When I interviewed for my current position at Book Riot, I remember being asked about my reading habits (naturally). I’ve always been a big fantasy/literary fiction/graphic novel girl, but am terrible with reading nonfiction.
Welp, I am still kind of bad, but I think I’ve gotten a *little* bit better. Just a smidge. Since I’ve noticed some great memoirs and biographies coming out in the new year, I thought to highlight some for your book clubs since it’s the genre of nonfiction I’m probably least likely to pick up *hides face in shame*.
First, I’ve got a li’l snack for ya.
Nibbles and Sips
Japanese soufflé pancakes by Kristen/Mochi Mommy
I don’t know what time of day you hold your book club meeting, but if you ever want to have them during prime brunch hours (or in the evening; I’m a breakfast-as-dinner girl myself), these fluffy soufflé pancakes would be perfect.
You’ll need: eggs, sugar, cake flour, baking powder, salt, milk, vanilla extract, and butter. You’ll mix all ingredients with a hand mixer at different intervals, which the full recipe and instruction list on Kristen’s website tells you about.
For some video guidance, check out her clip on Instagram. Top with cream or Nutella!
The House of Hidden Meanings by RuPaul
RuPaul had already made a name for himself as a premier drag queen and entertainer before the first episode of Drag Race. But since the show started, he’s become even more iconic, even ushering in a new era of Drag. Here, he offers a more intimate side of himself, detailing his life growing up as a queer Black kid in California, his time as a punk in Atlanta and New York, and how he found self-acceptance.
Carson McCullers: A Life by Mary V. Dearborn
McCullers is one of my favorite Southern writers, and just writers ever. I remember being amazed at how well she could write from the perspective of those who had experiences so outside of her own at such a young age (23, if we’re thinking of The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter). This is the first biography of the genius author in the last couple of decades, and it details her life — from the time she thought she’d be a concert pianist to her inherent queerness — referencing materials unavailable until the last decade or so.
Thunder Song: Essays by Sasha taqwšəblu LaPointe
Though this is a collection of essays rather than a straight memoir (the author does have a memoir as well: Red Paint), it still gets into LaPointe’s experiences as a queer Indigenous woman. With a very punk spirit (and the help of her family archives and her great-grandmother’s anthropological work), LaPointe picks apart narratives surrounding Indigenous people, analyzes cultural displacement, and critiques environmental destruction.
Private Equity by Carrie Sun
Carrie Sun has always worked hard. She excelled in school, graduated early from MIT, and entered the corporate world, all in the name of the American Dream her parents wished for her when they immigrated to the U.S. from China. But once she hits 29, she starts feeling like something’s missing. So, she drops out of a master’s program and quits her job. When she gets the opportunity to work for one of the most respected hedge funds in the world, she jumps at it. Soon, luxury and privilege like she’s never known are opened up to her, but it also starts to swallow her whole.
Suggestion Section
Book Club:
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8 of the Best Historical Fiction of 2023
I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in our In Reading Color Substack as well as chattin’ with my co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.
Until next time,
Erica