It’s a busy time in the Winchester household. Spring is just around the corner (here in the South, anyway), and conference season is almost upon us! I’m happily buried beneath dozens of books at any given moment. But while the busy season is a lot of work, it’s also a time when I find a lot of my hidden gems — books that might have gone unnoticed. So today, I’m featuring one of those AND a backlist book from an author who has a new book out this week. But first, bookish goods!
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Bookish Goods
DIY Miniature Antique Book Kit by LDelaney
I have seen these mini kits all over BookTok, so I had to see if I could find them over on Etsy. This it seems like a perfect place to start! $25
New Releases
Slow Noodles: A Cambodian Memoir of Love, Loss, and Family Recipes by Chantha Nguon with Kim Green
Chantha Nguon loses everything fleeing Cambodia in the 1960s. Years later, she finds healing through cooking Cambodian food that transports her back to her mother’s kitchen.
Splinters: Another Kind of Love Story by Leslie Jamison
Literary darling Leslie Jamison is back with a memoir about her life during and after divorce, examining the different parts of her identity — writer, mother, academic, woman, artist —wondering how she can find herself.
For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.
Riot Recommendations
Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments: Intimate Histories of Riotous Black Girls, Troublesome Women, and Queer Radicals by Saidiya Hartman
Saidiya Hartman writes incredibly beautiful prose. She describes the lives of young, urban Black women as they go about their lives. Hartman wanted to tell the story of the Black women she read about who were mentioned in passing or who appeared unnamed in photographs. She investigates their lives, researches their pasts, and invites readers to bear witness to these women all too often lost from history. This book is incredibly captivating and intricately crafted. I found myself mesmerized while wandering through the past.
The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath by Leslie Jamison
I’ve read a lot of Leslie Jamison’s essays. Her sentences are incredibly well crafted, and her narrative voice draws me in like few others. So when I saw she had a full-length memoir/contemplation of the nature of alcoholism and art, I knew I had to read it. In The Recovering, she describes her experience with alcoholism, her slow acceptance that she needed to get sober, and the understanding that she couldn’t do it on her own. She examines so many moving parts; I wondered how she would stick the landing. But she does. And like so much of her writing that has stayed with me, The Recovering will as well.
That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave, over on Instagram @kdwinchester, on TikTok @kendrawinchester, or on my podcast Read Appalachia. As always, feel free to drop me a line at kendra.d.winchester@gmail.com. For even MORE bookish content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.
Happy reading, Friends!
~ Kendra