Categories
Audiobooks

The Audiobooks Newsletter Gets a Makeover!

Hello, Audiophiles! During this hot South Carolina summer, I often find myself sitting on my back porch and watching the small touches of wildlife around me. Lizards crawl across the porch screen and jump from plant to tree and back. Gwen loves to boop the lizards from her side of the screen, if she can sneak up on them that is. Dylan takes over the second chair and proudly views his kingdom. While I love audiobooks, I think unplugging and just listening to nature  is a beautiful way to slow down and enjoy the world around me.

This week, we are changing up the audiobook newsletter format! And don’t worry; there will still be Corgi photos. 🙂

Bookish Goods

A photo of an AirPods case shapes like Totoro

Totoro Airpod 1,2,3 PRO Case Cover by Quirky Cute STUDIOS

I have several different pairs of headphones I switch out throughout the day. To tell them apart, I get cute little cases. I love Studio Ghibli, so this case is just a little piece of perfection. $21

New Releases

A graphic of the cover of Just Like Home by Sarah Gailey

Just Like Home by Sarah Gailey | Narrated by ​​Xe Sands

Xe Sands performs this story about one of the creepiest houses you’ve ever heard of. When Vera’s mom asked her to come home, she does. But she finds a strange artist living out back in the guest house. And why does she keep finding notes in her father’s handwriting all around the house?

A graphic of the cover of The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia | Narrated by Gisela Chípe

Gisela Chípe performs Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s latest novel, The Daughter of Doctor Moreau. The novel’s protagonist, Carlota Moreau, lives with her father on the Yucatán peninsula. Her father’s estate is filled with his experiments, a collection of half-human, half-beast hybrids. But when a visitor arrives, he triggers a series of events that will change Carlota Moreau’s life forever.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Since it’s Disability Pride Month, I wanted to share a couple of my all-time favorite audiobooks. In particular, I wanted to recommend a couple upbeat titles to highlight different kinds of disabled joy and witty humor.

A graphic of the cover of We Are Never Meeting in Real Life by Samantha Irby

We Are Never Meeting in Real Life by Samantha Irby | Narrated by the Author

Samantha Irby’s essays convey humor and heart in her signature strong narrative voice. So it’s no surprise that her audiobook narration is equally as excellent. We Are Never Meeting in Real Life was my introduction to Irby’s work, and I think for that reason, it’s still my favorite. Irby has inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which, as someone who also has a colon from the pits of hell, I deeply relate to. Irby is also very playful in her writing. Much to my delight, one essay is a fake The Bachelor application, (I have been watching that show for far too long). I will forever listen to whatever audiobook Irby wants to put out next.

A graphic of the cover of Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert

Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert | Narrated by Adjoa Andoh

Before I was familiar with Adjoa Andoh’s work as an actress, I became familiar with her work as an audiobook narrator. Andoh has an incredible talent for capturing the hilariously awkward stories that follow Talia Hibbert’s romance series Brown Sisters. In the first book in the series, we meet Chloe Brown, the oldest of the sisters, who has fibromyalgia and other chronic conditions. Chloe wants to live life on her own, away from her affluent parents, and moves into an apartment in a building that happens to have an incredibly attractive apartment manager. I love this couple as they navigate very real complications to their relationship. The other two books in the series are also just as wonderful, so definitely check them out if you love this one.

Libro.fm Podcast – Episode 03: “Interview with Kendra Winchester” – I was on Libro.fm’s new podcast! If your looking for a new audiobooks podcast, look no further! Libro.fm is doing great things.

AudioFile Magazine 30th Anniversary – Narrator Trailer – AudioFile put together this excellent clip of different narrators in honor of their 30th Anniversary. Congrats on the big milestone, AudioFile!

A photo of Dylan, a red and white Pembroke Welsh Corgi, sitting next to several tall book stacks that are all taller than him. He is look at you with the look of disappointment and judgement. After all, you could have bought more snacks instead of more books.
He’s a 10 but he judges you for buying more books when you already have so many unread ones at home.

That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave or over on Instagram @kdwinchester. As always, feel free to drop me a line at kendra.d.winchester@gmail.com. For even MORE audiobook content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy listening, bookish friends!

~ Kendra

Categories
True Story

A Couple of My Favorite Disability Memoirs

Hello, friends! We are in peak humid season here in the Lowcountry, so I’ve been spending my afternoons inside and my evenings at the dog park with my Corgis, Dylan and Gwen. I love these slow summer evenings in the South. Since we live right next to a waterway, we see a lot of water fowl flying back and forth. It’s one of my favorite ways to spend an evening.

Bookish Goods

A photo of bookmarks made of flowers encased in clear resin

Handmade Pressed Unique Floral and Glitter Bookmarks by Flora Resin Treasures

As a nature lover, I ADORE these bookmarks made with dried flowers and resin. These are also customizable, so you can pick and choose what kind of bookmark that you want!

New Releases

A graphic of the cover of Dirtbag, Massachusetts by Isaac Fitzgerald

Dirtbag, Massachusetts by Isaac Fitzgerald

I have loved Isaac Fitzgerald’s book recommendations for several years now, so I knew that his memoir-in-essays was a must read. From growing up in a homeless shelter to smuggling medical supplies into Burma, Fitzgerald’s story is a wild one. But through it all, Fitzgerald is looking to become at peace with himself, his past, and his body.

A graphic of the cover of The Unofficial Studio Ghibli Cookbook by Jessica Yun

The Unofficial Studio Ghibli Cookbook by Jessica Yun

Studio Ghibli fans rejoice as we finally have the cookbook we’ve always wanted. Jessica Yun gives us recipes inspired by Studio Ghibli’s animated masterpieces. The recipes include skillet bacon and eggs, ramen with “haaaam”!, herring and pumpkin pot pie, and steamed red bean bao.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

As Disability Pride Month continues, I wanted to feature some memoirs. It’s incredibly important that we listen to disabled people as we tell our own stories. There’s no one way to be disabled, and everyone’s experience is different. But thankfully, there are hundreds and hundreds of memoirs that disabled, chronically ill, d/Deaf, and neurodivergent people have written and put out into the world. Here are a couple of my favorites.

A graphic of the cover of Easy Beauty: A Memoir by Chloé Cooper Jones

Easy Beauty: A Memoir by Chloé Cooper Jones

Chloé Cooper Jones finds herself in a bar listening to two men argue whether or not a disabled person like her should even exist. Jones was born with a condition that results in her being short of stature with a change in her gait. Moving through the world as a visibly disabled person, Jones knows what it’s like to feel like she has to prove herself. But isn’t that just her internalized ableism speaking, she wonders. Easy Beauty follows Jones on her journey to finding meaning and peace in a world that all too often reminds her that it wasn’t built with her in mind.

a graphic of the cover of Haben: The Deafblind Woman Who Conquered Harvard Law by Haben Girma

Haben: The DeafBlind Woman Who Conquered Harvard Law by Haben Girma

Haben Girma is a DeafBlind disability advocate who’s traveled the world, graduated from Harvard Law School, and met President Obama. She grew up visiting her family in Eritrea, learning about how her grandparents lived through the war where Eritrea fought for their independence from Ethiopia. She always wanted to embody her family’s courage, so she decided to bravely face the world. She didn’t accomplish these things by overcoming her disability. Instead she embraced it, inventing new accommodation technology and advocating for better disability inclusion.

That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave or over on Instagram @kdwinchester. 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

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book . . .

Welcome to Read this Book, a newsletter where I recommend one book that needs to jump onto your TBR pile! These books come from all sorts of different genres and age ranges.

In honor of Disability Pride Month, I wanted to recommend another book about disability, but this time, it’s a novel in translation from Norway.

A graphic of the cover of The White Bathing Hut by Thorvald Steen

The White Bathing Hut by Thorvald Steen | Translated from Norwegian by James Anderson

[CW: ableism, eugenics, attempted suicide]

As a disabled person who loves books, I’m always looking for more stories about other disabled people and the lives they lead. But sometimes these books can be hard to find, and even when I CAN find them, they aren’t available in a format I can read. As part of my condition, I can’t read print books, but not every book is available as an audiobook. So when a friend volunteered to read this book to me, I gave a hearty, “Yes, please!”

The White Bathing Hut is about a Norwegian man who has a disease where his muscles deteriorate over time. When the doctor first diagnoses him at fifteen, he’s not sure that he wants to keep living. But he decides to hang on and discovers that life still has so many beautiful things left to offer. Over the years, he learns that his illness is genetic, but no one in his father’s family has the condition. When he asks his mother, she refuses to acknowledge the extent of his condition, let alone discuss her family’s medical history.

With The White Bathing Hut, Steen also comments on Norway’s history with eugenics. And while they denounce any practice of that now, the novel’s protagonist deals with constant ableism that’s still very much part of his modern experience as a person with a genetically inherited disability.

This is one of those books that found me at just the right time. As someone with more than one genetic disability, I’m all too aware of America’s love of eugenics and who may or may not have “the best quality of life.” But there is a lot of wisdom and encouragement in this novel. Steen shares the same genetic condition as his protagonist, and in a trailer for an upcoming documentary on his life, Steen describes his own mental health spiral after his diagnosis. But he goes on to say, “I’m glad I gave life a chance.”

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave or over on Instagram @kdwinchester. 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

Categories
Audiobooks

So Many New Audiobooks!

Hello Audiophiles! Shortly after I started writing the audiobooks newsletter, I adopted a Corgi puppy. You all have watched her grow up. This week, we celebrated Gwenllian’s first birthday. We got the Corgis pupcakes from a local bakery, and she received plenty of new toys. I can’t believe that so much time has gone by. It seems like just yesterday I was playing audiobooks out loud to help Gwen quit crying during crate training.

As Disability Pride Month continues, I love seeing so many people pick up more books by disabled, chronically ill, d/Deaf, and neurodivergent authors. Sometimes I scroll through the bookish internet and don’t see a single book by a disabled author. But this month, bookstagram is filled with so many excellent recommendations, and people are beginning to realize that disabled people tell incredible stories.

A photo of Gwenllian, the black and white Cardigan Welsh Corgi, sitting in front of boxes of her presents. A pupcake with a number one candle sits on the box filled with her presents.
Gwenllian sits in front of boxes of her presents. A pupcake with a number one candle sits on the box filled with her presents.

Riot Recommendation

A graphic of the cover of A Face for Picasso: Coming of Age with Crouzon Syndrome by Ariel Henley

A Face for Picasso: Coming of Age with Crouzon Syndrome by Ariel Henley | Performed by the Author

This week on the main site, I shared “7 Nonfiction Books for Disability Pride Month,” which included one of my favorite disability memoirs, A Face for Picasso. Henley and her twin sister were born with Crouzon Syndrome, a condition where the bones of their skulls fused too soon. They spent much of their childhood in the hospital, undergoing dozens of procedures to save their lives and to try to make their faces more “aesthetically pleasing.”

Henley gives us a look into her childhood. Of trying to just be a kid when the world around her constantly reminded her that she looked different than everyone else. Adults doubted her intelligence and other kids made fun of her and her sister. But we also see Henley’s joy of playing with her friends and the love she received from her family.

As Henley reaches young adulthood, she finds herself transitioning from a child where adults made a lot of the decisions about her health to an adult who makes her own decisions about her body and what procedures she wants to undergo. She discovers a new confidence in herself and her body.

In her performance of the audiobook, Henley gives us additional emotional insight into her story. I cried when she cried. I felt joy when she felt joy recounting her happiest memories.

New Releases

A graphic of the cover of The Mermaid of Black Conch by Monique Roffey

The Mermaid of Black Conch by Monique Roffey | Narrated by Ben Onwukue and Vivienne Acheampong

The Costa Book of the Year, The Mermaid of Black Conch, is finally available in the US! This novel follows David, a man who rescues a woman caught on a fisherman’s hook. Once out of the water the mermaid begins to change. David must work to help hide the mermaid and tries to help her adjust to life on land.

A graphic of the cover of The Man Who Could Move Clouds by Ingrid Rojas Contreras

The Man Who Could Move Clouds by Ingrid Rojas Contreras | Narrated by Marisol Ramirez

I love Ingrid Rojas Contreras’s debut novel, Fruit of the Drunken Tree, and I’ve been so excited for her memoir, The Man Who Could Move Clouds. Her memoir goes back to her childhood in Columbia. Her grandfather was a community healer, a man said to possess incredible abilities. Rojas Contreras examines her family legacy and what her role in the family mysteries might be.

A graphic of the cover of A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers

A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers | Narrated by Em Grosland

In the sequel to A Psalm for the Wild-Built, we once again return to the world of Panga. The monk Sibling Dex and the robot Mosscap return from their travels to try to live a life that is filled with friends and goes along with their principles.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

A graphic of the cover of The It Girl by Ruth Ware

The It Girl by Ruth Ware | Narrated by Imogen Church

Hannah Jones had a core group of friends in college. After one of her friends, April Clarke-Cliveden, is murdered, Hannah eventually marries April’s boyfriend. A decade after the murder, Hannah is expecting her first child. More secrets about April’s death are revealed, turning April’s world upside down.

A graphic of the cover of Sister Mother Warrior by Vanessa Riley

Sister Mother Warrior by Vanessa Riley | Narrated by Adjoa Andoh and Robin Miles

The queen of historical fiction is back with her latest novel Sister Mother Warrior. This novel focuses on two women during the Haitian revolution. Marie-Claire Bonheur, the first Empress of Haiti, grew up a free Black woman with immense privilege. Gran Toya is a warrior born in West Africa and brought to Haiti as an enslaved woman. Both women have an important role to play in Haiti’s revolution.

A graphic of the cover of Crying in the Bathroom by Erika L. Sánchez

Crying in the Bathroom by Erika L. Sánchez | Narrated by the Author

I loved I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter, so I’ve been highly anticipating Erika L. Sánchez’s new memoir, Crying in the Bathroom. Her memoir discusses everything from white feminism to depression as she shares more about what it was like for her growing up in Chicago as the daughter of Mexican immigrants.

Over on Book Riot

7 Nonfiction Books for Disability Pride Month” by Kendra Winchester

Around the Web

Macmillan Audio Releases Audiobook Version of Three Key Supreme Court Abortion Rulings” (Publisher’s Weekly)

Spotify is going big on a new feature – and it’s not music” (TechRadar) – Spotify is going to have audiobooks! I’m curious how this experiment will go.

Top 20 Most Recommended Fiction Audiobooks of All Time” (Libro.fm)

Listens on the History and Future of Reproductive Justice” (Audible)


That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave or over on Instagram @kdwinchester. As always, feel free to drop me a line at kendra.d.winchester@gmail.com. For even MORE audiobook content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy listening, bookish friends!

~ Kendra

Categories
True Story

Disability Memoirs for the Win!

Hello from the South Carolina Lowcountry! We’ve been living through an intensley hot and muggy spell. It’s so humid that even my Corgi’s butt floof is incredibly fluffy, bless his heart. But there’s something that I love about these slow afternoons. Plus, I have stacks of books around, so why not dive into some of them?

Bookish Goods

A photo go two tea packets

Relaxing Loose Tea 3-Pack Assortment by Serenitea Savannah

When I’m reading, I always need a cup of tea on hand. One of my favorite companies is Serenitea Savannah, a local tea company that has some of the best relaxing tea bundles. With this selection of Earl Grey Lavender, Peach Serenity, and Daydream, you are destined for an incredibly peaceful afternoon.

New Releases

A graphic of the cover of Crying in the Bathroom: A Memoir by Erika L. Sánchez

Crying in the Bathroom: A Memoir by Erika L. Sánchez

Poet, essayist, and novelist, Erika L. Sánchez, is back with her memoir, Crying in the Bathroom. She grew up as the daughter of Mexican immigrants in the ’90s. She describes herself as a misfit, always seeming too loud and foul-mouthed for the polite white society around her. In her book, she discusses everything from depression to white feminism.

A graphic of the cover of Cults: Inside the World's Most Notorious Groups and Understanding the People Who Joined Them by Max Cutler

Cults: Inside the World’s Most Notorious Groups and Understanding the People Who Joined Them by Max Cutler

In his latest book, Max Cutler examines the world of cults, why people join and how cults can be so successful. Cutler talks to people who’ve participated in cults, left them, or were born into them. This broad perspective gives Cutler’s work a unique perspective on these often mysterious organizations.

Riot Recommendations

To continue our celebration of Disability Pride Month, this week, I’m going to recommend a memoir from two disability rights advocates who raise awareness for people with facial differences.

A graphic of the cover of A Face for Picasso by Ariel Henley

A Face for Picasso by Ariel Henley

Ariel Henley and her twin sister Zan were born with crouzon syndrome, a condition where their skulls fused too soon. Throughout their childhoods, they had dozens of procedures to save their lives and to make their faces more cosmetically “pleasing.”  A journalist who interviewed them said that they had a face for Picasso. This stayed with Henley, and she mulled over the meaning of the phrase for years. As she grows into her own, she begins to accept her body, and her reflection, for what it is. A Face for Picasso was named A Schneider Family Honor Book for Teens.

A graphic of the podcast Say Hello by Carly Findlay

Say Hello by Carly Findlay

Carly Findlay was born with Ichthyosis, a rare skin condition that causes her skin to appear red. When moving through the world, random strangers have responded to seeing in her with hatred, repulsion, or even hostility. She really just wishes that they would just “Say Hello.” In her memoir, she describes her work advocating for people with facial differences, and raises awareness for their unique experiences. You can learn more about her work over on her website.

That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave or over on Instagram @kdwinchester. 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

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book…

Welcome to Read this Book, a newsletter where I recommend one book that needs to jump onto your TBR pile! These books come from all sorts of different genres, age ranges, and formats.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

This week, I’m recommending a book for Disability Pride Month! I love seeing so many people pick up books by disabled authors. A favorite of mine, and of much of the bookish internet, is Disability Visibility, an anthology of essays edited by Alice Wong. So if you loved that collection, you definitely need to check out Growing up Disabled in Australia.

A graphic of the cover of growing up disabled in Australia

Growing Up Disabled in Australia edited by Carly Findlay

A few years ago, I came across the “Growing Up” series from Black Inc books. This series of anthologies features essays from different minority communities around Australia, including Growing Up Asian in Australia, Growing Up African in Australia, Growing Up Queer in Australia, and Growing Up Aboriginal Australia. All of these anthologies are wonderful, but today, I wanted to share my favorite.

Edited by disability rights advocate Carly Findlay, Growing Up Disabled in Australia features disabled writers from across the continent with different kinds of disabilities. The word “disability” is an umbrella term that covers so many conditions and ways of being disabled, so I loved seeing the wide range of representation. Plus, experiences differ depending on the quality of care you receive in your particular country. I really appreciated learning more about how different people with the same condition can have completely different experiences based on their circumstances.

Findlay does a great job of encouraging the writers to tell their own stories. An autistic person writes about how they attended a play about an autistic girl. They really didn’t like the play, but when they talked to the play’s creators, they realized that they were approaching autism from a different perspective. This conversation reminded them that different people with the same condition can have very different opinions. 

There are special olympians, artists, and creators of all sorts in this collection. A woman with intellectual disabilities shares how the adults around her only seemed to tell her everything she couldn’t do. But she didn’t let that stop her from pushing herself to do the things she loves, like writing her own book.

Anthologies like Growing Up Disabled in Australia remind me of how vibrant, creative, and resourceful disabled people are. So much of our lives are spent fighting for our place in the world, for our very right to exist. But given a chance, we can do incredible things.


That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave or over on Instagram @kdwinchester. 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.

Categories
Audiobooks

It’s Disability Pride Month!

Happy Disability Pride Month! I love seeing disabled people highlighted and celebrated across the internet. While we still have a long way to go when it comes to general disability awareness, it feels like we reach more and more people every year. If you’re looking for more general info about Disability Pride, check out my post “A Book Lovers Guide to Disability Pride Month”, which details a lot of different options for how you can support and celebrate Disability Pride! And if you’re looking for audiobook recommendations, check out “7 Fiction Audiobooks for Disability Pride”.

This week, we’ve been taking the Corgis out in the evening to the neighborhood dog park. They usually have it to themselves, and Gwen and Dylan spend a lot of time annoying each other and chasing Dylan’s pink ball around. This ball is one of Dylan’s favorite things in the world. (Yes, I have several of them just in case the worst should happen). Recently, Gwen has taken to dropping the ball down an impossibly deep, dark hole the neighborhood dogs have been working on for the last few months. Dylan waddles over and tries to reach his beloved toy. Thankfully, we have eventually retrieved every lost ball, but Gwenllian seems to take far too much joy in throwing it back in again. Good thing they are both so cute.

A photo of Dylan's red and white floofy butt sticking out of a dark hole.
Dylan retrieving his pink ball

Riot Recommendation

A graphic of the cover of Easy Beauty: A Memoir by Chloé Cooper Jones

Easy Beauty: A Memoir by Chloé Cooper Jones

Chloé Cooper Jones is an academic working on her second PhD when she finds herself in a bar watching two men debate on whether or not she should exist. Oddly, she feels removed from the situation. How many times has she had to prove she’s worthy of existence? Far too many to count.

Jones was born with sacral agenesis, a condition that impacted her height and way of walking. Moving through the world as a visibly disabled person has meant Jones faces ableist comments from strangers on a daily basis. But this moment in the bar felt different. Was it because they were trying to be academic or did she just expect more of them? Jones starts searching for answers. She travels the world and enters the field of journalism just for a new challenge.

From its first few paragraphs, Jones’ prose captures your attention. As she performed the text, I couldn’t help but think of how fantastic her prose is, how each word has its place. Jones forced me to think about disability in a new way, questioning the way disabled people are forced to move through the world.

Ever since I finished this book, I haven’t stopped thinking about it. There’s an entire section of disabled motherhood, and Jones shares what it was like for her to surprise doctors when she wanted to have her baby. Admittedly, I found myself tearing up at different parts. Though Jones and I have different conditions, we both share many similar experiences, and I appreciated her thought-provoking takes on how those experiences impacted her life.

New Releases

A graphic of the cover of Night of the Living Rez by Morgan Talty

Night of the Living Rez by Morgan Talty | Narrated by Darrell Dennis

In his debut collection, Penobscot author Morgan Talty writes about a Native community in Maine. These twelve stories feature characters encountering mysterious things like a jar filled with a curse or a friend stuck with his hair frozen in the snow. Everyone and their mother’s brother has been gushing about this book and I can’t wait to listen!

A graphic of the cover of Original Sins by Matt Rowland Hill

Original Sins by Matt Rowland Hill | Narrated by Daniel Hawksford

Matt Rowland Hill grew up in the UK as a pastor’s kid. As he grows older, Hill realizes he doesn’t share the same faith as his conservative parents. Unsure of where to turn next, Hill finds himself feeling stuck, addicted to whatever he can get his hands on and attending too many funerals of his friends who have overdosed.

A graphic of the cover of 100 Animals That Can F--king End You by Mamadou Ndiaye

100 Animals That Can F–king End You by Mamadou Ndiaye | Narrated by Mamadou Ndiaye

On TikTok, there’s nothing like Mamadou Ndiaye explaining his latest fascination with yet another ferocious creature that will be more than happy to end you. Narrated by Ndiaye himself, listeners get to experience the audiobook equivalent of his videos on TikTok.

The Earthspinner by Anuradha Roy

The Earthspinner by Anuradha Roy | Narrated by Maya Saroya

Waking from a strange dream, Elango feels the urge to create something new like nothing else he has crafted. The potter constructs a terracotta horse, but then doesn’t know what to do with it. Should he display it in a temple? Or maybe give it to the woman he loves? Whatever decision he makes, he knows that from the moment he makes the horse, Elango’s life will be forever changed.

A graphic of the cover of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin | Narrated by Jennifer Kim and Julian Cihi

The author of The Storied Life of A. J. Fikry is back with her new novel, Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow. Sam Masur and Sadie Green start an epic partnership to create their masterpiece, Ichigo, a game that’s everything they always wanted. The novel spans thirty years, showing us the long after effects of their work. I’m always here for a novel about gaming, so I’m thrilled for this novel to finally be out in the world.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Over on Book Riot

8 of the Best Audiobooks Narrated by Frankie Corzo” by Kendra Winchester

True Crime Audiobooks That Will Keep You Up All Night” by Ashley Holstrom

How to Listen to Audiobooks” by Aisling Twomey

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave or over on Instagram @kdwinchester. As always, feel free to drop me a line at kendra.d.winchester@gmail.com. For even MORE audiobook content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy listening, bookish friends!

~ Kendra

Categories
Read This Book

Say Hello to Read This Book’s Newest Team Member!

Welcome to Read this Book, a newsletter where I recommend one book that needs to jump onto your TBR pile! These books come from all sorts of different genres, age ranges, and formats.

A photo of Kendra, a white woman with brunette hair. She wearing a white sweatshirt and grey dad hat. She's holding her red and white Pembroke Welsh Corgi, Dylan. Dylan is not thrilled to be having his photo taken.
a photo of Kendra and Dylan

Hi there! I’m Kendra Winchester, the newest member of the Read This Book crew! I’ll be popping into your inboxes once a week to share some of my favorite books. I’m a disabled book nerd from Appalachia now living in the South Carolina Lowcountry. When I’m not in the bookish world, I’m typically found at the dog park with my two Corgis, Dylan and Gwen. Some of you might already know me from Book Riot’s Audiobooks and True Story newsletters, but I’m excited to be sharing even MORE books with you here. So what are we waiting for? Let’s jump right in!

a graphic of the cover of Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward

Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward

Since I moved to the South fourteen years ago, I’ve been captivated by the vibrant Southern literary traditions here. And one of those shining stars is the incredible author, Jesmyn Ward. Every single book of hers stands out in my mind, but my favorite is Salvage the Bones.

From the first paragraphs, Salvage the Bones transports you to a different world, where a junk yard holds a ramshackle house dusted with red clay. With each description, Wards rips open the story, revealing every uncomfortable nuance of reality. You see and feel what she wants you to see and feel. And in this book, it’s all about Esch.

Near a bayou on the coast of Mississippi, Esch lives with her motherless family—three brothers and a father who constantly escapes his life through alcohol. They live in the house her father built for her mother, a place her family calls “The Pit.” Esch escapes The Pit through the books she reads, specifically identifying with Medea in the book Mythology. Like Medea’s passion for Jason, Esch loves Manny, a boy who, to her, shines like the golden sun. Unable to bear confessing her love, she lets him have whatever he wants, the act embodying her silent wish for him to love her. 

Over the twelve-days of the novel, Esch’s family listens to reports of a hurricane named Katrina, which heads toward the coast. At first, only Esch’s father believes the reports of the severity of the coming storm and begins staggering around, preparing for the hurricane. Esch faces each day with unflinching courage, quietly choosing to go on and take care of her family. But her brother, Skeetah, is more focused on caring for his white Pit Bull, China, and her new puppies.

While the story is often harrowing, the prose winds its way through your mind, making the violent descriptions seem simultaneously harsh and beautiful. Ward writes with the confidence of her protagonist, imbuing Esch with such complexity and emotional depth. You can’t help but know you are reading a master at her craft.

Salvage the Bones is the second novel in Ward’s trilogy of loosely connected stories set in Bois Sauvage, a fictional town in the Mississippi Delta. Ward’s debut, Where the Line Bleeds, introduces us to the town, focusing on two twin boys who’ve just graduated from high school. Ward’s third novel—Sing, Unburied, Sing—closes out the series, giving us a more fantastical take on the lives of the residents of Bois Sauvage. All three of them are excellent and they can be read in any order.

That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave or over on Instagram @kdwinchester. 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

Categories
True Story

Happy Disability Pride Month!

This past holiday weekend, my husband and I headed outside to spend time at the beach with gorgeous weather. As a book nerd, it’s easy for me to forget to get outside and enjoy the natural world around me. But the Lowcountry is so beautiful, it’s hard for anyone not to become captivated by nature. This week, I’ll be talking about recommendations for Disability Pride Month, but first, it’s time for new releases!

Bookish Goods

a photo of about a dozen leather book marks with tree-like patterns on them

Leather Bookmark by Green Roof Gallery

This maybe very lawful neutral of me, but I love a good bookmark, especially customized ones. I also love nature-related accessories, so these leather bookmarks from Green Roof Gallery are right in my wheelhouse.

New Releases

A graphic of the cover of 100 Animals That Can F*cking End You by Mamadou Ndiaye

100 Animals That Can F*cking End You by Mamadou Ndiaye

I wasn’t on TikTok very long before I discovered @mndiaye_97 and his videos about some of the most ferocious animals on the planet. As a longtime lover of factoids from the animal kingdom, I love his content. So of course I have to get my hands on his new book, 100 Animals That Can F*cking End You.

A graphic of the cover of Original Sins: A Memoir

Original Sins: A Memoir by Matt Rowland Hill

Matt Rowland Hill is a PK (pastor’s kid) who grew up in the U.K.  As Hill grows older, he drifts farther from his parents’ faith and finds himself floundering, unsure of where to turn next. Outside of his parents’ belief system, he doesn’t have any reference points to help guide him into adulthood. Eventually, he finds himself in and out of health clinics, addicted to whatever drug he can find. His memoir is written in such a captivating way that will capture your attention from the very first paragraphs.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

Happy Disability Pride Month! July is one of my favorite times of year because I get to celebrate and highlight other disabled folks. So I thought I’d feature some disability-related titles to honor the occasion.

A graphic of the cover Demystifying Disability

Demystifying Disability: What to Know, What to Say, and How to Be an Ally by Emily Ladau

If you’re new to the world of disability literature, Demystifying Disability is a great place to start. Emila Ladau does a great job of instructing people on disability etiquette 101. She also gives readers an introduction to disability history, language, and culture. This has become my go-to book whenever I want to introduce someone to the world of disability—it’s the perfect place to start!

A graphic of the cover of Disability Visibility: First-Person Stories from the Twenty-First Century

Disability Visibility: First-Person Stories from the Twenty-First Century edited by Alice Wong

Disability activist Alice Wong has gathered together some of the best disabled writers of the last few decades. This collection features authors from a wide range of backgrounds, each with their own unique experience of disability. Each essay gives a different perspective on what it’s like to live as a disabled person in the U.S. Plus, there’s even more resources in the back of the book.


That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave or over on Instagram @kdwinchester. 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

Categories
Audiobooks

The StoryGraph Adds a New Feature to Track Audiobook Listening!

This past weekend, the world watched Trumpet the Bloodhound win Best in Show at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog show! Of course, being a Corgi household, we were disappointed that neither of the Corgi breeds won, but we had a good time cheering them on anyway.

When I wasn’t cheering for the Corgis at Westminster, my spouse and I have been watching our way through Psych like it’s 2008. Not only has the fashion from our college years made a comeback, but it seems like the TV shows have too. For whatever reason, Sam and I both missed out on the Psych craze, so we’ve been enjoying this low-stakes mystery series. Of course, Only Murders in the Building is back with season two, so we had to drop everything to watch it. If you haven’t seen the first season yet, be sure to hop onto Hulu and check it out!

Watching both of these series has made me in the mood for a mystery novel on audio, but I’m not sure what to pick up. In recent years, I’ve enjoyed Jane Harper, Sujata Massey and Attica Locke. But what mystery novels would you recommend? Feel free to email your recommendations to me at kendra.d.winchester@gmail.com.

A photo of Gwen, a black and white Cardigan Welsh Corgi, sitting in a patch of golden sunlight while holding a purple elephant toy in her paws.
A graphic of Storygraph's Logo

The StoryGraph‘s New Audiobook Feature

With over one million users, The StoryGraph is a reading tracker that allows bookworms to record their reading habits in a wide range of ways. The StoryGraph will then take this date and create easy to understand graphs and charts. I love how easy StoryGraph is to use!

Just in time for this year’s Audiobook Appreciation Month in June, The StoryGraph released its new audiobook feature that allows users to track their listening. You can track your audiobook listening using several different data points, allowing audiobook lovers to customize their experience.

When I asked Nadia, The StoryGraph’s Founder, what challenges they ran into when creating the feature, she said that they had to consider the different ways that The StoryGraph’s users wanted to track their audiobooks and what data users wanted to see. This led them to use a more customizable approach to give their users the best experience possible.

In the future, keep your eye out for new updates from The StoryGraph, like their upcoming book club feature. Plus, they have a new dark mode and a new book scanning feature in the works too!

New Releases

A graphic of the cover of In the Beautiful Country by Jane Kuo

In the Beautiful Country by Jane Kuo | Narrated by Sura Siu

A family moves from Taiwan to America where the entire family lives in one tiny apartment. Anna thought that moving to “the beautiful” (what they call America in Chinese) would be like a dream. But so far, it’s just been disappointing. Anna can’t help but wonder, is all of her family’s sacrifice really worth it?

A graphic of the cover of Elsewhere by Alexis Schaitkin

Elsewhere by Alexis Schaitkin | Narrated by Ell Potter

Perfect for fairytale lovers, Elsewhere is set in a town where it’s just accepted that some mothers disappear. Vera grows up knowing that for her, motherhood is inevitable. But when the time comes, she has nothing but questions for what her own experience with motherhood will bring.

A graphic of the cover of Our Crooked Hearts by Melissa Albert

Our Crooked Hearts by Melissa Albert | Narrated by Chloe Cannon and Emma Galvin

Set in two time periods, Our Crooked Hearts possesses that creepy magical vibe Melissa Albert is known for. In the present day, Ivy is spending her summer break in the suburbs running into creepy figures and disturbing ruins with strangers. In the past, Dana is a city girl looking to connect with the supernatural with the help of her two friends. These two stories come together in the darkest, most delightfully sinister way possible.

A graphic of the cover of The Scent of Burnt Flowers by Blitz Bazawule

The Scent of Burnt Flowers by Blitz Bazawule | Narrated by Dion Graham

Bernadette and Melvin are a Black couple just trying to make a life for themselves in America in the 1960s. But after being attacked, the couple moves to Ghana in hopes of escaping the racial violence. There they meet Kwesi, a charming man who seems to rule the night life in their new city. When Bernadette experiences an immediate attraction to Kwesi, Melvin begins to worry that he might lose the woman he loves most.

A graphic of the cover of Katzenjammer by Francesca Zappia

Katzenjammer by Francesca Zappia | Narrated by Lauren Fortgang

Cat lives in her high school. In fact, she and several other students are trapped. As time passes, they begin to slowly transform into something else. None of them remember why exactly they are there. They just know that if they don’t figure out how to leave, they may lose what’s left of their memories.

For a more comprehensive list, check out our New Books newsletter.

Over on Book Riot

Listen Up: 8 Incredible Queer Audiobook Narrators” by Laura Sackton – Want to support more LGBTQ+ audiobook narrators? Check out this list!

15 of the Best Fantasy Lesbian Audiobooks to Listen to Right Now” by Addison Rizer –  Women loving women fantasy novels are having a real moment right now—here is a round up of 15 of them!

The Bane of My Bookish Existence: I Can’t Read Nonfiction in Print” by Carina Pereira – I love hearing about another audiobook lover’s approach to listening. 

Get the 10 Best Audiobook Narrators in Your Ears” by Nusrah Javed – Why haven’t we had a quick round of excellent audiobook narrators in a hot minute? Nusrah Javad has given us an excellent updated list!

What Makes a Great Audiobooks Narrator” by Arvyn Cerézo – I LOVE this piece from Arvyn Cerézo. They really get to the core of what makes an audiobook tick.

Around the Web

Top 20 Most Recommended Nonfiction Audiobooks of All Time(Libro.fm)

Top 20 Most Recommended Fiction Audiobooks of All Time” (Libro.fm)

The Best of the Year (So Far) 2022” (Audible)

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave or over on Instagram @kdwinchester. As always, feel free to drop me a line at kendra.d.winchester@gmail.com. For even MORE audiobook content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy listening, bookish friends!

~ Kendra