Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks – 91219

Hola Audiophiles! It’s starting to look like sweater weather here in the city of roses and I am pleased as pumpkin spice! I can’t wait to make soups and curl up with a hot cup of tea. I’m sure you seasoned Pacific Northwesterners are laughing at my excitement for cooler temps. It’s ok, I don’t mind being basic. Give me all of the chunky knits.

Before we get to all things audio, I have a giveaway for you! Enter to win the year’s 10 best mystery/thrillers so far, including American Spy by Lauren Wilkinson and The Lost Man by Jane Harper.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – September 17 (publisher’s descriptions in quotes)

gideon the ninthGideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir, narrated by Moira Quirk – WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH ME?? I forgot to include this one last week!! I feel like I owe a giant apology to Liberty who has so convincingly sold all of the bookish internet on this title. Here’s all you need to know: lesbian necromancers… in space. Get thee to a book retailer!

Chilling Effect by Valerie Valdes, narrated by Almarie Guerra – I can’t do better than this IG post from our very own Amanda Nelson: “A sci-fi romp with lots of cursing in Spanish and inter-species love and psychic cats and sometimes, there is coffee in that nebula. Found family AND heists AND murderous space baddies AND political intrigue AND a grumpy heroine who kicks ass first, asks questions later (again, in Spanish, she doesn’t care if you understand because she doesn’t care about the answer really).” I need this now.

Heaven My Home cover imageHeaven, My Home by Attica Locke, narrated by JD Jackson – If you loved Bluebird, Bluebird, get ready to spend some more time with Texas Ranger Darren Matthews. This time we follow along as Matthews goes on the hunt for a missing boy, but that boy’s family are a bunch of white supremacists, so… this may not be smooth sailing based on what we know about our dude Darren. Locke just does mystery and flawed protagonists so well!

  • Narrator Note: JD Jackson reprises his role as narrator after tackling Bluebird, Bluebird as well. Most recently, he narrated Colson Whitehead’s The Nickel Boys.

Red at the Bone by Jacqueline Woodson, narrated by a full cast** – It’s 2001 and 16-year-old Melody is making her grand entrance at her coming-of-age ceremony; she has on a custom gown, one that was intended for her mother sixteen years earlier for a similar ceremony that never took place. As the history of Melody’s parents and grandparents is revealed, the book explores “sexual desire and identity, ambition, gentrification, education, class, and status, and the life-altering facts of parenthood.”

  • Narrator Note: **That full cast? It includes Jacqueline Woodson AND Bahni Turpin. You added it to your cart, right?

Space Between: Explorations of Love, Sex, and Fluidity by Nico Tortorella, narrated by the author – Hey, so… I may have picked this one just because I have a lil’ crush on this Younger star and LBGTQ advocate. I have always been so impressed by their very candid discussion of sexuality and gender fluidity along the journey to discovering themselves fully. This memoir explores their childhood, downward spiral into drugs brought about by fame, and eventual arrival to a place of complete, unabashed authenticity.

  • Narrator Note: “read by the author” is one of my favorite phrases.

The Vanderbeekers to the Rescue by Karina Yan Glaser, narrated by Robin Miles – Full disclosure: Karina Yan Glaser is one of Book Riot’s own Contributing Editors, but I’d recommend this one even if she weren’t! This is the third in her beloved Vanderbeekers series and follows the titular children in a race to save their mother’s baking business from closure.

  • Narrator Note: So many narrator heavyweights in this newsletter! Robin Miles is another super fave, lending her voice to works by N.K. Jemisin, Nnedi Okorafor, Jacqueline Woodson, Roxane Gay, Stacy Schiff, Tananarive Due… how much time do you got?

Latest Listens (CW: sexual assault, though non-graphic)

speaking of summerI finally finished Speaking of Summer last week which I really enjoyed! When Summer Spencer mysteriously goes missing from the Harlem brownstone she shared with her twin sister Autumn, it appears that Autumn is just about the only person concerned with finding her. As she spins further into an obsession for facts that won’t reveal themselves, the reveal is one that I probably should have seen coming but didn’t. I love slow-burn psychological stuff like this, especially when it manages to weave in discussions of mental illness and current events.

Kudos to Karen Chilton for the weight she lends to the stories she performs. Every word is so powerful.

From the Internets

Why Malcolm Gladwell’s latest Talking to Strangers is an audiobook for the podcast generation.

Parade suggests these audiobooks for fall listening. The list is a teeny bit predictable but still contains some solid recs (Erin Morgenstern, we’re looking at you!)

For now, Audible will put the kibosh on the whole full caption rollout thing.

Over at the Riot

September means it’s officially back to school season! Here are some audiobooks for that school commute.


That’s all I got today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter, peep the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 9/11

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. Greetings from Portlandia, where the weather is beginning to cool and I am too dumb a Californian to feel anything but happy about it. Bring on the warm, autumny drinks, the falling of leaves, the perfect conditions for curling up with a hot cuppa and a lovely read.

Let me stop dreaming in pumpkin spice for a second to let you in on something sweet: we’re hosting a giveaway of the year’s 10 best mystery/thrillers so far! Enter here to win a big batch of thrilling titles that includes American Spy by Lauren Wilkinson and The Lost Man by Jane Harper.

Shall we? To the club!!


Now that I’ve moved to Portland, I need to find a new primary care physician. I was perusing a list of providers in between monitoring social media came across Kathleen Kenan’s piece about books on the history of illness and medicine. I find this subject fascinating, so it was only too easy for me to ditch my doctor search and instead spend the time adding these to my TBR. That inspired me to talk about a few other related titles perfect for this club thing we love.

The Collected Schizophrenias by Esme Weijun Wang – I LOVE this book. It’s a deeply personal, thoughtful, and well-researched discussion of mental illness, focusing in particular on the many stigmas and misconceptions attached to schizophrenia. Wang really drives home how both the public and medical community alike still know so little about all that this condition does and doesn’t entail, that it’s not one diagnosis but many.

  • Book Club Bonus: Before you begin this read, have the group write down five things they know, or think they do, about schizophrenia. When you meet to discuss the book, go over what everyone got right or wrong and what the book has taught them. No judgement here, be honest! The point of the exercise is to shed light on how little we know, and to bring awareness to the importance of increasing that knowledge on a global scale.

Brain on Fire by Susan Cahalan – Susan Cahalan was twenty four years old and life was grand: she was in a new and promising relationship and had just begun an exciting career with a New York newspaper. Seemingly overnight and with no clear explanation as to why, she found herself tied down to a hospital bed in a psychiatric ward: she was deemed violent, psychotic, a threat to herself and others. Her diagnosis? Unclear. What she went through and her eventual diagnosis are at once a riveting page-turner and a maddening peak into the pitfalls of our healthcare system.

  • Book Club Bonus: I can’t say too much without spoiling the book for you, but I will say this: money talks. Would Cahalan have received the proper treatment were it not for her family’s affluence? Given her situation, how confident do you feel in how we diagnose and treat mental illness at large? How do we address the disparity in care between those that can shell out the dolla dolla bills and those who absolutely cannot?

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot – I have a thing for that category of books I like to call “How the Hell Had I Never Heard of This Before?” This is one of them! Who was Henrietta Lacks? A poor black tobacco farmer whose cells, known as the HeLa line, are responsible for numerous medical breakthroughs over the last sixty+ years. These cells are still in use today, but get this: they were harvested from Lacks without her knowledge or consent in 1951 while undergoing cancer treatment at Johns Hopkins, the only hospital that would treat black Americans at the time. I muttered the phrase, “Oh for f&@#s sake!” to myself some twenty times while reading this book.

  • Book Club Bonus: Have a thorough discussion on the intersection of medical innovation and informed consent. On the one hand, fine, yes: medical waste is not a thing we technically have claim to once it’s removed from our bodies. But does it seem even a little bit right to know that so much medical progress, not to mention millions of dollars, have been made off the cell line of a woman whose family lives in poverty to this today?

Suggestion Section

The UN’s newly formed SDG (Sustainable Development Goals) Club is a book club for kids to help them deal with global issues.

I mentioned some of these last week, but here’s a more comprehensive list of celebrity book club picks for September 2019.

Speaking of celebrity book clubs, did you catch this week’s Book Riot Podcast? In Two Feet of Parchment about Moonstones, Jeff and Rebecca discuss the celebrity book club effect and how it’s maaaaybe not as clear as so many make it out to be.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

More Resources:
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks – 9/5

Hola Audiophiles! Por fin, I’m in Portland! Time to settle in, unpack what’s left of my things, and throw on some audiobooks while I explore my neighborhood. Fun!

I also want to thank everyone who has sent me messages of welcome and congratulations! I’ve been too much of a mess to respond, but I will soon. Thank you for being such cool book people!

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – September 10th (publisher’s descriptions in quotes)

Gun Island by Amitav Ghosh, narrated by Sagar Arya – You know me by now, friends: I see the words “folklore” and “rare book dealer” and I’m adding to cart in a euphoric trance. Dean Datta is a rare book dealer in Brooklyn who makes an annual trip to his native Calcutta. On one of said trips, he learns of a Bengali legend that sends him on a worldwide adventure in search of truth, meaning, and the roots of his heritage.

  • Narrator Note: Sagar Arya is part of the ensemble cast that narrated Zadie Smith’s White Teeth. Sold!

Lost in the Spanish Quarter by Heddi Goodrich, narrated by: Lisa Flanagan – I’ve been looking for something comforting and pleasant to read and this book fits the bill. Set in the Spanish Quarter of Naples, it’s a coming-of-age story about an Italian woman and American man who meet and fall in love as university students in Italy.

The Starlet and the Spy by Ji-min Lee, narrated by Janet Song – Ji-min Lee has written numerous books, but this is the first translated from Korean to English. It’s a piece of historical fiction set in 1954 about a Korean war survivor and translator who meets an American starlet on a four day visit to Seoul. That starlet? Oh yeah, it’s Marilyn Monroe.

The Testaments by Margaret Atwood, narrated by Ann Dowd, Bryce Dallas Howard, Mae Whitman, Derek Jacobi, Tantoo Cardinal – I probably don’t need to highlight this title, but I thought I’d give it a quick shout-out all the same. This Handmaid’s Tale sequel is already abuzz with controversy (and not-super-fantastic press, yikes). Give it a listen and decide for yourself.

will my cat eat my eyeballsWill My Cat Eat my Eyeballs: Big Questions from Tiny Mortals by Caitlin Doughty, narrated by the author – No one does death quite like best-selling author and mortician Caitlin Doughty. Now the author of Smoke Gets In Your Eyes is taking her skill set to the children, answering kids’ questions about death, dying, and decomposition. That title alone has my attention!

  • Narrator Note: I’ve only ever read Doughty in print, but the sample audio of her first two books did not disappoint. And like we always say: no better way to hear a story than to have it told to you by the person who wrote it.

Latest Listens

Now that I’m settled in my new place, I’m finally audiobooking again! I’m finally wrapping up Speaking of Summer and think I’ll probably tackle The Ten Thousand Doors of January next! What are you listening to and loving??

From the Internets

A piece from Publishers Weekly on the evolution of the Spanish-language audiobook market

Ummm… what? Apparently serial killer Ed Kemper voiced hundreds of audio books, like Flowers In The Attic and Star Wars. Gulp.

Over at the Riot

Look, I know everyone’s all “Waaah summer’s over!” To that I say: 1) So what? Fall is AWESOME, and 2) Calm down, it was 83 degrees in Portland today. Because warm weather is sticking around for so many of us, I’m throwing it back to this post from last year on great poolside audiobooks.


That’s all I got today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter, peep the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 9/4

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.

Looks like we maaaade iiiitttt. Yes y’all, I have finally, actually, no-really-I-mean-it-this-time moved all the way to Portland! I may not have all of my furniture and my clothes may still be in trash bags, but the books have all been put away and that, my friends, gives me peace.

Speaking of books, let’s talk about em. To the club!!


Today’s theme is very simple: Sh*t I Like. I took more than one warm and fuzzy trip down memory lane while packing up and shelving some of my favorite reads and thought I’d share a few with great club potential.

Let’s Pretend this Never Happened by Jenny Lawson – I’m a big fan of funny books that make me cry and “The Bloggess” Jenny Lawson has that combo on lock. One minute she’s talking about a taxidermied mouse, the next she’s sharing her struggles with mental health. I heart her so much for those candid conversations.

  • Book Club Bonus: We don’t all have a story about our fathers and taxidermied mice, but we do have funny stories of our own. I, for example, thought Madonna was not a Material Girl but a Cheerio Girl and DEMANDED to snack on the cereal while dancing to it in our living room as a kid. Your turn! Get real with the club and share funny childhood memories! Read your story aloud, or to make it even more interesting: have everyone write or type theirs up, put them in a bowl, then designate someone to read them aloud at random. See if the club can guess who each memory belongs to!
  • Related: Jenny Lawson recently announced that she’s opening a bookstore and bar in San Antonio!

We Are La Cocina: Recipes in Pursuit of the American Dream by Caleb Zigas, Leticia Landa – If you don’t know about La Cocina, look into this amazing nonprofit now: based in San Francisco’s Mission District, they provide affordable commercial kitchen space, technical assistance and even job placement for women of color and immigrant communities in the food business. This cookbook is a collection of stories and recipes from 40 of the talented women who got their start with La Cocina and I can personally vouch for their food’s deliciousness. All proceeds from sales of the book go right back into helping other women entrepreneurs and the fight for equity in the culinary industry.

  • Book Club Bonus: If you’re wanting to get away but can’t quite swing a group vacay right about now, dive into this cookbook to take a trip with book club through food. That braised fish recipe from Hang Truong of Noodle Girl Restaurant is the Vietnamese comfort food I didn’t know I needed in my life.
  • Bonus: Hold your club gathering at a woman-owned restaurant or eatery; if you’re in Northern California’s bay area, go support one of the women from the book!

And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie – I re-read this for what has got to be the 20th time recently and its genius strikes me every time (though some bits are problematic; yikes, that original title!). The premise: a bunch of strangers get a mysterious invite to an island mansion and guess what: they die. Shocking! They’re picked off one by one as bits of their shady pasts are revealed. It’s so unsettling and creepy and one of my favorite Christie works to date.

  • Book Club Bonus: Discuss whether any of the characters were likeable; if they’re awful, did they deserve to die?!  Did you see the ending coming? What books or films do you now recognize as drawing from this Chrisie classic?

Suggestion Section

Some more musings on what celebrity book clubs do for writers.

September celebrity book club picks from Reese Witherspoon, PBS, Emma Watson, and Emma Roberts.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

More Resources:
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks – 8/29

Hola Audiophiles!

Dios mio, y’all. It’s pretty much a wrap on August. Know what that means? 1. I’m going to be a Portland resident in just a few days. 2. The deluge of fall book releases is coming! There are soooo many books coming out next week alone and it’s kinda sorta maybe still summer?! It was so hard to choose just a few to highlight today, but I’m really excited about these picks.

Ready? Let’s audio!


New Releases – September 3rd (publisher’s descriptions in quotes)

A Fortune for Your Disaster: Poems by Hanif Abdurraqib, narrated by the author – I feel like we all need more poetry audiobooks in our lives. Poetry was meant to be read out loud! If you don’t know Hanif Abdurraqib, he is the brilliant poet, essayist, music critic, and excellent Twitter follow (so many literal LOLs) behind personal favorite Go Ahead in the Rain, a touching and funny love letter to A Tribe Called Quest, plus several other poetry collections. This one is a book of poems about “how one rebuilds oneself after a heartbreak, the kind that renders them a different version of themselves than the one they knew.”

  • Narrator note: I think this is the first time Hanif narrates his own work and I’m so, so glad that he did. I’ve heard him read in person and he is so dynamic: not animated per se, but an understated funny. And that voice! I’d listen to him read me the contents of my shampoo.

Dear Haiti, Love Alaine by Maika and Maritza Moulite, narrated by Bahni Turpin – Alaine is a 17-year-old Haitian American from Miami who’s been suspended from school and shipped off to Haiti: “Thanks to ‘the incident’ (don’t ask), I’m spending the next two months doing what my school is calling a ‘spring volunteer immersion project.’ It’s definitely no vacation. I’m toiling away under the ever-watchful eyes of Tati Estelle at her new nonprofit. And my lean-in queen of a mother is even here to make sure I do things right. Or she might just be lying low to dodge the media sharks after a much more public incident of her own…and to hide a rather devastating secret.”

  • Narrator Note: You know wassup. Bahni Turpin, everybody.

The Secrets We Kept by Lara Prescott, narrated by Carlotta Brentan, Cynthia Farrell, Mozhan Marnò, full cast – “A thrilling tale of secretaries turned spies, of love and duty, and of sacrifice – inspired by the true story of the CIA plot to infiltrate the hearts and minds of Soviet Russia, not with propaganda, but with the greatest love story of the 20th century: Doctor Zhivago.”

  • Narrator Note: You know how I feel about full cast recordings! All of the narrators have plenty of audio credits to their name, my fave being Mozhan Marnos’ performance of Wonder Woman: Warbringer by Leigh Bardugo.

Strange Birds: A Guide to Ruffling Feathers by Celia Perez, narrated by Rebecca Soler – We get asked a lot about family-friendly audiobooks and I think this would be a great one! If you loved Celia Perez’ First Rule of Punk, make this “story of four kids who form an alternative Scout troop that shakes up their sleepy Florida town” your next listen.

  • Narrator Note: I really liked Rebecca Soler’s performance of Empress of a Thousand Skies (yay space opera!). She’s also the voice behind all of your faves: Marissa Meyer’s Cinder, Scarlet, and Renegades, Melissa Albert’s Hazel Wood, Stephanie Garber’s Caraval series, and so much more.

Tunnel of Bones by Victoria Schwab, narrated by Reba Buhr – I think it’s time I just acknowledge that Victoria/V.E. Schwab is one of my favorite authors. This is the second book in the Cassidy Blake middle grade series; the first book City of Ghosts is a ghost-hunter caper set in Edinburgh that I absolutely love! In Tunnel of Bones, we follow Cassidy, her parents, and her ghost BFF Jacob to Paris to find out what lurks in those catacombs. Sold!

  • Narrator Note: Reba Buhr narrated City of Ghosts too and does a great job at performing in a children’s voice that doesn’t feel forced.

From the Internets

A headline that made me chuckle: Audible forced to defend the legal difference between audiobook transcripts and, uh, “books”

From African American studies to engineering, Bustle recommends nonfic audiobooks based on your subject of interest.

SFF publisher Baen Books and RBmedia have teamed up to produce audiobooks.

Over at the Riot

How audiobooks improve one reader’s mental health and reading life

Rioter Christine put together this list of self-improvement listens that I love! It isn’t the same fluffy stuff I see recommended all the time. No one telling me to just wash my face and whatnot.


That’s all I got today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter, peep the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 8/28

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.

‘Sup, club nerds? The time has come! This is the last newsletter I will write as a San Diego resident (at least for the foreseeable future). I’m mostly packed, very excited, and more than un poquito emo as I prepare to say my goodbyes. I’m also nursing one hell of a headache because my going away party’s theme was apparently tequila.

Let’s get to club business so I can go back to avoiding bright lights and loud noises.

Ready? To the club!!


As I prepare to leave the place I’ve called home for most of my life, I’ve reflected on how privileged I am to be moving under these circumstances. For many, leaving home isn’t some fun and emotional adventure; it’s a matter of life and death, a harrowing journey fraught with peril in pursuit of shelter, safety, a chance.

Today’s book club suggestions each examine the immigrant experience: two unique works of fiction on the journey itself and one nonfiction title about Dreamers. They should get your clubs talking about what it means to be an immigrant.

Signs Preceding the End of the World by Yuri Herrera, translated by Lisa Dillman – Yuri Herrera is one of Mexico’s most exciting contemporary novelists. In this tiny but powerful quest novel, a young Mexican woman crosses the border to deliver a letter to her brother at her mother’s request. It’s a border story unlike any I’ve read before; the maybe-magical realism, the play on language, the haunting dream-like quality… so good.

  • Book Club Bonus: First, and perhaps especially if you do speak Spanish: do yourself a favor and read the translator’s note first. It’s at the end of the book but I don’t feel like it spoils anything. When you’re done, discuss the translator’s word choice as discussed in that note; the author’s choice not to name specific destinations; how the story draws from other quest and hero journeys.

In the Distance by Hernan Diaz – When I tell you I’m recommending a powerful immigrant narrative, odds are you aren’t expecting a western about a Swedish dude. That’s precisely what this Pulitzer finalist novel is though! Håkan is just a boy when he’s sent to America by his father and is separated from his brother when he gets on the wrong boat. He embarks on an eastbound cross-country journey on foot to find him while everyone else is migrating west in the American 1800s.

  • Book Club Bonus: What Hernan Diaz does with the immigrant story by making the protagonist a very safe white male is just brilliant. Brilliant, I say! Discuss the language device (yeah, it’s weird, but also kind of genius), the cast of characters he encounters; how Håkan’s physical size as he grows into manhood is a metaphor for his legend; the physical and less tangible characteristics that we use to “other” people.

Just Like Us: The True Story of Four Mexican Girls Coming of Age in America by Helen Thorpe – I was in my early twenties when this work of nonfiction made me think a little harder about the ways in which the immigrant experience varies from person to person, and that’s coming from the child of immigrants. We meet four Mexican teens, all of whom have grown up in Colorado and two of whom are undocumented. This is an intimate view into their lives and specifically the plight of the Dreamer: poverty, citizenship status, and increasing fear of immigrants are just some of the threats they face in pursuit of an education, and their friendship often suffers in turn.

  • Book Club Bonus: This book was published in 2009, but I don’t have to tell you just how many of the topics discussed could easily have been plucked from 2019. Compare and contrast each young woman’s situation and the ways in which the system helped or failed them. Do some extra reading on the DREAM Act and DACA while you’re at it.

Suggestion Section

How a tiny Edinburgh book club grew to reach over 20 countries worldwide.

I know many of you won’t need help here, but for those that do: how to start a boozy book club.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

More Resources:
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks – 8/22

Hola Audiophiles!

Ay ay ay, I think I jinxed myself. I was on an audiobook roll and then… splat. More packing, more cleaning, more dinners, more stops on my farewell tour as I prepare to finish this move to Portland (8 days!). It’s cool though- we’re going to chat about new releases, a backlist bump, and some other goings on in the world of audiobooks.

Ready? Let’s audio.


Latest Listens

I thought I’d do a backlist rec for Zadie Smith’s White Teeth, narrated by a full cast, just because I’ve been talking about this book a lot at the bookstore (yes, I am still working 2 jobs). Archie Jones and Samad Iqbal are two wartime friends (WWII) looking back on their friendship while navigating life in a London they’ve watched transform. It explores friendship, culture, race, class, colorism, and the aftermath of war. It’s also absolutely hilarious.

One thing: the latest version of the audiobook has a completely different narrator than the one I listened to! While I enjoyed Jenny Sterlin’s version plenty, I love a full cast recording and liked what I heard in the sample online. I think you’re in for a treat.

New Releases – August 27 (publisher’s descriptions in quotations).

My Life as Ice Cream Sandwich by Ibi ZoboiMy Life as an Ice Cream Sandwich by Ibi Zoboi, narrated by the author – The author of American Street and Pride makes her middle grade debut with this title about twelve-year-old Ebony-Grace Norfleet. She was raised in Alabama by her grandfather, a NASA engineer who taught her to love space and science fiction. When extenuating circumstances force Ebony-Grace to go stay with her father in Harlem, she finds the place daunting. “But soon 126th Street begins to reveal that it has more in common with her beloved sci-fi adventures than she ever thought possible, and by summer’s end, Ebony-Grace discovers that Harlem has a place for a girl whose eyes are always on the stars.”

  • Narrator Noe: Ibi Zoboi put on the audiobook narrator hat for this one. I can’t wait to hear her perform it!

The Beekeeper of Aleppo by Christy Lefteri, narrated by Art Malik – When war erupts in Aleppo and destroys everything they love, a beekeeper and his artist wife must flee their beloved, broken Syria. The journey through Greece and Turkey is made all the more difficult by the wife’s recent onset of blindness; the pair must make it to Britain for even a chance at survival, but even that future is beset with uncertainty.

  • Narrator Note: There’s an actor by the named Art Malik who’s starred in all sorts of stuff from Dr. Who and Sherlock to cinematic jewel True Lies. I’m pretty sure he is the same Art Malik who narrates this novel; that voice is so dreamy!

The Girl Who Lived Twice: A Lisbeth Salander Novel by David Lagercrantz, narrated by: Simon Vance – You know the deal here, right? This is the sixth book in the Stieg Larsson Millenium series, which David Lagercrantz took over after Larsson’s death in 2004. Lisbeth Salander, the famed girl with the dragon tattoo, has disappeared, gone off the grid! What no one knows is that she’s finally done it: she has her enemy twin sister Camila in her sights.

  • Narrator Note: If you’ve been keeping up with Lisbeth Salander, you’ll recognize Simon Vance from the rest of the audiobooks in the series. He’s also narrated Interview with the Vampire, Dune, Dracula, and Naomi Novik’s Temeraire series, and that’s not even the tip of the narration iceberg.

From the Internets

A piece in the Wall Street Journal on audiobooking and drowning out the “wah wah wah audiobooks don’t count!” crowd.

Taron Egerton, star of Rocketman, will narrate the audiobook of Elton John’s memoir. 

Libro.fm has rounded up this fall’s most anticipated audiobooks. This list is hurting my brain, it’s so good. Leigh Bardugo, Erin Morgenstern, Jaqueline Woodson, Tomi Adeyemi, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and more… excited yet?

Over at the Riot

Button Poetry audiobooks are now available! Slam poetry + audiobooks are just a natural fit.


That’s all I got today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter, peep the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 8/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.

It’s happening! I’ve officially kicked off my See Ya Later, San Diego tour with numerous farewell activities planned throughout the week while also trying to work, and ya know, sleep? Before I start those “if I go to bed by X time, I can sleep Y hours and not die” calculations, let’s talk a little about book clubs + SFF.

To the club!!


The Hugo Awards were announced this week! Reading about the awards reminded me of our last Question for the Club; so many of you told me that science fiction and fantasy are the genres your book clubs are most reluctant to read. Let’s change that! This week I’m recommending some SFF reads great for sparking book club conversation.

The Raven TowerThe Raven Tower by Ann Leckie – In this latest from award-winning author Ann Leckie, the god known as the Raven protects the kingdom of Iraden. He speaks through a living bird called the Instrument and rules via a human agent known as the Raven’s Lease. The Lease is a powerful position, but comes at a price: when the Raven’s Instrument dies, so must the Lease. Bye bye birdie, bye bye you!

Everything is fine and dandy until someone finds a way to usurp the Lease’s throne, a feat that isn’t supposed to be possible. Feuding gods, a fight to reclaim the throne, blood sacrifice, invading forces… it’s so good.

  • Book Club Bonus: I love how this book plays with the idea of fate and destiny; talk about that and whether the characters acted from a place of autonomy. Discuss the role of faith and sacrifice and how the plot mirrors that of other well known stories and myths. How did the identity of the narrator work (or not) for you?

The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell – I listened to this audiobook while living in a gorgeous home in the English midlands that sat on 18+ acres of woods. I’d audio while I walked through them every morning, which started off a peaceful experience…

In the year 2019 (gulp!), Jesuit priest and linguist Emilio Sandoz leads a team of missionaries on a mission to make first contact with intelligent alien life on the planet Rakhat. In the year 2059, we witness the debriefing and interrogation of the ill-fated mission’s lone survivor, a broken human in the midst of physical and emotional recovery. Details of what occurred are revealed slowly in these alternating timelines. The ending made me stop dead in my tracks in those woods and say, “Oh… hell.”

  • Book Club Bonus: Talk about the role of love and faith/religion in the story; do you see it as a parable for man’s search for God and/or meaning? Should we be looking for extraterrestrial life? Unpack the reasons for the survivor’s reticence to tell their story. Then there’s the missionary angle: discuss the parallels to this mission with missionary expeditions to other countries with disastrous implications. I COULD GO ON. This book, y’all.

Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi – This West African fantasy (and one of this year’s Hugo winners) is set in Orisha, where the maji were massacred by a ruthless king who wants all magic erased from the world. Zélie is a diviner with the power to restore magic to Orisha, but she must first outrun the prince who’s after her head. With her brother and a defiant princess by her side, Zélie sets out to defeat the oppressive monarchy and harness her newly awoken magical abilities for good.

  • Book Club Bonus: If you don’t immediately pick up on the ways in which this book harkens to current events, Tomi Adeyemi makes sure to smack you in the face with that connection in her author’s note at the end. Discuss how the book addresses issues like racism, colorism, police brutality, and social justice within the framework of this lush and magical setting.

Suggestion Section

How the Great Big Romance Read, book club brainchild of The Ripped Bodice, has driven the @$&# out of Avon’s sales.

How Long Beach, California became a “book club superhub.” The LBC has 130+ registered clubs!

Current book club picks for BuzzFeed, PBS, plus a roundup of celebrity book clubs.

Barnes & Noble’s current national book club pick is Inland by Téa Obreht. Discussions are scheduled for September 10th in stores.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

More Resources:
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page

Categories
Audiobooks

An Emma Retelling, RadicaI Candor, and Airhorns for Bahni Turpin

Hola Audiophiles! Happy Thursday and welcome to another round of audio love with yours truly! I’m still living out of a suitcase with one foot in my hometown and one in my new home, but at least the bulk of the packing and shlepping is done so I finally have time to read. Yippee!

This week I’ve got a few new releases, a recent listen, and a batch of mostly good news. There is indeed more evidence that AI is coming for us all, so let’s all just hold hands and hope the bots are nice to us.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – August 21 (publisher’s descriptions in quotes)

Color Me In by Natasha Diaz, narrated by Bahni Turpin – White-passing Nevaeh Levitz has grown up comfortably in a posh New York City neighborhood, the daughter of a Black mom and Jewish dad. When her parents split up, Nevaeh goes to live with her mom in Harlem and instantly clashes with that side of the family. She’s forced to confront her privilege and her roots as she straddles both sides of her identity, all while falling in love for the first time. Sounds like a great coming-of-age story to round out your summer reading.

  • Narrator Note: *airhorns* Bahni Tuuuuuurrrrrppiiiiinnnnnn. That is all.

polite societyPolite Society by Mahesh Rao, narrated by Deepti Gupta – Hey! It’s a modern retelling of Jane Austen’s Emma set in Delhi! Ania Khuran is super pretty, super smart, and super bored, getting her kicks by playing matchmaker for her family and friends. Then her aunt’s handsome nephew arrives from America and brings with him a shift in the tides of Delhi’s polite society. Are her sensibilities any match for “old money and new; relentless currents of gossip; and an unforgettable cast of socialites, journalists, gurus, and heirs?” We shall see.

  • Narrator Note: Deepto Gupta most recently narrated A Place for Us by Fatima Farheen Mirza, the first title from by Sarah Jessica Parker’s imprint, SJP for Hogarth.

Going Dutch by James Gregor, narrated by Michael David Axtell – Richard is a broke, lonely, gay male grad student in what is at first a transactional relationship with Anne, a brilliant female classmate offering to “help” him write his papers in exchange for company. She knows he’s gay, and he knows that she knows he’s gay, but they proceed and find a friendly companionship. When a “one-swipe-stand” turns into something more serious for Richard, he “finds himself on a romantic and existential collision course – one that brings about surprising revelations.”

  • Narrator Note: Michael David Axtel’s voice reminds me a lot of Michael Urie, the narrator of Steven Rowley’s The Editor. It’s that classic, crisp style that could easily be the friendly voice behind a company recording, but not in a fake way.

Latest Listens

I think I’ve told you before that self-help and business books don’t generally speak to me. Then along came Radical Candor: Be A Kick-Ass Boss Without Losing Your Humanity by Kim Scott. I am changed! The concepts in it are simple and yet seem antithetical to the habits so many of us learn in Corporate America. Get personal at work! Do away with the word “superior!” Reward folks on a gradual promotion trajectory as much as those on a steep one – you need both kinds of people! For anyone who’s ever had (or perhaps even been) a boss that didn’t put their humanity first, this book may just revolutionize your views on effective leadership.

Listens on Deck

Though I am still living out of a suitcase and splitting my time between San Diego and Portland, I am finally finding time to audio again. I’m not sure what I want to take on next, though the new Téa Obrecht (Inland) and Ibi Zoboi (My Life As An Ice Cream Sandwich) are calling my name. It’s a toss up between one of those and Speaking of Summer.

From the Internets

It’s official: all of the Baby-Sitters Club books are live on Audible. Narrated by Elle Fanning!

A Chinese search engine is creating AI to narrate audiobooks in popular authors’ voices. Oh sure, fine. This is all fine.

New Directions Publishing has entered the audiobook market.

Have you ever thought about narrating an audiobook? Here’s a piece on finding voiceover work in audiobooks and other markets.

Over at the Riot

Jenn was on vacation hugging trees this week, so I popped in as a guest on this week’s Get Booked! One reader asked for easy-to-follow audiobooks on account of a recent concussion (yikes! feel better!). The show title is Suck My Galoshes, which is a clue as to my pick if you’re in the know. Bahaahaha.


That’s all I got today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter, peep the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 8/14

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. This week, your girl is back in San Diego wrapping up loose ends. I’m counting down the days until I’m no longer living out of a suitcase while also trying not to cry when I thinks of moving away from her nephew. So many feelings!

On a less weepy note, August is Women in Translation month! I’ll be talking about some awesome translated titles written by women for you to add to your club rotations. Tirzah Price and I will also be recommending works by women in translation on the next episode of the Read Harder podcast (airing Tuesday, August 20). If you’re participating in Read Harder or just want to read more translated work, we’re making it super easy for ya.

Ready? To the club!!


So why do we celebrate women in translation this month? First: because they’re awesome. Second: because there is still a huge disparity in publishing between the number of translated works by men and those by women. Shocking! As Rioter Rebecca Hussey states in her recent post on WIT month, “Translated books by men get more review coverage and critical attention as well. We need more books by women in translation and we need to give these books more attention!”

Here are some suggestions to get you started.

Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel, translated from Spanish by Carol and Thomas Christensen – I’m going to recommend this book until someone grabs me by the shoulders and tells me to stop. Tita is the youngest daughter in the De la Garza family; that means she’s bound by Mexican tradition to remain unwed and to care for her tyrannical mother Mama Elena until she croaks. As luck would have it, Tita falls helplessly in love with Pedro and wants to marry him. Mama Elena is like, “Nah, girl,” so Pedro marries Tita’s sister Rosaura instead to at least be close to Tita. Excellent plan with zero flaws! This heartbreaking love story and work of magical realism (Tita cooks her feelings into her food!) is a Mexican classic set during the revolutionary war.

  • Book Club Bonus: The format of this book is my fave: it’s split into twelve chapters, each of which starts with a recipe that is essential to the plot of said chapter. Make a Mexican feast with these recipes (quail in rose petal sauce!!!!) for book club and unpack how tradition can both be a beautiful set of customs and a cruel trap & killjoy.

Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk, translated from Polish by Antonia Lloyd-Jones – I’m about halfway through this 2019 Booker prize nominee from the author of Flights. It’s a literary murder mystery about Janina, a reclusive woman in a remote Polish village who minds the homes of bougie, well-to-do Warsaw residents when she’s not translating poetry or studying astrology. When a neighbor’s suspicious death leads to the discovery of several other bodies, Janina finds herself the object of everyone’s suspicion.

  • Book Club Bonus: From what I’ve gathered so far, this book is less concerned with the who and more with the why: it’s not as much about finding out who committed the crime as it is a study of human behavior, of empathy in particular. Dig into these ideas in book club: is the why just as important as the who, perhaps even moreso? Why we should care about other people?

The First Prehistoric Serial Killer and Other Stories by Teresa Solana cover imageThe First Prehistoric Serial Killer and Other Stories by Teresa Solano, translated from Spanish by Peter Bush – This is such a slept-on little book! It’s a darkly humorous collection of short stories, the second half of which are linked and explore the city of Barcelona’s darker underbelly. The stories are all kinda weird and super funny, and yes: the titular tale does indeed involve a caveman trying to solve a murder. The twist made me go, “HA!” out loud at the register of the bookstore.

  • Book Club Bonus: One of the things I enjoyed most about this quirky little book is how it depicts the darker side of Barcelona. I won’t say too much to avoid giving away bits from the linked story portion, but discuss how the stories connect and overlap and what lessons there are to be learned from the narrative on the whole.

Another resource for WIT Month:

15 Discounts and Giveaways for Women in Translation Month

Suggestion Section

NPR recently published a cool piece about silent book clubs. All the bookish communion, none of the pressure to be “on.”

A piece about book clubs where discussion is never about the book; it be like that sometimes! It turns out that’s ok.

If you’re in the UK and looking for a local book club, Bustle is here for you.

Oh boy, this Dear Abby letter made me chuckle: a concerned book club member wants to know how to handle the know-it-all smarty pants in the group (see the second question). Raise your hand if you’ve been there!


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

More Resources:
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page