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Audiobooks

Audiobooks 05/20/21

Hola Audiophiles! Happy Thursday from Migraine Central, where all the sounds are loud, the lights are bright, and a dull ache lives in the space behind your eyeballs even after the worst of the pain has faded. At least the aura and fuzzy floaters in my vision went away in time for me to put the final touches on this week’s newsletter. I thought I was about to have to send you all an audio file with some incoherent ramblings of what I thought the premises of the new releases’ plots were from memory. Phew!

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – Week of May 18

publisher descriptions in quotes

audiobook cover image of Tokyo Ever After by Emiko Jean

Tokyo Ever After by Emiko Jean

Izumi Tanaka, a young Japanese American woman in a mostly white northern California town, was raised by a single mom and no idea as to her father’s identity. Then she discovers that pops is none other than the Crown Prince of Japan, making Izzy is a literal princess. She travels to Japan to meet the dad she never known and get a taste of all that glitters, but the glamorous life may not be all it’s cracked up to be. This is pitched as The Princess Diaries meets Crazy Rich Asians, and that sounds like a super fun time. (young adult)

Read by Ali Ahn (To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before by Jenny Han, Claudia and Mean Janine (The Baby-Sitters Club, Book 7) by Ann M. Martin, plus all the recent BSC recordings of books told from Claudia’s perspective)

audiobook cover image of Ophie’s Ghosts by Justina Ireland

Ophie’s Ghosts by Justina Ireland

Ophelia “Ophie” Harrison learned she could see ghosts on the night her Georgia home and her father were taken from her in an act of cruelty. She and her mother have started a new life in Pittsburgh where Ophie’s mother secured her a job as a maid at Daffodil Manor, the same manor house where she works for the wealthy Caruthers family already. The manor is haunted by memories, prejudices, and wrongdoings from days gone by, not to mention the ghosts that only Ophie can see. She befriends a ghost whose life was ended suddenly and unjustly, hoping she might be able to help… but that haunted old house may hold more secrets that she realizes. (middle grade)

Read by the g.o.a.t. Bahni Turpin (The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead, They Both Die at the End by Adam Silvera)

audiobooks cover image of Rosaline Palmer Takes the Cake by Alexis Hall

Rosaline Palmer Takes the Cake by Alexis Hall

How many ways do I already love this book!? One: It’s by Alexis Hall, whose Boyfriend Material was one of my favorite audiobooks of 2020. Two: It’s a rom-com set at a baking show. Three: it’s the first in a series called Winner Bakes All. Give it to me! The titular Rosaline is a single mom who dropped out of college to raise her daughter and is now teetering on the edge of financial ruin. But where there’s a whisk there’s a way (hehe), and Rosaline gets a shot at turning things around when she lands a spot on a beloved baking show. That prize money would be life-changing, but there’s more than just the usual baking challenges to contend with; fellow contestant and shy electrician Harry Dobson makes Rosaline question everything she believes about herself, her family, and what she wants out of life. (romance, romantic-comedy)

Read by Fiona Hardingham (An Ember in the Ashes by Sabaa Tahir, We Hunt the Flame by Hafsah Faizal)

audiobook cover image of Unsettled Ground by Claire Fuller

Unsettled Ground by Claire Fuller

Fifty-one-year-old twins Jeanie and Julius live in isolation with their mother, Dot, in a cottage in the English countryside, secluded and sheltered from the modernizing world all their lives. When Dot dies and their landlord takes back the cottage, the twins are hit with a harsh dose of reality as they try to navigate life on their own. Julius is torn between his loyalty to Jeanie and a desire for independence while Jeanie struggles to find a job and and home for the two of them. “And just when it seems there might be a way forward, a series of startling secrets from their mother’s past come to the surface, forcing the twins to question who they are, and everything they know of their family’s history.” (fiction)

Read by Kim Bretton – I’m unfamiliar with Bretton’s work but I was sucked in by the sample enough to include it here in spite of being an Audible exclusive. I love her cadence, the slight rasp to the lower registers of her voice, and her lovely accent, of course.

Latest Listens

audiobook cover image of The Forest of Stolen Girls by June Her

The Forest of Stolen Girls by June Her

This historical YA mystery had me hooked from start to finish! In mid-1400s Joseon, Korea, Min Hwani’s family has never been the same since she and her sister went missing as children and were later found unconscious in a nearby forest next to a grizzly murder scene.Years later, their detective father has learned that 13 other girls have disappeared in that same forest—and now it’s him that’s gone missing. He traveled to their hometown on the South Korean island of Jeju to investigate and hasn’t been seen since. Min Hwani takes it upon herself to find her father and get to the bottom of these awful and mysterious disappearances, but the secrets she unburies in the process suggest the answer could lie within her own buried memories.

Some of you may just be cooler than I am, but this book kept me guessing the entire time. It casts suspicion on just about every character convincingly with lots of deftly placed red herrings, but also in examining how some crimes aren’t just the result of one act of evil. The heart of the crime explores women’s lack of bodily agency at the time and the danger that results when obsessive protection and misogyny combine. Add this to your TBL, journey to Jeju, and enjoy this suspenseful, atmospheric mystery.

Funny story: I was debating whether to read this book or If I Had Your Face by Frances Cha next, and it turns out they’re both read by Sue Jean Kim! I absolutely loved this performance. Sue Jean Kim manages the suspense and tension really wonderfully and keeps each of the characters really distinct. I can’t wait to spend time with her work again soon.

From the Internets

at Audible: Stacey Abrams Asked, What Happens ‘While Justice Sleeps’? And a Legal Thriller Was Born

at AudioFile: Chinese Folklore and Existential Questions and Celebrating the Audiobooks of the Women’s Prize for Fiction

at Libro.fm: 5 Reasons to Listen to Mysteries & Thrillers on Audio

Over at the Riot

5 Fantastic YA Audiobooks Narrated by Frankie Corzo <<< your girl came out of writing retirement to rave about one of her favorite narrators!

6 Audiobooks by Palestinian Women Writers


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

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In The Club

In the Club 05/19/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. I’ve been enjoying the hell out of the warmer weather in Portland with lots of outdoor dining and excursions into nature. Just breathing the woodsy air has put me in a good mood! I hope you’re all finding ways to decompress and take deep, cleansing breaths.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

Warmer weather can sometimes make me lazy to cook hot meals that require a lot of stove time, so that’s when I lean hard into mariscos. “Mariscos” is technically just the Spanish word for seafood, but it has a very particular connotation for me as a Mexican American that grew up by the border. Baja California (as in the Mexican state) seafood is its own special mouth-watering cuisine. The battered perfection of an Ensenada-style fish taco, the spicy kick of an aguachile, the tomato-ey zing of a coctel de camaron… want! This weekend I think I’ll start with some green ceviche recipe from a Mexican-American chef I love, Marcella Valladolid. Enjoy with a michelada in the sunshine as you talk books!

It’s (Been) Time to Talk About Palestine

I, like many, grew up with a vague and frankly inaccurate view of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. I don’t feel particularly equipped to talk about it now, but I also know silence isn’t the move. If you too are feeling like you know woefully little about the history of Palestine and the Israel occupation, the Zionist movement, and the damaging narrative pervasive in historical coverage of the region, here are three reads I came across in looking for ways to educate myself and show up.

If you have more and/or better suggestions, please fee free to share! I’d love to amplify those voices.

cover image of Sacred Landscape: The Buried History of the Holy Land Since 1948 by Meron Benvenisti

Sacred Landscape: The Buried History of the Holy Land Since 1948 by Meron Benvenisti

I found this book in a recent roundup by Refinery 29 on books to better understand the Israel-Palestine conflict (is “conflict” even the right word here? My words feel so inadequate). As a boy, author Meron Benvenisti accompanied his father, a distinguished geographer, on a trip through the Holy Land. The purpose of that trip? His father was charting a Hebrew map that would rename Palestinian sites and villages with names that linked these places–ones that, ya know, already existed–to Israel’s ancestral homeland. If you’re having a “I am criminally misinformed” moment right about now, you’re not alone.

Book Club Bonus: The Refinery 29 blurb for this book calls this “the perfect book for anyone who was ever under the misapprehension that Zionists came to Palestinian land and found nothing, establishing a country whose past was conveniently free of the people who had lived there for centuries. Benvenisti chillingly demonstrates how easy it is to erase generations of history when trying to create a new one, and makes clear the danger of looking at Eretz Israel/Palestine from a binary perspective.” Oof. Sound familiar? Hint: colonialism.

Cover of The Book of Disappearance by Ibtisam Azem

The Book of Disappearance by Ibtisam Azem, translated by Sinan Antoon

This book was part of a Palestinian SFF spotlight in Friday’s edition of our Swords and Spaceships newsletter. Written by a Palestinian journalist and novelist from the northern Jaffa town of Taybeh, this unsettling book imagines a world in which all of the Palestinians disappear all at once from the land of historic Palestine. I added this one to my TBR so fast; it feels insulting to call it “of the moment” right now when it’s been “of the moment” for Palestinians for literal decades. Still, this feels like an important time to read it.

Book Club Bonus: Take some time to examine the themes of loneliness, memory, loss, and definitely erasure. Discuss those factors as you try to better understand the weight of the humanitarian crisis in Palestine.

A Child in Palestine: The Cartoons of Naji al-Ali by Naji al-Ali

Naji al-Ali, who grew up in the Palestinian refugee camp of Ain al-Hilweh, was a talented artist whose thirty-year career saw his cartoons published daily in newspapers from Cairo to Paris. “Resolutely independent and unaligned to any political party, Naji al-Ali strove to speak to and for the ordinary Arab people; the pointed satire of his stark, symbolic cartoons brought him widespread renown. Through his most celebrated creation, the witness-child Handala, al-Ali criticized the brutality of Israeli occupation, the venality and corruption of the regimes in the region, and the suffering of the Palestinian people, earning him many powerful enemies and the soubriquet “the Palestinian Malcolm X.”

Book Club Bonus: I picked this collection because of the accessibility of the format. It allows readers both a bite-sized approach to understanding the Israeli occupation with the individual cartoons and a connected thread with the character of Handala present throughout. Discuss how viewing the conflict from the eyes of the child changes your own perspective.

Suggestion Section

LeVar Burton has launched an online book club!

But that’s not all: Roxane Gay And Jesmyn Ward are launching book clubs just in time for summer, too.

Book Rot has book club questions and discussion guides for Sense and Sensibility and On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous


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 and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. 
Vanessa 

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks 05/14/21

Hola Audiophiles! I’m back with what feels like an explosion of book releases this week! I included a few more than I usually do because I’m just so excited about them all, and because I’ve read several of them and loved them. Let’s get right to it!

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – Week of May 11

publisher descriptions in quotes

audiobook cover image of Illusionary by Zoraida Cordova

Illusionary by Zoraida Córdova

Finally! The sequel to Incendiary and conclusion to the Hollow Crown duology is here! I’m about to give a spoiler for Incendiary, so stop reading now if you intend on reading it. Go! Be Gone!

For those of you who are still reading, Renata and Prince Castian are on their way back to Puerto Leones to bring justice to the kingdom. Ren is reeling from betrayal by the Whispers and unsure if she can trust Castian and his bombshell revelations (oof! that ending!), but she and ol’ princey prince embark on a dangerous mission to find the fabled Knife of Memory, kill b*tch a** King Fernando, and bring peace to the nation. (YA fantasy)

Read by Frankie Corzo (Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Incendiary)

audiobook cover image of A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark

A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark

This is the third book and first full-length novel in The Dead Djinn universe, all set in an alternative, steampunk version of Cairo in 1912 (see my latest listen for more!). Special Investigator Fatma el Sha-arawi has been tasked with investigating the murder of a brotherhood dedicated to a Sudanese mystic. The murderer claims to be that very mystic, al-Jahiz, a man who disappeared decades ago after tearing a hole in the veil between the magical and mundane worlds. Together with her partner and a friend from Dead Djinn in Cairo (ehhem love interest ehhem), Fatma sets out to solve the case and uncover the truth about this self-professed prophet.

Read by Suehyla El-Attar (A Dead Djinn in Cairo)

audiobook cover image of Black Water Sister by Zen Cho

Black Water Sister by Zen Cho

Jessamyn Teoh has just moved back to Malaysia with her parents after not having been back since she was a toddler. She’s closeted, broke, has no job, no prospects, so this homecoming isn’t exactly triumphant. When she begins to hear a voice in her head, she at first chalks it up to stress. Turns out that voice is actually her dead grandmother, who in her life was an avatar to a deity called the Black Water Sister. Ah Ma wants revenge on a business magnate who insulted the Black Water Sister, and she’s going to use Jessamyn to get that vengeance—even if it’s against her will.

Read by Catherine Ho (Natalie Tan’s Book of Luck and Fortune by Roselle Lim, How Much of These Hills is Gold by C Pam Zhang)

audiobook cover image of We Are Satellites by Sarah Pinsker

We Are Satellites by Sarah Pinkser

A brain implant called a Pilot is the hot new thing taking the country by storm, going from a curiosity to a necessity to facilitate multitasking and keep up with school or work. Soon the implications are clear: you either get a Pilot or get left behind. And why wouldn’t you get one? They’re subsidized and they’re everywhere! “Those are the questions Sophie and her anti-Pilot movement rise up to answer, even if it puts them up against the Pilot’s powerful manufacturer and pits Sophie against the people she loves most.”

Read by Bernadette Dunne (We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson)

audiobook cover image of Son of the Storm by Suyi Davies Okungbowa

Son of the Storm by Suyi Davies Okungbowa

In the ancient city of Bassa, Danso is a scholar on the brink of achieving a greatness that he did not ask for and doesn’t want. What he does want is to explore what lies beyond the city walls, a place the Bassai elite claim contains nothing of interest. “But when Danso stumbles across a warrior wielding magic that shouldn’t exist, he’s put on a collision course with Bassa’s darkest secrets. Drawn into the city’s hidden history, he sets out on a journey beyond its borders.”

Read by Korey Jackson (Not So Pure and Simple by Lamar Giles, Let Me Hear a Rhyme by Tiffany D. Jackson)

audiobook cover image of While Justice Sleeps by Stacey Abrams

While Justice Sleeps by Stacey Abrams

When she isn’t out there fighting for democracy, Stacey Abrams is an author! She’s published several romance novels under the name name of Selena Montgomery as well as a book on leadership and activism (Lead from the Outside). Her first legal/political thriller, set within the halls of the US Supreme Court, is about young law clerk Avery Keene. Her life is completely upended when she learns that one of the Supreme Court justices has slipped into a coma and left instructions for her to serve as his legal guardian and power of attorney. As she’s plunged into a role she never saw coming, she discovers that justice may have secretly been researching a controversial case—and “suspected a dangerously related conspiracy that infiltrates the highest power corridors of Washington.”

Read by Adenrele Ojo (Call Your Daughter Home by by Deb Spera, Conjure Women by Afia Atakora)

Latest Listen

audiobook cover image of A Dead Djinn in Cairo by P. Djèlí Clark

A Dead Djinn in Cairo by P. Djèlí Clark

Like I mentioned above, The Dead Djinn universe is set in an alternative, steampunk version of Cairo in 1912. Decades earlier, it’s said that Sudanese mystic and inventor al-Jahiz shook the world when he literally drilled a hole in the veil between the magical world and the non-magical world using a mix of magic and machinery, then disappeared. Some say he still roams both the magical and non-magical realms, wreaking havoc and chaos in his wake.

Because the world is now magical, beings like Angels and Djinn exist alongside humans. Special Investigator Fatma el-Sha-arawi, the youngest woman working for the Ministry or Alchemy, Enchantments, and Supernatural Entities, is investigating what appears at first to be the suicide of a Djinn. The case sends her on a ride through the city’s underbelly that brings her into contact with nefarious ghouls, assassins, clockwork angels, and a sinister plot that could alter the course of time.

This is a shorty at just over an hour, but I was sucked into the story from the very beginning thanks to Suehyla El-Attar’s stellar performance. She really embodies the quirk and swagger of our investigator and gives a distinct voice to the myriad characters—both human and fantastical—packed into this fast-paced novella. El-Attar also leans into the book’s examination of gender, class, and colonialism with her delivery. Readers (listeners) won’t be able to look away from what this tiny wonder of a book has to say.

Come for the steampunk details and world building, stay for the colonialism side eye and feminist themes. This was so, so much fun.

From the Internet

at Audible: Voices of Audible: Celebrating AAPI Stories and Lives

at Audiofile: The Power of Stories of New Americans for Young Listeners

at Libro.fm: Top 20 Most Recommended Audiobooks of All Time

Over at the Riot

6 More of the Best Audiobooks for Mental Health Awareness Month


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club 05/13/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. Hola, book club fam! How’s everyone doing? I’m feeling a strange mix of look-out-world-here-I-come social and imma-need-a-few-days-alone-to-recharge exhausted this week, but it’s a pretty good feeling either way. It’s nice to get to go back to the office with the Portland Rioters and socialize a little more with the safety afforded to us by caution and vaccines. I hope you’re finding some kind of new normal to feel comfortable in, too—maybe even a return to more in-person book club meetings!

Speaking of which: to the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

Another week, another TikTok recipe. What ca I say, the Tok hasn’t let me down yet! This week I’m urging you to make these ooey gooey flourless peanut butter banana brownies. I made them this weekend and I almost ate the whole pan. Share them with your book club and avoid the stomach ache I gave myself, even if it was totally worth it.

Give Book Club a Sporting Chance

Real talk: the reason I picked books about/involving sports for this week’s newsletter is that I finally googled “what is Ted Lasso about” after weeks spent in the dark. I had no idea the show was about sports! So I made sports the theme. Deep, I know. Still, these books are all worth talking about!

beartown

Beartown by Fredrik Backman

I saw this book being compared to Friday Night Lights a lot when it came out. It’s about the small and struggling community of Beartown where the junior ice hockey team is about to compete in the national semi-finals. They actually have a shot at winning, which also means they’re carrying all of Beartown’s hopes and dreams on their shoulders. The pressure of representing an entire town is heavy, and those tensions lead to a violent act that leaves a young girl traumatized. The accusations that follow leave the town in turmoil.

Book Club Bonus: Discuss the pressure placed on young athletes and how it contributes to the larger culture around youth athletics, one that creates unrealistic expectations at best and is devastatingly toxic at worst. The book also foregoes the use of first names for a lot of its characters; discuss the significance of this choice.

cover image of Firekeeper's Daughter by Angeline Boulley

Firekeeper’s Daughter by Angeline Boulley

Eighteen-year-old Daunis Fontaine is a biracial, unenrolled tribal member with dreams of studying medicine, dreams that are put on hold when she defers enrollment to care for her mother and grandmother. Then she witnesses the murder of her best friend, a killing tied to drug abuse that’s then followed by a strings of other deaths linked to a new lethal cocktail of meth. Daunis gets pulled into an undercover investigation into the source of the meth, one that brings her into close contact with a new boy in town who might be hiding something. She also pursues her own secret investigation, using her knowledge of chemistry and Ojibwe traditional medicine to uncover buried secrets in her community. (This book involves a hockey team, in case you wondering where the sports part comes in).

Book Club Bonus: Daunis has to decide far she’s willing to go to protect her community, which often means working in direct opposition to law enforcement. Discuss the community’s distrust of non-native legal intervention and treatment of indigenous peoples as a whole (You have twelve hours to dedicate to book club, right?)

cover image of Proud: My Fight for an Unlikely American Dream by Ibtihaj Muhammad

Proud: My Fight for an Unlikely American Dream by Ibtihaj Muhammad

Ibtihaj Muhammad grew up in New Jersey as the only African American Muslim at school, so she was used to having to forge her own path. Then she discovered fencing, a sport traditionally reserved for the wealthy and one that didn’t exactly welcome with her with open arms. She didn’t let the hate stop her, though. She went only to defy expectations in becoming the only woman of color and the only religious minority on Team USA’s saber fencing squad. This story of her unlikely and odds-defying path towards Olympic glory in inspiring as it is thought-provoking.

Book Club Bonus: Muhammad is known for being the first woman to wear a hijab while competing for the United States in the Olympics. That was all in the last decade, and the Olympics have been around for (checks notes) A LOT LONGER THAN THAT. Discuss the ever-present challenges for women of color in athletics.

Suggestion Section

May 2021 Celeb Book Club Picks From Reese Witherspoon, Camilla Parker-Bowles, Carl Radke & More

Even Chanel has a book club.

Spread the word! Applications are still open for the LitUp Writer’s Fellowship. Reese’s Book Club. along with We Need Diverse Books, have created this fellowship to aid diverse emerging women writers. Five winners will each be offered an all-expenses-paid writer’s retreat, a three-month mentorship with a published author, and marketing support from Reese’s 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 and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. 
Vanessa 

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks 05/06/21

Hola Audiophiles! I finally got to go back to working in an office with the newly vaccinated Portland crew this week and wow, what a difference it makes to have some company! All praise and honor to science for bringing me back into close contact with these awesome people. It’s so soul-soothing to laugh with and bounce my weirdness off of them instead of sitting around talking to myself all day. Hope your May is off to a good start too!

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – Week of May 4, 2021

publisher descriptions in quotes

audiobook cover image of Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala

Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala

I have been waiting for this book for months! It’s the first in a new foodie cozy series and it’s by an author of color. To quote the great philosopher Britney Jean Spears, “gimme gimme more, gimme more, gimme gimme more.”

Lila moves back home after an awful breakup who’s then tasked with saving her Tita Rosie’s failing restaurant, and then has to deal with her matchmaking aunties who are equal parts loving an judgy AF. Things get complicated when a notoriously nasty food critic kicks the bucket moments after a confrontation with Lila, especially since said food critic is kind of her ex.

Read by Danice Cabanela, an actress and produce known for Forget Me Nots (2019) and The Debt Collector (2018). Really digging that sample!

audiobook cover image of Sorrowland by Rivers Solomon

Sorrowland by Rivers Solomon

I forgot Rivers Solomon had another book out this year! Vern is seven months pregnant and desperate to escape the religious compound where she was raised. She flees for the woods and gives birth to twins, planning to raise them far away from the clutches of the outside world. But when she’s hunted by the community that refuses to let her go, she unleashes a kind of brutality that she did not know she was capable of, that she shouldn’t be capable of. “To understand her metamorphosis and to protect her small family, Vern has to face the past, and more troublingly, the future – outside the woods.” (fiction)

Read by Karen Chilton (The Prophets by Robert Jones Jr., A Prince on Paper by Alyssa Cole))

audiobook cover image of Luck of the Titanic by Stacey Lee

Luck of the Titanic by Stacey Lee

Valora Luck has a ticket for the Titanic and big dreams of escaping England to pursue a career as a circus performer in New York, but she’s turned away because Chinese aren’t allowed into America. She simply has to get on board if she’s going to find her twin brother Jamie and audition for an influential circus owner though, both of whom are on the ship. She finds her way on as a stowaway, so she should stay hidden and out of sight. She has only seven days to find her twin brother, perform for that circus owner, and get him to help both her and Jamie into America. (YA historical fiction)

Read by Rebecca Yeo, an actress and producer, known for work such as Six Feet Apart (2021), Dead End – Dead Man Walking (2020)

audiobook cover image of Ariadne by Jennifer Saint

Ariadne by Jennifer Saint

Ariadne, Princess of Crete, grows up in the lap of luxury. But beneath her golden palace lies the threat that is her brother, the Minotaur, the monster who demands blood sacrifice. Then Theseus arrives, and in him Ariadne sees the possibility of escape. She defies the gods in an act of betrayal against her family and country and helps the Prince of Athens slay the Minotaur. But will doing so give her the happy ending she so craves?

Circe lovers: this one’s for us! I am so excited for another exploration of the forgotten women of Greek mythology.

Read by Barrie Kreinik (Migrations by Charlotte McConaghy, Code Name Hélène by Ariel Lawhon)

audiobook cover image of On Juneteenth by Annette Gordon-Reed

On Juneteenth by Annette Gordon-Reed

I admit the American education system failed me (and SO many others) in not teaching me about Juneteenth; it’s pretty sad to think that I only came to know about it in my twenties. “Weaving together American history, dramatic family chronicle, and searing episodes of memoir, Annette Gordon-Reed’s On Juneteenth provides a historian’s view of the country’s long road to Juneteenth, recounting both its origins in Texas and the enormous hardships that African Americans have endured in the century since, from Reconstruction through Jim Crow and beyond.” (nonfiction, history)

Read by Karen Chilton, her second appearance on this newsletter!

Latest Listen

audiobook cover image of Firekeeper's Daughter by Angeline Boulley

Firekeeper’s Daughter by Angeline Boulley

Listen to this one now! Eighteen-year-old Daunis Fontaine is a biracial, unenrolled tribal member with dreams of studying medicine, but those dreams are put on hold when she defers enrollment to stay local and care for her mother and grandmother. Her world is rocked even further when she witnesses the murder of her best friend, a killing followed by a strings of other deaths all linked to a new lethal cocktail of meth. Daunis gets pulled into an undercover criminal investigation into the source of the meth but also pursues her own secret investigation, using her knowledge of chemistry and Ojibwe traditional medicine to get to uncover buried secrets in her community. Daunis must learn what it means to be a strong Ojibwe woman and decide far she’s willing to go to protect her community, not to mention how to handle her complicated feelings for the new boy in town who may have something to hide.

Isabella Star LaBlanc is a Sisseton-Wahpeton Dakota stage and screen actor and her performance of this book is pitch-perfect! It would have been practically criminal to have this narrated by a non-indigeouns person and I’m glad someone had the sense to remember that. LaBlanc not only gives us just proper Anishinaabemowin pronunciations of words, names, and places, but also warm delivery of res slang and colloquialisms. The sense of place and community jumped off the page with her delivery. I hope we get to see more of her audiobook work soon!

If you’re looking to diversify your reading with books by indigenous authors, this is a fantastic, well-paced YA (bordering on New Adult) mystery that asks readers to ponder the importance of tradition and community, the attempted erasure of indigenous culture, and the politics of identity—not to mention how law enforcement ain’t always, shall we say, helpful.

TW: drug abuse, drug overdose, sexual assault (mostly off page, no graphic details)

From the Internets

at Audible: Congratulations! You’re a Grandparent. Now What?

at Audiofile: Audiobooks Celebrating All Things Gardening and 6 Mystery Audiobooks for AAPI Heritage Month

at Geek Tyrant: Dark Horse Graphic and Prose Novels Getting Audio Books with New Deal

at Libro.fm: Quiz: Your Next Audiobook for AAPI Heritage Month

Over at the Riot

7 Fiction Audiobooks for AAPI Heritage Month


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club 05/05/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. It’s somehow May already, and that means its Mental Health Awareness Month. I don’t know about you, but this last year in particular has made me acutely aware of the importance of discussions around mental health. So today’s book club picks are all works of fiction to spark discussions about mental illness: its intricacies, stigmas, how we address it, and all the ways we get it wrong.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

I had a mad craving last week for chicken shawarma bowl, specifically the kind you get from carts like The Halal Guys. Well, remember the Moribyan food blog I mentioned a few weeks ago? The lovely woman who runs it came through once again with not one but two fantastic mouthwatering recipes. First I made her Halal cart chicken and rice, and puh-lease use ghee if you can because it really does make all of the difference in the world. I had a ton of leftover rice, so next I made these oven-baked kefta (beef kabobs) to pair with it, too. WHEW, friends. I didn’t have any sumac for any of these recipes, but they still came out to perfect! Enjoy.

Mental Illness in Fiction

cover image of Darius the Great is Not Okay by Adib Khorram

Darius the Great Is Not Okay by Adib Khorram

Darius knows more about Hobbit social cues than Persian customs and speaks better Klingon than Farsi. The son of a Persian mother and a white American father, he’s never felt like he fit in anywhere, a worry not at all helped by his clinical depression. When his family travels to Iran to visit his mother’s family, Darius meets Sohrab, the boy next door. Soon the boys are spending their every moment together, and Darius realizes he’s never felt more like himself.

Book Club Bonus: Discuss how two people with the same diagnosis can have very different experiences and won’t necessarily relate, and how challenging it can be to communicate mental illness to a different generation or culture.

cover image of Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

Gifty is a Ghanian American working on a PhD in neuroscience, studying depression and addiction by observing the reward-seeking behavior of mice. This work is very personal: she was just a kid when her brother injured his ankle during a high school basketball game, then got hooked on Oxycontin and died of an overdose. Gifty turns to science to understand Nana’s addiction and the depth of her family’s loss, but also finds herself pulled in by the allure of salvation offered by the faith she thought she’d long abandoned.

Book Club Bonus: There’s a meaty discussion to be had here about the relationship between mental illness and religion, specifically how so many faith systems handle mental illness with a lot of dismissal and instructions to just “give it God” and pray.

cover image of Turn of Mind by Alice LaPlante

Turn of Mind by Alice LaPlante

Retired orthopedic surgeon Dr. Jennifer White is battling dementia and all of the life adjustments that come with her diagnosis. When her best friend is killed and found with several of her fingers removed with surgical precision, Dr. White is immediately the #1 suspect. The worst part: Dr. White could very well have done it, but she doesn’t know if she did. This thriller is well-paced and handles the subject of dementia with a lot of care.

Book Club Bonus: Dr. White’s dementia added a layer of complexity to what otherwise might have been a more straightforward thriller—explore that! Discuss the frailty of memory as both a blessing and a curse.

cover image of Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys

Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys

This one I haven’t read yet, but it was recommended to me by a reader (thank you so much!) after I talked about my love of Jane Eyre retellings.Wide Sargasso Sea gives a new voice to one of fiction’s most fascinating characters: the madwoman in the attic from Jane Eyre. Bertha, born Antoinette Cosway, is a protected young woman when she’s sold into marriage to the prideful Mr. Rochester. Her reputation is ruined by rumors about her past fueled by some really puritan attitudes towards sexuality, and her prideful husband becomes emotionally abusive and unfaithful. As he flaunts his affairs in her face, Bertha is continually gaslit until she reaches her emotional breaking point.

Book Club Bonus: Makes it kinda hard to write her off as “crazy,” doesn’t it? Discuss how a deeper examination of Mr. Rochester makes him a much more unsavory character than the one we’ve come to know in the original story, and how unfair Bertha’s narrative has been to her (and women in general).

Suggestion Section

May book club picks for Today with Jenna Bush Hager, LA Times, and Vox

at School Library Journal: 5 Tips for Starting a Nonfiction Book Club for Kids


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 and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. 
Vanessa 

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Audiobooks

Audiobooks 04/29/21

Hola Audiophiles! I’m back from my mini-vacay feeling refreshed, very slightly more tan, and missing my niece and nephew something fierce. Still, I’m happy to be back in the springtime wonderland that is the Pacific Northwest right now, even if this pollen is killing me softly with this song.

There are just a couple of days left in April and National Poetry Month, so let’s close the month out with some poetry audiobooks to soothe the soul, stir the senses, and hopefully inspire a little hope.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – Week of April 27th

publisher descriptions in quotes

audiobook cover of You Are Your Best Thing by Tarana Burke and Brene Brown

You Are Your Best Thing: Vulnerability, Shame Resilience, and the Black Experience by Tarana Burke, Brené Brown

I love this book’s origin story so much. Brené Brown and Me Too movement founder Tarana Burke are friends who’d recently been exchanging home decor ideas when Tarana reached out to Brené to ask if she was free to jump on a call. Brené expected wallpaper talk and got something much more serious: Tarana confessed that as a Black woman, she often felt like she had to do serious work to see herself in Brené’s words. Tarana suggested working together on a book about the Black experience with vulnerability and shame resilience, and the idea for You Are Your Best Thing was born. Contributors include Kiese Laymon, Imani Perry, Laverne Cox, Jason Reynolds, Austin Channing Brown, and more. (nonfiction, essays)

Read by Tarana Burke, Brené Brown, and the book’s contributors, as well as Mirron Willis, Bahni Turpin, JD Jackson, L Morgan Lee (in other words: hot fire!!)

audiobook cover image of Dial A For Aunties by Risa Mei

Dial A for Aunties by Jesse Q. Sutanto

I knew I needed this book about a woman who accidentally kills her blind date (whoopsie!) when Jamie highlighted it in this list of “It Was Self Defense! But Help Me Hide the Body!” crime novels. Meddelin Chan’s meddlesome mother calls her even more meddlesome aunties to help get rid of the body, and that turns out to be a lot harder than it seems. The corpse kiiiinda ends up in a cake cooler en route to the billionaire California coast wedding that the Chan women are working. What could possibly go wrong? (mystery)

Read by singer and actress Risa Mei

audiobook cover image of White Magic by Elissa Washuta

White Magic by Elissa Washuta

Elissa Washuta grew up surrounded by cheap imitations of Native spiritual tools, superficial interests in occult trends, “starter witch kits” full of sage and crystals, and the like. After a decade of abuse, addiction, PTSD, and a misdiagnosis of bipolar disorder, she found herself drawn to the real spirits and practices of her displaced ancestors in her search to find love and meaning. Here she writes about “land, heartbreak, and colonization, about life without the escape hatch of intoxication, and about how she became a powerful witch” as she explores “questions of cultural inheritance and the particular danger, as a Native woman, of relaxing into romantic love under colonial rule.” (nonfiction, essays)

Read by Kyla Garcia (There There by Tommy Orange, I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter by Erika L. Sánchez)

audiobook cover image of An Earl, the Girl, and a Toddler by Vanessa Riley

An Earl, the Girl, and a Toddler (Rogues and Remarkable Women Series #2) by Vanessa Riley

I don’t usually see the word “toddler” in a romance title, so when I do, I need to know more. The Widow’s Grace is a secret society that helps ill-treated widows regain their reputations, their families, and even find true love. After barely surviving a shipwreck en route to London from Jamaica that leaves her imprisoned and with a case of amnesia, Jemina St. Maur is relying on the society to unearth her true identity. Barrister Daniel Thackery, Lord Ashbrook, who was widowed by that same shipwreck, betrays the law he holds so dear to free Jemina from prison. But can he be trusted? Can she? As “ruthless adversaries close in, will the truth require him, and Jemina, to sacrifice their one chance at happiness?” (romance)

Read by Bahni Turpin (The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead, The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas)

Latest Listens – Poetry Spotlight

audiobook cover image of The Hill We Climb by Amanda Gorman

The Hill We Climb: An Inaugural Poem for the Country by Amanda Gorman

Amanda Gorman: ever heard of her? Consider this a reminder to revisit the stunning, powerful, soul-shaking poem first read at President Biden’s inauguration. This nine-minute recording is just of the titular poem, but what a standout nine minutes those are. Don’t forget to check out her debut collection (The Hill We Climb and Other Poems) when it hits shelves in September.

Read by the author

audiobook cover image of At Blackwater Pond by Mary Oliver

At Blackwater Pond by Mary Oliver

Mary Oliver was the first poet that made me feel like I “got” poetry and her work resonates with me differently every time I read it. Her poetry is as soothing as it is striking in its perfect simplicity and so accessible, too. This audio collection of forty of the late great’s favorite poems is so special because it’s a rare one: in her decades long career, she rarely performed her poetry in live readings. Enjoy this very special treat and take a moment for some reflection.

Read by the author

audiobook cover image of Alone Together Love, Grief, and Comfort During the Time of COVID-19

Alone Together: Love, Grief, and Comfort During the Time of COVID-19 edited by Jennifer Haupt

I don’t normally do Audible originals as a rule, but this one feels special enough to make the exception. This collection isn’t strictly poetry but a mix of essays, poems, and interviews by and from over 90 authors including Kwame Alexander, Andre Dubus III, Nikki Giovanni, Pam Houston, Caroline Leavitt, Ada Limón, Dani Shapiro, David Sheff, Garth Stein, and Luis Alberto Urrea. Themed in the possibility of hope and change in the age of isolation and uncertainty, the book is divided into five sections (What Now?, Grieve, Comfort, Connect, and Don’t Stop).

The full cast of narrators is every bit as impressive as the author list, including the likes of January LaVoy, Dion Graham, Julia Whelan, Adenrele Ojo, Emily Woo Zeller, Thérèse Plummer, Adjoa Andoh, Almarie Guerra, and more.

From the Internets

at Audible: The Best Audiobooks for Soothing Anxiety

at Audiofile: Listening to Poetry on Audio

at Libro.fm: If You Like These Oscar-Nominated Movies, You’ll Love These Audiobooks

also at Libro.fm is their annual Independent Bookstore Day Recap. Yay Indies!

at The Wall Street Journal: The Special Comfort of Audiobooks During Covid-19 and Trying Times

at Vice: ‘It’s a Crazy Issue’ – The Bizarre World of Scam Audiobooks — Yikes! Be on the lookout for these dupes.

Over at the Riot

5 of the Best Audiobooks for Your Next Sick Day

On the Companionship of Audiobooks and Podcasts


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

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In The Club

In the Club 04/28/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. I’m composing the bulk of this newsletter a little bit ahead of when I usually would because I’m taking some time off. I’ll be squeezing in some last snuggles with my niece and nephew and shoving in a few more tacos. Hope you’re all finding things to smile about this week, too.

To the club!!

Nibbles and Sips

I love cantaloupe. Like a lot. It’s a fruit that I feel gets a bad rap as either being boring (it’s not!) or tasting too similar to papaya (these are fighting words, because I loathe papaya). I crave big bowls of fresh, juicy cantaloupe when it’s warm outside, or the cantaloupe sorbet and paletas I are up eating from this tiny, cash-only Mexican ice cream shop in South San Diego. Know what I’ve never had, though? A cantaloupe cocktail. That changes now. Salud!

I Have Questions

I was looking for topics to suggest for this week’s newsletter and came across this post on 40 book club questions for all book clubs that Book Riot put out last year. I decided to sort of work backwards and suggest books to read based on those questions. Here are three of my faves and books I think would pair well with them. Happy reading!

Share a favorite quote from the book. Why did this quote stand out?

cover image of Peaces by Helen Oyeyemi

Peaces by Helen Oyeyemi

Otto and Xavier Shin have been gifted a trip on a very special train as a not-honeymoon honeymoon present from their aunt. They appear to be alone on this former tea-smuggling train and soon realize that it’s not your average locomotive; it seems to be customized to their particular tastes in ways that don’t exactly make sense, and they don’t know the train’s destination. Totally normal! Fun! While boarding the train, Otto spots a woman who be believes to be the mysterious owner, a woman who resides on The Lucky Day. She was holding up a sign—but did it say “hello,” or “help?” As the pair tries to get to the bottom of that little mystery, the trip upends everything they think they know about each other and their pasts. Oh and there’s a pet mongoose. Can’t forget the mongoose.

When I think of authors who continually blow me away with their impossibly beautiful sentences and truly weird books, I immediately think of Helen Oyeyemi. The things she does with words! The book asks us to consider what it means to be understood (or not) by the person you most want to perceive you, and I promise, you will find yourself highlighting all kinds of passages.

What songs does this book make you think of? Create a book group playlist together!

cover image of Chilling Effect by Valerie Valdes

Chilling Effect by Valerie Valdes

This question speaks to my soul! I am such a playlist person and music person in general. I’m constantly thinking of book soundtracks in my head when I’m reading and I think a lot of you probs do the same.

Because my job is pretty cool, I got to dream up a playlist for two SFF titles while filling in for Jenn on SFF Yeah earlier this month. It was SO much fun! Do this with book club and see what your playlist looks like. My picks for the super fun space romp with psychic space cats that is Chilling Effect? 1977 by Anna Tijoux / La Torre by Gabriel Rios /Quimbara by Celia Cruz / Ring the Alarm by Beyonce / Bitch Better Have My Money by Rihanna (I could have gone on for days!)

If you could hear this same story from another person’s point of view, who would you choose?

Our Kind of Cruelty by Araminta Hall

Our Kind of Cruelty by Araminta Hall

Mike Hayes’s childhood was brutal, dark, and lonely, but that was all before he met the love of his life, Verity Metcalf. With V by his side, Mike has learned how to love, how to care for himself, how to thrive in his career, and turn his life around. Together they will build something beautiful and be happy for the rest of their lives. Never mind that she’s not returning his calls, or that she’s technically engaged to someone else. It’ll all just a part of a secret game they play. Right?

I absolutely picked this one because the ending is super polarizing, and because I would read the crap out of a version of the book told from V’s perspective (assuming the ending is what I interpret it to be). Wish I could say more, you’ll have to read to figure it out for yourself!

Suggestion Section

This is pretty cool: Reese’s Book Club Launches Writers’ Fellowship LitUp for Underrepresented Women

The Hudson Valley and Long Island chapters of the Alzheimer’s Association have launched a virtual book club for caregivers


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 and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. 
Vanessa 

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks 04/22/21

Hola Audiophiles! I’ll be on a mini staycation by the time you read this newsletter, hopefully eating lots of tacos, sitting in the sun, and snuggling my niece and nephew because that is my favorite hobby these days. I’ll also be fully vaccinated! So much to look forward to.

While my reading has screeched to a halt this month, I’m going to need to catch up because these audiobooks don’t quit. So many great listens out this week! Ready? Let’s audio.

New Releases – April 20, 2021

audiobook cover image of Witches Steeped in Gold by Ciannon Smart

Witches Steeped in Gold by Ciannon Smart

I’m so excited for this one! This debut is a Jamaican-inspired fantasy about sworn enemies Iraya and Jazmyne, two witches who enter into a deadly alliance to take down their common enemy. Iraya has lived her life in a cell and Jazmyne is the queen’s daughter, and they’ll both have to navigate the intoxicating effects of power in this bloody pursuit of revenge. (YA fantasy)

Read by actress Nicola Lambo (American Crime Story: Versace, NCIS) and Tamika Keaton-Donegal — both appear to be new to audiobook narration but that sample sounds amazing.

cover image of Crying in H Mart by Michelle Zauner

Crying in H Mart by Michelle Zauner

I have been seeing this book everywhere, it’s time to add it to my queue. Michelle Zauner is an indie rock star of Japanese Breakfast fame and the author of the viral 2018 New Yorker essay that shares the title of this book. This is her memoir about growing up Korean American, losing her mother, and forging her own path in the wake of that loss. Everyone I know who’s read this has said it made them cry, too. (memoir)

Read by the author

audiobook cover image of The Forest of Stolen Girls by June Her

The Forest of Stolen Girls by June Hur

In 1426 in Joseon (Korea), Hwani’s family hasn’t recovered since she and her younger sister went missing and were later found unconscious in a nearby forest next to a grizzly murder scene. Years later, Hwani’s detective father learns that 13 other girls have disappeared in that same forest. He travels to their hometown to investigate, then vanishes himself. Hwani takes it upon herself to find her father and get to the bottom of these awful disappearances, and the secrets she unburies in the process suggest the answer could lie within her own buried memories. (historical YA mystery)

Read by Sue Jean Kim (If I Had Your Face by Frances Cha, another book I keep meaning to read!)

cover image of Kate in Waiting by Becky Albertalli

Kate in Waiting by Becky Albertalli

Kate Garfield and Anderson Walker are super besties with a mutual love for all things musical theater and the same taste in boys. That becomes a wee bit of a problem when Matt, their long-distance crush, shows up at their school (how dare!) and lands the lead in a musical opposite Kate. Kate thinks Matt might actually be into her, but she doesn’t want to go for it and hurt her bestie’s feelings. Turns out mutual crushes are a little less fun with when real life feelings are involved. (YA romantic comedy)

Read by actress Bebe Wood (Love, Victor, The New Normal)

Latest Listens

There is a lovely piece going up on the site next week (a week from today) about rereading the Ramona books as an adult, and it got me right in the feels box. Ramona was 👏🏼 my 👏🏼 girl! I named my doll Chevrolet and bonded with that little pest in a “my family can’t afford my haircut” moment of my own. I got a little emo when Beverly Cleary died thinking of everything those books meant to me, so editing that post was especially meaningful.

While I’m still going to purchase the boxed set for my Independent Bookstore Day, it occurred to me to check Libby to see if the audiobooks were available, too. Not only are they available, but they’re read by Stockard Channing! I downloaded those with the quickness.

So I don’t have a true Latest Listens review today, but instead want to encourage you to treat yourself to an audio version of a beloved children’s book. I’ve been spending time with my favorite pest on my walks and find myself smiling the entire time. The books are taking me back to a time when small problems felt like big ones to my child self, and that somehow reminds me that everything, if not immediately, will be okay.

From the Internets

at Libro.fm: Your Event Guide: Independent Bookstore Day 2021 (It’s almost here! Mark your calendars for April 24th and support your local Indies!)

at Audiofile: Mystery & Suspense Audiobooks That Will Make You Laugh

at Audible: Yo-Yo Ma’s Beginner’s Mind Is a Musical Meditation on the Power of Art

Know an audio newbie? Direct them to this guide for getting into audiobooks.

Over at the Riot

I Took Love Advice from the Bridgerton—Here’s How It Turned Out

A History of Audio Storytelling: From Radio and Audiobooks to Podcasts


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club 04/21/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. I have my second vaccine dose this week and I feel so emotional and excited! That plus a weekend spent mostly in the sunshine with by niblings has me feeling incredibly grateful for so many things. I hope you’re all able to get your hands on some of this optimism to help fill up your souls.

To the club!!

Nibbles and Sips

All that time in the gorgeous sun has me all kinds of excited to reintroduce responsible outdoor gatherings this summer! I’m already planning picnics in my head and this frittata sandwich recipe (frittata! in a sandwich!) with olive salad from Bon Appetit is whispering to me sweetly. I’m not partial to olives myself, so I’m thinking of subbing in a bruschetta-type spread or maybe a yummy pesto. Make a batch for book club and report back!

Earth to Book Club

Thursday, April 22nd is Earth Day, and there’s no time like the present to spend a little time reading and discussing the big blue marble we live on and how we’re killing it softly with this song. I’m giving you a cautionary tale, some beautiful nature writing, and a classic post-apocalyptic novel from a titan of science fiction. Go forth, read, and do some good for the planet.

cover image of A Children's Bible by Lydia Millet

A Children’s Bible by Lydia Millet

This novel is such a trip, a very not-subtle piece of commentary on climate change with some light Lord of the Flies vibes. A group of kids and teens are spending the summer at a lakeside mansion where their parents are having lots of booze, drugs, and sex while they mostly ignore their offspring. When a massive storm descends on the estate, the kids run right out into the apocalyptic chaos outside, one of them with a children’s bible in tow. As they seek refuge in an abandoned farm house, the events in the pages of the bible begin to bleed into real life.

cover image of Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler

Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler

This book takes place in the 2020s (join me in a laugh sob) where climate change has made basic resources scarce. Most find themselves at the mercy of a few corporations holding all the jobs and money (okay maybe it’s just a sob). Fifteen-year-old Lauren Olamina lives in Los Angeles inside a gated community with her preacher father, family, and neighbors, sheltered from the goings on of the outside world—for a while. As the anarchy grows and her world falls apart, Lauren struggles to make her voice heard while trying to protect her loved ones the imminent doom her small, insular community stubbornly insists on ignoring (more sobbing). Making matters more complicated: she suffers from hyperempathy, a debilitating sensitivity to other people’s emotions. You’ll want to pick up the second book in this biology, Parable of the Talents, too.

cover image of Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer

Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer

Botanist and professor Robin Wall Kimmerer is a member of the Citizen Potowatomi Nation, and this book of environmental science and indigenous wisdom is practically a classic in nature writing (not to mention a Book Riot fave). It’s a call to action for each of us to play a more active role in the protection and restoration of the natural world and in climate change initiatives, reminding us of the harmonious relationship indigenous communities shared with nature before some other humans (hint: colonization!) came in and messed sh*t up in epic and tragic fashion.

Suggestion Section

at Tor.com: Terry Pratchett Book Club: Good Omens, Part III

at The L.A Times: President Obama, Ava DuVernay bring ‘A Promised Land’ to L.A. Times Community Book Club

This isn’t about book clubs specifically, but could be a good piece to discuss: Is There a Scientific Case for Literature?


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 and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. 
Vanessa