Categories
In The Club

In the Club 2/10/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. This week’s newsletter was inspired by a moment of intense frustration when I could not twist and bend the way my yoga app was telling me to, and the feeling that this inability engendered. Luckily I have collected several tools to help me with this frustration, but that journey was a long and hard one. It got me thinking about how so many of the conversations we see on health and fitness leave a huge portion of our population behind, or just exclude them altogether. Let’s dive into that. All three of my picks are by Black women (one in collaboration with a white woman), and that fact alone has been so refreshing in redefining what yoga and body acceptance means for me.

Also: I am not ashamed to admit that in my frustration, I forgot I have vertigo and fell flat on my face trying to get into position. I am nothing if not graceful.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

There is this place here in Portland that rocks my socks off with their juicy, smoky, tasty wood-fired chicken and “guns,” these perfectly crispy potatoes dressed with lemon and sea salt, then topped with pickled red onions and either Peruvian aji sauce or chimichurri. I will almost never turn down a good chimichurri, but that aji sauce is the business. It’s a bright and citrusy concoction of jalapeño, cilantro, garlic, and lime.

So today’s nibble is a recipe for Peruvian-style aji sauce. I had the hardest time finding a recipe by a Peruvian chef or blogger, but did find what sounds like the sauce under a different name by Ecuadoran food blogger Laylita. I also found a YouTube video in Spanish, and a version at Food and Wine. I am not familiar enough with Peruvian cuisine to confidently say whether this sauce is “authentic,” but I do know that it tastes amazing. Serve with some crispy potatoes, put it on on eggs, pour it on tater tots, or use it as a salad dressing. Enjoy!

Move Your Body, F*ck the Shame

Two of these books are about yoga, but you don’t have to be a yogi for their message of self love and acceptance to be relevant. Even if there isn’t a yogi among your book club, I could encourage you all to get into those books and try! One of the many, many lessons you’ll learn is that yoga is not just those intense 90 minute flows in a hot room you may be thinking of; even a quick 15-30 minute stretch in the morning (in a chair! on the floor! with blocks! there are options!) can do wonders for your mood and muscles —I am SO much less sore in my day to day life. The third book is quite literally about the radical power of self love, and all three stare down our society’s lack of acceptance for bodies that don’t fit a narrow definition of “normal.”

cover image of Every Body Yoga by Jessamyn Stanley

Every Body Yoga: Let Go of Fear, Get On the Mat, Love Your Body by Jessamyn Stanley

Jessamyn Stanley is a huge part of the reason I came back to yoga after years of fits and starts. I was disillusioned by all the yoga classes where everyone but me was a thin white person, and where the instructors did little to nothing to offer modifications when poses weren’t accessible to me. I thought there was something wrong with my body and that maybe yoga just wasn’t for me. This book (and Jessamyn’s online presence in general) changed the game. It challenges stereotypes and offers tips and inspiration for finding yoga and self love, whether you’re at the beginning of your yoga practice or have already begun but find yourself hitting a wall. I go back and search for her tutorials at least once a week (I need to repurchase this book, see below to understand why) when I need a little help or encouragement to make a pose work for my body and my ability. It’s also just a really funny book—there’s a section called “The Chick-fil-A Bandit Walks Into Weight Watchers” and I cackle every time I think about that.

A story that sounds made up but is not: I bought this and took it with me to read at a park last summer with a little picnic in tow. A dog beelined it for my sandwich, but I managed to snatch the sammy away just in time. In what I can only call an act of savage vengeance, he/she grabbed my book instead and then hauled ass away in a matter of seconds. And that, children, is how I came to own Every Body Yoga for less than 48 hours.

Book Club Bonus: When you think of yoga, you probably think of a thin, flexible white woman who can effortlessly flow into a perfect chaturanga pushup while dressed in a cute, coordinated sports bra and legging combo that costs what I spend on two weeks of groceries. That’s because yoga is marketed that way pretty aggressively! Discuss that messaging and how completely at odds it is with the core principles of yoga.

cover image of Yoga Where You Are by Dianne Bondy and Kat Heagberg

Yoga Where You Are: Customize Your Practice for Your Body and Your Life by Dianne Bondy and Kat Heagberg

I first heard of Dianne Bondy on an episode of the Food Heaven podcast about joyful movement. When I found out her book was blurbed by Jessamyn Stanley, I had to cop it. This book and Jessamyn’s go hand in hand for me. They both offer a ton of insight as to the origins of yoga and its modern iterations, break down poses in a glossary format with modifications, and provide sample sequences. While Every Body Yoga speaks more to the individual and their own practice, Yoga Where You Are takes the messaging of accessible yoga further by tying it into activism. Dianne Bondy and Kat Heagberg discuss the whitewashing of modern yoga and its failure to make space for larger and disabled bodies, offering suggestions and solutions for creating truly safe spaces aimed at yoga teachers, while also speaking to individuals looking to find a place in the yoga world that’s accepting of them. I found the chapters on breath work super helpful and love the emphasis that there isn’t, contrary to what we’ve been told, a “right” way to do yoga.

Book Club Bonus: A lot of the same talking points for Every Body Yoga apply here. It goes beyond yoga though: discuss how fitness spaces in general leave a lot of people out of the conversation.

cover image of The Body is Not an Apology, 2nd Edition by Sonya Renee Taylor

The Body is Not an Apology by Sonya Renee Taylor (2nd edition)

The cover of the first edition of the book was stunning and they someone managed to up the ante with the second! My nickname for this one is “f*ck your body shame!” Activist and poet Sonya Renee Taylor calls readers to embrace radical self love and shed the indoctrinated body shame that’s so engrained in many of our thoughts. I cried a lot while reading this one when I realized quite how many times a day I think negative thoughts about my body and have spent a lot of time thinking about how and when I learned this behavior.

Book Club Bonus: As prep for book club, spend a day or even a couple of hours paying attention to every negative thought that pops into your brain about yourself. Write down your thoughts on that, then have the group share whatever they’re comfortable sharing, even if it’s just “I shamed my body 12 times in an hour” (you don’t have to share the specifics if you don’t want to). Where do these thoughts come from? At what age or stage in life do you remember absorbing that negative messaging? It’s eye-opening and heartbreaking to have these discussions, but empowering to name and reject the shame once you identify it.

Suggestion Section

Reese Witherspoon’s book club is now an app. Anyone try it yet? Rebecca and Jeff talked about it on this well’s Book Riot podcast and I too am a little surprised by what is and isn’t on the app.


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 02/02/21

Hola Audiophiles! Whoa. This week brought the first book explosion of the year, and there are far too many amazing titles for me to fit in this newsletter! I’m going to highlight a few whose audio performances sound the most exciting, but check out our New Books newsletter if you haven’t already for a more robust list. Let’s get to it before I take up too much of your time.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – Week of February 2, 2021

I truly wish I could talk about ten other books, like Milk Fed by Melissa Broder (queer dark fiction centered on disordered eating, blurbed by Carmen Maria Machado) and The Project by Courtney Summers (look, I have watched two documentaries about NXIVM and one about Heaven’s Gate, I am clearly in the mood for cult stuff). So many books, not enough time! But here are four I’m particularly excited about. (publisher descriptions in quotes)

cover image of  Make Up, Break Up by Lily Menon

Make Up Break Up by Lily Menon

Let’s kick things off with an enemies-to-lovers rom-com, shall we? Annika and Hudson go their separate ways after a summer fling in Vegas, never to see each other again… but not really! Annika gets the quite the unpleasant shock when she learns that Hudson is not only moving into her building in Downtown LA, but into the office right next to hers. She is trying to keep her app, Make Up, afloat, billed as “Google Translate for failing relationships.” Hudson has an app of his own called Break Up (really, bruh?) and it’s wildly successful, and it’s known as “Uber for break-ups.” Well isn’t that just peachy?? The two will clash again and again as they compete in a prestigious investment pitch contest. But again, I did say this was enemies to lovers, so… (romance)

Read by Natalie Naudus (The Bone Shard Daughter by Andrea Stewart, Ace by Angela Chen). I really enjoy her pace and inflection!

cover image of The Three Mothers by Anna Malaika Tubbs

The Three Mothers: How the Mothers of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and James Baldwin Shaped a Nation by Anna Malaika Tubbs

I mentioned both this book and the next one in yesterday’s In the Club newsletter and I’ll say it again: I’m so surprised that the concept for this book wasn’t explored sooner. So much has been written and read about Martin Luther King Jr, Malcolm X, and James Baldwin. But very little has been said about the extraordinary women who raised these American icons. In one stunner of a debut, Anna Malaika Tubbs (an educator, Cambridge PhD candidate, and Gates scholar, no big deal) celebrates Black motherhood by telling these women’s stories.

I recently found myself wondering what it must be like right now for the people MLK Jr. left behind: to witness a violent attempted coup largely led by white supremacists and then not a week later hear cries for unity underscored by MLK Jr quotes as though Dr. King wasn’t hated and persecuted in his time (and, you know, assassinated). This book feels like it came right on time; I for one am very interested in getting to know the women who raised these important figures, all of them taken too soon. For some bonus content, you can listen to Anna Malaika Tubbs on Jonathan Van Ness’s Getting Curious podcast. I especially enjoyed the part where he introduced her and said he “loves, like, a PhD moment.” (nonfiction)

Read by the author, whose voice is so bright and fresh! Her passion for this project is evident even in the sample for this title. I’m really excited to see what else she put out into the world.

cover image of Four Hundred Souls edited by Ibram X. Kendi and Keisha N. Blain

Four Hundred Souls: A Community History of African America, 1619-2019 edited by Ibram X. Kendi and Keisha N. Blain

It feels lazy to call this anthology impressive, but impressed I am. This is a community history by 90 brilliant writers, each of whom tackles a five-year period from 1619 to the present. Each writer’s approach is different: some wrote historical essays, others short stories, some shared personal vignettes. The result is an important body of work that “fundamentally deconstructs the idea that Africans in America are a monolith—instead it unlocks the startling range of experiences and ideas that have always existed within the community of Blackness.” (nonfiction, history, essays)

Read by… everyone? This book features 87 different narrators, including Dion Graham, Robin Miles, Phylicia Rashad, Leslie Odom Jr., Bahni Turpin, and more. Oh my gatos!

cover image of Blood Grove by Walter Mosley

Blood Grove by Walter Mosley

Walter Mosley’s infamous Detective Easy Rawlins is back! This is, I believe, the 12th book in this series and returns to the streets of sunny Southern California. Easy “navigates sex clubs, the mafia, and dangerous friends when he reluctantly accepts the racially charged case of a traumatized Vietnam War veteran in late-1960s Los Angeles.” (mystery)

Read by Michael Boatman (Slay by Brittney Morris, Devil in a Blue Dress by Walter Mosley), who btw is an actor who’s been in aaaaaall of the crime dramas. I heard him and legit went, “Hey! I know him from SVU!” His voice was practically made for audiobook performance. What a perfect person to read an Easy Rawlins mystery!

Latest Listens

Having finally blasted through my Libby loans last week, I went right back to waiting for other holds to come in. Then I remembered that the Libby app’s landing page usually has a collection of titles with no wait times available for immediate loan. And that is how I came to finally read Celeste Ng’s Everything I Never Told You.

This is, to be honest, not a book that was even on my TBR. When a book is everywhere—for reasons I can’t explain—I either want to run and grab it immediately or unconsciously stay far, far away from it. Everything I Never Told You fell into the latter category, and I don’t know why! I ended up really enjoying it and see why it makes such a good book club pick.

Lydia is dead. But they don’t know this yet...” So opens the book, and we very quickly learn that Lydia was the favorite, and I do mean fave-oh-rit, child of Marilynn and James Lee. Marilynn, who is white, and James, who is Chinese, are raising their mixed-race family of five in 1970s Ohio. All their hopes and dreams seemingly rest on Lydia’s shoulders, their perfect golden child who will surely go on to live the life they each once envisioned for themselves. But when Lydia’s body is found at the bottom of a local lake, the gossamer threads holding their family together come undone. The story is told in flashbacks and slowly pieces together what happened on the night of Lydia’s untimely death. It’s told from multiple perspectives, including Marilynn, James, Lydia, and her brother Nathan’s point of view, each revealing secrets and lies they kept from each other and from themselves.

Again, I see why this makes such a good book club pick. It asks us each to examine how well we really know the people we love, and confronts the devastating effects, if not addressed, of generational trauma. It considers the cost of perfectionism, especially the kind we foist on other people who never asked to be crushed under the weight of someone else’s expectations. It asks readers to sit with the idea that hurt people hurt people and to think critically about ambition. I kept finding myself shaking an angry fist at a character on one page only to better understand their motives, though not necessarily forgive them, a few chapters later.

It has been awhile since I listened to a book read by Cassandra Campbell, which is impressive considering her 47 pages of audiobook credits on Audible. I really enjoyed the life she gave to each character, especially Lydia and her siblings, Nathan and Hannah. She did a great job at nailing “frustrated teen” without sounding over-the-top and gimmicky, which many of you know is my pet peeve when adults voice younger characters. She conveyed hurt and anger and grief so well that I had to pause a few times and give it a minute.

If you’re in the mood for fiction that’s also a slow burn mystery and focusses more on the “why” than the whodunnit, and that sits with some of of the unsavory behaviors we exhibit when we feel robbed of our agency, add this one to your TBR.

From the Internets

I know I already expressed my awe for Four Hundred Souls, but here’s a piece from The Root about its star-studded audiobook cast. I’ll say it again for the people in the back: eighty! seven! different! narrators!

Libro.fm is kicking off Black History Month with a new, permanent collection of audiobooks by Black authors. Check out the collection here!

at AudioFile: go behind the scenes of the recording of Barack Obama’s A Promised Land

at Audible: Weezer… wrote a song about Audible?

Over at the Riot

6 Great Audiobooks in Translation – I’d like to add Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk, such a good listen! Just speed it up a little, unless you prefer your narration on the slower side.

Great YA Nonfiction on Audio


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 02/03/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. I am writing this to you with my face numbed to high heaven on account of some aggressive dental work and I am so. freaking. hungry!!! I keep trying to chew and drink something—anything!!—but I either bite the hell out of my cheek or the food just ends up on my shirt. But enough about me being a mess as per usual! Let’s kick off Black History Month with just that: Black history.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

I was in the mood for an adult beverage last week but couldn’t decide what the $@^#! to make with the ingredients on hand. That’s when I remembered that one of my favorite podcast personalities, Jade Verette, has a legit (and hilarious) IGTV cocktail series called Cocktails en la Casa (read up on her in this spotlight on Black mixologists by Food and Wine). I whipped up this frozen cucumber mint situation to pretend it was much sunnier outside my casa. It’s such a fresh, delicious blend of cucumber, mint, elderflower liqueur, fresh lime, and gin. Enjoy!

New Black History

Let’s get this part out of the way: around here, we read Black authors year round and not just in February. We do still set aside some designated time to celebrate Black voices during Black History month though, so that’s what we’re going to do today. These history books are all new and recent works by Black authors.

Four Hundred Souls: A Community History of African America, 1619-2019 edited by Ibram X. Kendi and Keisha N. Blain

I was originally going to suggest Ibram X Kendi’s Stamped from the Beginning, a book I’ve been slowly making my way through for months now. Then I remembered Four Hundred Souls and had to go with this. It’s a one-volume community history by 90 brilliant writers, each of whom tackles a five-year period from 1619 to the present. Each writer’s approach is different: some wrote historical essays, others short stories, some shared personal vignettes. The result is an important body of work that “fundamentally deconstructs the idea that Africans in America are a monolith—instead it unlocks the startling range of experiences and ideas that have always existed within the community of Blackness.”

The Three Mothers: How the Mothers of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and James Baldwin Shaped a Nation by Anna Malaika Tubbs

I’m actually surprised the concept for this book wasn’t explored sooner, because it feels long overdue. So much has been written and read about Martin Luther King Jr, Malcolm X, and James Baldwin (not that everyone has digested their message accurately, pero that’s some side eye for a different day). But very little has been said about the extraordinary women who raised these American icons. In one stunner of a debut, scholar Anna Malaika Tubbs celebrates Black motherhood by telling these women’s stories.

Caste

Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents by Isabel Wilkerson

When Isabel Wilkerson gets out bed in the morning, do you think she has her toast and coffee before or after she sits down to craft masterpieces of thought? Whew! It landed on all of the best-of lists and won all of the things in 2020, and it’s no wonder. This time she’s taken on America’s hidden caste system with a “deeply researched narrative and stories about real people.” She pulls back the veil to reveal the hierarchy of human rankings that dominates our society and the systemic racism that allows it to thrive.

Suggestion Section

Barack Obama apparently surprised a Zoom book club by dropping in on their discussion of his book, A Promised Land. I can’t even pretend that I wouldn’t have blurted out, “HOW HAVE YOU BEEN, DAD, AND DO YOU THINK MICHELLE WOULD LET ME BORROW THAT COAT?”

Good Morning America’s February book club pick is Cherie Jones’ How the One-Armed Sister Sweeps Her House.

The Today Show’s Jenna Bush Hager selects not one, but two books for February’s book club.

PBS’s February book club pick is Charles Yu’s Interior Chinatown.

American Airlines’ new Apple Books partnership includes access to Oprah’s Book Club picks,


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 01/28/21

Hola Audiophiles! It’s snowing in Portland (“snowing” because it’s kind of weak, but it still counts!) and I’m about to curl up on the couch with some Mexican hot chocolate and an audiobook to watch it from my window. My mood these days is just so much lighter! Wishing the same good vibes for all of you with me here today.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – week of January 26  (publisher descriptions in quotes)

Content warnings provided where possible

The Girls I’ve Been by Tess Sharpe

I organically stumbled across Instagram posts by no less than six Rioters singing this book’s phrases in a 48 hour period! Nora is a teen living with her aunt in Northern California dealing with an awkward love triangle (love shape?) between her and her two best friends. But skrrrrrr! That issue is put on pause when Nora and one of those friends walk into a bank and finds themselves in the middle of a robbery. Things escalate quickly, hostages are taken, and law enforcement awaits outside. But there’s another wrinkle the robbers don’t know about: among the hostages is a young woman who’s been several girls in her short lifetime, and has enough dangerous criminal experience to be a seriously dangerous threat. (YA mystery/thriller)

Content warning: chemical use, physical violence, sexual abuse, domestic abuse, child abuse, murder, torture, and gore.

Read by the author, Tess Sharpe!

Just As I Am by Cicely Tyson

Cicely Tyson is a living legend, an icon, a gem in our midst! This is Miss Tyson’s memoir chronicling a storied life and career: “It is me, plain and unvarnished, with the glitter and garland set aside. Here, I am indeed Cicely, the actress who has been blessed to grace the stage and screen for six decades. Yet I am also the church girl who once rarely spoke a word. I am the teenager who sought solace in the verses of the old hymn for which this book is named. I am a daughter and mother, a sister, and a friend. I am an observer of human nature and the dreamer of audacious dreams. I am a woman who has hurt as immeasurably as I have loved, a child of God divinely guided by His hand. And here in my ninth decade, I am a woman who, at long last, has something meaningful to say.” (memoir)

Content warning: violence, racism, and chemical use.

Read by (are you ready??) Cicely Tyson, Viola Davis, and Robin Miles. Legends!

A Thousand Ships by Natalie Haynes

I looooove mythology and need this book in my hands now! Told from the perspective of Calliope, the goddess of poetry (and side note: one of my forever favorite characters in Grey’s Anatomy history), this book is a fictionalized account of the Trojan war that focuses on the women: Trojan citizens, Penelope awaiting the return of Odysseus, the Amazon princess who fought Achilles, and three goddesses who started the whole damn thing. And in the highest of all cosigns, Song of Achilles and Circe author Madeline Miller says Haynes has given a “much-needed voice to the silenced women of the Trojan War.” I. can. not. wait. (historical fiction, mythology)

Content warning: mention of slavery, murder, violence, sexual assault, violence

Read by the author (a theme today!)

We Could Be Heroes by Mike Chen

Jamie and Zoe are strangers who have a funny little thing in common: they’ve each woken up in apartments they don’t remember renting. They have no idea who they are or how they got there, and one more surprise: they have super powers! Jamie uses his powers to pull of bank heists and other shady endeavors while Zoe uses hers to rain down some vigilante justice. and that is how their paths come to cross. When they meet for a second time at a support group for folks with similar stories to tell, they realize they might all be part of a bigger plan. (fantasy)

Read by Emily Woo Zeller (Book Riot fave alert! The Bride Test by Helen Hoang, The Poppy War series by R. F. Kuang)

Latest Listens

Recipe for Persuasion by Sonali Dev

All of my library holds are coming in and I’m trying to keep up! I inhaled this one in just a couple of days, the second book in Sonali Dev’s Rajes series of Austen rom-com remixes.

Ashna Raje is not okay! She’s struggling to run the failing restaurant that was her father’s legacy and to prove to her estranged mother that she knows her own mind. When she gets a last-minute offer to be on The Food Network’s latest celebrity cooking show, Ashna agrees begrudgingly. She does it mostly to avoid having to see her mother, and because winning the competition means a cash prize and the chance to turn her restaurant troubles right around. Pero… here’s the thing: the gorgeous retired pro soccer player she’s paired with on the show was once the love of her life, the one who ghosted her when she was at her absolute lowest. He has reasons of his own for wanting to be on the show, and him leaving her may not have gone exactly like Ashna remembers it. Is this partnership a recipe for disaster? Or will it end in sweet success? (tw: suicide, sexual assault; descriptions aren’t extremely graphic, but may still be much for some)

I am always so impressed by how fun and hilarious Sonali Dev’s books are while tackling some pretty heavy issues. The women in all of her books (and all of her characters in general) are so dynamic and layered, flawed and relatable. Both Ashna and her mother have moved through the world in ways that are difficult to understand as onlookers until we examine their behaviors through the lens of trauma. I am still sitting with the feelings that surfaced for me once the motivations behind Ashna’s attachment to the restaurant and loyalty to her father were revealed, and when her mother’s decision to rebel against societal norms at the cost of her family is made clear. Sonali Dev continues to give us these thoughtful examinations of the ways in which women have had to advocate for themselves, often at immense personal sacrifice, and rewarding us with a deliciously satisfying happily ever after for joining her in that reflection.

As for narration, I cannot imagine a more perfectly suited voice for Sonali Dev’s books than Soneela Nankani. In addition to also reading Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors, her catalog includes titles like The Daevabad Trilogy by S. A. Chakraborty, The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey, and Internment by Samira Ahmed. She gives you mid-30s anxious, Brazilian-British athlete swag, wise aunty energy, and more with seamless transitions.

So go, dear reader, and treat yourself to Recipe for Persuasion. Oh, and you don’t need to read the series in order, but do absolutely make some time for Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors! and look for Incense and Sensibility in July!

From the Internets

2021 Amazing Audiobooks for Young Adults — This list from YALSA (Young Adult Library Services Association) is a little dense visually, but worth it for the content.

Spotify Launches Audiobooks Program with 9 Classics, including Frankenstein and Jane Eyre.

Are you thinking, “How do I listen to audiobooks on Spotify??” Here you go!

at Audible: an interview with Alanis Morissette

at AudioFile: Families in Mystery Audiobooks: The Good and the Really Bad

at Libro.fm: 18 Audiobooks to Pre-Order Before Spring

Over at the Riot

6 of the Best Audiobooks Narrated by Prentice Onayemi

On this week’s Hey YA: Extra Credit episode, Hannah is joined by special guest Emily Blaeser to talk about their favorite YA audiobooks.


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 01/27/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. This week we’re finding love in this club with some discussion-worthy romance inspired by When in Romance’s 75th episode! Happy 3rd anniversary to the lovely ladies who turned me into a bona fide romance reader! Let’s talk about love and all its trappings.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

By the time this newsletter goes out, a friend and I will have surprised the third member of our quaranteam with a birthday dinner comprised of some of her favorite things. I have never met anyone more loyal to the potato in all its forms—she legit dreams in tater tot. So today’s nibble is exactly what we’re serving our friend for the main course: a totcho bar!

For the uninitiated, tots + nachos + totchos. So you basically load up a bunch of crispy and pillowy potato puffs with all the fixings one might apply to loaded nachos. We all nacho/totcho in our own way, but here’s the bar setup we’ll be providing for customization:

  • tater tots
  • shredded cheese
  • scallions/green onions
  • sour cream
  • diced tomatoes
  • sliced jalapeños
  • crispy chorizo/soyrizo
  • refried beans
  • avocado

You could also go with a bacon/cheese/sour cream/scallion situation, or go the shredded beef route with melty cheese.. go forth and starch totsper.

Romantically Speaking

cover of The Widow of Rose House by Diana Biller

The Widow of Rose House by Diana Biller

I give you this blurb from April 2020 as proof of my When In Romance fandom: “I was in theeeee worst reading slump for weeks and decided I’d try some gothic fiction with a romance at its core; I’m still newish to the romance game, so thanks once again to Trisha and Jess from When in Romance for the inspo. The Widow of Rose House by Diana Biller is the book that not only snapped me out of the slump, but keep the reading well past my bedtime. Gilded Age New York, a gothic mansion, a ruined widow with a tragic past, and a sexy nerd type who loves consent, sexy times, and science in equal, passionate measure. Oh and some ghosts, maybe? What a remedy! Read this now.” (tw: domestic violence)

Book Club Bonus: There is plenty to talk about with respect to Alva and how many hoops she (and any woman from that time period) has to go through to live life on her terms. But! Please also talk about how awesome it is to see such explicit requests for consent in sexy times scenes! It was so refreshing, as is how open and communicative Sam is so consistently.

Recipe for Persuasion by Sonali Dev

This is the second book in Sonali Dev’s The Rajes series of Austen rom-com remixes. Chef Ashna Raje is not okay; she’s struggling to run the failing restaurant that was her father’s legacy and is desperate to prove to her estranged mother that she knows what’s best for her own life. When she gets a last-minute offer to be on a celebrity cooking show, Ashna agrees to be on it mostly to avoid having to see her mother, but also because winning the competition means a giant cash prize that could turn her restaurant troubles right around. But plot twist!! The sexy retired pro soccer player she’s paired with is the former love of her life, the one who ghosted her at the lowest point in her life. He has reasons of his own for wanting to be on the show, and he remembers the end of their relationship quite differently. Is this partnership a recipe for disaster, or one for…persuasion? You don’t need to read the series in order, but I do very highly recommend Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors! (tw: suicide, sexual assault; descriptions aren’t extremely graphic, but may still be much for some)

Book Club Bonus: Sonali Dev’s books are hilarious and fun, but they tackle some heavy issues (see trigger warnings above). Both Ashna and her mother have made decisions about the way they move in the world that are easy to judge if you don’t examine them through the lens of trauma. Why is Ashna so attached to the restaurant, and why does she idealize her father? What would you have done in her mother’s shoes? This is such a good one to unpack.

Spoiler Alert by Olivia Dade

April is a geologist who writes fan fiction of her favorite show, Gods at the Gates, and cosplays in her free time. She’s always kept her “real life” separate from her fandom, but she decides to be more open about it when she gets a new job. When she posts her latest costume creation on Twitter, a plus-size take on Lavinia, it goes viral. Then the star of the show, Marcus, surprised everyone by first defending her from fatphobic trolls online and then asking her out on a date IRL. It’s on that date that Marcus—a secret fanfic writer who goes by Book!AeneasWouldNever online—realizes that April is his longtime online friend. Eek! This part I had to rip from the publisher copy: “With love and Marcus’s career on the line, can the two of them stop hiding once and for all, or will a match made in fandom end up prematurely cancelled?” (tw: fat shaming—but it’s not the whole point of the book, know what I mean?)

Book Club Bonus: We’ve recently seem some progress in the body positivity movement, and with that some moves in fat positivity, too. But wow, is there still a long ways to go. Was I jazzed when Ashley Graham became the first plus size model to book a Sports Illustrated cover? F*ck yes! Am I also tired of *only* seeing plus size bodies with those hourglass proportions in content that alleges fat positivity? Also yes. Discuss fat representation in media and in this book.

cover of reverb by anna zabo

Reverb by Anna Zabo

This third book in the Twisted Wishes series is one I keep meaning to read, and I remember that every time Trisha gives it a shout out on the show. Bass player Mish Sullivan is a rockstar goddess who can fend for herself, thankyouverymuch. But when a stalker gets too close and puts her in the hospital, Mish finds herself stuck with a bodyguard she doesn’t need or want. That bodyguard is David, a badass, ex-army martial arts expert who feels an instant attraction to this person he’s supposed to protect. Neither of them can deny the attraction and whoops! They wind up in bed together (again and again and again). But when the stalker up his game, David will have to choose—lover or bodyguard?

Book Club Bonus: Mish is cis femme and David is trans masc, and that’s why I think this makes such a great book club book: not because it has a trans character (because that should just be normal), but because it centers trans joy. As Zabo said themselves, “…people aren’t only their gender—even cis people. It’s an aspect of their lives, sure, and maybe a big one, but at a certain point, you’re just yourself. You’re the sum of all the things about you, and then some.” Discuss how representation is more than just seeing yourself on the page; it’s also about the quality and diversity of that representation, like in this lovely HEA.

Suggestion Section

Some book club friends in Skowhegan, Maine started a community refrigerator to help hungry. Love to see it!

Meet the book club that’s helping to quickly vaccinate its town. Love to see this too!

Brown Girls Book Club, a group of eight Black women who’ve been meeting for 25 years, came together to celebrate and watch last week’s historic inauguration. I love everything this week! Look at that joy.


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 1/21/21

Hola Audiophiles! I’ll keep it brief today: it’s a new dawn and a new day, and I’m feeling good. There’s work to do, absolutely. But today, we celebrate.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – week of January 19  (publisher descriptions in quotes)

audiobook cover of Amari and the Night Brothers by B.B. Alston

Amari and the Night Brothers by B. B. Alston

Amari has never stopped believing her missing brother is alive. Then she finds a ticking briefcase in his closet (totally normal!), and inside it is a nomination for a summer tryout at the Bureau of Supernatural Affairs. She knows this organization is the key to finding her brother, and that’s why she soon finds herself competing with a whole bunch of kids who’ve always own magic exists. If she can accept that magicians, fairies, aliens, and other supernatural creatures exist, and convince her paranoid classmates that she isn’t, in fact, an enemy, Amari might finally have a chance at finding her brother. This book is the first in a new series. (middle grade fantasy)

Read by Imani Parks (Saving Ruby King by Catherine Adel West, Tiny Pretty Things by Sona Charaipotra and Dhonielle Clayton)

audiobook cover image of Winterkeep by Kristin Cashore

Winterkeep by Kristin Cashore

I’ve been hearing a lot of buzz about this latest book in the Graceling Realm series. Bitterblue has been queen of Monsea for the past five years, slowly rebuilding her nation after her father’s horrific reign. She sends envoys to the nation of Winterkeep when she learns of lands in the east, but those envoys drown under suspicious circumstances. When Bitterblue decides to set off for Winterkeep herself, tragedy strikes again— a tragedy with devastating political and personal consequences. Meanwhile, in Winterkeep, the teenage daughter of two powerful politicians waits and watches. She’s the key to unlocking everything – but only if she’s willing to transcend leave behind the person she’s always been. (YA fantasy)

Read by Xanthe Elbrick, who also reads books two and three in the series (Fire and Bitterblue)

audiobook cover image of Remote Control by Nnedi Okorafor

Remote Control by Nnedi Okorafor

“The day Fatima forgot her name, Death paid a visit.” The new name given to her by the Angel of Death is Sanokfa, a name that means nothing to anyone but her and is her only tie to her family and her past. Now she searches for the object that fell from the sky and took everything from her with only a fox as her companion; anyone who gets in her way will face a girl whose looks and touch can kill. Whew, Nnedi Okorafor’s brain is a national treasure. (science fiction)

Read by Adjoa Andoh (Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert, The Raven Tower by Ann Leckie), one of the most rich, regal voices I’ve ever heard.

audiobook cover image of Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo

Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo

After she comes across a book featuring a love story between two women, a question takes root in seventeen-year-old Lily Hu: “Have you ever heard of such a thing?” She can’t remember exactly when the question planted itself in her, but the answer is obvious the moment she and Kathleen Miller walk under the flashing neon sign of a lesbian bar called the Telegraph Club. “But America in 1954 is not a safe place for two girls to fall in love, especially not in Chinatown. Red-scare paranoia threatens everyone, including Chinese Americans like Lily. With deportation looming over her father – despite his hard-won citizenship – Lily and Kath risk everything to let their love see the light of day.” (YA historical fiction)

Read by Emily Woo Zeller, a Book Riot fave! (The Poppy War for R. F. Kuang, This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone)

audiobook cover image of The Rib King by Ladee Hubbard

The Rib King by Ladee Hubbard

For over 15 years, August Sitwell has worked as a groundskeeper for the Barclay family, “a well-to-do White family who plucked him from an orphan asylum and gave him a job” in their household’s all-Black staff. But the Barclay’s fortune has fallen and their money gone with it, so a desperate Mr. Barclay agrees to sell his cook Miss Mamie’s delicious rib sauce for some quick cash. Marketed under the brand name “The Rib King,” the sauce bottle features a caricature of a wildly grinning August on the label, and neither Miss Mamie nor August will see a dime from the sale. “Humiliated, August grows increasingly distraught, his anger building to a rage that explodes in shocking tragedy.” (fiction)

Read by Korey Jackson (Not So Pure and Simple by Lamar Giles, Let Me Here a Rhyme by Tiffany D. Jackson) and Adenrele Ojo (Call Your Daughter Home by Deb Spera, The Mothers by Brit Bennett)

Latest Listen

cover image of American Spy by Lauren Wilkinson

American Spy by Lauren Wilkinson

I mentioned wanting to read this book over my holiday break, but my Libby hold didn’t quite come in on time. It finally arrived this week and the timing was perfect; I’ve been in the mood for a spy story and don’t come across nearly enough of them by authors of color! The plot: Marie is a young Black woman working as an FBI agent in 1980s New York. Her career has gone stagnant when she’s suddenly approached by the CIA to spy on the president of Burkina Faso, a figure being billed as a dangerous Communist despot; she has her reservations, but figures she may be able to leverage some information of her own if she takes the gig. But as we spy novel people know all too well, that spy life is not an easy one; she finds herself sympathizing with her target and questioning the US’s motives—and thus questioning her loyalties in turn.

The story is told in the form of a diary that Marie is writing to her young sons in the hopes that they will read it and understand her better when they’re adults. I loved this format so much for the insight it gave into Marie’s career and her psyche, into the ways her relationships with the mother (who left her), her sister (who died on assignment), and even her target have informed her every move—and not always in a good way. Marie is smart, capable, intuitive, but she’s also human, vulnerable, and a mother; none of the decisions she’s forced to make are easy ones, and the consequences of those decisions don’t just affect her. I loved getting into her head to live in that complicated grey area along with her. I clenched my teeth and held my breath through a lot of it.

The other aspect of the book that I’m a big fan of is how it shines a light on our country’s propensity for acting like the word’s police with, to be generous, less than noble intentions. This is an uncomfortable truth to sit with: we’ve meddled and contributed to instability worldwide under the guise of upholding democracy and fighting terrorism. Have we been the good guys in some of these scenarios? I hope so. But we’ve also done a lot of harm and don’t seem to like confronting that reality.

If you’re in the mood for a good, complex spy thriller with a POC main character and a lot of nuance, you know what to do. Bahni Turpin delivers another stellar performance that wonderfully embodies both Marie’s cynicism and passion. Is there anything she can’t do?!

From the Internets

Amazon Book Review suggests the best mysteries to try on audio.

at Audiofile: 6 Romances with Medical Workers (the real MVPs!)

at Audible: Alan Alda and Journalist Kate Rope Unearth a Hidden History of American Medicine

at CNN: a spotlight on Akrican Echoes, an audiobook app will tell unheard African stories

at TIME: 11 Funny Audiobooks to Lighten the Mood This Dreary Winter

Over at the Riot

Check out these audiobook apps to help you on your language learning journey.

5 Must-Listen Short Story Collections on Audio


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 1/20/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.Tis I, Vanessa, coming to you from the past, hoping that Inauguration Day goes off without a hitch and does not become a scary pop-up news alert on our phones. This week I’m offering you all book club picks based on how much you feel like “engaging.” A little more on that below.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

It’s a little nippy here in Portland so I’m craving the comfort of soups. This week it’s going to albondigas, a Mexican soup full of veggies and fluffy, delicious meatballs. There are more complicated versions, this is just the simple version I grew up with.

  • A package of ground beef or turkey
  • 1 egg
  • Half cup of par-cooked rice (give or take, and use cooked if that’s what you have)
  • Chicken bouillon powder
  • Veggies: 3 carrots (peeled and cut into 1-inch rounds) 2 zucchini or Mexican squash, (cut into 1 inch half moons), 2 russet potatoes (peeled and cut into 1 inch chunks)
  • 2 tomatoes (roma or on the vine), grated
  • salt & pepper
  • 6 cups (or so) of water or chicken broth

Combine the ground meat, egg, and rice in a bowl, then season with salt and pepper. Roll the mixture into smallish balls; I make mine about the size of a ping pong ball. Set aside.

In a large pre-heated pot, warm the grated tomato mixture. Add the water and chicken bouillon to taste (how much you need will depend on what liquid you used). As the water starts to simmer, add the potatoes and carrots and let cook for about 10 minutes, then drop the meatballs in carefully so as not to splash. Cook for about 20 more minutes, adding in the zucchini when there are about 10 minutes left.

For all my Instant Pot people, I do all the same steps except I use. the sautéed function at the beginning and throw all the veggies in at the same time before dropping in the meatballs. Once everything is in, seal the lid and cook on high pressure for 4 minutes. Release immediately when done.

Choose Your Own Engagement

I constantly ask myself what the right balance is between acknowledging the state of the world and providing escapism. I very solidly believe that reading is an inherently political act, and I try to reflect that belief by encouraging an activist approach to reading. I also want this space to be one of escapism, but to be clear: we’re not plugging our ears and screaming “lalala!” at the world’s injustices, but just taking a break to practice a little self care and recharge.

That being said, each of you lovely humans will find yourselves in a different head space this week. Some of you may want to engage with the realities of this political moment head on, others may want to yeet themselves into another galaxy to get a break from it all. So I have four book club options for you below that hopefully cover a few of those bases.

Straight, No Chaser

For the book club that’s ready to unpack some ugly truths and get uncomfortable right here and now, I suggest:

Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America by Ijeoma Oluo

Look, I told you this would make you uncomfortable. Ijeoma Oluo’s latest asks: “What happens to a country that tells generation after generation of white men that they deserve power? What happens when success is defined by status over women and people of color, instead of by actual accomplishments?”

Book Club Bonus: Apply what you learn here to what the US is going through right now, and really sit with the fact that it was a long time coming.

Oh Snap, There’s Spinach in This Smoothie?!

For the book club that wants the lesson snuck into some levity: you want to stay engaged, but are craving a lighter read. Try:

You’ll Never Believe What Happened to Lacey: Crazy Stories about Racism by Amber Ruffin and Lacey Lamar

Amber Ruffin is such a talented and hilarious human. She’s written for Late Night with Seth Meyers since 2014 (a role that made her the first Black woman to write for a late-night network talk show in the US). Amber lives in New York, but her sister Lacey still lives back in Nebraska where they both grew up. This book is a downright horrifying collection of stories of the kinds of the racist BS that Lacey deals with on a daily basis in Omaha (some examples: strangers touching her hair, being mistaken for Harriet Tubman(!?), Oh, and getting hit on by a dude with the confederate flag in his online dating profile). But!! It’s also so, so funny. The sisters’ banter and delivery injects such comedy into some truly cringey stories. You’ll learn something, but you’ll stay laughing too.

Book Club Bonus: Have you been a Lacey, or have you been the person with your paws all up in Lacey’s hair? Share your experience with the group, both on the giving and receiving ends.

Calgon, Take Me Away!

For the book club that appreciates 90’s TV commercial references, or that’s in the mood for a love story with some characters to dissect, I recently loved:

Beach Read by Emily Henry

January is a successful romance novelist who always believed in love and happy endings. That was until her dad died and she learned that he was unfaithful to her mother for years. Broke, grief-stricken, and on a deadline, she goes to stay at her dad’s Lake Michigan beach house for the summer to clear the house out and hopefully bang out an overdue book. She’s less than pleased to learn that Gus, a Very Serious literary fiction author and her college rival, lives in the house next door. Their reunion is… less than pleasant, but they also can’t seem to stay away from each other. When they both reveal that they have writer’s block, January and Gus come up with a plan: they’ll swap genres for the summer (and try not to fall in love).

Book Club Bonus: Both January and Gus are bringing some baggage to the table and are processing some grief, grief that colors their interaction and more than once leads to miscommunication. Discuss examples of similar patterns in your own lives if it feels right in the moment, orrrrrr you can talk about how romance has helped you heal in your life like it did for January. Embrace the feels! Share the feels! Get all up in those feels.

Where is My Spaceship? I’m Out.

For the book club that wants just a few hours of solid, fantastical escapism and maybe likes snarky animal companions, I absolutely love:

cover image of Sabriel by Garth Nix

Sabriel by Garth Nix

Sabriel has spent most of her life at a boarding school outside the walls of the Old Kingdom, where the line between the living and the dead is blurred. During her final semester at the school, her father, the Abhorsen—the guardian of the border between life and death—goes missing. Though most presume him dead, Sabriel is convinced he’s still alive, so she journeys into the Old Kingdom to find him. Along for the ride are two companions: Touchstone, a young Charter Mage long imprisoned by magic, and Mogget, a talking cat who’s forever mood is “grumpy AF.” As the trio travels deep into the Old Kingdom, they encounter threats of all sorts (most of them dead); every step brings them closer to a battle between the forces of life and death, one that brings Sabriel face-to-face with her own hidden destiny.

Book Club Bonus: I love books where a well-meaning person or group tries to protect a “chosen one” type by keeping information from them (or removing them from a situation entirely) in the name of protecting that person, only to sort of have it all blow up in their face. Discuss the Abhorsen’s decision to send Sabriel to Ancelstierre. Did he do the right thing?

Suggestion Section

Duchess Camilla is kicking off her new book club with Where the Crawdads Sing. That book, I tell ya. It will outlast the cockroaches.

Tor.com’s discussion of Terry Pratchett’s Wyrd Sisters continues.

Padmasree Warrior, the former CTO of Motorola and Cisco, recently unveiled her new startup called Fable, a social media app for book lovers.


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 01/14/21

Hola Audiophiles! What a boring news week, amirite? I cannot tell you how thankful I am for yoga and meditation right now. I hope my audiobook fam is also finding ways to stay sane and safe, too. As always, I’m sending you virtual love and wishing you happy reading.

Need some distraction? Let’s audio.


New Releases – week of January 12  (publisher descriptions in quotes)

I quickly want to shoutout to Angie Thomas’ new book, Concrete Rose. I figured you all don’t need me to tell you about this buzzy title, but I wanted to at least briefly mention it. It’s narrated by Dion Graham!

audiobook cover image of The Ruthless Lady's Guide to Wizardry by C.M. Waggoner

The Ruthless Lady’s Guide to Wizardry by C.M. Waggoner

In a fantasy version of Victorian England, Delly is a petty con and partially trained fire witch who’s not quite making ends meet. Then she comes across a listing for a job protecting a young woman in the weeks before her marriage. Seems like a cushy gig with easy money… Ha! Nope! Dellaria learns pretty quickly that her charge is the target of some pretty dangerous assassination attempts using necromantic magic. With the help of a motley crew of her fellow female bodyguards (including one she’s warming up to, if you know what I’m sayin’), Delly will have to find a way to best this elusive adversary and keep her charge (and herself) safe. (historical fantasy)

I read this one in print, so I sampled the audio and I have one hangup with the narration: it’s read in an American accent! Ava Lucas is lovely, this is not a critique of her. The book’s setting makes me wish it was read in an English accent, but the book is so fun that I have to include it here.

You’ll Never Believe What Happened to Lacey: Crazy Stories about Racism by Amber Ruffin and Lacey Lamar

I love Amber Ruffin, a hilarious comedian and performer who’s written for Late Night with Seth Meyers since 2014 (a role that made her the first Black woman to write for a late-night network talk show in the US). While Amber lives in New York, Ruffin’s sister Lacey still lives back in Nebraska where they both grew up. This book is a hilarious, if at times downright horrifying, collection of anecdotes of the kinds of comments, behaviors, and general racist BS that Lacey is subjected to on a near daily basis in Omaha. Some examples: strangers touching her hair, being mistaken for a prostitute, being mistaken for Harriet!! Tubman!! Oh, and getting hit on online by a dude with the confederate flag in his profile pic. Whew. The sisters’ banter and delivery injects a whole lot of comedy into what are otherwise some truly cringey stories. (humor, essays)

Read by the authors

Yellow Wife by Sadeqa Johnson

Pheby Brown has grown up relatively sheltered on a Charles City, Virginia plantation, shielded by her mother’s position as the plantation’s medicine woman and beloved by the Master’s sister. She’d been promised freedom on her 18th birthday and plans to start a new life with the man she loves. Instead, Pheby is forced to leave the only home she’s ever known and finds herself at Devil’s Half Acre, a notorious jail in Richmond, Virginia where the enslaved are “broken, tortured, and sold every day. There, Pheby is exposed not just to her Jailer’s cruelty but also to his contradictions. To survive, Pheby will have to outwit him, and she soon faces the ultimate sacrifice.” This sounds like a heartbreaking read, but comes highly recommended. (historical fiction)

Read by the wonderful Robin Miles (Caste by Isabel Wilkerson, The City We Became by N.K. Jemisin, The Good House by Tananarive Due, and a million billion other awesome books).

The House on Vesper Sands by Paraic O’Donnell

A seamstress leaps from the window of an estate with a cryptic message sown into her skin; after receiving a strange letter warning him of impending danger, a destitute Cambridge student comes to London in search of his uncle—and the woman he once loved; an heiress-via-adoption is trying to make her name as a serious journalist, but her curmudgeon of an editor believes ladies should only report on society events and gossip; and a sharp and committed but volatile detective who deals with cases of an occult nature is assigned to find out what happened to the aforementioned seamstress. Alll of these people (and a whole bunch of others), are connected by a twisty case of missing girls who’ve all disappeared under similar mysterious circumstances. This book is a gothic romp and I loves it! (historical fiction)

Read by Charles Armstrong, the voice behind The Mysterious Affair at Styles and tons of other Agatha Christie novels)

Latest Listens

Beach Read by Emily Henry

January is a successful romance novelist whose views on love are shattered when she learns her recently deceased father was unfaithful to her mother for years. While staying at her dad’s Lake Michigan beach house for the summer to a) clear the house out, and b) isolate herself into writing an overdue book, she discovers her college rival Gus, a Very Serious literary fiction author, lives in the house next door. Neither of them is particularly jazzed about running into one another, but they can’t seem to stay away from one another either. When they both reveal that they have writer’s block, they come up with a plan: they’ll swap genres for the summer—and try not to fall in love.

I deeply identified with how bristly January is when she was first reunited with Gus. My alter ego’s name is Peppermint Petty (Petty and the Jets album dropping soon!), so I got my whole life from January messiness when she couldn’t figure out how to process her feelings (purse wine!). The book really sits with the ways in which our experiences, specifically grief, color how we interpret other people’s words and behaviors. The miscommunications abound, but they’re all so relatable. We aren’t ourselves when we’re consumed with big, scary feelings.

Perhaps best of all though was the very meta examination of the healing escapism of romance novels. January describes first being drawn into romancelandia when her mother was diagnosed with cancer, and my eyes got a little foggy; I became a romance reader in the last few years and emphatically vouch for the restorative quality of a good HEA when nothing else in your life makes sense. Reading about it from the perspective of a character who loses her love-conquers-all self in the wake of tragedy and then finds her way back again was a wonderful balm to start the year off with, even if things took a ridiculous turn a mere few days later.

From the Internets

at Audible: an interview with Angie Thomas on Tupac, honoring Black men, and what’s next

at Audiofile: Remembering John le Carré, Master of Spy Thrillers

at Libro.fm: an interview with Author Interview: Robert Jones, Jr. and discussion of his new book, The Prophets

Over at the Riot

Eight of the Best Audiobooks Narrated by Nancy Wu

The Best Earphones for Audiobooks


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 01/13/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. I don’t know about you, but to quote Luvvie Ajayi, I miss precedented times. Or if someone in the sky is taking orders for the types of unprecedented times we’d like to see next, I’d really prefer an elimination of the gender pay gap, reparations, an efficient vaccine rollout, a foolproof solution for adult acne… I have more ideas for the suggestion box if anyone needs ’em!

Let’s take a moment for ourselves to talk about books, shall we? To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

A thing I actually said out loud last week while peering at the contents of my fridge: “What dish pairs best with news of an attempted coup?” I don’t know, but I can vouch for this snack hack I saw on TikTok when I gave up on cooking and ordered takeout instead.

Now listen: this seems like a thing we should have all figured out a long time ago. Perhaps some of you did! Go with me here anyway because it is rather delightful in its simplicity. Use a knife or kitchen scissors to make one slit in a wrap or tortilla from its center to the edge (me, an intellectual: a radius slit), then place a different topping/ingredient in each of the four quarters of the wrap. To finish it off, fold the quarters over one another (see the video in the link I provided above) and then toast it off in a panini press or a preheated pan. Here are some of the combos I’ve now tried successfully:

  • fig jam, brie, applies, arugula
  • spinach, shredded chicken, buffalo sauce, cheese
  • tomato, hummus, spinach & feta, grilled chicken
  • salami, mozzarella, arugula, pesto
  • avocado, bacon, spinach, tomato

Have Y’all…. Read Orwell?

If you’ve been online at all this week, you’re likely painfully aware of two facts: most people’s grasp of the First Amendment is shaky at best, and the Venn diagram of people who call a thing Orwellian and those who’ve actually read and understand Orwell is two circles that do not touch. Whew. Orwell’s books (including the oft incorrectly cited 1984) were a warning on the dangers of totalitarian rule—the guy even went to Spain to fight in the Civil War against fascists!

That brings me to today’s book club suggestions. As a lot of my very smart internet book friends pointed out in the past couple of days (and years), there is another writer who’s work we should be talking about right now, one whose books aren’t just eerily prescient, but terrifyingly so. I’m breaking a little with my regular format and highlighting just these two books; I’m challenging you all to read them in book club and discuss what we’ll just call the fascism playbook. Without further ado, I bring you Octava E. Butler’s Earthseed series.

parable of the sower

Parable of the Sower

It’s the 2020s (yeah, you read that right) and climate change has made basic resources scarce (gulp), and most find themselves at the mercy of the few corporations who have jobs and money to offer (well that’s just great!). Fifteen-year-old Lauren Olamina lives in Los Angeles inside a gated community with her preacher father, family, and neighbors where they’re all 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 (screams in relatable dread). Making matters more complicated: she suffers from hyperempathy, a debilitating sensitivity to other people’s emotions.

cover image of Parable of the Talents by Octavia E. Butler

Parable of the Talents

Full disclosure: I have not read these books myself and will remedy that this year. I bring this up in order to tell you that my eyes went the size of quarters when I learned that this second book takes place after the election of—wait for it—an ultra-conservative president who vows to “make America great again.” I’m sorry… make America QUE?!?! It’s now 2032 and Lauren is living in and leading Acorn, her vision of a peaceful community in northern California that lives by the Earthseed faith. This subversive community provides refuge for those persecuted in the wake of the election and is led by a Black woman, so… you know what that means: the prezzy and his MAGA folk put a target on her back.

Suggestion Section

The DC Public Library has launched the Love in Color Book Club featuring romance by authors of color. Love this!

Does your book club love some Sally Rooney? Mark your calendars, her third novel is coming!

Lily Marotta and Steven Phillips-Horst are launching a podcast called Celebrity Book Club on January 13. In each episode, the pair will read celebrity memoirs then come together to discuss “the juicy—and often unhinged—details.” (Side note that made me chuckle: Phillips-Hort’s name on Twitter is “cancela lansbury.”)

The Mary Sue Book Club’s January theme: Goddesses, Romcoms, and Dazzling Space Operas

Read with Jenna’s January book club pick is super high on my TBR.


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 01/07/21

Hola Audiophiles, and welcome back! I am fresh off two glorious weeks of sleeping in, reading, eating, and lather-rinse-repeating. I feel refreshed and kinda sorta hopeful for a less-hellish 2021! Let’s kick off the year with a fresh batch of audiobooks and think positive thoughts.**

**Past Vanessa wrote and scheduled this newsletter hours before the news coming out of the US Capitol broke. I went from feeling the bliss of hope to the crush of anger and terror. I don’t know what else to say here, so I’ll just say that I think it’s still important to keep hope alive even when it’s hard to be hopeful. Sending you all a virtual hug for whatever it’s worth.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – week of January 5  (publisher descriptions in quotes)

cover image of Black Buck by Mateo Askaripour

Black Buck by Mateo Askaripour

Unambitious 22-year-old Darren is perfectly content living with his mom and working at Starbucks, but his mom wants him to want more. Then a chance run-in with the smooth-talking CEO of New York’s hottest tech start-up leads to Darren joining his team. Within a week, Darren has transformed into “Buck”, a ruthless salesman unrecognizable to his friends and family (and the only Black person at the mysterious, cult-like, company). “But when things turn tragic at home and Buck feels he’s hit rock bottom, he begins to hatch a plan to help young people of color infiltrate America’s sales force, setting off a chain of events that forever changes the game.” (fiction)

Read by Zeno Robinson (Ali Cross by James Patterson, Hi Five by Joe Ide)

Happily Ever Afters by Elise Bryant

Sixteen-year-old Tessa Johnson has rarely seen herself reflected in the pages of the romance novels she loves (relatable, Tessa!). The only place she gets to be the leading lady is in the love stories she writes. She’s ecstatic when she’s accepted into the creative writing program of a prestigious art school, but gets smacked with a case of writer’s block during her very first workshop. But it’s okay! Her bestie Caroline has a plan! All Tessa needs is a real-life love story for some inspiration via a list of romance novel-inspired steps to a happily ever after. But Tessa finds these steps may actually be pulling her further and further away from herself… (YA romance)

Read by Jordan Cobb (Deathless Divide by Justine Ireland, A Song of Wraiths and Ruin by Roseanne A. Brown, two books I really need to read)

One of the Good Ones by Maika Moulite, Maritza Moulite

Teen social activist and history buff Kezi Smith is killed under shady circumstances after attending a social-justice rally. Her sister Happi and their family are left reeling and devastated as Kezi becomes yet another victim in the fight against police brutality. Then Happi begins to question the idealized way her sister is remembered. Perfect. Angelic—”one of the good ones.” (contemporary YA)

This narrator trio tho!!! Bahni Turpin, Jordan Cobb, and Carolyn Smith. What?!

Lore by Alexandra Bracken

For centuries, Zeus has punished the gods with a game called the Agon wherein the gods must walk the earth as mortals and then be hunted for their immortality. Fun! Only a handful of gods remain, the rest replaced by mortals who killed them and ascended. Lore is the lone survivor of a line of god hunters who were brutally murdered by a rival family. With the Agon approaching, Lore sees a chance for revenge against the mortals-turned-gods responsible for her family’s deaths.

Read by Fryda Wolff (Mass Effect Andromeda: Nexus Uprising by Jason M. Hough, K. C. Alexander and Mass Effect: Initiation by N. K. Jemisin, Mac Walters)

Outlawed by Anna North

Seventeen-year-old Ada is all smiles on her wedding day: she loves her husband and she loves working as an apprentice to her midwife mother. But a year later, she hasn’t been able to get pregnant, which is kind of a big deal when you live in a town where barren women are routinely hanged as witches. That’s when she packs up and joins the notorious Hole in the Wall Gang, a band of outlaws led by a preacher-turned-robber known as the Kid. “Charismatic, grandiose and mercurial, the Kid is determined to create a safe haven for outcast women. But to make this dream a reality, the Gang hatches a treacherous plan that may get them all killed. And Ada must decide whether she’s willing to risk her life for the possibility of a new kind of future for them all.”

Read by Cynthia Farrell (The Unhoneymooners by Christina Lauren, This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar, Max Gladstone)

Latest Listens

Tiny Pretty Things by Dhonielle Clayton and Sona Charaipotra

TW: eating disorders and body stuff (not quite body horror, but close if you’re squeamish).

Oh my gatos, y’all. The release of this book’s Netflix adaptation reminded me that I’d been meaning to read it for years, it’s so my kind of book (I know, I know: story of my life). I finally read it over the break and wooooooow. It’s like Center Stage meets Black Swan and Fatal Attraction.

The book is primarily told from the perspectives of Gigi, Bette, and June, three young ballerinas at an intensely competitive ballet school in Manhattan. Kind and lighthearted Gigi just wants to dance, but the act could literally kill her. She’s also the only Black girl at the school, so… you can guess how that goes. Privileged New Yorker Bette is… how do I put this? Picture a version of Regina George who pops a lot of pills and has a serious complex from dancing in the shadow of her ballet-star sister. She’ll stop at nothing to end up on top, and I do mean nothing. *shivers* June is a dangerous perfectionist who has to land a lead role this year, otherwise her super-controlling mom will pull her from the school. Everyone’s losing their sh*t because the cast for the school’s Nutracker performance is about to be announced, and an absolute mess of a scandal erupts when the Gigi lands the role of Sugar Plum Fairy. Everyone thought it would be Better. Bette for damn sure thought it’d be Bette. But it’s not, and not everyone is willing to accept that.

This is absolutely one of those books that makes you hold your breath and grip the nearest object with white knuckles. The competitive nature of ballet and all the related pressures, body issues, disordered eating, etc all leap off the page and smack you in the face: it’s tense and uncomfortable and vicious. I loved how the authors also examined the motivations of the less palatable characters (hurt people hurt people, it turns out). If you’re in the mood for an absolute ride of a book full of characters you both love and love to hate with narration that matches the AAAAAAAH-level tension and pace, pick up Tiny Pretty Things (and it’s sequel, Shiny Broken Pieces).

Read by Imani Parks (Saving Ruby King by Catherine Adel West, Monday’s Not Coming my Tiffany D. Jackson), Nora Hunter (You Don’t Know Everything, Jilly P! by lex Gino), Greta Jung (The Last Story of Mina Lee by Nancy Jooyoun Kim, Your House Will Pay by Steph Cha)

From the Internets

Any Bodega Boys fans out there? Check out Audible’s interview with Desus and Mero and a discussion of their book, God-Level Knowledge Darts: Life Lessons from the Bronx.

New year, new beginnings! Here are five audiobooks about new beginnings brought to you by the good folks at Audiofile.

Libro.fm has a quiz to help you pick your first listen of 2021 (or not first if I know my audience)!

Over at the Riot

6 Audiobooks to Help You Out of Your Post-Holiday Reading Slump


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