Categories
In Reading Color

I Like Big Books and I Cannot Lie

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

This past weekend, I got back into my little gaming habit — something that I had started again this winter after years of not owning a console. I know I’m late to the party, and that’s fine, but playing Animal Crossing: New Horizons with a cup of tea — or wine, if you want to make it saucy — is so relaxing. Like, I was in my element. Then I felt like I messed it up a bit by playing the new Pokémon game, because I spent way too long on that *cries*. But yeah, I’m always open to new and improve ways of feeling cozy and relaxed, so shout them out to me if you have some.

With that said, let’s get into some big books and new releases!

Bookish Goods

Magnetic Bookmark with Black woman reading a book

Magnetic Bookmark by KhaosandKreations

I don’t have a designated book nook, but this cute, magnetic bookmark reminds me of what I’m missing out on. $4

New Releases

Symphony of Secrets cover

Symphony of Secrets by Brendan Slocumb

This is one I included in this week’s new release round up. In it, Bern Hendricks feels like his dreams are coming true when he gets a call from Mallory Roberts to help authenticate a valuable musical piece. As an expert on the most famous American composer — Frederick Delaney — Hendricks feels honored that the board of the Delaney Foundation, and a descendant of Delaney, would use his services. But looking into the authenticity of the famous composer’s supposed final work reveals some unflattering truths. Hendricks is led to the streets of 1920s Manhattan, where he finds Josephine Reed — a young Black woman who seems to have been the actual genius behind Delaney’s masterpieces. As Hendricks gets closer to the truth, he also gets closer to making an enemy of a powerful organization that doesn’t want that truth to come out. 

cover of The Wishing Pool and Other Stories by Tananarive Due

The Wishing Pool and Other Stories by Tananarive Due

Due is an award-winning author of horror and speculative fiction, and her latest is a collection of short stories divided into four sections. While there are more straightforward horror tales, there are also ones that focus on Afrofuturistic narratives. These original and horrifying stories feature cosmic horror, characters who battle demons (both inside and out), and post apocalyptic comedy, with nods to everything from Octavia Butler to theTwilight Zone.

Don’t forget to check out our latest newsletter, The Deep Dive. It’s full of informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading. Subscribe and choose your membership level ($5 or free!) today at bookriot.substack.com.

More New Releases

Greek Lessons by Han Kang (Literary Fiction)

Sisters of the Lost Nation by Nick Medina (Mythological Thriller, Mystery)

The Haunting of Alejandra by V. Castro (Mythological Horror)

Damsel by Evelyn Skye (Fantasy)

Jasmine and Jake Rock the Boat by Sonya Lalli (Romance)

Trejo’s Cantina: Cocktails, Snacks & Amazing Non-Alcoholic Drinks from the Heart of Hollywood by Danny Trejo, with Hugh Garvey (Cookbook)

Snow & Poison by Melissa de la Cruz (YA, Fantasy Retelling)

Alondra by Gina Femia (YA, Contemporary)

Shinji Takahashi: Into the Heart of the Storm by Julie Kagawa (Middle Grade, Fantasy)

The Rhythm of Time by Questlove, with S. A. Cosby (Middle Grade, Science Fiction)

Chef Edna: Queen of Southern Cooking by Melvina Noel, illustrated by Cozbi A. Cabrera (Children’s Picture Book, Biography)

Egyptian Lullaby by Zeena M. Pliska, illustrated by Hatem Aly (Children’s Picture Book)

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

Riot Recommendations

I like to blame a diminished attention span on my current avoidance of big novels, but if I’m being honest, I think it’s the attention span plus maybe a couple other things. For one, working in the book world has me coming across all manner of interesting-sounding books, and I frequently have the urge to start new ones…at the risk of not finishing the ones I’m currently reading. Sometimes I resist this urge, and sometimes not. But I like the idea of big books and like how I feel once I’ve completed one, even if I haven’t finished one in a while. If you’re also down for sprawling sagas, and lived in, immersive worlds, I’ve got some recs below.

cover of Babel by RF Kuang

Babel : An Arcane History by R.F. Kuang

Kuang is the award-winning author of another big and juicy door stopper, The Poppy War (which I very much enjoyed listening to on audiobook, by the way). In Babel, she turns her talents towards the darkness inherent in Western academia. Robin, who was orphaned by cholera, was brought from China to London by a professor and studied Chinese, Ancient Greek, and Latin. His efforts through the years are so that he can enroll in a prestigious Oxford University program called “Babel.” The program’s location, the Babel tower, serve as the world’s translation center, and the reason Britain is able to maintain power. This power comes as a result of the unique magic system of this world, known as silver-working. With silver-working, meanings lost in translation are manifested with enchanted silver bars. Robin eventually realizes how much his own country — and others — suffer because of this magic and Britain’s use of it, and must decide if he wants to serve that power or disrupt it.

cover of Age of Vice by Deepti Kapoor; black with gold font

Age of Vice by Deepti Kapoor

In New Delhi, in the wee hours of the morning, five people die in a car accident. The luxury car involved belongs to a rich man, who it turns out wasn’t driving. And the servant who is actually in the car doesn’t know what’s happening. This event kickstarts a shifting and intricately woven narrative that takes place in contemporary India, where wealth, corruption, and violence center around the powerful Wadia family. Characters become connected as they navigate greed, rising through the ranks, and morality in this tome that’s part family saga, part crime thriller.

A Brief History of Seven Killings Book Cover

A Brief History of Seven Killings by Marlon James

This historical fiction sprawls over a host of characters — gangsters, CIA agents, journalists, and more — after gunmen try to kill Bob Marley in 1976 Jamaica, wounding others in the process. As the singer seeks refuge in England, readers follow the country in the decades following. Through varied perspectives, James paints a full and complex picture of Jamaica’s complexities, from the ’70s to the much-changed climate of the ’90s.

More Interesting Things

Billy Porter to star as James Baldwin in a new movie. Porter will also be co-writing the script with Dan McCabe.

New Trailer for HBO’s The Sympathizer, a show based on the award-winning novel by Viet Thanh Nguyen.

Malala Yousafzai to release a new memoir

Oprah and Mindy Kaling going to produce show based on Vera Wong by Jesse Q. Sutanto

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

Spring Has Sprung in These Books + New Releases

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

As a mood reader, I am, at times, a very simple person. Sometimes, figuring out what to read next feels like I need to consult the stars. Other times, it’s just simply inspired by the season. As such, with the sun bright and the temperature outside a smooth 66 degrees, I’m in the mood for books that feel like spring. For me, this means novels that take place during the spring (obviously), or ones that have general, plant-based themes, or themes of rebirth.

I’ll share a few with you after getting into some new releases!

Bookish Goods

Floral Bookmark with Black Women

Floral Bookmark with Black Women by HoneyGirlCreative

In theme with our books today, allow me to offer up these pretty, flowery book marks. $4

New Releases

the cover of The People Who Report More Stress

The People Who Report More Stress by Alejandro Varela

Whether it’s because I just started paying more attention to them or because there really are more of them, I’ve been noticing more reading coming out that focuses on the long-term effects of living as a person in the margins.Varela’s stories in The People Who Report More Stress are about these people, who have to withdraw in order to survive. A queer man goes searching for a long-term partner and weeds out political moderates, but then wonders if his approach is the best after some uncomfortable encounters; a childcare worker teaches children Spanish with Selena’s songs; a Latine father suffers though microaggressions during playdates with a white mother, and more.

Yours Truly  by Abby Jimenez cover

Yours Truly by Abby Jimenez

Dr. Briana Ortiz is simply going through it. Like, through it, through it. Her divorce has cemented, her brother is still looking for a kidney donor, and she might not even get that promotion she needs. It will probably go to the new male doctor, who she’s totally ready to hate on. But the new doc, Dr. Maddox, flips the script on Bri by sending her a letter…which she responds to with a letter of her own. Now the two are in constant communication, and she’s even allowed him to have lunch with her in her “sob closet.” As the two grow even closer, the good doc Maddox does a favor for her that is life-saving in this super sweet romance.

More New Releases

Butter: Novellas, Stories, and Fragments by Gayl Jones (Fiction, Short Stories)

Verity and the Forbidden Suitor by  J.J. McAvoy (Historical Romance)

Enter Ghost by Isabella Hammad (Fiction)

Blue Hour by Tiffany Clarke Harrison (Fiction)

Black Girls Must Have It All by Jayne Allen

Untethered Sky by Fonda Lee (Fantasy)

Throwback by Maureen Goo (YA, Science Fiction)

The Making of Yolanda la Bruja by Lorraine Avila (YA, Fantasy)

The Little Mermaid: Make A Splash by Ashley Franklin (Children’s Picture Book)

The Loud Librarian by Jenna Beatrice, illustrated by Erika Lynne Jones (Children’s Picture Book)

Naming Ceremony by Seina Wedlick, illustrated by Jenin Mohammed 

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

Riot Recommendations

Sweet Bean Paste cover

Sweet Bean Paste by Durian Sukegawa, translated by Alison Watts 

Sentaro’s dream of becoming a writer seems to fade more and more everyday. With his criminal record and drinking habit, all he seems able to to do for now is sell dorayaki, a Japanese pancake filled with sweet bean paste. His life gets an inspired jolt, though, when he meets Tokue. She’s disabled because of a disease that has filled her life with a lot of suffering, but despite her past, she makes the best sweet bean paste. She starts to teach Sentaro how to achieve sweet bean past perfection, and as they get to know each other better, the pasts they’re both trying to hide start to reveal themselves.

Magnolia, 木蘭 cover

Magnolia, 木蘭 by Nina Mingya Powles

This poetry collection screams “Spring!” to me lately because of the cover, yes, but also because of its focus on the senses, which I think is vital for a spring book. After living through the cold and monochromatic winter, spring is a time for our senses to reawaken and start to differentiate between stimuli again. And it’s through the senses that Powles explores the liminal spaces between languages, memories of a biracial childhood, and the joy of food and nature.

This Poison Heart cover

This Poison Heart by Kalynn Bayron

Beautiful covers aside, this YA novel is giving spring because of its plant magic (!). High schooler Briseis is a magical girl. She can will seeds to grow and manipulate plants in other ways. But she keeps her magic hidden from other people, except for her adoptive mothers, and doesn’t explore her power much out of fear. When her biological aunt Circe, who she never knew she had, dies, she leaves her a run down estate in upstate New York. Once the family of three makes the move, it’s at the estate that Bri learns more of her family, and therefore herself, while making tinctures for people, even as she fends off odd groups and mysterious women. This is like the perfect mix of Greek mythology and plant magic with gothic sensibilities. Kalynn Bayron is basically an auto buy for me at this point.

One more thing! Make sure to check out our latest newsletter, The Deep Dive. It’s full of informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading. Subscribe and choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com.

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

Arab American Heritage Month and New Releases

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

Although there has been some intense rain the past couple days on the east coast, the weather has been been looking up overall. I’m excited to head to the library, get some books and a beverage, and sit on somebody’s bench. I love spring.

As I fantasize about what I want to do before summer and its miserable heat comes, I’ve got some new releases and a couple books to help you celebrate Arab American Heritage Month.

Bookish Goods

Teabag Bookmarks

Teabag Bookmarks by CraftyLadyAz

These crochet tea bag bookmarks are the cutest! $6

New Releases

cover of Ana Maria and The Fox by Liana De la Rosa; Latine couple dancing

Ana María and The Fox by Liana De la Rosa

When the French invade Mexico in 1862, Ana María Luna Valdés and her sisters get sent to London for their protection. While they are originally meant to lay low, their uncle convinces them to socialize in high society, with the hopes that the neutral Queen will become sympathetic to their plight. While there, Ana María meets the stoic Gideon Fox, who has worked hard all his life to achieve his current status as a member of Parliament. Fox is on the brink of permanently abolishing slavery — and its loopholes — as he begins to (reluctantly) fall for Ana María. But the two know that their social statuses are precarious in Victorian England — hers as a foreigner, and his as the descendant of a formally enslaved woman. This is an interesting break from the usual historical romance set up.

cover of the scourge between stars by ness brown

The Scourge Between Stars by Ness Brown

Here’s a short one if you want something quick to dip into. It’s a space horror that follows the last humans as they try to make their way back to earth from the failed colonies their ancestors founded. Jacklyn is the captain of the doomed ship, which seems to be hurtling towards having its inhabitants starve or meet some other horrible fate. Like, say, the bloody, violent deaths that are befalling crew members. She has to figure out what’s killing people before they’re all gone.

More New Releases

House of Cotton by Monica Brashears (Southern Gothic)

Camp Zero by Michelle Min Sterling (Science Fiction, Dystopian)

A Fever in the Heartland: The Ku Klux Klan’s Plot to Take Over America, and the Woman Who Stopped Them by Timothy Egan (Nonfiction)

A Living Remedy by Nicole Chung (Memoir)

Funeral Songs for Dying Girls by Cherie Dimaline (YA, Fantasy)

Blood Debts by Terry J. Benton-Walker (YA, Fantasy)

¡Ay, Mija!  by Christine Suggs (YA, Graphic Novel)

Ander & Santi Were Here by Jonny Garza Villa (YA, Romance)

A Whole Song and Dance by Sarvenaz Tash (YA, Romantic Comedy)

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

Riot Recommendations

Cover of The Final Strife by Saara El-Arifi

The Final Strife by Saara El-Arifi

At 640 pages, this is the exact opposite of The Scourge Between Stars, but it’s good to become immersed in a fantasy that’s long af from time to time, you know? Here, three women, who are separated by a stringent social class based on the color of blood, spell the end of oppression. Sylah and Anoor were switched at birth, with the hopes of Sylah being one of the descendants of the magical elites to burn down the social hierarchy from the inside. The two women, with the help of Syrah’s friend Hassa — who is part of the invisible, enslaved class — set the stage for the empire to fall. The world building in this one is immaculate and based on Ghanian and Arab folklore. Thankfully, the second entry into this series, The Battle Drum, is out this year in May.

cover of If an Egyptian Cannot Speak English by Noor Naga

If an Egyptian Cannot Speak English by Noor Naga

In this multi award-nominated dark and chaotic novel, a rich Egyptian American woman visits her parents’ homeland where she meets a man who took photos during the Arab Spring. The two find themselves on the outskirts of modern Egypt society in many ways — she because she finds she can’t quite claim Egyptian as an identity, having grown up in the U.S.; and he because of the drug addiction that began after the revolution. The relationship turns violent, as they both try to use each other to compensate for what they lack.

Make sure to check out our latest newsletter, The Deep Dive. It’s full of informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading. Subscribe and choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com.

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

New Poetry Month Picks and New Releases

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

Well, well, well, it’s essentially already April and I must admit that I haven’t read quite as much as I would have liked to by this time. I chalk it up to the usual end-of-day fatigue, but also to the fact that I come across so many interesting books and keep starting new ones without finishing the ones I started before *cries in ADHD*. My two bedside tables are looking mighty wild and full of books right now.

But I’ve got a plan! April is National Poetry Month, so I’m going to keep chipping away at the books I’ve started, while fitting in a few poetry collections — which I have bought a lot of the past few months. I either have copies of or have already started all the poetry and in-verse recommendations I have for you today.

Bookish Goods

Dried Flowers And Gold Flake Resin Book Page Holder

Dried Flower and Gold Resin Book Page Holder by DesignedbyBethville

These book holders’ dried flowers give a cute, spring vibe that I’m here for — and that would look good between the pages of a poetry collection. Just saying. $10

New Releases

Lone Women Book cover of Lone Women by Victor LaValle; illustration of a Black woman standing in a field with a trunk by her feet

Lone Women by Victor LaValle  

LaValle’s latest is a creative blend of Western, horror, fantasy, and historical fiction. It follows Adelaide, a young Black woman, who runs to Montana to become a homesteader in the early 1900s. But with her come her secrets, like the fact that she set her California home on fire with her parents’ dead bodies inside. And then there’s the issue of the huge steamer trunk that accompanies her wherever she goes and remains closed, lest more people start to disappear.

ada's room cover

Ada’s Room by
Sharon Dodua Otoo, translated by Jon Cho-Polizzi

There are some Virginia Woolf references in this highly inventive novel by Otoo. For one, It seems like the title and subject matter reference Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own, and the premise of the book is Orlando-esque. It follows four women, who are really one, as they are reincarnated through time and observed by a curious narrator who takes on odd shapes, including a passport and a broom (like you do). The Ada of 15th century Ghana mourns her child as she fights against Portuguese slavers. Another Ada, living in Victorian England, becomes known as a mathematical genius. The third Ada is imprisoned at an incarceration camp brothel in 1945. And finally, the fourth Ada is a modern-day Ghanian woman in Berlin, pregnant and desperate to find a home before her baby is born. The past and present are interwoven by Otoo’s ingenious writing as all four Adas fight for their survival and a space of their own within society.

More New Releases

The Great Reclamation by Rachel Heng (Historical Fiction)

Chlorine by Jade Song (Fantasy, Horror)

Samuel Ringgold Ward: A Life of Struggle by R. J. M. Blackett (Biography)

Spoken Word: A Cultural History by Joshua Bennett (Nonfiction)

Birdgirl: A Young Environmentalist Looks to the Skies in Search of a Better Future by Mya-Rose Craig (Memoir, Nature)

The Perfumist of Paris by Alka Joshi (Historical Fiction)

Murder Under a Red Moon by Harini Nagendra (Mystery, Historical fiction)

The Human Origins of Beatrice Porter and Other Essential Ghosts by Soraya Palmer (Fiction, Magical Realism)

Not So Perfect Strangers by L.S. Stratton (Mystery/Thriller)

Stars and Smoke by Marie Lu (YA, Fantasy, Romance)

Chaos & Flame by Tessa Gratton and Justina Ireland (YA, Fantasy)

Mary Can! by Mary J Blige, illustrated by Ashleigh Corrin (Children’s)

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

Riot Recommendations

cover of Above Ground by Clint Smith

Above Ground by Clint Smith

Clint Smith, author of the award-winning How the Word is Passed, reflects on the changing powers of fatherhood in this latest collection of poetry. He explores how we are shaped by our families, as well as the pressures of society at large, but then this established form is disrupted when children are born. Once you become a parent, Smith explores how you start to see the world again, through a different perspective, and how this new view helps you grow with your child.

cover of Saints of the Household by Ari Tison

Saints of the Household by Ari Tison

This YA novel combines vignettes and poems to tell the story of two Bribri brothers. One day Jay and Max rush to the aid of their cousin when they hear trouble in the woods. They find her and their high school’s popular soccer player, who they think is hurting her, and beat him so badly that other kids at school ostracize them and they have to go to a series of counseling sessions. The incident also makes them have an existential crisis — are they just as bad as their abusive father, who they can’t trust, even with their mother? As the brothers reckon with their internal struggles, they grow apart, but also realize that Bribri traditions may help them mend.

cover of Alive at the End of the World by Saeed Jones

Alive At The End Of The World by Saeed Jones

Jones ponders on the current state of the world and determines that we’ve been living in an apocalypse. The everyday stressors of our lives, like racism and grief, chip away at us little by little until we are in our own, personal dystopia. But there is sweetness here, too, even as Jones plumbs the depths.

cover of The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On by Franny Choi

The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On by Franny Choi

This is another new poetry release that deals with the idea of apocalypses (surprise!) and what they mean for marginalized people. Like Jones, Choi’s poems show how the end of the world has always felt just around the corner for people subjected to colonialism, police brutality, and all the other descendants of colonialism. Where Jones’ collection is more self-based, Choi’s zooms out and crosses through time, looking at everything from the Korean Comfort Women of WWII to pop music.

we are all so good at smiling book cover

We Are All So Good at Smiling by Amber McBride

Amber McBride absolutely kills it with her YA novels in verse. Her debut, Me (Moth) was a finalist for the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature. In this January release, we meet Whimsy, who is in the hospital again for clinical depression. When she meets another former patient, Faerry, who is a Fae, the two start to see how interconnected their lives are. But then Faerry goes missing in the terrifying forest at the end of their street. Witches, princesses, and fairy tales lie in the path Whimsy must take to save him, but she’s also aided by some of the forest’s inhabitants, and by her own practice of Hoodoo.

Make sure to check out our latest newsletter, The Deep Dive. It’s full of informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading. Subscribe and choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com.

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

Illuminating Nonfiction and Fantastical New Releases

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

I love fantasy, as evident by my many proclamations of that fact in this newsletter, and all the fantasy I recommend. I will admit, however, that the older I get, the more I skim that ish, honey. I appreciate the world building, really, but it’s hard enough keeping up with the real world to learn the 50-leven new terms and clans in the first few chapters. I thought I was just lazy, but this TikTok validates me! (We sure do pretend! *sweats in tired fantasy reader*)

With that said, I do have a couple new fantasies for you, as well as some nonfiction to balance things out. Before we get to it, though, make sure to check out our latest newsletter, The Deep Dive. It’s full of informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading. Subscribe and choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com.

Bookish Goods

Black Authors Bookstack Sticker

Black Authors Bookstack Sticker by EclectiqueCreative

I love the the color scheme of this sticker that features some of the most iconic Black authors. $3.50

New Releases

cover of Flux by Jinwoo Chong

Flux by Jinwoo Chong

Brandon is 28, loses his job, loses his shit (temporarily), then is offered a mysterious job, where he proceeds to lose his shit again. It’s a different kind of losing it, though, because every day he goes into his job at Flux, a bioelectric tech start up, he can’t remember big chunks of time. And he doesn’t know why. Then there’s 8-year-old Bo, who loses his mother and starts to fall away into an ’80s show called Raiders. Finally, 48-year-old Blue wakes from a coma, can only speak through a cybernetic implant, and is involved with exposing the seemingly murderous misdeeds of the Flux company. Asian identify and tragedy connects the characters as a larger mystery unfolds through time travel. It’s a lot, but in all the best ways.

cover of The Lies of the Ajungo by Moses Ose Utomi

The Lies of the Ajungo by Moses Ose Utomi

This novella is the first in a new series by Utomi titled Forever Desert. It’s a coming-of-age tale wrapped in the skin of a fable, and follows Tutu who is about to turn 13 in the water-deprived City of Lies. Thing is, when citizens of this city turn 13, their tongues are cut out at the behest of the Ajungo empire, who threaten to cut off their water supply should they stop this practice. If you’re wondering how people tell lies in the City of lies with no tongues, I think that’s kind of the gag. Tutu journeys out of the city before he loses his tongue to save not only his sickly mother, but also his city.

More New Releases

The Raven Thief: A Secret Staircase Mystery (Secret Staircase Mysteries, 2) by Gigi Pandian (Mystery)

Wandering Souls by Cecile Pin (Literary Fiction, Family Saga)

Benjamin Banneker and Us: Eleven Generations of an American Family by Rachel Jamison Webster (History, Nonfiction)

Lucha of the Night Forest by Tehlor Kay Mejia (Young Adult, Fantasy)

While You Were Dreaming  by Alisha Rai (Young Adult, Romance)

Mirror to Mirror by Rajani LaRocca (Middle Grade, Poetry)

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

Riot Recommendations

cover of Poverty, by America

Poverty, by America by Matthew Desmond

While most of the books I feature in this newsletter are by authors of color, I will occasionally share a book by a non person of color that is either about a person of color or highly relevant to BIPOC communities. I’ve noticed there are a lot of non marginalized authors writing nonfiction about people of color in history, which is good, but also sometimes makes me wonder about representation and opportunity in academia, since I know it is severely lacking. That is another issue for another day, though.

Today, I’m recommending this much-anticipated new book by Matthew Desmond because it aims right for the so called morality that lies at the core of the Judeo-Christian American Dream this country was founded on, and asks how it could sentence its most vulnerable citizens to poverty. The U.S. is the richest country on earth, but 1/8 of its children don’t have basic necessities, and the number of people without housing is astronomical. Desmond uses research and original reporting to show how the comfort afforded to some comes at the severe cost of others. Luckily, he also shares how to change it, recommending that we all become poverty abolitionists — a term I really appreciate because of how it calls back to slavery abolitionists (thereby drawing parallels between slavery and capitalism).

The Intersectional Environmentalist cover

The Intersectional Environmentalist by Leah Thomas 

This and the next book fit so well with the first I mentioned because of how absolute and far reaching the system of privilege is in the U.S. Here, Thomas shows how, to save the environment, we have to look at racial discrimination and the communities it’s hurt. This is because Black and Indigenous people are disproportionately affected by environmental injustice, and only by uplifting their voices — and the voices of other BIPOC communities — will we truly be able to tackle issues threatening the planet.

a graphic of the cover of The Future Is Disabled: Prophecies, Love Notes and Mourning Songs by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha

The Future Is Disabled by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha

Piepzna-Samarasinha writes about how living through COVID has been as a disabled, queer femme-presenting person. The fact that the world was made for non disabled people was made even more clear since the onset of the pandemic, but in this book, they imagine a world where the majority of people are disabled. They posit that disability justice and disability culture is vital to overcoming things like fascism, the environmental crisis, and other issues. They also talk about the care crisis, and how disabled people have supported each other, and how they can continue to.

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

American Girl Dolls Get Spicy and ’90s Nostalgia

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

I don’t know how many of you heard about the latest in American Girl Doll news, but the doll company decided to come for millennials’ edges and release TWO (there being two of them somehow made it worse) dolls with historical character backstories…from the ’90s. And they made sure it was 1999 to be extra shady. Naturally, we were in our feelings, because it wasn’t that long ago. But then I got to thinking.

And I came to the conclusion that yes, yes it was. There’s been debate over whether fiction set in the ’90s should be considered historical for the same reason, and I admit my previous hesitation with that, but I’ve started to see the light. When I think back to the ’90s, first of all, I was barely aware of my own existence for most of them, but what I do remember seems like so long ago. I mean, 2020 feels long ago, too, but the distance between now and the ’90s hits different. From our technology to how we even address each other has changed drastically. Thinking about it got me thinking about the time in general, and had me remembering what I liked about it (because nostalgia is convenient like that), and wanting to read some books that were set in that time. If you want to get into some ’90s nostalgia with me, I’ve got a few books for you.

Before we get into that, though, make sure to check out Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, full of informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading. Subscribe and choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com

Bookish Goods

Reading Rainbow Inspired Enamel Pin

Reading Rainbow Inspired Enamel Pin by PinBotShop

LeVar Burton + the ’90s. Name a more iconic duo (I’ll wait). Get into this nostalgia for $10.

New Releases

Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers cover

Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers by Jesse Q. Sutanto

Vera Wong rises early and wonders why young folk don’t do the same. Actually, she wonders why a lot of people don’t do things she does or take her advice. Especially when she finds a body in her all but forgotten little tea shop in San Francisco’s Chinatown. She has advice for the police investigating the death — which they don’t seem to appreciate — and some advice for the suspects she’s gathered together…yeah, this is as silly and cute as it sounds, and I feel like I’ve met a few aunties like Vera in my day.

Our Best Intentions cover

Our Best Intentions by Vibhuti Jain

Here’s another mystery for you! This one takes place in New York City and follows Bobby Singh, an immigrant and single parent who is trying his best to achieve the American Dream. When his introverted daughter Angie finds one of her wealthy classmates stabbed in a football field, police think Chiara Thompkins, a Black runaway, is responsible. But we already know things aren’t always quite what they seem, and what gets revealed about the community, families, and even Angie’s own part in things is shocking.

More New Releases

Red London by Alma Katsu (Mystery/Thriller)

Bitter Medicine by Mia Tsai (Fantasy)

Dispatches From Puerto Nowhere: An American Story of Assimilation and Erasure by Robert Lopez (Memoir)

Dust Child by Que Mai Phan Nguyen (Literary fiction)

Everyday Grand: Soulful Recipes for Celebrating Life’s Big and Small Moments by Jocelyn Delk Adams (Cookbook)

the next new syrian girl book cover

We Were Once a Family: A Story of Love, Death, and Child Removal in America by Roxanna Asgarian (Nonfiction, True Crime)

I Will Find You Again by Sarah Lyu (Young Adult, Mystery/Thriller)

The Next New Syrian Girl by Ream Shukairy (Young Adult, Fiction)

A Bit of Earth by Karuna Riazi (Middle Grade, Poetry)

The Book That No One Wanted to Read by Richard Ayoade (Middle grade picture book)

Turtles of the Midnight Moon by María José Fitzgerald (Middle Grade, Magical Realism)

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

Riot Recommendations

cover of THE BLACK KIDS BY CHRISTINA HAMMONDS REED

The Black Kids by Christina Hammonds Reed

This YA novel takes place around the time Rodney King was brutally beaten by police. Until that happens, Ashley is living well — she’s been spending her high school senior year at the beach and California’s sunny days are peaceful. But once people see the recording of the beating, and L.A. is thrown into chaos, her wealthy Black family suddenly becomes fractured and the friends she thought she had remind her that she’s Black before she’s anything else.

sour heart cover

Sour Heart by Jenny Zhang

In this collection of stories, Zhang details what it’s like to grow up the daughter of Chinese immigrants in New York City. Zhang’s girls are shy, loving, cruel, and creative, but most of all, they are trying their best to make a space for themselves in the world. Though some of the 1960s Cultural Revolution in China is shown, the stories take place mostly in the ’90s.

My Soul to Keep by Tananarive Due

My Soul to Keep by Tananarive Due

This is the first of a series that actually started in the ’90s. In it, Jessica and David are happily married, but Jessica always feels that despite her husband’s seeming perfection, there’s something he’s withholding. Turns out that something is that David is a 400-year-old immortal who traded his humanity for immortality as part of an Ethiopian sect. Now, his sect wants David to leave his family. Instead, he tries to bring Jessica and their daughter into the fold. But Jessica may not be willing to make the sacrifice that’s required.

Honorable mention: Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng

I’m only briefly mentioning this one because it does, in fact, take place in the ’90s, but it also has literally over 1 million ratings on Goodreads and has been made into a show staring two of the biggest actresses working now, so I’m sure you’ve heard of it.

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

Women Now Publishing More Books Than Men

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

Women’s History Month is not playing with y’all. A new report just dropped detailing how women are now publishing more books than men. Women now publish more than 50% of all books, and have since 2020. The increase in published books by women has also come with a boost for the book industry overall, which boasted “a year-on-year increase of 12.3%” in 2021 (if you’re curious, publishing made $29.3 billion in 2021). With these stats we see what we’ve already known, really, which is that diversifying the publishing industry is not only the right thing to do, but people also just really like it.

It’s only fitting for me to focus on some books by women for today’s newsletter. Since it’s such a broad topic, I’m sticking to a couple new releases.

By the way, if you’re looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading, subscribe to Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox. Subscribe and choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com

Bookish Goods

Women In Saree Reading Book

Indian Women In Saree Reading a Book by KalaakaArByRekh

I love the color scheme in this pretty print. $21

New Releases

monstrilio cover

Monstrilio by Gerardo Sámano Córdova

It’s grief that leads mother Magos to cut off a piece of her 11-year-old son Santiago’s lung. It’s motherly love, and a bit of Mexican folk tale, though, that sees her nurturing the lung until it gains sentience. The Monstrilio it becomes craves flesh, but it’s also beginning to look like the Santiago Magos knew and loved. If the walls of Magos’ family estate in Mexico City, friends, and family can keep Monstrilio’s appetite in check, maybe the family will have a second chance at life.

Leila Aboulela cover

River Spirit by Leila Aboulela

Through magical writing, Aboulela tells the story of Sudan and its experience with imperialism through the lives of seven women and men. When Akuany and her brother Bol are orphaned during a raid on their village in South Sudan, the young merchant Yaseen takes them in. As she comes of age, Akuany is sold from house to house, just as Sudan wrestles with Christianity and Islam, freedom and colonialism.

More New Releases

My Dear Henry: A Jekyll & Hyde Remix by Kalynn Bayron (YA Historical, Science Fiction Fantasy, Retelling)

My dear Henry cover

Fat Off, Fat On: A Big Bitch Manifesto by Clarkisha Kent (Queer Memoir)

The Faithless (Magic of the Lost Book 2) by C. L. Clark (Science Fiction Fantasy)

What Happened to Ruthy Ramirez by Claire Jimenez (Literary Fiction)

Now You See Us by Balli Kaur Jaswal (Literary Fiction)

Love at Six Thousand Degrees by Maki Kashimada, Haydn Trowell (translator) (Literary Fiction)

Tremors in the Blood : Murder, Obsession, and the Birth of the Lie Detector by Amit Katwala (Nonfiction)

Letters to a Writer of Color edited by Deepa Anappara and Taymour Soomro (Nonfiction)

Who Gets Believed?: When the Truth Isn’t Enough by Dina Nayeri (Nonfiction) 

Black Ball: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Spencer Haywood, and the Generation That Saved the Soul of the NBA by Theresa Runstedtler (Nonfiction)

​​The Odyssey of Phillis Wheatley: A Poet’s Journeys Through American Slavery and Independence by David Waldstreicher (Nonfiction, Biography)

Heating the Outdoors by Marie-Andrée Gill, Kristen Renee Miller (translator) (Poetry)

Rosewood cover

Drinking from Graveyard Wells: Stories (Contemporary Poetry And Prose) by Yvette Lisa Ndlovu v

Tanya: Poems by Brenda Shaughnessy (Poetry)

Rosewood: A Midsummer Meet Cute by Sayantani DasGupta (Romance)

There Goes the Neighborhood by Jade Adia (YA, Fiction)

Chloe and the Kaishao Boys by Mae Coyuito (YA, Romance)

Change the Game by Colin Kaepernick, Eve L. Ewing, Orlando Caicedo (YA Graphic Memoir)

The Jump by Brittney Morris YA, Fiction

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

Riot Recommendations

The two books I mention below are perfect examples of what the article I mentioned earlier meant by more books offering “…narratives and perspectives that would otherwise have gone unwritten.”

The House of Eve Book Cover

The House of Eve by Sadeqa Johnson

In the 1950s in Philly, Ruby Pearsall is 15 and on track to attend college, thereby breaking a generational curse that plagues her family. But a love affair threatens to keep her moored in poverty. Then there’s Eleanor Quarles, who has married into an elite family in D.C. and struggles to fit in. Ruby’s and Eleanor’s paths intersect in interesting ways as they both make life-altering decisions.

Stealing cover

Stealing by Margaret Verble

In Stealing, Pulitzer Prize finalist Margaret Verble writes of Kit Crockett’s quiet life as a Cherokee girl in the ’50s. Since her mother died, and her father has been eaten up with grief, Kitt has spent her days reading Nancy Drew stories, fishing, and gardening, until she’s taken away from her family and people and sent to a Christian boarding School. There, she experiences not only horrible abuse, but also an intentional loss of self. But by writing of her experiences, she remembers and resists.

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

Interview With Zora Neale Hurston Documentary Filmmaker Tracy Heather Strain

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

We’re closing out Black History Month on a good note, with part of the transcript of a conversation I had with Tracy Heather Strain, award-winning director of the documentary Zora Neale Hurston: Claiming a Space, now streaming on PBS. She told me about the process of creating the film, what Hurston means to American literature and the field of Sociology, and how boldly feminist the author and researcher was in her everyday life.

Bookish Goods

Zora Neale Earrings

Zora Neale Earrings by AnkaraRaveCollection

Today is Zora Neale Hurston-themed! Get these earrings, with a real picture of Hurston, for $23.

New Releases

cover of The Unfortunates by
J.K. Chukwu

The Unfortunates by J.K. Chukwu

*New author alert!*

With her debut, Chukwu brings the heat down on Academia. Readers are brought into the world of Sahara, a queer half Nigerian sophomore at a predominantly white institution, through her honors thesis. Even as she struggles with long-term depression, aided no doubt by less than stellar grades and body image issues, she notices what’s happening to other Black students at her elite college. These “Unfortunates” are disappearing — by dropping out, dying by su*cide, or simply vanishing. With cutting humor, Sahara aims to be a voice for the unfortunate students by writing of their mistreatment in her thesis. Hopefully, before she becomes one of them.

An Autobiography of Skin cover

An Autobiography of Skin by Lakeisha Carr

Carr explores the trauma of three Black women — and their families — through three different but connected parts. Nettie, who grew up during integration, now smokes and gambles away her regrets in a parlor. Maya, on the other hand, is suffering from postpartum depression, and new reports of Black people being killed adds to her anxieties surrounding her children. Then there’s Ketinah, who waits out a storm with other family members, bringing out the ghosts that have haunted them all.

More New Releases:

Black Candle Women by Diane Marie Brown (Fantasy, Contemporary)

Black Earth Wisdom: Soulful Conversations with Black Environmentalists by Leah Penniman (Nonfiction, Environment)

Carmilla: The First Vampire by Amy Chu, Too Lee (Fantasy, Graphic Novel)

Liliana’s Invincible Summer: A Sister’s Search for Justice by Cristina Rivera Garza (Memoir, True Crime)

The Daughters of Madurai by Rajasree Variyar (Historical Fiction)

The Neighbor Favor by Kristina Forest (Romance)

Time’s Undoing by Cheryl A. Head

Your Driver is Waiting by Priya Guns (Literary Fiction)

Last Violent Call: A Foul Thing; This Foul Murder by Chloe Gong (Young Adult, Fantasy, Mystery, Historical)

She Is a Haunting by Trang Thanh Tran (Young Adult, Fantasy, Gothic Horror)

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

Riot Recommendations

Zora Neale Hurston Boxed Set

Zora Neale Hurston Boxed Set 

Includes: Dust Tracks on a Road, Jonah’s Gourd Vine, Mules and Men, Tell My Horse, The Complete Stories, Every Tongue Got to Confess, Moses, Man of the Mountain, Seraph on the Suwanee, Mule Bone, andTheir Eyes Were Watching God.

cover of Hitting a Straight Lick with a Crooked Stick

Hitting a Straight Lick with a Crooked Stick

In these stories, together for the first time ever and collected from lost periodicals and archives, Hurston writes of Black life — from migration to love to everyday struggles.

On Making Zora Neale Hurston: Claiming a Space

In Reading Color (IRC): There may be inherent and even subconscious racism involved, of course, when white people record Black histories, but how much of understanding the culture is needed to accurately record it? There was and perhaps still is this idea that anthropologists must be outside and away from their subjects to study them, but Black people have different ways of recording history. How does that affect the end result?

Tracy Heather Strain: With any group, if you go to the community and don’t understand what you’re seeing, you can get undesirable results. Once I’m invited into a community, that’s when I can get strong, heartfelt material. I can’t tell you how many interviews I’ve had where, if I wasn’t Black, the conversation might not have been understood as it was intended. But it can also be deeper than race — a lot of people limit the idea of community to “Black, white, Asian, etc.”

IRC: That’s yet another reminder that we need all kinds of diverse voices, even outside of race — voices from different socioeconomic backgrounds as well, for example.

Tracy Heather Strain: That’s because you’re bringing yourself to it. There’s no such thing as complete objectivity. Documentaries are, like anything, subjective. You have these true facts, but it’s how these facts are incorporated. Documentary is a form of storytelling, it’s not about finding documents.

Take for instance how, once we knew that Their Eyes Were Watching God was the third act climax, we thought backwards from there. We thought “what does an audience need to know to make that moment comprehended as well as felt?” I also knew I wanted to bring up the epilogue about Alice Walker, and was tasked with figuring out what to include so you understood why Hurston disappeared from public view. That’s how we made decisions about what to include, but someone else would choose something else.

IRC: Where are places you’ve seen Zora’s influence that maybe aren’t credit as such?

Tracy Heather Strain:

Well beyond anthropology, and there’s still work being done for her work to be accepted in anthropology, she was also interested in the stage. Someone described her as interdisciplinary before it was a thing to be. It’s kind of interesting to think of what would have happened if she had gone to Yale School of Drama like she had wanted. She wanted to share Black culture and recreate it. She wrote plays while she was at Howard. That’s one main area that people don’t know about.

Another area that’s not related to her creative output was how she handled relationships. They didn’t last long in the ’20s and ’30s because she wasn’t willing to give up her career. So many women wanted to have careers, but she didn’t give up hers. People know she’s a feminist, but don’t know why. And that’s another reason to talk about Zora Neale Hurston.

And then there’s the footage and recordings that she’s helped other researchers get, like Alan Lomax and others. Hurston was the reason he and some other white researchers were able to gather certain material. There were times that what some folklorists were presenting as Black culture was actually Irish or Scottish, and she helped to fix that.

IRC: What is something you’d want people to know about Zora above all else?

Tracy Heather Strain:

One of the things that was really important to me was to make sure that the people and imagery in this film appear as the type of faces she would see. It’s unfortunate that in 2023, this is refreshing and new, but this was a priority for me. A friend said “I know you made this film for everybody, but it also feels like you made it for us.” I feel like there’s a host of stories out there, stories about African Americans that haven’t been told. And since so many people learn things from video, it’s important that this imagery gets out.

It’s not always easy for us to do many things, but we shouldn’t let that stop us. If it is your passion, don’t let that stop you. Zora didn’t let it stop her, she kept going. She didn’t win the Guggenheim at first, but kept trying.

She was a smart and tenacious woman who worked really hard. She read a lot as a kid; she knew the classics. I was privileged to see her papers and drafts, but I don’t think she expected overnight success. There’s a way our society champions people who are overnight successes, but they aren’t. They just got some attention that made it seem that way. She knew what she was passionate about and she pursued it. She created her own path. I’m trying to use her as inspiration. Try to be comfortable with who you are.You don’t have to be perfect.


Zora Neale Hurston: Claiming a Space is currently streaming on PBS.

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

EZ in the Big Easy

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

By the time this newsletter comes out, I’ll be in New Orleans for Mardi Gras. I’ve been to the city before, but never for this celebration. I loved, loved when I was here last, but I must admit my slight anxiety over the crowd that I know will gather.

Despite that, I’m hyped to return to the home of jazz, so I’m sharing a couple books with you today that are based in New Orleans.

Bookish Goods

Black woman with hijab bookmark

Laminated Bookmark by ZellaAndCo

I love clean, simple designs, and I also love how this bookmark is laminated! $4

New Releases

cover of A Stone Is Most Precious Where it Belongs: A Memoir of Uyghur Exile, Hope, and Survival  by Gulchehra Hoja

A Stone Is Most Precious Where it Belongs: A Memoir of Uyghur Exile, Hope, and Survival  by Gulchehra Hoja

Gulchehra Hoja guides us through her life in in East Turkestan, from a pleasant childhood to early beginnings of becoming a TV star. Chinese rule set her down a different path, though. Once she began to realize the atrocities committed against her people, she changed as a journalist and began reporting more of what she saw. This led to 24 of her family members disappearing overnight. This memoir gives us a peak into what life has been like for the Uyghurs, something that has been in short supply.

cover of The Sum of Us (Adapted for Young Readers): How Racism Hurts Everyone

The Sum of Us (Adapted for Young Readers): How Racism Hurts Everyone by Heather McGhee 

As an expert in economic policy, McGhee knows that everyone can have a piece of the pie, but only if racial disparities are addressed. Here, she lays out how racism hurts all of us, even the ones who seemingly benefit from it. I love how books like this are adapted for younger readers, making the issues they cover more accessible. And honestly, even if you’re not who the YA label targets, these are still an a great way to get into a topic.

More New Releases:

Full Exposure by Thien-Kim Lam (Romance)

A Sun to Be Sewn by Jean D’Amérique, translated by Thierry Kehou (Contemporary/Literary Fiction)

A Small Sacrifice for an Enormous Happiness: Stories by Jai Chakrabarti (Literary fiction)

A Country You Can Leave by Asale Angel-Ajani (Contemporary/Literary Fiction)

Last Chance Dance by Lakita Wilson (YA; Romance)

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

Riot Recommendations

When I tell you I wish I was from New Orleans! It’s just as magical and amazing as you’ve heard.

cover of Blood Debts by Terry J. Benton-Walker

Blood Debts by Terry J. Benton-Walker

Sixteen-year-old twins Cristina and Clement Trudeau hail from a long line of powerful magic users, but their family is currently in disarray. Their father has died, their mother is sick, and the twins aren’t even on speaking terms. This changes once they realize their mother isn’t actually sick, but cursed, and it’ll take the two of them coming together to figure out who on the magic council — the same one from which their family was dethroned — wants to destroy their family. Doing so will require they solve a 30-year-old murder before another magical massacre happens in the city of New Orleans.

a kind of freedom cover

A Kind of Freedom by Margaret Wilkerson Sexton

We’re taken through the lives of Evelyn, a Creole woman growing up in New Orleans during WWII, and her descendants. For Evelyn, whose family is the apex of Black high society, a difficult choice between love and privilege must be made; then in the ’80s, her daughter Jackie contends with her husband’s drug addiction; and finally, Jackie’s son T.C. leaves jail after Hurricane Katrina to find New Orleans a totally different city than he remembered. As we see how their city changes around them, we see, too, how racism shifts and takes on new forms.

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

Messy 1900s Romance, Reality Show Dating, New Releases, and More!

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

Happy Valentine’s Day! I don’t know if it’s just me and the people I hang around, but I feel like the holiday isn’t celebrated like it used to be when I was growing up. Of course, retailers do their best to capitalize off of it, but I don’t feel the same fervor for it from actual people.

I kind of like what it’s become in recent years, though. I was speaking to my cohost Tirzah Price and she brought up how nice it was that we showed appreciation for everyone with Valentine’s cards when we were in elementary and middle school. It seems like the general public has moved in that direction more with things like galentines and palentines, which I am so here for.

As we show appreciation for those in our lives, I’ll share some recent romances to help you really get in the spirit.

Bookish Goods

Black Novelists T-Shirt 

Black Novelists T-Shirt by abrandcalledmuse

I love the design of this shirt, which features the names and likenesses of James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, Langston Hughes, and Zora Neale Hurston. You can also get it in black. $35+

New Releases

Sink: A Memoir cover

Sink: A Memoir by Joseph Earl Thomas

Thomas grew up in the Frankford neighborhood in Philly, where he fought for survival among the harshest conditions. Between a mother suffering from addition to an abusive grandfather and a constant lack of food, the reality of Thomas’ life was too much for a child to bear. So he turned to fantasy. Once he discovered nerd culture and video games, his world opened up. This aspect of fantasy plays easily throughout the memoir, as Thomas writes in third person, distancing himself from the story. This will have you in your feelings.

cover of the last tale of the flower bride by roshani chokshi

The Last Tale of the Flower Bride by Roshani Chokshi

From the onset, The Last Tale of the Flower Bride is steeped in dark fairy tale and mystery. Because of a strange childhood occurrence, the unnamed narrator has devoted his life to the mysterious and uncanny, and this devotion leads him to meet heiress Indigo Maxwell-Casteñada. The two are instantly enamored with each other and their relationship feels just as fantastical as the stories they share. They marry, but the success of the marriage hinges on one thing: if the husband doesn’t ask questions about Indigo’s past. When her aunt becomes deathly ill, this requirement proves to be too much for her him, and Indigo’s childhood home starts revealing secrets that threaten everything he knows and loves.

More New Releases:

Dyscalculia: A Love Story of Epic Miscalculation by Camonghne Felix (Memoir)

(Side note, but I know a few people who should have “A Love Story of Epic Miscalculation” as a subtitle (main title?) for their lives.)

A Darker Wilderness: Black Nature Writing from Soil to Stars by Erin Sharkey (Nonfiction, History)

I’m Always so Serious by Karisma Price (Poetry)

Unquiet Spirits: Essays by Asian Women in Horror , edited by Lee Murray and Angela Yuriko Smith (Science Fiction and Fantasy, Mythology, Horror)

Isha, Unscripted by Sajni Patel (Contemporary Romance)

Welcome Me to the Kingdom: Stories by Mai Nardone (History, Contemporary)

You’re That Bitch: & Other Cute Lessons About Being Unapologetically Yourself by Bretman Rock (Memoir)

My Flawless Life by Yvonne Woon (YA Mystery, Thriller)

Speculation by Nisi Shawl (Middle Grade, Historical Fantasy)

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

Riot Recommendations

The Davenports Book Cover

The Davenports by Krystal Marquis

This YA novel just gives. It’s a historical romance set in the early 1900s centered around the Davenports, a wealthy Black family in Chicago whose fortune was made by William Davenport, a formerly enslaved man who became an entrepreneur. Amongst the lavish parties, servants, lush surroundings, and societal expectations sit the Davenport siblings and their friends — all seeking out love, forbidden and not. Beautiful Olivia is the oldest and prepared to get married for the family, but then meets a charming civil rights leader. Then there’s Helen, who likes fixing cars, and her sister’s suitor. Amy-Rose and Ruby are both friends to the girls, and both have a crush on John Davenport. This is fun, historical mess that’s based on the real Patterson family, and shows a time in Black history that I always want to see more of.

cover of Dating Dr. Dil

Dating Dr. Dil by Nisha Sharma

While Kareena would love to have a relationship like her parents’, romance isn’t exactly her strong suit. Despite this, her father strikes a deal with her — she gets her mother’s house if she becomes engaged in four months. Thing is, the only man who’s featured prominently in her life lately is the TV doctor Dr. Verma, whom she had an argument with that went viral. The same argument that has dried up funding for the community center he wants to build. But Kareena’s aunties show up with another deal — if Dr. Verma can convince Kareena to marry him, they’ll pay for the center. Listen, sometimes you just need your aunties to bribe someone to be your fiancé.

D'Vaughn and Kris Plan a Wedding cover

D’Vaughn and Kris Plan a Wedding by Chencia C. Higgins

Kris and D’Vaughn’s relationship is fake, but they can’t let anyone know. They’re on the reality show Instant I Do, where they have to convince their friends and family that they’re getting married to each other to win $100,000. While each of them has their own reasons for being on the show — Kris is looking for her big TV break, while D’Vaughn wants an extravagant way to come out to her family — they both realize that there may be more to this thing that they initially thought.

Cover of The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna

The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna

Here’s one that’ll put a little dash of magic in your romance. Mika Moon is one of the last remaining witches in Great Britain. To keep this secret — thereby staying safe — she’s lived a life of isolation, even from other witches. But she also posts videos online claiming to be a witch, assuming people won’t take her seriously. Well, someone does, and he invites her to his house to teach three young witches how to better use their power. Mika takes him up on his offer, despite her better judgment, and discovers a place to belong. She also discovers thorny Librarian Jamie, who also lives in the house. New possibilities for existing with others present themselves to Mika, but so does danger…

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

Erica