Categories
In Reading Color

Black Friday Regret, New Releases, and More Nonfiction

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

Reading Color friends! I hope your Thanksgiving was peaceful if you celebrate it. Mine was cool but busy. I was driving around a bit for last minute things, and then later as I went to a couple houses.

For the rest of the weekend, the Nintendo Switch — and the Pokémon game — I gifted myself for early Christmas/Black Friday barely left my hands. And the time I wasn’t playing was spent looking up games I should get before sales end. I felt like I was 10 again making lists of video games I wanted. The only (dangerous) thing that is different is that I can actually buy them all now. *sweats*

As I ponder the ramifications of this recent decision, let’s get into some books!

Bookish Goods

Brown Girls Read Puzzle

Brown Girls Read Puzzle by thetrinigee

I’ve been meaning to get into puzzles — I’ve heard great things about doing them while listening to an audiobook — and this one’s art is pretty. $21+

New Releases

A Coastline Is an Immeasurable Thing: A Memoir Across Three Continents cover

A Coastline Is an Immeasurable Thing: A Memoir Across Three Continents by Mary-Alice Daniel

Daniel’s young world got a sudden shock when her family moved from Nigeria to the cold suburbs of England. She got another shock when they uprooted again, this time relocating to the Southern U.S. With each move and each effort to adjust to her changing environments, she lost a little of her mother culture. In this poetic memoir, she wrestles with this upbringing and all the differences in religion, race, and class that converged upon it.

We Deserve Monuments  cover

We Deserve Monuments by Jas Hammonds

This one is also about a move, but not as big of one. Here, 17 year old Avery’s mother moves them from D.C. to Georgia because her grandmother is dying. Her grandmother isn’t very welcoming, and neither is the town, but Avery is still able to find friends in Simone and Jade. Turns out the Avery’s new home is also riddled with secrets — from Jade’s mother’s unsolved murder case to Avery’s family’s history within the town — and finding them out will come at a cost.

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

Riot Recommendations

Here’s just a little more recent nonfiction to close out Nonfiction November.

Conversations with Birds cover

Conversations with Birds by Priyanka Kumar

Kumar is a filmmaker and novelist, and grew up in the beautiful Himalayas, whose beauty she took for granted, before she moved to North America. After the move, she felt disconnected from the natural world until her 20s, when she met birders on the beach and her eyes were opened to the lifestyle. In this memoir, she tells of how the beauty and majesty of birds helped her to not only appreciate her natural surroundings more, but also to realize her place in the universe.

We Refuse to Forget cover

We Refuse to Forget: A True Story of Black Creeks, American Identity, and Power by Caleb Gayle

Gayle tells the complicated history of Black Creek identity, starting with how some Creek people owned enslaved Black people. They also accepted free Black people fully into their nation as citizens — with some even becoming Chiefs, like Cow Tom. But this was undone in the ’70s by tribal leaders. This book tells why this came to be, how the U.S. government was involved, and how it still affects Black Creek people to this day.

File this “under interesting things in U.S. history that I know next to nothing about.”

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 Releases and a Mini Book List Inspired by Black Panther 2!

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

Success! I watched Black Panther 2 this weekend! It was kind of what I expected from what I had heard — there was, of course, lots of action, but also a lot of sorrow, especially when Chadwick Boseman was referenced. I know the character he played in the movie was T’Challa, but how he and his character both died seemed to be similar. I was definitely sniffling at the end.

Its happier elements were more of the same from the first movie: gorgeous depictions of African culture, but with some cool aspects of Mesoamerican culture by way of the new antagonist Namor. In addition to a couple new releases, I thought I’d highlight a couple SFF books that show off African and Mesoamerican lore just as brilliantly as Black Panther did.

Bookish Goods

Xochiquetzal Peachy Pink Aztec Goddess poster

Xochiquetzal Pink Aztec Goddess Poster by NalgonaPositiveShop

This isn’t entirely bookish, but it fits today’s theme and is so cute to me. Xochiquetzal was the Aztec goddess of beauty, love, art, and music. $13

New Releases

Africa Risen: A New Era of Speculative Fiction; painting of a young Black woman in a yellow astronaut suit holding little white flowers

Africa Risen, edited by Sheree Renée Thomas, Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki, and Zelda Knight

This collections’ award-winning editors have assembled a breathtaking anthology of science fiction and fantasy from Africa and its diaspora. Among the 32 original stories are a tale of a supercomputer that stores the minds of the country’s ancestors, and another in which the daughter of a rain goddess inherits her powers, which are needed to save the world. There are some familiar names among the list of contributors, like Tananarive Due, and many other ones that are new to me, but who I’m excited to discover.

other side of the tracks book cover

Other Side of the Tracks by Charity Alyse

In this YA novel, the towns of Bayside and Hamilton are separated — both racially and physically — by train tracks. When Zach, a white kid from Philly, crosses the tracks to meet his musical idol, a famous jazz musician, he also meets Capri. Capri, like her brother Justin, plans to escape her city, which has become complacent in racial segregation. Her meeting Zach gives her hope that she can make it on Broadway as a dancer. But then Zach’s friend is murdered by a police officer and the teens suddenly find themselves in the middle of a racial feud between the two towns.

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

Riot Recommendations

gods of jade and shadow

Gods of Jade and Shadow by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

I really loved this when I read it about three years ago. It follows Casiopea Tun, a girl who dreams of a life that will release her from cleaning her wealthy grandfather’s house. When she finds a weird wooden box in her grandfather’s room, she opens it, freeing the Mayan god of death. He tasks her with helping him regain his throne from his trifling brother, which will lead to her attaining her dreams if she succeeds, but her death if she doesn’t. So Casiopea sets out with the oddly intriguing death god, the two of them traveling from the glittering Jazz Age Mexico City to the depths of the Mayan Underworld.

Moreno-Garcia also dabbles in a little Aztec lore (there is some overlap between Mayan and Aztec culture) with Certain Dark Things. In it, lonely street kid Domingo and Atl, a descendant of Aztec blood drinkers, team up to escape a dangerous vampire clan.

Book cover of Raybearer by Jordan Ifueko

Raybearer by Jordan Ifueko

Tarisai was raised in isolation, and, with a number of rotating tutors, also raised to be the perfect companion to the Crown Prince. When the time comes for her to fulfill the purpose her absent mother, known as The Lady, has set out for her, she travels to Amritsar. In the capital, she is to compete with other children to become one of 11 chosen to be the Prince’s most trusted companions who will share a profoundly deep bond with him. A family like this is all she’s ever wanted, but The Lady wants her to kill the prince. I loved, loved this one and am still planning to read the sequel. One of the best things about it is the world building that’s rooted in the lore of different African cultures — there are drums that spread messages magically, fantastical creatures, and vibrant descriptions of food, clothing, and dance. There are also magic tattoos, demon children, and an underworld that takes children sacrifices. Y’all need to read this asap if you haven’t already.

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 Michelle Obama, Angels & Demons, and Indigenous Poetry

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

Friends! Somehow I have not seen Black Panther 2, and I am justifiably ashamed. To my credit, I also feel like I haven’t been seeing much advertisement for it, which made its release date totally slip my mind. I also feel like I saw more ads for the first movie, but I understand how the release of this one is bittersweet since the passing of Chadwick Boseman. I’m going to see it this weekend, but I know I will be ugly crying in the theater.

Welp! Now for some books…

Bookish Goods

bat book holder

Bat Book Holder by DeannaMarieCreations

This page holder totally looks like one Batman would have (RIP Kevin Conroy!). If you’re not feeling the bat, there’s a kitty, whale, doggo, and fox. $10+

New Releases

The Light We Carry: Overcoming in Uncertain Times cover

The Light We Carry: Overcoming in Uncertain Times by Michelle Obama

After Michelle Obama’s Becoming became (ha) one of the best selling books ever, she’s back with some tips on making it through the muck. She tackles issues like building healthy relationships — both at the personal and community-level — realizing your inherent worth, and dealing with self-doubt with a refreshing brand of optimism. I have to say I’m a little surprised that I haven’t been hearing a lot about this release, but it’s bound to be popular!

Cover of Tread of Angels by Rebecca Roanhorse

Tread of Angels by Rebecca Roanhorse

The new element known as Divinity is the power source for the most innovative technologies and a key to progress. But it can only be seen by the descendants of those who rebelled during Heaven’s War, now known as the Fallen. Although they have sole access to this valuable commodity, they are deemed as second-class citizens because of their having lost the war. When one of the Fallen, Mariel, is accused of murdering an upperclass Elect, her half sister Celeste will risk her life of privilege and take on the role of Advocatus Diaboli (Devil’s Advocate) to defend her sister. But of course, there are secrets that come to light, revealing things the powers that be don’t want coming out.

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

Riot Recommendations

Postcolonial Love Poem by Natalie Diaz cover

Postcolonial Love Poem by Natalie Diaz

“Let me call my anxiety, desire, then.

Let me call it, a garden.”

In this award-winning collection, Diaz writes of bodies — from Indigenous, Black, and Brown bodies to bodies of land and water — that have had violence done against them, but have also transformed that violence into something beautiful.

An American Sunrise cover

An American Sunrise by Joy Harjo

Joy Harjo was the first First Nations person to be named Poet Laureate of the United States, a title she held from 2019-2022 (also a title that is currently held by Mexican and Indigenous poet Ada Limón). Harjo has released many books of poetry, kids’ books, memoirs, and most recently a book on writing poetry, Catching the Light. In An American Sunrise, she travels to her family’s land, what is now known as Oklahoma. There, the violent removal of the Mvskoke people leaves a stain on the land, a fracture that Harjo intertwines her own personal history with First Nations’ history to contend with.

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

Sioux Recipes, New Releases, and a Little Nonfiction

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

In good news that gives me a break from the dumpster fire, Toni Morrison and Ruth Bader Ginsburg will have their own stamps!

Side note, but can we talk about Aunt Toni and her activities once she got to Howard University? I saw the documentary The Pieces I Am when it first came out, but I didn’t quite catch what she was implying here. The picture on the Instagram post helps me out, though lulz. Not mad in the least, and now I have yet another reason to stan Ms. Morrison.

Bookish Goods

Indigenous Kitchen Cookbook and Supplies

Indigenous Kitchen Cookbook and Supplies by SageAndOats

Learn recipes that use ingredients native to North America while you learn about Sioux culture with The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen. You also get some ingredients mentioned in the book: Passamaquoddy Maple Syrup, Sakari Farms Cedar Smoked Salt, and Sakari Farms Sweetgrass Tea. $70

New Releases

Cover of Even Though I knew the End by C.L. Polk

Even Though I Knew the End by C.L. Polk 

Every once in a while, I come across books that feel so perfectly for me. Even Though I Knew the End is one such book, with its ’40s setting, warlock private eye, endearing queer romance, and deals with demons. Years ago, Elena sold her soul to save her brother. Now, with mere days left before she’s dragged to hell, she’s offered a job that, upon completion, would mean she can keep her soul and stay with the woman she loves. She only has three days, though, to catch Chicago’s most notorious serial killer and save herself.

cover of Better Than Fiction

Better Than Fiction  by Alexa Martin

Drew just lost her granny and unexpectedly inherited her bookstore. While having one’s own bookstore sounds like a dream for many, Drew is not much of a reader, and even prefers *gasp* film adaptions to reading books *clutches pearls*. So on top of grieving for her grandmother, she’s also trying to run a business that she’s not used to. When she meets romance writer Jasper, he’s determined to help her see the joy in books, and proposes an exchange: he makes a must-read book list, and she shows him around Denver. As their relationship develops, it gets help from the resident book club called “The Dirty Birds,” which is populated by delightfully meddlesome older ladies. This is definitely a cute lil bookish romp.

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

Riot Recommendations

I realize I don’t talk about nonfiction in this newsletter enough, which is simply because I don’t read it enough. While I work on diversifying the types of books I read, here are a couple essay collections written by Indigenous writers to get us thinking.

Making Love with the Land: Essays cover

Making Love with the Land: Essays by Joshua Whitehead

Award-winning Whitehead returns with his first nonfiction book, which is a mixture of essays and memoir. In it, Whitehead explores how his life as a Two-Spirit person is, how his alienation corresponds both to his body and to the dispossession of Indigenous people, and much more.

the cover of No Country for Eight-Spot Butterflies

No Country for Eight-Spot Butterflies by Julian Aguon

Aguon is also Indigenous, but Chamorro from Guam. He, too, writes of the status of his homeland as its environment suffers from the effects of colonization. With lyrical prose, he calls all of us to action.

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

Mysteries with Indigenous Lore + New Releases!

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

Can we talk about adults reviewing kids’ things with adults in mind real quick? In wrapping up my October, I decided to watch Hocus Pocus 2. This is after seeing criticisms of the sequel claiming that it’s just a cheap ploy for nostalgia, etc., but I thought it was excellent. Like, yes, it’s a sequel that came out literally 30 years after the original movie, so its very existence is rooted in nostalgia. I don’t see the problem. Also, it is first and foremost a children’s movie, so things are going to be geared towards kids. With that said, for a kids’ movie, everything was perfect. I would have loved it as a kid.

I don’t get adults watching things with the idea that everything should accommodate them. I’ve also noticed this with some online reviews of young adult books. Some people complain how the characters are immature and the writing more simple than they’re used to. Like, yes sis, the book was written for literal teenagers. sheesh

Now that my mini rant is over, I’ve got some new releases and books to kick off Native American Heritage Month. Let’s goo

Bookish Goods

Girl Reading Book Sticker

Girl Reading Book Sticker by thetrinigee

This sticker embodies how I love my days to end: me, chillin’, reading next to a stack of books. $10+

New Releases

To Fill a Yellow House cover

To Fill a Yellow House by Sussie Anie

Kwasi is both excited and unsettled from his family moving to the opposite side of London. On the one hand, the new house is big but on the other, there is a new school with new kids to contend with. When he stumbles upon the secondhand store called the Chest of Small Wonders, he finds a place in his new world where he belongs and an unexpected friendship forms between him and Rupert, the shop owner whose wife died years ago.

The Banned Bookshop of Maggie Banks cover

The Banned Bookshop of Maggie Banks by Shauna Robinson

Yes, I also noticed how both newly released books I chose today are brilliantly yellow (orange yellow?). It’s clearly this week’s color theme!

As for Maggie, she goes to a town known as Bell River to help run her best friend’s bookstore that isn’t doing so great. She soon learns why: the local literary society wants to keep the bookstore selling older books, as they think that would be more benefiting of the town’s rich literary history. Problem is, people aren’t trying to buy books like that often. So, Maggie starts selling and discussing books people actually want to read in an underground book club. But then she discovers a town secret that could really muck things up.

I feel like this will be the perfect, cute little bookish cozy romance to snuggle up with as temperatures drop.

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

Riot Recommendations

Native American Heritage Month has officially started, and I’ve got a couple mysteries with female main characters who have to contend with demons and ghosts.

White Horse cover

White Horse by Erika T. Wurth

Stephen King Novels + Heavy metal + beers at the White Horse = 35 year old urban Indigenous woman Kari James. But this daily formula she’s fallen into gets shaken up when her cousin Debby finds an old bracelet that used to belong to Kari’s mother. Well, her mother still low-key has it since it summons her ghost, as well as a monstrous creature. Now Kari is haunted by both her mother’s spirit and the creature and has to figure out what really happened to her mother years ago. But in order to do that, she’ll have to face her own demons.

cover image for Shutter

Shutter by Ramona Emerson

In New Mexico’s Navajo Nation, Rita Todacheene works as a supernaturally good forensic photographer. She’s able to capture details no one else does because the ghosts of crime victims point her to clues that would otherwise go unnoticed. Sometimes this ability is more of a curse than a gift, though, as it has ostracized her from her reservation and is just generally stressful. And now may even get her killed — the latest crime victim’s ghost has latched herself on to Rita and wants revenge.

(I mentioned this a month ago since it was long listed by the National Book Awards.)

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 week,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

New Releases, Scary Short Stories, and More!

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

The fact that this is the last IRC newsletter before Halloween is ridiculous. I know I can read spooky books any time of the year — and I do! — but reading them in October just hits different. With that said, I’m nowhere near finishing all the ones I want to finish, and have been getting into anthologies to maximize the number of different horror stories I’m exposed to. It’s great because anthologies have the added bonus of introducing me to authors I haven’t read before.

After new releases, I have a few for you to add to your Halloween TBR.

Bookish Goods

Spooky Book Stack Sticker

Spooky Book Stack Sticker by JoyandCoffeeCo

Yeah, ’tis the season for all the skulls ‘n’ things, but this sticker also gives cute all year round vibes. Just sayin’. $4.

New Releases

The Standup Groomsman cover

The Stand-Up Groomsman  by Jackie Lau

This is the second in Lau’s Donut Fall in Love series. In it, opposites in the form of the funny and charming actor Melvin Lee and talented artist Vivian must forget their differences for the sake of their best friends getting married. As they each do their part to make the wedding work, something else starts to work, if you know what I mean.

Anywhere You Run by Wanda M. Morris cover

Anywhere You Run by Wanda M. Morris

It’s 1964 in Mississippi and people are literally dying to help others attain basic civil rights. When 22 year old Violet Richards kills a white man in self-defense, she knows she has to leave or risk ’60s Southern “justice.” When the police show up at Violet’s sister Marigold’s door — whose dreams of law school may be delayed due to an unexpected pregnancy — Marigold decides it’s best to leave, too. She heads to the North, trying to outrun the murder case as well as the social shame that comes with being an unwed single mother. What neither sister knows is there’s a man shrouded in darkness who’s hot on their trail.

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

Riot Recommendations

cover of other terrors an inclusive anthology

Other Terrors: An Inclusive Anthology, edited by Vince A. Liaguno and Rena Mason

From Tananarive Due to Stephen Graham Jones — this anthology features some of thee hottest authors when it comes to horror fiction today. Its title refers to belonging to the other, a status marginalized people contend with on a daily basis. It’s interesting to think of how much looking through this lense influences what one finds terrifying — I think that for marginalized people, horror fiction for us is typically more based in reality, but of course we are not a monolith and this is not the case for everyone. So far, I’ve only read the story by Tananarive Due, but baaby, it had me gagging.

She Walks in Shadows covers

She Walks in Shadows, edited by Silvia Moreno-Garcia and Paula R. Stiles

This anthology is one of retellings. It takes the stories of Lovecraft — with his hateful ass — and reimagines them from the perspectives of women. The cosmic, larger-than-life, existential horror that many who love Lovecraft appreciate is still front and center. If you’ve read any newsletter where I’ve mentioned retellings, you know that I love a good retelling that features a refocus on the marginalized identities that the original left out.

Fiyah: Hauntings and horrors issue

FIYAH #24: Hauntings and Horrors, edited by DaVaun Sanders

This is a bit of a divergence from what I usually present to you since it’s a literary magazine. It was founded by P. Djeli Clark and two authors who used to write for Book Riot: Troy L. Wiggins and Justina Ireland. I just bought issue #24 and am excited to read about malevolent forces, eye-stealing demons, magical honey jars, and all other manner of spooky goodness.

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 week,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

Space Pirates, Real Voodoo, and New Releases!

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

Working remotely is awesome for many reasons (no commute!), but it has its drawbacks, chief among them being too far from a lot of the cool people I work with. So this week I’m traveling to L.A. for a work retreat to meet most of my co-workers for the first time after having worked at Book Riot for a little over a year. This will also be the first time I’m traveling to California, so the whole trip feels like an adventure for me. I thought to highlight some very adventurous books as a result!

Bookish Goods

Fictional Wanderlust Tote Bag

Fictional Wanderlust Tote Bag by PoppyandVixenDesigns

You will never see me shy away from a good tote, and this one has just enough of a witchy factor to make it fitting for spooky season. $17+

New Releases

seven empty houses book cover

Seven Empty Houses by Samanta Schweblin

Schweblin is at the forefront of Latin American writers and this book is a finalist for this year’s National Book Awards for Translated literature. Through looking at houses, and all that they represent, Schweblin unnerves and calls out the ghosts, trauma, and other trespassers that pop up in domestic life. After this one, pick up Fever Dream for a trippp.

We Are the Scribes cover

We Are the Scribes by Randi Pink

This is another wonderful YA novel steeped in history by Randi Pink — who also wrote Angel of Greenwood, a historical novel about the Tulsa Massacre. We Are the Scribes follows Ruth Fitz, a teen girl whose family is heavy into activism. Her mother is a powerful senator fighting for change, her father a professor of Black American history, and her sister is already earning a name for herself within the community as an activist. Ruth sits a little outside of her family, though, as someone who isn’t as activist-oriented and just wants to write. That is, until something tragic makes her not want to write any more. One day she starts getting parchment letters sealed with a label reading “We are the scribes” from Harriet Jacobs. A part from being random — parchment letters, sis?! — receiving letters from the person who wrote Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl makes Ruth feel like she’s dreaming.

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

Riot Recommendations

The Red Scholar's Wake cover

The Red Scholar’s Wake by Aliette de Bodard

This is de Bodard’s latest addition to her highly inventive space operas infused with Vietnamese culture. Here, scavenger, bot maker, and analyst Xích Si is captured along with her ship by a fleet of pirates known as Red Banner. She’s certain she’ll eventually be killed, but instead, Rice Fish, the pirates’ leader, proposes she marry her. Rice Fish, a sentient ship, wants to use Xích Si’s technical know-how to solve the mystery of who killed her wife the Red Scholar. As their investigation goes on, their positions towards each other change.

Tell My Horse: Voodoo and Life in Haiti and Jamaica cover

Tell My Horse: Voodoo and Life in Haiti and Jamaica by Zora Neale Hurston

When I think of adventure and travel and learning, I think of Zora Neale Hurston, who traveled different parts of the Americas documenting Black life. Here, she travels to Jamaica and Haiti to observe firsthand the practice of voodoo. And what she sees shocks (zombies are real!) and disheartens.

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 week,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

Poetic Memoirs, Saigon Beauty Queens, and More!

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

Friends! This past weekend has reminded me why I didn’t have a TV for years after I started having my own apartment. As much as I complain about the one-episode-released-per-week shows, my discipline is terrible for on demand things. Watching Disney’s new Star Wars show Andor is so good, it had me rewatching the latest Star Wars movies, and I’m not even a stan! It’s got me curious about the animated Clone Wars and the multiple books out… *cries in habitual marathon watcher*

Bookish Goods

Bookworm candle

Bookworm candle by AnchoredNorthwest

Now your space can smell like how you feel! That is, if you feel like teakwood, patchouli, and dark musk (I know I do!).

$20 but on sale for $16 at the time of writing this newsletter.

New Releases

Daughters of the New Year cover

Daughters of the New Year by E.M. Tran

This follows five generations of Trung women, a Vietnamese family based in New Orleans and Vietnam. This stands out amongst similar family sagas, though, because it goes backwards in time instead of forwards. Starting in the present day, we see how former beauty queen Xuan Trung obsessively tries to map out her daughters’ futures, only for them to forge paths that are nothing like what their immigrant parents expected for them. Throughout the novel, they learn of the secrets of their ancestors, and how everything from beauty pageants to plantations led them to the Americas.

cover of If You Could See the Sun by Ann Liang; illustration of a young Asian girl's face being swept away

If You Could See the Sun by Ann Liang

I’ve been excited to talk about this one for a while. In it, Alice Sun struggles with her status as a scholarship kid at an elite international boarding school in Beijing. She finds that one day her figurative feelings of being invisible turn into her actually being invisible. And, once her parents tell her they can longer afford to pay for her tuition that isn’t covered by the scholarship, she decides to monetize her new powers. She uses her invisibility to find out messy life details of her fellow students, but the seemingly small tasks she takes on turn more criminal — slippery slope and all that — and she’ll have to decide just how much her conscience is worth.

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

Riot Recommendations

Monday was Indigenous Peoples’ Day, so let’s get into a couple books by some bomb Indigenous authors. I’ve got a poetic memoir and a horror for you, since I like to keep you on your toes.

Catching the Light by Joy Harjo cover

Catching the Light by Joy Harjo

Harjo, a member of the Mvskoke Nation and from Tulsa, Oklahoma, has been a poet for 50 years. On top of that, she served as the United States’ 23rd Poet Laureate from 2019-2022 (Ada Limón is currently serving as the 24th). In Catching the Light, she details her life as a poet — from her childhood in the ’60s to an adulthood advocating for Indigenous culture. This is a memoir about writing poetry, and how it is meant to fill the void left in the collective narrative that omits marginalized people.

cover of My Heart Is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones

My Heart Is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones

I realize I am really shifting the mood from Harjo’s book, but I wanted to give y’all a lil somethin’ spooky for the season. In My Heart is a Chainsaw, Jade is half-Indigenous, angry, abused, and lonely. Her little bubble of a world consists of horror movie trivia, and as people begin to die in her small town, she notices some similarities between her favorite films and the real murders…

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 week,

Erica

Categories
In Reading Color

Voodou Queens, Morally Gray Witches, and New Releases!

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

It’s officially October, which means I have started watching/reading all the spooky things! Spooky vibes are what led to me randomly watching the new Interview with the Vampire show this past weekend and it is so good. Like, I was upset there were only two episodes, and ended up watching the original movie with Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise. I have to say, as much nostalgia as I feel for the original movie, it definitely had some plot holes and the acting in the new show is so far way, way better overall. I’m excited to see Claudia make her debut this weekend!

Bookish Goods

Voodoo Queen Bookmark

Voodoo Queen Bookmark by BookishHeaux

I love the designs of this shop’s bookmarks (the thigh! the moon! the snek!) and have several of these. $5

New Releases

Our Missing Hearts Book Cover

Our Missing Hearts by Celeste Ng

Bird is 12-years-old and has been living under an increasingly oppressive American government with his father, a former linguist. In addition to censoring, authorities have just started being allowed to take children away from people who disagree with them, many of whom are of Asian descent. When Bird gets a mysterious letter, he begins on a journey to find his absent mother, whose poetry he has spent years distancing himself from. The gag is that this premise doesn’t sound too far off from reality.

A Minor Chorus by Billy-Ray Belcourt 

A Minor Chorus by Billy-Ray Belcourt 

I love novels written by poets, and Belcourt has won awards for his poetry. In this latest book, a queer Indigenous doctoral student wavers on the border between his old life, his childhood on the reservation, and the new academic one he’s trying to establish. Throughout the book, he’s reminded of Jack, a cousin who was in a toxic lifestyle involving police and drugs, an outcome that is not rare for Indigenous people living under the legacy of colonialism. He soon finds out that the escape he was hoping academia would be also has its consequences for people of color.

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

Riot Recommendations

As I mentioned before, it’s October, so I’m just going to be reveling in all the spooky things. First up: witches!

Cover of The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson

The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson

Immanuelle is a young woman living in a puritanical society who tries to be as pious as possible as a way to atone for her mother having a child— her— with someone outside of her race. One day she comes to find herself in the woods that surround her town, where the Prophet killed four witches. The spirits of the witches give Immanuelle a gift, and she learns that the woods were once a sanctuary for her deceased mother. She also learns that there are secrets about the Church and the town that will reshape how she views everything.

violet made of thorns book cover

Violet Made of Thorns by Gina Chen

Violet influences the court with her prophecies, which is all well and good, except she sometimes lies. She had been looking for a way to prevent Prince Cyrus from firing her once he’s crowned when the king asks her to lie about a prophecy concerning Cyrus’ love life. Obvi her morally gray self doesn’t have a problem fibbing, but doing so in this case awakens a curse which threatens the future of the kingdom. As she tries to save herself and the kingdom, she also seems to be falling for a certain prince…

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 week,

Erica

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In Reading Color

Latine Horror, New Releases, and an Indigenous Coloring Set

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

I went to a lil birthday get together on a friend-of-a-friend’s rooftop this weekend, and it was cute. The girlies wanted to go out dancing after though, and I, homebody that I am, had to ask another friend if she was going to make sure I wasn’t being a fuddy duddy. She said no, absolving me of my guilt, and my response was fitting. I was so glad I didn’t because my feet started hurting soon after. I am old *cries in millennial*.

Today, I’ve got a few new books and some spooky ones by Latine authors for the next time you have to “wash your hair” or “clean your apartment” (but really you’re just tired and your feet/knees hurt). I gotchu, friend!

Bookish Goods

Indigenous Art Coloring Book with Colored Pencils

Indigenous Art Coloring Book with Colored Pencils by SageAndOats

Bust out this colored pencils + coloring book set if you’re looking for something for your hands to do while you listen to an audiobook. $20+

New Releases

Best of Friends cover

Best of Friends by Kamila Shamsie

Zahra and Maryam are two opposites who gravitate to each other in Karachi, Pakistan. The two become best friends and grow up with each other under a dictatorship. Decades later, the women have each made their own mark on London, but when certain people from their past reappear in their lives, the two women’s friendship is challenged.

I love to see books that are centered around platonic friendship.

house of hunger book cover

House of Hunger by Alexis Henderson

That cover! I think it perfectly encapsulates the overall vibes of this book. It’s about Marion Shaw, who grew up in abject poverty, and who is desperate to finally get out of it. She sees an odd ad in the newspaper looking for a bloodmaid and figures it’ll give her as good a chance as any to get out of her current situation. Well, the position involves allowing wealthy nobles to drink her blood. In exchange, she’ll be taken care of. So she applies and becomes a bloodmaid for the House of Hunger, where she gets swept up in bloody hedonism. She also falls prey to the charms of her mistress, Countess Lisavet, who inspires admiration and fear equally. She becomes especially interested in Marion, but when other bloodmaids start going missing, Marion must learn what’s going on in the noble house before she’s unable to leave.

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

Riot Recommendations

Here are a couple spooky/horoor books written by Latine authors to start off the season with!

Scout's Honor by Lily Anderson

Scout’s Honor by Lily Anderson

Ugh, Lily Anderson is so good at writing fun, spooky YA novels! The first one of hers I read was Undead Girl Gang, and it had me gagging— in the bad way (because it was gross) and the good way. This one is similarly fun, creepy, and full of diverse characters. The main character herself, Prue, is half Puerto Rican, half white and a legacy Ladybird Scout. These are similar to girl scouts, except instead of selling cookies, etc. Ladybird Scouts protect humans from space parasites known as mulligrubs. So, while they present to outsiders as a demure ladies’ organization, the Scouts are actually training girls from a young age to kill with poisoned teas, knitting needles, axes, and swords. Prue turned her back on the organization once her friend was killed in action, and three years later, has only rejoined in order to swipe a powerful amnesiac tea that she’s hoping will wipe her memory of her trauma. She’s a tried and true Scout, though, so she naturally once again gets caught up in all the monster slaying.

Side note: I’d love to see a graphic novel adaptation with the same art as the cover.

THE QUEEN OF THE CICADAS cover

The Queen of the Cicadas by V. Castro

In the ’50s in southern Texas, an undocumented farmworker, Milagros, is lynched. Her murder goes uninvestigated by the largely white town, but the Aztec goddess of death, Mictecacíhuatl, takes notice. Now the goddess plans for both herself and Milagros to be reborn and get their bloody revenge on Milagros’ murderers and other perpetuators of colonialism’s evils.

I love a good colonialism revenge story, letmetellyou.

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 week,

Erica