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In The Club

July’s Must-Read Book Club Books

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

I’m back from my birthday vacay where I visited my friend. It feels a little weird coming back because I didn’t work for over a week, and we’re off again for the 4th of July. My stay was refreshing, though. I’d never been to Florida before and my friend had all manner of cat and dog for me to snuggle up with. I also punked convinced him to get a library card, so there’s that.

Lately, I’ve liked having newsletter sends where I let you all know of what I think are the best, juiciest, book club-worthy books coming out for the month. I think this month kind of has a lot, so this may be a two-part endeavor.

Before we get to the books, riddle me this: what do S.A. Cosby, Khaled Hosseini, Sarah Bakewell, and Yahdon Israel have in common? They’ve been guests on Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Now for the club!

Nibbles and Sips

lava cake with powdered sugar and raspberries on the side

Air Fryer Molten Lava Cakes by @mycomfortbakes and Tanya Harris

I’m late to the air frying thing, but am a total convert. I just came across this recipe, and have yet to try it, but am definitely saving for the next time I’m seriously craving chocolate. I have a short video option for you, as well as a detailed recipe.

You’ll need (courtesy of Tanya Harris at My Forking Life):

6 Tbsp butter 

4 oz semi-sweet chocolate in pieces

1 large egg

1 large egg yolk 

3 Tbsp white sugar

½ teaspoon vanilla extract

3 Tbsp all-purpose flour

A pinch of salt

Books to Keep in Mind for July

cover of Owner of a Lonely Heart by Beth Nguyen

Owner of a Lonely Heart by Beth Nguyen

This memoir is a reflection on motherhood, examining the author’s relationship with her mother, the surrogate mothers she’s had throughout her life, and even how her own children will remember her mothering. Nguyen was only eight months old when she was separated from her mother. Her father, grandmother, sister, and uncles fled a war-torn Saigon for the U.S., and the next time she’d see her mother was when she was 19. Since becoming an adult, her mother and she have spent no more than 24 hours together. Nguyen writes of how she dealt with this absence, how she came of age in the Midwest, and the life of a refugee.

Crook Manifesto Book Cover

Crook Manifesto by Colson Whitehead (July 18)

Pulitzer Prize-winning Whitehead’s continuation of his Ray Carney saga — which first started with the uber-popular Harlem Shuffle — is divided into three parts that see the former fence Ray reverting to his old life of crime. But he doesn’t start off with that intention. Actually, in 1971, after having sworn off his old life of moving stolen goods, he tries his best to make a legal go of things with his furniture store. That is, until his daughter starts yearning for Jackson 5 tickets, then he turns to crooked NYPD officer Munson. But to get the tickets, Munson has a favor to ask of Ray. One that will exact quite the physical toll. The second part sees Ray in 1973, teamed up with Pepper, his partner in crime, and hobnobbing with the odd world of Blaxploitation movies. Finally, in the third section, set in a burning 1976 Harlem, Pepper and Ray set out to get to the bottom of a firebombing that injured a kid.

Silver Nitrate Book Cover

Silver Nitrate by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (July 18)

We all know Moreno-Garcia writes banger after banger, so of course I had to let y’all know of her July release — and this one sounds like so much fun. Montserrat is a talented sound editor but is at the mercy of a sexist film industry in ’90s Mexico when her friend and crush Tristán — a former soap opera star — realizes he’s neighbors with the cult horror director Abel Urueta. Urueta promises to change their lives forever if they help him finish a movie about a Nazi occultist that he was never able to finish — one that he thinks has cursed him (if ever there were a curse-causing movie, it would be one about a Nazi occultist, I think). As the two help the legendary director, Montserrat starts noticing a lingering dark presence and Tristán may be seeing a ghost. This one is full of old-school moviemaking and occultism, all set in an immersive ’90s Mexico.

cover of The Deep Sky

The Deep Sky by Yume Kitasei (July 18)

Earth is ruined and the future of humanity lies in the hands of 80 graduates of a rigorous program that began when its participants were just 12 years old. Now the graduates are on a ship heading towards a new planet where they will be expected to birth a new generation. Except halfway through their journey, a bomb goes off, killing three people and knocking the ship off course. Worse yet, Asuka is the suspect as the only surviving witness. Thing is, she never really felt like she belonged on the expedition in the first place, as the representative of Japan — a country she barely has ties to as a half Japanese person having been raised in the U.S. — and as someone who barely passed training. But as the crew turns on each other, it’ll be up to her to find out who on board is the true guilty party.

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

Delighting velocireaders since 2017, Book Riot’s New Release Index will keep you in the know about all the latest books. Start your 14-day free trail today.

More To Read

8 Excellent LGBTQ+ Nonfiction Manga

All the Queer Fantasy Books: 28 Of the Best Reads

Welcome to the Stone Age: An Introduction to the Stonepunk Genre

Genre-Defying Fantasy Books You Won’t be Able to Put Down


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

PROFESSIONAL BOOK NERD VS. CHATGPT: WHO RECOMMENDED BETTER

Hey Readers!

Since I’m out this week, we’ve got a little something different for today’s newsletter.

Below, Amanda, one of our TBR bibliologists, battles it out with AI to see who makes the better book recommendations. Who do you have your money on?

Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, teachers, librarians, booksellers, and bookish professionals? Subscribe to The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, delivered to your inbox! Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com.


With all this chatter that ChatGPT will take over the world, those of us over at Tailored Book Recommendations (TBR) decided to see if AI is about to put us all out of work. TBR is our subscription based service that matches customers with their own professional book nerd, AKA bibliologist, who recommends three books per quarter based on the customer’s interests. When customers sign up for TBR, they fill out a short survey about their reading likes and dislikes, and let us know if there’s anything in particular they want to explore. Armed with a couple sample surveys and a ChatGPT login, I set out to see if I, an actual human bibliologist, could out-recommend ChatGPT’s algorithms.

Customer Number 1

First up, customer number one is a big fan of fantasy, sci-fi, speculative fiction, YA, and horror. They’re looking to explore more fantasy from non-Western viewpoints, enjoy books with multiple narrators, and would like to stretch a little bit outside their comfort zone. Their favorite recent reads include City of Brass by S.A. Chakraborty, Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo, and Feed by Mira Grant. The customer would like to avoid any books that contain violence towards animals.

Recommendation Number 1 

ChatGPT picked The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang: “This epic fantasy novel draws inspiration from Chinese history and mythology, offering a gripping tale of war, politics, and a determined young protagonist.”

An excellent book! But not right for this customer since it includes graphic violence towards animals, which the customer specifically asked to avoid. 

The Final Strife by Saara El-Arifi Book Cover

Instead, I’d go with The Final Strife by Saara El-Arifi. It’s an epic fantasy that follows three interconnected characters as they navigate a society where the color of one’s blood determines their role. This one is perfect for this customer since it is told through multiple perspectives and takes its inspiration from Arabian and African mythologies, fulfilling the request for non-Western fantasy.

Recommendation Number 2

ChatGPT went with Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel: “This post-apocalyptic novel explores the interconnected lives of various characters before, during, and after a devastating pandemic. It focuses on their resilience, creativity, and the importance of art in preserving humanity.”

Another great read — one of my favorites in fact. But I wouldn’t recommend it to a TBR customer since it’s already very popular and even has a TV adaptation. One of the benefits of TBR is we avoid picking books that already have a wide readership and instead hunt for more under-the-radar reads that customers aren’t as likely to have found on their own. 

We Have Always Been Here by Lena Nguyen book cover

My pick would be We Have Always Been Here by Lena Nguyen; a psychological horror novel set aboard a spaceship sent to colonize a remote moon. I think it’d be a good fit for the customer since they enjoy both sci-fi and horror, and the book’s futuristic setting and inclusion of android characters also pushes it into the speculative category.

Recommendation Number 3 

Chat GPT suggested continuing the Daevabad Trilogy by S.A. Chakraborty since the customer loved The City of Brass: “Since you enjoyed this book, you may also want to continue with the rest of the Daevabad Trilogy, including The Kingdom of Copper and The Empire of Gold. This trilogy is rich in Middle Eastern mythology, political intrigue, and complex characters.”

Book cover of The Keeper of the Night by Kylie Lee Baker

Ah yes, because a customer who enjoyed the first book in a series definitely needs a professional to suggest they read the second. File this under, “things your bibliologist will never do.” Instead, I’d go with The Keeper of the Night by Kylie Lee Baker. Not only is it an imaginative YA fantasy that weaves British and Japanese folklore, but it also branches out some from the customer’s usual interests with its historical London setting. 

Subscribe to First Edition for interviews, lists, rankings, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books.

Customer Number 2

Let’s try another one! Our second hypothetical customer wants their recommendations to include a nonfiction book by an author from a marginalized community, wants to expand their literary horizons, and would like at least one book that’s lighter in tone. They recently enjoyed The Ugly Cry by Danielle Henderson, A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark, and Front Desk by Kelly Yang. They read any genre and are eager to try a mix of recommendations, so there’s lots of room to play here.

Recommendation Number 1 

ChatGPT chose Becoming by Michelle Obama: “In this memoir, former First Lady Michelle Obama reflects on her life, from her childhood on the South Side of Chicago to her years in the White House. It offers insights into her personal journey, achievements, and the impact she has had on the world.”

cover of Hijab Butch Blues: A Memoir

Again, considering that this was one of the best selling books of 2018, I don’t think anyone needs to be reminded it exists, as good as it is.  

Instead, I would go with Hijab Butch Blues by Lamya H. It’s a newly released memoir by an anonymous queer Muslim woman. With some similar themes as The Ugly Cry, including coming-of-age and belonging, I think the customer will enjoy this unique perspective and be drawn in Lamya’s strong voice.

Recommendation Number 2

ChatGPT went with The Poppy War again. 

I guess I can see why ChatGPT recommended this book, but since the customer is looking to try new things, let’s go for more of a hidden gem, shall we?

cover of Across a Field of Starlight by Blue Delliquanti

I’d recommend a graphic novel called Across a Field of Starlight by Blue Delliquanti. Featuring dreamy illustrations, the story follows two nonbinary characters from opposite sides of an interplanetary war who collide and form a deep friendship that may grow into more. Since the customer doesn’t mention reading graphic novels, I think this will be a great way for them to explore a new-to-them genre while keeping with the hopeful tone they’ve enjoyed in other books.

Recommendation Number 3 

ChatGPT chose The House on the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune: “This heartwarming fantasy novel follows a caseworker who is sent to evaluate an orphanage for magical children. It explores themes of found family, acceptance, and the power of love and kindness.”

Book cover of Mango, Mambo, and Murder

Another missed opportunity for a hidden gem! Since this customer wants to be recommended a mix of genres, I decided to go with Mango, Mambo, and Murder by Raquel V. Reyes — a cozy mystery about a food anthropologist who winds up needing to solve a murder. It hits on the customer’s request for a light read while still being outside their comfort zone.

When it comes down to it, ChatGPT isn’t awful at recommending books, it just isn’t very creative. If you ask it for sci-fi, you’ll get Brandon Sanderson and Frank Herbert. Ask for horror and it’ll churn out Stephen King and Shirley Jackson. Request literary fiction and it’ll suggest F. Scott Fitzgerald and Harper Lee. And as we saw, it tends toward recommending best sellers, and, unless you specify you’re looking for diversity, white authors. It can’t seem to figure out how to avoid books that contain certain triggers and doesn’t really grasp the request to expand literary horizons. This experiment shows that once again, AI is a useful tool that can be outdone by a real human brain. If you’re interested in seeing what a real human being recommends for your next favorite book, come check out TBR!


See you next week when we’ll be back to regular club stuff. Happy reading!

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In The Club

The Best Books Released This Year (So Far)

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

The middle of the year is here! Somehow. I’m excited because I’m going to see a good friend I haven’t seen in ages, but a little apprehensive because he lives in Florida. I hope I don’t drown in the humidity. I melt at certain temperatures.

Book-wise, the middle of the year is interesting, since it prompts a few book sellers and reviewers to share lists of what they think are the best books published so far. We’ve written about Amazon’s, Goodreads’, and Barnes & Noble’s lists, as well as an all queer list that Esquire did. An interesting note on Barnes & Noble’s list is that it sorts books into interesting categories — like “Best Hot Messes” (a category after my own heart) and “Best Books Starring Octopi” (another one I vibe with, if we’re being honest).

Below, I’ve listed a few books that are found in at least a couple of the lists.

Before we start talking books for real, if you’re looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, booksellers, and bookish professionals, subscribe to The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers. Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com

Nibbles and Sips

red fruit punch with garnish

Strawberry Sorbet Punch by Millie Peartree

I’m still learning about certain aspects of the history of Juneteenth, and through this recipe, I first learned of the significance of red-colored drinks and food during the holiday (if you’d like to read more, here’s an interesting article). The holiday has passed, but I still plan to make this punch this summer, and will have something on the drink roster for next year.

To make it, you just need:

cranberry juice, ginger ale, pineapple, orange, and lemon/lime juice, strawberry sorbet, and some fruit to top everything off with. For amounts, click here.


cover of Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano

Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano

This book showed up on Amazon’s and Goodreads’ list. It follows William, who grew up in dysfunction. That’s why the basketball scholarship that pays for school far from his parents feels like a godsend. Eventually he comes across Julia, a lively young woman who appreciates his still waters. Soon, William finds himself being incorporated into Julia’s tight-knit family, which includes her three sisters — the artist Cecelia, the dreamer Sylvie, and the steadfast Emeline. For the first time, William gets to experience what it’s like to be in a caring and warm familial environment, but this feeling is torn by a disruption that spans generations.

Yellowface cover

Yellowface by R.F. Kuang

I’ve mentioned this one more recently, and I’m not surprised it’s being counted as one of the best this year so far (according to Amazon, Goodreads, and B&N). Kuang only dabbles in bangers! Athena and June were meant to be twinning. Or so June thought, since both graduated the same year from Yale and debuted in publishing the same year. But June soars into literary darling-hood, while June does not. One day, June sees Athena die in a random accident and impulsively steals her manuscript, a guaranteed masterpiece about the contributions of Chinese laborers during WWI. She edits Athena’s work, sends it to her agent as her own, and reaps the benefits. She even undergoes a rebranding, which involves her going by Juniper Song and using an ethnically ambiguous author photo. But the truth starts to creep out, even as June goes as far as she can to protect her secret.

a graphic of the cover of Quietly Hostile by Samantha Irby

Quietly Hostile  by Samantha Irby

This one popped up on Goodreads’, B&N’s, and Esquire‘s. Get ready to laugh, ki, and fall over. Irby is hilarious, and in these essays, she shares what her life’s been like since having gained even more success. She talks about Hollywood job offers, Sex and the City, as well as funky teeth problems and upset stomach. Listen, nothing is off limits, okay? Her willingness to bare it all coupled with her natural humor makes this book feel like you’re just kicking it with a friend.

cover of Happy Place

Happy Place by Emily Henry

Emily Henry is just that girl when it comes to contemporary romances (and Amazon and Goodreads members agree). Here, a friend group takes their annual, weeklong retreat to a cottage in Maine. Harriet and Wyn are sharing the cottage’s biggest room since they’ve been the ideal couple since forever. Only problem is that they actually haven’t been. Not really. Not for awhile. They broke up months ago, but don’t have the heart to ruin their friends’ last getaway in the cottage before it gets sold. They’re also a teensy bit in denial about their residual feelings for each other.

Subscribe to First Edition for interviews, lists, rankings, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books.

Suggestion Section

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Atom-what? A Brief Introduction to the Atompunk Genre

Illinois Has Officially Banned Book Bans

The Book Club Picks of June 2023, From Roxane Gay’s to

Reese’s

Philosophical Books That Will Make You Think

2023 Lambda Awards Announced


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Books Like “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse”

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

I saw Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse this past weekend and got my life. I kept hearing about it and knew I had to see it sooner rather than later lest I get spoiled beyond saving. It was just as creative and wonderful as everyone said, and I wanted to just keep the vibes going with the books I talk about today. A part from amazing visuals and brilliant character design, the movie (understandably) had a lot of dimension and world traveling, as do the books I have today (plus one that tells more of Miles’ story).

Before I get to the club and books, if you’re looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, booksellers, and bookish professionals, subscribe to The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers. Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com

Nibbles and Sips

chocolate chip cookies on a wire rack

Thee Best Chocolate Chip Cookies by Buzzfeed Tasty.

Yes, chocolate chip cookies are a little basic, but they’re also really good. And Buzzfeed’s Tasty people reviewed 50 recipes and found the best one. I felt like that was knowledge I should share with you. Here’s a link to the video as well as the page with the recipe listed out.


cover of miles morales by jason reynolds

Miles Morales: SpiderMan by Jason Reynolds

This is a natural place to start for this list. This is the first novel that tells Miles’ story, and it being written by Jason Reynolds is beyond perfect. Miles is a seemingly typical teenager in Brooklyn — he goes to school, plays video games with his bestie, and has a crush on another student. But the added responsibility of being Spider Man weighs on him. Lately, his powers have felt off, he gets suspended from school, he’s having recurring nightmares —and all of this is starting to make him doubt his ability to be a hero. This adds some of the very real elements that come with being a Black kid going to a mostly white private school to a comic book character’s story.

the ten thousand doors of january

The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow

At the beginning of the 20th century, January, a mixed girl, is living comfortably in Vermont. Kind of. Though she has everything she needs, she’s also kind of treated like a prop by those in high society. Her father is employed by Mr. Locke, for whom he travels the world to procure odd creatures. After her father disappears, she finds a book that uncovers secrets about doors to other worlds. As she travels to these worlds, she learns more about herself and the truth of things.

cover of This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone

This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone

Read this because of Bigolas Dickolas, but also because it’s a beautifully written epistolary romance blended with truly creative speculative worlds. Red and Blue are two agents fighting on opposite sides of a time war. Blue’s side is a sort of organic hive mind, while Red’s is peak technology. Throughout the book, the two women travel through time on missions to change the outcome of the war and eventually notice the other’s handiwork. This leads to what is, at first, an exchange of taunting letters, but turns into admiration and love. Technically, they aren’t really traveling to parallel universes, but the times they travel to are so different that they feel like different worlds.

Cover of The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson

The Space between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson

In this award-winning, world-hopping story, traveling the multiverse is possible, under one condition: the counterpart of the person traveling can’t still be alive. Cara’s other world counterparts often die, which means she’s able to travel to the more than 300 worlds her world knows to exist. Because of this, Cara is recruited by the Eldritch Institute of Earth Zero to travel the multiverse gathering information. This job somewhat boosts her social status, but her family still lives in what’s called “the wastes,” and she doesn’t fit in the privileged world, nor the marginalized one. Eventually, she uncovers something that could change life for everyone.

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

Subscribe to First Edition for interviews, lists, rankings, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books.

More To Read

28 Fascinating, Fun Facts About Books and Reading

11+ Things U.S. Public Libraries Offer That You Might Not Know About

8 Chilling New Horror Books Coming Out June 2023

Barnes & Noble’s ‘Best Books of the Year So Far’ List Is Here, and It’s Got Something For Everyone


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

June’s Must-Read Book Club Books

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

Now that Pride has officially started, Happy Pride!

Today I’ve got some books coming out this month that are perfect for Book Club discussions. This is a sampling of the great books coming out in June, and I’ve made sure to not repeat the books chosen in popular online book clubs that I’ve mentioned below.

Before we get to the books, make sure to check out The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers. It’s got fascinating stories, informed takes, and more drawn from our collective experience as power readers, booksellers, and bookish professionals. Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com

Nibbles and Sips

chicken gyro

Chicken Gyro by @gaming_foodie

I love the freshness of this gyro recipe — whose chicken you can replace with tofu if you’re meatless. The recipe involves marinating a chicken breast in Greek yogurt, minced garlic, oregano, salt and pepper, baking it at 375, and letting it cool before dicing into cubes. The cucumber salad topping needs cucumbers, tomatoes, onions, lemon, parsley, and the tzatziki sauce Greek yogurt, minced garlic, lemon, dill, and salt. Then you need lightly toasted pita bread, of course.

There’s a lot of crunchy freshness going on here, and side note, but all bodies are summer bodies. Enjoy!


cover of All the Sinners Bleed

All the Sinners Bleed by S.A. Cosby

It’s barely been a year since Titus Crowne became the first Black sheriff in Charon County, VA when there’s a school shooting. And before he can talk down the young suspect and get him to surrender, he’s shot by Crowne’s deputies. The subsequent investigation leads to Titus uncovering that the shooter — and other Black kids like him — were victims of abuse by the slain teacher. As he continues down his path of inquiries and finds secrets, bodies, and a killer, he must contend with the deep-seated racial vitriol of his surroundings.

cover of Lucky Red

Lucky Red by Claudia Cravens (June 20)

We stan a gun-totin’, revenge-gettin’ queen, and 16-year-old Bridget is exactly that. After her raggedy father dies from a snakebite, Bridget must cross the Kansas prairie with no money and her one mule. When she reaches Dodge City, her red hair attracts one of the women who runs the Buffalo Queen Saloon, a respected brothel run by women. She takes to being a “sporting woman,” a sex worker, even enjoying her time with the other women. Like, she really enjoys it, and comes to realize her sexuality through them — particularly the gender-bending gunslinger Spartan Lee. But the peace she’s found through the Buffalo Queen eventually becomes unsettled.

cover of Rivermouth: A Chronicle of Language, Faith, and Migration by Alejandra Oliva

Rivermouth: A Chronicle of Language, Faith, and Migration by Alejandra Oliva (June 20)

Oliva — whose family has an intimate relationship with the U.S.-Mexian border and who has worked as a translator for people coming into the U.S. — lays out the complexities of immigrating to the United States. She reflects on how refugees’ trauma must be mined and packaged for the immigration system, ponders who should be considered worthy of American citizenship, explores how many immigrants are not immediately welcomed but end up handling our most precious industries, like food harvesting, and more.

cover of The Rachel Incident by Caroline O'Donoghue

The Rachel Incident by Caroline O’Donoghue (June 27)

I’ve seen this messy book referred to as belonging to the millennial genre, and I appreciate how millennials are seen as quintessentially messy. I truly love that for us. Here, 21-year-old Rachel is about to be granted her degree in English in 2009, just as the recession fosters job insecurity. She develops a crush on Dr. Byrne, her married English professor, and her friend James encourages her to pursue him. James also has a makeout session with Dr. Byrne that Rachel walks in on. Interestingly enough, Rachel doesn’t feel a type of way about it. Instead, she gets closer to James, and the novel follows them and all their messy decisions.

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

Subscribe to First Edition for interviews, lists, rankings, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books.

More To Read

15 of the Most Underrated Books on Goodreads

The Best Books You’ve Never Heard of From the 2000s

A Ranking of Fictional Cats


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Queer Histories

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

Y’all, we’re about to start Pride Month! *plays DJ horns* I love how joyous Pride is as a heritage month, but there is of course, still lots to learn about queer history. As we get ready to shanty-you-stay in all the glorious Pride events this month, I’ve got a few illuminating queer history books.

But first — a reminder to check out our new podcast First Edition. You can subscribe to First Edition on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or your podcatcher of choice.

Nibbles and Sips

spicy tuna on crispy rice bites

Crispy Rice Spicy Shrimp Bites by Seafood_Network

This is such a good idea for a light-feeling food that also feels kind of fancy. I love the combination of shrimp, sriracha, Kewpie mayo, and crispy rice. It’s also fairly simple, as all you need are:

-Shrimp

-mayo

-scallions

-rice

-breadcrumbs

– soy sauce

And a little technique!


cover of Black on Both Sides: A Racial History of Trans Identity

Black on Both Sides: A Racial History of Trans Identity by C. Riley Snorton

Here, Snorton details the rich history of Black transpeople, especially how they have been cut out of the narrative of trans and queer history. By using the narratives of enslaved people seeking freedom, Afro-modernist literature, journalism, and other sources, Snorton shows just how much race has determined how topics like queerness and gender have been represented.

cover of Our Work Is Everywhere: An Illustrated Oral History of Queer and Trans Resistance by Syan Rose

Our Work Is Everywhere: An Illustrated Oral History of Queer and Trans Resistance by Syan Rose

In this unique collection, Rose documents the many voices of queer people across the country. Various members of different queer and trans communities — from activists to artists to healers — speak on their experiences. We hear about the dire issue that is Black mental health, disability healthcare, the issues Pacific Islander writers face, and more — all illustrated through colorful and interesting artwork that embodies each individual.

cover of The Lavender Scare

The Lavender Scare: The Cold War Persecution of Gays and Lesbians in the Federal Government by David K. Johnson

This award-winning book shows how the U.S. has been in the business of homophobia. Many know, for instance, of the Red Scare, but the Lavender Scare of the ’50s was a similar moment in U.S. history when queer people were considered a threat to the country. Through declassified documents, interviews with people who worked in D.C. at the time, and a lot of research, Johnson details just how damaging this persecution was. He also highlights how it led to the Gay Rights movement.

sister outsider cover

Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde

This collection of essays is essential reading for any intersectional feminist, queer history, Black history, or social justice reading list. In it, Lorde dissects the various ways each social justice movement — of the time, and now in many ways — falls short of their purported goals. She speaks about her experiences as a Black queer woman, and all the ways Western patriarchy is damaging. But she also offers a way towards healing, too.

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Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s The Deep Dive to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox.

From book Riot:


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Coming-Into-Adulthood Books

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

I’ve hit a nice little just-before-summer groove where I have a pleasant walk to the library where I read for a few hours on the weekends. I’m relishing it before summer comes because I’ve been known to spoil in certain climates.

Today I’ve got a few coming-into-adulthood books for you. After I’d gotten the idea for this theme and had started collecting a few books to mention, I realized that I define these kinds of books as ones where characters who are already adults have to figure things out, maybe even from scratch. This could mean having to start over or coming to terms with the fact that they hadn’t even “started” yet. Basically all of the books I talk about have characters contending with societal exceptions and how those expectations maybe don’t quite mesh with who they really are.

And they all have messy relationship dynamics, obvi.

Before we get to the books, make sure to check out First Edition. It’s the new Book Riot podcast that will include interviews, lists, rankings, retrospectives, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books. You can subscribe to First Edition on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or your podcatcher of choice.

Nibbles and Sips

cut pineapple, and quartered pineapple cuts on popsicle sticks

Tequila-soaked pineapple, suggested by Bustle

This is more of a good idea for summer than a recipe-recipe. You just need a fresh, ripe pineapple, tequila, pineapple juice, simple syrup (or agave), and lime juice. Soak your cut up pineapple over night in the liquid and stick popsicle sticks into each piece the next day. Sprinkle with tajín. For a visual, check out Bustle’s instagram account.

Bumpy Rides into Adulthood

Filthy Animals cover

Filthy Animals by Brandon Taylor

Similar to Taylor’s latest release, The Late Americans, Filthy Animals explores the messy personal lives of young creative people living in the Midwest. Following a stay in a psychiatric hospital, a queer mathematician meets a dancer and enters into a tenuous open relationship with him and his girlfriend. Other stories show the same situation from different perspectives and bring in characters connected to each other, but also struggling with their own relationships.

convenience store woman book

Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata

Keiko Furukura has never quite fit in, but since she was 18 and applied to a convenience store job in Tokyo on a whim, she feels like she at least has some things figured out. Like, she knows how to dress and act when she’s at work in order to look like she belongs, even if there is a “real” her that exists outside this persona. But now at 36, the normalcy she thought she’d maintained since her teenage years starts to crumble once her younger sister gives birth, and those close to Keiko start pressuring her to achieve society-set milestones. Giving in, she attempts a deal of sorts with a questionable co-worker, and though her life now appears to be “normal,” to her it feels like anything but.

Honey Girl book cover by Morgan Rogers

Honey Girl by Morgan Rogers

Grace Porter has thus far adhered to her strict (and financially supportive) father’s path for her — at only 28, she’s just achieved a PhD in the very white male-dominated field of astronomy. Despite the accomplishment, she doesn’t feel quite fulfilled. And when she goes on a trip to Vegas with friends to celebrate, she totally shakes up her life. By getting married one drunken night. When she wakes to her new wife, Yuki, she decides to stray from the path her father has set, and even her supportive group of friends, to try to make a go of it in New York with Yuki.

Sea Change cover

Sea Change by Gina Chung

I discussed this book not too long ago, but it also fits here perfectly. Ro is freshly 30 and is suspended in the past and is slowly becoming even more unmoored from the present. She has a distant relationship with her mother, her boyfriend broke up with her to colonize Mars, and her bestie is getting married. All she has left is the giant octopus named Dolores that she cares for at her lackluster job at the mall aquarium. But Dolores has been sold to a wealthy investor and will be moved soon. As Dolores leaves Ro’s life, all of Ro’s childhood trauma comes bubbling back to the surface.

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Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s The Deep Dive to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox.


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Queer Hauntings and Jewish American History

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

If you want a giggle (and a good book rec), read this article on Twitter’s Bigolas Dickolas, then continue on down for some books I gathered for Jewish American Heritage Month.

Before we get to the club, though, make sure to check out First Edition, the new podcast started by Book Riot co-founder Jeff O’Neal. It explores the wide bookish world, with interviews, lists, rankings, retrospectives, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books. Subscribe to First Edition on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or your podcatcher of choice.

Nibbles and Sips

DAIGAKU IMO  or GLAZED JAPANESE SWEET POTATOES

Daigaku Imo, or Glazed Japanese Sweet Potatoes by Marc Matsumoto

I randomly decided to try a Japanese sweet potato when I came across some in a grocery the other day and subsequently wondered where they’d been all my life. If you’ve never had one, they have a drier, fluffier texture than the usual American variety, and are really sweet. Like, sweet sweet (they low-key taste like cake!). I had prepared them as I’d seen before, which is just by cutting them in half and air frying/roasting them, but now I’m going to shimmy my way on back down to the store to try a recipe like this one by Marc Matsumoto. Glazed sweet potatoes are a popular sweet snack in Japan, and are relatively healthy (especially considering what I usually get into).

You’ll need:

Japanese sweet potatoes, oil, brown rice syrup, and black sesame seeds. Matsumoto shows how to prepare it.


The City Beautiful book cover

The City Beautiful by Aden Polydoros

This one had me by the throat! It’s a historical YA novel that’s part murder mystery, part haunting, and an immersive look at what life was like for queer Jewish people in the late 1800s. We follow Alter, who now goes by the name his parents gave him instead of the Americanized “Alex.” After having lost his dad on the way to America, he, like so many other Jewish immigrants living in Chicago, is trying his best to survive. He lives in tenement housing with three other young men his age and works at a printing press, scrimping as much as possible to bring his mother and siblings over from Europe. His life gets interrupted when a close friend of him dies, and the police, not wanting to tarnish the image of the Worlds Fair, want to brush it aside as an accident. But Alter knows better, and soon starts to lose his mind as he becomes possessed by his deceased friend’s dybbuk. He has to once again lean on Frankie, a friend from a past life that he had tried to leave behind. A friend that he might want be a little more. Together, they try to free Alter from the dybbuk before it completely takes over.

cover of The Color of Water: A Black Man's Tribute to His White Mother

The Color of Water: A Black Man’s Tribute to His White Mother by James McBride

The award-winning author of books like The Good Lord Bird, Deacon King Kong, and others, writes about his mother’s life. McBride and his 11 other siblings were raised in poverty by a mother who regularly avoided questions about her past, insisting that she was “light-skinned” when asked about her race. Turns out that she was the Polish-born daughter of an Orthodox rabbi who escaped the pogroms of Eastern Europe with her family. Once in America, she’d have to flee, still, from her abusive father, and would find solace in Black neighborhoods. McBride speaks of her life — her struggles, her accomplishments — as he does his own.

cover of Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls

Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls by T Kira Madden

Here’s another memoir! This time about the half Hawaiian Chinese, half Jewish niece of shoe designer Steve Madden. T Kira Madden grows up at the conflicting intersection of being privileged, biracial, and queer, witnessing firsthand all of the ugly that can come with the lifestyles of the wealthy. Though she lives the lavish life of a daughter within a shoe mogul family, her father’s alcoholism leads to him physically abusing her mother, which is followed by her mother struggling with a drug addiction. Meanwhile, T Kira is left to her own devices. Eventually, she finds her tribe — that is, of fatherless girls — which grants her the support and understanding she had missed in her younger years.

cover of Bad Jews: A History of American Jewish Politics and Identities by Emily Tamkin

Bad Jews: A History of American Jewish Politics and Identities by Emily Tamkin

Maybe as a coping mechanism or something else, I feel like there is always some form of gatekeeping that goes on within communities that are targeted and othered. Tamkin explores this within the Jewish community by sifting through the last 100 years of Jewish American life. From the Sephardic Jews who arrived in America in the 1600s, to Ashkenazi Jews who immigrated in large numbers to the U.S. in the early 1900s, and the civil rights era decades later, Tamkin gets to the bottom of what makes a “bad Jew” and what makes a good one. Turns out, the concept of what constitutes as Jewish within the community has shifted through the years.

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Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s The Deep Dive to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox.


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

A Long Island Grifter, Queer Lady Gladiators, and More Meaty May Reads

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

Have y’all been following the Scholastic story where they wanted Maggie Tokuda-Hall to censor anti-Asian racism in a book…about WWII? Yeah, well, she gave an update on the situation (she had a meeting with Scholastic) on her blog. *Hint*: it’s still a mess.

As we shake our heads in unison, let’s get to the club.

Nibbles and Sips

watermelon drink with garnish

Spicy Watermelon Lemonade by Nanajoe 19

Though the year feels like it’s zooming by, it also feels like people are super ready for summer. Or, I guess maybe people are always super ready for summer, it’s just that this time, I am too. Either way, I’m looking forward to trying this spicy watermelon lemonade! I’ve never thought to make lemonade spicy, but I have enjoyed the spicy margaritas I’ve tried, and lemonade has similar sweet/tart vibes going on.

Looks like you’ll just need:

– watermelon, cut up

– 4 fresh lemons for juicing

– 1/2 jalapeño

– sugar

– water

Then blend and garnish!

Before we get to the books, don’t forget to check out First Edition, the new podcast started by Book Riot co-founder Jeff O’Neal. It explores the wide bookish world, with interviews, lists, rankings, retrospectives, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books. Subscribe to First Edition on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or your podcatcher of choice.


Here are some books that have been added to various book club lists, are highly anticipated, and are just all around great conversation starters.

cover of Chain Gang All Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah  

ChainGang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah  

This is definitely one of our most-anticipated books of the year. With a premise that involves top women gladiators fighting for their lives within a corrupt prison system, it’s understandable. The author of Friday Black tells the bloody story of Loretta Thurwar and “Hurricane Staxxx,” two women who are friends, lovers, and popular Chain-Gang All-Stars. As All-Stars, they’ve fought against other prisoners in lethal battles to win shortened sentences through a highly contested program that’s run through the controversial Criminal Action Penal Entertainment organization in a (not so) alternative United States. Loretta nears the day she’ll finally be free, but the burden of all she’s done — and still has to do — weighs heavily on her in this damning look at America’s prison industrial complex and culture of violence.

cover of The Covenant of Water

The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese

The bestselling author of Cutting for Stone is back with a family saga spanning more than 70 years. The story of a girl who would come to be known as Big Ammachi — which essentially translates to “Big Momma” — twists and turns, intertwining as the waterways that her and her would-be family live by in Southern India. Big Ammachi’s family, part of a Christian community with a long history, will be as gifted as they are cursed, with the curious incidence of drowning being a common theme reoccurring through the generations. Starting in 1900, we experience the change and advancements time brings as Big Ammachi experiences them.

the guest book cover

The Guest by Emma Cline (May 16)

Alex is a certified mess, but I have to admit she’s also pretty bold in ways I could never be. After she commits a faux pas at a party, the older man she has a lil something going on with sends her on her way with a ticket back to where she came from. But she’s not ready to leave the bougie part of Long Island and all the potential ways its inhabitants could support her. So she drifts from place to place, using her people-reading skills to melt into each new social situation, seamlessly fitting in..until she doesn’t. Alex is the type of person who has random thoughts about how easy it’d be to steal things she comes across, so while she is pretty morally reprehensible, the narrative of seeing rich people’s worlds shaken up a bit makes for an interesting read. The premise of how she’s able to so easily pass in new social groups says a lot about privilege and race, I think. It also reminds me of a story from awhile back about a woman who pretended to be a German heiress. Supreme mess.

Yellowface cover

Yellowface by R.F. Kuang (May 16)

Kuang only writes bangers, and in this one, June witnesses the death of Athena Liu — who just finished a novel that promises to be a masterpiece about Chinese laborers’ contributions to the Allied forces during WWI. June decides to take Athena’s manuscript and claims the story as her own. To take full advantage (because, you know, stealing someone’s book wasn’t enough), she also lets her publisher rebrand her with an Asian-sounding name and an author photo of someone who is racially ambiguous (if you hadn’t guessed, June is white). The book is successful, but June can’t shake the feeling that it could all come tumbling down, and that the truth of Athena is about to be exposed.

*Bonus*: Kuang is interviewed here by author Zakiya Dalila Harris (The Other Black Girl) about the book and what inspired it. Here’s an excerpt I had to include:

“Kuang: “I really like the novelist John Banville and I was reading some interviews he’d done, and he mentioned that once he tried writing in an alternate voice, like a crime thriller, and suddenly he’d written paragraphs and paragraphs, and he thought to himself, ‘John, you slut.’ That’s how I felt drafting the first 3,000 words of Yellowface. It was just pouring out and I thought, ‘Becky, you slut. What are you doing?'”

Kuang, if you’re reading this, this paragraph makes us friends now.

cover of A History of Burning by Danika Oza

A History of Burning by Janika Oza

In the late 1800s, Pirbhai, a young Indian boy, becomes a worker indentured to the British in his desperation to find work. He’s taken to East Africa to work on the East African Railway, where he’s pressured to commit an act that will haunt him and his family for generations. His children grow up in a Uganda that is starting to divest from British rule, and eventually his descendants have to leave because of Idi Amin’s South Asian expulsion. They end up in different parts of the world, with some eventually finding each other again in Canada. This covers five generations of a family with lives spread out over four continents as they reckon with what they’ve done and lost in the name of survival.

Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s The Deep Dive to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox.

Suggestion Section

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I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

A New Holiday for Black Authors

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

Book friends, rejoice, for this May 4th will be the first Black Authors Day! Woo! This holiday was created by CaTyra Polland, CEO and Founder of the editing boutique Love for Words. Polland created this holiday to celebrate Black stories, literacy, and to support Black authors, who come up against obstacles when trying to publish.

My colleague samm and I interviewed Polland about the holiday, but the article will go up on May 4th. In the meantime, I thought to discuss some indie books by Black authors.

Real quick, before we get to that — check out First Edition, the new podcast started by Book Riot co-founder Jeff O’Neal. It explores the wide bookish world, with interviews, lists, rankings, retrospectives, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books. Subscribe to First Edition on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or your podcatcher of choice.

Nibbles and Sips

pie with whipped cream and coconut topping

Earl Grey Pie by
joshuacooksthendraws

I’ve never heard of an Earl Grey pie, but it honestly makes so much sense. I love tea-flavored things, and am itching to try this. If you do, let me know how it is!

In addition to typical pie ingredients, you’ll need:

Pastry Cream

Earl Grey standard tea bags

Whole milk

Vanilla paste

Chocolate Ganache

Indie Published Black Books to Check Out

cover of Becoming Ms. Burton: From Prison to Recovery to Leading the Fight for Incarcerated Women

Becoming Ms. Burton: From Prison to Recovery to Leading the Fight for Incarcerated Women by Susan Burton, Cari Lynn

Susan Burton’s life was turned upside down when her 5-year-old son was killed by a car in South L.A. Without access to professional mental health care, Burton turned to self-medicating with drugs. Because her struggles with addiction took place during the War on Drugs, she eventually landed in prison, and was in and out for the next 15 years. In all that time, she was never offered any kind of rehabilitation or help with her illness. She sought out a rehab facility on her own, underwent recovery, and set out to help women with similar challenges. In this memoir, she speaks about her experiences with addiction — including the systemic issues that lead to more incarceration rather than education and true recovery — and her organization A New Way of Life. This book, and Burton, have been recognized as vital to prison reform and social justice overall.

cover of Hull by Xan Phillips

Hull by Xan Phillips

“Let’s deflate something monstrous, / and take its air inside us.”

From Ghana to Tuskegee, this debut poetry collection by award-winning Xan Phillips follows the Black body as it is subjugated to the horrors of enslavement and other atrocities across different settings and time periods. But through it all, they also illuminate the ways that joy is reclaimed in intimate and queer spaces.

cover of Alfajiri by Michael LaBorn

Alfajiri by Michael LaBorn

Beautiful cover aside, I’ve seen this described as a fantasy novel that is perfect for frequent and infrequent fantasy readers alike, as its magic and world building feels a little easier to get into. Here, Kiah, who is essentially adopted by the queen of Alfajiri, sets out on a journey to discover more of her past. Accompanying her are her two close friends, and as the three journey on and learn about Kiah and the true nature of things, the structure of Alfajiri is threatened. Now the people of their country must choose between following the heir, or contending with an empty throne.

cover of Child Bride by Jennifer Smith Turner

Child Bride by Jennifer Smith Turner

It’s the mid 1900s in the south, and 16-year-old Nell is married off and whisked away to Boston. Though she likes the idea of being independent, shy Nell lives in a time when the weight of the world rests on women’s shoulders, and opportunities are few. Once she has three children, her body feels the consequences, and her emotionally abusive husband Henry withdraws from her. She seeks comfort in another man, Charles, who she meets at church, and who she becomes pregnant by. Child Bride follows Nell as she does the best she can in a harsh and segregated world.

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Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s The Deep Dive to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox.


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica