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In The Club

The First Novel by a Black American and Other History-Making Firsts

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

I’m going to go ahead and contradict myself right off the bat: I think we are a little too pressed as a society to highlight “firsts” these days. I chalk it up to the ever-present fight to publish content that’s highly clickable.

With that said, I do still think some firsts are worth celebrating, especially ones that come from a certain era. The books and authors I mention today were really pioneers in the world of literature, breaking tough ground for Black Americans. The books’ publish dates range from the late 1800s to the ’50s, and give such priceless insight into the times from which they came. Apart from that, they’re also just great works of literature.

Let’s get to them!

Nibbles and Sips

curry katsu

Katsu Curry by Yumiko

I saw something saying that Curry Katsu (essentially a Japanese-style curry accompanied by a fried chicken cutlet) was considered the best meal of the year. I had never tried Japanese curry before this, but have loved Indian and Jamaican curry since forever. Y’all. This was so good, I had to make it twice (the picture is what I actually made!).

The dish is pretty simple, but I feel like it takes a little getting used to because of its somewhat disparate parts. Here’s a recipe by Yumiko, but I also have tips. I mostly followed the recipe on the curry box that I got from Amazon, but when it came to the cutlets, I made sure to season both sides with salt, black pepper, and a little garlic powder before letting them hit the flour + egg + panko station.

The First Mystery, Pulitzer Award-Winning, and Movement-Starting Novels by Black Writers

Portrait_of_Harriet_E._WIlson

Sketches from the Life of a Free Black by Harriet E. Wilson — First Novel Published

Published in 1859, this was the first novel to be published in the U.S. by a Black American. Technically, it is the second one written by a Black American, as the first is Clotel; or, The President’s Daughter by William Wells Brown, but the latter was first published in England. It was only after Wilson’s book was published in America that Brown’s book came stateside.

Sketches is essentially auto fiction, and details Wilson’s life as a person of mixed (Black and white) heritage who gets abandoned by her mother once her father dies, going on to live a hard life indentured to a white northern family with an abusive matriarch. The book, and the identity of its writer, was lost in antiquity until Henry Louis Gates, Jr. found it in the early ’80s and fleshed out the history surrounding it.

*Note: The full title basically contains a slur, so I chose to leave it out here.*

cover of Annie Allen by Gwendolyn Brooks

Annie Allen by Gwendolyn Brooks — First Pulitzer Prize

Brooks was the first Black American to be awarded a Pulitzer Prize (1950), and it was for her her 1949 collection of poems titled Annie Allen. The collection was inspired by epics Iliad and Aeneid, and followed the life of a Black girl growing up in Chicago’s South Side. The original is very hard to come by now, but there are snippets of it in her Selected Poems, which I have linked.

cover of Cane by Jean Toomer

Cane by Jean Toomer — The Harlem Renaissance

With this book came the ushering in of a new era. Toomer’s Cane sat at a kind of crossroads. On the one hand, it was an experimental book told in three parts. Its mixed narrative forms — poems, vignettes, and a short play — subverted readers’ stereotypical expectations. In doing this, though, Toomer’s southern Black characters seemed to live stereotyped lives, even as he added nuance to their plight.

This was the book that started the Harlem Renaissance (I wrote a little more about it here). Alice Walker said of it “It has been reverberating in me to an astonishing degree. I love it passionately, could not possibly exist without it.”

The Conjure-Man Dies cover image

The Conjure Man Dies by Rudolph Fisher — First Mystery Novel

The Conjure Man Dies was published in 1932 and is thought to be the first mystery novel by a Black American. It’s set in the time it was written — 1930s Harlem — and follows Frimbo, a man from Africa who has made his home in the U.S. In Harlem, he’s known as a conjure man, and one day his friends find him dead under mysterious circumstances. This serves as a look into the ’30s by someone actually alive during that time, and as a mystery that’s still entertaining. It’s a shame that the talented Fisher, a doctor, musician, and (obvious) writer, died when he was only 37.

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

Get Swept Away in New Fantasy Books for February 2023

Forget Valentine’s Day! February is for Horror: New Horror Coming Out This Month

10 Riveting New Nonfiction Books to Read in February 2023

What Is Happening In Publishing?


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 week,

Erica

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In The Club

Diverse Romance + A Look at the History of Black Romance

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

I was recently speaking to a friend who doesn’t read much, but wants to. I asked her what things she’s liked to read in the past, and she said interesting memoirs. After I shared a couple suggestions, like Hijab Butch Blues and Somebody’s Daughter, I also thought to suggest romances because it seemed right up her alley. Do you know when I asked if she wants me to suggest any romances, she said “no, because then I’ll be depressed that I don’t have that in real life.” It gagged me a bit, not going to lie, because I felt that deeply in my soul.

Since it’s February, I’m recommending some romances, which I hope serves your book club well during this month of valentines and palentines…my friend and I will just be over here quietly weeping in the corner.

Now for the club!

Nibbles and Sips

S'MORES COOKIES

S’Mores Cookies by The Salty Marshmallow

I was really feeling like comfort food (when am I not) and wanted something sweet. What’s more comforting than a s’more cookie!? The Salty Marshmallow (fitting name) tells us how to get these glorious things here.

My Friend and I Are Taking Notes, Basically

The Kiss Quotient Book Cover

The Kiss Quotient by Helen Hoang

Stella is brilliant with numbers — which has resulted in a pretty sizable salary — but clueless when it comes to romance. She thinks that, as someone with little to no life experience and Asperger’s, it just makes sense to hire a professional to teach her the ways of love. That’s where Michael Phan’s fine self comes into the picture. The escort will teach Stella everything from kissing to beyond missionary *wiggles eyebrows*, but their arrangement soon starts to feel comfortable in a new way.

the cover of D’Vaughn and Kris Plan a Wedding

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

Kris is looking for her big break through a reality show, while D’Vaughn is looking for an exaggerated way to finally come out to her mom. To achieve these goals, the two decide to be on the reality show Instant I Do, which means they’ll have to plan their wedding in six weeks, and convince their loved ones that they’re actually in love with each other. Then they’ll get the $100,000 grand prize and all the other goodies. Of course, the cash prize isn’t the only thing at stake by the time that six week marker comes around.

A Lot Like Adios cover

A Lot Like Adios by Alexis Daria

Michelle is a graphic designer who is doing pretty well for herself…career-wise. Romantically, it’s a little dry. And Gabriel, her ex boo thang from when she still lived in the Bronx, is also doing pretty well as a co-owner of a celebrity gym in L.A. When Michelle gets brought on for a marketing campaign for Gabriel’s gym, those old feelings resurface, but some things have to be worked out before the relationship can really flourish.

cover of Black Love Matters by Jessica P. Pryde

Black Love Matters: Real Talk on Romance, Being Seen, and Happily Ever Afters By Jessica P. Pryde

Jessica P. Pryde is a contributor at Book Riot! She is one of our resident Romance experts and, here she has edited a collection of essays that both uplift and examine romance through the Black gaze. Contributors include everyone from Jasmine Guillory to Beverly Jenkins, Kosoko Jackson, and more.

Suggestion Section

Book Club Picks:

20 of the Coolest Bookstores in the World to Explore

Here’s How Moms For Liberty Is Lying About Books

February 2023 Horoscopes and Book Recommendations

Gift Tailored Book Recommendations to your bookish boo this Valentine’s. Gift TBR today!


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 week,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

New Book Club Books for Black History Month

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

Today is the first day of Black History Month, so we’re talking about new book club books by Black authors that’ll keep you engaged and full of discussion points during your book club sessions.

But first, if you’d like to donate to the Tyre Nichols Memorial Fund, you can do so here.

Nibbles and Sips

Roasted Pumpkin Pasta

Today I’ll be sharing what looks to be another banger from a new YouTube favorite of mine, @letsKWOOWK, who has a series of relatively inexpensive dishes he made during college, etc. In this one, he makes a roasted pumpkin pasta that sounds amazing.

All you need is:

  • garlic
  • onion
  • pumpkin
  • oil
  • bell pepper
  • pasta
  • coconut milk
  • spices to taste (whatever you like, I’d suggest at least some black pepper, and maybe a little cayenne)
  • salt

You roast the garlic, onion, pumpkin, and bell pepper, and toss in olive oil with a little salt for 45 minutes. Take the skins off the pumpkin after it cools a bit, then blend what you baked with the coconut milk and your spices. Boil your pasta and top with your pumpkin sauce and whatever protein you’d like.

Now for some books!

A Variety of Black Experiences

cover of Maame by Jessica George; pink and red flowers next to the colors of Ghana's flag

Maame by Jessica George

This was just released yesterday and is already on a few radars (it’s Jenna Bush Hager’s February book club pick, which I mention again below). It follows 25-year-old Maddie, a British Ghanian woman who is struggling to crawl out from under a mountain of stress. From caring for her father who is suffering from late stage Parkinson’s to dealing with a distant (but somehow still) overbearing mother and constant micro aggressions at work, she just really needs a break. She gets it in the form of her mother finally returning to London, and seizes the chance to start carving out a path for her independence. She accomplishes a few firsts — like living with roommates and engaging in some internet dating — but when something terrible happens, she has to pivot once more. This is a story that has all the seriousness of caring for a sick parent and work stress, but it centers a charming main character and has lots of humor and levity as well.

In the Upper Country Book Cover

In the Upper Country by Kai Thomas

Lensinda is a young Black woman working in the Canadian town of Dunmore in the 1800s, around the time the Underground Railroad ended. Dunmore is a town that many formerly enslaved people fled to seeking freedom. When a slave hunter is shot dead by an older woman who came by way of the Underground Railroad — and who refuses to leave before authorities come — the crusading journalist Lensinda works for asks that she get the elderly lady’s testimony. But it won’t be for free. She’ll only talk if Lensinda agrees to trade a story for a story. Soon, readers are taken on a journey of Black American history, which shows just how much Black and Indigenous people’s stories have intersected throughout the North American landscape. The older lady also has a secret for Lensinda that could change everything for her.

The Survivalists cover

The Survivalists by Kashana Cauley

As I mentioned a couple newsletters ago, I’ve really been into apocalyptic stories lately. I think watching and reading them a lot naturally makes you wonder how you’d fare in the same situation as the characters, so this book is right on time for me. Aretha falls in with a group of survivalists after having become an attorney and striving for partner, only to see that dream gradually slip away. When she meets coffee entrepreneur Aaron and moves in with him, she starts to wonder if her goals in life really make sense for her as she falls into an underground world of selling guns. Apart from having an interesting premise, this book also just has some great comedy moments, which makes sense since the author used to write for The Daily Show with Trevor Noah.

Note: I just realized this is also a book club pick for Roxane Gay’s club!

A Spell of Good Things cover

A Spell of Good Things by Ayọ̀bámi Adébáyọ̀

This story of the differences between socioeconomic class in modern-day Nigeria centers around Eniola, a young boy who struggles with paying for tuition and other expenses after his father loses his job; and Wuraola, a girl from a well-off family who is practicing as a doctor. Though their life circumstances are very different at first glance, there is some overlap, like small instances of violence. Adébáyọ̀ writes in a way that is empathetic and lush, slowly building up characters and their surroundings in a way that is immersive.

Suggestion Section

Before we close out the book club, if you’re looking for a Valentine’s gift, make sure to check out our Tailored Book Recommendations service (TBR). Gift your bookish boo TBR and our professional booknerds will help them achieve their reading goals. Go to mytbr.co/gift.

Book Club:

  • Roxane Gay’s new bookclub pick is The Survivalists by Kashana Cauley. You can register to watch a conversation Gay will have with Deepti Kapoor about her book Age of Vice, January’s pick, on February 23rd at 8 pm EST/5pm PST.
  • Jenna Bush Hager’s February pick is Maame by Jessica George

What Adaptations Get Wrong about Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

Here Are the 2023 Newbery, Caldecott, and Printz Award Winners

Where to Buy Cheap Books

New Jesmyn Ward Novel Coming in October


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 week,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Books That Give Year of the Rabbit Energy 🐇

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

This past weekend brought in the Lunar New Year, which means it’s officially the Year of the Rabbit. In contrast to last year’s take-charge Tiger energy, a rabbit year brings introspection, quiet, and an overall chill atmosphere. In other words, this is the year for immaculate vibes. I’m all about vibes and all about a Rabbit Year, so today I’m recommending books that are on the quiet side and that come with a slice of introspection.

Before we get to the books, though, if you’re looking for a Valentine’s gift, make sure to check out our Tailored Book Recommendations service (TBR). Gift your bookish boo TBR and our professional booknerds will help them achieve their reading goals. Go to mytbr.co/gift.

Now for ze club!

Nibbles and Sips

These crispy potato cheese quesadillas sound so good I’m surprised I hadn’t thought of them before. This recipe has ham, but it’s optional, of course.

Now for some books!

Books That Pass the Vibe Check

Cover for A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers

Psalm for Wild Built by Becky Chambers

Chambers’ chill world opens us up with nonbinary tea monk Sibling Dex, who doesn’t quite know what they want out of life. For now, they just try their best to serve tea in their traveling wagon and provide a listening ear to anyone who wanders in. One day during their travels, they meet a robot named Mosscap, who appears so long after humans agreed to free the robots that their existence was thought to be mythical. Now that robots are ready to mingle with humans again — on their own terms, of course — they want to know what humans need. This novella offers up the most comforting and cozy existential crisis.

Barakamon cover

Barakamon by Satsuki Yoshino

In this manga, Seishuu Handa is a calligrapher who has achieved great acclaim for being so young. But when a veteran calligrapher judges his work to be uninspired, Seishuu’s hubris leads him to punching the old man in the face. He gets unofficially exiled to an island by his dad to cool off and think about things. As a lifelong city boy, Seishuu takes a little time to adjust to country life, but he’s got a rambunctious teacher in the form of adorable first-grader Naru. Being in the countryside, and with such kind neighbors, changes Seishuu in ways even his family don’t see coming. There’s also an anime out for this that is seriously so sweet and chill to watch.

Sweet Bean Paste cover

Sweet Bean Paste by Durian Sukegawa, translated by Alison Watts 

Sentaro is a young man living in Japan who has baggage — he feels scarred by his criminal record, and he has dreams of becoming a writer, which may be getting squandered by his drinking habit. So what does he do? He just keeps on making dorayaki, a Japanese confection that is a pancake filled with sweet bean paste. He meets Tokue, an elderly woman, and she starts to teach him how to make the best ever sweet bean paste. But she has a past, too — one that has been wrought with ableism and disease.

cover of An Immense World

Immense World by Ed Yong

These last two books are contemplative to me because reading them requires us to situate ourselves within the larger framework of the world (Immense World) and the universe (The Milky Way). In Immense World, Ed Yong expands how we perceive the world by explaining how animals perceive it. He brings in German biology and philosophy to show how truly vast our world is if you think of it in terms of perception. It’s really interesting learning about how other animals have not only more honed senses, but totally different senses that allow them a completely different reality compared to ours.

The Milky Way: An Autobiography of Our Galaxy cover

The Milky Way: An Autobiography of Our Galaxy by Moiya McTier

The Milky Way has seen it all — literally — and is ready to spill, honey. Astrophysicist and folklorist Dr. Moiya McTier writes an autobiography of the Milky Way in its own voice — covering everything we know of its existence, from its start as clouds of gas scattered through primordial plasma 13 billion years ago to when humans gave it a name.

Suggestion Section

23 of the Most Influential Comics of All Time

Must-Read cozy Fantasy Books

Ever thought of what the future of libraries would look like?

The Harper Collins Strike for Better Pay and More Diversity Continues


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 week,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Books like THE LAST OF US

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

I’ve ventured outside a couple times so far this year to see a friend, but I’ve mostly been self-sequestering since the new year as I try to become reorganized (which includes more built-in reading time, of course). During this time, I’ve also adopted some TV habits that are somewhat unusual for me. For one, I’ve started watching more movies. I normally prefer shows’ 30 minute to one hour lengths, but now appreciate the two hour finality of a movie. On my short list, I have Everything Everywhere All At Once, Avatar 2, and Inu-Oh.

Movies aren’t the only way my viewing has changed — I’ve also started watching more post-apocalyptic things. I started watching The Walking Dead after hearing about it for a bajillion years, as well as The Last of Us, a new HBO series starring Pedro Pascal that’s based off a story-driven video game. First of all, after The Mandalorian and Game of Thrones, I’ll watch anything with Pedro, but also, The Last of Us is really good. Like, I’m hooked after the first episode. I’m not sure why I’ve been gravitating to these type of things lately — I guess after having acclimated to this new pandemic world, I’m no longer averse to plagues in books? One thing I’ve found is that I appreciate how relationship-based they are, and they’re an interesting way to think about how the world would look if those catastrophic things were to really happen.

So today, I’ve got some books that ask some interesting questions about the dissolution of society as we know it.

Now for the club!

Nibbles and Sips

Pistachio cake

Pistachio Cake by Marcia on Allrecipes

I don’t know what took me so long to include pistachio cake, but here we are. Both of my parents love pistachios, so I guess it’s in my DNA — it’s just a flavor/ingredient I love in any and all my sweet things. This recipe is for a bundt cake that I think will go well with any variety of book club coffees and teas. Enjoy!

Now for some books!

Post-Apocalyptic Problems

a pink cover made to look like a folder, with a simple white label in the center containing the title and author

Severance by Ling Ma

When the apocalypse hits in 2011, Candace is a millennial living in Manhattan and working as a production assistant for a company that makes specialty Bibles. The zombies in Severance, made by what’s called “Shen Fever,” aren’t the usual kind, though. Instead of mindlessly chasing humans, they’re mindlessly completing simple tasks that were part of their daily lives pre-infection until their bodies give out — retail workers keep folding clothing, for instance. The world halts, Candace flees and eventually finds a group of survivors who are looking to start a new civilization elsewhere, but she’s got a secret she has to keep from the leader of the group.

The critique of late-stage capitalism, the new, quirky take on zombies, even the pink cover all make this feel super duper representative of millennials. Plus, I like the phrase “coming-of-adulthood” that’s part of the official book blurb.

Cover of City of Orange by David Yoon

City of Orange by David Yoon

A man wakes up in 2010 knowing that a tragedy has befallen the world, but can’t remember his own name. As he tries to survive the new landscape, he meets a young boy named Clay who looks well taken care of. Clay is mysterious and hesitant to answer the man’s questions, but through him, we learn of the main character’s past life, and even sometimes wonder if the world is really as over as the protagonist thinks it is.

cover of Zone One by Colson Whitehead

Zone One by Colson Whitehead

This takes place over three days in a post-apocalyptic world that has been rocked by what is basically a zombie plague. We follow Mark, who is a member of a civilian team of workers in lower Manhattan who are trying to clear the area of “malfunctioning stragglers.” These stragglers aren’t the same infected that have been cleared out by the army, but a seemingly less dangerous type that are in a catatonic state, unable to adjust to the new forlorn world. Of course, things don’t go quite according to plan.

Cover of How High We Go in the Dark by Sequoia Nagamatsu

How High We Go in the Dark by Sequoia Nagamatsu

Once an ancient, arctic virus is accidentally unleashed by researchers, the entire world changes. Suddenly, ways of life all over the world must be altered and humans’ ability to adapt is tested. But adapt we do, and in that adaptation, our capacity for empathy and creativity are held on to steadfastly — people fall in love in the midst of tragedy; animals develop skills that help us connect more meaningfully to them; and loved ones go on cosmic quests.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

  • Erin and Dani’s Book Club (focused on Indigenous lit) is discussing A Minor Chorus by Billy-Ray Belcourt on January 28 at 1 pm EST. More info on their Instagram

Why You Should Start Book Journaling Right Now

35 of the best Bookstores in the USA

Aunjanue Ellis to star in new CASTE film directed by Ava DuVernay


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 week,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

A New Kind of New You?

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

I mentioned my resolutions concerning reading in the last newsletter, but wanted to focus on more general ones in this week’s. The new year is still considered a time to revamp and refresh, and I realize that for some of us, it can seem like a trend. And for some, it is. But I’m not mad at the idea of everyone taking a moment to step back and take a look at the long-term goals they have, as well as what’s working and what’s not.

I’ve also appreciated the way this goal setting and reappraisal of lifestyle has shifted to be more inclusive, body positive, and trauma-informed. I’ve thought to include some books today that will satisfy that urge to better oneself in the new year, while still encouraging individuality.

Before we get to them, don’t forget to sign up for our 2023 Read Harder Challenge, which is in its ninth year. Register here for a newsletter with reading suggestions for each of the 24 prompts. Big shout out to Thriftbooks for sponsoring!

Now let’s get to the club!

Nibbles and Sips

Sushi Bake by Gaming Foodie

I love, love sushi, and a sushi bake can come together in 30 minutes once you have all the ingredients. Once you do, watch Gaming Foodie’s quick video for putting it all together.

You just need:

  • 1/2 lb Salmon
  • 1/2 lb Imitation crab
  • 3 oz Cream cheese
  • 1/4 cup Japanese mayo
  • 1 tbsp Sriracha
  • 3 cups Rice
  • 2 tbsp Rice Vinegar
  • Dried seaweed

Season the salmon and bake it for around 20 minutes in an oven, or air fry it for 10 minutes. While you’re doing that, you can cook the rice for however long, depending on the type you get. once the salmon is done, take the skin off and shred it. Then mix it with shredded imitation crab, along with the mayo, sriracha, and cream cheese. Mix the rice with the rice vinegar once it’s cooked and then put in a baking dish, dispersing it evenly. Add a layer of shredded seaweed or furikake. Then, spread the salmon/crab/mayo mixture over it and bake for 10 mins at 380 degrees. Take it out and top with more seaweed, sriracha, spicy mayo, and even cucumbers or avocados.

Now for books!

New Year, New Book Club, Who Dis?

Set Boundaries, Find Peace by Nedra Glover Tawwab

I can think of at least five people at the top of my head who’d I’d recommend this book to. In it, Tawwab, a licensed counselor and popular relationship expert, uses research and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) methods to help you identify not just how to establish healthier boundaries with people, but also the root causes of any already existing unhealthy boundaries.

cover image of Every Body Yoga by Jessamyn Stanley

Every Body Yoga by Jessamyn Stanley

Setting this book as the book club read could make for an interesting meeting. It’s fairly short — at 222 pages — and is part memoir and part yoga instructional. It could be a nice, short intro into the new year for the book club, and you could make your meet-up part yoga session, if you’re feeling cute. Apart from the yoga poses taught, Stanley discusses how her journey as a fat, Black yogi has been. As you probably guessed, she’s been met with stereotypes regarding her race and size. The book club can combine this one with Yoke, her collection of personal essays, for all the goodness.

book cover laziness does not exist by devon price

Laziness Does Not Exist by Devon Price, Ph.D.

Price is a social psychologist who leads us away from the lie of laziness with Laziness Does Not Exist. In it, he takes it way back to the beginnings of the present scam that measures self worth based on productivity. Turns out, people in general do more today than they did during any other era in history. So I guess we don’t spend as much time getting avocado toast and overpriced lattes? Huh.

Discuss this one as a way to explore learning how to balance your work load and manage expectations.

Get Good with Money cover

Get Good with Money by Tiffany Alice

Financial education is not as prevalent as it should be, especially for those living in a capitalistic society that runs counter to their best interests. Aliche tries to remedy that by detailing a practical process of 10 steps that is designed to help guide people to financial security by managing debt, budgeting, and more. She writes from the perspective of someone who experienced being in quite the predicament financially, which makes her all the more relatable.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

Suggestion Section

Book Club Picks

Some other reading:

Cozy fantasy books!

1968 Romeo and Juliet film stars sue over underaged nudity

It’s the season for cozy things! Here are some cozy mysteries.


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 week,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Start the New Year Off With Unputdownable Books

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

Friends! It’s a new year and I am already discombobulated. I know it’s 2023, but sometimes I forget that it’s not still 2021…or late 2020. A mess. And I know I’m not the only one. Despite, well, everything, I’m hopeful about what 2023 will bring and am low-key looking forward to it.

I’ve made resolutions like everyone and their mama, and of course, one of them is to read more broadly. For this, I’m definitely going to be consulting our 2023 Read Harder Challenge, which is in its ninth year (!!). If you’d like to participate, click here to sign up to receive a newsletter that has sends tailored to each of the 24 prompts. Special thanks to Thriftbooks for sponsoring it this year!

Now lets get into this club!

Nibbles and Sips

fried potatoes

Cross-hatched Fried Potatoes by @thatdudecancook

These are some bougiely-cut potatoes (yes, I made that word up, but it feels right) that look extra crispy and wonderful. I also like how you can add whatever toppings you like. @thatdudecancook shows the technique here.

Books That’ll Have you Missing Sleep…

cover image of Killers of a Certain Age by Deanna Raybourn; illustration of a hand holding a big knife, with a bracelet on the wrist

Killers of a Certain Age by Deanna Raybourn

This is my first book of the year! Deanna Rayburn used to hold me down on my historical mystery/romance needs back in the day. I hadn’t read her in a while, though, so it was nice to read her writing in a different genre (somewhat, it’s still mystery). In this one, Billie, Mary Alice, Helen, and Natalie are older ladies who have spent the last 40 years as elite assassins for a secrete organization called The Museum that hunts down people like Nazis and dictators for termination. After the organization sends them on a paid vacay, they soon realize they’re the latest to be put on a hit list. Turns out there’s someone at The Museum who has turned in a report detailing how they’ve been freelancing, and unless they can clear their names, The Museum’s assassins will keep on coming.

This was so unputdownable for me that I didn’t even mind the flashbacks, which are every other chapter. I usually don’t care for flashbacks, even in books I like, because I don’t like being taken out of the present. I may be alone in that, though!

wow no thank you cover

Wow, No Thank You by Samantha Irby

In this collection of essays, Irby talks about being 40, moving to a Republican town in Michigan with her wife and step kids, and all the things that come with that. Like, literally, all the things — her stories of everyday life include everything from friend dates to the lack of cartilage in her knees. Reading this feels like sitting down with that one homegirl who always has a funny life story to share.

book cover for the weight of blood

Weight of Blood by Tiffany D. Jackson

I discussed this book as one of my faves for 2022 in the In Reading Color newsletter, it’s that good. It’s a YA retelling of Carrie, but I couldn’t really tell you how closely it stays to the source material since I haven’t read the original. My guess is that it strays a bit, since it’s about a (mostly) white-passing mixed girl named Maddy who lives in a small Georgia town where high school prom is still segregated in the year of our lord 2014. One day it rains, causing her hair’s natural texture to show. Maddy gets bullied with this revelation, some of which goes viral. To save her school’s reputation — thereby securing her own future at a future college — another student offers up her Black boyfriend to accompany Maddy to the prom to show how “progressive” the school is now. Ish gets real once a couple white students push Maddy too far…I love how this had segments of a podcast discussing the massacre at the high school. We learned more about the incident as we learned more about Maddy, and that narrative structure kept me hooked.

image of in the dream house book cover

In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado

This is a memoir that is unlike any you’ll ever read. Machado summons fairy tale and horror tropes to tell the story of domestic abuse within a same-sex relationship. I think this is especially affecting — juxtaposing narratives most of us are familiar with will make the details of the abuse she suffered feel all the more familiar and therefore devastating. This is inventive, poetic, and raw, and Machado will have you turning the pages with a quickness.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

Suggestion Section

Keep track of your reading with our reading log!

A Texas library has been privatized after a Pride display

Best books of the year according to all the lists

Quiz: which fictional library is your perfect match?


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 week,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Bookshop Murder, Enchanted Woods, Christmas Romance, and More!

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

Y’all. I think I have watched every Christmas movie to ever Christmas within the last couple weeks. Obviously, I started off with the first two Home Alone movies. I actually reintroduced them to a friend as possible movies to rewatch come holiday season, which I’m proud of. I also watched a few others I’d heard about but hadn’t seen before, like Die Hard (lol), Elf, The Muppet Christmas Carol, and Klaus. And let me just say that they were all fab, but Klaus set the standard for Santa origin stories for me, whew! It was super original, funny, and beautifully animated. Also a little sad. I highly recommend.

As the world crumbles around us *lolsob*, I’d like to keep this cozy vibe going with some balm for your spirit-type of cozy and wintery reads for your book club.

Before that, though, don’t forget about our new 2023 Read Harder challenge! This is the ninth year Book Riot has done this challenge and if you’d like to participate, click here to sign up to receive a newsletter that has sends tailored to each of the 24 prompts.

Nibbles and Sips

Use cookies

Ube coconut cookies by Jeanelleats

In addition to being a fabulous shade of purple, courtesy of ube extract, these cookies are also not too sweet — a quality I admire in a cookie. Janelle Eats details the recipe for the Filipine cookies on her Youtube account and website.

Now that you’ve got warm cookies, let’s get to the books!

Cozy, Wintery Reads

The Reading List cover

The Reading List by Sara Nisha Adams

This isn’t standard cozy fare for me as it’s a little on the serious side, but I still think it works. Mukesh tries to carry on in a London borough after having lost his wife. He spends his time doing regular life stuff like grocery shopping and going to Temple, but he also worries about his granddaughter Priya, who has withdrawn into herself.

Then there’s Aleisha, a teenager who works at the library and has found a list of books she’s never heard of in a copy of To Kill A Mockingbird. Naturally, she decides to read them and through them discovers an escape from home life. When Mukesh comes to the library, he’s hoping to find a way to connect to his granddaughter. What he finds is a teenage girl who shares a book list with him that opens him up.

Murder by Page One cover

Murder by Page One by Olivia Matthews

Here’s another library one! Honestly, library and bookstores are such perfectly cozy settings. This is more my usual speed for cozy readings as its a cozy mystery. In it, Marvey is a librarian who has moved from Brooklyn to a small town in Georgia. She’s still getting used to the quirky town when she finds a dead body in a bookstore. She gets involved in the murder investigation once her friend becomes a suspect. As a librarian, she’s an expert researcher and knows a thing or two about crime from all the mystery novels she’s read. She also goes around asking if everyone has a library card, which is precious.

Winterwood cover image

Winterwood by Shea Ernshaw

Nora Walker comes from a long line of women who have a special, magical connection to the woods. It’s this special connection that lets Nora know that when Oliver Huntsman — the same Oliver Huntsman who disappeared from a camp weeks ago during a terrible snowstorm — shows up, something is amiss. The woods shift uncomfortably around the boy, who should be dead, and Nora starts to seek out the truth surrounding Oliver’s survival. She cares about him, but he has more than a few secrets. This is a kind of wintery fairytale that’s atmospheric with beautiful writing.

Humbug cover

Humbug by Amanda Radley

Ellie is all about Christmas, even outside of its usual season. Her job she likes…less. She’s desperate for a career change, which comes in the form of CEO Rosalind Caldwell’s need for a new personal assistant. As Caldwell tries to save her Christmas party with the new girl snd Christmas enthusiast Ellie, Ellie develops a big crush on her assertive new boss…

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

Suggestion Section

8 Engrossing Books With Multiple Timelines

Barnes & Noble Opening 30 Stores in 2023, Leading a Big Real Estate Wave

8 Mythology Books for Adults

Books That Have Gotten Better with Age


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 week,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

The Best Book Club Books of the Year, Part 2

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

As I bundle up in my coziest cardigans and thick socks, I’ve got even more books that are some of the best of the year for discussing in your book clubs. These titles are popular enough to keep your book club in the know, but also very compelling and easy to make good discussions from.

Before we get into that, though, here’s another reminder for Read Harder 2023! This is the ninth year Book Riot has done this challenge and if you’d like to participate, click here to sign up to receive a newsletter that has sends tailored to each of the 24 prompts.

Nibbles and Sips

BOLIVIAN PICANA

BOLIVIAN PICANA by @letsKWOOWK

I came across this soup when I started watching a Christmas food from around the World Series. I love soup and this one sounds delicious. Here’s another recipe if you’re like me and like to compare different recipes when trying something new.

Best Book Club Books, Part 2

cover of The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida by Shehan Karunatilaka; colorful illustration of a Sri Lankan god

The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida by Shehan Karunatilaka

It’s 1990 in Colombo, Sri Lanka, and Maali Almeida is a photographer and a closeted gay man. He’s also just woken up in a celestial visa office and found out he’s dead. His body is dismembered and sitting in Beira Lake, and if he’s to find out who among the country’s many death squads and goons killed him, he’ll have to do so before the seventh moon.

The Violin Conspiracy cover image

The Violin Conspiracy by Brendan Slocumb

Ray wants to make a life out of playing classical music on his inherited violin, despite his mother’s “advice” to get a “real” job and the racism he experiences within the world of classical music. As he looks forward to performing in the Tchaikovsky Competition, his violin — which he discovers is an ultra rare Stradivarius — gets stolen. He knows he will get it back, but first he’ll have to wade through claims of ownership of the violin coming from his family as well as the family who enslaved his great-grandfather.

A graphic of the cover of I'm Glad My Mom Died

I’m Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy

The title of this surprise breakout had everyone and their mom (ha) gagging this year, and for good reason: McCurdy recounts her experiences as a child star, revealing some truly terrible details from her childhood. She describes eating disorders, addiction, child abuse, toxic relationships, and a lot more, all with an endearingly sharp sense of humor.

cover of Black Cake by Charmaine Wilkerson; white font over multi-colored paint swishes that create the face of a Black woman in the center

Black Cake by Charmaine Wilkerson

Okay, so I thought the women in my family could keep a secret, but Byron and Benny’s mom Eleanor really takes the cake (lol). The inheritance she leaves behind consists of a black cake and a recording that tells the story of a young woman who flees the island she called home because of a murder. The siblings try to piece together the truth of their mother’s life, even as their own relationship is at stake.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

Suggestion Section

Some of the best nonfiction of all time

Introducing the Best SFF of 2022

Danika Ellis writes of how the bookish internet killer her reading life

10 of the best mystery bookshops for super sleuths to visit

Book Riot’s Best Books of 2022


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 week,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

The Best Book Club Books of the Year, Part I

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 trip! I must say that I liked Boston more than I thought I would. I didn’t get to go to afternoon tea like I (really) wanted because of timing, but I did get to visit the public library the tea room was located in (it was huge and beautiful!). Turns out, the Boston’s Central Public library is the oldest urban public library and the largest public research library, both of which are noted in its grandeur. And, since I didn’t get to be bougie and do tea there, my friend found a tea place that lets you sample teas that were thrown overboard during the Boston Tea Party (lol).

Today I’ve got books that are some of the best of the year for discussing in your book clubs, but before we get into that, it’s time for Read Harder 2023! This is the ninth year Book Riot has done this challenge and if you’d like to participate, click here to sign up to receive a newsletter that has sends tailored to each of the 24 prompts.

Now for the club!

Nibbles and Sips

hot chocolate bombs

Hot Chocolate Bombs by Mashed

After taking a night time holiday lights tour in Boston, we were gifted gold-dusted hot chocolate bombs. It was some of the best hot chocolate I’ve had, and I’m hoping I can find a recipe to replicate it. Mashed promises that this recipe only takes 20 minutes, so I’m hoping it’s a match.

Best Book Club Books, Part I

cover of Memphis by Tara Stringfellow, featuring illustrations of four Black women sitting amongst grass and flowers

Memphis by Tara Stringfellow

When Joan was 10, her mother moved her and her younger sister away from her violent father. They went back to her grandmother’s house in Memphis, a house that was built by Joan’s grandfather who was lynched shortly after becoming a detective in Memphis. There’s a history of violence surrounding Joan’s family, which is explored in this multi-generational novel. The narrative shifts back and forth through 70 years to show the trials of Joan’s matrilineal family, and how she tries to express this generational trauma through art.

book cover the song of the cell

The Song of the Cell by Siddhartha Mukherjee

This book starts in the 1600s with a discovery made by Robert Hooke and Antonie van Leeuwenhoek. What they saw when they looked in their microscopes would go on to be called “cells,” the idea of which would change the field of science forever. By looking at living organisms as being comprised of tiny, self-contained cells, we’ve been able to understand human bodies and come up with advanced treatments. Pulitzer Prize-winning Mukherjee writes of complex science terms clearly and in an engaging way as he details this turning point in biology.

nightcrawling cover

Nightcrawling by Leila Mottley

Kiara and her brother Marcus have dropped out of high school and their family has been torn a part by tragedy, so she works to take care of them and the nine-year-old boy next door who was abandoned by his parents. When she discovers the dark world of night crawling as a way to make money, she jumps at what seems to her like a good opportunity. But with it comes involvement in a huge scandal involving the Oakland Police Department.

Sea of Tranquility cover

Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel

In 1912, an exiled 18-year-old enters the Canadian wilderness and hears a violin being played. A couple hundred years later, an author goes on tour to promote a book that has a strange passage about a man playing a violin as a forest rises around him. Then there’s the detective who is sent to investigate something strange happening in the North American wilderness involving an exiled earl driven to madness and a writer away from home…Metaphysics, time travel, and a particular set of violin notes all converge in this imaginative novel.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

Suggestion Section

An under $30 gift guide!

Ever wondered the names authors choose for their children?

An argument on why Christmas trees don’t belong in public libraries

What are some books you wish you could read again for the first time?


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 week,

Erica