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Early Native Americans

The history of Thanksgiving is, of course, a loaded topic. If you grew up around when I did (or are older!), you might be familiar with the Thanksgiving play in the movie Addams Family Values, where Wednesday plays Pocahontas (Jamestown! Pocahontas was at the Jamestown settlement!) and says to the Pilgrims:

“You have taken the land which is rightfully ours. Years from now, my people will be forced to live in mobile homes on reservations; your people will wear cardigans and drink highballs. We will sell our bracelets by the roadside; you will play golf and enjoy hot hors d’oeuvres. My people will have pain and degradation; your people will have stick-shifts. The gods of my tribe have spoken. They have said, ‘Do not trust the Pilgrims, especially Sarah Miller.’”

So we’re going to focus on Native American history today. With a lean towards early American history (17th/18th centuries).

An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz

This covers from the 1600s to the 2010s, and looks at United States history from some of the “more than five hundred federally recognized Indigenous nations” that still exist. It goes from colonization to imperialism and beyond. Shorter than 300 pages, this might be a good beginning-of-2021 read for your list.

Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War by Nathaniel Philbrick

This book totally changed my ideas about the Pilgrims and early America. There can be a tendency to harken back to when everyone was kinder and better, etc, but the more you study history, the more you learn that people have always been horrible (and good! but also horrible). I will never think of Miles Standish the same way again.

This Land Is Their Land: The Wampanoag Indians, Plymouth Colony, and the Troubled History of Thanksgiving by David J. Silverman

The story of Thanksgiving is basically the story of a group of religious fanatics who came to a place where other people lived and then promptly started starving to death because they didn’t know how to farm the crops there. I grew up rolling my eyes at this “liberal” version of the story, but then I became an adult and read what is reported to have actually happened, and yep. Historian Silverman looks at what led to the Wampanoag/Pilgrim alliance and what destroyed it.

Sioux Women: Traditionally Sacred by Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve

We know there’s a tendency to speak of Native Americans as one cohesive unit, when that is categorically false. In Sneve’s book, she focuses on how “Sioux women are the center of tribal life and the core of the tiospaye, the extended family. They maintain the values and traditions of Sioux culture, but their own stories and experiences often remain untold.” For this hundred page read, she combed through “the winter counts” and oral records of her ancestors to discover their past.

That’s it for this week! For more nonfiction reads, check out the For Real podcast which I co-host with the excellent Kim here at Book Riot. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

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True Story

New Releases: All-Girl Bands and Black Feminism

Happy Thanksgiving Week! What a time to check out some new releases as the day’s light grows shorter and our reading lamps more precious. I’m definitely looking at my reading goals with more and more of a nervous eye as we approach 2020’s final month, but why not add some fresh nonfiction to the pile. Here’re your new release highlights for this week:

Sax Appeal: Ivy Benson and Her All-Girls Band by Janet Tennant

The place! England. The time! Mostly the 1940s. Imagine A League of Their Own, but with musicians instead of baseball players. Ivy Benson started her own band before the age of thirty and kept it going for forty years. The band became the BBC’s resident dance band in 1943, and were top of the bill at the London Palladium in 1944. Someone make a movie about it please?

Carving Out a Humanity : Race, Rights, and Redemption, edited by Janet Dewart Bell and Vincent M. Southerland

In this collection, “preeminent civil rights attorneys and scholars of the past quarter-century weigh in on some of the most controversial aspects of race and the law.” Anita Allen, Chuck Lawrence, Michelle Alexander, and more offer “an unprecedented array of today’s most creative and brilliant thinking on race and the law.”

Masterpiece : America’s 50-Year-Old Love Affair with British Television Drama by Nancy West

Masterpiece Theatre debuted in 1971, making next year its fiftieth year in existence. This history of the show combines interviews, photographs, commentary, and anecdotes. If you have any Downton Abbey or just British drama fans in your life, this seems like an especially good book gift for them.

Undrowned : Black Feminist Lessons from Marine Mammals by Alexis Pauline Gumbs

This book is so specifically About a Thing, I’m going to entirely quote the publisher: “From the relationship between the endangered North Atlantic Right Whale and Gumbs’s Shinnecock and enslaved ancestors to the ways echolocation changes our understandings of “vision” and visionary action, this is a masterful use of metaphor and natural models in the service of social justice.” It’s such an interesting idea! Check it out.

For more nonfiction reads, check out the For Real podcast which I co-host with the excellent Kim here at Book Riot. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

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Some Memoirs for Your Friday

I like how we’ve switched from talking about people’s autobiographies to their “memoirs.” The difference seems to be something looser, freer, less constrained to tell the whole story, and just generally more fun and/or interesting. But also something potentially less bound by fact and more “these are my own impressions of an event.” Which is probably a more realistic take on an autobiography, because who knows what really happened ever?

Ok! Here we go:

Know My Name cover image

Know My Name: A Memoir by Chanel Miller

Before she revealed herself to the world, Chanel Miller was Emily Doe, the person whose victim impact statement to the man convicted of her sexual assault (sentence: six months) went viral. Miller’s recounting of her life and this extremely traumatic event and its aftermath is very, very well done. Pick up if you’re okay with something a bit heavier.

Black Indian: A Memoir by Shonda Buchanan

Poet and literary editor of Harriet Tubman Press, Buchanan uses her memoir to “explore her family’s legacy of being African Americans with American Indian roots and how they dealt with not just society’s ostracization but the consequences of this dual inheritance.” Check it out if you’re interested in exploring identity.

Tomboy: A Graphic Memoir by Lauren Prince

GENDER amirite? I couldn’t do this list without a graphic memoir and Prince’s memoir is a nice look at what does it MEAN if you identify as a girl but you don’t fit in with the cultural signifiers (dresses, princesses, etc). Most of the book is her grappling with that. The resolution doesn’t take up much space, but does it need to, is the question.

The Last Black Unicorn by Tiffany Haddish

Get this as an audiobook, for sure. I recommend that for basically any memoir by a comedian. Haddish went into the foster system as a teenager and after some issues, basically got told she could go to the Laugh Factory comedy camp or counseling. She clearly chose the former. She’s got such an awesome attitude about everything AND she’s hilarious, so we’re ending on this up note.


That’s it for this week! For more nonfiction reads, check out the For Real podcast which I co-host with the excellent Kim here at Book Riot. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

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True Story

New Releases: Obama and Rachel Bloom

Everyone holding up? Maybe? I used a bath bomb this week and it was a really A+ decision. If you don’t have a bathtub, they’ve got these shower…things. I’ve never used them, but my guess is they release some super nice-smelling MIST into your shower. Anyway, what I’m trying to say is, take care of yourself and also smell some nice things. And read some new books! Here are highlights from this week’s new nonfiction releases:

A Promised Land by Barack Obama

It is the FIRST volume of Obama’s presidential memoir. This goes from “young man searching for his identity to leader of the free world” and from his earliest political aspirations to being elected president in 2008. “We are privy to his thoughts as he assembles his cabinet, wrestles with a global financial crisis, takes the measure of Vladimir Putin, overcomes seemingly insurmountable odds to secure passage of the Affordable Care Act, clashes with generals about U.S. strategy in Afghanistan, tackles Wall Street reform, responds to the devastating Deepwater Horizon blowout, and authorizes Operation Neptune’s Spear, which leads to the death of Osama bin Laden.” This is a HUGE book, meaning metaphorically in the book world and also it is 768 pages. Wooooo!

I Want to Be Where the Normal People Are by Rachel Bloom

If you enjoyed Bloom’s show Crazy Ex-Girlfriend or her A+ YouTube vids, you’ll like this book. She goes deep into her past, meaning grade school and college stories, her struggles with mental illness and how she dealt with them, and there is even a MUSICAL chapter. She shows her career trajectory too, meaning basically how she went from making hilarious videos to having her own show. It’s great.

What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat by Aubrey Gordon

Described as an “indictment of the systemic and cultural bias facing plus-size people,” Gordon looks at “the cultural attitudes and social systems that have led to people being denied basic needs because they are fat” and discusses what fat activism can really look like in practice.

Waste: One Woman’s Fight Against America’s Dirty Secret by Catherine Coleman Flowers

Flowers is the founder of the Center for Rural Enterprise and Environmental Justice and was selected as a MacArthur Fellow this year. In her book, she talks about her life’s work: the fight for basic sanitation: “Too many people, especially the rural poor, lack an affordable means of disposing cleanly of the waste from their toilets, and, as a consequence, live amid filth.” This is the story of systemic class, racial, and geographic prejudice across the U.S. in California, Florida, Alaska, the Midwest, and more.


For more nonfiction reads, check out the For Real podcast which I co-host with the excellent Kim here at Book Riot. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

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Travel Narratives for Quarantine

If you didn’t listen to this week’s episode of For Real, you should, because while we were recording, the presidential election got decided, and the background cheers of Chicagoans made it all the way onto the podcast. It is historically NEAT.

Ok, so this week we’re looking at some travel narratives because it’s not like anyone’s going anywhere and it’s nice to read about when people DID go places. Travel by proxy! Here we go.

Spirit Run: A 6,000-Mile Marathon Through North America’s Stolen Land by Noé Álvarez

Álvarez is the son of Mexican immigrants and grew up in Washington state, working at an apple-packing plant. A first-generation college student, he struggled to find his place, until at 19 he learned about the Native American/First Nations movement called Peace and Dignity Journeys. This is an epic marathon, and Álvarez’s took four months and spanned from Canada to Guatemala. I’ve heard pretty much nothing but good things about this one.

Flaneuse: Women Walk the City in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Venice, and London by Lauren Elkin

I remember my Victorian lit professor saying, “do you know the female equivalent of flâneur? You do not, because it doesn’t exist, because women weren’t supposed to walk the city alone.” Well, here’s the modern day answer to that. It’s part memoir, as Elkin talks about her life in the subtitled cities, and also a history of “such flâneuses as the cross-dressing nineteenth-century novelist George Sand, the Parisian artist Sophie Calle, the wartime correspondent Martha Gellhorn, and the writer Jean Rhys.” I encourage you to flâneuse it up in your neighborhood.

Serve the People: A Stir-Fried Journey Through China by Jen Lin-Liu

Do you like food? Do you want to learn more about it, possibly accompanied by a travel theme? Chinese American journalist Lin-Liu gives a culinary tour of today’s (2008’s) China, “from cooking student to noodle-stall and dumpling-house apprentice to intern at a chic Shanghai restaurant.”

Cold: Adventures in the World’s Frozen Places by Bill Streever

Maybe this will make you glad you’re inside? Streever “journeys through history, myth, geography, and ecology in a year-long search for cold–real, icy, 40-below cold.” He looks at hibernation habits, talks about the Clovis people of the Ice Age, what happens when trees freeze, Japanese ama (“sea women”) divers, finding frozen mammoths, and more. This sounds GREAT.


For more nonfiction reads, check out the For Real podcast which I co-host with the excellent Kim here at Book Riot. We’re doing a gift guide episode soon, so if you’re looking for a nonfiction gift for someone, email us your questions at forreal@bookriot.com. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

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New Releases: So Many New Books!

Dang, I don’t know what’s up (pre-holiday fever?) but there are a TON of new releases this week. I have a pretty thorough spreadsheet, but some still slip through the cracks. That being said, I’m tracking eighteen at least semi-noteworthy new nonfiction releases this week. Here are your highlights!:

We Keep the Dead Close : A Murder at Harvard and a Half Century of Silence by Becky Cooper

In 1969, Jane Britton, a 23-year-old graduate student in Harvard’s Anthropology Department, was found murdered in her apartment. Forty years later, undergrad Becky Cooper first heard a mythologized version of the story and began a decade of research into Jane Britton’s murder, rumored to be committed by a Harvard professor. This book is EXCELLENT.

Fossil Men : The Quest for the Oldest Skeleton and the Origins of Humankind by Kermit Pattison

I love paleoanthropology. What are humanity’s origins! We don’t actually know that much! It’s so weird! When did things settle into the way we do them and why! So this book goes into the team that discovered “Ardi,” a 4.4 million-year-old likely human ancestor. My assumption (I haven’t been able to access a galley of this one) is that it’s called Fossil Men because the the seven person team credited in the Science article is entirely composed of men. The leader of the Ardi team, Tim White, was helped in his early career by famed paleoanthropologist Mary Leakey, so you’d think he’d maybe have learned something from that, but here we are. Anyway! Here’s the story of Ardi and the impact its discovery and shielded research had on the paleoanthropology community.

The Fabric of Civilization : How Textiles Made the World by Virginia Postrel

I’m not usually into “how [random daily item] CHANGED EVERYTHING” books, but textiles definitely had a huge impact and it’s really just a fun way to say “The History of Textiles,” which one would maybe be less inclined to pick up. “From Minoans exporting wool colored with precious purple dye to Egypt, to Romans arrayed in costly Chinese silk, the cloth trade paved the crossroads of the ancient world. Textiles funded the Renaissance and the Mughal Empire; they gave us banks and bookkeeping, Michelangelo’s David and the Taj Mahal.” This looks super fun.

A Cat’s Tale : A Journey Through Feline History by Dr. Paul Koudounaris and Baba the Cat

You’ve maybe seen Dr. Paul Koudounaris on some of mortician and author Caitlin Doughty’s YouTube vids. This history of cats is “dictated” to Koudounaris by Baba the Cat (just go with it), who goes through cats in ancient Egypt, Rome, Victorian England, modern France, and more. Scattered throughout are photos of Baba in pictures like the cover, wearing elaborate costumes. I mean, sign me up.

How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in America: Essays by Kiese Laymon

Originally published in 2013, but with SIX new essays, Carnegie Medal-winner Laymon revises and republishes his work on race, identity, and injustice. The thirteen essays touch on subjects ranging from “family, race, violence, and celebrity to music, writing, and coming of age in Mississippi.”

For more nonfiction reads, check out the For Real podcast which I co-host with the excellent Kim here at Book Riot. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

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Calming Books About Animals and Plants

I am writing this newsletter on Wednesday, in the middle of what let’s call “quite a pivotal week.” Picking a theme for today’s newsletter was challenging, to say the least, and I finally fell on animals and plants because my YouTube vids of choice have leaned increasingly on the side of “This Goose Was Sad Until It Met Its New Horse Friend” and animals and plants are really great and let’s read about them.

The Truth About Animals: Stoned Sloths, Lovelorn Hippos, and Other Tales from the Wild Side of Wildlife by Lucy Cooke

There are a lot of weird “facts” about animals floating around, some true, some not. Cooke looks into them here — the idea that eels are born from sand, that swallows hibernate under water, and that bears give birth to formless lumps that are licked into shape by their mothers — and breaks down what they say about *us*.

Rin Tin Tin: The Life and the Legend by Susan Orlean

Yes, THAT Susan Orlean. Orchids, libraries, celebrity dogs, she covers them all. Rin Tin Tin was the #1 box office draw in the 1920s. I get it, 1920s. You’d just dealt with a world war, a pandemic, and you just wanted to watch a dog be a hero. Orlean’s biography not only talks about Rin Tin Tin, but the bond between humans and animals.

Our Symphony with Animals: On Health, Empathy, and Our Shared Destinies by Aysha Akhtar

Dr. Akhtar studies animal ethics AND neurology and in her book looks at how “interspecies empathy enriches our well-being” and is “a vital component of human health.” She says that humans are neurologically designed to empathize with animals, and the love we give to them biologically reverberates back to us.

tw: bullying and abuse from Akhtar’s recounting of past incidents in her life.

The Plant Messiah: Adventures in Search of the World’s Rarest Species by Carlos Magdalena

Doesn’t this cover just make you FEEL better? Magdalena works at the Royal Botanic Gardens and is known for saving some of the world’s rarest plants. This is why it’s great to have so many humans. They care about so many disparate things, and Carlos Magdalena is HERE for plants. This takes you from Peru to Australia and back to England as he goes on quests to save plant life around the world. A+.


For more nonfiction picks, check out the nonfiction For Real podcast which I co-host with the excellent Kim here at Book Riot. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

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True Story

New Releases: Scotland and Data Privacy

We’re talking about a whole bunch of new releases today, so buckle in and let’s jump into early November book time:

How to Make a Slave and Other Essays by Jerald Walker

This is alREADY a finalist for the 2020 National Book Award in Nonfiction. It’s “an examination by one of America’s most acclaimed essayists of what it is to grow, parent, write, and exist as a black American male.” It includes essays like “Dragon Slayers,” “Feeding Pigeons,” “The Heritage Room,” and the eponymous “How to Make a Slave.”

Earth Keeper: Reflections on the American Land by N. Scott Momaday

Pulitzer Prize-winner Momaday is a member of the Kiowa tribe who has spent his life on reservations in the Southwest. In this new release, he “reflects on his native ground and its influence on his people” and “reminds us that the Earth is a sacred place of wonder and beauty; a source of strength and healing that must be protected before it’s too late.”

Clanlands: Whisky, Warfare, and a Scottish Adventure Like No Other by Sam Heughan and Graham McTavish

Remember travel? Outlander stars Heughan and McTavish travel through Scotland by boat, kayak, camper van, and motorbike. They go from Glencoe (like two hours north of Glasgow) to Inverness and Culloden battlefield (another two hours north!), all while hanging out with fun Scottish people. This book sounds like an A+ respite from 2020.

Cyber Privacy: Who Has Your Data and Why You Should Care by April Falcon Doss

“Amazon, Google, Facebook, governments. No matter who we are or where we go, someone is collecting our data: to profile us, target us, assess us; to predict our behavior and analyze our attitudes; to influence the things we do and buy—even to impact our vote.” Doss, a privacy expert and former NSA and Senate lawyer, demystifies the digital footprints we leave in our daily lives and reveals how our data is being used. This all feels pretty dang relevant.

Gone: A Memoir of Love, Body, and Taking Back My Life by Linda K. Olson

Olson and her husband were on vacation when their car was hit by a train. Olson lost both her legs and her right arm. In her memoir, she shares how she finished her residency as a doctor, raised two children, and traveled the world.


That’s it for new books! As always, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime and co-hosting the nonfiction For Real podcast with Kim here at Book Riot. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

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True Story

True Crime Reads

Happy Friday! Lots going on for sure, so take care of yourself this weekend. Possibly by reading a book? We’ve got a whole new themed list to march into the weekend with: true crime, but true crime NOT focused on murder. Here we go:

Diamond Doris cover image

Diamond Doris: The True Story of the World’s Most Notorious Jewel Thief by Doris Payne

Payne was a jewel thief for over 60 years, once arrested “after stealing a diamond ring in Monte Carlo that was valued at more than half a million dollars.” But then she broke out of jail with the help of nuns? This story sounds extremely fun and good for a winter read.

The Spy Who Couldn’t Spell: A Dyslexic Traitor, an Unbreakable Code, and the FBI’s Hunt for America’s Stolen Secrets by Yudhijit Bhattacharjee

In 2000, the FBI received a package. It was “a series of coded letters from an anonymous sender to the Libyan consulate, offering to sell classified United States intelligence.” What made the code much harder to crack was the sender had dyslexia. This is is billed as a “true-life spy thriller,” which is excellent, and is great for all you code-crackers out there.

The Feather Thief by Kirk Wallace Johnson cover image

The Feather Thief: Beauty, Obsession, and the Natural History Heist of the Century by Kirk Wallace Johnson

A flautist breaks into a museum and steals hundreds of bird skins. Why? Fly fishing. “What?” you correctly say. This not only goes into that super-weird story, but also the history of the man who collected some of the skins in the first place, Alfred Russel Wallace, who was perhaps equally weird (but not in a necessarily bad way).

American Sherlock cover image

American Sherlock: Murder, Forensics, and the Birth of American CSI by Kate Winkler Dawson

Ok sure, murder’s in the title, but it’s not the POINT of the book. It’s all about the “American Sherlock Holmes,” Edward Oscar Heinrich. Using forensics (in the 1930s and beyond), he solved over two thousand cases! It’s pretty satisfying to read about how someone found clues and deduced answers, especially in this time of chaos in which we all find ourselves. Facts! How comforting.


Have an excellent weekend! You can find me on social media @itsalicetime and co-hosting the nonfiction For Real podcast with Kim here at Book Riot. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

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True Story

New Releases: Black Diamond Queens, Ghosts, and Group Therapy

Welcome to the end of October! Finish up those scary reads, because reading them in November just doesn’t feel the SAME, y’know? We’ve got some excellent new releases this week for all your fact-loving needs:

Black Diamond Queens: African American Women and Rock and Roll by Maureen Mahon

Rock and roll! What a genre. And this new release is here to walk you through African American women’s contributions to the genre from the 1950s all the way through the 1980s. Big Mama Thornton, Tina Turner, the Shirelles, they are all here and their “powerful sonic legacy” is laid out.

Redbone: The True Story of a Native American Rock Band by Christian Staebler, Sonia Paoloni

Know the 1970s hit “Come and Get Your Love”? That’s the work of Redbone, a Mexican-American/Native American rock band of the ’60s and ’70s (it’s still an active band though!). This chronicles their rise to fame, and how “as the American Indian Movement gained momentum the band took a stand, choosing pride in their ancestry over continued commercial reward.”

Group: How One Therapist and a Circle of Strangers Saved My Life by Christie Tate

The memoir of a “guarded, over-achieving, self-lacerating young lawyer who reluctantly agrees to get psychologically and emotionally naked in a room of six complete strangers.” Basically, if you want to read a memoir about group therapy and how it can helpful, here it is! tw: self-harm and eating disorders

Life with the Afterlife: 13 Truths I Learned about Ghosts by Amy Bruni

This is pushing the “host of Kindred Spirits” thing, but I’m more impressed by Bruni’s past on GHOST HUNTERS. Here she tells stories about her ghostly experiences and “thirteen truths that guide her approach to the supernatural.” If you’re into real life (?) ghost stories and the people who investigate them, here’s a read for you.


You can find me on social media @itsalicetime and co-hosting the nonfiction For Real podcast with Kim here at Book Riot. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.