Categories
True Story

National Book Award Picks

I’m gonna be honest, I don’t follow book awards usually beyond scanning winner lists to see what nonfiction is on it (have I read it? no — but my For Real podcast co-host Kim probably has). I’m intrigued by the National Book Award though!

It’s given “by writers to writers,” so definitely not the People’s Choice Awards of the bookish world (that would be the Goodreads Awards), and the winners have to be U.S. citizens. It’s been around since 1936, then World War II happened and people said “maybe focus on other things for a minute,” and then it started up again in 1950.

Let’s look at some carefully selected winners, i.e. ones I thought looked interesting:

Wind, Sand and Stars cover

Wind, Sand and Stars by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (winner: 1939)

Yes, it’s the Little Prince guy! This is one of the rare cases where the English title is more poetic than the French (Terre des hommes? Land of Men? no thank you, please). This primarily contains stories of Saint-Exupéry’s time as an airmail carrier, flying across the Sahara Desert and the Andes Mountains. This includes his crash in the Sahara, which is most definitely included in The Little Prince. I love books from the 1920s/1930s. And I didn’t know this one existed!

Oysters of Locmariaquer Cover

The Oysters of Locmariaquer by Eleanor Clark (winner: 1965)

Yeah, like I’m gonna see a book from almost sixty years ago about oysters and not include it in this list. Look at the beginning of the description: “On the northwest coast of France, just around the corner from the English Channel, is the little town of Locmariaquer.” It sounds like a fairytale! But one with oysters! This is not only about the Belon oysters of Locmariaquer, but also about Brittany and its people.

The Hemingses of Monticello cover

The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family by Annette Gordon-Reed (winner: 2008)

It’s a history of the Hemings family! Yes, the family that includes Sally Hemings. And look, I’m not THAT old and I still remember when it was kind of big news that Jefferson exploited/sexually-assaulted-due-to-the-power-imbalance Hemings. Here, Gordon-Reed “traces the Hemings family from its origins in Virginia in the 1700s to the family’s dispersal after Jefferson’s death in 1826.” Fair warning that this book is over 900 pages long. But probably a lot of that is endnotes! A bonus of nonfiction: it’s usually not as long as you think it is.

The Dead Are Arising cover

The Dead Are Arising: The Life of Malcolm X by Les Payne and Tamara Payne (winner: 2020)

The most recent winner! It also won the 2021 Pulitzer. Les Payne passed in 2018, but he was a storied journalist who co-founded the National Association of Black Journalists. He spent almost thirty years on this book, which was finished by his daughter Tamara. Payne wanted to “transform what would become over a hundred hours of interviews into an unprecedented portrait of Malcolm X, one that would separate fact from fiction.” Based on the number of awards and laudatory statements this has received, it appears he succeeded.

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.

Categories
Book Radar

The Wheel of Time Keeps On Turning and More Book Radar!

Happy Thursday, star bits! I am back today to help delightful bookish items make their way through your eyeballs and into your brain. I’ve had a rainy, but great, week so far here in Maine. I’ve read some great books, one of which I will share with you on Monday. And I am contemplating rereading all of Stephen King’s books, because sure, why not, lol? I haven’t read some of the earlier ones since middle school, so it should be interesting. This week, I’ve also made my way to the fourth season of Leverage, and I’m getting ready for my birthday on Sunday. I’m planning on taking the whole day to read and eat delicious food. Yay, birthday week!

Moving on to today’s newsletter and book talk: I have a lot of fun news, including adaptation deals, a lot more book cover reveals, and a look at an upcoming essay collection I am excited to read. Plus I’ve included a picture of my stretchy orange monsters, some trivia, and more! I love writing these newsletters and I appreciate your support so much. Whatever you are doing or watching or reading this week, I hope you goodbob and we same place again very now. – xoxo, Liberty, Your Friendly Neighborhood Velocireader™

Trivia question time! A character named Nella runs a secret shop in eighteenth-century London in what bestselling 2021 novel? (Scroll to the bottom for the answer.)

Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

The Obamas are adapting Blackout for Netflix.

Speaking of the Obamas, former President Barack Obama released his summer reading list.

Here are Book Riot’s favorite books of the year so far.

Marie Benedict announced her new novel: Her Hidden Genius, about the woman who discovered the double helix of DNA.

Rosamund Pike is narrating Paula Hawkins’ new audiobook.

The Center for Fiction released its 2021 First Novel Prize longlist.

The Wheel of Time series is going to be a movie trilogy now, too.

Check out the cover reveal for Operation Sisterhood by Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich.

Here are more additions to the Pet Sematary sequel.

cover of pet sematary by stephen king

Jennifer Carpenter will return for the Dexter revival.

Here’s the cover reveal of Survive the Dome by Kosoko Jackson.

Hear LeVar Burton read his novel Aftermath for the first time.

Here’s the first look at Stars and Bones by Gareth L. Powell, which features a talking cat.

Here’s the cover reveal for Piñata by Leopoldo Gout.

Here’s the first look at This Rebel Heart by Katherine Locke.

Here’s the cover reveal for End of the World House by Adrienne Celt.

Book Riot Recommends 

At Book Riot, I work on the New Books! email, the All the Books! podcast about new releases, and the Book Riot Insiders New Release Index. I am very fortunate to get to read a lot of upcoming titles, and learn about a lot of upcoming titles, and I’m delighted to share a couple with you each week so you can add them to your TBR! (It will now be books I loved on Mondays and books I’m excited to read on Thursdays. YAY, BOOKS!)

Excited to read: 

cover of The Crane Wife: and Other Essays by CJ Hauser

The Crane Wife: and Other Essays by CJ Hauser (Doubleday, July 12, 2022)

As you can imagine, I spend a lot of time looking up stuff about books on the internet, and I often find something wonderful that I didn’t expect to find while researching something else. That is the case with this book, The Crane Wife, from CJ Hauser. What a delightful surprise!

Hauser is the author of the wonderful novel Family of Origin, which came out a few years ago. After the novel’s release, she wrote an essay called The Crane Wife, which received a lot of buzz, and it is included here in this forthcoming book of essays. The book is being compared to Cheryl Strayed, and is comprised of essays “around which to explore the narratives of romantic love we are taught and which we tell ourselves.” BRING IT ON.

What I’m reading this week.

cover of Comedy Comedy Comedy Drama: A Memoir by Bob Odenkirk

Comedy Comedy Comedy Drama: A Memoir by Bob Odenkirk

Just Like The Other Girls by Claire Douglas

Forging a Nightmare by Patricia A. Jackson

Joan Is Okay by Weike Wang

How High We Go in the Dark by Sequoia Nagamatsu

Song stuck in my head:

Rise & Shine by Mr. Gnome. (Also, I’m still really into listening to songs I loved when I was young. You can listen to a lot of them in this playlist I made!)

And this is funny:

Andrew McCarthy for the win.

Happy things:

Here are a few things I enjoy that I thought you might like as well:

  • Leverage: I am about 13 years behind in starting this show, but I like it! It’s like The Librarians without magic, but also with Christian Kane.
  • Purrli: This website makes the relaxing sounds of a cat purring.

And here’s a cat picture!

two orange cats stretching

Zevon and Farrokh enjoy calisthenics.

Trivia answer: The Lost Apothecary by Sarah Penner.

You made it to the bottom! High five. Thanks for reading! – xo, L

Categories
What's Up in YA

BLACKOUT to Netflix via Obamas: Your YA Book News and New Books, July 15, 2021

Hey YA Readers!

There might not be a lot of news, but the hero piece this week is a big deal. Let’s dive in.

YA Book News

New YA in Hardcover

All These Warriors by Amy Tintera (series)

Creatures of the Night by Grace Collins

Faking Reality by Sara Fujimura

Flash Fire by TJ Klune (series)

The Great Big One by J. C. Geiger

The Mythic Koda Rose by Jennifer Nissley

Radha and Jai’s Recipe for Romance by Nisha Sharma

The Right Side of Reckless by Whitney D. Grandison

The Taking of Jake Livingston by Ryan Douglass

Up All Night edited by Laura Silverman

When All The Girls are Sleeping by Emily Arsenault

When We Were Strangers by Alex Richards

Wings of Shadow by Nicki Pau Preto (series)

XOXO by Axie Oh

New in Paperback

Accidental by Alex Richards

The Extraordinaries by TJ Klune (series)

Home Home by Lisa Allen-Agostini

Parachutes by Kelly Yang

The Unleashed by Danielle Vega (series)

When She Reigns by Jodi Meadows (series)

YA On Book Riot This Week


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you again on Monday. May the rest of your week be packed with great reads.

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram.

Big thank you to Tor Teen and Flash Fire for making today’s newsletter possible!

Categories
Riot Rundown

071421-AgainAgain-RR

Categories
Giveaways

071421-RNMG-Giveaways

We’re giving away a $200 gift card to The Ripped Bodice, our favorite romance-only bookstore, to one lucky reader! To enter, just sign up for our romance newsletter Kissing Books and get news, book recommendations, weekly book deals, and more from the world of Romancelandia.

This sweepstakes is open to residents of the United States (excluding Puerto Rico and all other US territories). Entries will be accepted until 11:59pm, July 31st, 2021. Winner will be randomly selected. Complete rules and eligibility requirements available here.

Categories
Audiobooks

Long-Awaited New Audiobook Releases!

Hello, audiophiles! Thank you all so much for your kind words of welcome. Audiobooks have long been my first love, and I look forward to celebrating them with you every week.

I hope all of you in the American Southeast are safe and well after Elsa galavanted across the country. We bunkered down here in the Low Country and much of the island lost power. I want to send a huge thanks to all of the teams that have worked hard to restore power to communities on the east coast after the storm.

After Elsa passed through, Dylan was more than happy to reclaim his favorite spot on the porch. He enjoys spying on the neighbors and barking at the dogs that walk by our front porch.

photo of Dylan the corgi sitting on a chair

Backlist Love

Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants by Robin Wall Kimmerer

While I didn’t have the internet after Elsa came to town, I listened to audiobooks downloaded on my phone. It felt restorative to listen to Robin Wall Kimmerer read her audiobook Braiding Sweetgrass to me. Each essay in the book focuses on a different aspect of how human beings are part of nature, holding key roles in many of its ecosystems. There’s just something so special with how Kimmerer encourages folks to think about their actions and how that affects the natural world around them.

With her encouragement, I walked outside and began looking at the palm trees and tall grasses around my house. I moved outside of Appalachia for the first time back in October, so many of the plants were unfamiliar to me. I pulled out my Seek app and began learning about the different species of fauna that make their home near mine.

That’s where Robin Wall Kimmerer shines best. With her stories of learning how to weave baskets from freshly felled trees to scooping algae out of her pond, you get the sense she knows the wildlife around her intimately, as fellow sharers of the land. There’s so much wisdom in this book. I know it’s one I’ll listen to again and again.

Narrated by Robin Wall Kimmerer

Long-awaited New Releases

In the audiobook world, most audiobook editions release the same day as the print edition—but not always! To make sure y’all still know about them, I’m highlighting some recent audiobooks that have been released long after their print editions entered the world.

Even As We Breathe by Annette Saunooke Clapsaddle

This incredible novel came out in hardcover last summer, but we FINALLY have an audiobook as of the end of last June. I adored Even As We Breathe and can’t stop talking about it. This work of historical fiction follows a disabled Cherokee man named Cowney who gets a summer job at the historic Grove Park Inn in Asheville, North Carolina. While WWII rages on, the US military is using the inn to hold prisoner foreign diplomats of enemy countries. When a young Japanese girl goes missing, Cowney is racially profiled and brought in for questioning. Kaipo Schwab performs the audiobook with such emotional depth, capturing Cowney’s perspective perfectly.

Narrated by Kaipo Schwab, who is also part of the cast who performs Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse and Kink edited by Garth Greenwell and R.O. Kwon

The Birds of Opulence by Crystal Wilkinson

This week, The Birds of Opulence arrived in my audiobook app, and I could not have been more excited. I’ve waited for the audio edition for several years now and feel overjoyed that the time has finally arrived! Affrilachian author Crystal Wilkinson is the current Poet Laureate of Kentucky, but she also writes fiction! The Birds of Opulence is in many ways a family story that focuses on the different generations of Black women in the same community. Narrator Allyson Johnson captures the beautiful cadence of Wilkinson’s incredible prose.

Narrated by Allyson Johnson, who also performs The History of White People by Nell Irvin Painter and Fearing the Black Body by Sabrina Strings

Pure America: Eugenics and the Making of Modern Virginia by Elizabeth Catte

Though the audiobook for Pure America was delayed only a couple months, I could not have been more thrilled to have one of my most anticipated releases of 2021 finally in my hands (well, in an audiobook app on my phone, which I was holding…close enough!). Perhaps most well known for her book What You Are Getting Wrong About Appalachia (which she wrote in response to the unfortunately popular Hillbilly Elegy), Catte is back with Pure America, a look at the role of eugenics in Virginia. With the #FreeBritney movement saturating our newsfeeds, this audiobook comes at the perfect time. The discussion around Britney’s conservatorship has shined a spotlight on how America’s healthcare and legal systems have repeatedly failed and often actively harmed disabled people. Pure America tackles this same topic with Catte’s signature attention to detail and finesse. Jo Anna Perrin performance shines when she’s narrating the complicated details throughout the book, making it easy for listeners to follow along.

Narrated by Jo Anna Perrin, who also performs What You Are Getting Wrong About Appalachia by Elizabeth Catte

Over on the Riot

If you loved Braiding Sweetgrass as much as I did, you have to check out 5 Audiobooks that Help You Explore Nature!

Around the Web

Check out this quiz from Libro.fm that pairs you with an audiobook written by a disabled author!

Scribd’s Reading Challenge for July

Vogue editors list their favorite audiobooks for summer road trips

Andy Serkis is recording a new edition of the Lord of the Rings Trilogy

The Mary Sue lists 10 sci-fi/fantasy audiobooks you definitely should check out


I’d love to hear from you! Drop me a line at kendra@readingwomenpodcast.com or say hi over on Instagram @kdwinchester (or follow Dylan @thebookcorgi). For even MORE audiobook content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy listening, bookish friends!

~ Kendra

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Kidlit Deals for July 13, 2021

Hey there, kidlit pals! Another summer week, another dash of sunshine in the form of book deals in your inbox! I hope you’re all keeping happy and healthy and hydrated in addition to well-read, but reminder to grab these book deals ASAP because they won’t last long!

Total Eclipse of Nestor Lopez by Adrianna Cuevas is a perfect adventure read for fans of Rick Riordan Presents! It’s just $3.

cover of The Total Eclipse of Nestor Lopez

Fly on the Wall by Remy Lai is about a kid who goes on an adventure to the other side of the world to prove he can to the family who is overprotective, for just $3.

Need a series starter to keep you busy? Malamander (The Legends of Eerie-on-Sea Book 1) by Thomas Taylor is a steal at $1.

This one goes on sale fairly often, but Merci Suárez Changes Gears by Meg Medina is on sale again for $1!

Darkdeep by Ally Condie and Brendan Reichs is a creepy adventure series starter for under $5, and you can get the sequel The Beast for the same price!

This is a graphic novel that’s perfect for that awkward in between MG and YA stage, and it’s an award winner! This One Summer by Mariko and Jillian and Tamaki is $3.

For a heartwarming picture book, pick up Rescue and Jessica: A Life-Changing Friendship by Jessica Kensky, Patrick Downes, and Scott Magoon!

Have you seen the Flora and Ulysses movie yet? If not, catch the book by Kate DiCamillo for just $2!

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Categories
True Story

New Releases: Bring Some Nonfiction on Your Vacation

I feel like I could really go for a readathon right about now. Knock out some of these new reads that are constantly getting released.There are too many good books! Not enough time! But, y’know. Better to have more books than you’ll ever have time to read than not enough books. Sounds terrible.

Summer is a blockbuster time for new releases, so we’ve got some good ones. Let’s get to ’em:

Don't Let It Get You Down cover

Don’t Let It Get You Down: Essays on Race, Gender, and the Body by Savala Nolan Trepczynski

Nolan writes about living in the in-between, from growing up with her Black and Mexican father and white mother to how she “began her first diet at the age of three and has been both fat and painfully thin throughout her life. She has experienced both the discomfort of generational poverty and the ease of wealth and privilege.” She breaks down these themes through twelve essays, including “On Dating White Guys While Me,” “The Body Endures,” and “Fat in Ways White Girls Don’t Understand.”

The Icepick Surgeon Cover

The Icepick Surgeon: Murder, Fraud, Sabotage, Piracy, and Other Dastardly Deeds Perpetrated in the Name of Science by Sam Kean

The author of The Disappearing Spoon comes back in an “untold history of science’s darkest secrets.” We talk about science as a force for good, but what about when it’s not? And how far back does that go? Kean “reveals the origins of much of modern science in the transatlantic slave trade of the 1700s, as well as Thomas Edison’s mercenary support of the electric chair and the warped logic of the spies who infiltrated the Manhattan Project.” Booooo Edison.

Black Box Cover

Black Box: The Memoir That Sparked Japan’s #MeToo Movement by Shiori Ito, Allison Markin Powell (Translated by)

In 2015, journalist Ito charged well-known reporter Noriyuki Yamaguchi with rape. When she went to the police, they told her that her case was a “black box,” which meant it was “untouchable and unprosecutable.” Her memoir was published in 2017 and “became the center of an urgent cultural and legal shift around recognizing sexual assault and gender-based violence.”

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.

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Beyond the Straight Gaze

Hello friends! Here in Canada, we’ve been a little slower on the vaccine rollout than the U.S., but I just booked my second shot! So exciting! I have big plans for two weeks after — by which I mean I’m going to browse the bookstore so hard. I’m also considering getting my hair dyed the bisexual flag. (I haven’t had a haircut since the pandemic started.) I hope that you are keeping healthy and safe out there! Let’s get into the books!


Lately, I’ve been thinking about how grateful I am that I didn’t grow up with the wealth of queer representation there is now in books and TV. I know that sounds wild, so let me contextualize. I am lucky enough to have grown up in a very accepting community — probably one of the most queer-friendly places I could have come out in the world during the aughts.

With all of the privilege I had access to, representation for queer people was still pretty limited. I watched Buffy for the lesbian representation — that’s how bad it was. (Spoiler alert: I do not recommend this now.) There were some queer books, of course. Great authors, like Sarah Waters and Jeanette Winterson. A few YA novels. Not a lot of diversity, whether in terms of intersectionality or genre, but I was grateful for what existed. I started a bi and lesbian book blog to try to draw more attention to these titles and help others find them.

So, as someone who has centered their life around queer books, why would I be glad there weren’t as many options when I was young?

Well, let me tell you about the time I played Gone Home with my partner. I hadn’t read a lot about it. I just knew it was queer and well-respected. I had the vague inkling it was tragic, but I decided to go for it anyway — despite not playing video games much. Vague spoilers for the game Gone Home: I got to the end of that game and cried. For quite a while. I was so prepared for tragedy — the story letting these two teenage girls have a relationship without suffering subverted the expectations ingrained in me most of my life, and I had an immediate response of relief, gratitude, and joy. I had a similar reaction to a cartoon that will go unnamed that made the queer subtext 100% text in its final episodes, something I couldn’t have dreamed of as a kid.

To me, it’s a joy every time queer lit goes somewhere it hasn’t gone before. I know how far it’s come, and I’m constantly surprised at what is possible now. I am proud of the young queer people growing up now who are demanding better representation because they weren’t raised on crumbs. They have entitlement of the best possible kind, because of course they are entitled to have their stories — our stories — told.

On a personal level, though, I’m glad that I got to see this transformation, and that each milestone is so joyful to me. Perhaps it’s masochistic, to be happy that my bar for good queer rep is low enough that I am constantly delighted by what clears it, but here we are. I’m even more grateful, though, that the generations following me aren’t this way. It’s that energy that’s helping to push YA especially forward, never settling for “better than before.” I’m so excited to see what comes next.

All the Links Fit to Click

Thumbnail of trailer for Ahead of the Curve documentary
Watch the trailer on YouTube!

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

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

A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers (Non-Binary Sci-fi)

It’s been centuries since the robots left. They wandered into the wilderness, leaving behind their tools, never to be seen again — except that one just showed up, asking a tea monk what humans need. The robot can’t leave without an answer to that question, but the monk and robot quickly find this isn’t an easy task. This is a new novella series from the author of the Wayfarers books! (Don’t fear: I’m not counting the robot as non-binary rep! The monk is non-binary/agender.)

the taking of jake livingston cover

The Taking of Jake Livingston by Ryan Douglass (M/M YA Horror)

Jake Livingston has it hard enough being one of the only Black students St. Clair Prep, dealing with racist teachers. Things seem to be looking up when another Black student, the handsome Allister, arrives — and there’s even the glimmer of romance in the future. There’s just one thing that always gets in the way: Jake sees dead people living their last moments on a loop. While that’s never easy, school shooter Sawyer Doon is a ghost like no other, and his haunting has serious consequences for Jake. (Make sure to look up content warnings before getting into this one, because this social thriller deals with dark subjects and has some skin-crawling horror scenes.)

The Rebellious Tide by Eddy Boudel Tan (M/M Fiction)

The Calyx Charm by May Peterson (Trans Woman Fantasy)

A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor by Hank Green (Bisexual F/F Science Fiction) (Paperback rerelease)

The Mythic Koda Rose by Jennifer Nissley (Sapphic Contemporary YA)

Being You: A First Conversation about Gender by Megan Madison and Jessica Ralli, illustrated by Anne/Andy Passchier (Children’s Nonfiction)


That’s it for me this week! Until next time, you can find me on Twitter @Lesbrary. You can also hear me on All the Books on the first Tuesday of the month, and I post weekly New Releases videos on the Book Riot Youtube channel. You can bet I sneak in as many queer titles as I can.

Happy reading!

Danika

Categories
In The Club

In the Club 07/14/21

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

Firstly, introductions are in order! My name is Erica and I’m new to In the Club and Book Riot overall. I’m super geeked to be a new Associate Editor (okurrt!) as well as the writer for this newsletter. I only hope that I am half as entertaining as Vanessa was. I’m going to warn you right now that, as you may have already noticed, I may make the occasional Cardi B. reference. I apologize in advance.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

I just spent a wonderful birthday week in New Orleans, courtesy of the good sis Pfizer, and thought I’d share one of the many new things I tried while there. Although I got to sample all the heartier dishes, like étouffée, gumbo, and jambalaya, I figured I’d share something a little more low-key. If you’re up for it, please try these wonderful Creole pralines. Yes, they’re full of sugar, but I think we all deserve a treat for dealing with this heat!

New Orleans was as musical as it’s rumored to be, and it’s got me in a jazzy, nostalgic mood. I’d like to keep the N’awlins vibes going just a while longer as I discuss books set in the idyllic Jazz Age. Now let’s get to the books!

The Other 20s

gods of jade and shadow

Gods of Jade and Shadow by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

I love mythology! Couple that with an intriguing setting like Mexico City in the 20s, and I’m good to go. I essentially finished this one in a day and a half with a combination of the physical copy as well as the audiobook (which I highly recommend!).

Here, we follow Casiopea Tun as she carries out her life as little more than a servant in her grandfather’s house. She discovers a curious box in his room and opens it, accidentally freeing the Mayan God of Death, Hun-Kamé. The romance that manifests during the journey they take to return Hun-Kamé to his rightful throne is juxtaposed against vivid descriptions of the Mayan underworld and skirmishes with those that oppose his return.

Book Club Bonus: There’s a good opportunity here to discuss how Mayan mythology compares with other religions, mythology, and lore. What similarities are there? What differences? Also, how do colorism and colonialism play a role in the social hierarchy here? Why did Casiopea have the status she did in her grandfather’s house?

cover of dead dead girls

Dead Dead Girls by Nekesa Afia

Louise Lloyd is a young, queer Black woman living in Harlem in the 1920s. As a teenager, someone tried to violently kidnap her. Although she got away, this ever-present threat of violence finds her again as Black girls are murdered in her neighborhood. After being arrested following an episode of police brutality, she’s given the option to help solve the murders in exchange for her freedom. This is maybe what the show Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries would be with the addition of 20s-era racism+sexism. It’s also the first in a series called the Harlem Renaissance Mysteries, so there’s more to look forward to.

Book Club Bonus: Discuss the prevalence of violence in women’s lives, and the compounding effect of otherness (being queer, a person of color, and/or disabled). What may be some of the lasting effects of these kind of experiences? Also, how did you like the structure of the mystery (how the killer was revealed) compared to other murder mysteries?

zora Neale hurston and langston hughes drawn

Zora and Langston by Yuval Taylor

This gives a rare glimpse into Zora Neale Hurston’s and Langston Hughes’ intense friendship that shaped the Harlem Renaissance. Their friendship was such that they wrote intimate letters to each other, traveled the rural South in Hurston’s car collecting Black lore (that would later be used in plays and books like Barracoon), and collaborated on creative projects (Mulebone). Their intimacy also meant they shared a patron in the form of a controlling white woman named Charlotte Osgood Mason, who went by “Godmother.” Despite such intimacy, their friendship would be forever damaged in the early 30s.

Book Club Bonus: Discuss what the cost of patronage was as a Black artist. What were the different stances on respectability and how did Zora and Langston fit within them? Why did Zora die in obscurity while Langston remained a well respected literary figure?

Suggestion Section

Luckily for us, Obama has shared his summer reading list, so you can have even more things to add.

Here’s yet another super handy link to the tea 🍵 on other book clubs from all over the interwebs.

And, as always, there are also our other newsletters to keep you well-read.


Thanks for staying a while! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com.