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Riot Rundown

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In The Club

In the Club 02/24/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. How is everyone this week? In Portland we’re getting some actual sunshine and slightly warmer temps, and I know I’ve changed as a person when I see 45 degrees in the forecast and go, “Oh word? I don’t even need a scarf!” For those of you still recovering from the hell of winter storms, I’m thinking of you and hoping relief finds its way to you soon.

To the club!!

Nibbles and Sips

I’ve mentioned before that I love me some Food Tik Tok, right? Well one of my favorites right now is a creator by the name of Hajar Larbah (Tik Tok username @moribyan). She makes all sort of delicious foodstuffs, including a lot of recreations of popular restaurant foods. I die. My recent favorite recipes (there are… so many) are chicken shawarma, which I’ve always been needlessly intimidated to make??, and yellow rice like you’d get at a Halal cart. My mouth is so happy! Make and share with the club.

Just Because We Can Doesn’t Mean We Should

When planning out this week’s newsletter, I already knew what books I wanted to recommend but couldn’t really put my finger on… why?! I knew I wanted you to read and discuss them because they’re all really great books, but what was the theme that was lumping together in my brain? After lots of consideration, I’ve landed on this: just because we can do a thing, does that mean we should? Let’s get into it.

The Echo Wife by Sarah Gailey

I made a face and went “eeew!” out loud a few times in the first few chapters of this book. Why? Because “eew” is how I feel about a husband stealing his brilliant scientist wife’s research and then using that information to not only clone her (seriously, bro?) and but then cheat on her with! that! clone! The squick factor gets turned all the way up when we find out the clone is pregnant. It all gets just a little more complicated when the wife, Evelyn, gets a panicked call from Martine: she’s just killed the husband Nathan and needs help… err… cleaning up the mess. It does not go how you’re thinking it will. Whew.

Book Club Bonus: Well then! There’s so much to talk about here: bodily autonomy, consent, a woman’s right to choose, and of course: the ethics of scientific research. There’s a lot of grey area in this kind of innovation, and this book dives straight into the murky bits.

The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell

I thought a lot about this book when I heard it was being adapted for film (yiiiiiikes, if you know, you know), and again last week when the Perseverance rover landed on Mars. It’s about a Jesuit priest and linguist who leads a scientific mission to make first contact with intelligent extraterrestrial life. I was told to prepare for a catastrophic end, but I was so not prepared! Space exploration is super cool and all, pero this book is all, “what if it went horribly wrong?” Like rull wrong. So wrong. Theeee most wrong. I can’t get the wrong out of my brain and it’s been literal years since I read it. (TW: violence, sexual assault)

Book Club Bonus: I don’t want to tell you too much here because you need to experience it for yourself. Once you’ve taken a day or two to process this one, write down and discuss the ways in which this book is an indictment of colonization, an examination of faith, and what it says about the way we define humanity.

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Catherine House by Elisabeth Thomas

Catherine House isn’t your run-of-the-mill educational institution; admission is highly competitive and its demands super intense: once students arrive, they must disconnect from the outside world and remain on campus for their full three-year tenure with no outside contact. No phones, no internet: they must dedicate themselves wholly to the Catherine House way. This sort of immersive education maybe sounds like a cool, edgy and immersive idea, but like… I sense problems! This has been described to me as weird and labyrinthine with major gothic vibes all set in a creepy old house, so what I’m saying is I bought it immediately.

Book Club Bonus: You may have sensed, as I did, that there are some sinister secrets in this story, and you’d be right. The school is determined to keep a history of shady experiments hidden at all costs, and if only THAT were a thing that only happened in fiction. Discuss! You know what to do here.

Suggestion Section

Need some swoonworthy picks perfect for your romance book clubs? Say no more!

How about some queer picks? These audiobooks are great for LGBTQ+ book clubs.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. 
Vanessa 

Thanks again to our sponsor Read Bliss, a community created by romance fans at Harlequin Books! If you’re looking for a way to connect with fellow romance readers and authors, Read Bliss may just be the bookish community you’re looking for. Stay up to date on the latest in romance book news, genre discussions, book-tuber videos, reading challenges and more with fellow lovers of swoons!

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Read This Book

[2/24] Read This Book: THE WEDDING DATE by Jasmine Guillory

Welcome to Read This Book, the newsletter where I recommend a book you should add to your TBR, STAT! I stan variety in all things, and my book recommendations will be no exception. These must-read books will span genres and age groups. There will be new releases, oldie but goldies from the backlist, and the classics you may have missed in high school. Oh my! If you’re ready to diversify your books, then LEGGO!!

Did you know February is National Wedding Month? Although the most popular months for weddings are June, August, and September, most proposals occur between Christmas and New Year’s Day, which leads to February becoming the most popular time for wedding planning. Also, thanks to Valentine’s Day, February 14th is a popular day for both proposals and weddings. 

The Wedding Date Book Cover

The Wedding Date by Jasmine Guillory

Drew Nicols is still sans a plus one for his ex-girlfriend’s wedding where he also happens to be a groomsman. Then, on a chance encounter in an elevator, he finds the perfect solution in Alexa Monroe who agrees to be Drew’s wedding date for the weekend. Following the wedding, they both go their separate ways. Drew returns to his life as a pediatric surgeon in Los Angeles, and Alexa heads back to Berkeley where she works as the mayor’s chief of staff. However, after having more fun than they both expected, Drew and Alexa can’t stop thinking of one another. 

The Wedding Date was one of the first books I read during the first big COVID-19 quarantine. This delightful rom-com helped take my mind off of the uncertainty and panic I was feeling during that time. Like all of the romantic comedies I’ve read recently, I had a hard time putting down this book, and I finished it in almost record time. If you are looking for the standard rom-com fare with the cute boy meets girl meet cute, then this book is a must-read for you, too. 

I instantly loved Alexa and Drew’s connection. Even though the agreement was just the one date, I knew there would be more to this love story. Plus, I just wanted these two kids to work out as soon as they were flirting in the elevator. Since this is a literary rom-com, I was sure Alexa and Drew would be together in the end, but there were plenty of expected (and a few unexpected) bumps along the way. By the time I finished The Wedding Date, I knew I wanted to read more of Jasmine Guillory. With a debut novel that checks all of my romantic comedy boxes, I became an instant fan, so be prepared for more Guillory reading recommendations in the future!

Until next time bookish friends,

Katisha


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Unusual Suspects

Mysteries Rooted In Place

Hi mystery fans! I have two mysteries rooted in settings that vividly come alive, and both start with missing person cases. So get toosh comfy to armchair travel to New Zealand and Tasmania for some serious page turning.

Quiet In Her Bones by Nalini Singh

This is the perfect beach read to escape your winter situation. Aarav Rai is a 26-year-old bestselling crime author whose mother disappeared–with a quarter of a million of his father’s money–when he was a teenager. Was she a missing person who should be presumed dead or a woman in an abusive relationship who took money and ran?

Those have been the questions left behind in an Auckland, New Zealand, cul-de-sac. Except now Nina Rai’s car has been found with her body inside at Waitākere Ranges Regional Park adding new questions: did she die in a car accident; was she murdered? Aarav has plenty of theories from his crime writing brain, but he was recently in an accident and is having memory issues–including around what he remembers from the night of his mother’s disappearance. But he does remember her screaming.

And so we’re taken not only into Aarav’s thoughts and memories of his childhood but also into the cul-de-sac of wealthy neighbors as he tries to unravel everyone’s secrets and dirty deeds…

I love small communities and watching all the secrets being exposed, so this was already my catnip, and then it had the added bonus of a great location we rarely get to armchair travel to. Aarav is an interesting, layered, on-and-off unlikeable character forced to face his complicated feelings and memories of his childhood and parents.

I listened to the audiobook, narrated by Raj Varma, which is always my go-to format for settings I am unfamiliar with in hopes to hear proper pronunciations. I really liked Varma’s voice, accent, and that he did not do high pitched women’s voices.

(TW alcoholism/ domestic abuse/ statutory (19/16)/ dog death questioned as poisoning, no graphic details/ past suicide, detail/ past eating disorder, detail)

The Survivors by Jane Harper

I love that I can count on Harper to deliver an immersive, page-turning, atmospheric mystery every single time.

I’m not going to give a lot of plot away on this one because a lot is revealed in fragments and I loved collecting the pieces as I was getting to know the characters. Kieran Elliott has returned home to a small south coast town in Tasmania. His father has dementia, being looked after by his mother, and he’s come home with his girlfriend Mia and new baby daughter to help pack up the home.

He’s not only dealing with the current situation and emotional toll of an ill parent but it’s also forcing him and the community to face a past many would rather bury. There was an accident. There may still be a missing person. There have only ever been questions and accusations. And now there is a murdered woman. Kieran is about to learn that you can’t run away from an unresolved past…

I loved watching Kieran and Mia reconnect with people they hadn’t seen in a long time and all the complexities involved, the tension of a place trying so hard to forget the past, the family dynamics, the complicated nature of grief, all playing out along the ocean coast, which can quickly turn from tranquil to violent.

(TW parent with dementia/ drowning/ suicide on page)

From The Book Riot Crime Vault

Women Have Always Loved Reading Thrillers—Just Ask the Victorians


Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2021 releases. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and get Tailored Book Recommendations!

Until next time, keep investigating! In the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, and Litsy–you can find me under Jamie Canavés.

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own, you can sign up here.

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True Story

New Releases: Smugglers + Grifters

Fwoosh, how are we already at the end of February? I mean, aside from the whole short month thing. My reading remains as scattered-across-many-books as ever, and these new releases don’t help (in a good way?). Nonfiction is continuing to “bring it” as a genre, and I continue to be weirdly proud of it.

Speak, Okinawa: A Memoir by Elizabeth Miki Brina

This is summarized as “a young woman’s journey to understanding her complicated parents–her mother an Okinawan war bride, her father a Vietnam veteran–and her own, fraught cultural heritage.” I LOVE this cover so much. It’s so pretty. Brina recounts growing up in the United States, her complex relationship with her mother, and her attempt to reckon “with the injustices that reverberate throughout the history of Okinawa and its people.”

Flight of the Diamond Smugglers: A Tale of Pigeons, Obsession, and Greed Along Coastal South Africa by Matthew Gavin Frank

We love a good subtitle. Frank “sets out across the infamous Diamond Coast to investigate an illicit trade that supplies a global market.” Because people sneak pigeons into closed down diamond mines and tie diamonds to their feet! There are so many things happening in the world all the time and this is definitely one I did not know about that is just bonkers.

Grieving While Black: An Antiracist Take on Oppression and Sorrow by Breeshia Wade

Kim recommended this on the podcast and it sounds truly amazing. Wade “approaches grief as something that is bigger than what’s already happened to us” and says that “[e]ach of us has a moral obligation to attend to our own grief so that we can responsibly engage with others.” She connects this work with systemic oppression and how dealing with our grief can help us be more compassionate and available for other people. Love everything about this.

Confident Women: Swindlers, Grifters, and Shapeshifters of the Feminine Persuasion by Tori Telfer

Do you like tales of TRICKSTERS? Telfer, author of Lady Killer, is apparently making collected tales of ne’er-do-well women her thing, and I am here for it. She splits the stories into themed sections, so you can either pick the section you want to start with and go, or do that good-for-our-times thing of reading an essay, leaving it for a bit, reading another, etc. It’s the true benefit of this sort of book. Aside from teaching you about all kinds of fascinating people.


For more nonfiction new releases, 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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Today In Books

The Bram Stoker Awards Announces Its 2020 Nominees: Today in Books

The Bram Stoker Awards Announces Its 2020 Nominees

The Horror Writers Association has announced the finalists for the 2020 Bram Stoker Awards. Members of the association will be able to vote from March 1st through March 15th. The winner of the award will be announced during this year’s virtual StockerCon 2021, which will be held May 20th through May 23rd.

Victor LaValle Coming Out With New Comic Book Series

Novelist Victor LaValle is publishing a new comic series with artist Jo Mi-Gyeong. The five-issue series, published by Boom Comics, will be released in May. LaValle said, “This a story, inspired by young folks like Mari Copeny, Elsa Mengistu, Greta Thunberg and so many more, of how an eleven-year-old girl, EVE, and her android teddy bear try to do the seemingly impossible: save the planet, save us.”

Anthony Bourdain’s Crime Novel Gone Bamboo Becoming a TV Series

Anthony Bourdain’s 1997 thriller novel Gone Bamboo is now slated to become a television series. Producers Webster Stone and Robert Stone have acquired the rights to the novel, which is set on the island of St. Martin and follows an assassin named Henry Denard.

Black, Latinx, and Millennial Readers Are The Backbone of The Book World

New research shows Black, Latinx, and Millennial readers are buying and engaging with books more than other groups.

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What's Up in YA

Your YA Book News and New Books: February 25, 2021

Hey YA Readers!

We’re rounding out the second month of 2021 already, if you can believe it. The YA world has some great news and, of course, some great books for your shelves this week.

YA Book News

New YA Books This Week

Bent Heavens by Daniel Kraus (paperback)

Bone Crier’s Moon by Kathryn Purdie (paperback, series)

A Dark and Hollow Star by Ashley Shuttleworth

The Desolation of Devil’s Acre by Ransom Riggs (series)

Destination Anywhere by Sara Barnard

Dragonfly Girl by Marti Leimbach

Girls With Razor Hearts by Suzanne Young (series, paperback)

How To Change Everything by Naomi Klein and Rebecca Stefoff (nonfiction)

The How and The Why by Cynthia Hand (paperback)

The Initial Insult by Mindy McGinnis

Kings, Queens, and In-Betweens by Tanya Boteju (paperback)

Like Home by Louisa Onome

Mazie by Melanie Crowder — if you like historical fiction, this is an utter GEM.

The Missing Passenger by Jack Heath

Prepped by Bethany Mangle

Rebelwing by Andrea Tang (paperback)

The Shadow War by Lindsay Smith

Some Other Now by Sarah Everett

The Things She’s Seen by Ambelin Kwaymullina and Ezekiel Kwaymullina (paperback)

The Truth App by Jack Heath (paperback)

The Valley and The Flood by Rebecca Mahoney

YA Talk at Book Riot

Wear your love for all things young adult with this fun keychain. $15.


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you again on Monday!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram and editor of Body Talk(Don’t) Call Me Crazy, and Here We Are.

Thanks again to Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and Some Other Now for making today’s newsletter possible!

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Giveaways

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Book Riot is teaming up with the Happily Ever After newsletter from St. Martin’s Press Romance for a chance to win an ARC of ONE LAST STOP by Casey McQuiston! Five winners will receive an ARC of this highly anticipated title. Click here or the picture below to enter!

Here’s a little bit more about the Happily Ever After newsletter: Stay up to date on the latest romance buzz by signing up for our weekly newsletter as we ship the hottest couples and celebrate all things romance. Your next romantic obsession awaits!

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Riot Rundown

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The Stack

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