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Today In Books

UK Cookbook Covers Change For US, Here’s Why: Today In Books

UK Cookbook Covers Change For US, Here’s Why

“Are the home cooks of the U.S. so different from their counterparts on the other side of the Atlantic?” Apparently marketing thinks so, or at least the people in the many meetings held just for picking the right cover photo for a cookbook. And a main difference is in the UK they’re aiming for a not obvious cover to entice you to know more. Look at side-by-side cover comparisons and see which you prefer?

The Strand Expands

Book Culture at 450 Columbus Avenue will now be The Strand at Columbus Avenue, opening in March. “’We are so excited to expand The Strand and engage the community of the Upper West Side,’ said owner Nancy Bass Wyden in a statement. ‘We aim to continue the legacy of my father, and his father before him, by bringing the joy of books to everyone.’”

Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret Adaptation

After 50 years of saying “nope” to adaptation offers, Judy Blume has granted rights to Brooks, Craig and Gracie Films for Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret and they’re now being wooed by studios because this will certainly be a big sale. Huge. Hope all the wait was worth it for an amazing adaptation because that 1970s YA novel has meant a lot to many generations of kids.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

6 Mystery Novels Set in Scotland

Hello mystery fans! Who’s ready to click all the links, get some Amazon deals, and hear about a new documentary? Well, ready or not, here we go:

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Know My Name cover imageRincey’s Booktube review of Know My Name by Chanel Miller (TW rape)

Rincey and Katie are here to satisfy your SFF mystery cravings and to talk about the Edgar Award nominees in the latest Read or Dead.

The (Legal) Thrill Is On: 14 Authors Like John Grisham

6 Mystery Novels Set in Scotland

Die Hard at a Rest Stop and More Must-Read Mystery and Thrillers

American Spy cover image2020 BARRY AWARD NOMINATIONS

“One day somebody will explain to me why it is that, at a time when science has never been wiser, or the truth more stark, or human knowledge more available, populists and liars are in such pressing demand.” John le Carré on Brexit: ‘It’s breaking my heart’

Cuban Writer Honored for ‘Queen of Bones’ Murder Mystery (The bit about how heavy her accent is was not needed.)

“It would be better if we were having conversations about it rather than talking at each other, and as always, books are some of the best means to spark those kinds of conversations.” Throwing Rocks: An Interview with John Vercher

News And Adaptations

I inhaled her mystery novels in high school: Legendary Mystery Writer Mary Higgins Clark Has Died at 92

Well this upcoming “gothic lesbian murder book” sounds super good.

The Highway, the first book in C.J. Box’s Cassie Dewell series, is being adapted into a CBS show by David E. Kelley.

Chris Pratt will star in and executive producer an adaptation of the political thriller The Terminal List by Jack Carr.

Rosario Dawson Teases ”Smart, Weird, Wild” New Murder Mystery Series Briarpatch

Agatha Christie’s The Pale Horse Amazon adaptation has a trailer!

Watch Now

McMillions On HBO Go: A six-part docuseries about the ex-cop that defrauded the McDonald’s Monopoly game of $24 million. “Big crime, when nonviolent, can have an element that’s sort of funny — audacious, inventive, and doomed to blow up in the faces of the perpetrators. But big criminals often suck in small criminals, and in those stories, you often find desperation and naivete.” From Linda Holmes NPR review. Watch the trailer.

Reminder: Briarpatch starring Rosario Dawson as an investigator premiered yesterday, February 6th on USA Network, and if not up already will probably soon be on the website/app.

Kindle Deals

The Impossible Girl by Lydia KangA great historical mystery following resurrectionists in 1850 is ridiculously priced at $0.99: The Impossible Girl by Lydia Kang (Review)

The third book in my favorite Sherlock series is $1.99 if you’re not already caught up: The Hollow Of Fear by Sherry Thomas. (Review)

From my TBR pile the British serial killer detective thriller The Cutting Room (Carver and Lake #2) by Ashley Dyer  is $1.99!

Bellweather Rhapsody cover imageAnd for a quirky, horrorish murder mystery, Bellweather Rhapsody by Kate Racculia is $1.99! (Don’t remember if it has triggers.)

Start a delicious cozy mystery series: Hummus and Homicide by Tina Kashian is $1.99!

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

Until next time, keep investigating! In the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, 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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Giveaways

020620-Tor.comPrizePack-Giveaway

Looking to add to your 2020 TBR shelf? We’re giving away a prize pack of 28 Tor.com Publishing titles from 2019 to one lucky Book Riot Reader!

Enter here for a chance to win, or click the cover image below!


Here’s what Tor.com is all about:

Tor.com has published award-winning science fiction and fantasy short stories since 2008. Over the past few years, we have been hard at work expanding our publishing program to include novellas and novels in DRM-free ebook, print, and audiobook formats. Sign up for our newsletter to receive news and updates on all of our titles and authors, plus excerpts, features, new acquisitions, sweepstakes and more.

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Audiobooks

Audiobooks – 2/6

Hola Audiophiles! Welcome to February and the land of books aplenty. It is getting harder and harder to pick just a few audiobooks to highlight each week, which is, of course, a good problem to have. I might start including a bulleted list of titles in addition to the ones I blurb in detail – what do you think of that plan?

For now, let’s dive into some of the listens out this week.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – February 4

upright women wantedUpright Women Wanted by Sarah Gailey, narrated by Romy Nordlinger – Esther is a stowaway who’s just been found in the book wagon of the Librarians. She’s running away from home to escape (deep breath, here I go!) an arranged marriage set up by her influential father to a man who used to be engaged to her best friend Beatriz, the best friend whom Esther was in love with and who was just hung for possession of resistance propaganda. This queer, near-future, post-apocalyptic take on the pulp Western about lesbian librarians on horseback is just so good!

Narrator note: This book is also my latest listen! More on that in a bit.

18 Tiny Deaths: The Untold Story of Frances Glessner Lee and the Invention of Modern Forensics by Bruce Goldfarb, narrated by Nan McNamara – Did you know that a woman is responsible for advancing modern forensics? I didn’t! She was a grandmother with no college degree who was so respected for her intelligence and skill as a researcher that she was able to break down barriers in women’s education. She sounds like a Miss Marple type, a woman whose keen observations of everyday life made her a force to be reckoned with—she helped change the face of science!

Narrator Note: Nan McNamara is an actress you may recognize from her work on TV series like Hawaii Five-O and Criminal Minds

black sundayBlack Sunday by Tola Rotimi Abraham, narrated by Ron Butler and Liz Femi – It’s 1996 and twins sisters Bibike and Ariyike are living a comfortable life in Lagos, Nigeria. Then their mother loses her job and the family turns to a local church whose lead pastor isn’t shy about worshipping material wealth. Things go from iffy to terrible when the girls’ father puts the family home up on a “sure bet” and loses it. The twins and their siblings are forced to move in with their reluctant grandmother and soon find themselves drifting further and further from one another.

Narrator Note: Liz Femi is an actress and casting director who’s newer to audiobooks; Ron Butler has narrated the work of James Patterson, N.K. Jemisin, and James Baldwin, and more

The Lost Book of Adana Moreau by Michael Zapata, narrated by Coral Peña – In 1929 in New Orleans, Adana Moreau writes a work of science fiction about a young Dominican immigrant not unlike herself in search of a lost city. The book does well and Adana begins to write a sequel, then destroys it with the help of her son when she suddenly becomes ill. Decades later in Chicago, Saul is cleaning out the home of his recently deceased grandfather when he finds a manuscript of—whaddya know—that allegedly destroyed sequel. How does this manuscript exist? Why does his grandfather have it? Saul will find himself in New Orleans in the thick of Katrina to get to the truth.

Narrator Note: Coral Peña is the voice behind Angie Cruz’ Dominicana, a book I’ve had on my TBR since it came out last year! From the samples I’ve listened to, she reminds me of the mellow but effective style of Almarie Guerra, the voice behind Ann Davila Cardinal’s Five Midnights.

Latest Listens

I went on a hike through Portland’s Forest Park over the weekend (after first getting super lost and wandering through some uphill a$$ neighborhoods), allowing me to finish Upright Women Wanted in one listen. I knew this would be good because Sarah Gailey always comes through, but it was even better than expected!

River of Teeth by Sarah GaileyIf you don’t already know, horseback librarians were a real thing! Much like with River of Teeth (did ya know the U.S. once tried to make hippos our primary meat source??), Gailey took a real moment from history with Upright Women Wanted, put their unique flavor on it, and packaged it in a page-turner novella. This was my first audiobook by Romy Nordlinger and I am an immediate fan! You all know how quickly exaggerated, gimmicky accent work turns me off, and I was rull worried when I realized the accents here were… hmm, what to call them: Western, maybe, or “cowboy” twang? Nordlinger was spot-on though and built a nice level of suspense, not to mention the excellent job she did of conveying conflict and desire. So fun!

From the Internets

I know you all like audiobooks, but maybe you know someone who has yet to dip their toe in these waters. If you know a podcast fan who’s audiobook curious, have them start with these short stories.

Eight audiobooks about queer women to add to your queue

Over at the Riot

Ya girl (it’s me, I’m the girl) talked about audiobook speed on YouTube last week. Weigh in: do you adjust your audiobook speed?

Curious about Libro.fm? Tirzah answers some FAQs about my favorite audiobook platform, one that supports indie bookstores!

Five of the best audiobooks by narrator Soneela Nankani as picked by Rioter Kendra. I’m glad it wasn’t my job to narrow it down to just five because Soneela is so fantastic! Some of my most recent faves include Internment by Samira Ahmed and Sonali Dev’s Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors.


That’s all I got today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter, peep the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Tuesday and Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
Book Radar

A Look at New Books From Susanna Clarke and David Mitchell and More Book Radar!

Welcome to another fun-filled newsletter of bookish stuff, goods, substance, things, impedimenta, kit, objects, paraphernalia, trappings, etc. I have some interesting bits and bobs to tell you about before I get back to my reading. I am about to start the upcoming Vanessa Veselka novel. I have been waiting seven years to read this, so to say I am excited would be an understatement. I AM MADE OF SQUEE.

And 365 Day Movie project update: I have watched Logan Lucky, Bridesmaids, Fighting with My Family, I Tonya, I Don’t Feel At Home in This World, Captain Marvel, and Inside Out. I reeeeeeally liked Captain Marvel! Mostly for Goose, lol.

Whatever you are doing or watching or reading this week, please remember to be kind to yourself and others. I’ll see you again on Monday! – xoxo, Liberty

Trivia question time! What is the name of Celie’s sister in The Color Purple?(Scroll to the bottom for the answer.)

Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

Pieces of Her by Karin Slaughter coverToni Collette will star in Netflix’s Pieces Of Her adaptation, based on the novel by Karin Slaughter.

Waterstones shared the cover of Piranesi, the upcoming novel by Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell author Susanna Clarke.

Edwidge Danticat won the $100,000 Vilcek Prize in Literature.

Claribel Ortega’s upcoming novel, Ghost Squad, is being adapted into a film.

Danielle Deadwyler has joined the Station Eleven adaptation.

Alice Hoffman shared the title and cover of a new Practical Magic prequel.

Here’s the latest on adaptation news for Judy Blume’s Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret.

Jenna Bush Hager’s February book club pick is The Girl with the Louding Voice by Abi Daré.

the color purpleAnd The Color Purple to return to theaters for its 35th anniversary.

Here’s the cover reveal for Master of Poisons by Andrea Hairston. And Tor also shared the cover of Burning Roses by S.L. Huang.

And here’s the cover reveal for David Mitchell’s upcoming novel, Utopia Avenue.

Here’s the first look at Legendborn by Tracy Deonn.

Sarah Rees Brennan shared the cover for the comic Fence: Striking Distance, which weaves queer romance into competitive combat sports.

Here’s the cover reveal of Rent a Boyfriend by Gloria Chao.

Victoria Lee announced her next book, which is pitched as ‘The Secret History meets Genuine Fraud and The Craft‘.

The Dark Corners of the Night, based on the third novel in Meg Gardiner’s UNSUB series, is being adapted as a series.

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:

ikengaIkenga by Nnedi Okorafor (Viking Books for Young Readers, August 18)

This is Nnedi Okorafor’s first middle grade novel! I AM SO EXCITED. I love everything she does. It’s set in Nigeria, and is about a young boy with magical superpowers who vows to avenge the death of his police chief father. YES PLEASE. P.S. I am still over the moon about the Binti adaptation news from a couple weeks ago.

What I’m reading this week.

The Subtweet: A Novel by Vivek Shraya

Hummus and Homicide (A Kebab Kitchen Mystery Book 1) by Tina Kashian

The Great Offshore Grounds by Vanessa Veselka

Greenwood: A Novel by Michael Christie

Children of the Land by Marcelo Hernandez Castillo

And this is funny.

Same, same.

Song stuck in my head:

Don’t Talk to Strangers” by Rick Springfield

Trivia answer: Nettie.

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

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book: IN THE DREAM HOUSE: A MEMOIR by Carmen Maria Machado

Welcome to Read This Book, a weekly newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!

in the dream house book coverThis week’s recommendation is In the Dream House: A Memoir by Carmen Maria Machado.

Content warning: domestic abuse, physical intimidation and emotional manipulation

“Love cannot be won or lost; a relationship doesn’t have a scoring system. We are partners, paired against the world. We cannot succeed if we are at odds with each other.”

Carmen Maria Machado is the author of Her Body and Other Parties: Stories, which was a National Book Award finalist in 2017 and one of my favorite reads of the year. She changes up genres in this latest release, which details the two very painful years she spent as a graduate student at the Iowa Writer’s Workshop and was in an emotionally abusive relationship with another woman. This is so much more than a memoir, though—Machado plays with form and tropes to tell a complex and beguiling story of her relationship. Beginning with heady infatuation, complicated by differing values, her partnership slowly but surely turns dark, until Machado finds herself alienated and held hostage by the whims of a person whose demands don’t always make sense. The chapters are brief, and labeled as devices or tropes (Dream House as Inciting Incident, Dream House as American Gothic), allowing Machado to examine this time in her life from multiple angles, through varying lenses.

But more than a story of domestic abuse, this is also an important look at domestic abuse between same-sex partners. In writing this book, Machado began researching queer intimate partner abuse and what information she could find was scant or, more often than not, deliberately buried. And so, In the Dream House becomes a touchstone book about queer domestic abuse, demanding that we shed light on this very real and important issue, for as Machado writes, “We deserve to have our wrongdoing represented as much as our heroism, because when we refuse wrongdoing as a possibility for a group of people, we refuse their humanity.”

Machado’s writing is razor-sharp, playful, powerful, and this is ultimately a hopeful book with a happy ending. I read it in a single sitting (the short chapters make it easy to say, “Just one more…”) and I could not stop thinking about the writing for days afterward. For audiobook listeners: Machado narrates the audiobook herself, although due to the experimental structure of this book, you might want to read a physical copy. (Or pick up both. You won’t regret it.)

Happy reading!

–Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, and Twitter.

Categories
The Goods

Bookish Valentine’s Gifts

Celebrate Valentine’s Day with these lovely literary gifts for your favorite book lover.

Bookish puns are the best puns. ISBN Thinking of You tote, $20.

For the literary art lover, here’s a sexy print of a Great Gatsby quote, $24.

Set the mood with a Jane Austen-inspired library candle, starting at $12.

Give your linens a literary spritz with Alice in Dreamland pillow spray, $5.70.

Jewelry is a classic Valentine’s gift choice. Go bookish with these storyteller earrings, $15.

When your Valentine loves a good cuppa, you can’t go wrong with beautifully packaged literary tea, $5.

Turn your favorite poem into customized art, $160.

Need a literary Valentine’s card to go with your perfect gift? We’ve got you covered.

Categories
Kissing Books

Fake Relationships and (Not So) Casual Sex

Happy Thursday, lovers! It’s a new month, and I’m coming in with a new attitude! There are so many new books out this week and I haven’t even done my planner for this month and I’m sort of freaking out a little bit but it’s all to our benefit so I will just breathe. Breathe with me.

Over on Book Riot

Whether you’re a Nalini Singh fan or not, this is a fun quiz.

Enter to win a Barnes and Noble gift card!

Just getting into audiobooks, or looking for an alternative to Audible? Here are all your questions answered about Libro.fm.

And I know it’s in the footer but I completely failed to include the last episode of When In Romance in the rundown last week.

Deals

Pride Prejudice and Other Flavors cover imageIf you’re okay with being hungry while you read (like, all the time), Pride, Prejudice, and other Flavors by Sonali Dev is 1.99. As I mentioned in my short review and rec of this book the first time around, there are all the content warnings: discussion of multiple past rapes (one of which included use of rohypnol); discussion of lost pregnancies and attempts to get pregnant; family discord and estrangement; brain tumors; bad reaction to potential blindness; an Assigned Criminal At Birth law enforcement interaction…I think that’s all of the big stuff. But if you feel confident reading around it, the book itself is lush and lovely…and I’m super excited to pick up Recipe for Persuasion next, because after Northanger Abbey, Persuasion is my favorite.

Black History Highlight

There’s so much to Black history, and so little romance to talk about when we talk about it. Obviously, Beverly Jenkins is the go-to when we talk about North American-focused Black history and heritage in romance, but there are other authors who have done great work writing meaningful, poignant romances featuring Black characters in our shared historical timeline.

cover of a champion's heart by piper huguleyA Champion’s Heart by Piper Huguley

Piper Huguley is most known for her Milford College series, which draws us into the lives of people living in the decades before the turn of the 20th Century, but there are so few romances set during the Great Depression that I always recommend this one to new readers. There is a couple you want to succeed in their relationship, but also in their lives, and the setting is one that leaves you regularly on edge about whether they might actually make it work. But it’s a romance, so you know things will work out some kind of way.

New Books!

There are so many new books out this week, some of which came out earlier than I expected or just sort of came out of nowhere!

Never Kiss a Duke
Megan Frampton

I missed this one last week, so I thought I’d drop it here. I don’t know what this trend with ladies owning gaming houses has come from, but I like it. Here, Ivy is in charge and hires Sebastian de Silva, former duke, now left with nothing but his charm. There’s obviously going to be some tension regarding the fact that she is his employer, but hey, if her own personal goal is to never kiss a duke, she’ll succeed (because he isn’t one anymore lolsob).

Her Twin Baby Secret
Therese Beharrie

Alexa has decided to have children on her own. Which is fine. But she hits it off with Benjamin—a business rival—after they pretend to be in a relationship for some reason, and now she wonders what the future might look like. I love Therese Beharrie’s various baby books like nobody’s business, so I’m a little biased, but I think you’ll have fun with this one.

Blame it on the Billionaire
Naima Simone

If there’s one thing Naima Simone kills us with it’s drama drama drama, and this one is definitely going to be one of those! There’s a blackout, and Nadia and Grayson take supreme advantage of it. When the lights come back on, Grayson surprises Nadia with a fake engagement proposal (ANOTHER ONE! I AM LIVING!), but there are plots afoot to take her down.

Ignite on Contact
Jaci Burton

This is the second book in Burton’s new Brotherhood by Fire series, which I was intrigued by as a big fan of the 9-1-1 universe (though I think these might have been more inspired by Chicago Fire, which I’ve never seen). In this one, younger brother Rafe is all about that casual life, and ER nurse Carmen doesn’t have time for anything more. They start out with what they both think is a little fun, and then Rafe goes and catches feelings, to his own surprise.

cover of Temporary Wife Temptation by Jayci LeeTemporary Wife Temptation
Jayci Lee

Natalie and Garrett are both in need of a spouse. Not for love and companionship, but for the sake of family pressure and other appearance-related things. So when Garrett proposes that Natalie marry him, in order to prevent his matchmaking mother from thrusting the bride of her choice upon him, Natalie agrees. They also agree they won’t have sex. Or fall in love. Hah. Yeah, cause that always works.

Hearts on Hold
Charish Reid

So there’s a sexy, tattooed children’s librarian and a “tightly wound” university professor. She comes to him with a proposal for the university and public library to work together, and the fire blazes between them almost immediately. There are sexytimes. There are apparently spreadsheets involved. That’s all I know

And then of course the ones I talked about earlier this week, A Heart of Blood and Ashes by Milla Vane and The Worst Best Man by Mia Sosa, which both deserve all the yelling.

As usual, catch me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or send me an email at wheninromance@bookriot.com if you’ve got feedback, bookrecs, or just want to say hi!

Categories
Today In Books

Barnes & Noble Did What Now?! Today In Books

Barnes & Noble Did What Now?!

The importance of inclusivity is to acknowledge that people of color/marginalized voices are equal and worthy voices. B&N and Penguin Random House missed this message and decided inclusivity means reprinting classic books with people of color on the covers. The stories, many racist, aren’t changing, making this very ill advised window dressing at best. Why not spend that time/money/energy on promoting modern books inspired by classics written by authors of color/marginalized voices? Books such as A Blade So Black by L.L. McKinney; Frankenstein in Baghdad by Ahmed Saadawi; A Summer for Scandal by Lydia San Andres; Ayesha at Last by Uzma Jalaluddin; The Weight of Feathers by Anna-Marie McLemore. Update: Barnes & Noble cancelled the event for these books and here’s their statement.

650+ Japanese Illustrated Books Online

The Metropolitan Museum of Art now has 650+ eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Japanese illustrated books digitized! Many of the works are by ukiyo-e artists, but there are also various schools of Japanese art represented. This is what the internet was invented for.

Patti Smith Helps Burgled Bookstore

Singer-songwriter, author, and poet Patti Smith heard about Portland’s Passages bookshop in Oregon being vandalized and robbed and offered to help. It took a bit for the owner to realize who it was on the phone: “In the week after the story appeared, I’d gotten a few crank calls and emails, so I was a little wary. But when she said she had read that one of her books had been taken, and that she couldn’t replace the missing Warhol but would be happy to send a box of signed copies of her books, I realised that it was Patti Smith calling.”

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – February 5

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

We’ve at long last waved adios to one hell of a January and I am proud of all of us for making it through! My man Punxsutawney Phil has done us a solid and predicted an early spring and we have Black History Month to celebrate; I don’t know what the rest of this year brings, but let us revel for now in these two Very Good things.

To the club!!


Nibbles & Sips

So what I am NOT gonna do is suggest some gross and patronizing food theme for Black History Month. If I logged on during Hispanic History Month and saw someone suggesting everyone make chimichangas for book club, I might have to take these earrings off.

I do however want to highlight a few of my favorite Black food bloggers, chefs, and TV personalities. These are all recipes I’ve made and loved from people I’ve found through podcasts, word of mouth, and my obsessive online recipe search habit because food is life.

Suggestions:

Now for Some Books!

such a fun ageSuch a Fun Age by Kiley Reid – Alix, a white influencer, hires Amira. a twenty-something Black woman, to be her young daughter’s babysitter. A surprising connection from Alix’ past and Amira’s present threatens to undo them both. This is a funny, thoughtful read about race and privilege that will be sure to spark good book club conversation, one that really dives into that whole “the road to hell is paved with good intentions” thing. (Also: Sharifah and I will be joining Jeff for a bonus episode of the Book Riot podcast to discuss this very book. Be on the lookout for that in the next few days; I have feelings!)

Trailblazer: A Pioneering Journalists Fight to Make the Media Look More Like America by Dorothy Butler Gilliam – Dorothy Butler Gilliam is the first Black woman to write for the Washington Post, a fact I’m ashamed to admit I didn’t know until last year when I picked up this book. This is a memoir of her life and experience breaking down barriers, but also a sort of crash course on the history of Black journalism in America.

Ghost Boys by Jewell Parker Rhodes – Jerome is a twelve year old boy who dies when a police officer mistakes his toy gun for a real one and shoots him. As a ghost, Jerome befriends Sarah, the daughter of a white police offer and only living person who can see him, as well as the ghost of Emmett Till. He observes the complete devastation his death has wreaked on his family and community, and confronts this country’s long history of violence against Black people. Yes, this is a middle grade read, but don’t let that dissuade you from reading it. It packs a punch and asks a lot of tough but important questions, ones that we need to discuss with children early on.

Suggestion Section

Calling all MythBusters fans! Adam Savage is starting a book club and wants you to join.

February book club picks from PBS and Jenna Bush Hager

Is Reese’s Book Club more potent than Oprah’s?

An orthodontist in Indiana created Connections Book Club, a book club that brings together health-care practitioners passionate about innovation and partnering with other professionals to better treat their patients.

Why one reader skips her book club meetings – sometimes this is just how it goes!


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, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Tuesday and Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

More Resources:
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page