Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Peek Over Our Shoulders What Rioters are Reading on September 28, 2017
Peek Over Our Shoulders What Rioters are Reading on September 28, 2017 In this feature at Book Riot, we give you a glimpse of what we are reading this very moment. Here is what the Rioters are reading today (as in literally today). This is whatâs on their bedside table (or the floor, work bag, desk, whatevskis). Gird your loinsâ"this list combined will make your TBR list EXPLODE. Weâve shown you ours, now show us yours; let us know what youâre reading (right this very moment) in the comment section below! Liberty Hardy Binti: The Night Masquerade by Nnedi Okorafor (Tor.com, January 16, 2018): The final book in the freaking fantastic Binti trilogy. One word: eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! (e-galley) Anthony Karcz Apex (Hunter) by Mercedes Lackey: The final entry in Lackeys Hunger Games meets DD Monster Manual series. Ive been hooked since the first book, with its no-nonsense protagonist and gonzo monsters on practically every page. Im excited to see where Joy ends up, but sad to leave this world behind. (E-book) Kate Scott The Sacred Enneagram by Christopher L. Heuertz: Iâm always game for a new book on the Enneagram! (Paperback) Ilana Masad Prosperoâs Daughter by Elizabeth Nunez: Iâm taking a fascinating class right now in which we read this book, and our professor kept bringing us back to this one extremely salient pointâ"this retelling of The Tempest by William Shakespeare is told from within an already-colonized space, and doesnât give its Caliban character a history of pre-colonization. The book is spectacularly discomfiting (which is good), sometimes a little heavy handed, but ultimately a needed exploration of the continued effects of European colonization of the Caribbean. (Hardcover) Claire Handscombe Stay With Me by Ayobami Adebayo: Iâve wanted to read this ever since it was mentioned at the Buzz panel at BookExpo, and Iâve convinced my book club to read it with me. Win! (galley) Celine Low The Glass Palace by Amitav Ghosh: Iâm trying this new thing whereby I organise my reading based on metaphor (now doing glass) and this is the next highly rated one on my list. Any recommendations welcome! S.W. Sondheimer IQ by Joe Ide: This is one of the books Kareem Abdul-Jabbar recommended in the interview we posted last week and it is phenomenal. Started it this afternoon and already on pg 229. Think Sherlock Holmes as a young black man growing up in LA, his clients insanely wealthy rappers as well as young Latinx women kidnapped off the street by a pedophile. Iâm going to have to fight myself hard not to stay up and finish this one tonight. Sarah Nicolas They Both Die at the End by Adam Silvera: Iâm going to be finished with this book by the time this post goes live because Iâm just tearing through it. Itâs so good! Itâs about two teenage boys who are initially strangers spending their last day on earth together. (audiobook) Nicole Froio We Were Eight Years in Power by Ta-Nehesi Coates: Coates is one of my favorite writers and I canât wait to read this collection of essays about the Obama years. (arc) Jaime Herndon The Glass Eye by Jeannie Vanasco: I just started this memoir about family, the stories we tell ourselves, and mental health. And its captivating. (Galley) Teresa Preston The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America by Richard Rothstein: The magazine I used to work for published several articles by Rothstein on segregation, so I was excited to see heâd written a whole book on the topic. The book is also on the longlist for the National Book Award. (Hardcover) Steph Auteri Clean Room Vol. 3: Waiting for the Stars to Fall by Gail Simone, Walter Geovani, Sanya Anwar, and Quinton Winter: There was a conversation among fellow Book Rioters about spooky comics, and Clean Room came up. I like spooky. I read the first two volumes in one quick gulp through Hoopla, and now Iâm on the third. (Ebook) Laura Sackton Independent People by Halldor Laxness: Iâve been obsessed with Iceland ever since I had the chance to travel there last fall. So Iâve decided to work my way through Icelandic literature, starting with Halldor Laxness, the only Icelander ever to win a Nobel prize and beloved in his country. So far, Independent People is a gritty and rather gloomy look at sheep farming in the Icelandic countryside. In other words: awesome. (Audiobook) Elizabeth Allen Lily and the Octopus by Steven Rowley: I read this for my local indieâs bookgroup. With the exception of The Art of Racing in the Rain, Iâve been kind of over emotional stories about beloved family pets dying. But, like Garth Steinâs book, Rowley finds a completely new and unique way to discuss the painful yet beautiful journey of saying goodbye to a member of your family. He combines stark reality and fabulism to really express what it feels like to live in that stagnant time between knowing your pet will be leaving you soon and actually having to make that final, difficult decision. (Paperback) Priya Sridhar Certain Dark Things by Silvia Moreno-Garcia: Silvia is a wonderful editor, and a storyteller. She takes us to Mexico City, where Atl, a woman with Aztec origins and a need to drink blood, has to go on the lam when a gang targets her. She takes an unwitting donor with her, and starts getting attached to the young Domingo. Meanwhile her pursuers, who also have supernatural roots, contend with a reckless member and the stricter laws that donât allow for ample feeding. I love this world so much, and the rich language within the prose. (eBook) Jan Rosenberg The Idiot by Elif Batuman: I have heard everyone talking about this book. I listened to a podcast that mentioned a few of the subtle, funny moments that make this book so poignant. Like how Selin canât decide to answer a classmate when he stops to ask how she is, so she stares at him until he just gives up and walks away. I was on the fence for a while, but Iâm halfway through and I love it so much. I want to linger with this book so that it takes longer to finish. Selin is the daughter of Turkish immigrants and has just arrived at Harvard from New Jersey. Harvard is supposed to be a haven for intellectuals, but the students and professors are hilariously lost, and no more confident in themselves than Selin is. Selin is such a fresh, honest, and brave young woman. And Iâm pretty sure this book makes an argument for wordplay as foreplay. I may have to check out Batumanâs other novel when Iâm finished. (Hardcover) Katie McLain The Devotion of Suspect X by Keigo Higashino: I found a copy of this at a nearby used book sale, and I keep hearing so many good things about Higashinoâs mysteries that I decided to grab it. Iâm not far into it, but I can tell already itâs a compelling story. (Paperback) Derek Attig Bearly a Lady by Cassandra Khaw: I was desperately in need of something fun and sparkly and delightful, and so I pounced on this werebear-with-a-vampire-roommate story. I donât regret it. Not a bit. (ebook) Jess Plummer The Three Lives of James Madison: Genius, Partisan, President by Noah Feldman: I was inspired by Matt Grantâs presidential biography challenge to try working my way through biographies of every US president so far over the next four years. Three and half down, a daunting number to go! (Digital ARC) Jen Sherman I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou: This is one of my books for the Read Harder challenge, which Iâm desperately trying to finish in the next six weeks! The book is harder to read than I thought it would be, but as I said to my husband last night, itâs narrated by an African American child living in the American south in the 1930s. It was never going to be a light and fluffy read. (Library paperback) Rebecca Hussey Border: A Journey to the Edge of Europe by Kapka Kassabova: First, this is nonfiction published by Graywolf Press, and that makes it automatically worth checking out. But itâs also a mix of memoir, travel writing, and social/political observations and analysis, a combination of genres I canât resist. Fifty pages into this exploration of the border areas in Bulgaria, Turkey, and Greece, Iâm finding it fascinating. (Paperback ARC) Adiba Jaigirdar The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock by Imogen Hermes Gowar: Iâm basically on board for any book that is about mermaids. And this one had mermaids in the title! So far, itâs not exactly what I expected the book to be, but the prose is beautiful and Iâm certainly intrigued. (Digital ARC) Jenn Northington Basic Witches by Jaya Saxena and Jess Zimmerman: I picked this up on a whim at BEA, expecting it to be a very silly but fun millennial grimoireâ"a novelty book, something I might flip through once and then pass along. Readers, I read it cover to cover, and Iâm keeping my copy forever. Saxena and Zimmerman do an excellent job of talking about intention setting as ritual, laying out the history of witchesâ"particularly in the USâ"and their relationship with feminism, AND of making me laugh out loud with occasional silliness. This book is a gemâ"get it for you, for your girl gang, and any woman who might be occasionally tempted to hex a catcaller. Jessica Yang The Disappearance of Ember Crow by Ambelin Kwaymullina: I read The Interrogation of Ashala Wolf a while back and loved it, so of course the sequel is on my to-read list! (hardcover) Tasha Brandstatter A Kiss in Lavender by Laura Florand: The latest release by one of my favorite authors. (ebook) Emily Martin All the Ugly and Wonderful Things by Bryn Greenwood: This was my pick for the book club Iâm in, and Iâm absolutely loving everything about this book. I know that Book of the Month chose it for their book of the year in 2016, and I can see why. This is a very unique book that leaves me feeling conflicted about each and every character. Honestly, Iâm nearly finished with the book and I have no idea how it should end or how I should even be rooting for it to end. Whatever happens, I canât put it down. (hardcover) Susie Rodarme Hunger by Roxane Gay: I have finally started this book. I have been circling it since it came out, trying to be brave enough to read it, or maybe waiting for when I really needed it, which seems to be right now. (hardcover) Simone Jung Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Saenz. Iâve been on a YA kick lately and getting through my TBR. I picked up this book recently because Iâve heard so many good things in the past, and the number of awards tacked onto this book cover made me wonder how good it is. Since Iâm the type of person who has to find things out for myself, I had to read it for myself. I canât believe how amazing this story is following two boys on their way to discovering their lives as well as themselves. (paperback) Alison Doherty The Purity Myth: How Americaâs Obsession with Virginity Is Hurting Young Women by Jessica Valenti: Ooof this book is putting me in a dark mood, but I also canât stop talking about what Iâm learning to everyone I meet. From abstinence only âeducationâ programs to abortion laws and the treatment of assault victims, Iâm captivated at how society from courtroom to classrooms systematically devalues women to little more than their sexuality through an emphasis on sexual purity. The things that are hard about reading this book are the same things that make it so important. Deya Bhattacharya HomeFire by Kamila Shamsie: This was longlisted for the Man Booker this year and I know this book has been doing the rounds on Instagram so naturally, I was curious. Picked it up on my birthday rather abruptly; as traditional goes, I buy at least one book on my birthday, and it was almost 9 pm with the neighbourhood indie closing, so I just grabbed it. Now Iâm awake all night telling myselfâ"âDeya, just one more chapter!â What a read this is! (Hardcover) Jamie Canaves The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra (Baby Ganesh Agency Investigation #1) by Vaseem Khan: On the day of his retirement (due to health issues) Inspector Ashwin Chopra inherits a baby elephant and comes across a case of a dead boy he canât let go of. I picked this up in hopes that I will learn the secret to someone gifting me a baby elephant but also I am always here for a mystery set in Mumbai, India. (ebook) Karina Glaser A Boy Called Bat by Elana K. Arnold: A lovely chapter book about a boy on the autism spectrum who falls in love with a rescued baby skunk, and how he tries to convince his mother to let him keep it as a pet. A sweet story with realistically drawn characters and honest emotions. (Library Hardcover) Margaret Kingsbury We Should All Be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: Um, Iâm reading this because itâs short. Okay, so I have more reasons than that, but Iâm running behind on my yearly reading goal. At 52 pages, I should be able to finish this tonight in a single sitting. But of course Iâm also reading it because Iâm a feminist and I want to read it⦠(Paperback) Trisha Brown Completely by Ruthie Knox: Ruthie Knox is one of the first romance authors whose work I read, and sheâs definitely the first whose backlist I immediately sought out and devoured. After stepping away from writing for a couple of yearsâ"an eternity in romance timeâ"Knox returned this year with a couple of new releases, including new release Completely, and I am delighted to have her back. (e-galley) jessica pryde Acting on Impulse by Mia Sosa: I one-clicked this the day it came out (if you know me, star/not-star romances are my total tropetonite) but Ive also got a library stack a mile high so this one wasnt started until all I had was my phone and a long wait for someone and Im so glad I did. Those library books can wait. (ebook) *** What are you reading? Save
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