Tumgik
#noopiming
queerliblib · 6 months
Text
Queer books?? fuck yeah. Indigenous Queer books for Indigenous Heritage Month??!? even better.
290 notes · View notes
Tumblr media
vote yes if you have finished the entire book.
vote no if you have not finished the entire book.
(faq · submit a book)
5 notes · View notes
Note
books (assuming it’s okay to submit more than one):
Ángeles Vicente, Zezé (1909)
Rosa Guy, Ruby (1976)
Deborah Hautzig, Hey, Dollface (1978)
Samuel R. Delany, Tales of Nevèrÿon (1979)
Elizabeth A. Lynn, Watchtower (1979)
Nancy Garden, Annie on My Mind (1982)
Alice Walker, The Color Purple (1982)
John Preston, Franny, the Queen of Provincetown (1983)
Samuel R. Delany, Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand (1984)
Timothy Findley, Not Wanted on the Voyage (1984)
Jeanette Winterson, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit (1985)
Chrystos, Not Vanishing (1988)
Ian Iqbal Rashid, Black Markets, White Boyfriends, and Other Elisions (1991)
Crìsdean Whyte (Christopher Whyte), Uirsgeul / Myth (1991)
Carlos Sanrune, El gladiador de Chueca (1992)
Tom Lennon, When Love Comes to Town (1993)
Fernanda Farias de Albuquerque and Maurizio Jannelli, Princesa (1994)
Qiu Miaojin, Notes of a Crocodile (1994)
Shyam Selvadurai, Funny Boy (1994)
Gregory Maguire, Wicked (1995)
Christos Tsiolkas, Loaded (1995)
Nina Revoyr, The Necessary Hunger (1997)
Lola Van Guardia (Isabel Franc), Con pedigree (1997)
Tom Lennon, Crazy Love (1999)
Micheál Ó Conghaile, Sna Fir (1999)
Laurie J. Marks, Fire Logic (2002)
Nalo Hopkinson, The Salt Roads (2003)
Esdras Parra, Aún no (2004)
Barry McCrea, The First Verse (2005)
Manuel Tzoc, Gay(o) (2010)
Tama Wise, Street Dreams (2012)
Dane Figueroa Edidi, Yemaya’s Daughters (2013)
Jamie Berrout, Otros Valles (2014)
Niviaq Korneliussen, Homo sapienne (2014)
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, This Accident of Being Lost (2016)
Nathan Niigan Noodin Adler, Wrist (2016)
Trifonia Meliba Obono, La bastarda (2016)
Sofia Samatar, The Winged Histories (2016)
Kai Cheng Thom, Fierce Femmes and Notorious Liars (2016)
jia qing wilson-yang, Small Beauty (2016)
Billy-Ray Belcourt, This Wound Is a World (2017)
Elliot Cooper, Rogue Wolf (2017)
Kevin Lambert, Querelle de Roberval (2018)
Joshua Whitehead, Jonny Appleseed (2018)
Masande Ntshanga, Triangulum (2019)
Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies (2020)
Tlotlo Tsamaase, The Silence of the Wilting Skin (2020)
Bendi Barrett, Empire of the Feast (2022)
Simon Jimenez, The Spear Cuts Through Water (2022)
Kōtuku Titihuia Nuttall, Tauhou (2022)
if you’d rather keep it to one book at a time: Samuel R. Delany, Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand (1984).
Thank you so much for this fantastic list! They're all queued.
11 notes · View notes
meta-squash · 4 months
Text
Squash's Book Roundup 2023
Last year I read 67 books. This year my goal was 70, but I very quickly passed that, so in total I read 92 books this year. Honestly I have no idea how I did it, it just sort of happened. My other goal was to read an equal amount of fiction and nonfiction this year (usually fiction dominates), and I was successful in that as well. Another goal which I didn’t have at the outset but which kind of organically happened after the first month or so of reading was that I wanted to read mostly strange/experimental/transgressive/unusual fiction. My nonfiction choices were just whatever looked interesting or cool, but I also organically developed a goal of reading a wider spread of subjects/genres of nonfiction. A lot of the books I read this year were books I’d never heard of, but stumbled across at work. Also, finally more than 1/3 of what I read was published in the 21st century.
I’ll do superlatives and commentary at the end, so here is what I read in 2023:
-The Commitments by Roddy Doyle -A Simple Story: The Last Malambo by Leila Guerriero -The Hero With A Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell -Uzumaki by Junji Ito -Chroma by Derek Jarman -The Emerald Mile: The epic story of the fastest ride in history through the Grand Canyon by Kevin Fedarko -Venus by Suzan-Lori Parks -The Hearing Trumpet by Leonora Carrington -Sacred Sex: Erotic writings from the religions of the world by Robert Bates -The Virginia State Colony For Epileptics And The Feebleminded by Molly McCully Brown -A Spy In The House Of Love by Anais Nin -The Sober Truth: Debunking the bad science behind 12-step programs and the rehab industry by Lance Dodes -The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea by Yukio Mishima -The Aliens by Annie Baker -The Criminal Child And Other Essays by Jean Genet -Aimee and Jaguar: A Love Story, Berlin 1943 by Erica Fischer -The Master And Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov -The Mustache by Emmanuel Carriere -Maldoror by Comte de Lautreamont -Narrow Rooms by James Purdy -At Your Own Risk by Derek Jarman -Escape From Freedom by Erich Fromm -Countdown: A Subterranean Magazine #3 by Underground Press Syndicate Collective -Fabulosa! The story of Britain's secret gay language by Paul Baker -The Golden Spruce: A true story of myth, madness and greed by John Vaillant -Querelle de Roberval by Kevin Lambert -Fire The Bastards! by Jack Green -Closer by Dennis Cooper -The Woman In The Dunes by Kobo Abe -Opium: A Diary Of His Cure by Jean Cocteau -Worker-Student Action Committees France May '68 by Fredy Perlman and R. Gregoire -Capitalist Realism by Mark Fisher -The Sound Of Waves by Yukio Mishima -One Day In My Life by Bobby Sands -Corydon by Andre Gide -Noopiming by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson -Man Alive: A true story of violence, forgiveness and becoming a man by Thomas Page McBee -The Artist's Reality: Philosophies of Art by Mark Rothko -Damage by Josephine Hart -Schoolgirl by Osamu Dazai -The Passion According to G.H. by Clarice Lispector -The Sex Revolts: Gender, Rebellion and Rock n Roll by Simon Reynolds and Joy Press -The Traffic Power Structure by planka.nu -Bird Man: The many faces of Robert Straud by Jolene Babyak -Seven Dada Manifestos by Tristan Tzara
-The Journalist by Harry Mathews -Bullshit Jobs by David Graeber -Moscow To The End Of The Line by Venedikt Erofeev -Morvern Callar by Alan Warner -The Poetics Of Space by Gaston Bachelard -A Boy's Own Story by Edmund White -The Coming Insurrection by The Invisible Committee -Jesus' Son by Denis Johnson -Notes From The Sick Room by Steve Finbow -Artaud The Momo by Antonin Artaud -Doctor Rat by William Kotzwinkle -Recollections Of A Part-Time Lady by Minette -trans girl suicide museum by Hannah Baer -The 99% Invisible City by Roman Mars -Sweet Days Of Discipline by Fleur Jaeggy -Breath: The new science of a lost art by James Nestor -What We See When We Read by Peter Mendelsund -The Cardiff Tapes (1972) by Garth Evans -The Ark Sakura by Kobo Abe -Mad Like Artaud by Sylvere Lotringer -The Story Of The Eye by Georges Bataille -Little Blue Encyclopedia (For Vivian) by Hazel Jane Plante -Blood And Guts In High School by Kathy Acker -Summer Fun by Jeanne Thornton -Splendid's by Jean Genet -VAS: An Opera In Flatland by Steve Tomasula -Sorry I'm Late, I Didn't Want To Come: One introvert's year of saying yes by Jessica Pan -Whores For Gloria by William T. Vollmann -The Notebooks by Jean-Michel Basquiat, Larry Walsh (editor) -L'Astragale by Albertine Sarrazin -The Decay Of Lying and other essays by Oscar Wilde -The Immortal Life Of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot -Open Throat by Henry Hoke -Prisoner Of Love by Jean Genet -The Fifth Wound by Aurora Mattia -The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx -My Friend Anna: The true story of a fake heiress by Rachel DeLoache Williams -Mammother by Zachary Schomburg -Building The Commune: Radical democracy in Venezuela by George Cicarello-Maher -Blackouts by Justin Torres -Cheapjack by Philip Allingham -Near To The Wild Heart by Clarice Lispector -The Trayvon Generation by Elizabeth Alexander -Skye Papers by Jamika Ajalon -Exercises In Style by Raymon Queneau -Tender Buttons by Gertrude Stein -The Feather Thief: Beauty, Obsession, and the Natural History Heist of the Century by Kirk Wallace Johnson
~Some number factoids~ I read 46 fiction and 46 nonfiction. One book, The Fifth Wound by Aurora Mattia, is fictionalized/embellished autobiography, so it could go half in each category if we wanted to do that, but I put it in the fiction category. I tried to read as large a variety of nonfiction subjects/genres as I could. A lot of the nonfiction I read has overlapping subjects, so I’ve chosen to sort by the one that seems the most overarching. By subject, I read: 5 art history/criticism, 5 biographies, 1 black studies, 1 drug memoir, 2 essay collections, 2 history, 2 Latin American studies, 4 literary criticism, 1 music history, 2 mythology/religion, 1 nature, 4 political science, 2 psychology, 5 queer studies, 2 science, 1 sociology, 1 travel, 2 true crime, 3 urban planning. I also read more queer books in general (fiction and nonfiction) than I have in years, coming in at 20 books.
The rest of my commentary and thoughts under a cut because it's fairly long
Here’s a photo of all the books I read that I own a physical copy of (minus Closer by Dennis Cooper which a friend is borrowing):
Tumblr media
~Superlatives and Thoughts~
I read so many books this year I’m going to do a runner-up for each superlative category.
Favorite book: This is such a hard question this year. I think I gave out more five-star ratings on Goodreads this year than I ever have before. The books that got 5 stars from me this year were A Simple Story: The Last Malambo by Leila Guerriero, Capitalist Realism by Mark Fisher, The Emerald Mile by Kevin Fedarko, The Mustache by Emmanuel Carriere, The Passion According to GH by Clarice Lispector, trans girl suicide museum by Hannah Baer, The Fifth Wound by Aurora Mattia, Mammother by Zachary Schomburg, and Blackouts by Justin Torres. But I think my favorite book of the year was The Fifth Wound by Aurora Mattia. It is an embellished, fictionalized biography of the author’s life, chronicling a breakup that occurred just before she began her transition, and then a variety of emotional events afterward and her renewal of a connection with that person after a number of years had passed. The writing style is beautiful, extremely decadent, and sits in a sort of venn diagram of poetry, theory, fantasy and biography. My coworker who recommended this book to me said no one she’d recommended it to had finished it because they found it so weird. I read the first 14 pages very slowly because I didn’t exactly know what the book was doing, but I quickly fell completely in love with the imagery and the formatting style and the literary and religious references that have been worked into the book both as touchstones for biography and as vehicles for fantasy. There is a video I remember first seeing years ago, in which a beautiful pinkish corn snake slithers along a hoop that is part of a hanging mobile made of driftwood and macrame and white beads and prism crystals. This was the image that was in the back of my head the entire time I was reading The Fifth Wound, because it matched the decadence and the strangeness and the crystalline beauty of the language and visuals in the book. It is a pretty intense book, absolutely packed with images and emotion and ideas and preserved vignettes where reality and fantasy and theory overlap. It’s one of those books that’s hard to describe because it’s so full. It’s dense not in that the words or ideas are hard to understand, but in that it’s overflowing with imagery and feelings, and it feels like an overflowing treasure chest. Runner-up:The Mustache by Emmanuel Carriere. However, this book wins for a different superlative, so I’ve written more about it there.
Least favorite book: Querelle de Roberval by Kevin Lambert. I wrote a whole long review of it. In summary, Lambert’s book takes its name from Querelle de Brest, a novel by Jean Genet, and is apparently meant to be an homage to Genet’s work. Unfortunately, Lambert seems to misunderstand or ignore all the important aspects of Genet’s work that make it so compelling, and instead twists certain motifs Genet uses as symbols of love or transcendence into meaningless or negative connotations. He also attempts to use Genet’s mechanic of inserting the author into the narrative and allowing the author to have questionable or conflicting morals in order to emphasize certain aspects of the characters or narrative, except he does so too late in the game and ends up just completely undermining everything he writes. This book made me feel insulted on behalf of Jean Genet and all the philosophical thought he put into his work. Runner-up: What We See When We Read by Peter Mendelsund. This graphic designer claims that when people read they don’t actually imagine what characters look like and can’t conjure up an image in their head when asked something like “What does Jane Eyre look like to you?” Unfortunately, there’s nothing scientific in the book to back this up and it’s mostly “I” statements, so it’s more like “What Peter Mendelsund Sees (Or Doesn’t See) When He Reads”. It’s written in what seems to be an attempt to mimic Marshall McLuhan’s style in The Medium Is The Massage, but it isn’t done very well. I spent most of my time reading this book thinking This does not reflect my experience when I read novels so I think really it’s just a bad book written by someone who maybe has some level of aphantasia or maybe is a visual but not literary person, and who assumes everyone else experiences the same thing when they read. (Another runner-up would be The Hero With A Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell, but I think that’s a given because it’s an awful piece of revisionist, racist trash, so I won’t write a whole thing about it. I can if someone wants me to.)
Most surprising/unexpected book: The Mustache by Emmanuel Carriere. This book absolutely wins for most surprising. However, I don’t want to say too much about it because the biggest surprise is the end. It was the most shocking, most unexpected and bizarre endings to a novel I’ve read in a long time, and I absolutely loved it. It was weird from the start and it just kept getting weirder. The unnamed narrator decides, as a joke, to shave off the moustache he’s had for his entire adult life. When his wife doesn’t react, he assumes that she’s escalating their already-established tradition of little pranks between each other. But then their mutual friends say nothing about the change, and neither do his coworkers, and he starts spiral into confusion and paranoia. I don’t want to spoil anything else because this book absolutely blew me away with its weirdness and its existential dread and anyone who likes weird books should read it. Runner-up: Morvern Callar by Alan Warner. I don’t even know what compelled me to open this book at work, but I’m glad I did. The book opens on Christmas, where the main character, Morvern, discovers her boyfriend dead by suicide on the kitchen floor of their flat. Instead of calling the police or her family, she takes a shower, gets her things and leaves for work. Her narrative style is strange, simultaneously very detached and extremely emotional, but emotional in an abstract way, in which descriptions and words come out stilted or strangely constructed. The book becomes a narrative of Morvern’s attempts to find solitude and happiness, from the wilderness of Scotland to late night raves and beaches in an unnamed Mediterranean city. The entire book is scaffolded by a built-in playlist. Morvern’s narrative is punctuated throughout by accounts of exactly what she’s listening to on her Walkman. The narrative style and the playlist and the bizarre behavior of the main character were not at all what I was expecting when I opened the book, but I read the entire book in about 3 hours and I was captivated the whole time. If you like the Trainspotting series of books, I would recommend this one for sure.
Most fun book: The Emerald Mile by Kevin Fedarko. This book was amazing. It was like reading an adventure novel and a thriller and a book on conservationism all wrapped into one and it was clearly very passionately written and it was a blast. I picked it up because I was pricing it at work and I read the captions on one of the photo inserts, which intrigued me, so I read the first page, and then I couldn’t stop. The two main narratives in the book are the history of the Grand Canyon (more specifically the damming of the Colorado River) and the story of a Grand Canyon river guide called Kenton Grua, who decided with two of his river guide friends to break the world record for fastest boat ride down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon. The book is thoroughly researched, and reaches back to the first written record of the canyon, then charts the history of the canyon and the river up to 1983 when Grua made his attempt to race down the river, and then the aftermath and what has happened to everyone in the years since. All of the historical figures as well as the “current” figures of 1983 come to life, and are passionately portrayed. It’s a genuine adventure of a book, and I highly recommend it. Runner-up: Summer Fun by Jeanne Thornton. It asks “What if Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys was actually a trans woman?” Actually, that’s not quite it. It asks “What if a trans woman living in poverty in southwest America believed to an almost spiritual level that Brian Wilson was a trans woman?” The main character and narrator, Gala, is convinced that the lead singer of her favorite band, the Get Happies, (a fictional but fairly obvious parallel to the Beach Boys) is a trans woman. Half the book is her writing out her version of the singer’s life history, and the other half is her life working at a hostel in Truth Or Consequences, New Mexico, where she meets a woman who forces her out of her comfort zone and encourages her to face certain aspects of her self and identity and her connection with others. It’s a weird novel, and definitely not for everyone, but it’s fun. I was reading it on the train home and I was so into it that I missed my stop and had to get off at the next station and wait 20 minutes for the train going back the other way.
Book that taught me the most: Breath: The new science of a lost art by James Nestor. In it, Nestor explores why humans as a general population are so bad at breathing properly. He interviews scientists and alternative/traditional health experts, archaeologists, historians and religious scholars. He uses himself as a guinea pig to experiment with different breathing techniques from ancient meditation styles to essentially overdosing on oxygen in a lab-controlled environment to literally plugging his nose shut to only mouth-breathe for two weeks (and then vice-versa with nose breathing). It was interesting to see a bunch of different theories a laid out together regarding what kind of breathing is best, as well as various theories on the history of human physiology and why breathing is hard. Some of it is scientific, some pseudoscience, some just ancient meditation techniques, but he takes a crack at them all. What was kind of cool is that he tries every theory and experiment with equal enthusiasm and doesn’t really seem to favor any one method. Since he’s experimenting on himself, a lot of it is about the effects the experiments had on him specifically and his experiences with different types of breathing. His major emphasis/takeaway is that focusing on breathing and learning to change the ways in which we breathe will be beneficial in the long run (and that we should all breath through our noses more). While I don’t think changing how you breathe is a cure-all (some of the pseudoscience he looks at in this book claims so) I certainly agree that learning how to breath better is a positive goal. Runner-up: The Sober Truth by Lance Dodes. I say runner-up because a lot of the content of the book is things that I had sort of vague assumptions about based on my knowledge of addiction and AA and mental illness in general. But Dodes put into words and illustrated with numbers and anecdotes and case studies what I just kind of had a vague feeling about. It was cool to see AA so thoroughly debunked by an actual psychiatrist and in such a methodical way, since my skepticism about it has mostly been based on the experiences of people I know in real life, anecdotes I’ve read online, or musicians/writers/etc I’m a fan of that went through it and were negatively affected.
Most interesting/thought provoking book: Mammother by Zachary Schomburg. The biggest reason this book was so interesting is because the little world in which it exists is so strange and yet so utterly complete. In a town called Pie Time (where birds don’t exist and the main form of work is at the beer-and-cigarettes factory) a young boy called Mano who has been living his childhood as a girl decides that he is now a man and that it’s time for him to grow up. As this happens, the town is struck by an affliction called God’s Finger. People die seemingly out of nowhere, from a hole in their chest, and some object comes out of the hole. Mano collects the things that come out of these holes, and literally holds them in order to love them, but the more he collects, the bigger he becomes as he adds objects to his body. A capitalist business called XO shows up, trying to convince the people of Pie Time that they can protect themselves from God’s Finger with a number of enterprises, and starts to slowly take over the town. But Mano doesn’t believe death is something that should be run from. This book is so pretty, and the symbolism/metaphors, even when obvious, feel as though they belong organically in the world. A quote on the back of the book says it is “as nearly complete a world as can be”, and I think that’s a very accurate description. The story is interesting, the characters are compelling, and the magical realist world in which the story exists is fascinating. Runner up: trans girl suicide museum by Hannah Baer. This is a series of essays taken (for the most part) from Baer’s blog posts. They span a chunk of time in which she writes her thoughts and musings on her experience transition and transgender existence in general. It is mostly a series of pieces reflecting on “early” stages of transition. But I thought it was really cool to see an intellectual and somewhat philosophical take on transition, written by someone who has only been publicly out for a few years, and therefore is looking at certain experiences with a fresh gaze. As the title suggests, a lot of the book is a bit sad, but it’s not all doom and gloom. A lot of the emphasis is on the important of community when it comes to the experience of starting to transition and the first few years, and the importance of community on the trans experience in general. I really liked reading Hannah Baer’s thoughts as a queer intellectual who was writing about this stuff as she experienced it (or not too long after) rather than writing about the experience of early transition years and years down the line. It meant the writing was very sharp and the emotion was clear and not clouded by nostalgia.
Other thoughts/commentary on books I don’t have superlatives for:
I’m glad my first (full) book read in 2023 was A Simple Story: The Last Malambo by Leila Guierrero. It’s a small, compact gem of a book that follows the winner of an Argentinian dance competition. The Malambo is a traditional dance, and the competition is very fierce, and once someone wins, they can never compete again. The author follows the runner-up of the previous year, who has come to compete again. It paints a vivid picture of the history of the dance, the culture of the competition, and the character of the dancer the author has chosen to follow. It’s very narrowly focused, which makes it really compelling.
The Hearing Trumpet by Leonora Carrington could have easily won for most fun or most interesting book. Carrington was a surrealist writer and painter (and was in a relationship with Max Ernst until she was institutionalized and he was deported by the Nazis). In The Hearing Trumpet, an elderly woman called Marian is forced by her family to go live in an old ladies’ home. The first strange thing about the place is that all of the little cabins each woman lives in is shaped like some odd object, like an iron, or ice cream, or a rabbit. The other old women at the institution are a mixed bag, and the warden of the place is hostile. Marian starts to suspect that there are secrets, and even witchcraft involved, and she and a few of the other ladies start to try and unravel the occult mysteries hidden in the grounds of the home. The whole book is fun and strange, and the ending is an extremely entertaining display of feminist occult surrealism.
Sacred Sex: Erotica writings from the religions of the world by Robert Bates was a book I had to read for research for my debunking of Withdrawn Traces. It was really very interesting, but it was also hilarious to read because maybe 5% of any of the texts included were actually erotic. It should have been called “romantic writings from the religions of the world” because so little of the writing had anything to do with sex, even in a more metaphorical sense.
Every time I read Yukio Mishima I’m reminded how much I love his style. The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea almost usurped The Temple of the Golden Pavilion as my favorite Mishima novel. I’m fascinated with the way that Mishima uses his characters to explore the circumstance of having very intense feelings or reactions towards something and simultaneously wanting to experience that, while also wanting to have complete control and not feel them at all. There’s a scene in this novel where Noboru and his friends brutally kill and dissect a cat; it’s an intense and vividly rendered scene, made all the more intense by Noboru desperately conflicted between feeling affected by the killing and wanting to force himself to feel nothing. The amazing subtle theme running through the book is the difference between Noboru’s intense emotions and his desire/struggle to control them and subdue them versus Ryuji’s more subtle emotion that grows through the book despite his natural reserve. I love endings like the one in this book, where it “cuts to black” and you don’t actually see the final act, it’s simply implied.
In 2016 or 2017, I ran lights for a showcase for the drama department at UPS (I can’t remember now what it was) that included a bunch of scenes from various plays. I remember a segment from Hir by Taylor Mac, and a scene from The Aliens by Annie Baker. In the scene that I saw, one of the characters describes how when he was a boy, he couldn’t stop saying the word ladder, and the monologue culminates in a full paragraph that is just the word “ladder.” I can’t remember who was acting in the one that I saw at UPS, but that monologue blew me away, the way that one word repeated 127 conveyed so much. This year a collection of Annie Baker’s plays came in at work so I sat down and read the whole play and it was just incredible. I’d love to see the full play live, it’s absolutely captivating.
Narrow Rooms by James Purdy was a total diamond in the rough. It takes place in Appalachia, in perhaps the 1950s although it’s somewhat hard to tell. It follows the strange gay entanglement between four adult men in their 20s, who have known each other all their lives. It traces threads of bizarre codependency, and the lines crossed between love and hate. The main character, Sidney, has just returned home after serving a sentence for manslaughter. On his return, he finds that an old lover has been rendered disabled in an accident, and that an old school rival/object of obsession has been waiting for him. This rival, nicknamed “The Renderer” because of an old family occupation, has been watching Sidney all their lives. Both of them hate the other, but know that they’re destined to meet in some way. Caught in the middle of their strange relationship are Gareth, Sidney’s now-disabled former lover, and Brian, a young man who thinks he’s in love with The Renderer. The writing style took me some time to get used to, as it is written as though by someone who has taught themselves, or has only had basic classes on fiction writing. But the plot itself is so strange and the characters are so stilted in their own internality that it actually fits really well. Like The Mustache, this book had one of the strangest, most intensely visceral and shocking endings I’ve read in a while. It was also “one that got away.” I read it at work, then put it on my staff picks shelf, and only realized after someone else bought it that I should have kept it for myself.
The Passion According to G.H. by Clarice Lispector blew my mind. I really don’t want to spoil any of it, but I highly encourage anyone who hasn’t read it to do. The build in tension is perfect and last 30 pages are just incredible. Lispector’s style is so unique and so beautiful and tosses out huge existential questions like it’s nothing, and I love her work so much.
Moscow To The End Of The Line by Venedikt Erofeev was another really unexpected book. It’s extremely Russian (obviously) and really fun until suddenly it isn’t. The main character, a drunkard, gets on a train from Moscow to Petushki, the town at the end of the line (hence the title), in order to see his lover. On the way, he befriends the other people in his train car and they all steadily get drunker and drunker, until he falls asleep and misses his stop. Very Russian, somewhat strange, and I was surprised that it was written in the late 60s and not the 30s.
Dr. Rat by William Kotzwinkle was what I expected. Weird in a goofy way, a bit silly even when it’s serious, and rather heavy-handed satire. The titular Dr Rat is a rat who has spent his whole life in a laboratory and has gone insane. The other animals who are being tested on want to escape, but he’s convinced that all the testing is for the good of science and wants to thwart their rebellion. Unfortunately, all the other animals who are victims of human cruelty/callousness/invasion/deforestation/etc around the world are also planning to rebel, connection with each other through a sort of psychic television network. It’s a very heavy-handed environmentalist/anti-animal cruelty metaphor and general societal satire, but it’s silly and fun too.
Confessions Of A Part-Time Lady by Minette is a self-published, nearly impossible to find book that came into my work. It’s self-printed and bound, and was published in the 70s. It is the autobiographical narrative of a trans woman who did drag and burlesque and theatre work all across the midwest, as well as New York and San Francisco, from the 1930s up to the late 60s. It was originally a series of interviews by the two editors, who published it in narrative form, and it includes photos from Minette’s personal collection. It’s an amazing story, and a glimpse into a really unique time period of gender performance and queer life. She even mentions Sylvia Rivera, specifically when talking about gay activism. She talks about how the original group of the Gay Liberation Front was an eclectic mix of all sorts of people of all sexualities and genders and expressions. Then when the Gay Activists Alliance “took over”, they started pushing out people who were queer in a more transgressive or unusual way and there was more encouragement on being more heteronormative. She mentions Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P Johnson, saying “I remember Sylvia Rivera who founded STAR – Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries. She was always trying to say things – the same kinds of things Marsha P Johnson says in a sweeter way – and they treated her like garbage. If that’s what ‘order’ is, haven’t we had enough?”
Whores For Gloria by William T Vollmann was exactly as amazing as I thought it would be. I love Vollmann’s style, because you can tell that even though the characters he’s writing about are characters, they’re absolutely based on people that he met or saw or spoke to in real life. The main character, Jimmy, is searching for his former lover, Gloria, who has either died or left him (it is unclear for most of the novel). He begins to use tokens bought from sex workers (hair, clothes, etc) to attempt to conjure her into reality, and when that doesn’t work, he pays them to tell him stories from their lives, and through their lives he tries to conjure Gloria. This novel’s ending had extremely similar vibes to the ending of Moscow To The End Of The Line.
Prisoner Of Love by Jean Genet was a lot to take in. It was weird reading it at this moment in time, and completely unplanned. It’s just that I have only a few more books to read before I’ve made my way through all Genet’s works that have been translated into English, and it was next on the list. Most of the book focuses on Genet’s time spent in Palestine in the 70s and his short return in the 80s. He also discusses the time he spent with the Black Panthers in the US, although it’s not the main subject of the book. Viewing Palestine from the point of view of Genet’s weird philosophical and moral worldview was really interesting, because what he chooses to spend time looking at or talking about is probably not what most would focus on, and because even his most political discussions are tinged with the uniquely Genet-style spirituality (if you can call it that? I don’t know what to call it) that is so much the exact opposite of objective. It’s definitely not a book about Palestine I would recommend reading without also having a grasp of Genet’s style of looking at the world and his various obsessions and preoccupations, because they really do inform a lot of his commentary. It was also written 15 years after his first trip to Palestine, partly from memory and partly from journal entries/notes, which gives it a sort of weirdly dreamlike quality much like his novels.
Blackouts by Justin Torres was so amazing! It blends real life and fiction together so well that I didn’t even realize that most of the people he references in the novel are real historical figures until he mentioned Ben Reitman, who I recognized as the Chicago King Of The Hobos and Emma Goldman’s lover. The book follows an unnamed narrator who has come to a hotel or apartment in the southwest in order to care for a dying elderly man called Juan Gay. Juan has a book called Sex Variants, a study of homosexuality from the 1940s which has been censored and blacked out. Back and forth, the narrator and Juan trade stories. The narrator tells his life story up until the present, including his first meeting with Juan in a mental hospital as a teenager. In turn, Juan tells the story of the Sex Variants book and its creator, Jan Gay (Ben Reitman’s real life daughter). The book explores the reliability of narrative, the power of collecting and documenting life stories, and of removing or changing things in order to create new or different narratives.
Again, Clarice Lispector rocking my world! Generally I can read a 200-ish page novel in somewhere between 2 and 4 hours depending on the content/writing style. Near To The Wild Heart took me 9 hours to read because I kept wanting to stop and reread entire paragraphs because they were so interesting or pretty or philosophical. The story focuses on Joana, whose strange way of looking at the world and going through life makes everyone sort of wary of her. This book is so layered I don’t really know how to describe it. So much of it is philosophical or existential musings through the vehicle of Joana. Unsurprisingly, it’s a beautiful book and I highly recommend it.
I’m just going to copy/paste my Goodreads review for Skye Papers by Jamika Ajalon: This book had so much potential that just…fell short. I could tell that it was written for an American audience but the way the reader/Skye is “taught” certain British terms and/or slang felt a bit patronizing. The characters were fleshed out and interesting and I liked them a lot but the plot crumbled quickly in the last half of the book Things sped up to a degree that felt strange and unnatural, the book’s pacing was inconsistent throughout. Perhaps that was deliberate considering the reveal at the climax, but if it was, it should have been utilized better. If the inconsistent pacing wasn’t deliberate, then it just made the book feel strange to read. There were moments were I felt like there should have been more fleshing out of certain character relationships. Even with the reveal at the end and the explanation of Pieces’ erratic/avoidant behavior, I wish there had been more fleshing out of the relationship or friendship between her and Skye at the beginning, when Skye first arrives in London. Characters who seemed cool/interesting got glossed over and instead there was a lot more dwelling on Skye walking around or busking or just hanging out. I could have gone without the last 30 or so pages after the big reveal, where Skye went back through everything that happened with the knowledge she (and the reader) had gained. It dragged on and on and at that point I felt like the whole story was so contrived that I just wasn’t interested anymore. A friend who read this book before I did said she thought it was an experimental novel that just hadn’t gone far enough, and I completely agree with her. I think if the style with the film script interludes went further, into printed visuals or more weirdness with the interludes, more experimental style with the main story, or something, it would have been really good. It just didn’t push hard enough.
The Feather Thief by Kirk Wallace Johnson was a fun little true crime novel about a young flautist who broke into a small English natural history museum in 2009 and stole hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of preserved rare bird skins dating back to the 19th century. He was a salmon fly-tying enthusiast and prodigy, and old Victorian fly designs used feathers of rare birds. The book first goes through the heist and the judicial proceedings, then examines the niche culture of Victorian fly-tying enthusiasts and obsessives, and then chronicles the author’s attempts to track down some of the missing birds. It was a quick, easy read, but fun and an unusual subject and I quite enjoyed it.
In 2024 I don’t plan on trying to surpass or even reach this year’s number. I’m going to start off the year reading The Recognitions by William Gaddis, then I’m going to re-read a number of books that I come across at work or in conversation and think Huh, I should reread that one of these days. So far, the books I am currently planning to reread: Sometimes A Great Notion by Ken Kesey, As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner, The People Of Paper by Salvador Plascencia, Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf, The Mustache by Emmanuel Carriere, McGlue by Otessa Moshfegh, Long Day’s Journey Into Night by Eugene O’Neil, Acid Snow by Larry Mitchell, and Nightwood by Djuna Barnes.
6 notes · View notes
mysymmetry · 11 months
Text
2023 Reading List updated Jan 8 March 13 April 10 May 29 July 5
Read So Far: Play It As It Lays, Joan Didion All of This Could Be Different, Sarah Thankham Matthews Readme.txt, Chelsea Manning The Book of Grief and Hamburgers, Stuart Ross Burntcoat, Sarah Hall The Best American Essays 2022, ed. Alexander Chee Easy Beauty, Chloe Cooper Jones Very Cold People, Sarah Manguso Son of Elsewhere, Elamin Abdelmahmoud Happy Place, Emily Henry Couplets, Maggie Millner Strange Loops, Elizabeth Harmer Milk Fed, Melissa Broder
Currently Reading: Tides, Sara Freeman (lib yes - placed hold) Ace, Angela Chen (lib yes - placed hold) Ripe, Sarah Rose Etter Pathological, Sarah Fay Biography of X, Catherine Lacey The Best American Poetry 2019, ed. Bliss Montage, Ling Ma The Carrying, Ada Limon Death in Her Hands, Ottessa Moshfegh The Hurting Kind, Ada Limon A Single Rose, Muriel Barbery The Power of Geography
Want to Read: Foster or Small Things Like These - Claire Keegan (lib yes for both, recom from bookseller at Different Drummer!) The Light Room, Kate Zambreno No One is Talking About This, Patricia Lockwood Lurch, Don McKay No Archive Will Destroy You, Julietta Singh The Story of Our Lives, Ted Chiang
HALF FINISHED The Marrow Thieves, Cherie Dimaline Animal Person, Alexander MacLeod My Face in The Light, Martha Schabas Pure Colour, Sheila Heti Satched, Megan Gail Coles A Lover's Discourse, Roland Barthes The Country of Marriage, Wendell Berry
Minique, Anna Maxymiw We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies, Tsering Yangzom Lama Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
5 notes · View notes
bookclub4m · 2 years
Text
Episode 161 - Hate Reads
This episode we’re talking about Hate Reads! We discuss annoyance reading, hate reading vs reading something you hate, completionism, experiencing bad media as a social bonding experience, and 1-star reviews of books. Plus: Books about women murdering!
You can download the podcast directly, find it on Libsyn, or get it through Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Google Podcasts, or your favourite podcast delivery system.
In this episode
Anna Ferri | Meghan Whyte | Matthew Murray | Jam Edwards
Media We Mentioned
The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels (Wikipedia)
"A spectre is haunting Europe”
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
Game of Thrones (Wikipedia)
Divergent by Veronica Roth
“Divergent might have been sloppy in places, but in a bizarre continuity error, both Tris’ disabling trauma around guns and an actual gun appears and disappears as is convenient in the final chapters… This violates both Chekhov’s Gun and some corollary: if you introduce a gun, it must exist.” (from Jam’s review; see also “I’m not reading another YA trilogy unless someone guarantees me no queer people die in the second act”)
Insurgent by Veronica Roth
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir
Harrow the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir
“reading this book felt like having to eat three bags of raw spinach before I was allowed the ice cream sundae I'd been promised” (from Matthew’s review)
The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown
Links, Articles, and Things
161 (number) (Wikipedia)
Schadenfreude (Wikipedia)
Mark Oshiro (who Jam mentioned) appears to have deleted their YouTube channel? Or Something? You can still go to their website and the Mark Reads website.
Hazel & Katniss & Harry & Starr Podcast
Episode on Ready Player One
A recent(ish) episode of Watch+Play (there’s a lot of them!)
There’s also this playlist of shorter, edited videos if you don’t want to commit
Hark (Jam’s holiday music podcast)
Hot take (Wikipedia)
Hate-watching (Wikipedia)
Episode 011 - Religious Fiction (the one in which Anna read the book she hated)
BookTok (Wikipedia)
Matthew can’t find the specific X-Men review he mentioned, but it’s buried in this site somewhere (that link specifically is to a scathing review of the final issue of Mutant X)
Show, don't tell (Wikipedia)
Questions
What Romance genres do you want us to read?
What comic would you use to introduce superhero comics to adults (who haven't read them before)?
Twitter thread
15 works of Experimental Fiction by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) Authors
Every month Book Club for Masochists: A Readers’ Advisory Podcasts chooses a genre at random and we read and discuss books from that genre. We also put together book lists for each episode/genre that feature works by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) authors. All of the lists can be found here.
Aphasia by Mauro Javier Cárdenas
When I Hit You: Or, A Portrait of the Writer as a Young Wife by Meena Kandasamy
Big City by Marream Krollos
Search History by Eugene Lim
Dreaming of You: A Novel in Verse by Melissa Lozada-Oliva
The Story of My Teeth by Valeria Luiselli
This Could Have Become Ramayan Chamar's Tale: Two Anti-Novels by  Subimal Misra, translated by V. Ramaswamy
If an Egyptian Cannot Speak English by Noor Naga
Oreo by Fran Ross
We Cast a Shadow by Maurice Carlos Ruffin
Pedro Páramo by Juan Rulfo, translated by Margaret Sayers Peden
Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
I was the President's Mistress!! by Miguel Syjuco
Split Tooth by Tanya Tagaq
Savage Tongues by Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi
Give us feedback!
Fill out the form to ask for a recommendation or suggest a genre or title for us to read!
Check out our Tumblr, follow us on Twitter or Instagram, join our Facebook Group, or send us an email!
Join us again on Tuesday, November 1st we’ll be discussing the genre of Investigative Journalism!
Then on Tuesday, November 15th we’ll be talking about Podcasts!
2 notes · View notes
piratewithvigor · 2 years
Text
Thank you @kayfabebabe for tagging me
~ ~ ~ 
Relationship Status: Single, but mentally very married to Shannon Moore
Favourite Colour(s): A real good rich Purple
Favourite Food(s): Tacos. I've only ever had one bad one in my life. Also mac n cheese and oven-roasted rosemary potatoes. And foccacia
Song Stuck in Your Head: Me & Magdalena by The Monkees (it's been a week and if it continues, it's gonna owe me rent soon)
Last Google Search: ‘Cody Rhodes' - trying to remember if his stable with baby DiBiase and Orton was called Legacy or Evolution or something I completely forgot
Current Time: 11:06am
Dream Trip: Wichita Falls, Texas. I need to know what's down there that keeps mentally dragging me. But a dream journey would be to drive Route 66
Last Book You Read: A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara
Last Book You Enjoyed: Maus by Art Spiegelman. I usually try to avoid reading book pdfs, but I needed to read Maus ASAP and did not stop reading it until I'd read through both volumes
Last Book You Hated Reading: My feelings towards A Little Life are very complicated. I enjoyed the story, I loved the characters, and I had a good time reading it. That being said, I finished it 3 months ago and still occasionally get pangs of deep guilt in my chest that make me sit down until I remember that it's just a book and I didn't make any of those things happen to those characters.
But the last book I truly hated reading with every fiber of my being was Noopiming: The Cure For White Ladies by Leanna Betasamosake Simpson. I read it for a class, I attended a talk by the author and I can honestly say I've never read a more pretentious waste of paper than that book.
Favourite Thing(s) to Bake/Cook: I usually have very neutral feelings on cooking. I don't exactly do it for fun. But I do get very very excited when I get particular things right. My favourite things to get right are fried eggs on toast (if I get both yolks intact and the bread toasted and buttered at the right time, it's glorious) and Shane O'Mac N Cheese (my own recipe. I've never written it down, so it's different every time, but when I truly channel the Shane O'Mac vibe, I can really get it right)
Most Niche Dislike: CM Punk. I acknowledge he's good, but he was a goddamn BULLY to my sweet beloved Shannon Moore (to the point where I have the two of them on a Rivals Card and the back says something to the effect of "Punk beat Moore every time they stepped in the ring together and sometimes outside it") and like IT'S NOT SHANNON'S FAULT HE'S SHORT. HE'S THE PERFECT SIZE FOR ME PERSONALLY TO HUG AND HE SMELLS REALLY NICE AND HE'S SO KIND AND I LOVE HIM SO MUCH AND PUNK JUST NEEDS TO FUCKIN CHECK HIMSELF
Opinion on the Circus: I had a circus unit in elementary school gym class. I wasn't very good at juggling balls, but I was pretty good at juggling scarves and was boss with the spinning plates. This was, to my understanding, a way to determine which high school one would go to when they finished sixth grade (12 years old). You would either continue to the French Catholic high school (it was a French Catholic elementary school), or you would go to the National Circus School about 2 hours away if you were absolutely exceptional. I have very fond memories of the circus unit being the one thing in gym class I was good at.
Do You Have a Sense of Direction?: Yes. And a photographic memory for locations. I grew up with Google Maps first becoming a thing and Dad resisted the use of a GPS until very recently, so since both my parents have shit eyesight and Mom can't remember directions to save her life, it fell on me to get us places without murders happening
~ ~ ~ 
Tagging: @the--blackdahlia @coffee-n-bagels-comic-universe @wendigoruble @thiccfoley @pepperstreak @definitelydivergent @track12to13 
4 notes · View notes
protoslacker · 2 years
Link
I found this presentation by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson  so interesting. Even if you don’t have the time to listen to the whole presentation you may be interested to visit the book page. The bookcover features a well-known visual work by Rebecca Belmore entiltled Fringe that is worthshile viewing. And there is a link to a short film which includes Simpson reading a passage from the book entitled Solidification which is quite beautiful.
2 notes · View notes
librarycards · 1 month
Note
if you're still doing book recs :3
camp concentration by thomas disch
an exchange of hostages by susan r. matthews
junglist by 2 fingas & james t. kirk
noopiming by leanne betasamosake simpson
exquisite corpse by poppy z. brite
ooh a couple more new-to-me books and overall very fucked up [affectionate] taste, love it!
recs:
Davey Davis, X.
Kim Hyesoon, A Drink of Red Mirror
Gretchen Felker-Martin, Manhunt.
John Singleton, Angel Blood
Tanya Tagaq, Split Tooth
0 notes
naabesim · 5 years
Text
Fear of caribou
Gaawiin inzegi'igosiig asabikeshiinyag. Inzegi'igoog idash adikwag 🦌 😬
Niwaabamaag asabikeshiinyag moozhag, gaawiin wiikaa niwaabamaasiig adikwag omaa Minowakiing!
Oshkaya'aawiyaan ingii-wanishin noopiming giiwedinong. Ingii-bezhig. Mii dash maajii-noopinazhid bezhig adik gezika. Ingagwe-gii'aa a'aw adik, indaabiji-noopinazhig idash. Niin na niwii-amwig?!
0 notes
nzhode · 9 months
Text
Inashke mii omaa gii-pabaamoseyaan gabe-giizhig omaa noopiming. Niwii-o-kii’igoshim miinawaa…
0 notes
unexpectedarrivals · 1 year
Text
This morning I realised it has been complicated because I'm trying to flesh out three registers: (1) personal resistance, (2) public-political resistance, (3) formal resistance... not sure what that looks like but this incredible interview with David Harrington of Kronos Quartet alerted me to what has been missing.
I also realised that the image that was coming to mind before was a memory from the cover of the book NOOPIMING: The Cure for White Ladies, written by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson. The art action on the cover is by Rebecca Belmore , the cover design by Alysia Shewchuk.
Tumblr media
I read this book in 2020 over and over during the pandemic and listened to the audiobook. I keep writing above "this morning..." because that's how things occur to me. I wake up. I don't remember my dreams but some words about my process are in mind that hadn't been there so clearly before.
Rebecca Belmore's art was really a portal for me, because she is able to find actions that reverberate on multiple registers. Her work brings the personal and collective unconscious to the surface for me.
I first saw Bellmore's work when I was volunteering at the Grange at the AGO. When I look for information on the work I see the title of the installation is "Wild" and it was shown in 2001 but my memory of it was that I saw this in the early 90's. That memory flip is incredible to me - to have the memory before the experience itself. It seems like a sign that the artist was tapping into stories we knew all along but could not look at our unconscious awareness. Or maybe this phenomena reveals something of how the art work allowed me to time travel during my volunteer hours.
My job was to stand for hours near this bed that I was told the artist came to rest in at times. I felt a sense of absence, longing, curiosity and surreal imagination from hanging around someone else's intimate space for hours looking at a lump in the bed and telling patrons about this "invisible history," the presence and absence of Indigenous and settler-colonial bodies, the paradigmatic replacement from one history to another.
Tumblr media
0 notes
razor-twat · 1 year
Text
Books read during the holidays:
1. Leanne Betasamosake Simpson -Noopiming (the cure for white ladies)
2. Stephen Graham Jones -the only good indians
0 notes
irenehardacre · 2 years
Text
(Download PDF/Epub) Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies - Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
Download Or Read PDF Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies - Leanne Betasamosake Simpson Free Full Pages Online With Audiobook.
Tumblr media
  [*] Download PDF Here => Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies
[*] Read PDF Here => Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies
 Award-winning Nishnaabeg storyteller and writer Leanne Betasamosake Simpson returns with a bold reimagination of the novel, one that combines narrative and poetic fragments through a careful and fierce reclamation of Anishinaabe aesthetics. Mashkawaji (they/them) lies frozen in the ice, remembering a long-ago time of hopeless connection and now finding freedom and solace in isolated suspension. They introduce us to the seven main characters: Akiwenzii, the old man who represents the narrator?s will; Ninaatig, the maple tree who represents their lungs; Mindimooyenh, the old woman who represents their conscience; Sabe, the giant who represents their marrow; Adik, the caribou who represents their nervous system; Asin, the human who represents their eyes and ears; and Lucy, the human who represents their brain. Each attempts to commune with the unnatural urban-settler world, a world of SpongeBob Band-Aids, Ziploc baggies, Fj?llr?ven K?nken backpacks, and coffee mugs emblazoned with
0 notes
mysymmetry · 2 years
Text
2022 Reading List:
Read So Far:
Her Turn, Kathryn Ashenburg
Let Me Tell You What I Mean, Joan Didion
Intimacies, Katie Kitamura
Memorial, Bryan Washington
Catherine House, Elisabeth Thomas
Beautiful World, Where Are You, Sally Rooney
Best Young Woman Job Book, Emma Healey
When I Was Young and In My Prime, Alayna Munce
Hunter with Harpoon, Markoosie Patsauq
Homo Irrealis, Andre Aciman
Beach Read, Emily Henry
People You Meet on Vacation, Emily Henry
Currently Reading:
The Marrow Thieves, Cherie Dimaline
Animal Person, Alexander MacLeod
My Face in The Light
Pure Colour, Sheila Heti
Satched, Megan Gail Coles
A Lover's Discourse, Roland Barthes
The Country of Marriage, Wendell Berry
Dream Work, Mary Oliver
Orion Sweeping, Anne Marie Todkill
Want to Read:
Thank You For Being Late, Thomas Friedman
The Dovekeepers, Alice Hoffman
Ella Minnow Pea, Mark Dunn
Everything Inside, Edwige Danticat
Old Monarch, Courtney Marie Andrews
The Midnight Library, Matt Haig
A Hero of Our Time, Naben Ruthnum
Minique, Anna Maxymiw
We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies, Tsering Yangzom Lama
A Bit Much, Sarah Jackson
Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
The Best American Essays 2022, ed. Alexander Chee
4 notes · View notes
bookclub4m · 2 years
Text
15 works of Experimental Fiction by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) Authors
Every month Book Club for Masochists: A Readers’ Advisory Podcasts chooses a genre at random and we read and discuss books from that genre. We also put together book lists for each episode/genre that feature works by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) authors. All of the lists can be found here.
Aphasia by Mauro Javier Cárdenas
When I Hit You: Or, A Portrait of the Writer as a Young Wife by Meena Kandasamy
Big City by Marream Krollos
Search History by Eugene Lim
Dreaming of You: A Novel in Verse by Melissa Lozada-Oliva
The Story of My Teeth by Valeria Luiselli
This Could Have Become Ramayan Chamar's Tale: Two Anti-Novels by  Subimal Misra, translated by V. Ramaswamy
If an Egyptian Cannot Speak English by Noor Naga
Oreo by Fran Ross
We Cast a Shadow by Maurice Carlos Ruffin
Pedro Páramo by Juan Rulfo, translated by Margaret Sayers Peden
Noopiming: The Cure for White Ladies by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
I was the President's Mistress!! by Miguel Syjuco
Split Tooth by Tanya Tagaq
Savage Tongues by Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi
2 notes · View notes