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How is everyone doing???
I totally spaced it and didnt create a weekly chapter check in for Queen of Faces! But for sure will make one for our next read to help guide people on were to be and not fall behind (been swamped with my 9-5 and banners + getting sick on top of everything). So far im about 50% through queen of faces and omg ...... im loving every chapter and the multiple POVs we get!!!! Im terrible at predicting endings so to be honest ill probably be shocked with what happens either way hahahha I also love how ambiguous the genders are for the characters. The magic system is also super cool, giving us a leveling up system were magic can evolve and branch out to new paths. Does anyone have any book recommendations for the month of April? (I'm open to all fiction, romance, epic fantasy, horror, lit-rpg) I can start a new poll next week.
As for my little project I kinda want to make mini banners of each book we read so Ill start posting my work process this weekend
Bookish opinion time! What are your thoughts on book covers? Which style is your favorite? I've put some examples below.
I tried my best but I might've gotten some of the maximalism book covers wrong. It's basically a cover with a lot of detail on it. For artistic, I interpret this as a book with abstract details or a repeating pattern.
Hi nerds,
I recently had a bookseller rite of passage: I attended my first Winter Institute, the annual industry convention hosted by the American Booksellers Association for independent bookstores across the country. This year, 1,600+ stores attended. It was madness.
It’s a packed three days of panels, vendor tables, publisher sales rep appointments, author signings, and more. I was there for my day job in publishing, but I managed to sneak away a few times to catch talks I wanted to attend—and I got to meet SO many fellow booksellers in the wild. I have literally never felt more popular in my life. I’m still riding the high of being pointed at across a room and hearing someone yell “Sunny’s?!” at me.
A big part of Winter Institute is access to upcoming titles that publishers bring with them. There’s something called a galley room (a galley is an advanced reading copy of a book, also referred to as an ARC), which is full of thousands of unreleased titles that are free for the taking. Just after breakfast on the first day, the doors open and absolute chaos ensues. I’m talking people stacking 30+ books in their arms, trying to shuffle through a sea of other people doing the exact same thing. Watching 1,600 people descend on a room full of books is something I won’t forget anytime soon especially because I was right alongside them.
I get a ton of galleys in the mail every day at the store. My sales reps at each publisher are usually happy to send whatever I want for stock consideration, so I wasn’t feeling particularly feral about grabbing everything I saw. But I still came away with my fair share.
The following is my bounty—and I’m going to tell you why each title made the cut and was worth lugging home.
I fucking STAN Hernan Diaz. His hit rate is 2/2 and I'm sure Ply will be a banger as well. I actually got to meet him during an authors reception at Winter Institute, and I told him that I always recommend In the Distance to customers when they come in looking for a Western to prank them. He signed my book with the following: "To CJ, with so many thanks for misleading readers into my work." 🥲
About the book:
The Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Trust turns to the future with a novel that examines the place of technology in the American imagination
Centuries from now, at the dawn of a historical epoch filled with both uncertainty and promise, an orphan is adrift in a city on the brink of a great transformation. The state has been dismantled, and humans are reinventing social bonds and learning new ways to coexist with nature. Following a childhood defined by loss, survival, and found family, the orphan grows up to become a “pincher,” someone who steals electricity from the grid to sell it on the black market. It’s a high-risk life, one that brings her into a rich downtown art and music scene where she powers underground concerts. It also leads her to a colossal scientific invention that could be either a contraption devised by a deranged mind or a machine that will change the very fabric of reality.
After rewriting America’s past with his two previous novels, Hernan Diaz now gives us a glimpse into the future. Ply questions the place of technology in the American experiment with a plot that grabs both heart and mind. It is a novel of ideas built from a story of people. Combining Dickensian odyssey, family drama, and scientific thriller, Ply poignantly charts the tenuous boundaries of selfhood and the distance that inevitably stands between us and those we love.
Like I mentioned, I was really attending Winter Institute in a publisher capacity and the majority of the time I was behind a folding table handselling upcoming titles from the publisher I work for's catalog. Our table neighbors were the Canadian publisher, Biblioasis. Their sales rep described their table as being segmented into pastoral novels vs. hysterical novels, and directed me to Love Novel when I expressed I was more interested in the hysterical. The author of Love Novel is Croatian, and I am too! I don't think I've read anything translated from Croatian before, so this cemented that this was the book for me.
About the book:
Love in late capitalism: Ivana Sajko takes us to the frontlines of a war waged between kitchen and bedroom.
Love in late capitalism: in an unnamed city, a husband and wife wage a silent war of rage and resentment. He, an out-of-work Dante scholar, is trying to change the world--and write a novel. She was once a passable actress, but now she's failing at breastfeeding. They take on gigs and debts. He drinks cheap wine; she cleans obsessively. In their two-room flat the tension rises and turns exquisite: the rent is past due, their careers have stalled, the regime is crumbling, and there's always the baby, the baby who won't stop crying.
Intense and astutely ironic, devastating and darkly comic, Ivana Sajko's Love Novel takes a scalpel to the heart of modern married life.
I gotta be real with you, this was a cover grab. What a compelling and minimal treatment! I love the sense of scale here. The published FSG is usually a safe bet for me as well, so after reading the description on the back this one came home with me.
About the book:
After her mother is sentenced to life in a hilltop prison, Suzanna vows to return to the hill forever. An unexpectedly funny and deeply moving novel about the many ways we punish and return to each other.
Suzanna Klein was a baby when her mother got up early one morning to rob a bank with a group of fellow radicals. Now, every Saturday, Suzanna lines up at the prison gates among the other children, each dressed as if for celebration. Inside there is a nursery and a cemetery; there are watchful guards and distractable nuns; there are women counting down to release and women like Suzanna’s mother, who will never be released.
At home, Suzanna is raised by her grandmother, who is entirely unforgiving of her daughter’s crime and refuses to visit the prison. Surrounding Suzanna are her grandmother’s friends, who know one another from their years in the Communist Party and still spend extended cocktail hours debating the Hitler-Stalin pact. Though these women once insisted on changing the world, they are torn between teaching Suzanna how the world works and shielding her from it.
Suzanna vows to return to the prison forever but her mother wants her to be free. Harriet Clark’s The Hill is an incandescent novel of a child growing up between worlds, the last of three generations whose fates have been tied to punishment. It is the tale of a family broken apart by the desire for change, told with irreverent wisdom and visionary force. The Hill brings new music to American fiction.
I loved Daniel Mason's debut novel, North Woods. I handsell this a lot at the store and find it works for a lot of recommendation requests I get. I was able to get this one signed as well and meet Daniel and he was nice enough to sign one for my boss Matt, who was the person who recommended North Woods to me in the first place. Hi Matt I know you're reading this.
About the book:
A year in the life of a family as they strike out into the unknown (aka Vermont), leaving all the comforts of home behind—a rollicking, lyrical novel from Pulitzer Prize finalist Daniel Mason, the bestselling author of North Woods and one of America’s greatest living writers
Miles Krzelewski is a devoted husband, a doting father beloved for his outlandish bedtime stories, and the proud owner of a truffle-hunting dog in a land with no truffles. He is also a bit lost, twelve years late with his PhD on Russian folktales and increasingly haunted by a sense that he’s become a disappointment to his family. So when his wife, Kate, accepts a visiting professorship at a prestigious college in the faraway forests of Vermont, he decides that this will be the year to finally move forward with his life.
But Miles is a man of many enthusiasms, one who possesses, in Kate’s words, a great capacity “to fall in with anyone, anywhere.” And no sooner does he arrive than he finds himself entangled with a cast of characters as colorful as those of any of his folktales, from a ghostly tree surgeon to a scythe-mad biochemist, from a Shakespearean temptress to a photographer of snowflakes obsessed with chronicling, on thousands of index cards, the world’s delusions in an Inventory of Wrong Ideas.
The new friends, the enchanted woods, the histories: sure, no PhD, but all good fun. Until Miles stumbles upon a bizarre—perhaps ridiculous—local legend, which, he soon suspects, might not be just a legend after all.
Joyous, absurd, and life-affirming, Country People is a luminous exploration of marriage and parenthood, the nature of belief and the power of stories, and the ways in which we find connection in an increasingly fragmented world.
Soft Skull is another indie publisher who consistently do weird shit that I'm into it. The desert landscape made me pick this one up (always looking for arid desert rep in a novel!) and the description sold me.
About the book:
A complex mother-daughter relationship is taken to a new level in this fresh and propulsive novel of family curses, blood-thirsty ghouls, and budding romance set against the Mojave Desert and Las Vegas
Ellis Karsten spends nights working triage in the ER and days having the same conversation with her mom. The early onset dementia is exhausting, but the real challenge is their curse—Ellis’s family must feed daily on blood, or risk becoming mindless, skinless killing machines. When Ellis’s uncle, who supplies their blood, vanishes, she takes it upon herself to find a new source, aided by a prickly paramedic who’s equal parts unpredictable and intoxicating. But as Ellis fights to balance her bloodthirsty nature with a new relationship, her mom’s impossible demands transform into panicked warnings that a fabled monster, “The Flayed Man,” is stalking them.
As she traverses the desert in search of blood, Ellis risks her safety and her family’s secret, until it becomes clear that her mom is right: something ancient and hungry is hunting them, and it has come for her mom. Blood hunger begins to overtake Ellis, transforming her body into something ghoulish and frightening—exactly what The Flayed Man wants. In the end, she must decide who to trust, what she’s willing to sacrifice, and whether she is worthy of a life, and love, beyond her curse—or if she’s going to succumb to instinct and ravage the world.
This seemed to be the book in the galley room that most people were eager to get to first. I liked Station Eleven, both the book and show, but have not read anything else from this author! The premise of this one sounds more interesting to me compared to the rest of her backlist. Absolutely hate this cover though, so lazy!
About the book:
The award-winning, bestselling author of Station Eleven and Sea of Tranquility returns with a breathtaking novel of doubles, shadow worlds, and fractured timelines as a man disappears from a glittering Los Angeles party, and a woman—a gunrunner, an art collector, an operative of the State—searches for answers.
Los Angeles, 2031: The first spring after the collapse of the United States, peacekeeping troops withdraw from the city, the Jacaranda trees blossom, and the curfew is finally lifted. Ari Waker and her roommate pass the gauntlet of bomb-sniffing dogs, the shanty towns, and the Red Cross tents as they walk across Silverlake to a party. The mood is ecstatic inside the apartment, people drink and dance, a woman wears a silver dress, pleated like tinfoil. And then: A shift. A bewildered twin, an uncanny doppelganger stumbles through the crowd and out into the night, and Kareem, the party’s host, vanishes into thin air.
As Ari Waker unravels the mystery of this inexplicable night, Emily St. John Mandel unfurls a story that takes us from a future America splintered by civil war to the seaside cliffs of Greece where weapons dealers hide in an elegant resort, and from the domed city of Paris to a colony on the moon. An unforgettable literary feat, Exit Party is a novel about the price of safety, the perils of the surveillance state, a requiem for a world not unlike our own, and a breathtaking story of resilience in the face of cataclysmic change.
I cruised around some other publisher tables and stopped by Coach House, where their sales rep told me this was Marxism meets sci-fi. Say no more, I'm in. I think this one is going to hurt my brain.
About the book:
Close Encounters of the Third Kind meets Annihilation in this poetic space-age fable of proletarian internationalism.
At the end of the twenty-first century, on the shores of the Indian Ocean, a minor Marxist politician's speech is interrupted by the arrival of an iridescent, pill-shaped object. It brings him, briefly, to another world, and to a state of ecstasy he will struggle to interpret upon his return. Soon, many others will be offered the same incantatory opportunity. Rival states attempt to capitalize on these developments, and a cynical spy sets an elaborate psychological operation in motion. Thousands of miles away, on an agricultural commune near the Caspian Sea, a young poet spends her nights troubled by prophetic dreams. The politician, the spy, and the poet will be ineluctably drawn into one another's orbits, as will the mysterious Bell Letterist, author of a text about "the interdimensional will to the aesthetic" - a powerful motive force that requires human solidarity in order to thrive.
The Coffin of Honey is inspired equally by apocryphal stories of Alexander the Great, Bolaño-esque tales of literary vanishings, thousand-year-old Persian poems by exiled princesses, and the fever-dream conclusions of every parapolitical conspiracy theory that might just be true.
Similar story here, I really liked Sorrow and Bliss, this authors debut. I thought it depicted depression in a really precise and exact way and I am excited to read more from her. I also hate this cover but it is giving the upmarket broad audience appeal I'm sure it is intended to.
About the book:
The “brilliant” (Ann Patchett) and much beloved author of the critically acclaimed Sorrow and Bliss returns with a tender and hilarious novel about heartbreak and the journey from isolation and loneliness towards love.
Sophie Pattison loves books. And as well as a dream job at a local book festival, she has a husband she adores, a lifelong best friend, Emma, and a brother she’s always been close to. Which makes you wonder why since Christmas Sophie has been living alone, estranged from Emma, avoiding her brother, and about to be fired.
Now it feels like the only thing she has left is reading. When Sophie re-discovers an author she first read in her twenties, the words on the page reach her in a new way—becoming both solace and company. Devouring every one of her novels, Sophie begins to dream of meeting her, knowing she never will. But what if she did? What if, by then, the author feels like a friend? What if, for Sophie, it feels almost like love?
In this much anticipated novel, Meg Mason captures the heartache and dark humor of our relationships in all their complexity, giving us a story about the power of connection and an ode to the inexplicable nature of the human heart.
Lastly, I was able to meet Melissa Albert and grab her adult debut. She has a strong career as a YA author in the SFF space. I love this weird ass apothecary meets 1970's horror novel cover. I also feel weirdly connected to her because our last names are almost the same lol.
About the book:
The haunting new novel from New York Times bestselling author Melissa Albert, in which the estranged adult children of a legendary author, written into their dead mother’s beloved fantasy series, must contend with the vine-like creep of legacy, memory, and magic.
Guinevere Sharpe has two childhoods.
In one, she and her brother, Ennis, live in the wooded shadow of their family's isolated Vermont farmhouse; in the other, the pages of their mother’s world-famous Ninth City books, where their magical adventures have made them household names. In reality, Guinevere's childhood isn't the enchanted idyll her mother’s readers imagine: she and Ennis are growing up near-feral, unwashed and underfed, escaping each day to the wild woods they’ve made their playland. As Edith Sharpe’s books explode into epic popularity, the threats of a rural childhood give way to the escalating perils of fame—until the night it all goes up in flames, leaving Edith’s series unfinished and her children the sole survivors.
Now an adult coasting on her mother's name, Guinevere is mid-promotion for a ghostwritten memoir when her estranged brother, an artist who has until now spurned his family's legacy, announces an upcoming installation titled, simply, Mother. As rumors swirl around a death connected to his last show, unsettling recollections from Guinevere’s childhood begin to surface. Her public facade starts to crack, forcing her to confront the questions she's spent the last twenty years running from: What really happened the night of the fire? And what dark history lies behind their mother’s fantasy world?
The Children is wise to the mythic weight childhood memories gather over time, and the way our most beloved stories grow up with us. It's for anyone who's ever revisited an old favorite and found its pages cast in a darker light, the line separating magic from reality blurring as we discover the books that once comforted us carry shadows of their own.
That's it! A conservative haul if you can even believe it. I hope this was interesting and put some new books on your radar.
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Happy Tuesday, mis internet amigxs!
I have been so behind this week due to a family emergency earlier in the week and I can't seem to catch up. I want to apologize for this brief introduction this week, but hopefully some of the news I'm sharing with you will help assuage my brevity here.
HOUSE OF THE SPIRITS GIVEAWAY
As you're all aware, we're reading The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende in April ahead of the Spanish-language release of the show on April 29th. I posted an amazing giveaway yesterday for 5 copies of the Everyman's Library hardcover edition of the book AND an Out Of Print t-shirt that features the original cover! You can enter to win on the PRH website.
MARCH BOOK CLUB REMINDER
The second week in March is not to late to join us on Discord for book club! Our fiction pick is Now I Surrender by Alvaro Enrigue (we just voted in Discord for a chat date and the announcement will be announced this week) and our nonfiction sidequest read is Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here by Jonathan Blitzer. There are also several unofficial buddy reads going on as well. If you've been hesitant to join, now is the perfect time! You can check out ALL our official upcoming picks in this IG carousel if you want to begin planning your TBR for more Latine reads.
And now, on to this week's releases...
ROMANCE
The Starter Ex by Mia Sosa
Second Chance Duet by Anna Holguin (Audiobook)
HISTORICAL
Frida's Cook by Florencia Etcheves (Audiobook)
HORROR
You Should Have Been Nicer to My Mom V. E. Tirado (Audiobook)
Cabaret In Flames by Hache Pueyo
MIDDLE GRADE
No Way Never Sisters by Natalia Sylvester & Chantel Acevedo (Audiobook)
Mystery on Macaw Mountain by María José Fitzgerald (Audiobook)
Queso, Just In Time by Ernesto Cisneros (Audiobook)
xoxo,
Carmen
If you guessed NICK CUTTER, author of The Troop (wow, what a good guess!) You'd be correct!
We have to pass along our notes to editorial, let me know what YOU would love to see on the front cover.
Here is the full blurb:
"Gory, claustrophobic, and very dark -- this is a book best read in sunlit places, breathing fresh air, under an unobstructed blue sky." -- Nick Cutter
Hi Friends,
What did you read last week?
I am so proud of myself to sticking to my own reading schedule, so I'm about 1/4 into The Year of The Witching, our Women in Horror Book Club. This one started off kind of slow for me and I'm not really sure where it is headed. I don't feel particularly attached to the main character, Immanuelle yet.
I'm also about 1/4 into The Night Watchman, our Good Day To Read Indigenous book club pick. I am doing the audiobook, but had to pick up the physical as well so that I could do some annotating and take some notes. There are a lot of characters in this one (as to be expected in all of Erdrich's books! I am really fond of Patrice. I am concerned about Vera. And I'm also concerned about all of these creepy men!
If you want to keep up with the book club chatter, don't forget to join our community Discord.
Outside of the book club, I am reading an Indigenous sci-fi that was submitted to me for publishing consideration. I'm about 1/4 into this one as well and I'm really enjoying it. It is very, very humorous. (More to come!)
These are going to be my 3 main reads this week. I may try to pick up one of the others I've started recently also! I've never had so many books going on at the same time.
Let me know what you're reading this week below!
Updates! Deadline! More things happening around A Complement of Scoundrels by S.V. Lockwood as we move towards release day. Let's talk about 'em!
We reached out to authors in the hopes that they would provide "blurbs", which are important to converting browsers into buyers and establishing credibility, and received some tremendous quotes about their reaching experience that we can use in promotion. Here's what we got back:
“I loved this. Starting with a heist and morphing into a revenge story; it's a terrific debut. Well-drawn, sympathetic characters lead the way, with an ensemble of rouges and a gallery of side characters, a beautifully constructed world and a villain to loathe. This is a book I would highly recommend. A lot of fun with an emotional punch.” - John Gwynne (The Faithful & The Fallen/Of Blood & Bone/Bloodsworn Saga)
For instance, if you're anything like me, and love you some Papa Gwynne, a trimmed down version of that quote on the cover is a helluva sell.
"A stunningly imaginative debut. Lockwood’s prose is smart, sharp, and relentlessly charming. The city of Carintheum, from its vibrant streets to the seedy warrens of the grayside, is as colourful and compelling as the characters who inhabit it. I was hooked from the very first page, and I seriously doubt I’ll read a better book this year." - Nicholas Eames (Kings of the Wild/Bloody Rose)
“A swift heist packed with a cast of charming miscreants and vibrant, inventive worldbuilding, A Complement of Scoundrels is an accomplished debut and tremendous fun!”- Sam Hawke (City of Lies)
"Fantasy for the tech generation. A spellcracking debut." - Thomas Weaver (Artificial Wisdom)
Another independent author, Andy Peloquin, ended up getting approved on NetGalley for the digital ARC and enjoyed it so much that he also provided a choice quote.
“Breathtakingly audacious and compelling—gritty underworld fantasy has a new dark queen!” - Andy Peloquin
I'm super grateful that these fine folk took the time to read A Complement of Scoundrels and wrote up some great words about it, and hopefully they've helped convince you if you're on the fence.
Now as you probably know by now this comes out in September, pre-orders are open, you can also still request it on NetGalley, and another way to read it early is to subscribe at the Sicko tier by March 10th (today!) and you’ll get the digital ARC around June, at the Mega Sicko tier and above you get a finished physical copy in your hands around June. It's the final day to get in on that so pitter patter, get at 'er!
The next big thing on the agenda is to review the offers we have for the audiobook, because yes, there will be an audiobook!
I AM SO EXCITED TO SHARE THESE WITH YOU!!!!!
After we had our first cover design meeting for book 2 aka CREATIVE DIFFERENCES by Annabel Paulsen and Lydia Wang last month, I wasn't expecting the first round of sketches to come back so soon. These are super rough sketches to give us an idea of movement, poses, composition, etc! I'll share the next version once our feedback is taken into account :)
ALSO SO EXCITING: We are so lucky to get to work with the artist that everyone loved in the comments: Dana Lédl <3 Which of these 4 versions is your favorite? Which do you think Annabel, Lydia and I like best?
DO NOT SHARE THIS WITH ANYONE PLEASE THIS IS JUST FOR US CHICKENS!!!!
xx Nina
February might be the shortest month of the year, but that makes my determination to find, read, and fall in love with the most books possible my main goal. I would say having three 5⭐️ reads would accomplish that goal. I also have fallen in love with non-fiction and am craving non-fiction books. To me, that alone is peak goal reaching. I read a total of 17 books and 1 novella. I had an average rating of 4.12 ⭐️ with 6,680 pages read.
Here are my top 5 books from February:
The House of my Mother by Shari Franke
*I do not rate memoirs*
I had never heard about 8 Passengers (even though I lived on Youtube in my teenage years) or the downfall of Ruby Franke. There is maybe a brief recollection if I think very hard about it, but otherwise, I went into Shari Franke's memoir blind and came out a different person. I personally think that children should not be on vlogging channels and their childhood put on the Internet. This here though showed that you never know what happens behind closed doors, even when someone lives in a glass house. The trauma that Shari endured, the abuse she was subjected to time and time again, and her frame of mind that there may be some good to come out of it in the end. I was horrified to hear of what Shari and her siblings experienced. Their lives documented, their actions, thoughts, and feelings manipulated to appease Ruby and Jodi's fantasies. I was appalled, broken, and hopeful for Shari. I wish to see her thrive and grow. To have a community, friends, and family that will support her rather than drag her down. I want this to be an example for so many that vlogging a child's life might not be all sunshine and roses the cameras make it out to be.
Ink Blood Sister Scribe by Emma Törzs
4.5⭐️
Imagine a book where the magic is spell books. Anyone can use the spell book, but they must give some of their blood to activate the spell. The spell does not last forever and the spell book fades over time with each use. There are some people who have the ability to feel the spell books, differentiate between regular and magic. Now, imagine where to create the spell book, you have to be a scribe and what you need to give is your blood... and lots of it. This is the foundation of Ink Blood Sister Scribe. The very very very basic foundation, but this is the foundation you want to know. No, need to know, because the rest of the book will suck you in. Not only is this a unique magic system I have never read about before, but it is also a standalone. Now if those two things don't convince you to read it, maybe knowing that I got 20% into this book and then all of a sudden I was finished and my mind was altered. I craved a book that would sink its teeth into me. I have never read a book quite like this and unless I read another book by Emma Törzs, I don't think I ever will.
A Time of Blood by John Gwynne
5⭐️
Since this is a sequel, I don't want to be someone that spoils a book for you. I'll just put it this way- I finished 'A Time of Dread' and then immediately picked up 'A Time of Blood.' I finished both of these books in about 72 hours. I would have finished them sooner if I didn't have to be an adult and go to work.
A Time of Dread by John Gwynne
5⭐️
Going back to the Banished Lands was the equivalent of drinking a large glass of water after being parched for days. Nothing has or will ever taste as good. You have the same writing style that you fall in love with during 'The Faithful and the Fallen,' a smattering of references from 'TFATF,' and the joy of the character work John Gwynne is known for. If you loved 'TFATF' and have been sitting on this series, get off your butt, pick this up, and fall in love all over again.
Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson
5⭐️
This book made me fall in love with non-fiction, crave it, buy it, and read it. This is the first non-fiction book I have read since college and the first I have read without it being part of the syllabus. 'Just Mercy' follows Bryan Stevenson and his journey into helping the wrongly convicted on death row. It takes a deep dive into the United States justice system, the corruption littered throughout, how race, poverty, and mental health can all impact the outcome of a trial and the bias seen throughout the legal system. It was raw and heartbreaking. Each of the trials are based on true stories. The determination Bryan Stevenson has to save those on death row is hindered often by the same justice system that put them in there. I shed many tears while reading and was impacted by this book in more ways than one. I truly think this is a book that everyone should read. I am not just saying this because it's a good book, which it is, but because of the topics it covers, the important issues that take place on these pages, and the reality this book gives you.
Ronnica Reads
Ronnica fatt
Committed to celebrating books from marginalized authors, with an emphasis on diverse books that lean literary.
Littrilly Reads & Chats Club
Tasj
Hello & welcome to Littrilly Read & Chats Club (LRCC)! <3 I’m Tasj! Here to help you find reads that enlighten, comfort, and excite! Expect: book recs, Book reviews, bookish diaries, reading vlogs, book club, and literary exploration
Reading Fools
Marston Quinn
I’m a fool, and so are you, but maybe we'll be a little less foolish if we read great books together?
Collectible Science Fiction
Adam
Welcome to CSF! Home of the coolest books and covers.
The Threaded Library
Carlos osuna
The Threaded Library isn’t just a book club — it’s a creative, cozy, and wonderfully queer corner of the internet where stories and art intertwine.
Tastemaker-curated publishing imprints
We partner with select tastemakers to discover resonant new voices and publish to readers everywhere.
