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From exclusive content and book clubs to the collaborative publishing of entirely new voices, Bindery empowers tastemakers and their communities to elevate and celebrate stories that deserve to be read.

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Update to Bindery


My amazing Bindery team,

I am so incredibly grateful for all the support you’ve given me since I started this page. I feel so lucky to have such wonderful people in my life. That said, I am not doing what I should be here on Bindery. You are paying me $5/month, and in return, I’m not giving you anything. Despite my best intentions at the beginning, I just don’t have the time to give what I should over here.

That said, I’m going to be discontinuing paid memberships. I have to reach out to Bindery to get this taken care of, and I actually don’t know if they’ll allow me to keep the page running if I don’t have a paid tier, so I’ll let you all know soon if that’s the case. In the meantime, please feel free to downgrade your membership. I feel horrible that I took this long to do this. I hope you all know I never intended to take advantage of your generosity, and I sincerely apologize if you feel scammed in any way.

Nothing else will be changing (unless Bindery makes me), but I just feel this is the best path forward. I love you all and again, I’m so grateful for all of you being in my life.

June events at Sunny's

Hello nerds,

Coming in hot with a busy June!

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In Person Events

Thursday, June 4th at 6:00 PM

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Join us at Sunny's for Yuma County Abolition's monthly book club. This month they are meeting to discuss the second half of Let This Radicalize You. RSVP HERE.

  • About the book: What fuels and sustains activism and organizing when it feels like our worlds are collapsing? Let This Radicalize You is a practical and imaginative resource for activists and organizers building power in an era of destabilization and catastrophe.

  • About Yuma County Abolition: Yuma County Abolition is a grassroots, volunteer-run network dedicated to providing immediate support to our community while building long-term, self-sustaining resilience. We ground our work in solidarity, intersectionality, abolition, accountability, mutual aid, and autonomous direct action.

Friday, June 5th at 5:00 PM

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First Friday is back! Come beat the heat and spend some time downtown after the sun goes down.

About the event: In partnership with the 261 Shops, we will be participating in First Friday. Creation Coffee will be on-site with speciality brews for paying customers to ANY participating business. No minimum purchase required. Sunny's entire store will be 10% off from 5-7 and 20% off for card holding members.

Friday, June 12th at 6:00 PM

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Join us for an author event with Dora Rodriguez, advocate for migration justice and memoirist. Dora will be reading from her memoir and books will be for sale to be signed by the author. This is a FREE event to attend, but we ask that you RSVP so we have a good headcount and can prepare the space. RSVP HERE.

  • About the book: Dora: A Daughter of Unforgiving Terrain is a gripping memoir by Dora Rodriguez, one of only thirteen survivors of a harrowing 1980 crossing through the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument in Arizona during El Salvador’s civil war. At just nineteen, Dora risked everything to flee political violence, only to be met with new dangers along the migrant trail. Her story unfolds in vivid, heart-wrenching detail, from a childhood of hardship and resilience in Santa Ana, El Salvador, to the moment she collapses in the desert, left for dead, and through to her eventual rise as a humanitarian leader in the U.S. borderlands. Her story became one of the catalysts for the Sanctuary City movement in Tucson.

    Now the Founder and Director of Salvavision, Dora shares her journey with unflinching honesty, illuminating the realities of forced migration and the resilience it demands. This is a story of survival, service, and the enduring hope that drives people to risk everything for a better life.

    For readers of Solito and The Line Becomes a River, this book offers a firsthand account of forced migration and the strength it takes to rebuild. An essential title for readers drawn to immigration stories, human rights, and voices of lived experience.

Thursday, June 18th at 6:00 PM

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Join us at Sunny's for our monthly in-person event, Sunny's Salon. This months edition is to celebrate queer reads. RSVP HERE.

  • About the event: To honor Pride Month, this edition of Sunny’s Salon we will be talking about and recommending our favorite queer reads. We also will have a curated selection of books available to be purchased and donated to one n ten. one n ten is a non-profit that enhances the lives of LGBTQ+ youth and young adults, ages 11-24, by providing empowering social and service programs that promote self‐expression, self‐acceptance, leadership development, and healthy life choices.

Online Events:

Sunday, June 28th at 11:00 AM

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Join us at Sunny's us online for our monthly book club Zoom meeting. The June book is Canon by Paige Lewis. RSVP HERE.

  • About the book: Two unlikely heroes embark on quests to win God’s favor in this outrageously entertaining, profoundly heartfelt novel that announces an ingenious new voice in the tradition of Chain-Gang All-Stars, No One Is Talking About This, and Martyr!

  • About Sunny's Book Club: Sunny’s Book Club is a monthly book club highlighting both new releases and backlist titles we love. A virtual discussion is hosted over Zoom on the last Sunday of the month. You can check out our selections each month and sign up here. You do not have to buy the book from Sunny's to participate, but we love when you do!

Thank you all for your support as always and hope to see you in person this month.

CJ

Love what we do? Become a paid subscriber for less than a cup of coffee a month. Your ongoing support helps us plan ahead, fund causes we care about, and create meaningful programming for our community.

Review: Hungerstone by Kat Dunn

I’ve always had the perhaps unpopular literary opinion that Le Fanu’s Carmilla beats Stoker’s Dracula by a country mile, and it’s not just because I like to see women get what they want. 

Written 25 years before Dracula, Carmilla is short, with an economy of language that makes the entire story feel like a single feverish dream. Both were written during an era of incredible social change and wrestled with ideas about modernity, class and social order, feminine sexual agency, and moral purity. The vampire in both Carmilla and Dracula embodies the perversion that threatens “goodness.” Both are also rooted in Victorian anxieties about cleanliness and contagion, the rising influence of the middle classes, the parasitism of the nobility class, and, more simply, intolerance of “the other.” Count Dracula is of a noble, ancient line, while Carmilla’s background is ambiguous but her uncanny magnetism and influence place her firmly in this position of an “other” who commands significant power. 

Anyway (and this is all necessary background, I promise), where Le Fanu succeeds for me in a way Stoker doesn’t–besides that Stoker loved himself a dead horse for beating–is in the utter failure to make me fear Carmilla. She is not grotesque as Dracula often is for Stoker. And the moments of longing and eroticism in Carmilla are so compelling, so tender, that I surely would have been vampire food.

I mean, look at this: 

“I have been in love with no one, and never shall," she whispered, "unless it should be with you."

How beautiful she looked in the moonlight!

Shy and strange was the look with which she quickly hid her face in my neck and hair, with tumultuous sighs, that seemed almost to sob, and pressed in mine a hand that trembled.

Her soft cheek was glowing against mine. "Darling, darling," she murmured, "I live in you; and you would die for me, I love you so."

I started from her.

She was gazing on me with eyes from which all fire, all meaning had flown, and a face colorless and apathetic.

"Is there a chill in the air, dear?" she said drowsily. "I almost shiver; have I been dreaming? Let us come in. Come; come; come in.”

You’re swooning, right? You’re swooning. It’s an incredibly effective work and it doesn’t need 600 pages to be so. 

Carmilla laid a foundation for much of the subsequent vampire fiction of the European canon, and the popularity has never stalled. Now, what I loved about Kat Dunn’s Hungerstone, was that it honored the original work while also subverting its narrative into a bloody celebration of good-for-her-style feminine sexual agency. 

Lenore is a wife of ten years to a social-climbing steel magnate, Henry, but their marriage is stale and unsatisfying. They’ve just moved into the imposing Nethershaw manor in the English countryside, surrounded by wind-blown moors and a sense of looming dread. 

When a carriage accident brings the mysterious Carmilla to stay in the manor, something begins to stir in Lenore. 

So, it’s a Carmilla retelling, obviously, and it takes all of what is lovely about the original – the atmospheric sense of dread that drapes itself across the narrative like wine-red velvet, the bloodthirsty longing, the tender eroticism, but it also expands upon the idea of a woman’s hunger within a repressive context. Lenore’s personhood, womanhood, ability to experience pleasure, and agency are all tightly restricted, and Carmilla is the force that helps her to reacquaint herself with want. This hunger permeates the book, and it’s brutal, bloody, and so, so satisfying. This thematic exploration of desire is deepened through the parallel explorations of the appetites of the capitalist class, the industrial revolution, and colonial expansion. It's also subversive of the original narrative in that Carmilla's arrival is indeed a threat to the patriarchal status quo and to the carefully curated sterility of Lenore's life -- but this danger is ultimately imperative for Lenore's survival and liberation.

Two things I really appreciate: one, that this is not a story about Carmilla. She is an almost surface-level character, and little of her motivation or backstory is necessary for the story. Though what bites we get of her on-page are delicious (she’s sarcastic, strange, beautiful, and mean – consider me seduced! I’ve seen enough!), she is little else, ultimately, than a catalyst for Lenore. This is not a love story – at least, not one between the two women, though the development of their relationship has tension and tenderness enough to get by on. Lenore, on the other hand, is an expertly fleshed-out protagonist. She’s riddled with juxtapositions, complications, and short-comings. She is intelligent but fearful, self-repressed but full of rage, self-involved but self-aware. She is not good, she was never meant to be, and it’s for this reason that she’s so compelling. 

Second, that the tone and pacing don’t recreate but implies the original novel’s sensory experience. Much of the first half of our story is a meandering through Lenore’s interior self, and it’s quiet, introspective, but never dull. The prose is lovely and elegant, and throughout the setting reverberates an anxious, eerie ticking of a clock, with the distinct impression that time is running out. In contrast, the final third of the story is a blood-drenched frenzy, though this sudden change of pace feels intuitively correct. It is like the death throes of a wounded animal; there is a heavy sense of inevitability, as though it is only right, only natural, that Lenore should rip control of her life back with her own bared teeth, that things should erupt from everywhere and nowhere, all at once.


80 Queer Book Recs for Pride Month!

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It’s Pride Month!

2 years ago I stacked all my queer books so see how many I had. It was 60 at the time, now it’s 80!

You can see all the covers in this TikTok, https://vm.tiktok.com/ZNR7s2tUa/

But if you just want to read the list - here it is below! I have read and loved all of these.

Happy Pride!

80 Queer Book Recs:

Fantasy:

Faebound by Saara el-Arifi

She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan

Gideon the Ninth by Tamsin Muir

Cinderella is Ded by Kalynn Bayron

Angels Before Man by Rafael Nicolas

The Final Strife by Saara el-Arifi

House of Hunger by Alexis Henderson

The Gilda Stories by Jewelle Gomez

Legends and Lattes by Travis Baldree

Silver Under Nightfall by Rin Chupeco

Dowry of Bl00d by S.T. Gibson

Her Majesty’s Royal Coven by Juno Dawson

The Final Strife by Saara el-Arifi

Among Thieves by MJ Kuhn

In Deeper Waters by FT Lukens

The Sunbearer Trials by Aiden Thomas

Sixteen Souls by Rosie Talbot

The Empress of Salt and Fortune by Nghi Vo

In the Ravenous Dark by A.M. Strickland

Every Heart a Doorway by Seanan McGuire

Here to Slay by Radhika Sanghani

Moth Dark by Kika Hatzopoulou

Overemotional by David Fenne

When the Tides held the moon by Venessa Vida Kelley

Lies we sing to the sea by Sarah Underwood

Songs for Ghosts by Clara Kumagai

The Chromatic Fantasy by H.A.

The Wolf and his Kingston by Finn Longman

One Hundred Nights of Hero by Isabel Greenberg

Nimona by N.D. Stevenson

Spell Bound by F.T. Lukens

Seven Recipes for Revolution by Ryan Rose

Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas

Somadina by Akwaeke Emezi

Zachary Ying and the Dragon Emperor by Xiran Jay Zhao

Sci Fi:

On a Sunbeam by Tillie Walden

All that’s left in the world by Erik J Brown

Twice Lived by Joma West

Face by Joma West

Iron Widow by Xirin Jay Zhao

The City We Became by NK Jemisin

In the Watchful City by S. Qiouyi Liu

Several People are Typing by Calvin Kasulke

Key Lime Sky by Al Hess

Chain Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah

Romance:

The Dos and Donuts of Love by Adiba Jaigirdar

The Henna Wrs by Adiba Jaigirdar

Hani and Ishu’s guide to fake dating by Adiba Jaigirdar

Rani Choudhury Must D!e by Adiba Jaigirdar

Drink Up, Darling by Harvey Oliver Baxter

Initiation by Alethea Faust

Cafe con Lychee by Emery Lee

Lark & Kasim Start a Revolution by Kacen Callender

Beating Heart Baby by Lio Min

Mercy by Ian Haramaki

Out of the Blue by Jason June

The Prospects by KT Hoffman

Ander and Santi were here by Jonny Garza Villa

Self-Made boys by Anna-Marie McLemore

Game Changer by Rachel Reid

Heated Rivalry by Rachel Reid

Common Goal by Rachel Reid

Tough Guy by Rachel Reid

Role Model by Rachel Reid

The Long Game by Rachel Reid

Cafe con Lychee by Emery Lee

A Gentleman’s Gentleman by TJ Alexander

The Gentle Art of Fortune Hunting by KJ Charles

Horror:

Hell Followed with Us by Andrew Joseph White

The Spirit Bares its Teeth by Andrew Joseph White

The Gilda Stories by Jewelle Gomez

Bloom by Delilah S. Dawson

Coffin Moon by Keith Rosson

Let’s Split Up by Bill Wood

Poetry:

The Black Flamingo by Dean Atta

Bad Q u e e r by Gayathiri Kamalakantham

Coming of age:

Loveless by Alice Oseman

Felix Ever After by Kacen Callender

Mystery:

Tradwife by TC Parker

Murder in the Dressing Room by Holly Stars

6 Romance Novels About Domestic Violence & Abuse Survivors

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As a survivor of intimate partner violence, I love to read romance novels about survivors finding love and safety as they recover from abuse. While their lives are not defined by past trauma, their trauma does inform how they experience intimacy, trust and pleasure. Romance novels that show compassion for survivors and depict them as heroes and heroines taking charge of their lives do important work to de-stigmatize conversations about domestic violence. Through storytelling, they put a human face on the psychological process of recovery and healing, as well as what toxic and dangerous relationships can look like.

Romance genre conventions promise readers that no matter the dark subject matter explored — and no matter the pain the characters endure — everything will be okay. These books send a powerful message that no one deserves to be abused, and that survivors of abuse deserve happy endings with respectful, empathetic, and swoon-worthy partners.

No Ordinary Love by Myah Ariel

Pop superstar Ella Simone is in the middle of a contentious legal battle with her unfaithful and emotionally abusive husband. The last thing she needs is bad press, but after a wardrobe malfunction at an awards show, she and baseball player Miles Westbrook make headlines with their scorching chemistry. This a beautiful celebrity romance about the many forms abuse can take, and learning to open yourself up to love again after having your trust broken.

I had the opportunity to interview Myah Ariel about the book on my podcast, Rebel Ever After. She said, “When you're in a relationship, you might think, ‘I'm not being hit, I'm not being pushed, so this isn’t abuse.’ But I think it's important to realize that abuse has levels, it has shades, it has colors, and it comes in many of them. Just because you've not been bruised or battered does not mean that you haven't been abused.”

[Content warning: Ella's abuser is a character on-page and litigation abuse is continuous.]

Love and Other Conspiracies by Mallory Marlowe

Hallie Barrett is still reeling from her breakup with an abusive coworker at a Buzzfeed-like media company when she's tasked with producing a viral new web series. She teams up with cryptid expert Hayden Hargrove to host a show about the unexplained, and sparks fly as they investigate the Moth Man, Area 51 and other classic conspiracy theories. But will their show perform better than her narcissistic ex's?

Mallory Marlowe and I talked about abusive workplaces and where she found inspiration for Hallie's growth on Rebel Ever After. She said, "I wanted to take those feelings that I had on my own journey of rediscovering my worth and rediscovering that I was smart, that I was valuable, that I should have been a valued team member. I'm a valued person. You don't realize how deep it gets into your psyche until you're taking a step back and starting to heal. I wanted to channel a lot of that pain that I felt into healing for Hallie."

[Content warning: Hallie's abuser is a character on-page and continues to emotionally abuse her at work and online.]

Pas de Don't by Chloe Angyal

Ballet dancer Heather Hayes is at the peak of her career when she learns her fiancé Jack has been cheating on her with another woman in the company. To get away from him, she moves across the world to dance with the Australian National Ballet. The ANB has a strict no-dating policy for its dancers, but her tour guide Marcus is hard to resist... and the perfect foil for her ex. Chloe Angyal writes with compassion about the slow, insidious nature of emotional abuse and how patriarchal institutions protect abusers.

A Delicate Seduction by Regina Kammer

Percival Wood, the Marquess of Norrington, reunites with his old friend Bertram Atherley, the Viscount Ravensburgh, for a Grand Tour of Europe after the death of his controlling partner. This lovely queer historical romance focuses on Percival as he finds joy and understanding now that he is free from abuse, while he still navigates the lingering effects of trauma.

The Duchess Takes a Husband by Harper St. George

After the death of her abusive husband, Camille, the Duchess of Hereford, wants to experience sexual pleasure and reclaim her sense of self. She turns to Jacob Thorne, the illegitimate son of an earl and a co-owner of an infamous private club. Jacob is the perfect partner for a recovering survivor: he is patient, generous, and wildly sexy. This Gilded Age historical romance is one of my personal favorites.

On Rebel Ever After, Harper St. George shared her experience writing the book with me. She said, "It wasn't a book I was looking forward to writing for emotional reasons, but I knew I needed to write her story. It was sort of healing to write it. I'm glad that it landed so well. When I go to reader events, people will come up to me and tell me that that book really meant a lot to them on their own healing journey. It's great to get feedback that it landed, because that's what I want my books to do. They can get awards or star reviews or whatever, but for me, what really hits me and resonates with me is when people tell me, 'Oh, that really helped me at a time when I needed it.'"

Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert

In this wildly popular contemporary rom-com, Chloe Brown is in a rut due to living with a chronic illness. She creates a list of adventures to have and recruits handyman Redford ‘Red’ Morgan to help her break out of her shell. Meanwhile, Red is slowly healing from a past relationship with an abusive ex-girlfriend. The two learn to meet each other's needs even as they butt heads. It's a sweet pleasure to watch them open up to new experiences and love.

But How Are You, Really by Ella Dawson

BONUS! My own romance novel is about a survivor of emotional abuse who thinks she's healed from her traumatic relationship in college... only to come face to face with the past at her college reunion. I worked hard to represent PTSD and how abuse makes survivors skittish about asking for help and trusting new partners.

If you or someone you know is experiencing intimate partner violence, you are not alone. The National Domestic Violence Hotline can anonymously offer you support and resources here.

Please know that no one deserves to be abused, whether that abuse is emotional, financial, physical or digital. You can read my essays about abuse and trauma recovery here.

Deep-Dive Reader Kits for Daughters of the Sun and Moon Are Here!

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Historical fiction lovers, this one is for you!

We are thrilled to announce that our complete collection of reader resources for Daughters of the Sun and Moon by Lisa See is now available!

This unforgettable novel takes readers into the lives of Dove, Petal and Moon, three Chinese women navigating survival, friendship, injustice and resilience in 1870s Los Angeles. Rich with historical detail and emotional depth, it is the perfect book for deep discussions, thoughtful reflection and immersive reading experiences.

To help you get even more from this remarkable story, we've created four exclusive companion guides designed for every type of reader.

Now Available

📚 Book Club Kit

Perfect for book clubs looking to host a memorable discussion. This kit includes:

  • Discussion questions

  • Themed activities

  • Historical exploration prompts

  • Themed menu ideas and recipes

  • Door prize suggestions

  • Meeting planning resources

📝 Individual Book Club Member Reader Guide

Designed to accompany readers throughout the novel with:

  • Character trackers

  • Reflection prompts

  • Annotation suggestions

  • Quote collection pages

  • Reading notes and discussion preparation tools

☕ Solo Deep-Dive Reader Kit

For readers who love an immersive solo experience, featuring:

  • Guided journaling prompts

  • Reading atmosphere ideas

  • Historical context exploration

  • Reflection exercises

  • Themed recipes and activities

👭 Deep Dive Buddy Reader Kit

Perfect for virtual or in-person buddy reads, including:

  • Reading checkpoints

  • Prediction sheets

  • Buddy discussion questions

  • Shared activities

  • Final reflection exercises

  • Celebration ideas

✨ Tap the link to download your kits.

Book Club & Individual Book Club Member Reader Guide https://canva.link/g5zsrjlp2izthkd 

Solo Deep-Dive Reader Kit https://canva.link/xv9a9j2lz843ky1 

Buddy Reader Kit https://canva.link/e0xn7dl1j4gn8xi 

Happy reading, and may Dove, Petal and Moon stay with you long after you turn the final page.

Daughters of the Sun and Moon by Lisa See A Deep Dive Book Club Review

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A sweeping and heartbreaking story of survival, sisterhood and resilience in early Los Angeles

Some historical fiction novels transport you to another time. Others completely immerse you in lives that history tried to forget. Daughters of the Sun and Moon by Lisa See does both with breathtaking emotional depth, unforgettable characters and a haunting exploration of identity, womanhood and survival in 1870s Los Angeles.

From the very first chapter, our book club knew we were stepping into a story that would demand emotional investment. Lisa See paints a vivid portrait of a violent and rapidly changing Los Angeles where anti-Chinese sentiment simmers beneath every interaction, every business deal and every fragile hope. Through Dove, Petal and Moon, readers are given three vastly different perspectives on immigration, class, gender and cultural expectations yet all three women are united by hardship, resilience and the desperate search for freedom.

Three women. Three destinies. One unforgettable story.

What makes Daughters of the Sun and Moon so powerful is the way Lisa See carefully balances each woman’s story without allowing any one voice to overshadow the others.

Dove’s innocence and sheltered upbringing create one of the novel’s most emotionally devastating arcs. Her bound feet become both a literal and symbolic representation of how women are controlled, valued and confined. Watching her navigate marriage, expectation and betrayal sparked some of our deepest book club conversations.

Petal quickly became a favorite among several members of our group. Her journey from poverty and desperation to fierce determination carries enormous emotional weight. She embodies survival in its rawest form, and her experiences reveal the brutal realities many immigrant women faced after arriving in America during this period.

Moon may be the most layered character in the novel. Intelligent, observant and quietly defiant, she constantly struggles between tradition and justice. Her education and ability to speak English provide opportunities the others do not have, yet she still remains trapped by prejudice and societal limitations. Her storyline led to some incredible discussions about visibility, privilege and the cost of speaking out.

Together, these women form the emotional core of the novel. Their friendship develops slowly and authentically, shaped through shared suffering, grief and endurance. Lisa See captures the complicated beauty of female solidarity in a world determined to silence them.

The historical detail is immersive and devastating

One of Lisa See’s greatest strengths as a writer is her ability to weave meticulous historical research into emotionally compelling storytelling. The setting feels alive in every chapter dusty streets, crowded homes, traditional customs, racial violence and fragile communities all blend together to create an atmosphere that feels deeply authentic.

Our group especially appreciated how the novel does not shy away from the horrific anti-Chinese racism of the era. The growing hostility throughout the story creates a constant sense of tension that culminates in the terrifying “Night of Horrors.” These scenes are difficult to read, but they are written with care and purpose rather than sensationalism.

The novel also explores themes of:

  • Immigration and displacement

  • Female autonomy and bodily control

  • Friendship and chosen family

  • Racism and xenophobia

  • Cultural identity and assimilation

  • Survival through suffering or eating bitterness

These themes gave our book club endless discussion material and made this one of the most layered historical fiction reads we’ve tackled this year.

What our book club loved most

Our members especially connected with:

  • The richly developed female friendships

  • The emotional complexity of each protagonist

  • The immersive historical atmosphere

  • The balance between beauty and brutality

  • The exploration of overlooked Chinese-American history

  • The way Lisa See gives voice to women history often erased

Several readers also commented on how cinematic the novel felt. Every chapter unfolds with vivid emotional and sensory detail that makes it incredibly easy to visualize.

A few things readers should know

This is not a light historical fiction read. The novel contains difficult themes including racism, violence against immigrants, abuse, human trafficking and misogyny. Some scenes are emotionally heavy and may be difficult for sensitive readers.

The pacing is also more character-driven than action-driven. Readers looking for a fast-moving plot may need patience during the earlier chapters as Lisa See carefully builds the world and emotional foundations of each woman’s journey.

However, for readers who enjoy deeply immersive historical fiction with emotionally layered characters, the payoff is absolutely worth it.

Final Thoughts

Daughters of the Sun and Moon is a deeply moving and unforgettable historical fiction novel that shines a light on stories rarely centered in mainstream historical narratives. Lisa See once again proves why she is one of the most respected voices in historical fiction today. Through Dove, Petal and Moon, readers witness the extraordinary strength required simply to survive in a society built to deny them humanity.

This is the kind of novel that lingers long after the final page not only because of its heartbreak, but because of the resilience, friendship and hope that survive within it.

If your book club loves emotionally rich historical fiction with powerful female characters, layered discussions and immersive historical detail, this is absolutely one to add to your reading list.

Download Your Free Reader Kits

Ready to take your reading experience even deeper?

Download your FREE:

  • Book Club Starter Kit

  • Individual Book Club Reader Kit

  • Solo Reader Kit

  • Buddy Reader Kit

Tap the link to download your kits https://canva.link/4oxti16h1jo6hoi 

Or join The First Editions for the complete deep-dive experience featuring expanded discussion guides, historical deep dives, exclusive activities, themed recipes, annotated discussion prompts, printable extras and premium reader resources designed for serious book lovers and book clubs.

WEEKLY NEWSLETTER: June 2nd Latine Book Release

Happy Tuesday, mis internet amigxs,

We had a lovely chat with Natalia Hernandez last night. That chat will be posted on YouTube soon, but until then...

BOOK CLUB ANNOUNCEMENTS

Book club announcement is up on social media today, but here is a written out list of our book club books for the next few months (in addition to all the books being linked below):

  • June fiction: And I'll Take Out Your Eyes by A.M. Sosa (audiobook)

  • June nonfiction: continue reading Accordion Eulogies by Noe Alvarez (audiobook)

  • July Summer School reads:

    • 1 month to read P FKN R: How Bad Bunny Became the Global Voice of Puerto Rican Resistance by Vanessa Diaz and Petra R. Rivera-Rideau (audiobook)

    • July - August read: Cuba: An American History by Ada Ferrer (audiobook)

  • August fiction: The Intrigue by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (preorder audiobook)

  • October: You Should Have Been Nicer To My Mom by Vincent Tirado (audiobook)

September book club pick poll will be up next week.

GET ALL THE LATINE RELEASES EARLY!

Libritos and lectores members got ALL of June's releaes in their email this month. If you want to receive an early email, then UPGRADE to Libritos or Lectores membership level to get releases early AND support the work I do for Latinx literature!

And finally, for ALL THE JUNE 2nd BOOKS ON MY RADAR

ONE BOOK NOT INCLUDED IN THE EARLY NEWSLETTER

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We Are Pan by Andre R. Frattino and illustrated by Yasmin Flores Montanez: based off Operation: Pedro Pan, this graphic novel explores the exodus of 14,000 children from Cuba to Miami in the 60s

Horror

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Muneca by Cynthia Gomez (Audiobook)

YA Fantasy

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Their Will Undone by RJ Valideperas (Audiobook)

Middle Grade

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Stream by Aida Salazaar (Audiobook)

Young Adult Contemporary

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Monarchs In The Wild by Israel Moya (Audiobook)

Fantasy

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Beneath The Sacred Well by Rocio Carranza

Mystery

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The Adventure of Juan Planchard by Jonathan Jakubowicz (Audiobook)

Short Stories

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Amarisa's Cooking Pot: Tales of Life in All Its Wonders by Désirée Zamorano

xo,

Carmen

New Release Roundup: What to Read & What to Skip

One of my goals this year is to help you spend less time wondering what to read next and more time actually reading.

Every Tuesday on Instagram, I share a roundup of books hitting shelves that day. But over here, we get to answer the real question: Should you read it or skip it?

This week’s stack took me everywhere from influencer-fueled psychological thrillers and complicated family beach dramas to necromancers, unicorns, magical forests, and one absolutely gorgeous literary fiction novel that may end up being one of my favorite books of the year.

As always, these are just my personal reactions. A book that didn’t work for me might end up being your next five-star read, and a book I loved may not land the same way for everyone else. That’s the fun part of reading.

So let’s sort through this week’s new releases and figure out which books earned a spot on your TBR and which ones I’d leave on the shelf.

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🎧 Man of My Dreams

Read or Skip: SKIP
Rating: 3 stars

I spent most of this book feeling like I had accidentally picked up the wrong story.

The synopsis promises one thing. The book delivers something completely different.

And look, I don’t mind a good twist. I don’t mind a mystery leading into another mystery. But I do mind when an entire storyline feels like it exists purely to distract the reader from what the book is actually about.

By about a third of the way through, it became painfully obvious that the mystery I thought I was reading wasn’t really the mystery at all. Once that clicked, I couldn’t stop wondering why I had spent so much time investing in a plotline that ultimately felt irrelevant.

The biggest issue for me was that it felt like two separate books smashed together. One story is introduced, another story takes over, and neither one felt fully satisfying by the end.

I know some readers will enjoy the layered mystery approach, but personally, it left me frustrated rather than impressed.

Final thought: If you love mysteries that constantly pull the rug out from under you, this may work better for you than it did for me. Unfortunately, I spent more time feeling irritated than intrigued.

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🎧 Tell Your Friends

Read or Skip: SKIP (for me)
Rating: 3 stars

This is one of those books where I loved the premise far more than the execution.

The idea is fantastic. A woman who grew up on her family’s wildly successful vlog channel begins questioning the life that was built for public consumption. The conversations around influencer culture, internet fame, parasocial relationships, and identity were easily the most interesting parts of the story for me.

Maybe it’s because I work in content, but I found myself much more invested in the questions underneath the thriller than the actual mystery itself. Who are you when your entire life has been curated for an audience? How much of your identity belongs to you versus the version people expect you to perform?

That’s fascinating territory.

Unfortunately, the mystery never fully came together for me. I kept waiting for a twist that would genuinely surprise me or a reveal that would completely reframe everything I thought I knew, but it never quite arrived.

I also listened on audio and found the POV transitions surprisingly confusing. Despite having a single narrator, there were multiple moments where I had to stop and figure out whose perspective I was actually in.

Final thought: An interesting exploration of influencer culture and internet fame wrapped inside a psychological thriller, but I wanted more from the mystery than it ultimately delivered.

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👨‍👩‍👧 Down with the Shipmans

Read or Skip: READ
Rating: 4 stars

Some books feel like summer. Not because they’re light or fluffy, but because they understand nostalgia.

Down with the Shipmans is one of those books.

After the death of their mother, three sisters return to their family beach house only to discover their father plans to sell it. On paper, that’s the plot.

In reality, this book is about everything that house represents.

Childhood memories. Family history. Old wounds. The versions of ourselves that seem to reappear the second we walk back through the front door of a place that once felt like home.

What worked best for me was how complicated the family dynamics felt. Nobody is entirely right. Nobody is entirely wrong. They’re simply people carrying years of shared history and trying to navigate grief, change, and each other.

The New Hampshire coastal setting adds so much warmth and atmosphere, but beneath that cozy summer exterior is a surprisingly honest story about loss and moving forward.

Final thought: A heartfelt beach-town family drama that perfectly balances nostalgia, grief, humor, and complicated sibling relationships.

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🩵 Whistler

Read or Skip: READ IMMEDIATELY
Rating: 4.5 stars

Ann Patchett somehow managed to write a book that feels both quiet and enormous at the same time.

Whistler begins with a chance encounter at a museum when Daphne Fuller unexpectedly comes face-to-face with Eddie Triplett, the former stepfather she hasn’t seen in decades.

From there, the story unfolds into something beautiful, reflective, and deeply human.

This is a book about memory. About the choices that shape our lives and the people who leave permanent fingerprints on us, even when they’re only part of our story for a short time.

What struck me most was how effortlessly Patchett captures the feeling of looking backward. The realization that entire versions of ourselves still exist in other people’s memories. The understanding that seemingly small moments can quietly alter the course of a life.

It’s understated in the best possible way. There aren’t huge dramatic twists and there doesn’t need to be.

The emotional impact comes from the humanity of it all.

Final thought: One of the most beautiful books I’ve read this year and a reminder that sometimes the quietest stories leave the deepest marks.

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🦄 The Unicorn Hunters

Read or Skip: READ
Rating: 5 stars

Anne of Brittany wanted to avoid marriage so badly that she invented an elaborate unicorn problem.

Honestly? Iconic behavior.

The Unicorn Hunters is exactly the kind of historical fantasy I love: rich with real history, layered with folklore, filled with clever women, political intrigue, magical forests, and just enough wonder to make everything feel possible.

Katherine Arden takes the story of Anne of Brittany and reimagines it through the lens of myth and magic, weaving unicorns, lost cities, prophecy, and the legendary forest of Brocéliande into a story that feels both fantastical and deeply rooted in history.

I was completely swept away. The magic is wonderful, but what really stood out was Anne herself. Arden allows her to be clever, strategic, stubborn, ambitious, and deeply human in a way that feels incredibly refreshing.

Also, Louis throwing himself into danger at every opportunity in the name of love? More of that, please.

Final thought: Magical forests, court intrigue, clever women, unicorns, and history reimagined through fantasy. Katherine Arden remains incapable of disappointing me.

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💀 Hopelessly Necromantic

Read or Skip: READ
Rating: 4 stars

Bone jokes? Check.

A burned-out thirty-something necromancer who really wishes someone else would save the kingdom? Also check.

Hopelessly Necromantic follows Sikras, a disgraced royal necromancer grieving the loss of his wife while reluctantly getting dragged into another world-saving adventure alongside a demon recruit and an extremely charming skeleton brother-in-law.

The humor here worked really well for me. It’s packed with puns, self-awareness, and that specific kind of fantasy comedy where everyone seems slightly exhausted by the fact that they’re in a fantasy novel.

At its core though, this is a story about grief, healing, friendship, and finding reasons to move forward. The romance is very light and develops quickly, but I found the friendships and found-family dynamics far more compelling anyway.

My only real criticism is that everything feels a little surface level. The heavier emotional themes are there, but the book rarely digs as deeply into them as I wanted it to.

Still, it’s incredibly charming.

Final thought: A funny, cozy fantasy full of skeletons, necromancy, found family, healing, and enough bone puns to make me question all my life choices.

And that's this week's release-day stack.

As for the standouts, Whistler and The Unicorn Hunters were easily the stars of the week for me, while Down with the Shipmans delivered exactly the kind of nostalgic summer family story I tend to love.

Now I want to hear from you: Which of these new releases are you most excited about? And if you've already picked one up, let me know whether you agree with my verdict or think I completely missed the mark.

Until next Tuesday, happy reading. 📚

Bailee Russo

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Bee's Books

Bailee Russo

Speculative fiction reader, writer, and reviewer | Anthropology & history scholar | Lover of delightfully weird books

Joe

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Diva Down Books

Joe

Welcome to Diva Down Books! Here, you’ll get the inside scoop on what I’m reading and how I feel about it. One thing about me is that you’re going to get a brutally honest review. I’m happy to have you here!

Rebel Ever After

Ella Dawson

A celebration of swoony, progressive romance novels, hosted by author and podcaster Ella Dawson. Listen to new episodes in the Rebel Ever After feed wherever you get your podcasts!

Sawyer Cole Hobson

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Not A Phase Books

Sawyer Cole Hobson

Welcome to Not A Phase Books! A book loving community where we’re inclusive and dare to be our authentic selves in the face of the societal norms. Come for the book talk, stay for the community, grow together.

MJ

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Reading This Life

MJ

Hello and welcome! I'm so glad you're here! My name is MJ and I've been a booktuber since 2022. I love horror, vintage YA, all things tech (e-readers, e-reading apps), my family, and my dog (Watson) more than is probably reasonable. Stay tuned for book reviews, recommendations, a bit of my writing, and whatever else feels right.

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