Laden...
It’s an empirical fact that crowns, fairies, and Afros go together. These books — which draw on the countless mythologies and imaginative traditions of African and Black diaspora peoples — prove it.
Forwarded this newsletter? Well, hello there! BuzzFeed Books celebrates all things books for every kind of reader, and the newsletter is the best way to keep up with curated posts, exclusive reviews, virtual events, and author features. We'll pop into your inbox every Tuesday and Sunday, with the occasional offer from a sponsor. Maybe we're biased, but we think you'll really enjoy it. Hit the button below to join us! Subscribe
More for your TBR list 15 Romance Books To Read Based On The Trope You Love Most 24 YA Books Releasing Before Spring That You Need To Pick Up Quizzes Only A Real Book Lover Can Name The Book Title From The Blurred Out Cover Eat A Korean Feast And We'll Tell You Which "To All The Boys I've Loved Before" Character You Are
Read this: Credit: @splitrockbks My local used bookstore, Topos Bookstore & Cafe, recently opened for limited, distanced browsing and it has been a godsend. It's rare that I'm able to make time to read books that aren't brand spanking new, but every now and then there's nothing better than walking through a used bookstore looking for anything that catches your eye. When I spotted Rivka Galchen's pocket-sized book (just under 150 pages) full of brief observations about mothers and children in literature, mixed with her own experiences as a new mother, I knew there was no way I was leaving the store without it.
Galchen's descriptions of her early days with her daughter (whom she refers to as "the puma") are more relatable than anything I've read in the 19 months since my first child was born. She writes about her naïveté leading up to the birth, and beautifully encapsulates the contradictions of that first year — the experience of this new person as somehow equally foreign and innately knowable. "I had imagined that I was going to meet, at birth, a very sophisticated form of plant life," Galchen writes. "I would look forward to getting to know the life-form properly later, when she had moved into a sentient kingdom, maybe around age three. But instead, within hours of being born, the being [...] appeared to me not like a plant at all, but instead like something much more powerfully moving than just another human being, she had appeared as an animal, a previously undiscovered old-world monkey, but one with whom I could communicate deeply: It was an unsettling, intoxicating, against-nature feeling." And yet, she notes, this rich, complicated, fraught experience is largely absent in classic literature.
This is, thankfully, changing; in just the past five or so years I've been thrilled to read novels about new(ish) mothers like Lydia Kiesling's The Golden State, Ashley Audrain's The Push, Diane Cook's The New Wilderness, Helen Phillips' The Need, and Elisa Albert's After Birth — all of which tell brutally honest stories ranging from irreverent to ambivalent to disturbing, complicating the narrative of the blissful new mother experiencing a love unlike any other. Not to mention the recent spate of wonderful motherhood memoirs, of which Little Labors is now one of my favorites. I'm sure I'll be revisiting it. Get your copy. —Arianna Rebolini
This week in virtual book events: Feb. 22–27
Monday, Feb. 22 Heather McGhee discusses The Sum of Us: What Racism Costs Everyone and How We Can Prosper Together with Ibram X. Kendi — hosted by Magic City Books, 7 p.m. CT. $30. More info. Anna North (Outlawed) and Alexis Coe (You Never Forget Your First: A Biography of George Washington) discuss their latest books — hosted by Elliott Bay Book Company, 7:30 p.m. PT. More info.Tuesday, Feb. 23 Emily St. John Mandel discusses The Glass Hotel with Isaac Fitzgerald — hosted by Brookline Booksmith, 7 p.m. ET. More info. Roxane Gay, Larissa Pham, and Kim Fu discuss their contributions to the short story anthology Kink in conversation with Lidia Yuknavitch — hosted by Powell's, 6 p.m. PT. More info. Patricia Lockwood discusses No One Is Talking About This with Catherine Cohen — hosted by Skylight Books & Dynasty Typewriter, 6 p.m. PT. $5. More info.Wednesday, Feb. 24 Hermione Lee discusses her biography of Tom Stoppard, Tom Stoppard: A Life, with Stoppard himself — hosted by Greenlight Bookstore, 5 p.m. ET. $45. More info. Elizabeth Miki Brina discusses Speak, Okinawa with Bryan Washington — hosted by Books Are Magic, 7 p.m. ET. More info.Thursday, Feb. 25 Julia Fine discusses The Upstairs House with Lynn Steger Strong — hosted by Politics & Prose, 6 p.m. ET. More info. Naomi Klein discusses How to Change Everything with Miko Vergun and Isaac Vergun — hosted by Powell's, 5 p.m. PT. More info. Gabriel Byrne discusses Walking With Ghosts with Sarah McNally — hosted by McNally Jackson, 7 p.m. ET. $5. More info.Friday, Feb. 26 Lily King discusses Writers & Lovers with Ann Patchett — hosted by Parnassus Books, 6 p.m. CT. More info. Joe Ide discusses Smoke — hosted by Murder by the Book, 8 p.m. CT. More info.Saturday, Feb. 27 Mikki Kendall discusses Hood Feminism with Jalessah T. Jackson — hosted by Charis Books & More, 7:30 p.m. ET. More info. Jen Sincero presents Badass Habits: Cultivate the Awareness, Boundaries, and Daily Upgrades You Need to Make Them Stick — hosted by Book Passage, 1 p.m. PT. $40. More info.
More From BuzzFeed 37 Products That Might Help Make Winter A Little Less Miserable 20 Products Reviewers Say Help Them Calm The Heck Down 27 Genius Things To Help With Small DIY Projects Around The House 32 Difficult Puzzles That Might Actually Keep You Entertained For More Than A Day If You Love Candles, You Need To Shop These 19 Black-Owned Candle Brands 38 Things From Etsy That'll Probably Have People Asking "Where Did You Get That?"
BuzzFeed, Inc. We hope you love the products we recommend! Just so you know, BuzzFeed may collect a small share of sales from the links in this email. View our privacy notice and cookie policy |
Laden...
Laden...
© 2024