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  • The Hub

    News, Notes, Talk

    The people’s hero Keanu Reeves has written a novel with China Miéville.

    Emily Temple

    January 10, 2024, 10:27am

    Yep—noted art book publisher, comic book writer, and all-purpose hero Keanu Reeves is back to bless the darkest timeline with a novel. The Book of Elsewhere, which will be published by Del Rey on July 23, 2024, was co-written with China Miéville, and is set in the world of the BRZRKR comics that Reeves wrote with Matt Kindt and artist Ron Garney. According to the publisher, the novel “follows an immortal warrior on a millennias-long quest to discover the key to his immortality—and perhaps, a way to free himself from it.”

    “It was extraordinary to have the opportunity to collaborate on The Book of Elsewhere with one of my favorite authors, China Miéville,” said Keanu Reeves in a press release. “China did exactly what I was hoping for—he came in with a clear architecture for the story and how he wanted to play with the world of BRZRKR, a world that I love so much. I was thrilled with his vision and feel honored to be a part of this collaborative process.”

    “Sometimes the greatest games are those you play with other people’s toys,” China Miéville said. “It was an honour, a shock and a delight when Keanu invited me to play. But I could never have predicted how generous he’d be with toys he’s spent so long creating, how glad to experiment together, how open to true collaboration. I hope readers get to experience even a fraction of the pleasure reading The Book of Elsewhere that I experienced in the writing—in the serious business of play.”

    Here’s the cover:

    And you can preorder it here.

    Announcing the 2024 class of Periplus fellows.

    Literary Hub

    January 9, 2024, 10:00am

    Literary Hub is pleased to announce the 2024 class of Periplus Fellows. This year, Periplus awarded a total of 48 mentorships to writers of color living and working in the United States—selected from a pool of more than 500 applicants—pairing each one with a member of the collective, an established writer who will meet monthly with their mentee to foster community, support their writing practice, and advise on the nitty gritty of making a career as an artist.

    “Periplus has given me incredible access to creative, professional, and social resources through its mentorship program,” said Hilal Isler, a 2023 Periplus Fellow, in a release. “As a first generation immigrant who doesn’t know anyone in the publishing industry—and who doesn’t have an MFA—I’ve found that Periplus has helped me progress on the journey toward publication, supporting me and connecting me to resources I need to make my dream of becoming an author a reality.”

    The full list of 2024 fellows is below:

    Alice Nguyen (she/her) is a journalist and fiction writer based in NYC. Her writing has appeared in NBC News, St. Louis Magazine, and K’in Literary Journal. Alice’s mentor is Mimi Lok.

    Amari Amai is a black transmasculine poet and Great Migration baby, born and raised in Chicago, Illinois. They are a poet in residence at the Chicago Poetry Center, and a Watering Hole ‘23 fellow. Their work is influenced by black spiritual practices, weaving ancestral voices and histories with southern dialect to paint their black trans lived experiences. Amari’s mentor is Dustin Pearson.

    Amy Zhou 周纯 (they/she) is a queer neurodivergent researcher-organizer, urban planner, and writer based on Ohlone land (Oakland, California). They write and create comics about memory, diaspora, land, and home. Amy’s mentor is Lauren Markham.

    Angélica Martinez is a Venezuelan American writer, editor, and educator based in New York City. She holds an MFA from Hunter College and has received support from VONA/Voices. Angélica’s mentor is Kirstin Valdez Quade.

    Anna Hui Tran (she/her) is a writer from Sydney, Australia, now living in Iowa, USA. Her work was previously shortlisted for The Australian/Vogel’s Literary Award. Anna’s mentor is James Han Mattson.

    Anthony Gomez III is an English PhD student at Stony Brook University and is based in Brooklyn, New York. He is a Chicano writer with fiction appearing in New Letters, Four Way Review, Shenandoah, and other literary magazines. Anthony’s mentor is Derek Palacio.

    Arina Sarwari-Stadnyk (she/they) is a queer Afghan-Ukrainian linocut printmaker and writer on unceded Ohlone Lisjan land. Arina’s drawings, linocut prints, poems, and lyrical essays celebrate diasporic memory and intergenerational joy. Arina’s mentor is Sarah Perry.

    Ashna Ali is a best-of-the-net-nominated queer, disabled, and diasporic Bangladeshi poet raised in Italy and based in Brooklyn. Their first collection, The Relativity of Living Well, is forthcoming from Bone Bouquet in 2024, and their work is featured in Split This Rock, The Margins, Nat. Brut, Zoeglossia, and beyond. Ashna’s mentor Diana Khoi Nguyen.

    Audrey Kuo is an interdisciplinary artist, abolitionist, coach, and mischief enthusiast working toward collective liberation. Through their art and movement work, Audrey explores their belief that the work of liberation asks us to both dismantle systems of oppression and offer compelling, joyful alternatives. Audrey’s mentor is Zeyn Joukhadar.

    Ben Brooks is an impatient black editor and novelist based in New York City. You can find more of what he’s writing, reading and translating on Instagram @soarticulit. Ben’s mentor is Zain Khalid.

    Canela is a 2-Spirit Indigenous artist who grew up in the heart of Oaxacalifornia. Visit https://linktr.ee/canelacreator to learn more about their work. Canela’s mentor is Angelique Stevens.

    D.L. Cordero is an afro-latinx and taíno fantasy author, occasional poet, and horror dabbler working out of Denver, CO. Their writing, found in literary magazines and anthologies, centers empowered, messy characters from historically oppressed groups, with the hope of minimizing isolation in sparkly oddballs. When not storytelling, Cordero can be found wrangling their pit bull and yellow lab while binging old-school anime. Follow them @dlcorderowrites and on dlcordero.com. D.L.’s mentor is A.E. Osworth.

    daniel barrios (he/him) is a Dominican/Puerto Rican writer with indigenous roots living in New York City. He holds an MFA from Southern New Hampshire University, and he teaches English literature and composition at St. Paul’s School of Nursing. He is writing a collection of short stories. Daniel’s mentor is Jenzo DuQue.

    David Renteria is a racquet stringer in Sacramento, California. He writes about his own private undocumentation, with pieces in Write Now! SF Bay, Berkeley Fiction Review, and Quarter After Eight. David’s mentor is Daniel Peña.

    Derrel Furutani is a Japanese-American writer and educator living in Los Angeles, CA. Derrel’s mentor is Megan Kamalei Kakimoto.

    Dianna Vega is a Dominican writer and poet based in Florida. Her poetry has appeared in Outrageous Fortune and South Dakota Review. Dianna’s mentor is Cleyvis Natera.

    donia salem harhoor (they/she) is a disabled egyptian american anthophile and caregiver living in Lenapehoking whose work often considers how language, lineage, land, and dis-ease shape us. Executive director of The Outlet Dance Project, lover of foxes, tree lichen, & aunties cackling, their work has received support from RAWI, Lambda Literary, Roots.Wounds.Words, Open Mouth Poetry, Swim Pony, and others. donia’s mentor is Tracy Fuad.

    Ellena Basada is a writer from Gresham, Oregon. A 2019-20 Fulbright Scholar in Berlin, she is interested in creative collaborations, technologies of memory and identity, and work that explores the self as an unreliable and anxious agent. Ellena’s mentor is Melissa Chadburn.

    Erika DeShay is a Black poet and English teacher living in Denver, Colorado. Erika’s work grapples with finding joy in times of sorrow and has been published or is forthcoming in Spoken Black Girl, Fatal Flaw, 45 Magazine, Half and One, and The Cortland Review. Erika’s mentor is Marlanda Dekine.

    Gerardo J Mercado is a Puerto rican poet and fiction writer, his work has been published in online magazines, multiple anthologies, and literary journals. Gerardo’s work focuses on the spiritual identity, the caribbean, and nature. Gerardo’s mentor is Libby Flores.

    Hairol Ma is a Taiwanese-American writer from California. She is at work on a novel and a collection of short stories. Hairol’s mentor is R.O. Kwon.

    Hayward Leach is a Brooklyn-born actor and writer published in Narratively and Porter House Review. He has received support from Meg Pillow’s Craft Year workshop, Tin House, Kimbilio, and Community of Writers; he is at work on a story collection and historical fiction novel about 1930s Mexico City. Hayward’s mentor is Kim Coleman Foote.

    Isabella Lopez Procassini is a writer of literary and speculative fiction. She is working on a genre-bending short story collection about the beliefs and bodies we inherit. Isabella’s mentor is Deesha Philyaw.

    Isra Rahman is a journalist and advocate in Chicago working on abolishing prisons, police, and carceral systems. In her writing she explores stories of love, grief, and community pertaining to her identity as South Asian Muslim. Isra’s mentor is Hilary Leichter.

    Jamar Thrasher is a Pennsylvania-based writer of fiction and creative non-fiction. His stories commonly touch on the raw aspects of the emotive human experience, specifically those dealing with religion (Christianity in particular), race, and industry. Jamar’s mentor is Laura van den Berg.

    Jamiella Brooks, writing under the pen name Parlei Rivière, is a Black mother-scholar, daughter, and descendant living in Philadelphia, PA who explores the intersections of language, anti-colonialism, and space. Her debut creative fiction story, “Space Treads,” can be found in Uncanny Magazine, where she also has a forthcoming piece, “Redshift || Shiftred.” Jamiella’s mentor is Jennine Capó Crucet.

    Jenny Wu is a critic and educator based in New York City whose work has appeared in The New York Times, Artforum, Art in America, The Washington Post, and elsewhere. Jenny’s mentor is Angelica Jade Bastién.

    Jessica Winkler is an award-nominated researcher of oral history and a 2023 Tin House Workshop alumna. Her memoir-in-progress tracks a common dream between four generations of women in her family. In it, she also explores what it means to fail a ritual, storytelling as survival, and intergenerational hope. She writes under her Chinese name, LiXin. Jessica’s mentor is Anna Qu.

    Joy KMT is a mother, lover & Hoodoo Opulence. As a writer, she has received residencies and fellowships from Heinz, MacDowell, Callaloo, & VONA. They is published in many places, including Callalloo and Nepantla: A Journal Dedicated to Queer Poets of Color. She is the winner of the Discovery Prize from Black Poetry Review. Her work is informed by maroon futurisms, liberation, spiritual fugitivity, & very very Black space-time. Joy’s mentor is Arthur Rickydoc Flowers.

    Judy Jiang was born and raised in Oregon in a home with her parents, grandfather, and three siblings. She works, creates, and imagines as a writer, artist, and filmmaker. She is currently at work on a memoir on Chinese-American culture, daughterhood, loss, and grief. Judy’s mentor is Nadia Owusu.

    Khalid Mitchell is a Charleston-based writer. He currently has work in Major 7th Magazine. Khalid’s mentor is Rion Amilcar Scott.

    Laura Torlaschi is a Queens-based essayist previously published in The New York Times’ Tiny Love Stories, Roxane Gay’s The Audacity, Petit Mort, and P’an Ku. Drawing on her experience as the queer, disabled daughter of Argentinian immigrants, she explores themes of class, female sexuality, disability, and the American Dream. Laura’s mentor is Carina del valle Schorske.

    Li Sian Goh is a Chinese-Singaporean writer who writes about art, authoritarianism, immigration and belonging. Her work has been featured or is forthcoming in Joyland Magazine, swamp pink, and No Tokens. She lives in New York, where she is at work on a short story collection and a novel. Li Sian’s mentor is Rachel Khong.

    Lil Kalish is a Los Angeles based writer and journalist covering LGBTQ rights at HuffPost. Their reporting examines questions around rights to healthcare and bodily autonomy, tech privacy, and right-wing politics and appears in The Guardian, The Los Angeles Times, Mother Jones, BuzzFeed News, CalMatters and more. Lil’s mentor is Alex Marzano-Lesnevich.

    Loren Maria Guay is a poet and speculative fiction writer, with work published in Tinderbox Poetry Journal, West Trade Review, Breakwater Review, Asymptote, khoreo, and others. Born in Asunción, Paraguay and raised in Brooklyn, NY, they are currently based in Chicago and can be found at lmguay.com. Loren’s mentor is Erica Mena.

    Malik Washington is a writer, educator, and artist whose writing includes essays, poetry, plays, and short stories. Across these practices, Malik seeks to create spaces that invite learning, beauty, and interruptions of power and violence. He is the creator and editor of The Stevland Exchange, a community and online platform connecting people, culture, and memory through music. Malik’s mentor is Jenny Sadre Orafai.

    Marissa Fretes is a writer originally from New York City and currently based in Washington, D.C. Her work has received support from the Jenny McKean Moore Workshop at George Washington University and the Hurston/Wright Foundation. Marissa’s mentor is Yalitza Ferreras.

    Maya Garcia is a Nicaraguan-American writer from Minneapolis, Minnesota. She received a dual Bachelor of Arts in English and Puerto Rican and Latino Studies from Brooklyn College in 2020 and an Advanced Certificate in Labor Studies from the Graduate Center of New York in 2021. Having previously accepted fellowships from VONA, the Watering Hole, Brooklyn Poets, The Seventh Wave Magazine, Macondo Writers Workshop, and the Loft Literary Center, her work seeks to explore the intersections of Latinidad, womanhood, queerness, and working-class identities. You can find her on instagram @mayag_23. Maya’s mentor is Teow Lim Goh.

    Oluwabambi Ige is a Nigerian writer living in Philadelphia. His work has appeared in Agni, Story Magazine, Joyland, Columbia Journal, has won the Winter Tangerine Award for Prose, been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, and received support from the Breadloaf Writer’s Conference. He is working on his first novel. Oluwabambi’s mentor is Sidik Fofana.

    Paula Gil-Ordoñez Gomez is a Mexican-Spanish-American poet based in Brooklyn. She is the Social Media & Membership Manager for Brooklyn Poets. Her writing has been published or is forthcoming in HAD, Variant Lit, X-R-A-Y, Rejection Letters, and Heavy Feather Review, among others. Paula’s mentor is Adrienne Raphel.

    Solomon Tesfaye is an Ethiopian writer, born and raised in a refugee camp in Yemen, and now living in D.C. He is currently querying his first novel, which explores the refugee experience through a transcontinental lens – Elsoloo.com. Solomon’s mentor is DK Nnuro.

    Summer Farah is a Palestinian American writer from California. She is calling on you to recommit yourself to the liberation of the Palestinian people each day. Summer’s mentor is E. Alex Jung.

    Swiss McCall is a Black, masculine-presenting lesbian writer and professor from Maplewood, NJ. She is currently working on cultivating and expanding her artistic scope into the genres of fiction and creative non-fiction. Swiss’s mentor is Denne Michele Norris.

    Tania Perez Osuna is the eldest daughter of a Zapotec-Mexican family which incidentally means she is a translator, a bootleg paralegal, and a recovering unofficial therapist. She is currently working on a project that takes place on the southern AZ border where she grew up, a place that is full of magic, community, and grief caused by bad policy, disinvestment and greed. In her work she strives to capture the complexity of joy, as well as the nuanced ways she has witnessed life unfold. Tania’s mentor is Jami Nakamura Lin.

    Tommy Kim lives in the San Fernando Valley with his wife and two daughters. His writing has appeared in JOYLAND and THE ST. PETERSBURG REVIEW, and he is a graduate of the Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers. Tommy’s mentor is Joseph Han.

    Tshaka Campbell is a poet, artist, performer and the first black Santa Clara County Poet Laureate. He is a husband and father inspired by life and asks the world to “Listen Different!” Tshaka’s mentor is Vincente Perez.

    Veasna Has is an LBC-raised turned Queens-based writer whose work explores themes of family and cultural identity, rooted in her Cambodian American upbringing. Her writing has been supported by the Mendocino Coast Writers’ Conference and Kundiman. Veasna’s mentor is Nicole Chung.

    Yazud E. Brito-Milian (they/them) is a Chicane poet, impatient collagist, abolitionist, and eldest sister. Born in Winston-Salem, NC, and based in Chicago, IL, they are working on their first chapbook dedicated to their dad’s black and yellow KORG M50 and the Sonideres who raised them. Their work can be found in Muzzle Magazine, Voicemail Poems, and The Poetry Project. Yazud’s mentor is Maceo Montoya.

    Here are this year’s finalists for The Story Prize.

    Literary Hub

    January 9, 2024, 8:00am

    This morning, The Story Prize—which seeks to recognize the best short story collection published every year—announced its three 2024 finalists, chosen from a total of 113 submissions. “Even after reading more than 20,000 short story collections over the twenty years this award has existed, we’re still encountering short story collections unlike any we’ve read before. These three books expand the form and offer profound observations about the human condition,” said Larry Dark, Director of The Story Prize, in a press release.

    The winner will be announced on Tuesday, March 26, and will be awarded $20,000; each runner-up will receive $5,000.

    The finalists are:

    Yiyun Li, Wednesday's Child

    Yiyun Li, Wednesday’s Child
    (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

    other minds

    Bennett Sims, Other Minds and Other Stories
    (Two Dollar Radio)

    Paul Yoon, The Hive and the Honey: Stories

    Paul Yoon, The Hive and the Honey
    (Marysue Rucci Books)

    22 new books out today!

    Gabrielle Bellot

    January 9, 2024, 4:01am

    I’m still processing that it’s now 2024—I just almost wrote “2023” again!—and it can feel a little disorienting to enter a new year for the first few days, if not weeks. But there are reliable things to look forward to, like brand-new books coming out each week, and, after a slowdown in December, we’re back into the swing of things with a slew of exciting new fiction, memoirs, poetry collections, and critical nonfiction to consider.

    Below, you’ll find a new collection of short stories from Jill McCorkle, Katherine Min’s much-buzzed posthumous novel The Fetishist, a hallucinatory new novel from Álvaro Enrigue memorably described by one reviewer as “an Aztec West Wing,” and many other intriguing fictions; poetry collections from Yalie Kamara and Mikeas Sánchez, the latter the first woman to publish a book of poems in Zoque and Spanish; new nonfiction tackling music for the deaf, climate change, fatness, the checkered history of the Surrealist movement, and more; and many other intriguing titles.

    As 2024 creeps forward, its contours uncertain, I hope you’ll find some comfort in choosing one, or many, of the great new options below!

    *

    You Only Call When You're in Trouble - McCauley, Stephen

    Stephen McCauley, You Only Call When You’re in Trouble
    (Holt)

    “Picture F. Scott Fitzgerald with tongue in cheek and you get the gift of Stephen McCauley’s You Only Call When You’re in Trouble. I loved these deliciously flawed characters and every thought that runs through their heads. As with all things Stephen McCauley, it has the highest of wit and the sharpest of social commentary plus tenderness and much love.”
    –Elinor Lipman

    Old Crimes: And Other Stories - McCorkle, Jill

    Jill McCorkle, Old Crimes: And Other Stories
    (Algonquin Books)

    “Jill McCorkle has had an extraordinary ear for the music of ordinary life since the beginning of her career, able to work with the voices we know so well to write these stories about they will not tell us, what they would rather not tell us, what they hope to tell us, what too often goes unsaid. And this collection is a new wonder.”
    –Alexander Chee

    The Fetishist - Min, Katherine

    Katherine Min, The Fetishist
    (Putnam’s)

    “Darkly funny, strangely poignant and sometimes startlingly vicious, The Fetishist is a wonderful novel from an author we lost too soon, and a sweeping yet intimate statement on the impacts of racism and sexism on Asian American women….Captivating, hilariously twisted…simultaneously playful and powerful….This remarkably clever, wickedly incisive little book will keep you hanging on every word and leave you with questions you’ll ponder for days.”
    BookPage

    Rental Person Who Does Nothing: A Memoir (Original) - Morimoto, Shoji

    Shoji Morimoto, Rental Person Who Does Nothing: A Memoir
    (Hanover Square Press)

    “Undeniable poignancy…a narrative that transcends cultural borders….An eccentric, charming book, showing how humans can connect in the strangest of circumstances.”
    Kirkus Reviews

    Of Greed and Glory: In Pursuit of Freedom for All - Plant, Deborah G.

    Deborah G. Plant, Of Greed and Glory: In Pursuit of Freedom for All
    (Amistad Press)

    “If you want to understand the current issues surrounding race, social justice, and inequality, you have to read Deborah Plant’s book, Of Greed and Glory. Deborah understands that the issues surrounding race, unfolding before us now in America, are deeply rooted in the legacy of the African American past. She writes eloquently and beautifully about that past. Of Greed and Glory is a must-read book for socially conscious citizens.”
    –Clyde W. Ford

    Unshrinking: How to Face Fatphobia - Manne, Kate

    Kate Manne, Unshrinking: How to Face Fatphobia
    (Crown Publishing Group)

    Unshrinking is an incisive polemic that brilliantly dissects fatphobia, the way it encroaches upon our lives, and how ultimately we can, if we are willing, do the challenging work of unlearning damaging ideas about fatness, health, and happiness.”
    –Roxane Gay

    Besaydoo: Poems - Saweda Kamara, Yalie

    Yalie Saweda Kamara, Besaydoo: Poems
    (Milkweeed Editions)

    “Yalie Saweda Kamara’s lucent poetry collection Besaydoo encircles matters of race, heritage, boundaries, and exchanging ‘worry for hope’….Eloquent, proud, and discerning, the poems of Besaydoo preserve the wary splendor of lived experience.”
    Foreword Reviews

    How to Be a Good Savage and Other Poems - Sánchez, Mikeas

    Mikeas Sánchez, How to Be a Good Savage and Other Poems (trans. Wendy Call and Shook)
    (Milkweed Editions)

    “In a fiercely personal yet authoritative voice…Mikeas Sánchez explores the worldview of the Zoque people of southern Mexico…How to Be a Good Savage and Other Poems examines the intersection of Zoque struggles against colonialism and empire, and those of North African immigrants and refugees….Coming from the only woman to ever publish a book of poetry in Zoque and Spanish, this timely, powerful collection pairs the bilingual originals with an English translation for the first time.”
    Latin American Literature Today

    My Friends - Matar, Hisham

    Hisham Matar, My Friends
    (Random House)

    My Friends is a breathtaking novel, every page a miracle and an affirmation. If there is a language of exile, My Friends is what it sounds like: exquisite and painful, compassionate and unflinching, and, above all, overwhelming in its boundless hope that within exile rests a path toward a different kind of return—one that leads us back to ourselves. Hisham Matar is one of our greatest writers. How lucky we are to be in his midst.”
    –Maaza Mengiste

    The Djinn Waits a Hundred Years - Khan, Shubnum

    Shubnum Khan, The Djinn Waits a Hundred Years
    (Viking)

    “Haunting and healing, The Djinn Waits a Hundred Years, with its shades of The House of Spirits and Rebecca, is one of the best books I’ve read this year…Khan’s gorgeous writing lays bare what it means to love, grieve, haunt and, ultimately, let go.”
    –Sarah Addison

    You Dreamed of Empires - Enrigue, Álvaro

    Álvaro Enrigue, You Dreamed of Empires (trans. Natasha Wimmer)
    (Riverhead Books)

    “Throughout the book, Enrigue (and in English his excellent translator, Natasha Wimmer) boldly uses modern language to recreate the past….Parts of the novel play like an Aztec West Wing, taking us deep into the political maneuverings of the royal court but blending its particularities with twenty-first-century psychology. It’s a rich approach that achieves a hallucinatory vividness.”
    The Guardians

    Soundtrack of Silence: Love, Loss, and a Playlist for Life - Hay, Matt

    Matt Hay, Soundtrack of Silence: Love, Loss, and a Playlist for Life
    (St. Martin’s Press)

    “After learning that his diagnosis with neurofibromatosis would eventually render him completely deaf, Hay leaned into his lifelong love of pop music and resolved to create a playlist of songs he never wants to forget….While Hay doesn’t sugarcoat his circumstances—he unsparingly recounts his lengthy recovery from multiple brain surgeries, for example—his optimism in the face of adversity is stirring. This moving memoir makes magic out of facing the music.”
    Publishers Weekly

    The Furies: Women, Vengeance, and Justice - Flock, Elizabeth

    Elizabeth Flock, The Furies: Women, Vengeance, and Justice
    (Harper)

    “Three women pursue justice in this powerful account of what happens when institutions do not protect them. Journalist Flock (The Heart Is a Shifting Sea, 2018) brings the gripping stories of Brittany Smith, Angoori Dahariya, and Cicek Mustafa Zibo to life with vivid detail and in-depth research….Her compelling narrative will resonate with those who seek to live in a more feminist, egalitarian society.”
    Booklist

    Why Surrealism Matters - Polizzotti, Mark

    Mark Polizzoti, Why Surrealism Matters
    (Yale University Press)

    “Mark Polizzotti makes good on his title and reveals Surrealism as a source of ongoing inspiration and energy. He’s the perfect guide: clear-sighted about Surrealist misogyny and homophobia, but equally clear about its revolutionary potential. A work of commanding integrity.”
    –Rosanna Warren

    River East, River West - Rey Lescure, Aube

    Aube Rey Lescure, River East, River West
    (William Morrow)

    River East, River West is a beautifully expansive tale of new beginnings—and the pasts we can’t extricate ourselves from. From Qingdao to Shanghai, readers are invited into a richly layered world teeming with secrets, desires, and unexpected tenderness. Bright human insights shine through unforgettable characters fighting for their autonomy….In this exciting literary debut, Aube Rey Lescure deftly illuminates the difficult choices we make to save ourselves and each other.”
    –Thao Thai

    Aednan: An Epic - Axelsson, Linnea

    Linnea Axelsson, Aednan: An Epic (trans. Saskia Vogel)
    (Knopf)

    Aednan is a soul-gripping and enthralling journey into what it feels like to be othered in your own land. Through powerful poetic prose, Axelsson offers us a profound invitation into understanding what it means to be deeply intertwined with nature. It takes raw talent to build deeply fleshed out worlds and deep characters with sparse poetry. Reading Adnan was an immerse privilege, one I indulged in with utmost reverence.”
    –Lola Akinmade Åkerström

    1000 Words: A Writer's Guide to Staying Creative, Focused, and Productive All Year Round - Attenberg, Jami

    Jami Attenberg (editor), 1000 Words: A Writer’s Guide to Staying Creative, Focused, and Productive All Year Round
    (S & S / Simon Element)

    “This encouraging handbook by novelist Attenberg…offers brief essays aimed at motivating readers to get writing….The highlights of the volume are letters originally written for Attenberg’s Craft Talk newsletter from such writers as Roxane Gay, Min Jin Lee, Emma Straub, and Bryan Washington, who expound on their craft; Carmen Maria Machado, for instance, describes her process of recording voice notes of narrative ideas and later expanding them into stories.”
    Publishers Weekly

    The World That Wasn't: Henry Wallace and the Fate of the American Century - Steil, Benn

    Benn Steil, The World That Wasn’t: Henry Wallace and the Fate of the American Century
    (Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster)

    “One of the strangest characteristics of Cold War historiography is the frequency with which Henry Wallace and hagiography have accompanied one another. ‘If only Wallace, and not Truman, had succeeded FDR, ‘ the argument runs, ‘the Cold War would never have happened.’ No Wallace biographer, until now, has made a serious effort to assess that claim….With The World That Wasn’t, Benn Steil has risen triumphantly to that challenge: his book is equally important for what it tells us about our past, and for what it may imply about our future.”
    –John Lewis Gaddis

    Slow Down: The Degrowth Manifesto - Saito, Kohei

     

    Kohei Saito, Slow Down: The Degrowth Manifesto (trans. Brian Bergstrom)
    (Astra House)

    Slow Down has an almost magic ability to formulate complex thoughts in clear language, as well as to combine strict conceptual thinking with passionate personal engagement. Saito’s book is not just for anyone interested in ecology or in the problems of today’s global capitalism, it is simply indispensable for those of us who want to SURVIVE—in short, to all of us.”
    –Slavoj Zizek

    Goldenseal - Hummel, Maria

    Maria Hummel, Goldenseal
    (Counterpoint)

    Goldenseal is a savagely beautiful novel about the dangers and damages of passionate lifelong female friendship, intertwined with a brilliantly wrought elegy for the twentieth century. Hummel is a powerful writer. This book is extraordinary.”
    –Kate Christensen

    Inverno - Zarin, Cynthia

    Cynthia Zarin, Inverno
    (FSG)

    “Zarin’s point, perhaps, is that life-changing love affairs mushroom out beyond the moments spent together. Full of gorgeous descriptions, fascinating characters, and impressive allusions to fairy tales, Robert Redford movies, Girl Scouts, Blondie, and more, Inverno is intellectual, acrobatic, and fascinating.”
    Booklist

    Cops search middle school for banned books in liberal Massachusetts

    Jonny Diamond

    January 8, 2024, 11:36am

    It’s easy to ridicule Florida for all its feverish urges to ban sexy books, but America’s latest obsession with censorship has truly gone nationwide. Towards the end of last year, in deeply blue, liberal Massachusetts (at W.E.B. DuBois Middle School no less!) Great Barrington police responded to a complaint about the oft-targeted Gender Queer by sending a plain clothes officer INTO THE CLASSROOM to search for the book.

    Yes, an agent of the state entered a school to confiscate books; as close to a textbook definition of censorship as you can get. As usual, none of the usual cast of free speech grifters on the right said anything (they’re all too busy shutting down speech on college campuses), but local students stood up and protested. According to The Berkshire Eagle:

    LGBTQIA + teens who have been beaten, or attacked with slurs and other indignities organized a walkout at Monument Mountain Regional High School to talk about it. More than 100 students and staff gathered outside the school to protest a police officer’s search for the illustrated novel, “Gender Queer” by Maia Kobabe, in a eighth-grade middle school classroom this month after someone — who remains anonymous — complained that the book contains pornographic images.

    Most of us here at Lit Hub have book-banning fatigue, at this point; the last couple years of cynical, well-funded culture war activism is enough to make anyone despair of the American project. But so long as teenagers can muster the anger and courage to protest, so must we.

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