ππ Read
Kristen Arnett Gets Her Best Ideas at the Bar - Interview Magazine interviewmagazine.com
ππ Read
Kristen Arnett Gets Her Best Ideas at the Bar - Interview Magazine interviewmagazine.com
The postpartum experience isnβt just expensive; it can also be one of psychic trauma and creative crisis. Someone who was a person becomes a mother. βYouβre not a person. You donβt have a name,β says Zambreno. This feeling of erasure is a current that runs through her work, reaching peak intensity in βTo Write as if Already Dead.β βI need to restore myself after being made into a ghost,β Zambreno says. βI always feel like writing the most when Iβm being made invisible.β
Kate Zambreno on her new book "To Write as if Already Dead" - Los Angeles Times latimes.com
ππ Read Together As We Burn: On a Complicated Maternal Bond and Intergenerational Love. A heartbreaking excerpt from Ashley C. Ford’s memoir, Somebody’s Daughter.
ππ Read Stories and Hormones Shape Our Lives by Elanor Broker. Beautiful essay weaving together personal experiences of trans matrescence and the books Detransition, Baby and The Argonauts.
I may receive commissions for purchases made through links in this post.
I love the way N. K. Jemisin’s The City We Became captures the spirit of the five boroughs of New York here in a way that is legible to non-New Yorkers. This book recasts Lovecraftian horror as a fight for the city’s soul. It features street artists, grad students, an MC-turned-lawyer-turned-councilwoman, a PhD director of an art non-profit, and a sheltered girl who’s never left Staten Island. If you’re looking for representation for Black, Latino, and queer characters, Jemisin’s got you. This book is a fast, fun read that imagines some of the daily horror in our world as being caused by eldritch forces from beyond our universe. Borrowed this one from @durhamcountylibrary. Highly recommend.
What’s a fantasy or sci-fi book you’ve read that helped you think through recent events?
Finished reading: The City We Became by N. K. Jemisin π
Finished reading: Crooked Kingdom by Leigh Bardugo π
ππ¬ “We learn to wring magic from the ordinary… When the world owed you nothing, you demanded something of it anyway.” Crooked Kingdom, Leigh Bardugo, p. 460
Want to read: The Lightmaker’s Manifesto: How to Work for Change Without Losing Your Joy by Karen Walrond π
π
Kaz Brekker is the best.
Why do we have obligations besides reading books?