The only way to the end is through

April in Review — Lit Chat Vol. 18

Pyramid of book cover images with 1000 WORDS: A WRITER'S GUIDE TO STAYING CREATIVE, FOCUSED, AND PRODUCTIVE ALL YEAR ROUND by Jami Attenberg on top; MARTYR! by Kaveh Akbar and NOTHING TO ENVY: ORDINARY LIVES IN NORTH KOREA by Barbara Demick in the middle; DEATH VALLEY by Melissa Broder, THE BLUE MIMES by Sara Daniele Rivera, and A COURT OF THORNS AND ROSES by Sarah J. Maas on the bottom.

Hi friends,

April’s big news has been that I’m taking a temporary social media reprieve, and the brain space that has opened up over the past few weeks has been unbelievably refreshing. I went from taking two weeks to read one novel to finishing five books in ten days. My attention span is lengthening by the minute!

It’s silly because I haven’t really enjoyed posting on social media in years. It feels like a hassle, and I mostly prefer to leave my personal life to the imagination. But I love lurking. It’s the lazy girl’s equivalent of eavesdropping in a busy coffee shop. I love listening to other people’s conversations and personal dramas and feeling like I’m in the world even if I’m just alone in my bed. But guess what scratches that same itch? READING! (Shocking! I know.)

Being more or less offline has been freeing. I feel like a kid again, when the first thing I reached for when bored on summer vacation was a book, or a craft, or my bike. I feel like I have a brain again and I’m so excited to use it.

That said, let me tell you about some books! If you prefer to get this post right to your inbox, you can do so by subscribing to my Substack below:


THE FOUNDATION:

Book cover images for DEATH VALLEY by Melissa Broder, THE BLUE MIMES by Sara Daniele Rivera, and A COURT OF THORNS AND ROSES by Sarah J. Maas

Death Valley — Melissa Broder

Melissa Broder has nailed writing weird little books with female protagonists who are about one mild inconvenience away from a full mental breakdown. In Death Valley, a writer escaping the pressures of tending to her hospitalized father and her chronically ill husband has a bizarre experience in the desert, which leads to her getting lost and coming face-to-face with the realities (surrealities?) of grief and love. Broder strips her protagonist’s needs down to their most primal, placing her basest desires on the same stage as her instinct to survive and proving the two equally necessary and inextricably intertwined. A quick, trippy read! I liked it better than The Pisces, but it didn’t stand out too much otherwise.

The Blue Mimes: Poems — Sara Daniele Rivera

This National Poetry Month was less poetry-heavy than past years, but I had to squeeze at least one collection in! The Blue Mimes won the Academy of American Poets First Book Award for its meditations on grief and longing during the tumultuous years of the Trump presidency and the pandemic, and the personal losses that defined this time for the poet. The poems flow seamlessly between English and Spanish, this dialogue an avenue to explore Rivera’s family legacies in Cuba, Peru, and the U.S. in an effort to preserve the stories and memories that get lost when moving between countries and generations. I really recommend taking a few minutes to read three poems from the collection on Electric Lit here.

A Court of Thorns and Roses — Sarah J. Maas

All of the people who recommended this series to me failed to mention that it is essentially Beauty & the Beast, but with sexy faeries! That would have been a crucial selling point for the former Disney kid in me. A human woman spirited into faerie territory, forced to live in an exquisite mansion with a cursed (but still gorgeous) faerie lord who treats her kindly and comes to love her?? Tale as old as time! Unfortunately for Feyre and Tamlin, the presence of four more books in this series leads me to believe their happily ever after is still a long ways away, but I’m definitely in the mood to see where the rest of this story goes.


SOLID SUPPORTS:

Book cover images for MARTYR! by Kaveh Akbar and NOTHING TO ENVY: ORDINARY LIVES IN NORTH KOREA by Barbara Demick

Martyr! — Kaveh Akbar

In this first novel from poet Kaveh Akbar, struggling writer and recovering addict Cyrus Shams seeks the wisdom of a terminally ill artist who has chosen to spend her final days in residence at the Brooklyn Museum. Having immigrated to America from Iran as a young child after the tragic death of his mother, Cyrus has a fascination with death and martyrs. His latest project, a book of poems about famous martyrs, is an attempt to find meaning in his own life and work, and his conversations with the artist become increasingly personal as he strives to reconcile his desire to die well with the indifferent reality of death.

I had the pleasure of seeing Kaveh Akbar discuss Martyr! at P&T Knitwear back in January, which was an absolute delight. Akbar spoke candidly about how his own journey with sobriety influenced Cyrus’s, and about the myriad influences on his work and creative process in his transition from writing poetry to fiction. Akbar’s sense of genuine awe and gratitude for the world around him are contagious and permeate throughout his work. He signed my book, “May you walk in wonder,” and I just think that’s a beautiful blessing to give to anyone, much less a stranger.

Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea — Barbara Demick

I want to give a shout out to my Aunt Sally for this recommendation! This book, which follows six former citizens of North Korea who defected to South Korea, was shocking in the ways I expected it to be, and devastating in ways I never thought to imagine. By interviewing defectors from various backgrounds and levels of privilege in South Korea, Demick reveals a country in chaos, rife with widespread poverty, bureaucratic disorganization, and deliberate misinformation during the reign of Kim Jong-Il to 2015, the time of her reporting.

The North Korean regime is often aptly described as Orwellian, in large part due to the nature of its surveillance state and enforced loyalty. However, what struck me the most was the extent of information deprivation throughout the country at all levels of wealth and privilege. Even as they were starving in a famine that killed millions in the 1990s, schoolteachers were still teaching their dying pupils that they should be grateful to be North Koreans, and that everywhere else in the world was inferior. A doctor who escapes across the Chinese border only realizes that this is untrue when she sees that dogs in China have more food to eat than she did back home. It’s easy for us in the West to dismiss North Korea as an anachronistic propaganda machine, but this book was eye-opening in its portrayal of the true horror and suffering its people have experienced for the sake of a few powerful men’s delusions.


THE TIPPY TOP:

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

Book cover image for 1000 WORDS: A WRITER'S GUIDE TO STAYING CREATIVE, FOCUSED, AND PRODUCTIVE ALL YEAR ROUND by Jami Attenberg

I’m giving this book the top spot for April, but I’ve been taking my time with it ever since attending not one but two (!) of its Brooklyn launch events back in January. 1000 Words is the book version of author Jami Attenberg’s annual #1000WordsofSummer challenge, in which participating writers are tasked with writing 1000 words a day for two weeks. For each day of the challenge, participants receive a motivational email from either Jami or another writer, offering much-needed encouragement and perspective. This book is a collection of these letters, as well as a number of short craft talks from Jami, organized seasonally to represent the shifting needs and opportunities of one’s ever-evolving creative practice throughout the year.

It’s hard to express in just a few paragraphs how much #1000Words means to me. I’ve participated in the challenge and its mini offshoots with varying levels of success since 2020, and have found such wonderful and frankly life-changing community, along with significant consistency and improvement in my personal writing practice. I’ve spent the past four months with this book on my desk, reading a few pages at a time before getting busy. Now that I’ve come to the end, I can say with confidence that it’s a volume I’ll continue turning to for a very long time.

This book is essential for all writers, but I’d also recommend it to those with any kind of creative practice. Swap out “writing” for painting, singing, dancing, crafting, etc., and its prescriptions for setting achievable goals, recognizing your strengths, and carving our time for your work—among many, many other things—become universal for creatives everywhere. I’m so grateful for the wisdom and encouragement both inside this book and beyond it in the greater #1000Words community, and I can’t recommend both highly enough. If you’re interested in joining us, the next #1000Words challenge starts on June 1st!


That’s all for April! I’ll probably come back to Instagram eventually, but until then, text/email/these comments are the best way to reach me. And I hope you will still reach me, because I am more jazzed than ever to be reading and talking about books.

Until next time, happy reading!
❤ Catherine


Housekeeping note: all links go to my Bookshop storefront, where each purchase supports independent bookstores (and this newsletter, because I get a small percentage of each sale).

Fly me to the moon…

October in Review  Lit Chat, Vol. 13

Pyramid of book cover images, with Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel on top, and Nora Goes Off Script by Annabel Monaghan, Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros, and Pew by Catherine Lacey on the bottom.

Housekeeping note: all links go to my Bookshop storefront, where each purchase supports independent bookstores (and this newsletter, because I get a small percentage of each sale).


Hi friends,

Another short one for you this month. It feels a little strange to be sitting here thinking about the privilege I have of being able to leisurely escape into other worlds via books when there are civilians caught in active war zones, but I’m not a foreign policy expert and that’s not what this newsletter is for. What I will share instead is a recent newsletter from author Alexander Chee, which includes some recommended reading from those whose experiences are far more relevant than mine and whose voices are just as deserving of your attention, plus a link to contact your reps about calling for a ceasefire. If you only pick one to read, let it be this poem from Naomi Shihab Nye. Big thanks to Nikhil for sharing.

Meanwhile in book world, I’ve been settling into fall with some longer reads (not included: the Outlander book I got through 500 pages of before taking a break), and taking the time to really sit with some of the shorter ones that have left their mark this month. I have a bad habit of racing into my next read without giving the last one enough time to marinate in my brain, and I’m trying to be better about that (waiting at least a day). It’s just so hard when there are so many books to be read! My TBR pile is so long. Thank goodness for Daylight Savings ending, honestly, which will make me feel so much less guilty about staying inside and reading as we hunker down into the colder months.

Speaking of, let’s move on to the books.


THE FOUNDATION:

Book cover images for Nora Goes Off Script by Annabel Monaghan, Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros, and Pew by Catherine Lacey.

Nora Goes Off Script — Annabel Monaghan

This was my book club book for October, but I sadly couldn’t make it to book club this month so you’re all my book club now. Nora writes cheesy Hallmark movies for a living until a script about her failed marriage unexpectedly sells big in Hollywood. Production promises they’ll only have to shoot on location on Nora’s property for a few days, but Nora’s hundred-year-old house and quiet, comfy life with her two young kids charm the movie’s lead actor, Leo Vance. Leo offers to pay Nora to let him stay an extra week for some rest and relaxation, and cue the romance channel ‘falling in love with a movie star’ montage! But real life can’t possibly follow the same formula as one of Nora’s scripts…or can it? This was a sweet, easy read with a few fun zingers and a heartfelt emphasis on family, belonging, and what it means to feel at home.

Fourth Wing — Rebecca Yarros

If you loved the Eragon books as a kid and thought “Man, you know what would make this better? More sex and death,” then this one’s for you. Violet Sorrengail is the daughter of one of Navarre’s most famous dragon rider generals, and though she’d had no intention of becoming a Rider herself, her mother had other ideas. This is how she ends up enrolled in the deadliest Quadrant of the Basgiath War College, where the names of fallen candidates are read out at roll call every morning. Violet isn’t as physically strong as the others, but she’s smart—smart enough to sense that there’s something the students aren’t being told about the failing protection wards at their borders, and smart enough to keep Xaden Riorson, son of an executed rebellion leader, from making good on his promise to kill her. I’m docking points for excessive horniness (Xaden is unfortunately very hot), but this was exactly the kind of immersive fantasy that I’d been craving since September, and thus it is very likely that I shell out for the sequel when it publishes this week(!).

Pew — Catherine Lacey

This is one of those strange, disorienting books you keep mentally turning over long after you’ve finished. In Pew, the discovery of a young stranger sleeping in a church, whose age, race, and gender remain ambiguous throughout the novel, rocks a small Southern town. Though initially welcoming, the stranger’s inability to speak or provide any clarifying details on their background and identity strains the good intentions of the congregation, especially as their arrival coincides with preparations for the town’s annual Forgiveness Festival. Nicknamed ‘Pew,’ the stranger’s refusal to conform to any of the townspeople’s projections stymies some and intrigues others, and many take Pew’s silence as an opportunity to make their own haunting confessions. What follows is an eerie portrait of a community built on contradictions and an unsettling reflection on American values and morality. Thank you, Monique, for this stellar rec!

THE TIPPY TOP:

Book cover image for Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel

Sea of Tranquility — Emily St. John Mandel

Much like Pew, this is a book that I’ve found myself coming back to nearly every day since I’ve finished. It’s a hard one to talk about without spoiling, but Sea of Tranquility follows a set of characters throughout history and the future who have all had the same strange, almost otherworldly experience: a momentary flash of darkness, accompanied by the sounds of a violin and the noise of an airship taking flight. From Vancouver Island in 1912 to the surface of the moon in 2401, the book revolves around the mystery of these recurring moments, and investigator Gaspery-Jacques Roberts’ determination to discover the cause of the anomaly.

I’ve avoided Emily St. John Mandel’s books for years despite having only ever heard high praise, because I thought I didn’t want to read a pandemic novel, or I thought I wouldn’t like sci-fi, etc. etc., but I’m so glad Sea of Tranquility destroyed all my preconceptions. Even the most speculative aspects of the novel felt somehow familiar and accessible, because even on the Far Colonies of the moon, Mandel preserves the humanity of her characters through their ambitions, nostalgias, dreams, and despairs. Best of all, the precision with which every piece of information is perfectly placed for an ultimate reveal has you flipping back whole chapters as you read to see how you could have possibly missed the initial signs. My advice is to read as much of the book in one go as you can—or at least whole chapters at a time. You won’t want to miss a single detail.


That’s all for now! I hope you’re able to squeeze some reading into the extra hour of your day today. If you want to chat more about these books or any others, leave a comment or send me a message!

Until next time, happy reading!
❤ Catherine