Wicked Women, Magical Realism, and More Picks for Book Club

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Hello, people of the club! <insert airhorn here> Tis I, Vanessa Diaz. Remember me?! It’s been years since I helmed this here newsletter, and I can’t tell you how pleased I’ve been with everything Erica brought to it when she took over. She’s off on some well-deserved time off right now so I’m back in my old virtual stomping grounds.

Today, I’d love to share three of the books I’d pick for a juicy book club discussion from my recent reading. I have a novel told in two timelines featuring wicked women, a blend of personal essays and cultural criticism on magical realism, and a novel about the darkness lurking beneath a Black utopia in California. I’ve also got some links to share, including a reading list for Juneteenth.

But first: some snackage.

Nibbles and Sips: Salads That Don’t Suck

As soon as summer approaches out here on the west coast, I begin to look at my stove and oven with aggressive millennial stank face. When it comes to feeding myself, I reach for either things I can whip up in the ol’ air fryer or cold, low-prep foods. As such I’ve slowly amassed a collection of delicious, interesting salad recipes that aren’t just a pile of sad, soggy iceberg lettuce with some julienned carrots that nobody wants or asked for.

My latest obsession for tasty cold food ideas is an account on TikTok called

Malas by Marcela Fuentes

In the 1950s, young wife and mother Pilar has just moved to La Cienega, Texas when she’s cursed by an old woman claiming that Pilar stole her husband. In 1994, 14-year-old Lulu is begrudgingly preparing for the quinceañera she doesn’t want when her beloved grandmother dies. Pilar is the glamorous stranger who crashes the funeral and soon forms an unlikely kinship with Lulu, a bond that will force Pilar to confront her past and Lulu to embrace her future. This is a love letter to Tejano culture that takes readers from dusty rodeos to family gatherings to a Selena concert.

cover of Magical/Realism: Essays on Music, Memory, Fantasy, and Borders by Vanessa Angélica Villarreal

Magical/Realism: Essays on Music, Memory, Fantasy, and Borders by Vanessa Angélica Villarreal

I admit I first added this book to my TBR thinking it was going to be straight “academic” examination of magical realism (I had not read the description), but it’s a beautiful blend of memoir and cultural criticism.

The author, Vanessa Angélica Villarreal, a poet and artist, felt called to Mexico when she became a mother, eager to reconnect with her ancestry. Unfortunately, her return from that journey wasn’t a pleasant one but one marked by loss. This book is an exploration of the role of fantasy and magic in our collective lives and the author’s personal journey. She uses pop culture (The Neverending Story, Game of Thrones, The Witcher, Nirvana, Selena) as well as personal anecdotes to ask: “What does the constant state of loss after colonization, enslavement, and dispossession do to the collective imagination?”

one of our kind book cover

One of Our Kind by Nicola Yoon

Nicola Yoon’s first adult novel is being described as The Stepford Wives meets Get Out, to which I say: sign me up! Jasmyn and King Williams are a Black couple who move to Liberty, a planned Black utopia in California. It all seems great at first, but while King fits right in immediately, Jasmyn does not. She came to Liberty in search of a community centered on social justice and activism, but Liberty’s inhabitants are less interested in social justice and more with bougie “self-care” at the town’s fancy wellness center. As you might expect, Jasmyn soon uncovers a secret that reveals darkness beneath the town’s seemingly perfect facade.

Suggestion Section

Book Club Picks For June 2024, From Mocha Girls Read to GMA Book Club (Book Riot)

Silent Book Clubs Are Here and Introvert-Friendly (POPSUGAR)

Related to the above: I saw a local book club (Prose Before Bros Bookclub, A++ name) is hosting a silent book club happy hour at a bakery that I’ve been meaning to try here in Portland. If you’re in Portland, OR, it’s at Flour Bloom, here are the deets!

Oprah Announces Her 106th Book Club Pick (OprahDaily.com)

You probably already know that our usual In the Club host, Erica Ezeifedi, also writes In Reading Color, our weekly newsletter focusing on literature by and about people of color. Since today is Juneteenth, I thought I’d share Erica’s post from last week sharing a Juneteenth reading list that would make for excellent book club reading.

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