#bookworm
To Wear A Crown Street Team Sign-Ups are now open!!! (And you could win some goodies in the process)
A street team helps an author promote their book leading up to release by posting provided graphics on social media at predetermined times.
Being involved in the TWAC street team will involve posting about 4 times between 25 April and 25 May.
AND ONE LUCKY STREET TEAM MEMBER WILL WIN A TWAC GOODIE PACK!
The goodie pack includes 3 TWAC bookmarks, one TWAC art print, a personalised thank you letter, and a signed bookplate.
SIGN UP HERE
Books read in February 2022
THE SKY IS EVERYWHERE by Jandy Nelson
THE HURTING KIND by Ada Limón
THE CRYING BOOK by Heather Christle
Books read in January 2022
RADIO SILENCE by Alice Oseman (reread)
ANIMAL by Dorothea Lasky
SUNNY SIDE UP by Jennifer L. Holm and Matthew Holm
INVISIBLE EMMIE by Terri Libenson
THE POSTMAN FROM SPACE 2: BIKER BANDITS by Guillaume Perreault
ZYLA & KAI by Kristina Forest
LONG DISTANCE by Whitney Gardner
THE TATTOOED POTATO AND OTHER CLUES by Ellen Raskin
my year in books
read/goal:50/50
top 10:
- How Much of These Hills is Gold, C. Pam Zhang: In my opinion, a contemporary classic. Weaves Chinese myth with stories of the American Gold Rush. Beautiful prose and valuable takeaways re: family, truth, and gender.
- A Little Devil in America: Notes on Black Performance, Hanif Abdurraqib: Essay upon essay of mind-plowing poetics and storytelling. Hanif’s version of Baldwin’s Devil Finds Work. A wide swath of topics from blackface to spades to magic.
- Writers & Lovers, Lily King: Came to me at the exact right (or wrong?) time, just when my father passed away. A keenly-observed novel about grief and persona that is something like if SweetbittermetNormal People.
- How to Write an Autobiographical Novel, Alexander Chee: Inspired me to get over myself and just start writing again. The essay on roses absolutely floored me.
- Lose Your Mother: A Journey Along the Atlantic Slave Route, Saidiya Hartman: Hard to stomach, but necessary. Foundational for the way I am thinking about neo-slave narratives and speculative historical fiction.
- Seek You: A Journey Through American Loneliness, Kristen Radtke: The minute I read this, I added it to the syllabus for my class on women in isolation. Part graphic novel, part longform essay, part research paper, and wholly extraordinary.
- The Sonic Color Line: Race and the Cultural Politics of Listening, Jennifer Lynn Stoever: This one’s just for me. The burning core at the center of my reading list and the inspiration and model for my scholarship.
- The Street, Ann Petry: Read it because of the book above, but an absolute banger of a book. Devastating ending. Would be extraordinary taught alongside Native Son.
- The Fifth Season, N.K. Jemisin: This book has everything. Polyamory. Earth-bending. An alien creature frozen inside a giant piece of rock in the middle of the ocean. Love this woman, love seeing Blackness-as-default in sci-fi novels.
- Fun Home, Alison Bechdel: You read it in high school for a good reason. A true exemplar of the genre and a fascinating way to teach non-chronological storytelling.
rest below the cut
- Camera Lucida, Roland Barthes
- The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, V.E. Schwab
- Brothers & Keepers, John Edgar Wideman
- Bunk: The True Story of Hoaxes, Hucksters, Humbug, Plagiarists, Forgeries, and Phonies, Kevin Young
- Ninth House, Leigh Bardugo
- House of Earth and Blood, Sarah J. Maas
- Children of Virtue and Vengeance, Tomi Adeyemi
- Emergence of Cinematic Time: Modernity, Contingency, the Archive, Mary Ann Doane
- An American Sunrise, Joy Harjo
- Nabokov’s Favorite Word is Mauve: What the Numbers Reveal About the Classics, Bestsellers, and Our Own Writing, Ben Blatt
- Rule of Wolves, Leigh Bardugo
- The Lightning Thief, Rick Riordan
- Savage Preservation: The Ethnographic Origins of Modern Media Technology, Brian Hochman
- The Obelisk Gate, N.K. Jemisin
- The Stone Sky, N.K. Jemisin
- People We Meet on Vacation, Emily Henry
- The Gentleman’s Guide to Vice & Virtue, Mackenzi Lee
- The Yellow Wallpaper, Charlotte Perkins Gilman
- Legendborn, Tracy Deonn
- Josh & Hazel’s Guide to Not Dating, Christina Lauren
- In Cold Blood, Truman Capote
- The Race of Sound: Listening, Timbre, and Vocality in African American Music, Nina Sun Eidsheim
- One Last Stop, Casey McQuiston
- One to Watch, Kate Stayman-London
- Time Binds: Queer Temporalities, Queer Histories, Elizabeth Freeman
- Gideon the Ninth, Tamsyn Muir
- Echo and Narcissus: Women’s Voices in Classical Hollywood Cinema, Amy Lawrence
- An Extraordinary Union, Alyssa Cole
- It Ends With Us, Colleen Hoover
- Harrow the Ninth, Tamsyn Muir
- Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce Racism, Safiya Noble
- Listening in: Radio and the American Imagination, Susan J. Douglass
- How to Fail at Flirting, Denise Williams
- The Flat-Share, Beth O'Leary
- Radio Voices: American Broadcasting, 1922-1952, Michele Hilmes
- Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art, Scott McCloud
- The Souls of Black Folk, W.E.B. Du Bois
- The Love Hypothesis, Ali Hazelwood
- The Road Trip, Beth O'Leary
- We Ride Upon Sticks, Quan Barry
set up an air mattress in the office for a friend who stayed over last week and tbh i kind of like it like this
Slytherin aesthetics.