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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 30, 2024
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Monday, May 27, 2024
Updated: Thursday, May 23, 2024
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"What I love about NVNR is chatting with other booksellers and store owners and helping each other problem solve and figure out what issues are shared vs what issues are specific to my store."
--NVNR 2023 Attendee
The New Voices New Rooms Conference may be several months away, but savvy booksellers can get a lot of preparation done in advance in order to make the most of their time at the show. Here are some things to do sooner, rather than later:
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Reach out to other booksellers and vendors to let them know you will be at NVNR 2024. Now is the time to get on people’s radar: publishers are already deciding which booksellers they want to be sure to catch up with and perhaps even take to dinner. If you are part of a formal or informal bookseller group – an advisory council, a coalition of stores, or even just an ad hoc group of booksellers with common interests – there is time in the program schedule for you to meet up together in person. Start planning your get-togethers now.
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Join the NVNR Conference Discord channel. It is open to all bookseller conference attendees and is there for booksellers to exchange information and ideas, ask questions, and, of course share photos. Ask for an invite.
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Find a conference buddy. If you are a new bookstore and/or this is your first time attending a book conference, you can reach out to NVNR for a guide or veteran bookseller to show you the ropes. This can be especially helpful if you have a specific goal in mind, such as “setting up new accounts with small presses” or “finding genre authors for our new Romance book club.” Email NVNR if you’d like help.
Click here to register for NVNR: SIBA
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 23, 2024
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The application deadline for the Books Across Borders Scholarship has been extended to June 15.
Apply for a fellowship to attend an International Book Fair! The booksellers selected will be treated to customized itineraries at the fair, including specially developed panels, meetings, and receptions with publishers, authors, booksellers, and more. Possible destinations include the Frankfurt International Book Fair, the Guadalajara International Book Fair, the Sharjah International Book Fair, the Bologna International Book Fair, and the Turin International Book Fair.
Apply here
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 23, 2024
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Booksellers have one more week to place holiday catalog orders that include the saturation mail option.
Saturation Mail allows bookstores to send catalogs to specific zip codes and mail carrier routes. It can be very effective at reaching new customers beyond the store's usual mailing list and social media following. It is also a good way to expand a store's reach into new areas and markets.
Stores can work with the Regional Associations Marketing Partnership (RAMP) to fine tune where they want to direct their saturation mail efforts. Although saturation can be applied to an entire zip code, it's more common to use a more targeted approach: for example, by choosing an area with a new housing development within easy driving distance, or a neighborhood along the same bus or subway route as the store. Bookstores that have recently moved or opened a new location can use saturation mail to introduce themselves to their new neighborhood.
Stores receive up to 7000 catalogs free of charge, which can be used in saturation mailings. Additional copies cost $0.11 per piece. All mailed catalogs have a postage charge, as well as a one-time imprinting fee of $110.00. If you select saturation mail with your catalog order, RAMP will help you choose a coverage area that is both within your budget and maximizes your reach. The deadline to start a saturation mail order is June 1. The earlier you start, the more time you have to work on a mailing strategy that will work best for your bookstore.
Order your catalogs here.
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 23, 2024
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NAIBA, GLIBA, SIBA, AND CALIBA asked publishers to submit fresh, fun, and inclusive cover designs that feature festive art and an indie spirit. And they delivered! Please spend some time with each beautiful, thoughtful, and heartfelt design.
Now it’s your turn to participate in the final selection. View each engaging design in the gallery below, and submit your top three choices. (One vote per person.)
Go here to vote
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 23, 2024
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Current Newsletter: Booksellers on the bestsellers
Book Buzz Feature: Woodworm by Layla Martinez
Initially, Woodworm was a short story. It was summer, I was spending a few days at my grandmother’s house, which is the house that appears in the novel, and I was in my bedroom, about to go to sleep, when the wardrobe door opened. In that wardrobe are not everyday clothes, but special clothes for the family, like my grandmother’s wedding dress, the habit my uncle wears during Holy Week or the dress my grandmother wants to be buried in. The door opened by itself and it was quite scary, and in that moment I knew I wanted to write about the history of that closet, the history of the house and the history of the women who had lived in it.
― Layla Martinez, Center for the Art of Translation
Decide For Yourself Banned Book Feature: The Testaments by Margaret Atwood
I wasn’t entirely sure whether I wanted to read this one or not; I didn’t want my impression of The Handmaid’s Tale to be ruined or tainted if I didn’t enjoy it. Luckily for me, I LOVED it. It was definitely a lighter/easier read and, while it answered some questions, it still left a lot of room for imagination (which I love).
―Niamh Kenny, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah , Georgia
NEW REVIEWS | SUBSCRIBE | SUBMIT A REVIEW | FOR PUBLISHERS
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 23, 2024
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Linda-Marie Barrett / Executive Director:
Reading: Detransition, Baby by Torrey Peters, a window into another world that will forever change this reader. Looking forward to discussing it at my book club in June.
Listening: To classical music and highway sounds as I barreled down highways, past the Great Smokies, through the Cumberland Gap, and on to Louisville, KY for our Indie Press Social with GLIBA.
Watching: Electronic and abandoned billboards along my travel route, which are alternately funny and terrifying, depending on your POV.
Candice Huber / Membership:
Reading: Mirrored Heavens by Rebecca Roanhorse but saw that Lotus Empire by Tasha Suri is now up on Edelweiss, so I'm about to go back and forth so I can finish two of my favorite series!
Listening: In between audiobooks, so listening to the sounds of the airport on my way to SIBA's Indie Press Social in Louisville, KY!
Watching: About to watch Three-Body Problem.
Nicki Leone / Communications:
Reading: Light in Gaza: Writings Born of Fire, edited by Jehad Abusalim, Jennifer Bing, and Mike Merryman-Lotze, We Wrote in Symbols, Love and Lust by Arab Women Writers, edited by Selma Dabbagh. But for my next big sink-your-teeth-into-it summer fiction I'm reading Her Side of the Story and The Forbidden Notebook, both recently available in English from the Italian feminist writer Alba de Céspedes -- who I never heard of! I only stumbled across the name because Elena Ferrante wrote the forward to The Forbidden Notebook.
Listening: Having listened to Judi Dench, Shakespeare, the Man Who Pays the Rent, I am now revisiting my Arkangel Shakespeare productions with entirely new eyes and ears.
Watching: In a fit of nostalgia, Simon Schama's The Power of Art.
SP Rankin / Website Administrator:
Reading: New on my shelf: The Three Escapes of Hannah Arendt: A Tyranny of Truth, cartoonist (New Yorker) Ken Krimstein's 2018 graphic biography of Hannah Arendt.
Listening: Just in time for a long flight, Tiger Blood, the new album from Waxahatchee (the performing name of singer/songwriter Katie Crutchfield); Washed Out's new album, Purple Noon; a cover of Steely Dan's "Dirty Work" by King Princess that was in Hacks; Chappell Roan's album The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess
Watching: The hilarious, outrageous, mean but open-hearted third season of Hacks starring the brilliant Jean Smart, long may she reign.
Andrea Richardson / Sales:
Reading: I'm sitting in decision paralysis because I don't have anything I need to read and so much I want to read, I can't pick where to start. Send help.
Listening: Birds chirping outside and my cats chirping at the birds inside. Watching: Jeopardy! Masters - I can't get enough of those folks.
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 23, 2024
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 16, 2024
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Orders are now open for SIBA’s Holiday Catalog -- a key element in maximizing 4th quarter sales for SIBA bookstores. Although the deadline to place your catalog order is June 15th, we recommend you order now to get ahead of the June 1 deadline for saturation mailing (sending your catalog to residents of specific zip codes and carrier routes) and voting on the holiday cover design.
The sooner you order, the sooner we can make sure you’re all set! And remember, the first 7000 catalogs are free!
John Cavalier, former SIBA Board president and co-owner of Cavalier House Books in Denham Springs, LA, has already placed his order and offers this shout-out of encouragement to fellow SIBA booksellers:
“The SIBA Holiday Catalog is a big part of our holiday plans. We use the heck out of it. We do so many offsite events in the last quarter of the year and we hand those catalogs out like a politician at a parade! Dollar for dollar, it's probably one of the most cost-effective tools we have in our marketing tool chest. Over the years we've used the catalog as mailers, newspaper inserts, handouts, bag stuffers - you name it. No matter the use, we've always seen results! It brings old customers back and is a professional first impression to share with new customers. It's a no-brainer for us!”
Place your order here, and reach out to us if you have any questions.
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 16, 2024
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Week two of SIBA's 21-Day Racial Equity Challenge focuses on assessing (and re-assessing) your bookstore or business with an eye towards diversity, equity, and inclusion. How does a business incorporate anti-racist principles into its ethos and day to day operations?
"Community" is fundamental to indie bookstores. With the ongoing divisiveness of public discourse and the rise of book banning, the topics and tools in this week of the Challenge are especially valuable:
SIBA has kept the 21-Day Challenge registration open for booksellers who would still like to join in. Booksellers can also participate by visiting the 21-Day Challenge Blog, where each day's prompt is posted when it is emailed out.
See also:
21-Day Challenge Edelweiss Collection: Over thirty books are mentioned or discussed in the 21-Day Challenge, making this collection a foundation for an Anti-Racist reference library.
DEI Resource Library: All the tools, documents, video links, and resources included in the 21-Day Challenge are also in its companion Resource Library.
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 16, 2024
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Congratulations to Lauren Groff and The Lynx Bookstore, which was featured in the New York Times last week:
“This store would probably still be a pipe dream if the book bans hadn’t happened,” said Groff, who has lived in Gainesville since 2006. “I want this for me too. I don’t want to live in a place where we stifle free expression.”
Position Open: Assistant Manager
Boutique bookstore in Atlanta West End college community seeks assistant manager with bookstore administration, event planning and floor sales experience. BA degree required. Prior experience in medium or large bookstore a plus. Please contact info@44thand3rdbookseller.com to submit interest.
Bookstore for Sale
Douglasville Books, a historic bookstore in Douglas County, GA that has been in existence for 38 years, is currently up for sale. The store is located in downtown Douglasville and is 2500 square feet. It's the only bookstore in the county besides Books-A-Million, who often sends customers to Douglasville Books. Diamond in the rough that makes a decent income. The store address is 6643 Church Street, Douglasville, GA 30135. Interested parties should contact dvillebooks@gmail.com for inquiries.
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 16, 2024
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Current Newsletter: Coming soon, can't wait!
Book Buzz Feature: Lies and Weddings by Kevin Kwan
I wanted to do something tonally different, a relief from this big, heavy family story. This new book continues with Sex and Vanity’s theme of Asian characters outside of Asia. When I was thinking about what the whole trilogy would be, for lack of a better metaphor, I thought of a Chanel bottle: New York, London, Paris. This time they’re in England. I’m taking that traditional English country manor novel, sort of a Jane Austen world, and turning it on its head.
― Kevin Kwan, Hollywood Reporter
Decide For Yourself Banned Book Feature: Kneel by Candace Buford
have never cared so much about football as I have while reading Kneel. This is a fantastic debut. ―Cat Chapman, Oxford Exchange in Tampa, Florida
NEW REVIEWS | SUBSCRIBE | SUBMIT A REVIEW | FOR PUBLISHERS
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 16, 2024
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Linda-Marie Barrett / Executive Director:
Reading: Women! In! Peril! by Jessie Ren Marshall. So imaginative; each story brings you somewhere new, and different than anything you've experienced.
Listening: Enjoying music and meditation on my Calm app.
Watching: Am in between series at the moment, and open to recommendations for cozy mysteries and romantic comedies set in beautiful places.
Candice Huber / Membership:
Reading: Mirrored Heavens by Rebecca Roanhorse. So excited to dig into the third book in this trilogy!
Listening: So close to finishing The Emperor and the Endless Palace by Justinian Huang!
Watching: Finally finished The Wire. What a brilliant show! I particularly loved Bubbles, Omar, and Prez's character arcs.
Nicki Leone / Communications:
Reading: Natural Magic: Emily Dickinson, Charles Darwin, and the Dawn of Modern Science by Renee Bergland, We Wrote in Symbols, Love and Lust by Arab Women Writers, edited by Selma Dabbagh.
Listening: Judi Dench, Shakespeare, the Man Who Pays the Rent. I switched to the audiobook because, you know, Judi Dench! What a fascinating look at how a great actor approaches a character. Most oft-repeated piece of advice: "The audience understands more than you think. Don't underestimate them."
Watching: Well, thanks to the above I have a lot of RSC (Royal Shakespeare Company) productions queued up on my watch list. But with some trepidation -- film is not stage.
SP Rankin / Website Administrator:
Reading/Listening/Watching: "A story is not like a road to follow … it’s more like a house. You go inside and stay there for a while, wandering back and forth and settling where you like and discovering how the room and corridors relate to each other, how the world outside is altered by being viewed from these windows. And you, the visitor, the reader, are altered as well by being in this enclosed space, whether it is ample and easy or full of crooked turns, or sparsely or opulently furnished. You can go back again and again, and the house, the story, always contains more than you saw the last time. It also has a sturdy sense of itself of being built out of its own necessity, not just to shelter or beguile you." - Alice Munro
Andrea Richardson / Sales:
Reading: I just finished an ARC of The Genius of Judy, about Judy Blume's books and feminism and I could not have loved it more.
Listening: Rain outside! It's so cozy, all I want to do is tuck in with a cat and a book.
Watching: All I am watching right now is the weather forecast for my upcoming camping weekend, when the rain will be much less cozy.
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 16, 2024
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 16, 2024
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Based on our booksellers' conviction that you can never have too many good books, Read This Next! is a list of books coming out next month that booksellers are especially excited about. Read This Next! Kids is a bimonthly list of forthcoming Children's and Young Adult Books receiving Southern indie bookseller love. Each list includes resources for booksellers, including an Edelweiss collection, downloadable flyer, and sharable graphic. All the included books are featured in The Southern Bookseller Review newsletter, and promoted as "Weekend Reads" on SIBA's social media channels, along with the bookstore which wrote the review.
Siblings, serial killers, and second chances -- the books on the June "ReadThis Next! list are a perfect collection of summer reads.
RTNext! Bookseller Resources:
Edelweiss Collection | Flyer | Flyer Front (image)
What SIBA Booksellers have to say:
A Good Life by Virginie Grimaldi, Hildegarde Serle (trans.)
At first glance, you might think that this book won't rip your heart out, but I can tell you that it absolutely does!
– Kelsey Jagneaux, Tombolo Books in St. Petersburg, Florida
Swift River by Essie Chambers
Swift River is such an emotional story, effortlessly intermingling American history with one young woman's personal history. You will fall in love with Diamond and find yourself rooting for her!
– Emily Lessig, The Violet Fox Bookshop in Virginia Beach, VA
Just Some Stupid Love Story by Katelyn Doyle
An epic saga romance between two people who have been it for each other since they were young, but things have never been right. a steamy second chance romance with snappy dialog.
– Preet Singh, Eagle Eye Book Shop in Decatur, Georgia
Fire Exit by Morgan Talty
This story about grief and mental illness is woven around struggles to understand family, both biological and nurtured. Brilliantly written, Fire Exit bears witness to what a birthright and culture mean when you were denied what felt like home.
– Rachel Watkins, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia
Love Letters to a Serial Killer by Tasha Coryel
Coryell's debut will have you captivated even as you groan along at Hannah's poor decision-making. Is Hannah setting herself up for murder or is she the one who can see the truth? Hannah is a hot mess but you can't help but hope it all works out for her!
– Andrea Richardson, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 9, 2024
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The first week of SIBA's 21-Day Racial Equity Challenge is underway, with a theme of learning to recognize and counter bias -- both conscious and unconscious -- within ourselves and our immediate social circle.
Each morning participants receive an email prompt which includes some questions to reflect on and ideas for turning those reflections into actions. The email also provides a list of tools and resources to help.
SIBA has kept the 21-Day Challenge registration open for booksellers who would still like to join in. Booksellers can also participate by visiting the 21-Day Challenge Blog, where each day's prompt is posted when it is emailed out.
And two new resources are now available:
21-Day Challenge Edelweiss Collection: Over thirty books are mentioned or discussed in the 21-Day Challenge, making this collection a foundation for an Anti-Racist reference library.
DEI Resource Library: All the tools, documents, video links, and resources included in the 21-Day Challenge are also in its companion Resource Library. The library is fully searchable and can be filtered by the Day or the Week of the Challenge. There are over 40 listings related to the first week alone.
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 9, 2024
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Today’s question is: Which SIBA scholarships and grants can I apply for? Which ones will help me get to New Voices New Rooms?
SIBA currently has seven different scholarships and grants open for applications. Here’s what you can apply for right now to help with the annual New Voices New Rooms (NVNR) conference costs:
May Deadlines:
Binc Scholarship: Deadline is May 15. Provides one $500 scholarship with a full event pass to a SIBA bookseller to attend NVNR.
George Keating Memorial Scholarship: Deadline is May 15. Provides one $500 scholarship with a full event pass to a SIBA bookseller to attend NVNR.
BIPOC Booksellers Development Scholarship: Deadline is May 17. Provides four $500 scholarships with full event passes to SIBA booksellers who identify as BIPOC to attend NVNR.
NVNR Travel Grants: Deadline is May 17. Provides six $500 travel grants with full event passes for SIBA booksellers to attend NVNR.
Jamie Rogers Southern (SIBA Retiring Board Member) Scholarship: Deadline is May 17. Provides one $500 scholarship with a full event pass to a SIBA bookseller to attend NVNR.
Macmillan Booksellers Professional Development Scholarship: Deadline is May 20. Provides one $500 scholarship with a full event pass to a SIBA bookseller who identifies with an underrepresented group (BIPOC, queer, disabled) to attend NVNR.
June Deadlines:
Wanda Jewell Scholarship: Deadline is June 15. Provides one $400 scholarship with a full event pass to a SIBA bookseller to attend NVNR.
SIBA has a really useful web page listing all the scholarships and grants we offer, application links, and a handy calendar to help you keep track of deadlines. We offer more than NVNR scholarships! Take a look and apply now for any assistance you might need. As always, if you have questions or want additional information, feel free to reach out to me at candice@sibaweb.com.
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 9, 2024
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Current Newsletter: In celebration of Asian Pacific Heritage Month
Book Buzz Feature: The Ministry of Time by KalianeBradley
(When asked about the inspiration for her story)
I was watching a TV show called The Terror. It aired in 2018, but I was watching it in lockdown 2021. And I was struggling to follow what was going on. It’s a great show, but I had lockdown brain. I just thought, “I’m not quite sure what’s going on. There are a lot of people that are all talking, they all look the same — they’re all white guys with mutton chops and big, arctic coats…” ― Kaliane Bradley, Bookweb
Decide For Yourself Banned Book Feature: Georgia Peaches and Other Forbidden Fruit by Jaye Robin Brown
Lesbians and religion are not topics seen very often in YA (and rarely in the same book, and definitely not in a positive light), but Brown manages to pull it off. The religious aspect of the book is never preachy or heavy-handed- it’s just a part of who Jo is. While she might struggle with intolerant churchgoers (and especially her new Step Grandmother), Jo’s love of God is as ingrained and steadfast as her love for girls. Jo is an amazing character- she knows who she is, what she wants to do, and who she wants to love. But she’s also a teen girl who is uprooted from her Atlanta life and thrown into a new family and new town, far away from her friends and a more tolerant community. ―Kate Towery, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia
NEW REVIEWS | SUBSCRIBE | SUBMIT A REVIEW | FOR PUBLISHERS
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 9, 2024
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Linda-Marie Barrett / Executive Director:
Reading: Swiped by L.M. Chilton, a novel that brings together the horrors of online dating, serial killers, and existential dread in surprisingly funny ways. I've also been enjoying The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron, a book that's long been highly recommended and is both entertaining and inspiring.
Listening: Enjoying the birdsong and toddler giggles just outside my office window.
Watching: Finished the latest season of Shetland, which was fantastic, and am still on a Death in Paradise and Beyond Paradise kick.
Candice Huber / Membership:
Reading: I just started Mirrored Heavens by Rebecca Roanhorse. I'm going to take this one slow because so far, it's one of my favorite series of all time, and I don't want it to end (Between Earth & Sky, began with Black Sun). This is the final book of the trilogy, and I can't wait to see if it's just as metal as the rest of the series!
Listening: Still making my way through The Emperor and the Endless Palace, and honestly I'm immediately obsessed. And it's pretty spicy!
Watching: Well I finished season 4 of The Wire, and I'm just heartbroken. I have started season 5, the last season, and I don't expect to get any less heartbroken. To balance the heaviness out, I also love my short, charming sitcoms - Abbott Elementary, Animal Control, and Not Dead Yet!
Nicki Leone / Communications:
Reading:Natural Magic: Emily Dickinson, Charles Darwin, and the Dawn of Modern Science by Renee Bergland. Judi Dench, Shakespeare, the Man Who Pays the Rent, and We Wrote in Symbols, Love and Lust by Arab Women Writers, edited by Selma Dabbagh.
Listening: I spent an afternoon sporadically transferring all my playlists off apple music and on to Spotify, and in the process discovered an old playlist from 25 years ago I had titled "Bubblegum."
Watching: Movie night with SP returns! We watched Marleen Gorris' A Question of Silence, also something I remembered from, well, a long time ago. I remembered the story being brilliant. But I hadn't remembered that everything else about the film -- the cinematography, the casting, and the script, oh, the script! -- was equally brilliant. Also, one of the characters was reading Doris Lessing! I distinctly saw the name on her book, although I couldn't see the title and could not even after an intensive image search on Google, find a picture of the cover.
SP Rankin / Website Administrator:
Reading: I am about a third of the way into French writer Julia Malye's epic new novel Pelican Girls. Set in 1720s French Louisiana, it's the story of a group of young French women dispatched from an overcrowded asylum/prison in Paris to be brides/breeding stock for French colonists. Elegantly written, meticulously researched, and harrowingly action-packed.
Listening: Recent stars of my playlist: country icon Linda Martell's classic 1970 album Color Me Country, Angel Olsen/Big Time, Beyoncé/Cowboy Carter, Van Morrison/St. Dominic's Preview, Andrew Combs/Canyons of My Mind and Ideal Man, Calexico/Algiers.
Watching: Nicki and I revived the "watch a movie while furiously texting each other about it" society with A Question of Silence (1982), Dutch director Marleen Gorris's furiously feminist classic. Yes, this needed twice the recommended dosage of "furiously."
Andrea Richardson / Sales:
Reading: Jingle Bell Mingle, the upcoming Julie Murphy/Sierra Simone collab and the third in their Christmas Notch series. It's super spicy right out of the gate this time!
Listening: There is a very enthusiastic Little League game going on across the street from my house right now and it sounds like the dang World Series is happening.
Watching: Everybody's in LA, John Mulaney's absurd live show on Netflix. It's completely ridiculous and lots of fun.
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Posted By Nicki Leone,
Thursday, May 9, 2024
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