We’re getting down to the final rounds, and the battles for these last few slots have been intense. Never Let Me Go, which made it all the way to the finals in last year’s March Sadness bracket, was knocked out early by The Secret History. Instagram voters had Bunny leading the The Idiot by five, but our web voters ultimately helped The Idiot clinch the win by a margin of just twelve votes. On the flip side, Instagram voters overruled web voters on Disorientation vs.Trust Exercise, giving Disorientation the win. Beauty beat out The Art of Fielding in a clean sweep.
Check out the bracket below to see where the match-ups stand.
Cast your votes in the Semifinals below before noon Eastern on Wednesday, 4/2. Then stop back at the same time tomorrow for the FINAL ROUND!
An insufficiency of affirmations (See also: an exhaustion of friends)
A navel-gaze of memoirists
A nitpicking of copy-edits
A personal attack of rejections (See also: a wallowing of tacos)
A whiteness of canonical texts
An angst of novelists
A fiction of author bios
An overstimulation of literary festivals (See also: a statement of questions, a hangover of receptions, a conspicuousness of name drops, an imposter syndrome of networking events)
A heightening of comedy writers
A pandering of markets
A prestige of residencies
A vampire of what’s-at-stakes
A purgatory of freelance jobs
A $1.17 of Medium earnings
An enigma of 1099s
A GENIUS of editors (See also: an obviousness of flattery)
I have a soft spot for ghosts. I see them as a re-emergence of that which has been repressed, their hauntings as a return of the past, either in quiet encroaching or in violent invasion into the present. So restored, the exiled can be either re-integrated or banished, suppressed again. It can also, as it sometimes happens with queer things, and the word itself, be reclaimed. My relationship with the idea of reclaiming is somewhat uneasy because, at least on the surface, it rests on a history of violence that becomes definitionally inescapable: to recast something as benign or even empowering, you first need to have been abused with it. The reclamation is a disarming, a transfer of the weapon from the hands of the oppressor into the hands of the oppressed, where it can, hopefully, be put to better use. The idea is enticing, if vaguely alarming. Ghosts function similarly in making the invisible visible; holding on to the violence done to them, they force a reckoning.
Domestic abuse, especially in queer relationships, has been historically such an invisible thing—threatening, even, to our narratives of feminist empowerment or queer liberation. I am haunted by so many stories of what abuse and violence look like, feel like, sound like; of who can be a victim of these and who a perpetrator; of who can survive them, and how. Is there anything here I’d want to reclaim? Domestic violence is a haunting in that its structures are always already in place thanks, in part, to the stories we tell about it, that we’ve been telling about it for millennia. In Sour Cherry, my debut novel, I chose to retell the story of Bluebeard not in reclamation but in proliferation. The ghosts are many, and they demand their stories told; if not their real ones, then at least the ones you already know.
The queerness of the book is sometimes overt, but usually it is subtle; I find it in the peelings of wallpaper, in the silent longing, in the camaraderie of ghosts. It is also in the dialogue with what came before—because to speak is to invite, to converse is to desire. So here are some books I hope my novel is in conversation with, desiring of, haunted by. These works speak to how hauntings and ghosts can become vehicles for identity-related anxieties, as well as for the unspoken and unspeakable violence and abuse faced by our LGBTQ+ community, and sometimes perpetrated within it. To summon queer ghosts is to counter queer invisibility; to speak of them, with them, through them, is to invent a language for what was before abject and inarticulable.
Audacious, thought-provoking, and very, very queer, this anthology is as devastating as it is affirming. Here, queer people are afforded the full breadth of human (and sometimes inhuman) complexity. Among these tales you will find a haunted porter of a sentient hotel, a queer kid who makes friends with a telepathic mummy, a serial killer falling in love with a walking corpse; violent delights and parasitic wonders by a host of exciting queer voices, brought together by Sofia Ajram’s dark vision.
A memoir about domestic abuse in a queer relationship, pieced together through an intricate overlapping of genres, tropes, and fairy tale motifs. I love everything Machado writes, but what I love in this book in particular is something that had always felt true to me: the conceptualization of intertextuality as haunting. Text, reader, and author are all haunted by the literary corpus that produces us. The book reads me as I read it, and that’s just the way I want it.
This is a novella, creepy and delicious like everything written by Khaw. A group of friends unite to celebrate the wedding of Faiz to Nadia, who has always wanted to get married in a haunted house. The house, a Heian-era Japanese manor, is haunted by a dead bride and the dozens of girls built into its walls. But the real haunting is, as in most of my favorite ghost stories, internal: the characters act out their resentments and dysfunctions with the diligence of ghosts compelled to repeat their pasts and carry out their grudges, inescapably, forever. The past is present, our tiny lives so flimsy we never even stood a chance.
A trans boy is haunted by the ghost of his mother, haunted by birds and names, haunted by his own body and a gender that isn’t. A book that resonates with the stories of the past, with longing, with art and all its treasures and losses. This is a jewel of a novel about family and community, and about queers finding joy without denying their pain. Because joy and pain are not opposites; that is a lesson only the most beloved of ghosts can impart.
This is a collection of weird, deeply moving stories populated by queer and trans characters that find themselves out of place. Jeremy has a poltergeist in his closet, unraveling his clothes (and, let’s be honest, don’t we all?); a team of murdered girls fight “monsters and undead menaces;” and—my favorite—Clay is haunted by keys that show up in his throat while ghosts roam the world. Cipri’s fiction is intelligent, irreverent, tender, and strange in the best of ways.
I read this book years ago, yet it remains one of my most memorable reading experiences. Both lyrical and horrifying, the novel revolves around a group of women haunted by their racist house. Miranda communicates with the ghosts of her mother and grandmother, but this seems to me the least of her hauntings: her body craves chalk, craves the Silver house, craves her girlfriend. She is a woman riddled with desires that seem forever unfulfillable. Both timeline and point of view feel faltering, stumbling, which, to me, creates the sensation of a slow, protracted suffocation.
I have been describing this novel as a book about a haunted house that is also the fascist heart of Britain—and in that way it seems to be in conversation with White is for Witching, too. There are queers in it. There are trans people in it who are neither monsters nor saints, but actual humans who can both hurt and be hurt. (This, in times of moral panics and virtue signalling, is actually refreshing.) There are TERFs (and some of them are human too). There are many things in it that could use content warnings (as there are in life). This is a book that captures something incredibly hard to explain about what it’s like to live as a trans person in the UK right now; it does so with a fierceness and rawness and tenderness that tore me apart (and I was grateful for it). The most heart-wrenching, brutal, and intoxicating book I’ve read in a long while.
How can I describe this book? It’s by far one of the most inspired and inspiring works I’ve encountered. It starts with a film watched by an audience of ghosts, the spirits of people who have died “hundreds of thousands of times, whether in war, under war, or astride war; in shootings and bombings and shellings and camps and pogroms and hospitals.” The book is made up in part from pieces that have appeared before elsewhere, which is only fitting: the novel is haunted by short stories that had always already been a novel in progress, a book in hiding, sticking out its ghost tongue. Is it queer? Why, yes, of course. Queer as in strange, queer as in gay, queer as in brilliant.
Welcome back to March Gradness! After a weekend break, we’re returning with the quarter final match-ups. Last round had some very narrow wins, with The Art of Fielding beating out Special Topics in Calamity Physics by a mere three votes, and Trust Exercise clinching a win over Stoner by a margin of two! Some longstanding favorites have continued to sweep the competition (looking at you Never Let Me Go and Bunny).
Check out the bracket below to see where the match-ups stand.
Quarter Finals voting is now closed. Head to the next round to cast your votes in the Semifinals!
In the sweltering summer of my fourteenth year, my ma drove Quinnie and me to ballet camp every morning while Quinnie’s parents got divorced. Quinnie was a redheaded sixteen-year-old, a girl I’d known since we were children but had never really known. I hardly spoke in ballet class, or anywhere else. Each morning, I rose at six to dress before Quinnie came. The sun was already above the trees, and I awoke sweating. Ma didn’t like to use the air conditioning at night. We didn’t grow up with air conditioning in China, she said. We slept outside sometimes on rocks to stay cool, she said, which sounded like something she’d made up just to see if I’d believe it. Ma hadn’t bought me new underwear in years—she never mentioned bodies, breasts, hair, periods—so each morning I ripped off one of the fraying pairs I’d worn since the sixth grade, and pulled on my tights and leotard, before the sun had fully risen, before Quinnie could come and be cruel.
By the time Quinnie came to our door with her pink ballet bag, Ma had breakfast ready. She tried to make what she thought a real American teenager would want, frozen waffles and bagels and glasses of milk, but always got something wrong, forgetting the cream cheese or syrup, and I could see Quinnie noting every mistake. Quinnie would enter with her sweetest smile and say hi, Mrs. Chen, and sit at the little dining table waiting to be served. Ma would say in Chinese things that I should convey to Quinnie, even though Ma spoke English just fine—there’s more milk in the fridge, there’s peaches in the fruit bowl—things I never relayed, because I could not think of anything less cool. Once we were eating, Ma would retreat, smiling proudly at us. She was so trusting, so unsuspectingly excited to see me talking at the table with another girl.
A boy in my class wants to do me, Quinnie said, tearing off shreds of dry waffle. Ma was just a few feet away, but Quinnie talked loudly, her full mouth making sticky bready sounds. Quinnie was pretty. Her red hair was thick and wavy and she had green eyes, and very light eyebrows that made her look perpetually surprised. In ballet class, she looked at herself very intently in the wall mirrors. It was almost embarrassing to witness. I wasn’t surprised boys wanted to do her.
Ma was a fourth grade math teacher and had the summer off, which was why she had time to shuttle us around. Quinnie stayed at our house until her mom came to get her, straight from the lawyer’s office where she worked. Quinnie’s mom and my ma occasionally ran into each other at the store, and Quinnie’s mom must have seen Ma as responsible, with her neat little grocery list written in Chinese and her cart full of vegetables. Besides, we lived closer than the other girls at camp, who had nice mansions over by the National Park.
Did Ma’s students like her? Did they think her accent was too strong, her clothes too outdated, that she was boring? I never asked her anything about work. When we talked it was about things that didn’t concern her. News stories or celebrity gossip or myths about ghosts or demons. Occasionally, Ma told stories from Hunan. These felt so distant and strange, I wondered if she had invented them. Ma was good at telling stories, and so was I. It was a talent we shared. I told her stories about school and ballet, about accidentally walking into the boys’ bathroom, falling during a pirouette, cowering under a table during a food fight, embellishing and exaggerating until her face folded into a delighted smile.
The first afternoon Quinnie came over after ballet camp, I didn’t know what to do with her. Our house was lacking in entertainment, and my room was too intimate and childish, full of pictures I’d drawn in kindergarten. Instead, I brought her to the basement. It was cooler there, but our dusty television didn’t have cable and the fabric pattern of the old wicker couch had faded away. Bug carcasses littered the windowsills. Quinnie pulled a Nerf gun out of the crate of old toys, pointed it at me, and pulled the trigger. I brought my hands to my chest, staggered backwards, and said, you got me.
Fuck yeah, I did, Quinnie said, dropping the gun back into the crate with a loud plastic clatter. Fuck yeah, I did. Later that summer, I would whisper this again and again to myself in the mirror. We both sat on the floor right where we were standing—I felt unable to remember any social niceties, unable to move my body easily through space. Quinnie pointed to my legs. I’d changed out of ballet tights into shorts. You don’t shave? she said, her voice innocent. I looked down at my legs. They were prickling with thin lines of black hair.
I usually do, I lied. Just forgot.
You should start doing it, she said. It’ll make you way hotter.
Shaving was one of the many things Ma hadn’t told me about. Totally, I said to Quinnie, folding my legs beneath me. I’ve just been lazy. No one to impress, I tried to joke. I’d learned about deodorant in a similarly embarrassing way, when a ballet classmate told me, in a kind whisper, that there was a way to stop the sweating and the smell, actually. When I’d first gotten my period, a month ago, leaking brown stains on my ballet tights, I’d left them piled on the bedroom floor conspicuously so Ma would see. Like an animal leaving marks to communicate with other animals. Ma had come into the room and stared at the stained tights, her eyes wide, and said, oh, as if she’d never seen blood before. The next day there were pads under the bathroom sink.
Quinnie shrugged. Up to you, I guess. You know what’s sick? she said. Since my parents are getting divorced, they can’t keep track of their alcohol stash. I can get drunk whenever I want.
That’s cool, I said.
You drink? Quinnie asked.
Not really, I said.
Why am I not surprised? Quinnie laughed. God, I can’t wait to be an adult, she said. Suddenly, she rolled over and stretched out on the carpet. Her red hair spread beneath her head. The hem of her purple t-shirt pulled away from her denim shorts, revealing a gleaming white strip of skin. It felt like something I wasn’t meant to see. She looked perfect—vivid and disheveled—like a character from a movie.
After Quinnie left, Ma said: Quinnie has the hair of a fox.
Then she told me again our favorite fox demon stories, about the foxes who wore painted skins to look like women and captivated foolish men. Sometimes the foxes won, eating the men’s hearts and escaping with their freedom, but most of the time the people won, despite being foolish. They found some Taoist monk who had some trick, and the foxes would fall for the trick and die. Whenever Ma told these stories, she said that the foxes and the men “laid in bed together.” There was a secret in this sentence, the secret of sex, that Ma was unwilling or unable to discuss.
I can see the fox in Quinnie, Ma said.
Ma and I were both more docile, muted creatures. My father had left before I was born, and there had never been other men. Ma didn’t tell any stories about my father. She didn’t talk about him at all. I couldn’t imagine Ma having sex, not just because she was my mother, but because of the ordinariness of all her actions, the way even tying her shoelaces or turning the stove on politely encouraged people to look away.
In the news, there was talk of a young female celebrity whose nude photos had been leaked online. It had sparked a lot of talk about digital security, but also whether it was the female celebrity’s fault.
What do you think about it? I asked Ma, as she tended to her garden. She pulled a weed with her gloved hand and pushed her black hair, limp with sweat, out of her face. The cicadas droned. Would Ma reference the foxes again?
Oh, it’s bad, Ma said, shaking her head. It will be bad for that woman.
That’s all she said. She reached for another weed.
At ballet camp, Quinnie mostly ignored me. We went through a schedule from eight in the morning until three—stretching to barre, to jazz, to modern, to pointe. Every now and then there were fun classes, like pantomiming. Out the large studio windows were the crowds outside the movie theater, the skateboarders, the children running through the fountain. The windows fogged at the edges with our sweat. Quinnie stretched with the rich girls in the back corner of the studio, Stephanie and Lis and the others. They were pretty and slender and white and wore nice clothes. Why was it that rich girls were always so pretty? Maybe Quinnie wanted them to think she was rich, too. But I knew her house looked like ours: squat, old but not in a beautiful way; perfectly ordinary.
I was having a hard time with ballet. When I was younger, the teachers had smiled and said that I was “promising.” I was cast in good roles. But recently, the teachers were smiling less. I was too tense. You’re holding back, they said. You need to let go. I couldn’t move like Quinnie—with the sure knowledge that people wanted to watch.
I felt guilty. I knew that ballet was expensive, but Ma always said that she’d rather spend money on something that made me happy than things like houses and cars. We drove the same old Toyota Corolla that we’d had since I was a child; Ma never bought new clothes for herself. Our house was full of aging furniture, scratched cabinets, coupons. But was ballet making me happy? How to talk to Ma about things like money, or happiness?
After the last class of the day, we all went into the dressing room to change. The dressing room was the most frightening part of ballet camp—a square room with a mirror and a scratchy, carpeted floor that smelled perpetually of feet, too small, such that we bumped into each other as we peeled off our leotards. Our uniforms already left us so exposed, the thin fabric stretched over our bare skin, showing every mole and crease. We weren’t supposed to wear underwear, because the teachers said the bands interrupted the vertical lines of our bodies.
The other girls asked each other their most private questions in the dressing room: how were they meant to feel when a boy stuck his fingers up inside them? Were their boobs big or small? If they masturbated. If this or that had ever happened on their periods. If they knew how to give a blowjob. Of course, they also talked about the celebrity with the leaked photos.
Quinnie seemed to hold all the answers. She quickly became the center of the dressing room, the other girls curling towards her, squirming and giggling.
When you breathe the smoke in, she said, hold it in your lungs until it hurts, then breathe it out. If you drink before you have sex, it feels better. You hold it in your hand, like this, not too soft, and you start slow, up and down…
What about you? asked the nice girl who’d told me about deodorant, looking at me. Have you done it?
Don’t bother asking her, Quinnie said, smiling sweetly at me. She hasn’t done anything. She’s completely naive.
When Ma picked us up, I would sit in the back with Quinnie and worry about making Ma feel like a chauffeur, but she would just smile and ask us how ballet went. Quinnie would look at me with her invisible eyebrows raised, as if daring me to tell Ma the things uttered in the dressing room.
It was good, I always said, nothing more. I looked away from Quinnie out the window, at the familiar route. The churches along the parkway half-hidden by trees, the warehouses behind the military hospital, the fire station, the little grocery store with the old-timey sign. Masturbation, hand jobs, weed. These were stories I would not tell Ma. Her eyes would go wide and she’d just go, oh.
On Friday afternoon of the second week, Quinnie’s mom didn’t come. Thirty minutes passed, an hour. Ma had already started preparing dinner. Quinnie, who could usually talk forever about boys or music or movies, became oddly quiet and went to sit by the window.
Tell her she can stay for dinner, Ma said to me. I told Quinnie.
No, she’s just a mess, she’ll be here any minute, Quinnie said.
I couldn’t imagine talking about my mother like that—not out loud. Ma sliced garlic and glanced at me; I pretended to read my book; Quinnie stared out the window. I couldn’t see her face, only the wild tumble of her red hair, outlined with golden light. Finally Ma put down her knife.
Let me drive you home, she said to Quinnie. It was the first time Ma had spoken to Quinnie directly, beyond a hello or goodbye. Quinnie looked at her for a moment, and then said, okay.
As she gathered her things, she looked out the window, as if expecting to see her mother pull up in front of the house at the last second.
When I’m an adult, she said, I’m never having kids. Why would you have kids if you don’t even want them? She slid her right foot in and out of her flip flop. Well, at least I’ll have the house all to myself, she said. I can get drunk.
Ma smiled in response. Ready? she said.
In the third week of ballet camp, we started flamenco class. Thrillingly, we had to obtain new things for it—a flamenco skirt, flamenco shoes, and a pair of castanets. We were taught by a beautiful Spanish woman who wore her hair slicked into a low, severe bun. Ma said she would make me a skirt. She took me to the fabric store and we selected a blood-red cotton embroidered with large, orange flowers. The house filled with the mechanical chugging of her machine.
As she sewed, she told me a new story, about a young woman who had lived in her childhood apartment building. The woman had a sweetheart in the same building, a boy she’d grown up with. One day, the sweetheart became engaged to another young woman from a wealthier family. They would be moving to America together.
A week later, all of his family’s chickens went missing, Ma said. Usually the chickens were so loud, waking everyone up, but that morning, we woke to silence. We all wondered what felt so different.
Some people said perhaps foxes had eaten the chickens, but there were none of the usual signs of violence—blood, feathers. It was as if the chickens had simply vanished. Then, on the first day of summer, the young woman emerged wearing a deep red dress. No one could look away from her beauty, from the rare and incredible color.
But as the week went on, Ma said, we noticed that the red was fading. The dress became ugly and blotchy.
They never proved it, but everyone was sure that the young woman had killed all of the chickens in revenge, and had dyed the fabric with their blood.
They never proved it, but everyone was sure that the young woman had killed all of the chickens in revenge, and had dyed the fabric with their blood.
Blood makes a bad dye, Ma said to me, sewing away. It may be beautiful at first, but it breaks down.
When I changed into my blood-red flamenco skirt before class, I realized that everyone else had purchased the exact same black spandex skirt from the dance supply store. Where did you get that skirt? Quinnie said, staring.
My mom made it for me, I said. Quinnie’s face folded shut.
She couldn’t just buy one for you? She sounded almost angry. You should’ve gotten one that’s like, professional.
We learned to stamp our heels in rhythms on the floor, and swirled our hands in the mirror until our forearms ached. Quinnie swished the skirt around her calves, measuring her small waist approvingly in the mirror with her eyes. I loved the way I looked in my skirt, too: the way I became a burning red sun when I spun. I was good at flamenco. I could see Quinnie thought so as well, the way her eyes narrowed at me in the mirror.
Our teacher told us to get into pairs. I turned to Quinnie, my only friend, but she slipped her arm into that of the girl next to her. One of the rich girls, Lis. Sorry, she said, still smiling, shrugging. Black skirts only.
I had to pair up with our teacher, whose smell was animal and comforting. She beamed at me approvingly. I hated Lis, and I hated my red skirt.
Why didn’t you just buy me a skirt? I asked Ma at home.
Is there something wrong with yours? she said.
It’s too short, I lied.
I can extend it, Ma said. Just give it to me, I’ll do it now.
Why can’t we just do things like everyone else? I said. Why does it always have to be different?
Ma was still smiling at me, her brow furrowed in confusion. Different how? Something in me ached. Never mind, I said. Forget it. Please forget it.
One afternoon later that week, Quinnie said she was bored of sitting around. Let’s take the bus downtown and look at boys, she said. I left that part out when I asked Ma if we could go. Men played a limited role in the stories Ma told me. Even if they were critical to the story, like in the one about the blood-dyed dress, they were never allowed into the foreground. When I’d first started kindergarten, meeting other children with two parents, I’d asked her about my father.
He isn’t important, Ma had said. We had been in the car, waiting at an intersection. Me in the backseat, looking at her dark hair. We don’t need him. It will always just be us.
Ma gave me a bag of change for the bus fare. We walked down the street to the stop. It was humid and the air seemed to waver. The coins jangled. The bus stop was beside a large street, an exposed swath of concrete at the intersection. I felt painfully visible. A truck pulled up next to us with two men inside. Reddened skin and sunglasses. Their windows were down and rock was playing on the radio. They were looking at us through the dark blankness of their sunglasses. Quinnie shifted under their gaze, a plant turning to the sun. Does the carpet match the drapes? one guy called out.
Quinnie shifted again. She didn’t answer.
Hey, konichiwa, the guy said, pointing his dark lenses towards me.
Fuck off, shithead, Quinnie said suddenly, her voice loud and surprising. Cunt, the guy yelled as the truck pulled away. Quinnie grabbed my hand and began walking back up the hill to my house, pulling me. She held my hand too tightly, crunching the bones together in a way that was both painful and comforting. After a while she seemed to realize she was still holding my hand, and she dropped it.
In the fourth week of ballet camp, I sat on the couch downstairs and Quinnie sat next to me. This was unusual. We usually maintained a careful distance. I had a bowl of slick, yellow mango slices balanced on my knees. I could see all of her freckles. She kept sighing.
Boys are so complicated, she said. She wanted me to engage, press her for details, but I wanted her to pay attention to me for once.
You know, I said, in my mom’s hometown, there was a woman who slaughtered all of her ex-boyfriend’s chickens because he got married to another woman.
I wanted to tell Quinnie a story that would impress her. Something she hadn’t heard of before. None of my own stories would suffice, so I borrowed Ma’s. Quinnie may have known sex and drugs and boys, but she didn’t know Hunan.
Whoa, Quinnie said.
Yeah, I said. She stole them away, slashed all of their throats. Blood and feathers everywhere. And then, she took a dress, and soaked the dress in the blood of the dead chickens. She wore that red dress for everyone to see.
Ma hadn’t said anything about blood or feathers or slashed throats or whether it was ever proven what the woman did, but who was to say that didn’t really happen? And how would Quinnie know the difference?
That’s crazy, Quinnie said. Where’s your mom from again? China? China sounds crazy. Yeah, it’s wild, I said, even though I didn’t know. I’d never been to Hunan. Tell me about the boys you like, she said.
Jessie in eighth grade, with beautiful sketches of fish in his notebook; Kane from history class, who laughed too generously at the teacher’s bad jokes. I had admired them with a lukewarm tenderness, an occasional daydream about holding hands, but nothing wild, nothing that had consumed me. I don’t like any, I said.
Any? she said. That’s crazy. I feel like I always have a crush on someone. I want all of them. Any man walking by, and I just want him to want me, you know? I want him to look at me and think I’m sexy. Even the assholes and the ugly ones and the old ones. Like those guys in that truck. Before they started talking, I wanted them to keep looking at me. Is that fucked up?
I shrugged. I just don’t feel that, I said.
Some of my dad’s friends used to look at me when they came over for dinner, Quinnie said. They liked hugging me, picking me up, kissing me on the cheek, you know. Afterwards, my mom and dad used to fight about it. Dad always said Mom was making it up, being crazy. But it’s true, they looked at me and because of them, she said, her voice becoming quiet and defiant, I knew I was beautiful.
I said nothing, looking down at the mango.
Have you had your sexual awakening yet? Quinnie said. Maybe that’s the issue.
My what? I said.
Have you ever even kissed someone?
I slid my finger around the rim of the bowl of mangoes. I didn’t have it in me to lie.
Oh my god, you haven’t, Quinnie said. Asians are always such goody two-shoes. Well, there’s the problem. You can’t know what you want if you’ve never had it.
For some reason, my heart was pounding. My fingers were sticky and I wanted to lick them clean.
I’ll tell you what, Quinnie said. I could feel the heat of her body now. I’ll give you some practice. As a friend.
And then she was leaning forward, her hair tickling my knee, and she was kissing me. I was thinking about the stickiness of my fingers and what would happen if I lifted them to her sweet, shampoo-smelling hair, and how her mouth felt like the mango, but I couldn’t tell if it was my mouth that tasted of mango or hers, and was it supposed to feel this way if she was a girl? Then she pulled away, and she was taking a piece of mango and complaining about pointe class as if nothing had happened, nothing at all.
We went upstairs when Quinnie’s mom rang the doorbell.
In the final week of ballet camp, one of the rich girls, Stephanie, invited us to a sleepover. A week and three days had passed since the Kiss, and Quinnie still acted like nothing had happened. I could tell that she enjoyed playing this game, sometimes reaching across me to grab something, her hair swinging across my face so that I smelled her shampoo and sweat, or pressing her leg against mine in the car. She was watching to see how I would react. I made sure to remain perfectly calm. In the dressing room, Stephanie told us that we should bring our cutest bra and underwear to the sleepover, and when Quinnie left my house, I frantically considered my options.
My best pair of underwear, which was from the sixth grade, had a pattern of Valentine candy hearts that said things like “be mine” and unraveling elastic that sliced into my flesh. Ma still hadn’t gotten me a real bra. I dug through her drawers and stole one. It was dusty pink and so old that the lace was curling and pilling, the underwire lancing through the worn fabric. I stuffed it into my bag.
Ma drove us to the sleepover. I never got invited to sleepovers, and I could tell she was proud. She was wearing her best dress and nice clogs she wore only a few times a year. So trusting. She had no idea who this Stephanie was, who any of these girls were. They could be satanists, or cult followers.
Stephanie’s house was an imposing white rectangle, with many windows and a long, circular driveway. My ten classmates sat at a massive wooden table in the kitchen, talking and drinking sodas. Quinnie slid immediately into the conversation, and I sat beside her. Stephanie brought out a pile of pink t-shirts. We were going to decorate them and print nicknames across our chests. Apparently this was what one did at a sleepover. Immediately, everyone was consulting each other on what their nickname should be. It was clear that each of my classmates was defined by a set of stories from our many years of ballet: boobs popping out of leotards, flirting with boys, accidentally spitting water onto our teachers, being hungover during class. Some of the stories were things I’d witnessed; some I’d never heard before. Everyone agreed that Quinnie’s nickname should be “queen of the sluts.”
What should mine be? I said. My classmates turned to look at me. There was silence; a few girls glanced at one another. They smiled at me, in the way someone smiles at a lost child. Quinnie was bent over her own shirt. She would not help me.
I’ll figure it out, I said. I wanted it to pass—this painful moment, my understanding that no one knew me, that I played no role in any of their stories. My classmates looked relieved; the conversation resumed. Goody Two-Shoes, I stamped onto the fabric. What Quinnie had called me, right before the Kiss. Maybe someone would find it funny. Maybe Quinnie.
I wanted it to pass—this painful moment, my understanding that no one knew me, that I played no role in any of their stories.
When our shirts were done, we moved into Stephanie’s game room for the night. The room was cavernous, paneled with dark wood, with a huge, heavy pool table in the center.
Quinnie yelled that it was time to strip, and everyone obediently removed their clothes, revealing an array of colorful bras and underwear I’d seen in displays at the mall. I thought about the stolen bra in my bag, ratty and outdated, and suddenly I couldn’t bear to put it on. I was annoyed again at Ma, for being so out of touch. I kept my tank top on. There were a few minutes of exhibition and admiration. Quinnie was showing off a set she’d just gotten from PINK. I knew she often stole things from the mall, but she said it was a gift from her mom. Everyone told her she was sexy. God, she was so annoying. She’d probably kissed every girl here. Someone said my candy heart underwear was cute.
We played games like Never Have I Ever and Truth or Dare. Never Have I Ever was a pain, because I’d never done anything. Truth or Dare had everyone doing wild things and talking about boys. There was a lot of talk about fucking, though when we were asked if we’d had sex during Never Have I Ever, only Quinnie had lowered her finger, to much gasping and squealing. Like, several times, she said. It’s not a big deal at all.
My classmates dared one another to hump pillows, to make out with a pool ball, to give a lap dance to Stephanie. When each girl completed a dare, the others shrieked and whooped and cheered. I decided to risk a dare. I wanted to hear someone whooping and cheering for me. Someone told me to run a lap around the room topless. As I pulled off my tank top, I was thrilled and mortified. I tried to throw the top aside with casual confidence as I stood, as if I did this all the time. I was being invited to be one of them, to prove myself equally daring; but there was also the chance of my failure, of doing the most damning of things—trying too hard. Being too transparent in my desire to belong. As I ran, I was painfully aware of my exposed body; I felt almost guilty, even though I had been asked to do it, even though they’d all been doing the same kinds of things all night, as if I were forcing the image of my body upon the other girls. Especially Quinnie. Had Quinnie felt something in my kiss—the Kiss—something greedy, something wanting? Did she think I wanted her to look at me? Would she look at me, admire my new boldness? Or would she see right through me—see my pathetic effort, my pathetic desires? Would she be disgusted by what she saw?
When I turned the corner of the pool table, I realized no one was even paying attention; they had already moved on to the next girl. My dare had been a throwaway. They’d just wanted to get it over with. They were just including me to be nice, but I didn’t want people to be nice. I wanted them to cackle at my stories, to look at me the way they looked at Quinnie.
I couldn’t find my tank top. I resisted the urge to wrap my arms around my chest—somehow I knew Quinnie would notice if I did. It would be obvious how hard I was trying to be cool and uncaring and bold. A real goody two-shoes.
Did someone take her shirt? Quinnie crowed. That’s messed up! You know she’s shy! You really are so shy, Lis said to me. Like, you never talk.
Don’t be hard on her, she’s just a little different, Quinnie said, placing her hand on my shoulder with exaggerated affection. Her touch seemed to burn through my entire body. Tell them that story about your mom’s neighbor from her village or whatever, the village with all the chickens running around, that woman who murdered her ex-boyfriend or something? She comes from a different world, Quinnie said matter-of-factly to the other girls.
What? That sounds bizarre, Stephanie said, looking at me.
Here’s your shirt, one of the girls said, quietly. It was the girl who’d told me about deodorant.
She didn’t kill her boyfriend, I said. It was his chickens. And she didn’t live in a village. The story, the story that wasn’t mine, was out of my hands; I had carelessly thrown it out into the world, tried to trade it for the opportunity to be interesting, and now I couldn’t take it back. I’d cheapened it, I’d betrayed Ma, the woman with the dress, an entire country I hardly knew anything about. Quinnie didn’t hear me, or she pretended she didn’t.
It was midnight when people got bored of Truth or Dare and Quinnie suggested we play “America’s Next Top Model.” Stephanie and another girl were the judges and came up with challenges, like making outfits out of toilet paper and doing catwalks around the pool table and posing. Stephanie took photos of us with a small blue camera, and she and the other girl looked intently over the photos and eliminated someone each round. I was quickly eliminated. By two in the morning, we sat in piles of discarded toilet paper against the pool table and cheered for the remaining candidates. Then it was down to four girls. Quinnie was one of them. Stephanie and her co-judge were running out of challenge ideas, and people were getting tired. I know, Quinnie said, her eyes wicked. Let’s model sex poses in pairs.
Oh my god, Stephanie said.
And, Quinnie said, we have to do it completely naked.
The other girls screamed. I wondered if anyone else was afraid, if anyone else thought Quinnie was going too far. My only ally, deodorant girl, was fast asleep already. But I knew better than anyone how easy it was to follow Quinnie.
Quinnie and the other three remaining girls stepped out of their underwear, unhooked their bras. I’d seen all these girls naked before, but there was something different about how they were holding themselves, something intentional, as if they were playing a part. They didn’t feel as if their nakedness was an affront, a burden, an embarrassment to glance away from. They kicked their underwear aside indifferently, adopted languid postures—they acted like it was easy for them to put themselves on display.
Quinnie and Lis were a pair. Lis laid down on the floor and Quinnie straddled her, and Stephanie raised her camera. Quinnie and Lis stared into the lens, exaggeratedly serious. They moved into another pose. They were narrowing their eyes, parting their lips, curving their backs and necks, clutching one another close, adopting expressions and positions they’d seen somewhere else—on some adult woman, these poses that sent a signal shining forth into the world, that said come here, come to me, look at me, consume me. They were clumsily obscene, eager to get it right, to create the correct shapes, to look grown up, sexy. Quinnie’s red fox hair fell across Lis’s face. All the girls beside me were screaming. I put my shorts back on and left the room.
I sat at the long table in the dining room. I wanted to go home. It was all stupid, childish. I imagined Ma coming, opening the door to the game room, looking at the scene with her eyes wide, saying, oh. I fell asleep with my head on my arms and woke in the gray of early morning, my eyes and neck aching, my mouth sticky. I walked back to the game room. My classmates were strewn about, asleep around the pool table. Quinnie had put her underwear back on. The camera lay beside Stephanie.
I walked over and picked it up. I felt oddly calm, far calmer than when I’d been running around topless in front of everyone, calmer than I had ever been around Quinnie. I looked at their bodies in the photographs, pressed together into various shapes, their exaggerated expressions. Everything looked even flatter, even more artificial in these photographs, stamped into place. How stupid it was to take photographs! How terrible it would be if someone saw them, someone outside of this room. How much damage could be done. I looked closely at one photograph—Quinnie and Lis kneeling, facing one another in profile, nose to nose, looking one another in the eye. Their eyes were cold, almost mocking, as if even they couldn’t take themselves seriously. But they were beautiful, one couldn’t deny that. I powered the camera off and, creeping over the bodies of my classmates, slipped it into my bag.
Back at ballet camp, Stephanie told us she had bad news. The camera is gone, she said. The camera with all the pictures.
Everyone looked around at one another. No one laughed, or said anything. The air in the dressing room was hot and still and smelled like sweat. I widened my eyes in surprise, mirroring my classmates.
I kind of forgot about it at first. Then I was like, wait a minute, where is it? Then I was wondering if maybe my mom took it, Stephanie said, but no. She was looking down at her knees.
Then Quinnie jumped up. Who the fuck took it, she said, pointing her finger around the room. There were protests. No, someone here fucking took it, Quinnie said. Some creep. Which one of you did it? Spit it out.
No one said anything. Girls glanced at one another. Quinnie turned and looked at me. You, she said. Fucking freak. You’re obsessed with me. You did it.
What? someone said. Her?
Quinnie, you’re fucking crazy, someone else said. I said nothing. I breathed very slow. I looked straight at Quinnie, shrugged and shook my head.
Someone started to laugh, thinking it was some kind of joke. No one could imagine I would ever do such a thing. Goody two-shoes. The air loosened. Other girls started to smile. But Quinnie’s face didn’t change.
I bet it was Lis, someone said.
Lis’s face turned red. Shut up, she said. Quinnie was the one who was way too into it. Are you a lesbian, Quinnie?
More girls laughed. Quinnie looked around.
Fuck off, she said. It was a fucking game. She was silent again, staring at me. The laughter wilted. Quinnie stormed out of the room, slamming the door.
That day, when Ma drove us home, Quinnie didn’t look at me once. We stared out of our respective windows. The churches. The car shops. Fire station. Grocery store. I wondered if Ma could sense it, the anger in the car. When we got home, Ma pulled a bowl of papaya out of the fridge. She held the bowl forward, smiling, everything about her open, as it always was.
I hate that fruit, actually, Quinnie said, still smiling. Her eyes were a cruel, hard green. It smells. I don’t like any of those weird snacks.
She turned and walked to my room. This would be the first time she’d ever been inside. This was how Quinnie saw us. The freak with her freak mother. I was all wrong as an American teenager, I knew nothing, and I wanted the wrong things. I wanted to kiss Quinnie. All I was to Quinnie was another loser who wanted her. And maybe Quinnie thought it was all Ma’s fault I was like this, Ma’s strangeness, Ma’s ignorance, growing into me. I couldn’t even look at Ma. I took the bowl from her and followed Quinnie.
She was opening and closing all my drawers, banging them. I shut my door and stood against it, holding the bowl of papaya and watching. Quinnie threw things out of my dresser, ripped my covers off of my bed.
Where the fuck is it, she was saying again and again, through clenched teeth. I know you have it.
I don’t know what you’re talking about, I said.
In the humidity, her hair stuck to her neck. Her face was red and shining.
Fucking loser, she hissed at me. Just give it up, she said. I stayed very still. Finally she dropped to the floor and, to my surprise, she started to cry.
This can’t be happening, she said. No one can see those. My parents would fucking kill me. They found out about the drinking. My mom slapped me. They can’t know about this. And yeah, I’ve only had sex once and it sucked. So fucking what. God, where is the fucking camera?
I looked at her, trying to make my eyes soft, pitying. I let Quinnie cry on the floor and pushed cubes of papaya into my mouth. Juice slid down my face and I licked it away. I wondered if Ma could hear us. I imagined her serenely washing vegetables as Quinnie cried and yelled just down the hall.
When I thought of Quinnie being cruel to Ma, when I thought of all her small cruelties, I remembered the woman with the chicken blood dress. I imagined the thrill that woman must have felt, stepping out of her door in the red dress for the first time. I held a lot of power, having those photos. It was the first time I had any sort of power over Quinnie.
I finished the bowl of papaya while Quinnie stormed off to the bathroom and shut herself inside, not emerging until her mom came to get her. When I approached the door, I heard her crying quietly.
After Quinnie left, I went to stand with Ma in the kitchen as she chopped vegetables for dinner. Ma, I said, you know the celebrity who got her photos leaked?
Mm, Ma said, her knife rhythmic against the cutting board.
What would happen if that happened to me? I said. I expected Ma to keep cutting, to say something vague, like oh, that would be bad, the way she deflected everything. But Ma put down her knife and turned to me, her eyes urgent and serious.
What happened, she said. Tell me. We will figure it out.
I was startled by how different she seemed. I saw suddenly that she did know, what it meant to take such a photo and have it emerge into the world, what would have to be done about it; she knew everything behind such a scandal, the wants and motivations of adults and almost-adults, the machinations of sex and desire.
Oh no, I said quickly, shaking my head. I couldn’t look at her, at the intensity of knowledge in her eyes. I was thinking hypothetically, I said.
Ma picked up the knife and shrunk back into her usual presence. Don’t scare me, she said, especially when I have a knife. She turned back to the cutting board.
It would be later, in my young adult years, that I would learn that Ma was known as the great heartbreaker of her college class, that she had entranced and then rejected an important government official who had visited her town, that she had been the one to tell my father, a charming but unreliable gambler she’d only been with for a year, to get lost, that she was the one who bewitched men, then danced lightly from their snares. How lucky I am, she would say to me—he gave me you, then he let me go free.
I feel so sorry for Quinnie, she said, brushing the chopped scallions into the pan, where they sizzled in the oil. The sharp smell of the scallions filled the air. She said Quinnie’s name as she always did, long and stretched: queeeenie.
I went downstairs and pulled the camera out from under the couch cushion. I looked at the pictures of Quinnie and Lis, their playacting, so innocent in its obscenity. There was a clear effortfulness to their performance that made me feel something I’d never before associated with Quinnie: I pitied her, she was like me—a child, nervous and uncertain. I tried to imagine myself into their bodies, tried to imagine want and desire, but instead, as I stared at their glare-reddened eyes, things peeled away, every myth I’d made about Quinnie, every man and woman I’d imagined her with, peeling away until only she remained, crying on the floor of my room. I slid the camera back under the cushion.
Every now and then, I would take it out and look through the photos again, wondering what I was looking for; sex, innocence. I did this until the camera ran out of battery. I thought again about the woman whose sweetheart had abandoned her. I imagined her wearing the chicken blood dress out into the courtyard for the first time, a red jewel, feeling the stares of her many neighbors, as focused and burning as the Hunan summer sun. I imagined her leaning over the balcony railing, knowing everyone would notice; I imagined her pride and the thrill of danger and revenge, the swish of the fabric against her skin, the secret knowledge of its origins. I wondered if she’d known then, on that first day in her bloody dress, that in time the red would fade, that soon it would all become ugly and unremarkable.
I grew up in a terribly small town on the other side of the world but ours was a home filled with books to the brim. After reading the Great Gatsby, I started seeking out New York in both books and the popular culture I consumed.
First with novels—from Nella Larsen to Jack Kerouac to Sylvia Plath to Colson Whitehead. Then, once I encountered Alison Bechdel’s inimitable Fun Home, in the form of comics. When I finally made it to New York in person, I was already consumed by a love affair with the city that I had made up in my head before I ever stepped into it.
Over the years, as I pursued a doctorate in English, I found myself increasingly drawn to the medium of comics. That’s how my debut book This Beautiful, Ridiculous City—a graphic memoir that explores the promises and pitfalls of New York from an immigrant perspective—came to be. It is also a book about how literature led me to the New World.
Here are 8 comics set in New York City that I have read, reread, and loved:
As a graphic memoir about alcoholism and sobriety while slowly being priced out of New York, Impossible People is both effervescently humorous and profoundly sad. There’s something stirring yet wistful about Wertz’s observations about the indignities of life as a human and a cartoonist. One of the brightest spots in this book is her painstakingly detailed cityscapes—spanning bodegas, storefronts, windows units, and street signs in deep inks, a style that also appears prominently in her 2017 book Tenements, Towers and Trash: An Unconventional Illustrated History of New York City.
Seek Youisn’t a New York story so much as a story that occurs in New York some of the time, as Radtke moves from her midwestern town to the city in her twenties. One of the finest examples of how research and storytelling can be combined in the comics medium, it deep dives into loneliness and its causes and manifestations, through elegantly explained scientific experiments, personal narratives, and stories of loneliness as it pertains to those around her. We learn about the part of the brain that responds to isolation, how social rejection feels akin to physical pain inside our brain, how the society we live in is not designed to foster community, and how technology figures into all of this, among other fascinating topics, all revolving around the concept of loneliness and human need for connection. An essential read.
Published in 1978 and one of the first book length comics to experiment with serious subject matters in this medium, it is often cited as the first graphic novel, although there were a few others before it. Yet its influence on the comics scene from the 20th century to the present day is incomparable. Eisner is also the artist who popularized the term “graphic novel,” although it was coined elsewhere a few years before this book was published. Drawn in sharp black ink, A Contract with God comprises impeccably expressive imagery spanning four short, interwoven stories. It is based in a tenement at 55 Dropsie Avenue in the Bronx “that was built around 1920 when the decaying apartment houses in lower Manhattan could no longer accommodate the flood of immigrants that poured into New York after World War I.” It looks at a cast of characters—laborers, clerks, low paid city employees—from his own memories. These, he writes at the beginning, are true stories that he converted into fiction. The first story looks at Frimme Hersh, who lost his daughter to sudden illness, the second is about a has-been opera singer who tries to revive her glory days by coaching a hapless street singer during the Depression era, the third is about the super, Mr Scuggs, and the fourth and the final one is about the tenants of Dropsie Avenue vacationing in the Catskills.
One of the most ingenious graphic novels I have ever read, in which Mazzucchelli takes a story of a middle aged “paper architect” and Cornell professor and turns it into an existential quest. It is not so much a story about New York as it is about leaving it behind. In fact, the story starts when Polyp’s apartment building is set ablaze by a lightning strike, leaving him scrambling to escape in the middle of the night. Once outside, he stands in the pouring rain, watching his life go up in smoke. We follow him as he walks away, and takes the subway to Port Authority where he gets on a bus to the middle of nowhere. A formalist masterpiece, it eludes easy description, but if you like Greek tragedies and very literary comics, you will love Asterios Polyp.
The book revolves around raising a mixed-race kid in a half East Indian, half Jewish family in Brooklyn, who asks hard questions about race such as “Are White people afraid of Brown people?” and more worryingly, “Is Daddy afraid of us?” Jacob’s visual style involves heavy use of colorful photographs as the backdrop of black and white graphic cut-outs of her characters and many, many speech balloons, to illustrate a story about race and diaspora in America, the ways it has changed for the better, and the ways it hasn’t. On the other side of the world, back in her parents’ hometown in India, the book looks at colorism through the eyes of a younger version of Jacob. Heartfelt, funny and incisively perceptive, it earnestly explores what it means to be Brown in America in the wake of 9/11 and in the aftermath of the 2016 election.
The book originally began as a leaflet for her daughter who left her suburban home for school in Manhattan. Chast, who was born in Brooklyn, spent her early adulthood in Manhattan before moving away as one does in the pursuit of more space in the suburbs ahead of starting a family. Full of her signature wry but laugh-out-loud humor (as seen in The New Yorker), this pocket-sized book is, as the subtitle says, part love letter to New York and part guide book. If you are completely new to the city, it will teach you how to navigate the subway, the grid system, what cross-streets are, and how Sixth Avenue and Avenue of the Americas are the same thing but, of course, no one (really, not a single person) calls it the latter. If you have been living here for a while and already know everything Chast has to offer, the book’s easy charm will still (probably) urge you to take a long, aimless walk and make you appreciate this beautiful, ridiculous city all over again.
Queenie: Godmother of Harlem is based on the life of Stephanie Saint-Clair, aka “Queenie.” Born on a plantation in Martinique, a French colony in the Caribbean, Queenie leaves for New York around 1912. She survives an abusive ex-boyfriend, followed by a brutal attack by the Ku Klux Klan, and then finds the courage to begin to foster a name for herself as the Queen of Harlem’s mafia. She became the runner of the numbers game in the 1930s when the Prohibition era was coming to an end. She built her own image, dressing in fine clothes and jewelry and purchasing ads in The New York Amsterdam News. She was a resilient woman and a compassionate leader who helped out and empowered many in the Black community with the money she made from racketeering. At the end of her life, we see her enjoying an idyllic afternoon in Long Island, retired. This heavily researched, part fictionalized graphic novel offers us deep insight into a piece of forgotten history.
Based primarily in 1940s Brooklyn and focusing on a cast of characters who are women, Jewish, and refugees, Victory Parade reflects on intergenerational trauma as experienced and passed down by Holocaust survivors. Grittier than most other books in this list, there are abusive marriages, illicit relationships, sexual harassment, and metaphorical disembodiment signaling the war-torn society, but there’s also love, longing, female friendships, and survival in the middle of it all. With frequent references to Greek tragedies and 20th-century painters, Victory Parade is a testament to the comic medium’s ability to portray complex and difficult subjects with nuance, create meaning with a coalescence of words and images.
Welcome to Day 5 of March Gradness! We’ve whittled it down to the Sweet Sixteen of campus novels. In the last round, Bunny and Disorientation swept the competition, while all of the others were nail-bitingly close races. The Book of Goose beat Real Life by a margin of 6 votes, and Trust Exercise was neck-and-neck with A Separate Peace on Instagram but took the lead by a wide margin with our web voters.
Check out the bracket below to see how the matches have shaken out so far.
Round 3 voting is now closed. Stop back Monday, 3/31 at 12 pm Eastern to vote in the quarter finals!
What we eat in literature tells its own story. A pie? That’s the story of hard work, perseverance, dedication to craft. A ripe peach is the story of sunlight and sweetness and deep roots. A roast chicken, skin burnished a deep brown, might tell a story of home.
As I wrote about food–and my own complicated relationship with it and with restaurants–in my book, Cellar Rat: My Life in the Restaurant Underbelly, I spent a lot of time thinking not only about how food was cast in literature, but also about other women. About how women landed on the page, about how they fed and nurtured, about how they found themselves in proximity to food, cooking food, working in the food industry, serving food, falling in love with food, eating for survival and for pleasure, finding themselves through food and completing others through its preparation.
Some of the seven books compiled here include women who work in restaurants. Some include women who write about food, or who cook professionally. Others are simply books about women who exist in the domestic sphere, bound by food and its endless possibilities. Women who are guardians of the palate, women who understand this basic and innate instinct to feed. Women who love all of it.
My own book explores what it means to be a woman in the food space. I look, specifically, at the ways in which the food industry, in all its toxicity, shapes women like me, even as it provides a compelling backdrop for these stories. I hope to offer a place for readers–like these seven books do–to see food and the lives of those intertwined with it, in a new way.
Lottie Hazell’s Piglet is an observational masterpiece, leaning into the nuances of romance, body image, and womanhood all through the lens of food. The titular main character, Piglet, nicknamed, in youth, for her voracious appetite, works as a cookbook editor, precariously attempting to climb the ranks at work while simultaneously living out her dream at home: wealthy fiancé, lovely home, kitchen well-equipped with the trappings necessary to host a nice dinner party. It is only when her life goes haywire–a secret unveiled, a life unraveling–that Piglet comes into her own, cooking less for performance and more for the curative and meditative value. It’s an astute look at what it means for women to eat, to feed, and, finally, to feel full.
Alice Stern, the admissions officer protagonist of Emma Straub’s This Time Tomorrow, doesn’t work in the food industry, but food and memory permeates this book, which is about choices, and love, and how women root themselves in both home and work. Untethered from the traditional confines of time, Stern is free to repeat familiar meals with her father–Gray’s Papaya, for instance, for an iconic hot dog–before flitting back to her current life, where she is 40. In a world where Stern’s churning confusion unlocks the mystery of both present and past, food is a grounding present. Hot dogs, lentil and veggie pie, a pear and radish salad: these are concrete reminders of the very real and very tangible moments shared with the people we love.
GMA Book Club Pick Homeseeking, by Karissa Chen, spans generations and countries, uniting–then separating–then reuniting young lovers in twists of fate and circumstance. The book, which splits time between mainland China, Taiwan, California, and Hong Kong, is not ostensibly about food, but some of Chen’s most interesting characters find identity through the service and preparation of delicious things. In noodle shops, cloaked in steam, the protagonist lovers, Suchi and Haiwen, try to piece their lives back together. In war-torn China, Haiwen’s mother makes an indisputably crisp turnip cake. Women and mothers are the engines of this book, the characters who feed and nurture and propel the carefully crafted and smart narrative forward.
A barely concealed Roman à clef, Heartburn chronicles the doomed union of food writer Rachel Samstat and political journalist Mark Feldman. Most of Samstat’s major life events, as told through Nora Ephron’s witty and perceptive voice, are punctuated by important foods (and, accordingly, recipes), perhaps the most famous of which is the key lime pie, a Chekovian element that does, in fact, detonate, right in the face of a lothario. Samstat, a stand-in for Ephron herself, is comforted, perplexed, and invigorated by food, and the narrative takes shape in the context of the network of ways that she, a food professional, feeds both herself and others.
Rufi Thorpe’s latest novel–juicy, relatable, and simultaneously over-the-top–follows financially strapped Margo, a young woman with (you guessed it) no cash but plenty of other problems. One such problem: she’s pregnant, unexpectedly, with a child from an ill-advised romance with her professor. Like many young women with diminished options and an overdrawn bank account, Margo ends up in restaurant work. The rest is a story of wit and whimsy and a bit of exaggeration. Restaurant work fails Margo, but there is more out there for her, an arc of redemption for both her and for the people who have caused her harm.
Chris Whitaker’s winding, multi-generational saga, All the Colors of the Dark, follows the lives of Patch, a captive-turned-artist-turned-fugitive, and Saint, a young girl-turned-home cook-turned police officer. Saint’s unlikely legacy becomes her domestic calling: the biscuits she makes, the painstaking attention she pays to the craft of cooking. She is a woman thrown into the man’s world of law enforcement, but, back at home, she is more than a sufficient cook. She feeds. She nurtures, passing down legacy–and the legacy of friendship and love and home and searching and even hope–through food.
New York Times-bestselling author Clare Lombardo opens her fresh novel, Same As It Ever Was, in a grocery store; there, protagonist Julia Ames runs into an old friend, Helen Russo, while shopping for the ingredients to make crab cakes for her husband’s birthday. Russo, an older woman who had been, for a time, a motherly figure to Ames, comes alive in later chapters, and through acts of cooking. Food, in fact, punctuates the book’s main events. Crab cakes: celebratory for a 60th birthday. Later, an apricot galette will set an affair in motion. Both Ames and Russo have entrenched domestic roles, and their work in the kitchen is at once ancillary and important. They are making something, feeding someone, memorializing something. For these characters, who exist in a world where limits are drawn and bound by the more powerful people around them, there is a certain freedom here, in a place where the rules are theirs and theirs alone.
The Gradness continues with Round Two (part two)! Voting is heating up and there were some close calls from yesterday’s matches with Calamity Physics narrowly beating out Skippy Dies and The Art of Fielding edging out We Wish You Luck. Foster Dade Explores the Cosmos toppled Possession by a margin of just nine votes. On Beauty, Transcendent Kingdom, Never Let Me Go, If We Were Villains, and The Secret History decked the competition.
Take a look at the updated bracket below to see where the match-ups stand.
Round Two, part two voting has now ended. Head over to Round Three to vote in the latest match-ups!
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