Book Club: Breaking the rules all the way to the bestseller list
Good morning, and welcome to the L.A. Times Book Club newsletter.
Silvia Moreno-Garcia heard the same advice over and over when she began writing books: Stick to your genre. Stay in your lane. Donât mess with success.
She thanked everyone for all that safe expert advice, and then ignored it completely â and wrote herself right onto the bestseller list, doing it her way.
Switching from fantasy to mystery to science fiction, to horror and noir, often blending several styles at once, helps Moreno-Garcia find a fresh focus every time out.
âThere is also the fact that some of the authors Iâve most admired have exhibited nimbleness and fluidity,â Moreno-Garcia writes in a new essay for The Times. âWalter Tevis wrote the chess drama âThe Queenâs Gambit,â but also the science fiction novel âThe Man Who Fell to Earthâ and âThe Hustler,â about a pool player wishing to break into the major leagues. Joyce Carol Oatesâ prodigious output, which spans the gamut from family dramas to horror, also caught my imagination.
âGrowing up, it delighted me when I found a writer who seemed to escape classification, be it British writer Tanith Lee or Mexican novelist Sergio Galindo.â
Moreno-Garcia blurs the lines more than most and gives booksellers trying to shelve her work headaches. But so did such diverse talents as Joan Didion (celebrated this week for her novels, memoirs, nonfiction and social commentary); Roxane Gay (who writes novels, short stories, nonfiction and comics); and previous book club author Luis J. Rodriguez (the former L.A. poet laureate who also writes nonfiction, novels and childrenâs books).
âWhat Iâm asking readers is to follow me into the forest,â Moreno-Garcia says in an interview with reviewer Paula L. Woods. âYou wonât get lost, hold my hand, and Iâll tell you a story.â
On Sept. 27, Moreno-Garcia joins the L.A. Times Book Club to discuss her latest bestseller, âThe Daughter of Doctor Moreau,â a sci-fi thriller inspired by the classic novel by H.G. Wells about a mad scientist and reimagined in the rainforests of the YucatĂĄn Peninsula. Sign up on Eventbrite for this free, livestreaming event, which starts at 6 p.m. PT.
If youâre an audiobook fan: AudioFile Magazine features âThe Daughter of Doctor Moreauâ on its August list of best listens, via Bookmarks: âGisela ChĂŹpeâs performance of this audiobook is exceptionally touching. She deftly captures the spirit of these richly defined characters and the mood of mounting dread.â
If you enjoy community discussions like this one: Many readers tell us how much they value the chance to see, hear and meet world-class authors and newsmakers every month. Weâre so appreciative of your enthusiastic emails and survey responses. Now take the next step: Please make your tax-deductible donation to the new Los Angeles Times Community Fund to help our community book club keep going and growing.
Banned Books Week
School book bans have seen an unprecedented surge this year, says a new report by PEN America released for Banned Books Week. The report cites three most frequently targeted titles: Maia Kobabeâs memoir, âGender Queer,â banned in 41 districts; George M. Johnsonâs âAll Boys Arenât Blue,â banned in 29 districts; and Ashley Hope PĂŠrezâs âOut of Darkness,â banned in 24 districts. The authors with the most books challenged were Ellen Hopkins, Kobabe and Toni Morrison.
âThis censorious movement is turning our public schools into political battlegrounds, driving wedges within communities, forcing teachers and librarians from their jobs, and casting a chill over the spirit of open inquiry and intellectual freedom that underpin a flourishing democracy,â says PEN Chief Executive Suzanne Nossel.
ICYMI: Watch author George M. Johnson, student activist Madison Clevenger, parent Brooke Harper and historian Michael Hines discuss âThe Book Ban Waveâ during this weekâs Ideas Exchange.
Whatâs next
In October, the L.A. Times Book Club is reading âDinosaurs,â the soon-to-be-released novel by Lydia Millet.
Milletâs last novel, âA Childrenâs Bible,â explored climate change and was a 2020 National Book Award finalist.
Now Millet returns with âDinosaurs,â the story of a 40-something protagonist who escapes Manhattan to seek solitude in the West after a breakup, only to find himself living next door to a family in a glass house. Publishers Weekly calls âDinosaursâ a âbrilliant story of survival.â
The author of more than a dozen novels, Millet lives in the desert outside Tucson, Ariz., where she has worked as an editor and writer at the Center for Biological Diversity. Last year, she wrote this piece for The Times: âClimate crisis is here; so is climate fiction. Donât you dare call it a genre.â
Keep reading
Fall fiction: Andrew Sean Greer won the Pulitzer Prize in fiction for his 2017 comic novel, âLess.â The San Francisco writer is back this month with a sequel, âLess Is Lost,â which finds a path to both satire and tears. âTake an uncertain man, a âmiddle-aged gay white novelist nobodyâs ever heard of,â and put him in a host of places heâs uncomfortable in, especially when heâs uncomfortable everywhere, and some amount of hilarity is bound to ensue,â says reviewer Mark Athitakis. âEarly on we are promised âa donkey, a pug, a whale, and a moose.â In due time the full menagerie arrives.â
Explaining Putin: In the early days of the pandemic, British historian Orlando Figes began his âlockdownâ book: a survey of the ideas, myths and beliefs that have molded Russians over the last thousand years. Published as the Russia-Ukraine war enters its seventh month, Figesâ âThe Story of Russiaâ unpacks the regionâs history and helps explain current events and motivations.
AI lit: Hereâs the latest from arts columnist and book club guest Carolina A. Miranda: âWhat have I been doing? Iâve been reading books â looking for the weirdest descriptions I could find of Los Angeles, and feeding them into an AI image generator.â Read more.
Giving it away: âWe have always considered Patagonia an experiment in doing business in unconventional ways,â Yvon Chouinard wrote in his book âLet My People Go Surfing.â âNone of us were certain it was going to be successful, but we did know that we were not interested in âdoing business as usual.ââ On Sept. 14, the billionaire CEO announced that he is giving away his Ventura-based outdoor apparel company to fight climate change.
Defender of nature: A new book, âCitizen Justice,â examines the environmental legacy of U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas. âHe was advocating for the environment, and he turned out to be so critical to the history of conservation,â says M. Margaret McKeown, a San Diego judge and the bookâs author.
Bilingual book festival: â The fourth annual Los Angeles Libros Festival continues on Saturday, Sept. 24, featuring Spanish-language and bilingual storytelling, author talks, workshops and performances at the Central Library downtown. Itâs free.
Booked up: Have you checked out the new L.A. Times Book Club hats, socks and crewnecks? Send us a photo of what youâre wearing and reading in an email to [email protected].
Last word: âRead the books theyâre banning,â says actor and former âReading Rainbowâ host LeVar Burton. âThatâs where the good stuff is.â
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