MEALS, MUSIC, AND MUSES by Alexander Smalls - Deep South Dining Interview

Deep South Dining | August 17, 2020

“Chef Alexander Smalls began his life in the South Carolina low country, but has traveled the world as a world class opera singer, opened some of Americas finest restaurants, and has the awards to prove it. His new cookbook, Meals, Music, and Muses: Recipes from My African American Kitchen bridges his two passions and presents them as binding forces of culture and history. Malcolm and Carol talk with Alexander about this new book, his South Carolina roots, and also hear from a show favorite about the elusive Hoover Sauce. Let's eat y'all!”

Follow the link above to listen to the entire interview!


Victoria Sanders
ME & MAMA by Cozbi A. Cabrera - Author Of... "'Me & Mama' Author-Illustrator Cozbi Cabrera Does It All"

Author Of | August 17, 2020

“There seems to be nothing Chicago multimedia artist Cozbi Cabrera cannot do. Her talents range from gorgeous illustration to lyrical written word to delicate textile art. Just glimpsing her website, visitors get an immediate sense that she is a special creative force to behold. In 2020, Cozbi has two children's books hitting shelves—Exquisite: The Poetry and Life of Gwendolyn Brooks, written by Illinois' own Suzanne Slade (Abrams, April 7th); and Me & Mama, for which she is both author and illustrator (Simon & Schuster, coming August 25th)—joining a stack of others titles that she has either written or illustrated. And lucky participants in November's SCBWI Illinois Interactive 2020 virtual conference will get to experience Cozbi's incredible talents upclose, as she works with artists in breakout sessions.

Cozbi has drawn national attention with her handmade collectible cloth dolls, called Muñecas. And her growing collection of children's books (including Thanks A Million, written by Nikki Grimes and published by Greenwillow Books; My Hair Is A Garden, Albert Whitman) have earned starred reviews. We thought it would be interesting to hear from Cozbi about her creative process.”

Follow the link above to read the full interview!


Victoria Sanders
WHEN THEY CALL YOU A TERRORIST by Patrisse Cullors and asha bandele - Stylist UK "The 6 books to help you cope with change"

Stylist UK | August 12, 2020

“2020 has not gone to plan. On every level, all of us have been adapting to unexpected changes and, it’s safe to say, we’ve all struggled. This is because lockdown and Covid-19 has had an impact on almost every area of our lives: our time at home, our social circles, job security and plans, close relationships, family dynamics, health, holidays… the list goes on and on.

Also, as humans, we’re not great at adapting to change – our brains are hardwired towards familiarity and finding paths that work for us and protect us from harm. All of that has been totally blown out of the water.

So how do we adapt and learn to roll with the punches? Well, whatever part of life you’re struggling with, we’ve found the best 6 books to help you cope with change. 

Read on to discover the books you need – from break-ups and activism to job losses via new lifecycles and working from home.”

When They Call You a Terrorist by Patrisse Khan-Cullors and asha bandele was included in this beautiful round-up. Follow the link above to read more.


Victoria Sanders
MEALS, MUSIC, AND MUSES by Alexander Smalls - Taste "The Many Meals and Muses of Alexander Smalls"

Taste | August 10, 2020

“Alexander Smalls might be the only person who’s won a Grammy, a Tony, and a James Beard Award. His most recent book, Meals, Music, and Muses: Recipes from My African American Kitchen, bridges his celebrated careers as both an opera singer and a restaurateur while telling the story of Southern food through music. It’s a rich and layered read, with each chapter paying tribute to a genre of music and a genre of food that, as Smalls writes in the book’s introduction, ‘are rooted in a knotty lineage that connects West Africa and Western Europe.’ There’s jazz (the improvisational bites that begin a meal), spirituals (rice, pasta, and grits), and serenades (comforting sweets).

The book came out as a follow-up to Between Harlem and Heaven, the James Beard Award–winning cookbook that Smalls published with JJ Johnson and Veronica Chambers in 2018. It was published just as he put the finishing touches on Let Us Break Bread Together, the first recording he’s made in 30 years, which pays tribute to some of the musical history that he touches on in Meals Music, and Muses.

When COVID-19 hit, Smalls had to put the recording’s release, along with a new restaurant project in London, on pause, but he’s been staying busy and creative while quarantining at home in New York. We recently caught up over the phone to talk about how Meals, Music, and Muses came about, and how inextricably linked those meals and music can be.”

Follow the link above to read the entire interview.


Victoria Sanders
FOR THE BEST by Vanessa Lillie - Boston Globe "In a new reading box, two Rhode Island thrillers, a candle, and chocolate"

Boston Globe | August 6, 2020

“Ink Fish Books’ new Rhody Reader Box bundles what some would call required reading with trinkets inspired by the Ocean State.

The September box includes a signed copy of best-selling author Vanessa Lillie’s newest book, For The Best, in which a murder suspect tries to prove her innocence through a vlog. Also inside is a copy of her earlier release, Little Voices, an Aster Ocean State candle, whiskey-infused chocolate from Aura’s Chocolate Bar, and a handmade paper flower crafted by a local librarian. Ten percent of the sales from the boxes, each priced at $44.99, will go to the Rhode Island Writers Colony, which supports writers of color in residency programs.”

Follow the link above to read more!

Victoria Sanders
THE BLACK CABINET by Jill Watts - WICN Interview

WICN | August 6, 2020

“Inquiry welcomes back writer and historian JILL WATTS. She is a Professor of History at California State University. Her new book is a compelling account of the African Americans who worked hard to effect real and permanent political change during the Franklin Delano Roosevelt administrations. Professor Watts’ ‘must-read’ book is: THE BLACK CABINET: THE UNTOLD STORY OF AFRICAN AMERICANS AND POLITICS DURING THE AGE OF ROOSEVELT.

Follow the link above to listen to the interview!


Victoria Sanders
THE SILENT WIFE by Karin Slaughter - Jackie K. Cooper "Karin Slaughter’s THE SILENT WIFE Is An Exquisite Novel"

Jackie K. Coper | August 4, 2020

“For me to enjoy a book it must have style and substance. For some readers style is enough, while others require an abundance of substance. Karin Slaughter always delivers both and her latest novel THE SILENT WIFE is a perfect example of how the two must merge. To have ‘style’ in your story you have to be in control of the plot and people it with fascinating characters. To have ‘substance’ you have to provide enough interest and detail to hold the reader’s attention. Check and check.”

Follow the link above to read the full review.

The Silent Wife by Karin Slaughter is now available!


Victoria Sanders
Patrisse Cullors - British Vogue "The 20 Remarkable Activists On Vogue’s September Cover Are Ready To Change The World"

British Vogue | August 3, 2020

“On a Saturday in early June, I found myself blinking into the summer light as I emerged from London Underground’s Vauxhall station with two little girls beside me, witnessing something new. It was not the first major protest that month, not even the first Black Lives Matter protest, but as I stepped up on to that street, I felt an outpouring of raw, ancestral anger and outrage against racism on a scale I’ve never experienced before.

We had come to march because of the May killing of George Floyd; an act so callous and brazen his family described it as a ‘modern-day lynching’. The pain gathered after his death in Minnesota like an ocean swell, then rolled over the planet like a tsunami of Black rebellion, while injustices against Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, Belly Mujinga, Shukri Abdi and so many more took centre stage. In London, we found ourselves surrounded by people of all races and ages, motorists beeping ‘Black. Lives. Matter’ in unison with the march and bus drivers throwing Black Power fists from behind their windscreens. As the veteran Black liberation activist Professor Angela Davis remarked about the protests in America, and the same was true of Britain, ‘We’ve never witnessed sustained demonstrations of this size that are so diverse.’”

Follow the link above to read the full article.


Victoria Sanders
THE BLACK CABINET by Jill Watts - Gary Shapiro's "From the Bookshelf" Interview

Gary Shapiro’s “From the Bookshelf” | August 3, 2020

“From the Bookshelf is heard on radio station KSCO in Santa Cruz California.  Host Gary Shapiro brings you interviews with best selling authors of fiction and non-fiction, graphic novelists, actors, photographers, and singer-songwriters discussing their works.”

Historian Jill Watts spoke with Gary Shapiro about her latest book: The Black Cabinet. Follow the link above to listen!


Victoria Sanders
THE SILENT WIFE by Karin Slaughter - Parade "The 20 Best Thrillers Ever, According to Author Karin Slaughter"

Parade | August 3, 2020

“As one can only expect from a Karin Slaughter crime thriller, her latest book The Silent Wife (William Morrow) comes with just the right amount of twists, turns, shocks, surprises and domestic thrill and shrill that will keep longtime fans of her Will Trent series on their toes—and welcome new readers to the party.

In The Silent Wife, Georgia Bureau of Investigation’s Will Trent (and everyone’s favorite pediatrician-coroner Sara Linton) look into the murder of a young woman. When a prisoner recognizes the method of the attack (identical to the one for which he insists he’s been framed), they begin to dig into both crimes before it’s clear the original case is going to have to be solved first. But a decade has passed, and so have memories, witnesses and evidence, but a ruthless murderer must be tracked down nonetheless.

‘At the very core of it, I always want my readers to get a really good story,’ she says. Since Slaughter began writing, she’s been focused on introducing a different voice to stories about domestic violence, many of which are told through a predominantly male voice. ‘I wanted to bring a female perspective to it and talk about how complex it is. As great as men are at writing about some things, there’s just an undeniable perspective that women bring to this. And I’m proud that I’ve held to the choice to write about recovery and the kind of expectations that women tie themselves in knots over when they become victims of violence.’

Ahead of the release of her 20th book, Slaughter reflects on some of the best thrillers she’s ever read and why the authors and stories are deserving of their place at the top of her list.”

Follow the link at the top of the page to see Karin Slaughter’s full list!


Victoria Sanders
Karin Slaughter - New York Magazine "The (Truly) Waterproof Notepads a Crime Writer Uses to Craft Plots in the Shower"

New York Magazine | July 31, 2020

“At the beginning of my writing career, I bought all kinds of notebooks (from Moleskines to fancy journals with handmade paper) to keep handy for jotting down ideas, but none of them ever really worked for me. I always went back to using stray pieces of paper, hotel stationery, and the back of a CVS receipts. My one issue with those? They don’t really work when wet, which would seem like a weird complaint were it not for the fact that about 70 percent of my good ideas — including several of my book titles — have come to me while in the shower.

My father always taught me to make sure I have the right tools for every job, so whenever there’s a task to do, I look for the best, most efficient way to do it. I first found AquaNotes by doing a Google search for ‘notepads that can get wet.’ I’ve also used similar notepads from a company called Rite in the Rain, but the paper felt icky and it had a metal spiral binding and I’m not getting a tetanus shot for a notebook. The AquaNotes website’s testimonials had me rooting for the product before the shipment I ordered even arrived. The one that sold me read, ‘The writing stayed intact even when I … hit it hard with the shower hose!’”

Follow the link above to read the rest of this amazing article from Karin Slaughter!


Victoria Sanders
Patrisse Cullors - Vulture "Naomi Campbell Saying ‘I Think Things Are About to Change, Don’t You?’ Won Late Night This Week"

Vulture | July 31, 2020

“Speaking of things that deserve our collective attention, this week on The Daily Show, Trevor Noah devoted a segment to highlighting and celebrating Black women. In the latest installment of ‘If You Don’t Know, Now You Know,’ Noah detailed the history of the erasure of Black women as leaders of social-justice movements, from Sojourner Truth, Ida B. Wells, and Mary Church Terrell in the women’s suffrage movement all the way to the Black Lives Matter movement founded by Alicia Garza, Opal Tometi, and Patrisse Cullors. The segment was such a great example of how whitewashed history is. I clearly remember learning about Susan B. Anthony (she’s on a coin) and Elizabeth Cady Stanton (Seneca Falls Convention, let’s go) in grade school, but I absolutely didn’t hear the names Ida B. Wells or Mary Church Terrell uttered in an academic context until my junior year of college, and that is an example of academic misogynoir. Merci beaucoup to Trevor Noah et. al for educating the masses and centering Black women in the narrative, while also serving an incredible example of Black French New Wave Cinema.”

Follow the link above to read the full article.


Victoria Sanders
FOR THE BEST by Vanessa Lillie - Rhode Island Monthly "Ink Fish Books to Launch Rhody Reader Box with Local Author Vanessa Lillie"

Rhode Island Monthly | July 29, 2020

“Normally when you’re at your local bookstore, you’re expecting to walk out with only the book you’re dying to read. But now, Ink Fish Books in Warren has gone one step further to make your next purchase even more meaningful. The book shop has come up with a new and exciting way to incorporate a community love of reading and celebrate local businesses in Rhode Island. Ink Fish Books owner Lisa Valentino and local author Vanessa Lillie are teaming up to introduce the first Rhody Reader Box, including a selection of handcrafted gifts paired with a signed book by a bestselling author. Ten percent of the sales will be donated to the Rhode Island Writers Colony, a local nonprofit supporting writers of color through residency programs founded in Warren.”

Follow the link above to learn more!


Victoria Sanders
"The Little Black Book of Discrimination | Book Publishing Insiders’ Secret Battles with Systemic Racism" by Stacey Garratt and Jeff Rivera

The Little Black Book of Discrimination | Book Publishing Insiders’ Secret Battles with Systemic Racism

“Her voice still gets choked up when she talks about it. After working her way from an assistant position to a senior level publicist at a major publishing imprint, Robin* (who chose to withhold her identity for fear of retaliation) was proud to have worked her way into a competitive field as a black woman in an overwhelmingly white field. 

She worked tirelessly, sacrificing personal relationships for the company, traveling mercilessly at a breakneck speed—giving everything to her job.  Even as a debilitating illness painfully ravaged her body, and she went into the office under the effects of the medical treatment, Robin dedicated herself to the book publishing company, telling herself that if she had their backs in turn, they would have hers. And then, at what should have been the height of her career, her position was eliminated. 

‘After many years of stellar performance reviews, all of a sudden I was having performance issues that were never fully explained and there was NO plan for how I could improve. When I was also denied a cost of living raise, something I had gotten every year, I knew the writing was on the wall. I wasn’t surprised when I was told my position was eliminated. It was a “business decision” which I came to understand to mean that they were no longer going to publish as many books by authors of color. How could they? Many of the editors of color who acquired those books had moved on and the list became more and more white which reflected the staff that was left. The imprint no longer felt like home and in many ways they freed me to pursue my passion elsewhere.’

It was a painful reminder of how far the industry needs to go in terms of creating true equality for people of color who work in book publishing.

[…]

This systemic challenge has not gone oblivious to those outside of the community. There are white colleagues who have gone above and beyond to fight for different voices to be heard in publishing, both authors as well as editors and agents. Multiple professionals who are people of color have mentioned the late Carolyn Reidy, Publisher Judith Curr, literary agents, Victoria Sanders, Theresa Park and Celeste Fine and others who give hope that impactful change is possible by partnering with others.”

Follow the link above to read this important article about the systemic racism present inside the publishing industry.


Victoria Sanders
OTHER PEOPLE'S PETS by R.L. Maizes - The Washington Post Review

The Washington Post | July 29, 2020

“On the surface, La La seems stable and driven: She’s in veterinary school and engaged to a chiropractor named Clem. No one would guess that her father, Zev, a lifelong thief, began teaching his daughter how to pick locks when she was still in elementary school. When one of Zev’s burglaries goes so badly that a homeowner winds up in a coma, La La finds herself torn between the life she has built in Denver and the life Zev gave her after her feckless mother left them.

[…]

Other People’s Pets, with its lively voice and unexpected characters, makes a perfect addition to anyone’s summer reading pile, but it is required for those who understand that coming of age has absolutely nothing to do with age.”

Follow the link above to read the entire review!


Victoria Sanders