In all the ways that food can call us to gather, it can also show us ways to rebel and to feed our resistance to power. And that’s the focus of Julia Turshen’s tiny but powerful cookbook; she gathered recipes from chefs and activists seeking a way to feed those who helped push for change... Continue Reading →
The Lil’ Deb’s Oasis Cookbook: Please Wait to be Tasted
The cover alone lets you know that this cookbook is about celebration: its vibrant hues and punny title portend the vivacious dishes outlined within, the recipes from a small but mighty restaurant in Hudson, NY called Lil’ Deb’s Oasis. (The restaurant has - sadly - closed, but thank your lucky stars that the recipes are... Continue Reading →
Cool Beans
While cooking can be about community and resistance, it can also be entirely personal. My wife Mallory and I love to cook, and she especially loves beans. I know that I can entice her to a recipe if it features beans, and Joe Yonan’s cookbook is the early-holiday gift I’m giving us this year. Yonan... Continue Reading →
Flamboyants: The Queer Harlem Renaissance I Wish I’d Known
Anyone who tells you that listening to an audiobook isn’t “technically” reading is lying. When George M. Johnson’s newest nonfiction - Flamboyants: The Queer Harlem Renaissance I Wish I’d Known - hit the audio shelf, I made it my top priority to give it a listen, and this slim book - mixed with poetry by... Continue Reading →
The Prospects
I know, I know. Baseball season is “technically” over, but KT Hoffman’s debut queer sports romance The Prospects is a line drive straight to your heart. Every baseball season starts with one thing: hope. The hope that your team will go farther, run faster, and make it to the playoffs. And that’s the case for... Continue Reading →
The Spirit Bares Its Teeth
A hallmark of the queer community is our ability to survive, even when society throws our identities, our bodies, and our right to exist into question, and Andrew Joseph White’s second novel, The Spirit Bares Its Teeth, examines the struggle and triumph of that upheaval.
It Came from the Closet
A must-read for fans of horror films. Full stop. It made me reflect about why I love (and hate) some slasher movies, and it ignited in me a desire to watch some films I’ve never seen (Dead Ringers, Eyes Without a Face, and The Wolfman).
Our Wives Under the Sea
Julia Armfield’s debut novel is a slow-burn psychological suspense that examines grief, the unknown, and what lies at the bottom of our deepest, darkest fears of self and our most closely-held relationships.