Hi,
Can you feel it? Fall, or cozy book season, is just a few days away.
Oh, I know we can pick up a book at any moment, in any season. But the promise of fall is that the sun won’t lure you away right up until bedtime, leaving you feeling like you didn’t pack enough in, like there was juuust one more thing you could have done. Nope, fall says, take it easy. Get ready to hibernate.
I have about three years’ worth of specifically autumn books I’ve picked up, imagining myself with time for at least one chapter each night — long enough for a piping hot beverage to cool for a few sips and then bed. Sweet, sweet bed. On time. With deep sleep. 🛌
The brutal truth is, as I romanticize this literary scenario, I scroll. I scroll through summer, I scroll through fall, winter, and spring. I don’t like the dumb name this habit has, revenge scrolling, because why would I want to take something out on myself? Or my day? Silly. It’s just a bad habit. One I should break already. How about this — do it with me.
Marisa Lagos, filling in for Press Play’s Madeleine Brand, talked about fall book picks with Joumana Khatib, editor at the New York Times Book Review, and David Ulin, professor of English at USC, editor of the literary journal Air/Light. They discussed books about long COVID-induced insanity, true crime, and a mother speaking to her son from the afterlife. I mean, if that chilling juiciness isn’t enough to make you throw your phone into the farthest hamper in your house (on silent, no less), I don’t know what is!
Wait, before you do that, give the interview a listen. It’s a quick 15 minutes. You got this. And a good night to us all.
Picking a bookmark,
Connie Alvarez
Your KCRW Insider
P.S. Already have a book on deck? Do share. I’m going with something from my old pile. Oh, and please help monitor the butterflies (below).