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From exclusive content and book clubs to the collaborative publishing of entirely new voices, Bindery empowers tastemakers and their communities to elevate and celebrate stories that deserve to be read.
I shared a post on Instagram recently but wanted to give even more book recs on here for Pocahontas characters and the reasons I chose each one.
THOMAS
The Death of Jane Lawrence by Caitlin Starling & Juniper & Thorn by Ava Reid
Both stories center control, repression, and systems that look orderly on the surface but are quietly rotting underneath. That tension between logic and something deeply wrong mirrors Thomas perfectly.
KOCOUM
Never Whistle at Night: Back for Blood & Bad Cree by Jessica Johns
These both ground horror in ancestry, land, and generational memory. Together, they reflect Kocoum’s connection to community and the idea that the past is never truly separate from the present.
JOHN
The Hacienda by Isabel Canas & The Silent Companions by Laura Purcell
Both books trap their characters in controlled, domestic spaces that slowly turn hostile. That loss of authority in the face of something supernatural lines up with John’s need for certainty.
RATCLIFFE
Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin & The Violence by Delilah S. Dawson
These are both brutal, society-breaking narratives where survival requires adaptation to constant violence. They match Ratcliffe’s world, where chaos isn’t an anomaly, it’s the baseline.
FLIT
Maeve Fly by CJ Leede & A Certain Hunger by Chelsea G. Summers
Both lean into indulgence, performance, and female rage with a sharp, self-aware edge. That mix of chaos and control fits Flit’s unpredictable, almost theatrical energy.
MEEKO
Nothing Tastes As Good by Luke Dumas & Bloom by Delilah S. Dawson
These stories start soft and intimate before shifting into obsession and transformation. That progression mirrors Meeko’s curiosity and loyalty evolving into something more complicated.
PERCY
Diavola by Jennifer Thorne + Rouge by Mona Awad
Both focus on vanity, image, and identity unraveling under pressure. They reflect Percy’s arc from surface-level entitlement to a more self-aware, fractured perspective.
POCAHONTAS
White Horse by Erika T. Wurth + Shutter by Ramona Emerson
These both center cultural memory, spiritual responsibility, and connection to land. Together, they align with Pocahontas’s role as someone who carries history rather than escapes it.
I'm definitely going to do more of these types of posts. Everyone has their own niche on Instagram and I think since I love watching and reading so much it's a great way to combine the two. Also, the books for each character are readalikes so generally if you like one you'll like the other.
It's time to wrap up Monster Blood II and Kick off Deep Trouble!
WRAP UP
I enjoyed Monster Blood II more than part I. It didn't seem as far fetched as the first one! And while its still not my all time favorite in the series, we at least did get a mega mutant hamster out of it which is cool.
Questions:
What was your favorite part?
What animal would scare you the most if it ingested monster blood?
KICK OFF
And now it's time to clear the beaches and stay out of the water! Our next book is Deep Trouble.
Synopsis:
Billy and his sister, Sheena, are visiting their uncle Dr. Deep on a tiny Caribbean island. It's the perfect place to go exploring underwater...and Billy's ready for an adventure.There's only one rule to remember: Stay away from the coral reefs. Still, the reefs are so beautiful. So peaceful. Billy can't resist.But he's not alone in the water. Something's lurking deep below the surface. Something dark and scaly....Something that's half-human, half-fish...
Coming to YouTube & Bindery next week...
My week in NYC for BookCon was jammed packed with events leading up to the event and I was keeping a little secret. I was invited by Simon Maverick and Scarlett Press to come to their offices and sit down with H.M. Wolfe to discuss all things Daggermouth and what we can expect next. The interview will be live next week, with early access to Bindery subscribers.
Morning besties!
I'm going to be quick this week since we are about to head out the door to go see the Dodgers and Cubs face off. But I wanted to give you a little reading update as per usual.
I'm deep into the audiobook of This Book Made Me Think of You, which you all voted for last week. I get why so many people love it, but I'm finding the writing a little simple for my tastes. It seems like the type of book that begs for beautiful prose in addition to heartfelt moments of grief, but the prose is lacking a bit. We will see how it all ends and where my ranking falls, but right now I'm not wow'd.
The Fourth Wife on the other hand is knocking my socks off! I am so drawn to this book that I have lost interest in several of my other reads, including my April BBFL book, Go as a River, which I NEED to finish stat. The Fourth Wife is about a young Mormon bride in a polygamous marriage who's realizing she married into something more than she bargained for. It's set in 1880s Utah and is the perfect accompaniment to Trust Me, the brand new FLDS documentary on Netflix (which is a must watch by the way).
This week I finished Royal Spin, a contemporary romcom my IRL bookclub chose for May. Shockingly, I really enjoyed it! I mean, one of the co-authors is a real Royal journalist, so it's got to be good, right? It's perfect for anyone who wants a fun workplace romance and loves all things The Crown.
I have SO much new content coming soon, so watch for updates in your inbox if you're a newsletter subscriber!
ICYMI:
March reading fully wrapped
The Mountains We Call Home unboxing
Sapphic novel perfect for summer reading
Last Monday's bookmail haul
Hear it Here First:
Discord server coming soon!!!! I can't wait to show y'all what I've created. I hope you love it!
xoxo
C
This week’s reading mood? Strong women carrying entire plots on their backs… and men making choices that had me yelling out loud.
Let’s start with Burn the Sea because I am fully in my historical fantasy era right now.
I went into this knowing absolutely nothing about Abbakka Chowta, and now I’m sitting here like… how did I not already know about this woman?? A queen fighting the Portuguese in the 1500s?? Immediately obsessed.
Tewari blends real history with fantasy elements like half-man, half-snake tyrants (yes, really), and somehow it all works. The political tension, the stakes, the way Abbakka has to constantly prove herself in a world that underestimates her… it just hit.
Also: the men in this book?? Some of them need to take a deep breath and reevaluate. Respectfully.
I cannot wait to talk to Mona Tewari on May 1 because there is so much to unpack.
Blind Date Agreement was such a fun shift in tone.
If you’ve read Cunsolo before, you already know the vibe: high school drama on the surface, but with real issues layered underneath. And the blind date premise? It just kept getting better the more chaotic (in a fun way) the dates became.
But what surprised me most were the side characters. They absolutely carried some of the emotional weight of the story for me. And the ending? Way more grounded and realistic than I expected, which I appreciated.
Okay but let’s talk about Victim or Villain.
I picked this up for the audiobook because anything Teddy Hamilton narrates, I’m listening. No questions asked.
But Gwen Kane?? She’s the reason you stay.
A woman who escaped an abusive marriage, rebuilding her life on a ranch, trying to figure out who she is now… and then everything gets complicated. Fast. Add in a hot vet and a situation that keeps escalating, and you’ve got a romantic suspense that is tense, fast-paced, and very easy to binge.
Morally gray women will always win for me.
Now Blood Bound.
This is the one that made me go, okay… romantasy is back.
You’ve got dragons, witches, talking animal familiars (with actual personalities), layered history, and twists that kept me fully engaged. But the real highlight? The dual POV between two women who are not romantically involved and don’t exist to compete with each other.
It gave me that Aelin and Manon energy where they’re powerful, complex, on different sides, but there’s still this underlying respect. I loved that dynamic so much.
The romance was cute, maybe a little fast for me, but honestly? The female relationships were the heart of this story.
I do wish we got a bit more depth in certain parts of the worldbuilding, and the ending felt a little rushed with everything it tried to wrap up… but overall this was just a really fun, engaging read that pulled me right back into the genre.
Break Room is one of those books I almost wish was longer… which is wild because it’s just over 100 pages.
It’s a translated novel that quietly gets under your skin. The author’s note alone had me sitting there like… oh. Oh no.
It really digs into workplace dynamics, assumptions, and how we perceive the people around us. Like, do we actually know our coworkers? Or are we just filling in the gaps with our own biases?
Uncomfortable in a way that feels very intentional.
South of Somewhere was my in-person book club pick, and this one felt very close to home. Literally.
It’s set in my area, and I kept recognizing locations which made the reading experience so fun. But beyond that, it’s a clean romance with a faith element that takes its time exploring recovery and healing in a way that felt honest.
It’s quieter than some of the other books I read this week, but it stuck with me.
And then there’s Dark Is When the Devil Comes.
I don’t even know how to explain this reading experience other than: I was yelling. The entire time.
The atmosphere is so creepy, the twists just keep coming, and at no point did I feel grounded in what was real and what wasn’t. Which I think is exactly the point.
But also? This book reinforced a very important life rule for me:
Do not get in the car.
Ever.
If you’ve read any of these, I need your thoughts immediately. And if not… what was the best book you've read recently?
It's almost time! ⏰ Join me for a LIVE Q&A on Sunday at 2pm ct/3pm et with Gryffin to celebrate where we're at in the publishing process, offer a few updates, and chat all things Twigs!
This discussion will be spoiler-free, including the Q&A portion of the interview. I just ask that we save those specific questions for our next live after the book has released.
I'm hosting it on Zoom this round so that we can record it for those who can't make this one. I'll post it early next week right here on Bindery for anyone who missed out.
Ready to join us?
CLICK HERE TO JOIN THE ZOOM
See you soon, Quillers! 😘
Meg
It's Independent Bookstore Day and I know I'm late on getting this post out, but that's because I did a crawl to ten bookstores today with my friends!
If you don't have a local store, please consider making us your home store on Bookshop.org and Libro.fm!
Here are some books we recommend for today!
Ryn:
Lethal Kiss by Taylor Grothe (Out October 20, 2026)
Seek the Traitor's Son by Veronica Roth (Out May 12, 2026)
Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith (yes, we adore Star Wars in this house)
The Spirit Bares Its Teeth by Andrew Joseph White
Tori:
The Sluts by Dennis Cooper
Boy Parts by Eliza Clark
The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty (this is Tori's favorite book of all time)
Friends,
our first book hasn’t even hit the shelves yet, and now our second book has back copy! I don’t know if I’m supposed to share this (lolz, always choose asking for forgiveness/ permission) and it’s not final but check her out!
I’m so excited to share because I feel I haven’t been able to share much!
Cracks in an Ocean of Glass by Kristy Park Kulski
Wherever she goes, the dead walk with her.
Some histories have the power to possess us.
Dark strands of hair crack the corners of my sight, suspended as always in the air, spidering and floating as if in liquid. Mul-gwishin. Water ghost.
Korean-American teen Gracie Russell feels she belongs nowhere. In suburban 1990s Washington, she is constantly at sea, struggling with her biracial identity, her father’s violent alcoholism, and her mother’s looming mortality. When Ji-eun dies, Gracie will lose the chance to mend their uneasy relationship. But Gracie can feel Ji-eun slipping away, pulled by the tides of memory back to authoritarian 1970s South Korea and a past so drowned in sorrow it conjures a mul-gwishin—a Korean water ghost.
As Ji-eun’s body weakens and the autumn rains fall in torrential sheets, the sound of dripping water haunts Gracie, bringing with it unsettling visions. Cracks form in the basement wall, exposing a crumbling passageway to a sea of liquid darkness, and Gracie is running out of time. And the mul-gwishin is coming for her.
For readers of Catriona Ward and Han Kang, Cracks in an Ocean of Glass is a new vision of heritage, violence, and the histories that possess us from Korean-American author Kristy Park Kulski.
Ahhhhhhh! Thoughts? Hopefully early cover art coming soon!
Thank you so much for supporting this imprint!
Finally (knock on wood) I am diving back into the world of Eahbridge. For those of you that have joined me on this lengthy journey, thank you so much for sticking with me, even when I have been stuck. As this book is intertwined with loads of firsts, first artwork commissions, first sharing of snippets and such, as well as the first time truly connection with a narrative as a nonbinary writer. I think all of that has contributed to my writer's block, because my imposter syndrome kicks in, giving me doubts in my creative abilities.
But, then I will either chat with one of my friends who has an understanding of the narrative, or re-read small passages for myself, and I fall in love all over again. With the characters, their motivations, the world, and the desire to share that with the world hits me all over again, superseding my imposter syndrome and desires for perfection.
The first draft does not need to be perfect. It just needs to be written.
And so, as I bring you along in this journey, I am going to continue to be patient with myself and my writing, knowing that there is an audience out there that wants to hear my words and how creative I can be.
If you continue joining me, I thank you, and promise to not only do better with delivering the content, analysis, and content, but do better with embracing the block not as a dead end, but an opportunity to explore a new path.
Thank you so much and I cannot wait to bring you more!
Friends,
I'm back from New York and slowly adjusting! I've got Bookcon updates and more for you! I admit I am behind on EVERYTHING and might be that way for the next month! I'm behind on bookclub- our readalong- our calendar- and content LOL (though I do have TWO BIG surprises for paid subscribers later today)
Each month, I select one day for us to support an indie bookshop as a community and what more perfect day that INDIE BOOKSTORE DAY!
This month, we are supporting Quiet Quail Books, an Indigenous owned bookstore located in San Bernardino! All purchases through bookshop support both Quiet Quail Books (an Indigenous bookshop) and this imprint!
One of the things I love about being a book content creator is sharing curated lists! I've attached some books to this post for easy clicking, but I've also created some lists. And if you don't like any of those, once you click on my bookshop link, you can buy anything and it will support Quiet Quaill!
Must Read Women in Horror
Must Read Indigenous Horror
Must Read Indigenous Romance
Must Read Indigenous Fantasy/Sci Fi
Must Read Indigenous Thriller and Mystery
From The Mixed Up Desk Indigenous Faves
Also, what a perfect day to pre-order What Feeds Below! <3 (Speaking of What Feeds Below, paid subscribers- give me an hour and a very cool sneak peek is coming!)
Laura Bookish Corner
Laura
Welcome to my bookish corner! I'm glad to have you. I hope you find books you love here
Village Hidden in the Pages
ethan ₍^. .^₎⟆
welcome to my corner of the internet!
Make Lit Happen
Natalka Burian
Obsessive, hyperspecific book recommendations for readers, writers, and everybody else.
Ink & Ether
Michelle, The Keeper
A woman and latine owned pop-up fantasy bookstore. Serving magic, feminism, and rebellion.
Two Stories Bookshop
Queer-Owned Shelves🌈
We are an online queer-owned bookshop located in Chicago, IL. Our goal is to provide off-the-beaten path horror and thriller recommendations, but we can rec for any genre!
Tastemaker-curated publishing imprints
We partner with select tastemakers to discover resonant new voices and publish to readers everywhere.
