A platform for bookish tastemakers
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.
My Fools! My Friends!
I apologize for my absence here, especially as it relates to updates on our March books and announcing the April books! Candidly life got away from me as I spent the end of March and beginning of April supporting my darling Mother through a (successful!) hip replacement. More to come re: March & April soon.
In an effort to make it up for it, I'm going to be doing a giveaway for Gal Beckerman's new book How To Be a Dissident, out 4/21. Gal writes for The Atlantic and you should definitely check out his work. If you're reading this email, you're already signed up for the raffle, as I'll be drawing names from existing subscribers (at any tier) on Sunday.
Talk more soon!
I know wayyy too many people who can’t stand a serious chunk of their social circle. I wonder if the only reason they continue to be friends with their friends is to have friends?
Perhaps they maintain friends for optics. They see friends as a conduit to status: how else do you get invited to parties? Or accessories: who else is gonna fill out your bridal party? Or maybe friends keep loserdom at bay (your mailman will judge you if you don’t receive any holiday cards).
friendship is a necessary nutrient
People who despise their friends yet continue to socialize with them are baffling because friendship is my primary source of joy. I rely on my friends to keep my life from feeling like drudgery. (I am a joyless, deeply discontent person aka a writer -- writing brings me meaning and fulfillment, not happiness.)
true friendship is taking selfies in the club bathroom while he pees
The peak of my March one of those special nights where you think, This is what life's all about. I was with an old friend (9 yrs friendship**), a newer friend (2 yrs friendship**), and a new friend (<1 year**). New didn’t know Old or Newer. Old&Newer are old friends themselves (that’s how I met Newer). I had no idea how the chemistry would shake out, but it was superb.
** I’m cracking up at typing the # of years I’ve known someone as if it’s their credentials. Sanibel (Penn, 10 yrs friendship). This feels like something that would go on a bridezilla’s wedding planner’s clipboard (“falling out in 2009, friendship re-established 2013 after intervention”).
Conversation 10/10
The socializing at that March dinner was so good that when I got home, I felt like I had accomplished something. The evening was gratifying akin to finishing a challenging book.
It’s impossible to capture this feeling without sounding cheesy: it’s when you’re in a cab going home and you’re so happy that it transforms into gratitude (which never lasts) and you’re like, Life is amazing. What an honor to exist. (It's the type of friendship Stegner paean-ed in Crossing to Safety.)
So why do so many people hate their friends?
The problem is accepting that social life plateaus as you get older. It’s normalized to resent your friends, and for friendship to become a chore. I’ve gotta see xyz person, ugh. Or so-and-so just asked me to get coffee 🙄. Part of the chore-like feeling, imo, is the bias toward old (as in, long duration) friendships. It’s seen as disloyal and ungrateful to end these. Which means many people are keeping friends out of inertia. Or nostalgia.
Nostalgia friendships
“What’s wrong with nostalgia?" was this woman’s comment on my tiktok about friendships that are dragging the bedraggled corpse of “we’ve been friends for 20 years,” death rattle, behind them.
If my friend were to say, “ours is a nostalgia friendship,” I would be deeply offended. This means that the only thing tethering us is something ancient, like the fact that our dads were college roommates. Or we happened to be enrolled in the same ice-skating class at 6yo. Be more hateful, please.
My reply to the idiotic comment is: what’s wrong with doing anything out of inertia is that YOU HAVE FREE WILL. What's wrong with being passive and letting life wash over you? Everything is wrong with that.
Nota bene: Deep meaningful friendships formed over many years are the most valuable. Full stop. “Old friends” sounds like a slur 😓 but old friends are absolutely the best genre of friend. I am not disparaging them whatsoever.
There's a difference between having friends and having friendship
If you're deep in an unsatisfying-comfort-zone-malaise of friends -- it's been the same stale circle for decades, with undercurrents of animosity and tension, lots of prickliness -- it's very possible you have friends but not friendship.
my new theory
is that the healthiest social life is one that exists in many stages of friendship at once. Both in the sense of a mixture of young and old (duration of friendship) friendships and also a mixture of friends whom you can imagine getting close to, and others whom you are content to remain at acquaintance+ level with.
Diversify your friend portfolio.
Has your social life stagnated?
Most people hit a social plateau because there are no longer new infusions of friends. My last infusion was grad school, which was 9 years ago. My MFA friends are now my “old” friends.
Until last year, I only had old friends. Thanks to my book coming out last April, I got introduced to a bunch of authors who were also debuting, and for the first time since grad school, I got a new crop of friends. It felt like college orientation. Or summer camp.
New blood is fun
do you remember this maybe fake, definitely performative kourtney/addison rae friendship?
We went to each others' book launches and stayed out late gossiping about our pub sagas. I went to DC to guest teach a class for a new friend who’s a professor at GW. The shared experience of First Book provided a pretext for all these new friendships—but as the year came to a close I realized there'd be no more book launches, and I couldn’t help but wonder: Would my new friendships fade alongside my debut novel?😙
What I actually couldn’t help but wonder was how to orchestrate regular infusions of new friends into my life.
i feel like i'm arguing for an open relationship
It’s not that I want to cheat on my old friends or replace them – it’s about social complacency. Variety is what makes you appreciate anything (if you’ve ever been a spoiled rich brat on vacation, you know the hell of eating at fine dining restaurants back to back to back when all you want is lamyun or mcdonalds).
Hosting my Salon and meeting so many people has reminded me how fun it is to connect with someone anew. Making new friends uses similar muscles to dating. If you’re married AND you have an established friend group, those muscles are bound to weaken.
SRG Salon is the best friend-making vehicle I could've dreamt up
Ask me to RFK an ideal friendship pyramid: I'd design it to be 60% long term friends, 20% people that are most likely becoming long term friends, and 20% new/casual friends. Call me an ethical friendship slut.
BTW
This is not a rah-rah “put yourself out there and make new friends” self-help post (because if you wanted to you would). This is, instead, a year of realizing post about how I unconsciously, unthinkingly resigned myself to the notion that these 20-or-so-people are my friends *fixed mindset* and that is that. This finite group (of wonderful people) are mine to hold on to (or not) for the rest of my life, lest I become one of those people whose only friend is their spouse.
It's not true. Plateaus are not permanent. This is a philippic against inertia 😇
Good morning, mis internet amigxs!
It's finally here! Bien Leidos first annual Read-A-Thon weekend!
If you're on Bien Leidos Discord, just find the #Readathon channel. It has a cute pink flower emoji and is in the Bookish Discussions section.
Are you a Bien Leidos member who's NOT on Discord yet? Now is the perfect time to join!
If you haven't subscribed to Bien Leidos yet, now is the time! Subscribers at ALL MEMBERSHIP TIERS get access to Discord and the Readathon this weekend.
What is the Readathon? Well, quite simply, we'll be reading at home all weekend while chatting our current reads AND...competing for prizes!
Cole has put together bingo cards for the weekend and each day there will be 1 book winner each day and 1 mug/stickers (all pictured below) each day! So come for the readathon and stay for bookish chit chat!
We'd love to have you join Bien Leidos Discord! xo, Carmen
If you follow my blabbing on threads or know me personally, you’re probably aware I’ve been making a conscious effort to read/recommend books by authors who I genuinely respect.
This is really important to me and sometimes feels very challenging because I have strong convictions yet always want to give folks the benefit of the doubt. I feel so bummed out when I find out someone is not who I thought they were. But I guess that’s life. That’s social media and public platforms.
Here are 7 books by authors who I will always stand behind and 7 books by authors I will no longer be recommending (*weeps a little*).
If you have book recs by stand up authors (subjective, I know) I’m always looking for more! :)
Now for the discussion of the second section of Good People by Patmeena Sabit (Things Secret and Open, pages 91-192). I felt like this section really reminded me why I liked this book when I read the ARC in November and why I thought it would make for a great discussion.
That said, I also struggle to talk about this section. Some of you know that I spent my first 39 years in the evangelical church, where I was taught problematic beliefs about Islam. One of the common statements was how Islam is bad for women. I now see the irony of being taught this in a patriarchal institution that also perpetuated to harm women. All that to say, I feel it's important to focus on dismantling the patriarchy I participated in rather than pointing the finger at others. But I will also listen and amplify own voices of women in other patriarchal cultures.
The use of the title really struck me: "Good people, as soon as their daughters know right from left, teach them one thing: That a girl's reputation is like a cloth of pure white. The tiniest fleck of dirt--the tiniest fleck anywhere--and the whole thing is ruined." (p.139)
Sounds familiar.
So for some discussion questions:
How have your thoughts of the Sharaf family changed with the additional commentary?
How do you square the two very different perspectives on how Zorah was parented?
Where do you think the story is going? What prejudices and/0r assumptions are leading you to think that?
It’s April. We’re 1/4 of the way through a four year life sentence, and this chaos fae is tired.
The Riven Altar by D. M. Randall sweetly calls my name from my Kindle Library… Building up my author account has been slow and clunky. So what else would I do when I have a mountain of ARCs giving me the side eye and responsibilities to other authors as an editor? Obviously ignore most of that and work on editing Bad Ends. What did you think I was going to say? Make a schedule and work through it systematically? Pffft. That’s not how I roll!
Then it popped into my head to share my editing process with y’all visually. If you would be interested in a more detailed description of how I edit/revise, make sure to let me know below or on the Discord. (Did you know we have a Discord? It’s quiet. Come make noise over there with me!)
—🩷 Emerson
Let's talk bookmarks! How do you mark the page? For me, I love using a standard bookmark. I have a big collection and I like to match my bookmark to the book I'm reading whether it be the theme of the book or its cover color.
Dog ear (or fold)
A standard bookmark
Anything I can find (Receipt, paper, etc.)
Other (Let us know in the comments!)
No preference
What’s Your Bookish DNA? Decoding Your Reader Personality
We’ve all been there: staring at a bookshelf overflowing with unread stories, yet feeling like there’s nothing to read. Or perhaps you’re the type who has their entire reading calendar mapped out until 2027.
Understanding your Reader Type isn’t just a fun label it’s the secret to curing a reading slump and actually enjoying your hobby. So, which category do you fall into? Let’s break down the three most common profiles.
1. The Mood Reader 🌊
The Vibe: I don't choose the book; the book chooses me.
You don't care about schedules or hyped releases. You care about how you feel right now. If it’s raining, you want a gothic mystery. If you just finished a heavy literary drama, you might pivot immediately to a palate cleanser rom-com.
The Struggle: You often have five half-finished books because your mood shifted mid-chapter.
The Superpower: You rarely feel like reading is a chore because you’re always following your heart.
2. The TBR To-Be-Read Strategist 📋
The Vibe: The list is sacred.
You have a spreadsheet, a dedicated Goodreads shelf, or a physical stack of books that dictates your life. You likely participate in reading challenges like the 52 Books in a Year quest and feel a deep sense of dopamine when you check a title off the list.
The Struggle: You might force yourself through a DNF candidate just because it’s next on the list.
The Superpower: You are incredibly well-read and disciplined. You actually finish what you start.
3. The Seasonal Reader 🍂
The Vibe: Fantasy in winter, thrillers in summer.
Your reading habits are intrinsically tied to the world outside your window. October is strictly for horror and witches; July is for breezy beach reads and contemporary fiction. You treat books like a seasonal wardrobe.
The Struggle: If a book doesn't fit the aesthetic of the current month, it stays on the shelf for another year.
The Superpower: Your reading experience is immersive. You’ve mastered the art of atmosphere.
The Quick Quiz: Which One Are You?
Answer these three questions to find your match:
You’re at a bookstore. How do you pick your next purchase?
A) Whatever cover speaks to my soul in this exact moment.
B) I have a pre-written list of 10 titles I’m allowed to buy.
C) Whatever looks like it would be perfect to read by a fireplace/at the pool.
How do you feel about DNF-ing a book?
A) If I'm not feeling it after ten pages, I'm out.
B) I hate it. It feels like failing a mission.
C) I’ll put it down, but I might pick it back up when the weather changes.
Your friend asks what you’re reading next month. You say:
A) "No idea. Ask me in a month."
B) "The third book in my historical fiction sequence."
C) "It’s spring, so obviously something with flowers on the cover."
Results:
Mostly As: You’re a Mood Reader. Embrace the chaos!
Mostly Bs: You’re a TBR Strategist. Your organization is enviable.
Mostly Cs: You’re a Seasonal Reader. Enjoy the vibes.
The Golden Rule: There is no wrong way to read. Whether you read one book a year based on the moon phases or sixty books a year based on a rigid checklist, the goal is the same: to get lost in a good story.
Which reader type are you, or do you find yourself being a hybrid of two?
Hello, all!
We finally received our approval for the Assumed Business Name for our sole proprietorship from the Cook County Clerk's office! It's in the mail, but I got the approval email.
Thank you all so much for helping us get this far--next stop is the registering of the LLC!
Something I'd like to post more of on our bookstore social media accounts are recommendation videos for our favorite (insert trope or genre). Is that something you'd all like to see?
For instance, a starter one would be "Ryn's Favorite Indigenous Horror" and it would be (let's be real) books like Indian Burial Ground by Nick Medina and The Buffalo Hunter Hunter by Stephen Graham Jones with White Horse by Erika T. Wurth thrown in as well!
Help out by filling out the poll on this post!
Hello loves! Today I want to share a "guest" post that felt really meaningful from our dear friend, Marines with MAREAS here on Bindery. Like many of us, Mari found herself in high emotion watching the space exploration news this week and her perspective of that experience touched me.
MAREAS is also releasing an incredible book this spring, Our Sister's Keeper. In this post, she shares some updates on that title and why this release is so meaningful. I thought you'd appreciate it as much as I did. Be sure to give Mari a follow and check out her Bindery, as well!
Love to you all!
xx, Meg
_____________________________________________________________________
Hi friends,
Last night, while cuddled up on my couch in my messy apartment, I cried watching a livestream.
The crying part is not super unusual for me, to be honest. I cry at commercials, at the endings of books, at strangers' reunion videos that the algorithm decides I need to see. I cry when I'm happy or sad or mad or frustrated or otherwise processing big emotions.
But anyway, the point is that last night, I was watching the Artemis II livestream, and I completely lost it the moment they came back around from the dark side of the moon and reestablished contact with Mission Control.
If you haven't been following along, there are human beings in space right now, and they have traveled further from Earth than any humans have ever been before. That's emotional enough, but they also keep saying things from up there about Earth and about humanity and about what it looks like to see this whole messy planet from that distance, and it's wrecking me.
You are special, in all this emptiness. This is a whole bunch of nothing, this thing we call the universe. You have this oasis, this beautiful place that we get to exist together.
There is something about watching humans do the audacious, watching them be collaborative and hopeful in the middle of everything that's happening down here. Call them the light and dark sides of the moon: what we are capable of when we try, and what we are capable of doing to each other when we decide some people don't deserve the oasis. The cost of all of that, too—who gets to explore, who funds it, and whether that is money well spent while other things burn. (That last argument always gets complicated when you look at what else the money is being spent on, but I digress.)
The last time I cried, before the astronauts, it was about Our Sister's Keeper by Jasmine Holmes, which just so happens to have some of these same themes.
Our Sister's Keeper is set in East Cobb, Mississippi, a wealthy all-Black free town, meant to be untouched by white oppression. Thea Elliot and her husband Kid arrive with big dreams and find something that looks, at first glance, like everything they could have hoped for. But the town is haunted by ghoulish, walking nightmares that only the women can see.
Marah is a carrier: a woman with the ability to pull traumatic memories directly from men. East Cobb has flourished because women like her make it possible for men to live free of their pain.
It is, I think, one of the most precise and devastating explorations of what community costs (and who pays) that I have ever read. It is also a love letter to sisterhood. It is about audacity and collaboration. Jasmine writes with such tenderness, even in the horror. Especially in the horror, actually.
And while its final pages did indeed make me cry, the last time I cried about OSK, it was because it became real that people would have it in their hands soon.
See, the thing about acquiring a book is that you fall in love with it mostly alone, and then you spend months holding it while you wait for the rest of the world to catch up.
Which brings me to the news: Our Sister's Keeper has been chosen for Aardvark's April box, which means you don't have to wait until the June 9th pub date. You can have it right now. And not just early; This is an exclusive hardcover edition, the only way to get this book in hardback.
Aardvark is a monthly subscription box. They do a genuinely fantastic job of curating a diverse list and are a blast to follow on social media. And if you are new to Aardvark, you can use my code MAREAS to get Our Sister's Keeper for $4 (in the US). It's an unmatched deal, truly, and I hope you take advantage of it!
Meanwhile, pictures are flooding in of people receiving their copies, and every single one makes me cry a little. (See above re: my whole thing with crying.)
If you've already gotten yours, I want to see it. Tag me. Show me where you're reading it—on your couch, on your commute, in a patch of sunlight on the floor. Show me the oasis you made for it.
And if you haven't yet: the code is MAREAS, the deal is $4, and the book is waiting for you.
Finally, if you see me around and I'm weepy, it's either about the astronauts or about this lovely reading community.
Thank you, always.
♥️
Marines
Here’s a sneak peak of my short story releasing in Of Plagues and Blasphemy: A Medieval Horror Anthology coming this May.
Preorder below! The book features several talented authors including Teagan Olivia King, Saratoga Schaefer, Julia Jackson, Briana Morgan, and more.
Here’s the first few paragraphs.
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!
Death by TBR Books
Stephanie
A woman/neurodivergent/disabled owned indie press and online bookshop. Death by TBR Books was built for the horror that creeps in quietly and refuses to leave. We also offer recommendations in ANY genre as our owner was also a librarian!
Judging By The Cover
judgingby_thecover
Curated book recs and unfiltered thoughts on everything bookish.
Kindred Readers
Syd <3
Hi friends !! I’m Syd and welcome to Kindred Readers !! A page that hopes to build a community of diverse readers from all walks of life.
Literally Moody
Una
Welcome to the place where I share my lukewarm takes on the Sci-fi/Fantasy, Horror, and Romance books I read!
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We partner with select tastemakers to discover resonant new voices and publish to readers everywhere.
