5 new books to read this October

October has finally arrived, and we can’t wait to see you all at our Virtual Festival! Below, we’ve listed five upcoming books we cannot wait to dive into. We recommend purchasing and preordering these captivating reads from our friends at BookPeople.

Leave the World Behind by Rumaan Alam

Released October 6th, 2020

This suspenseful and provocative novel was a Finalist for the 2020 National Book Award in the Fiction category. Rumaan Alam writes a gripping story of two families, strangers to each other, who are forced to spend an eventful weekend together after a peculiar turn of events.

Earthlings by Sayaka Murata

Released October 6th, 2020

Sayaka Murata writes an engrossing, dreamlike, and inventive story of feeling out of place. Growing up, Natsuki spent her summers with her cousin Yuu in the wild Nagano mountains before they were driven apart. Now adults and soon to be reunited, Natsuki and Yuu must utilize their strengths and do what it takes to survive.

Alexandra and the Awful, Awkward, No Fun, Truly Bad Dates by Rebekah Manley

Coming: October 13, 2020

Rebekah Manley’s debut work is a heartfelt and hilarious picture book parody for adults. Follow along with the main character Alex as she ventures on thirty dates in thirty days. We are thrilled to feature Rebekah Manley and her book at this year’s Festival – register to attend a panel with Manley in conversation with Twenty Guys You Date in Your Twenties author Gabi Conti on Sunday, November 8 at 7:30 p.m. CST!

Greenlights by Matthew McConaughey

Coming: October 20, 2020

We are looking forward to reading this brand new memoir from our 2020 festival author Matthew McConaughey. The first 350 people who register for our event with McConaughey on November 7 will receive a copy of the book with a signed bookplate. All other registrants will receive a copy of Greenlights.

Memorial by Bryan Washington

Coming: October 27, 2020

We loved the stories in Bryan Washington’s Lot and cannot wait to read his upcoming narrative. A heartfelt novel about love in a time of change, Bryan Washington’s Memorial stars Mike, a Japanese-American chef, and Benson, a Black daycare teacher, a gay couple in Texas. At this year’s Virtual Texas Book Festival, Washington will be in conversation with fellow Texan debut novelists Richard Z. Santos and James Wade. Register to attend their session here.

Additional October 2020 releases on our to-read lists:

October Book Club: ‘Dear Justyce’ by Nic Stone

This month’s pick for the Austin360 Book Club powered by TBF is Dear Justyce, the sequel to the #1 New York Times bestselling Dear Martin by TTBF keynote Nic Stone.

In this follow-up story, incarcerated teenager Quan writes letters to Justyce, the protagonist of Dear Martin, about his troubled childhood, a coerced confession, his experience with police, and more. This stunning novel, which can be read as a sequel or as a standalone novel, unflinchingly examines the American justice system’s discrimination against Black boys.

If you order Dear Justyce from BookPeople, signed, personalized books are available for anyone who orders before October 20! Signed books will be available for any additional orders while supplies last.

Save the dates for the Texas Teen Book Festival October 31 and November 1, when Nic Stone will discuss Dear Justyce!

Past 2020 book club picks:

 

GET TICKETS: An evening with Jodi Picoult

Join us for an evening with #1 New York Times bestselling author Jodi Picoult and Amanda Eyre Ward as they discuss Picoult’s new novel, The Book of Two Ways, on Wednesday, November 11 at 6 p.m. CST. Each ticket is $41 and includes the cost of the book, processing fees, and shipping. The first 100 ticket buyers get a signed copy of The Book of Two Ways!

Get tickets here!

See the lineup announcement for this year’s Virtual Texas Book Festival! 

Lit Crawl Austin 2020 goes virtual

Lit Crawl Austin celebrates its tenth year of irreverent literary programming…and what a year! Instead of one night, Lit Crawl Austin 2020 will take place over several nights and even a couple of brunches. This year, we’re excited to be partnering with some great organizations for Six Square‘s Toasts and Topics, Chicon Street Poets Presents, Texas Observer‘s Short Story Contest, Awst Press Presents Quiplash, Austin Bat Cave‘s Story Department. Of course, Literary Death Match is back for another year, and we look forward to hosting two bookish Sunday brunches!

Stay tuned for author announcements, the schedule, and some special surprises. All Lit Crawl programming will take place during the weeks of October 31 through November 15. Lit Crawl events are intended for a mature audience unless noted otherwise.

As always, Lit Crawl Austin is free! We keep on keepin’ on through the generosity of our community. Want to support the Texas Book Festival, Lit Crawl Austin, and our authors? Donate to the Texas Book Festival! For the first time ever, we have an exclusive TBF Lit Crawl armadillo enamel pin. If you donate $25 or more to Lit Crawl, we’ll send you this one-inch pin, which will look great on denim jackets, backpacks, tote bags, and everywhere else you’d like to pin it!

Donate today to receive your limited edition pin

 


A Texas-sized thank you to Lit Crawl Austin presenting sponsor, Texas Monthly!

Texas Monthly is a proud partner of the Texas Book Festival. Love a good true crime story? Next Tuesday, September 29, we’ll be launching “Tom Brown’s Body,” a new podcast and written series by our own Skip Hollandsworth. Listen to the trailer now and sign up for the Texas Monthly true crime newsletter for updates here. Or get a head start on the story through our October issue––available on newsstands now.


Thank you to Lit Crawl partners Rambler and Desert Door! Stay tuned for cocktails and mocktails to pair with poetry, storytelling, and literary competition.

The tastiest sparkling water in Texas, Rambler is sustainably sourced, made in Austin and proudly partnered with Texas Parks & Wildlife Foundation,  helping to preserve Texas lands and waters for future generations. #RaiseARambler

Desert Door Texas Sotol is a distilled spirit from wild-harvested sotol plants and hand-crafted in Driftwood, Texas.


Shop the TBF virtual bookstore at BookPeople!

Announcing our 2020 Author Lineup!

The 2020 Virtual Texas Book Festival will feature more than 125 authors, illustrators, poets, journalists, artists, and thought leaders across a diverse array of genres and topics, including Matthew McConaughey, David Chang, Kevin Kwan, Sigrid Nunez, Isabel Wilkerson, Julia Alvarez, Yaa GyasiErin Brockovich, Brit BennettJosé R. RalatMichael J. Sandel, Dean Koontz, Kathy ValentineIbi Zoboi, and more!

See the full lineup!

Texas Teen Book Festival

Elizabeth Acevedo and Nic Stone will be the keynote speakers for the 2020 Texas Teen Book Festival, taking place online on October 31 and November 1. The TTBF lineup also includes Tiffany D. Jackson, Candace Bushnell, Natalia Sylvester, Lilliam Rivera, Yamile Saied Méndez, Rory Power, Francisco X. Stork, and more.

Children’s programming

Children’s programming will run from November 2 to 6 and will include acclaimed children’s authors and illustrators Jon Scieszka and Steven Weinberg, Isabel Quintero, Mikaila UlmerDerrick Barnes, Anna Meriano, Rebecca J. GomezRaúl The Third, David Bowles, Jerome Pumphrey and Jarrett Pumphrey, and more.

2020 First Edition Literary Gala

Adult author programming will run from November 6 to 15. The First Edition Literary Gala will also take place virtually this year on Friday, November 6 at 7:30 p.m. CST,  featuring authors Julia Alvarez, Nick Hornby, and Natasha Trethewey, as well as emcee Michael Ian Black. Find sponsorship information here.

Shop books by Festival authors

Make sure you stop by our online store at BookPeople, our official indie bookseller, to pick up your copies of books by all the excellent authors joining us for this year’s Festival!

SHOP HERE

Matthew McConaughey In Conversation with Ethan Hawke: ‘Greenlights’

Join us for an afternoon with Texas’ own Matthew McConaughey as he discusses his memoir, Greenlights, in conversation with Ethan Hawke on Saturday, November 7 at 4 p.m. CST. Each ticket is $41 and includes the cost of the book, processing fees, and shipping. Signed books are no longer available. Your ticket purchase supports the Texas Book Festival!

Get tickets here!

See the lineup announcement for this year’s Virtual Texas Book Festival! 

Shop our Festival bookstore at BookPeople!

Make sure you stop by our online store at BookPeople, our official indie bookseller, to pick up your copies of books by all the excellent authors joining us for this year’s Festival!

SHOP HERE

Save the dates for the 2020 Virtual Texas Book Festival:
Texas Teen Book Festival: October 31-November 1
Children’s Programming: November 2-6
Adult Programming: November 6-15

Attend the 2020 First Edition Literary Gala!
Friday, November 6 | 7:30 p.m. CST

Find Gala sponsorship information here.

Book Club Discussion: Q&A with ‘Mexican Gothic’ author Silvia Moreno-Garcia

The Austin360 Book Club powered by Texas Book Festival thoroughly enjoyed reading Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia in August! This dark twist on the classic gothic novel is definitely a story you’ll want to read with the lights on. We were delighted to talk with the book’s author about the book! Want to discuss Mexican Gothic with us? Join the book club on Facebook!

What inspired you to write your own twist on a gothic novel? Why set it in 1950s Mexico?

Gothic literature does not include many people of color. When it does, they are an Other that is horrific or exotified. You see it in Dragonwyck, where there is a mixed-race woman whose main role is to appear to be shifty and potentially dangerous/mad. You see it also it with Dracula, who is technically European, but he’s Eastern European and at the point in time when Stoker is writing this is seen as an ‘inferior,’ dangerous sort of person and a racial Other. And you even see it in Jane Eyre, with the mad wife in the attic. The wife is technically white, but in the 19th century there is this fear of degraded whiteness. So the thought is that white people who are growing up in the Caribbean, who are being exposed to the influences of people of color, of the Other, are being diminished in some capacity. It’s a compromised whiteness.

So I wanted to place a Mexican heroine in the middle of a Gothic novel and not have her be a figure of exotic thrills or repulsion. She is not the dreaded Other and the European forces are not by default the superior, civilized element of the book.  

Parts of this book feel very Shirley Jackson-esque, the way High Place seems to be its own character. Were you inspired by any other “haunted houses” in horror stories, or maybe even real-life locations, when writing about High Place? 

I was inspired by a real town in Mexico called Real del Monte. It’s up high in the mountains, it tends to be chilly there and rainy during certain times of the year, and it was mined by the British in the 19th century. The English presence earned it the nickname of ‘Little Cornwall’ and it has a very distinctive English cemetery. When I visited that cemetery I thought it was like stepping into a vintage horror movie, with mist all around.

The subject of eugenics comes up a lot in the book. What made you want to address this topic?

I have a Master’s degree in Science and Technology Studies. My thesis revolved around eugenics and early 20th century literature, specifically Lovecraft’s work. Eugenics was a widespread ‘discipline.’ There were eugenics journals, it showed up in textbooks and it even inspired legislation. Eugenics often mixes with issues of race and Latin America becomes a contested space in eugenics thought because there is race mixing, which is seen as very dangerous by white eugenicists in places such as England. That is how you find people such as Ephraim Squier, an America archeologist, saying that “In Central and South American and Mexico we find people not only demoralized from unrestrained association of different races, but also the superior stocks becoming gradually absorbed in the lower.”

How did you get the idea to use the ouroboros as the Doyle family’s coat-of-arms?

I saw it in a tombstone. It was a symbol used by alchemists and by Gnostic sects. I also found references of it in books such as Mushrooms, Myth and Mithras: The Drug Cult that Civilized Europe.

Your publisher shared a Spotify playlist to go along with the book—were there any particular pieces of music that inspired you while writing this book?

No. I very much like “The Chromatics,” though.

It was recently announced that the book has been optioned for a Hulu series by Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos. What parts of the novel are you most excited about seeing brought to life?

I think the set design for the house, to be honest with you. And I’m just really curious to see how screenwriters adapt something from book form into a script.

 What are you reading right now?

I’m doing preliminary research for another book, so my reading list would look extremely bizarre. For my own pleasure I just bought “Unforgetting: A Memoir of Family, Migration, Gangs, and Revolution in the Americas” by Roberto Lovato and I have a review copy of “The Phlebotomist” by Chris Panatier.  

September Book Club: ‘The Only Good Indians’ by Stephen Graham Jones

We’re excited to share that 2020 Festival author Stephen Graham Jones’ The Only Good Indians is our September pick for the Austin360 Book Club powered by Texas Book Festival!

This gripping new tale of horror, guilt, and revenge centers on four Native American friends haunted — quite literally — by a hunting trip gone wrong. Years after the incident, one of the men, Lewis, is suddenly forced to face his past before it gets to him first. With its expert blend of chilling imagery and social commentary, Jones’s novel tackles themes of tradition and cultural identity while keeping readers hooked.

Grab your copy of The Only Good Indians from our friends at BookPeople, and make sure to save the date for our annual BookPeople Day of Sales, which benefits the Texas Book Festival, on Thursday, September 10.

Jones is one of more than 125 authors coming to this year’s Virtual Texas Book Festival, which takes place online October 31 to November 15! In lieu of book club discussions in September, October, and November, we’ll be reading book club picks by Festival authors that we’re excited to hear from and see at this year’s Festival! Stay tuned for our full author lineup coming (extremely) soon!

Past 2020 book club picks: