National Book Award : Fiction Long List Reaction

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[Music] hey everybody welcome back to my channel it's russell with inking paper blog i hope you're doing very very well today and i am here with a special guest to talk about one of our favorite times of year hunter is here to talk about the national book award long list for fiction with me again welcome hunter thank you for having me i think i'm doing you know they tell you it's like um there's those like there's those 50 plus men 50 year old plus men who they hold the camera down like this and they take really unflattering that's what i'm doing now you know what bookish opinions can come from any angle that uh you know it is what it is but i think you look fantastic we are very happy to have you back uh we have done this now we did this last year right did we do this the year before too we did so this is our third year talking about the national book award yeah oh and this year definitely threw us for a loop lots to talk about lots of books that i thought would be there that aren't there but overall a pretty exciting list actually you know it's funny because technically technically i predicted because last year i only got four like that i like actually listed out this year i listed out five of them well half is better than i mean i normally have read about half and this year i had only read two which is ridiculous for me so two did you read so before it started i had read the prophets and i have read uh cloud cuckoo land okay um but but the list came out on friday if you guys if you all didn't know all of the national book award long lists were announced last week and fiction was announced on friday since friday i have progressed and i read four more so i have six of them under my belt and i'm halfway through another one so see you're like blasting i i have been like not reading that's not true i did re-read matrix well that's another thing i reread matrix this weekend so this is my that was my yeah so i've basically oh and i've and i've read intimacies twice too so i'm rereading the same books instead of reading well and then this is not a this is a long list that included a couple of chunky chunky books so yeah gonna take some dedication so overall opinions hunter what was your initial reaction to the long list um i will say there are some that were like totally out of left field for me that i was excited about there were some that i was like oh that was that was the choice that i thought was like an obvious choice that you might want to divert from but okay well we'll do that um and then there's like my queen lauren groth who i'm sure some people are like oh yeah she's not but like i don't care i am always like lauren groff is my top vote at all times well i remember when i read the monsters of templeton by laura lauren groff when it came out and she was nobody yeah and i said i loved that book i loved it and i was like this woman is going to be a force to be reckoned with and um we'll get to her book and everything but she has now been on the long list or shortlist for her last three novels so yeah you know was there anyone off that didn't make the long list that you were like truly surprised um i'm gonna i'm gonna say no um which i feel like is like kind of controversial but i will say i was disappointed to see that milk blood heat was not on the long list but i was excited to see that uh it was on the 535 yes um i really wanted to see brandon taylor's filthy animals on this list and he hasn't been given the either so i feel like their national book award is just letting me down in that they're giving him the shaft and i'm like he's been like uh shortlisted for the booker but can't make it on the national book award list i don't know what that is about so i i'm gonna say something uh controversial yet brave which is that um i think i think real life would have had a better shot making it this year than last year oh i agree i agree i agree but overall the list is pretty eclectic but interestingly enough there's a lot of like when we'll talk about this as we go through but a lot of first-person narratives a lot of like one point of view or epic family saga or epic you know saga so it's very interesting that dichotomy um so well we don't want to be here all day should we talk about the books that made the list hunter i'm ready so we're just going to talk about them in alphabetical order by author's last name that's how they were announced um from the national book foundation and we're going to go through and we'll sort of let you know which ones we've read which ones we haven't read and uh sort of our feelings about them having been on here and the first one is cloud cuckoo land by anthony dorer have you read anything by anthony doerr okay confession i read like 60 of all the light we cannot see and did not love it so i put it down so i read all the light we could not see and i'm just not a big world war ii person so to me that that didn't speak to me his short story collection is very very good but so this is a book told in three parts one part is and takes place in the 1400s in constantinople right am i right um yes in constantinople we have two characters there a young woman who works in a sewing house and a young man who was taken from a farm by a man who wants to conquer constantinople we have a modern time story and we have an 80 year old man who is working in a library putting on a play about a book and a young man he was trying to blow up a building next door and then we have this futuristic tale of this young woman on a spaceship who is uh being contained because of a breakout and all of this wraps around this original greek text that sort of weaves its way through all three narratives um i have already reviewed this book on my channel i have already told everybody i loved this book but it is the first chunkster on this list this is like over 600 pages yeah i have not finished this one i've only just like i like i started and i restarted it because i don't know why but like if i if i start a book and i don't get 100 pages in i kind of forget where i'm at but i'm intrigued by this one more than i was um although we cannot see and i also forget because all that we cannot see was it was uh on the short list for the national book award but redeployment won that year for that but uh he won the pulitzer the pulitzer yes yeah so there are actually some very big names on this long list um i think that this is such a departure for him from what he's put out in the past so i'm really excited i i also often forget that anthony doerr is american for some reason i always think he's british but he lives in idaho he's like old fat you know good idaho middle america but i love this book and i'm excited to see it here i'm interested because it's so different than everything else on the list well i'm not i will say it's not a book i i thought it might have a chance but i was it's not what i listed out but i think so charles you uh who won last year for interior chinatown um was one of the judges and this one to me it seemed like a very um interesting book stylistically structurally on a for formally on a formal level and so like i think that um that kind of stuff is what probably him and even also even more uh margaret uh wilkerson sexton i believe was also a judge and i think that she does things that are interesting with form so i think that's um makes sense for this yeah yeah well and we'll we will talk about a book that's on the list later which i is the only book i had not heard of um but then i saw that charles you had blurbed it so i was like oh so it was already in his his mine so okay well i'm just going to sort of turn the next book over to you because you know you are sort of the um instagram uh queen of the fan club of miss lauren groff yeah and her new book matrix which just came out actually um and i'm a huge lauren graf fan i totally support her being everywhere um and i like that this blurb tells us absolutely nothing about the book so tell us what we need to know i mean all you really need to know is that it is a book that takes place in the 12th century and it's about nuns and okay i will also say like this could be potentially a little bit spoiler but not really there is um there is some sexual content in this book that like i had me clutching my pearls and i was obsessed um so i am obsessed with books about nuns i think that they are fascinating fascinating characters and so i'm so excited to see what lauren groff does with that so um is this one told from so i really noticed that a lot of these books are told from like a one-person perspective or their very family or you know saga saga-esque is this one told from a single person's perspective or is it more other people too involved um it's it's pretty close on marie de france de france um it's pretty close on her and it's from like and it's it but it does span like a great deal of time um and it does include like little bits and pieces from like um of what is it um aquitaine aquatic oh okay yeah um it is really fat it's actually also a very i'm gonna say joyful like it is like i don't know maybe it's just like maybe it's just the fact that like in my mind everything has felt so dark that like maybe it's not as joyful as it as i think it is but like if you've been living in this world that we've been living in it feels very joyful in comparison okay well to put you on the spot hunter of all of lauren's books where is this rate um for okay i think that uh on a like technically speaking i think it is on par with i think that her last three books the ones that have all been uh on the long list at least for the national book award i think they're all pretty equal in different ways um i will say that my favorite still is fates and furies and and then next is florid this is not like this is not my personal favorite however this has some of my favorite lines that she's ever written oh see there you go well i'm really excited to get to this one because i also am a huge learner not as huge as you can people i know that you interviewed her for riverhead can people still find that online i don't know listen i have no information i'm not i'm useless um all i will say is all i will say is is that she dressed as a nun at the end of the interview for anyone who has not seen it she dresses and none at the end of the interview and because i did not have uh a nun a habit i just took a t-shirt and threw it on my head and started speaking in a mid-atlantic type like little edf accent and she was living for it um and she's also just very kind listen i'm not saying that people should win things just for being very kind but she is very kind i i won't spend forever talking about her but like i do worship at the crown at the altar of um of lauren gross so well and you know what we all have those authors that just speak to us and she's yours so that's pretty fantastic um let's move on to really the only small independent press book i think on this list um all of the other books are from bigger bigger publishers i think this is from gray wolf and this is abundance by jacob gwanzen so had you heard of this before the long list came out no and it's so i'm really mad at myself for not because i tend to be i tend to keep an eye out for gray wolf's books because i t um i really do think that they have a lot of like i mean they had uh in the dream house uh with carmen carmen marie machado yes and uh and they also they had a book that came out a couple years ago like 2018 called some hell by patrick nathan that i loved so they've got some great ones yeah so i actually have had this on my shelf i got this because i read the starred review in publisher weekly and um i actually read this one this weekend so this is really really good so this is the story um of a father and a son and it has to do with money and poverty and just sort of like that fight to dig out of poverty that is just almost impossible sometimes here in america and what's really clever is each chapter is actually um titled with the amount of money that the father has in his banking account at the time that that part of the story is being told now he has just gotten out of prison i'm not going to tell you why because it's important uh into the story arc and he has his young boy and they're living in their car and uh the wife or the mother has gone away and it is the young boy's birthday to start and the dad has splurged on mcdonald's and a hotel room and then something happens but the whole they are super excited because the dad has an interview the next day to finally get a job but the world is going to throw everything they can and it goes back and forth to how the the father character met the woman who he um winds up having the child with we get to really it's a lot about father-son love um and what you're willing to do but it i mean it is heart-wrenching money is so difficult to write about sometimes yeah and he does it tragically beautifully at the same time i'm really i'm excited for this one partly because i i'm wondering how it's going to compare to um a book that came out last year that was on the i think it i can't remember if it was on the shortlist or not but that you and i both loved the great offshore grounds yes um yeah because it sounds very dif yeah very different but still that same sort of earthiness to it yeah yeah um yeah no and i will say so i actually listen to a lot of books while i read them and this audiobook is really fantastic so if you are an audiobook reader um this will definitely do it but i will say abundance by jacob gwanzen um fantastic and i'm saying his name his last name how i pronounce it but i'm not sure if that's right so i apologize if i'm saying it wrong but um it's so good i will just go back we can say the audiobook for matrix is uh narrated by it's a british narrator and i guess it just depends on if you like british narrators or not if you like it um i just can't really throw like i like i don't like i love like i don't know there's some accents i love um and maybe if it was like maybe it was like cockney i'd like it but that it wouldn't fit the book anyway but um but yeah so i'm super excited i always love when a little book that no one's really probably read it makes it a list and this one definitely deserves it now that i finished it i actually think you will quite like it um because he's very clever um linguistically and stylistically and i know that that's something you're sort of drawn to so i think you'll really like it so i'm really happy for jacob this is his debut novel too okay so so yeah he yeah he's pretty fun to uh he's very edgy on instagram like he's sort of fun to pay attention to so yeah that's exciting and then so there are really two books that were not on my radar but this one at least i had seen and that is zory by um larry hunt and i had seen this book on shelves but it was not on my radar at all have you this is one you haven't read but did you know about it before no this is like i knew nothing about this although it has really impressive um some of these blurbs are really impressive yes so this is a um told from the point of view of zory she is a woman who we meet at sort of the end of her life in she's older and she tells us the story of her life in sort of rural indiana um and i think there's a blurb on it but i'm not sure but i it a hundred percent reminds me of marilyn robinson's writing okay and very much you know how that small town feel of olive kit rich and elizabeth stroud both of those sort of together and you just sort of this one woman and all the people in her life on this farm and everyone around her and it deals with you know death it deals with life it deals with loneliness i loved this book like it was i was so ashamed that i had not had it on my shelf yet it's a russell book 100 i just love books that just do that to me beautiful beautiful it sounds really good i also really like the cover yes yes well and i have never read it i've never heard of this author and i just that just never that never happens so i mean he has yeah eight novels yes he is a very handsome man i'm just going to say that as well but um yeah eight novels um and he has been around writing for quite some time so i'm going to be doing some backless diving so yeah so i highly recommend that one it's also a phenomenal audiobook yeah okay so so the one book i was a little bit scared of when it popped up because it is so long to love songs of w.e.b du bois what do you know about this one hunter well i don't know if you know this i don't actually look i don't know what any book is about before i start reading it um so i still i mean i have an idea i know it's sweeping epic all that stuff um i also i'm like i'm going to be like i just don't i don't like beta yeah hate it um okay but let me just say i know people are like scared of this link this to me for some reason i'm always like oh good i'll read that quickly because i'm because big books there's something about big books where i get so invested that it almost like makes me read more than a little book will yeah oh that's interesting well um so i don't want a short change i didn't realize so it's the love songs of w.e.b du bois by honoree fionn jeffers and she was actually long-listed last year for the national book award for poetry yeah so she is a you know originally a poet this i believe is her debut novel and you're right it's a sweeping epic about a young black woman from she lives in the city but she goes off into georgia in the south and she starts to investigate her family history through her maternal line and she goes back to sort of figure out who she wants to be and where she wants to go um and it also i mean jacqueline woodson dolan perkins valdez angie thomas deshaw stillway and stephen powell watts it didn't come without a blurb from a pretty impressive names like i pretty much worshiped the ground that jacqueline woodson walks on so anytime that she suggests something um i'm saving this one to last i think i will love it i definitely think i will but i mean it it's a it's a hefty book yeah it'll be really good to like help with people's grip strength you can use it to exercise while you're doing stuff um you just but whenever my head whenever my weights are too heavy for my shoulder workouts i'll grab two big books and start using them do you like a big family saga epic is that uh uh sort of a trope that you're attracted to i guess you know um yeah i just i don't know what it is but i love a big book that like that justifies its bigness i think um i read great circle by maggie shipstead a couple weeks back and i really enjoyed that when i thought it was like i know some people wanted to edit it down but i just i don't know i it's not it's not as big as this but it's still it's like bigger so i started that because i was so sure it would be on this list and so i was like i'm gonna jump ahead um i was so positive we would see it um i'm really really liking it did you know that it was actually 400 pages longer yeah so it was over a thousand pages and they edited it down but um i i really like it but we're not here to talk about what didn't make them but i she's i mean she's doing well she's shortlisted for the booker yeah she's not having a bad day oh goodness so this next book actually was the first book i read of 2021 and that's the prophets by robert jones jr it was the very first book i picked up to start the year um so i'm happy to see it on here i was a little surprised i liked this book quite a bit but i just didn't i didn't know that it had like the gumption for for this list but i really liked it i had a feeling it would be like when i first read it i thought oh this is going to be one of those books i see on the list i i do still really like it for me it's been one i guess that like i guess that you know the more i think about it the more it kind of comes back but it's not it's just not been one that has been at the forefront of my mind this year but then again i will also say hardly any book has been at the forefront of my mind this year i've been like what what are books but this is um this is a different take on a um queer story tol it's the story of two queer slaves who um meet each other very young and are in a relationship on a plantation and how their relationship really affects everyone around them um and you know how that all comes to be it is heart-wrenching i mean uh robert uh jones jr does not shy away from the atrocities that are slavery and um it fluctuates from many different points of view throughout it which i thought really worked in a lot of sections i didn't like i did it's not that i didn't like i didn't totally connect when it would flip to sort of like the white plantation slave owner point of view i didn't find that as engaging as the rest of the viewpoints um but in the end when this book ended i was like bawling my eyes out i do think i will say that i don't think it's like the most i i i it's one of those books where um i really liked it but i think maybe i'm like just so critical because i see like how great it is that like i almost want just like those last bit little like kind of refinements to kind of like yeah um but i do it's still like a five-star read for me i still think absolutely yeah yeah and it's a phenomenal debut novel like this is the first book that um robert uh has put out in the world is amazing and he and his style are adorable um i love to follow him i love to hear him talk so i really do um i'm glad it's there i'm glad maybe more people will read it yeah um and i can't wait to see what he does next so oh yeah and that's i will say that it is i think that he's going to be one of those people who has a very um exciting breadth of work over the years yeah yeah agreed okay so i think this one you just i think i don't know if you said it on this call or before when we were chatting but you've read this one twice right intimacy yes like katie kitamura i am okay so yes so i was obsessed i read her book a separation back when it came out um thought it was great i think this is even better this is listen i'm gonna be hype i'm gonna be um probably praising this so much it's gonna annoy people but i love when a book is like like i i did not emotionally connect that much with this book and i don't really think that you're supposed to but this is one of those books where every single sentence counts and is so like well crafted but it does but it's also it's it's well crafted on a sentence level a paragraph level a page level a chapter level like every single piece is like so perfectly fit together it is so impressive and i want like i want people to understand this is a brilliant book by a brilliant author and i love it so the story is of a young woman who is starting or has just started a career as an interpreter at the the hague and all that goes with that it's about also about her trying to find a place in the hague she has this romance that with this man he was just sort of still married not married sort of thing and her relationships with people that she's meeting and also sort of this underlying political tension of what the hague is for and all of that i too thought this book was brilliant like totally bought into it um i tried to read the separation a couple of times but it was just one of those books that i didn't connect with and not for any fault of hers i just don't think that it was a book for me but when i finished this i was just like this book should be read by everybody as like a perfect example of what you can do with so little that is so much like i want i want to read what i would love to read short stories by her because i would love to see what she do with them yeah yeah and her character development in such a way like you don't realize you're getting to know this woman until like 30 pages in you're like you fully understand her in so many ways yeah yeah it's a really really good book i'm really glad to see it here because i had sort of thought ah i didn't love a separation maybe i'll pass it by i devoured it i devoured it that's yeah i i both times i read it i read it one sitting so yeah it's that kind of book you definitely can absolutely absolutely okay now this is the other book hunter that was not on my radar in the slightest i had not heard of it i knew nothing about it and that is hell of a book by jason mott um yeah which is so so it's literally a read with jenna pick i don't know how i look at this so um this is i have started this one have you read this one or have you read anything by jason mott before no so i learned in doing a little research on him he wrote a book called the returned which was a tv show for two seasons so he did fairly well um and this book is told from the perspective of two different characters one is a young black boy who is teased um by his you know the other black students for the color of his skin and who his parents are have sort of ingrained in him that if he concentrates enough he can become invisible and be unseen and safe and then the other part of the book is that from the point of view of a young current um black author who was on book tour for a novel that he wrote called hell of a book and sort of he he makes some interesting choices and then all of a sudden this young kid just pops up and on his book tour and he doesn't know where he's from who he is really but the kid just says to him i wanted you to see me and how that all comes together i mean i'm here for the i like uh there's a oh gosh remember her name there's an author i follow on twitter who said was like it truly is a hell of a book like you've got to read it um i am very excited about this one just because i love a book that's not on my radar yeah well i've already started about 100 pages in and i'm absolutely loving it and this is the one that charles you blurbed already and um who i love also blurbed it so i know that it's like in that z you know zone for me but i didn't know what to expect and so far i'm absolutely absolutely loving it so yeah hell of a book jason mott the one book that i was like where did that book come from i had never heard of it so oh goodness and this was the other surprise for me hunter only one short story collection this year yeah that is you know it's so funny right because like i think like we talked about this last year because how many how many were on there last year there were at least two um because there was the secret lives of church ladies that's right oh and there's that one by the guy who died no that's is that this year you mean are you talking about after parties no last year that there was a short story oh yeah you're right um the um guy from north carolina between two wings or something like that yeah you're right there was that and there may have been a third too i feel like there was a third but i can't yeah i can't remember but this year it's elizabeth mccracken and her book the souvenir museum um i really and this is out from echo which i always support echo because they've always been really kind to me and they produce phenomenal books um all of these publishers have been kind to me and to you and produce phenomenal books but um i devoured this collection i read it in probably half a day okay um it deals with loss it deals with family it deals with memory it deals with what do you do next um there's some interconnected short stories about a young couple who are not married and sort of they go to visit someone for a wedding and then we sort of find out more about them and other stories um but i i just i flew through this book and these stories um it's really really good i am very excited for this because partly because i wanted to read um bolaway which was that was her last book right yeah um did not read it because i'm a hoe um but i always love a short story collection i love a short story collection that i that has not been on my read i mean i like anytime i hear about something that i haven't heard about that i'm like oh good um and obviously like i said i don't know what anything's ever about but i like the cover so i'm sorry yeah yeah no it's definitely i think you're gonna really like it just because i know how short story driven you are as a reader um and i think you are going to see some really clever work done um and anyone that can get me to buy into a character in 20 pages definitely gets like a mark in my book because that's the hardest part of a short story collection for me um the second story proof about a young man who takes his elderly father to ireland i believe for the first time or scotland i can't remember um after his mom passed away broke my heart it's so good okay so good i'm excited so that's the souvenir museum by elizabeth mccracken and last but not least is our second pulitzer winner yeah bewilderment by richard powers um he is shortlisted for the booker long listed for the national book award very um sugary bane from last year he chuggy bang went to win the booker so be interesting um confession hunter i own all of richard powers books i have read half of many of them i have not finished have not i have not like i own several i have not read one i have not even read a page of one oh goodness well i don't know what it is i always am interested in what he's going to write about the over story was just too much for me but i have tried others and i just never get them finished i don't know what that is did you see the pan that like just just like dwight garner i think wrote that just scathing review in the new york times for this one i heard about it i don't want to read it until after i read the book um so this is the story of a father and son as well i feel like that's a theme like children and their uh parents but um the father is an astrobiologist and the son is nine years old and his wife is past he's raising a son by himself and his son is a very unique kid but he's also gets into trouble because he hits someone in the face in the third grade and he's trying to figure out how to help his son unique methods to do that and i've heard um some people just love this book yeah i've heard it's more digestible than the overstory yeah yeah um so i wonder if he'll it'll be his year to win like the booker but not win the nba again gina so not so not to be like not to be that person but somebody actually said they excuse me i can't remember who it was somebody said do you think bewilderment and cloud cuckoo land will both be on the long list and i said i was like no i don't think they're gonna have two white guys who write like fine books but are just like not really saying like i mean i know that's like just generalizing but i was like you know like i don't i just most of these people are writing the same stuff over and over again um not to like go after anyone i know people are very sensitive about their books i've learned that last year um but yeah i was very surprised to see both of these especially this one just because i don't know something like it's so funny i say this as a person who literally lauren groth has been on the list the past you know two times she's had a book out and i've been like she deserves it and then richard powers you know he's on this and i'm like how dare he he's already been here before um clearly richard power speaks to writers that's what i have taken away from it is that or people who think a certain way about literature yeah you know i think richard power i am surprised cloud cuckoo land is on the list not in a way that i'm not happy because i really liked it it just doesn't seem like an mba book for me um but i agree i don't think both will make the short list i don't know that that's going to possibly happen um so i i speak with such confidence as a person always wrong um yeah i'm intrigued but we'll see so there are 10 books here um do you think that there's an early front runner um okay like i've only i have not read all these but i will just go ahead and say that two of the books that i've read are um are my the they're ones that i just would love to see and i hope both make the short list which are intimacies and matrix um i think they're both just superbly written and i think that like i don't know i'm thinking i um i yeah i i don't know enough about these to really speak on them but i from what i've read i just think i wish okay i will say this i actually think intimacies might be the one that could take it for me i um i do think i've i still have three to read um or you know three and a half or four or whatever but um i do think just if i go by sort of like the power behind it the momentum i do think the love songs of w.e du bois has a lot of momentum right now people are talking about this book and people adore it and the nba tends to like one of those big sweeping american sagas that you know takes us to task for our past but gives us hope of the future sort of thing yeah do you that reminds so just a weird random question do you think that a book like the great offshore grounds would have won if it had more momentum behind it early on um i'm not sure i think um there's also something to be said for the nba also likes someone to take a risk in their writing and um you know jesmyn ward always has sort of that um magical realism aspect or um which so did uh coulson whiteheads the underground railroad or and charles u his was a very unique vision the great offshore grounds which i loved was a more straightforward narrative and i think that sometimes that may hold it back when it comes to getting these awards so that's why i think patricia's lockwood's book may win the booker prize um even though that book doesn't speak to me i recognize it does something that's never been done in literature before and prizes like to award that sort of stuff i would like to make a comment about so i will say i completely understand why the book doesn't work for a lot of people um i was a big fan of that book and i hope it wins partly at this point just because people hate that book with a passion and i'm like polarizing it is but to me that's what makes it i don't know i love a book that is that you know just divides people i'm like yes let's create division in the world i mean in the reading world yes i will say uh when this is not a video about the booker so stop but i will say i read the promise by damon galga and it is phenomenal i got a copy of that one because uh bernie lombardi a bookstagramer on ins on instagram he said he was like it is the book i want to win it's very good you have to read it so i got a copy yes no and i hope you love it as much as i did and damon gal got is been up this is his third time on the shortlist so it will be interesting to see um but yeah no the booker prize another video for another day okay well hunter and i will hopefully he will agree to come back so we can talk about it after we've had a chance to read it and pick our shortlist choices and we will do that video and see which ones we think will make the short list um and then we will have a reaction to the short list and pick a winner before that so you'll get to see hunter two more times well hunter thank you so much for coming and talking books with me i always appreciate your opinion yeah thank you for having me and um until next time everybody hunter and i wish you happy reading and we'll see you later bye [Music] [Music] you
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Views: 951
Rating: 5 out of 5
Keywords: National Book Award, Books, Book Reviews, Book Recommendations, Literature, Reading, Booktube, Kid Friendly, Family Friendly, Anthony Doerr, Lauren Groff, Jakob Guanzon, Laird Hunt, Honoree Fanonne Jeffers, Robert Jones Jr, Katie Kitamura, Jason Mott, Elizabeth McCracken, Richard Powers
Id: VJiy1THYyfA
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 43min 5sec (2585 seconds)
Published: Thu Sep 23 2021
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