
#Celebrate Day 5: #StickerOnCvr #StickerOnCover on this book for being a National Book Award finalist. I suspect this one is perfect for our #BIPOCIntlAuthorArtist2026 reading theme.

#Celebrate Day 5: #StickerOnCvr #StickerOnCover on this book for being a National Book Award finalist. I suspect this one is perfect for our #BIPOCIntlAuthorArtist2026 reading theme.

While I‘m glad to have read this, I‘m more happy to be done with it. The writing is excellent, but the stories are really dark and sad. It was very cool reading about Denver and other nearby Colorado areas. My mom‘s little town Montrose even got a mention.
Short stories about women and girls of mixed indigenous heritage, mostly focused on familial dynamics.
Tons of triggering content. But a very strong SS collection.

Books finished in September 2022 📚 ✨️
Delia and Talia let me down with 3-star reads 🤷🏻♀️
Shapes of Native Nonfiction was great, 4 stars 👍🏻
Sabrina & Corina was ELITE, 5 stars, no notes 🏆
I read all of these in printed form, with the exception of Merry Inkmas, which I listened to during the tail end of my rough multi-day vertigo spell when I had my first case of The Rona 📖 🎧
Happy spooky month, everybody! 👻 🎃 🖤

One of the best short story collections I've ever read. None of the stories were duds. However, be warned: ALL of the stories were devastating in one way or another. Fajardo-Anstine explores abandonment, death, and grief; women feeling trapped in relationships, roles (especially motherhood), and poverty; domestic and other forms of violence; and the impacts of capitalism, gentrification, colonialism, and white supremacy. 📖

I'm still not a fan of short stories so, while I thought these were good, I wanted more of some of these characters. Sugar Babies, Sabrina And Corina, and All Her Names were my favorite but I thought they were all well executed. All the stories were about loss and struggle and they all made me think. Several of them I believe will stay with me for a long while.

This terrific short story collection explores Latinas in Colorado, often focusing on themes of trauma and maternal abandonment. They‘re not quite linked, but definitely associated, holding together as a true grouping. I didn‘t want to put this one down.

Return one book to the library, bring six home.🤦🏻♀️🤷🏻♀️✨ #goldenhour

This was a great short story collection set in Denver, Colorado featuring women of Latina indigenous ancestry.
Astounded by how beautiful this is. Top 3 of the year.
It‘s December and I really really really didn‘t meet my reading goals this year. But I ended an unhealthy relationship, quit my job and am moving, am going through mental health treatment and trying to figure out my life. I know 2022 will be better (the bar is low), and I know I will be ok. I hope you guys have a great end of the year.

#SeptemberWrapUp
Glad I got to squeeze in 4 books this month featuring Hispanic authors and stories for Hispanic Heritage month.

@peanutnine thank you! This was a great swap package- I love your book choices, mask, bookmarks- and the ceramic is stunning! #staycationintimeswap #sits

Beautiful! These stories were so poetic, moving and easily digestible. I love that they were all set in Colorado too. It got me out of a slump of reading a few pages and switching books.
I normally am not a fan of short stories but was really engaged by the stories of Denver and the people who have long histories there.

This book is a collection of stories about indigenous latinas living in the American west of Denver, Colorado.
This book is way more than that description. It‘s short stories showing the trial and tribulations women, not just women but indigenous women, go trough in daily life. My heart weeper and smiled for these women in the stories and the relationships they had. I can‘t wait to read more from this author.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

I enjoyed reading Sabrina & Corina. I found myself so glued to it. The short stories had me wanting to consume the book in one day.
My favorite short story was "Ghost Stories". Ana the main character in the short story was relatable. Her struggles with school life, and her personal life can be felt through the words written by Kali. Must read.

Yesterday I listened to a goodly chunk of the tagged book while I set up my bookish journal for 2021. The stories are excellent, albeit often pretty bleak, and I‘m now equipped with a splash page, a spending log, tally pages for all the vectors I care about, tracking pages for freebies/ARCs and library books, an A to Z spread, and two monthly bingo sheets. #audioplanning

I host an annual Jolabokaflod party, and obviously this year it had to go virtual. We managed to still have a pretty good turn out, and did two swaps- one secret Santa style which we opened together, and one “in person”, in which we talked about favorite books we will now deliver to each other.
This was my secret Santa gift from my friend @SenatorMothma . I just love this cover, and I‘m looking forward to these stories!

At the bookstore, I showed Tomi the teen section, an over flowing back corner with a dirty love seat. There were posters on the walls of nineties celebrities posing with copies of Beloved and Moby-Dick.
"See," I told him. "Even Buffy the Vampire Slayer likes to read." When he asked who that was, I said never mind and told him to pick out a book.

#audiobook, read by various narrators, collection of #shortstories - featuring Latina women. I don't often read short stories because I have trouble connecting with characters and settings in the short amount of time I have with them. However, this was not the case with this collection. A couple scenes from this book will stay with me for some time. also, that cover 😍

This was a lovely collection of stories, all centered on Latinx lives in Colorado, mostly around Denver. They were quiet and beautiful stories, many laced with a touch of sadness and a sense of something lost in the face of Denver‘s rapid gentrification. I wasn‘t blown away, but I enjoyed them!

#porchlife #TGIF #wineandbooks
Time to relax with a book, popcorn, & wine. Excited to read this book especially because it is short stories. So I can absorb one story at a time, slowly.

I probably read 1 short story collection a year as they are just not my thing but this was absolute dynamite. She writes in the author‘s note that this collection took a decade to write and it shows. The care and precision and grace in these stories will stick with me for a long time. 5🌟

Short stories mostly about indigenous peoples living in the us.

Oops, forgot to post this one! I read it during #midyearrush and I have to say, a lot of these #shortstories really hit you in the feels. They're short but tell SO MUCH. They are also very sad, telling the struggles Latina women go through in white communities, in their own, and usually at the hands of men. That said, the stories also feel very hopeful. Many potential triggers like abortion, abuse, sexuality, etc #fiction

Did you guys ever have to carry around those babies in high school? We had flour babies 😂😂 First story was very...interesting, a commentary on motherhood I think #midyearrush

This felt like what short story collections should always be like. Every one was just the right length, none felt skippable or less good than the others. The different ways of approaching Latina and Native women were so fascinating, deep and touching. The writer‘s style was quite cool but with so much emotion underneath it and nothing ever felt forced. I‘d read everything else by this author in a heartbeat

My dreams these days are a combo of Contagion, Hunger Games and Chernobyl (I didn‘t watch any of these lately), so I have decided to take it easy. 🤯
For the #EasterExtravaganza readathon I plan to finish one book, read one short story a day, and start a new book. I finished Agnes Grey by Anne Bronte yesterday and started the tagged book for stories.
#covercrush

This collection of short stories was okay, but I didn‘t really connect with any of them. Just a personal taste issue I suppose but it was a very dull reading experience for me. 😐

Books Read February 2020: 31-50
This year of reading so far has felt a bit slower, what with the Faulkner class, the Erdrich readalong, and the Odyssey readalong. Some of that reading is not represented here because I'm still making progress. ⤵️

Wow, stunning writing of deep heartbreak, love, family. These stories tug and chip away at your heart. I fell in love with these women and men. These tales are told with such respect and honor. Only problem is I wanted more.

This short story collection didn't blow my mind, but it was solid. The setting, both physical and emotional, was vivid throughout, but as with most short story collections, I suspect this will stay with me more as impressions and scenes than as distinct stories.

This book of short stories by Kali Fajardo-Anstine (and from the Tournament of Books longlist) focuses on the lives of Latina and/or indigenous women living in an area of Denver. Families, traditions, and violence are important themes.
This is an #ownvoices collection

"Though the southern Colorado soil is normally hard and cakey, it had snowed and then rained an unusual amount that spring."
#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl

Book 5 of 2020. I liked this story collection, but I was expecting more. Between the award nomination and all the raving I have seen about this book, I expected a standout. Instead it was just a decent collection. I liked the Colorado connection, but wanted more about landscape, flora/fauna, weather. About what makes Colorado unique. #shortstories

In short... whatever you are doing now STOP. Go to the book store or kindle e-store and purchase this short story collection! Absolutely STUNNING!!!!!!!! WOW! Just WOW, WOW and more WOW! The audiobook is fabulous also!

The upside to spending the day couch-ridden with the last of this cold was finishing this volume of short stories! It was a strong collection about various Latina women living in Denver and a perspective I‘m glad to have sat with for a little while.

If I could give this 5 pick‘s I would! The arrangement of these short stories helped illuminate POV‘s rarely told through the lens of a multigenerational family perspective and women of color. Some of them broke me in ways I wasn‘t expecting. My 2019 favorite read! The book cover alone...❤️❤️🙌🙌

A collection of short stories about women living in Colorado, who are all decedents of Indigenous tribes in Latin America. The standouts for me were “Sugar Babies,” “Sabrina and Corina,” “Sisters,” and “Tomi” but they are all well written. As others have noted, the voices of the characters, and many of their challenges, do feel repetitive by the end, but overall I‘m glad to see this on the NBA shortlist.

#NBAfiction2019 A collection of stories centered around Native and Hispanic women in Colorado, particularly the Denver area. All the different relationships between women within a family are explored - grandmother, mothers, sisters, cousins. Themes include absent mothers, poverty, gentrification, and the ways women can hurt themselves and others through their relationships. I wanted more variation in the stories, but still a solid collection. 4⭐️

Starting my 2019 @NationalBook fiction longlist reading next! #NationalBookAward