But what books should you bring with you on your autumn day excursions, or when you first curl up on that first cool night when you can turn off the air conditioning and bundle up with a cup of tea instead? I have five literary book recommendations that will warm you up.

Salt Slow by Julia Armfield

Armfield has written a gorgeous short story collection full of strange, haunting stories featuring obstinate women, many of them queer. They are surrealist, magical, and speculative: in “The Great Sleep,” people’s Sleeps become independent entities, stepping out of bodies and preventing their people from sleeping at night, changing the world and making the narrator think about the uses of sleep. There are stories about a young girl who becomes friends with a wolf; a female punk band with obsessed fans and a fantastical secret; a Frankenstein-esque heartbreak. Just a little bit spooky as we head towards October.

Evvie Drake Starts Over by Linda Holmes

This is the perfect book to read on a damp day, a cup of something warm in your hands. It’s a fast-moving romantic novel about a woman unexpectedly widowed. After a year, her best friend Andy asks her if she can take in a tenant, a former professional pitcher named Dean. The novel features a relaxing realism, crackling chemistry, and light easy dialogue. And ultimately it isn’t about the romance, but about Evvie’s growth and recovery from the death of her emotionally abusive husband, and her route to independence and self-care.

The Water Dancer by Ta-Nehisi Coates

The first novel by Coates is out, and you don’t want to miss it. The book digs into slavers’ brutal separation of families, following Hiram Walker, who, when torn from his mother, gains a mysterious power that will help keep him alive in the years to come. His life will span deep hatred in the South and insidious torture in the North, all as he stays focused on the hope that he will succeed someday in finding and saving his family. It’s a highly anticipated release.

I adore Karen Russell. Her strange, surrealist, fantastical worlds and tales never fail to capture my imagination—from Swamplandia! to Vampires in the Lemon Grove, she’s kept my undivided attention. Now she’s back, her comedic, absurdist tone in tow, to enchant us with a new collection of short stories that will be a mainstay on my bookshelf for years to come.

I Can’t Talk About the Trees Without the Blood by Tiana Clark

More people need to read this incredible poetry collection that blew my socks off earlier this summer. Clark’s poems are gorgeous: they touch on the historic trauma of being a black woman today, through everything from literary history to Rihanna’s “Bitch Better Have My Money” to childhood bullies to institutionalized segregation. Excellent on every page, I was scandalized that it took me this long to discover Tiana Clark, and I want everyone to drop everything and read her poetry—especially fans of the Breakbeat Poets movement.

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