Here are 5 (or 6) things worth sharing this month:

1. Reading: I recently finished the lovely middle grade novel, Ruby Lost and Found, by Christina Li. It’s about a girl who’s been sentenced by her parents to spend the summer with her grandmother, visiting a local senior center and interacting with her grandmother’s friends. After learning that a beloved bakery in the neighborhood is in trouble, she tries to brainstorm ways to save it. It was such a sweet story of family connection, coming of age, and learning to fight for a community. Highly recommended! Li is also the author of Clues to the Universe, which I have not yet read but, of course, plan to!

2. Reading: Another fantastic middle grade read this month was Gillian McDunn’s When Sea Becomes Sky. It was another summer story (I guess I’m only just getting around to reading them all) about a girl who learns her special place with her brother is going to be destroyed by development—and she tries to save it. Which makes it seem similar to Ruby Lost and Found, but it’s totally different. McDunn is probably best-known for her books Caterpillar Summer (which I also recommend reading) and Honestly Elliott, which I haven’t yet read.

3. Reading: “Mom likes to call them my ‘angels,’ but I worry that takes away their humanity and their nonreligious capacity for love and compassion they showed a stranger.” Javier Zamora’s memoir, Solito, is a sometimes disturbing portrait of his migration from El Salvador to the United States when he was 9. It was a riveting tale of survival and perseverance, made even more emotionally gripping because it was real. I highly recommend it. 

4. Reading: I finished another fantastic middle grade this month—Jenn Reese’s A Game of Fox & Squirrels. It’s a magical realism book that confronts abuse in a very unique way. I found it captivating, touching, and…well, magical. I have not read any of Reese’s other books, which include Every Bird a Prince and Puzzleheart (which releases May 14, 2024), but one is currently in my holds stack at the library, and the other will be as soon as it’s released. 

5. Watching: If you’re looking for a good drama (if your heart can handle anything other than comedy—and it’s a close call for me), look no farther than Apple TV’s The Morning Show. This show is a very candid look at what a modern early morning TV show workplace looks like. They take on modern-day issues—racial equity, political thought, and (whether you’re ready for it or not) life after Covid (Season 2 gets an up-close look at Covid). The show is currently in Season 3, and it’s been renewed for at least one more season. It’s well worth the watch!

6. Reading: “You fight and you fall and you get up and fight some more. But there will always come a day when you cannot fight another minute more.” Oh, what a disturbing—and yet somehow inspiring—book. Kate Moore’s The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America’s Shining Women tells the true story of the hundreds of young women who worked in radium-dial factories and lived with the horrendous consequences—and what they did to battle for workers’ rights. It was fascinating, disturbing, and utterly riveting. A few months ago I shared another of Moore’s nonfiction books, The Woman They Could Not SilenceDo yourself a favor, and pick them both up. You’ll be captivated.