Book Club: Steph Cha and Joe Ide talk mysteries and murder
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Good morning, and welcome to the Los Angeles Times Book Club newsletter.
Los Angeles has a well-earned reputation as the capital of noir. And on Monday, March 30, contemporary crime authors Steph Cha and Joe Ide will talk with readers about what L.A.âs latest generation of fictional sleuths shows us about the city.
Join us at 7 p.m. as the Los Angeles Times Book Club hosts its very first virtual event. Cha and Ide will explore L.A.âs noir landscape in conversation with Times reporter Maria L. La Ganga. This meet-up will be streamed live from The Timesâ Facebook page and on YouTube. Itâs free â just BYOB.
Cha is the author of âYour House Will Pay,â a bestselling thriller exploring L.A.âs racial tensions through the stories of two families â one Korean American, one black â grappling with a decades-old crime. (Read The Timesâ review.)
Ide writes the edgy âIQâ series set in East Long Beach. His latest book, âHi Five,â finds private eye Isaiah Quintabe entangled with a murder suspect who has multiple personalities. (Read The Times review.) Ide recently tweeted a story from the Wrap about Snoop Doggâs plans to executive produce a TV series based on the books.
What questions do you have for the authors? Join the conversation by sending them in advance of Mondayâs meet-up to [email protected].
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10 questions for Joe Ide
Joe Ide lives in Santa Monica and published his first mystery in his mid-50s. His 2016 debut novel, âIQ,â received an Edgar Award nomination for best first novel by an American writer. He followed up with âRighteousâ in 2017, âWreckedâ in 2018 and âHi Fiveâ in January.
In the New York Times, reviewer Janet Maslin calld Ide âthe best thing to happen to mystery writing in a long time.â His fans include Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Michael Connelly, who described him as a writer who âtakes it up a notch,â because âheâs reflecting on how difficult this place can be to grow up in and survive when you live south of the 10 Freeway.â
Ahead of Mondayâs chat, Ide shared some of his current reads and other interests.
Hereâs whatâs on his mind right now:
Book for social distancing: I work at home and keep to myself under normal circumstances, so socially distant is a way of life. Iâm reading âThe Devil in the White Cityâ by Erik Larson.
Favorite noir book: âTinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spyâ by John LeCarrĂ©. Spy fiction is noir in another country.
Book I love to read again and again: If I had to choose one, it would be âThe Roadâ by Cormac McCarthy.
TV show Iâm binging: âBabylon Berlinâ
Favorite music: Blues
Inspiration behind your current book: âThe Three Faces of Eveâ and âSybilâ
Something that might surprise people: I am incredibly incompetent at anything that requires real-world planning, fixing, building, organizing, maintaining focus or moving quickly.
Spending my days: Pretty much like I always do. Writing, reading, walking.
Next Project: IQ 5, titled âSmokeâ
Theme song: âCakewalk into Townâ by Taj Mahal. Itâs a cocky, head-bobbing, carefree little tune. How I feel on a good day.
Quarantine diaries
We recently asked authors who are stuck at home like the rest of us to track what they do over several days of isolation. The first diary comes from Steph Cha, who is expecting her first child next month. She writes:
âIâve been listening to audiobooks lately, figuring Iâll lean on them pretty heavily when Iâm taking care of an infant. A couple of weeks ago, I put a hold on the first volume of Robert Caroâs âThe Power Brokerâ through the library â I own the paperback too, and figure I can toggle between them. The audiobook just became available, and [my husband] Matt and I start it together, another project to get us through these endless days. Weâve both been meaning to read this book for years, and so far, itâs pretty fascinating. We also start a 2,000-piece jigsaw puzzle of Van Goghâs âStarry Night,â putting the border together while we learn about [Caroâs subject] Robert Moses.â
Author Laila Lalami, who joined book club readers in July, shared her coronavirus diary too: âI dreamt that I was a decorative-art historian in Bahia, Brazil, and that I was showing museum visitors an antique Moroccan teapot. It was the most restful dream I had all week. Then I woke up and remembered.â
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Foodie alert
This spring weâll be reading âAlways Home: A Daughterâs Recipes & Stories,â the new memoir by Fanny Singer about growing up with one of the worldâs most celebrated chefs.
Singerâs mother is Alice Waters, the author and chef behind Chez Panisse in Berkeley and the founder of the Edible Schoolyard Project, which teaches kids how to grow and eat healthful foods. She pens the foreword to âAlways Home.â
âMy mom makes a chicken stock whenever she arrives somewhere new,â Singer writes. âIt is the aromatherapy of my childhood, a smell intermingled with that of burning leaves or rosemary.â
âOf course making a chicken stock is something that requires getting a chicken first, and procuring a chicken is more easily achieved in some corners of the world than others, and certainly not at all hours.â
Singer and Waters are scheduled to join the L.A. Times Book Club on May 8 to discuss food and family with Times editor Laurie Ochoa. Stay tuned for more details.
Read on!
Book chats, distance dinner parties, virtual poker: Jessica Gelt shares 10 ways to connect with family and friends.
On a budget? In the past week, publishers and audio entertainment companies have offered a deluge of free e-books and audiobooks to keep readers of all ages engaged while theyâre hunkered down at home. Hereâs how to read for free while social distancing.
Coronavirus tips: Here are 50 skills you can learn online during self-quarantine. Theyâre all free.
What to watch: TV experts share the 51 best TV shows to binge while self-quarantining.
Hollywood changed âLittle Fires Everywhere.â Thatâs what author Celeste Ng wanted. Read Yvonne Villarrealâs behind-the-scenes interview.
Help us get L.A. reading and talking.
The Los Angeles Times Book Club is your chance to help us build something amazing. Itâs about much more than the remarkable books we read. Itâs about coming together to share an experience.
Stay tuned for more events and conversations, and stay in touch. Tell us: What stories do you want to share? What authors would you most like to meet?
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Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.