Biography and Memoir
October 2022
Recent Releases
California Soul: An American Epic of Cooking and Survival
by Keith Corbin with Kevin Alexander

What it is: an engaging memoir from former Crips member and revered Alta Adams chef Keith Corbin, who perfected his culinary skills while serving a ten-year stretch in prison.

Read it for: a no-holds-barred account of perseverance and redemption.

Don't miss: Corbin's tributes to the Watts neighborhood where he grew up and the grandmother who inspired him to become a chef.
A Visible Man
by Edward Enninful

What it's about: Edward Enninful's life as a gay Ghanaian refugee in England and the first Black editor-in-chief of British Vogue.

Topics include: navigating racism and imposter syndrome in an exclusionary industry; redefining beauty standards; how he champions his fellow Black creatives; working with Anna Wintour.

Try this next: Elaine Welteroth's inspiring memoir More Than Enough, which chronicles her tenure as Teen Vogue's first Black editor-in-chief.
Dinners With Ruth: A Memoir on the Power of Friendships
by Nina Totenberg

What it's about: the five-decade friendship between NPR correspondent Nina Totenberg and Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who bonded over shared hardships in their male-dominated fields.

Why you might like it: Totenberg's compelling account offers revealing insights on Ginsburg's life beyond her work (she officiated Totenberg's wedding; the pair once skipped a work function to go shopping).
Solito
by Javier Zamora

What it's about: In 1999, nine-year-old Javier Zamora migrated unaccompanied from El Salvador to the United States, a journey that spanned over two months and three thousand miles.

Book buzz: This Read with Jenna Book Club pick offers a heart-wrenching account of found family, second chances, and survival.

For fans of: Children of the Land, written by Zamora's fellow Undocupoets Campaign founder Marcelo Castillo Hernandez.
Books You Might Have Missed
My Life: Growing Up Asian in America
by Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment (editor); with an introduction by SuChin Pak

What it is: a thought-provoking and intimate anthology offering 30 diverse firsthand accounts of the Asian American experience.

Featuring: poetry, comics, essays, monologues, and more.

Further reading: Asian American Histories of the United States by Catherine Ceniza Choy; Rise: A Pop History of Asian America from the Nineties to Now by Jeff Yang, Phil Yu, and Philip Wang.
Dinner for One: How Cooking in Paris Saved Me
by Sutanya Dacres

Love in a Manhattan bar: New Yorker Sutanya Dacres hit it off with a handsome Frenchman and eventually moved to Paris and married him.

Alone in Paris: 
The marriage ended after three years, leaving Dacres adrift. At a breaking point, she started cooking simple dishes, such as pasta salad and leek risotto (recipes included), as she rebuilt her life.

For fans of: the author's podcast, Dinner for One; David Lebovitz's Paris books, which mix memoir and recipes; Julie Powell's Julie & Julia.
This Body I Wore
by Diana Goetsch

What it is: poet Diana Goetsch's lyrical memoir chronicling her late-in-life coming out and transition: "How can you spend your life face-to-face with an essential fact about yourself and still not see it?"

What's inside: candid reflections on the evolution of the trans community from the 1980s to the present.

Try this next: For another moving memoir written by an author who transitioned in their 50s, read P. Carl's Becoming a Man. 
Contact your librarian for more great books!
Prince George's County Memorial Library System
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