The best panels at the L.A. Times Festival of Books, according to an L.A. bookseller
Jessica Ferri, owner of Womb House Books, shares the panels sheâs most excited about at the 2024 Festival of Books
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Iâm Jessica Ferri, a writer for The Times and the owner of Womb House Books, a secondhand online shop specializing in 20th century literature by women. We will have a booth (No. 122) at the festival, so come on down and visit us! In addition to books, weâll be selling our author hats, so choose your L.A. it-girl fighter while supplies last: Eve Babitz or Joan Didion.
In book news, I think this season is an explosion of blessings of writing by women. Sheila Hetiâs new book, âAlphabetical Diaries,â is a veritable art bible. Then thereâs Maggie Nelsonâs new collection of essays and conversations, âLike Love,â and Miranda Julyâs latest novel, âAll Fours,â coming in May. In June we have Rachel Cuskâs new novel, âParade,â and in July, Sarah Mangusoâs second novel, âLiars.â
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The L.A. Times Festival of Books is finally here!
Iâm moderating what I think will be the best event at the festival, âLove and Friendship: Miranda July and Maggie Nelson in Conversation,â on Saturday at 1:30. Weâre going to be discussing the concept of âfeeling realâ in our relationships â love in marriage and the perils of having a human body. Maggie and Miranda are two of the most audacious thinkers and artists, and it will be such a thrill to have them onstage together.
Also, on Sunday at 12:30, Belletristâs Karah Preiss will be moderating a conversation between Melissa Broder, Henry Hoke, Isle McElroy, and Jennine CapĂł Crucet called âMake It Weirder: Body Swapping, Giant Cacti, and Celebrity Impersonators in Contemporary Fiction.â Broderâs most recent novel, âDeath Valleyâ (which I reviewed for The Times), is a book about grief that somehow manages to be hilarious. Tickets are required for both events.
The Week(s) in Books
If youâre into literary takedowns, Ann Manovâs Bookforum review of Lauren Oylerâs most recent book of essays, âNo Judgment,â may go down in history, thanks to lines like this: âOyler clearly wishes to be a person who says brilliant things â the Renata Adler of looking at your phone a lot â but she lacks the curiosity that would permit her to do so.â
Sophie Kinsella, the author of âShopaholicâ and other books, announced on social media that she is under treatment for brain cancer. âTo everyone who is suffering from cancer in any form I send love and best wishes, as well as to those who love and support themâ she wrote. âIt can feel very lonely and scary to have a tough diagnosis.â
Scribner editor Emily Polson created a stir when she posted a photo of a box of galleys of âDidion and Babitzâ by Lili Anolik, calling them âLiterary It Girls.â Most were excited by the book, but some took issue with Babitz and Didion being paired together, leading Polson to issue an apology.
âThe PEN Awards and World Voices Festival is on the brink of collapseâ according to Literary Hub, due to what many feel is a total lack of response to the war in Gaza. Nearly 30 writers and translators have pulled out of the awards. In an open letter, they write: âWe cannot, in good faith, align with an organization that has shown such blatant disregard of our collective values.â
Bookstore faves
For this weekâs bookseller conversation, I spoke to past festivalgoers Jenny Yang and Chris Capizzi, owners of Filipinotownâs new A Good Used Book shop. Hereâs what they had to say about curating their new space.
What would you say your specialization is in? What makes âa good used book?â
We definitely love vintage paperbacks, which we set out in wine crates like records so people can flip through them, cover to cover. We want a whole new generation to discover them. We focus mostly on modern and classic literature including poetry and plays, genre fiction like science fiction and crime, nonfiction in the humanities, sciences and social sciences as well as occult and spirituality, modern and contemporary art and culture of all kinds. I think weâre looking for all the different ways the human experience is interpreted and expressed, and we look to provide a wide variety of ways people communicate those experiences in print.
Tell us about the new shop, the location and neighborhood.
Weâre located in Historic Filipinotown near Echo Park, Silver Lake and downtown Los Angeles. We have great neighbors like Clark Street Bread, GrĂĄ Pizza, Laveta Coffee and Butchr Bar, so thereâs a lot to do. And we have Echo Park Lake just a few blocks away, with Vista Hermosa Park, the local favorite, even closer.
What do you think of L.A. book culture? What are your customers looking for?
There are great bookstores that have been around and are still going strong on this side of L.A.: Alias East in Atwater Village, Counterpoint Records and Books in Hollywood, Sideshow Books in Miracle Mile, Stories in Echo Park and the Last Bookstore downtown. Also canât forget about the Secret Headquarters comic shop thatâs been going on 18 years and just got a new location in Atwater Village. And weâre excited to be part of a new class, along with Untitled Books, Heavy Manners Library and Des Pair Books, working toward nurturing our communities around books.
Whatâs the most popular title and/or who is the most popular author you sell?
Currently our most popular title is âEverything Nowâ by Rosecrans Baldwin. We call it the âgateway drugâ to Los Angeles literature. Itâs a great book for transplants and native Angelenos to better understand Los Angeles through its history, its artists and its authors. And itâs just fun to read.
What are your and Jennyâs favorite books of all time, and what are you reading now in terms of new books?
One of Jennyâs favorite books is âBreast and Eggsâ by Meiko Kawakami, a novel translated from Japanese that sheds light on femininity through female relationships and a womanâs relationship to her own body. She just finished reading Han Kangâs novel âGreek Lessons ,â her follow-up to âThe Vegetarian,â a thought-provoking thriller about how one womanâs choice to stop eating meat changes the course of her life and the lives around her.
My favorite book of all-time is probably âBlack Boyâ by Richard Wright, and Iâm currently finishing up Kazuo Ishiguroâs latest, âKlara and the Sun,â a speculative fiction novel told from the point of view of an android companion.
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