What weâre reading: The page-turning thrills of a chefâs memoir and a sci-fi bestseller
![Chef Keith Corbin stands looking out of the frame](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/dbf1d4f/2147483647/strip/true/crop/4480x6478+0+0/resize/1200x1735!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F33%2F6d%2Fee5330704d659a39dcf3279d1c38%2Fla-ca-jc-chef-keith-corbin-california-soul-book-club-02.jpg)
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Good morning, and welcome to the L.A. Times Book Club newsletter.
When Keith Corbin writes about growing up in a world awash in drugs, guns and gangs, it burns with the intensity of the best pulp fiction, says author Jervey Tervalon. âBut it isnât fiction â itâs the life he lived.â
Tervalon praises the authenticity of Corbinâs new book, âCalifornia Soul: An American Epic of Cooking and Survival,â a gritty chronicle of the chefâs unexpected journey from drug dealer to prison inmate to co-owner of one of L.A.âs most celebrated restaurants.
On Aug. 23, Corbin will join the L.A. Times Book Club for a conversation with Times food editor Daniel Hernandez about the inspiration for his California soul food, his hard-won redemption and his desire to pay it forward.
âSo much of Corbinâs writing ⊠is what crime writers aspire to do, but the language and conventions of crime writing sometimes seem stilted or manufactured. Reading âCalifornia Soulâ is a different experience,â Tervalon says.
âCorbinâs story comes through without self-consciousness and in his own language, a language that isnât the vernacular of the generic streets but the patois of those of us who grew up in Black Los Angeles.â
Corbinâs youthful life as a drug dealer landed him in prison, but that turned out to be the beginning chapter of his story rather than the end. After his parole, he landed work at a refinery and quickly earned a promotion, only to be fired when a background check turned up his felony record. He needed a job and heard about a new restaurant in his old Watts neighborhood that was hiring. âIt was about paying bills,â he says during a conversation with Laurie Ochoa in The Times kitchen.
That desperate choice changed his life. The restaurant was Locol, created by chefs Daniel Patterson and Roy Choi in an effort to bring âchef-driven, quality food at a low price to a food desert,â Corbin says. He went to work there as a line cook and learned from his new mentors. Locol closed in 2018, âbut I wouldnât be where I am today without it,â Corbin says.
Join us for this monthâs book club night with Corbin at 7 p.m. PT on Aug. 23 at the ASU California Center, located in the historic Herald Examiner Building downtown. Get tickets to attend in person or virtually.
Before book club starts, ASU will offer a guided tour of the newly revived landmark, which was built by publishing titan William Randolph Hearst more than a century ago. Space is limited; sign up on Eventbrite when you get your tickets.
Tell us: What questions do you have for Keith Corbin and Daniel Hernandez? Send your questions and comments to [email protected].
Get the recipe: The Timesâ Food section features Corbinâs Vegan California Gombo from his Alta Adams menu.
![Book covers for "California Soul" by Keith Corbin and "The Daughter of Doctor Moreau" by Silvia Moreno-Garcia.](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/1fea5a4/2147483647/strip/true/crop/800x600+0+0/resize/1200x900!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fd3%2F13%2F63fa4b254334943815443062fdb1%2Fsoul-and-moreau-covers.jpg)
September book club
Mark your calendar for Sept. 27 when bestselling novelist Silvia Moreno-Garcia joins us to discuss her new science fiction thriller, âThe Daughter of Doctor Moreau.â
Born in Mexico and now living in Vancouver, Moreno-Garcia has been evolving across genres for years, moving with ease among fantasy, mystery, science fiction, horror and noir stories. President Obama included her novel âVelvet Was the Night,â a recent L.A. Times Book Prize finalist, on his 2022 summer reading list. She also is the author of âMexican Gothicâ and âGods of Jade and Shadow.â
âThe fictions of Silvia Moreno-Garcia abound in shapeshifters,â says reviewer Paula L. Woods. âAnd they are central to her latest novel, âThe Daughter of Doctor Moreau,â which reframes the classic H.G. Wells story of terrifying human-animal hybrids as a thrilling and romantic anticolonial adventure set in the YucatĂĄn Peninsula.
âIf you read her work as deeply as it deserves to be read â beyond its page-turning thrills ⊠youâll see that what lies beneath is even more astonishing: a perspective on Mexican history as broad and inclusive as any youâre likely to see in fiction â never mind a bestseller list.â
On Sept. 27, Moreno-Garcia will be in conversation with Times editor Steve Padilla at 6 p.m. PT. Sign up on Eventbrite.
If you enjoy these community discussions: Please consider becoming a benefactor of the new Los Angeles Times Community Fund, which supports our signature literary programs: the L.A. Times Book Club and annual Book Prizes.
Keep reading
The long shadow of âThe Satanic Verses.â Columnist Patt Morrison discusses her several interviews with Salman Rushdie, his books and the 1989 fatwa on the authorâs life in the wake of last weekâs near-fatal attack during a lecture.
The future of publishing. Authors Guild President Douglas Preston explores how an antitrust trial underway in Washington, D.C., could reshape the books we read â and who writes them. âLess competition is going to change the dynamic,â Macmillan Chief Executive Don Weisberg testified.
Going home. Times reporter Melody Gutierrez writes about what she discovered returning to her abandoned childhood home near Twentynine Palms. Her story quotes Jerry Burger, author of âReturning Home: Reconnecting With Our Childhoods,â who notes that many of us feel particularly strong emotions about the place we lived between the ages of 5 and 12. âIt seems to be those are key years,â Burger says. âFor many people their identity is tied up with that place, with that time.â
![A newspaper story about returning to an abandoned childhood home.](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/1b093b3/2147483647/strip/true/crop/1920x1080+0+0/resize/1200x675!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F26%2F56%2F763412344dcd9bc70ee26ba71eac%2Flatt-melody-returns-to-desert-home-melody-gutierrez.0000004.jpg)
Comic book epic onscreen. A lively new TV adaptation makes the most of Neil Gaimanâs âThe Sandman,â writes critic Robert Lloyd.
New lit podcasts. Check out previous book club guest Susan Orleanâs âBook Exploder,â a spinoff of the Netflix series âSong Exploder,â that features authors such as Min Jin Lee, George Saunders and James McBride âbreaking down one passage from one of their works, showing how much work goes into every paragraph of a book,â writes Alison Stewart at wnyc.org. Also, Times books contributor Bethanne Patrick has just launched the âMissing Pagesâ podcast: âPatrick reinforces the lesson of never judging a book by its cover by untangling some of the publishing industryâs biggest scandals,â says the Guardian. Iâd love to hear about other podcasts and audiobooks book clubbers are enjoying. Share your suggestions in an email to [email protected].
âIf itâs banned, read it.â Craig Johnson, author of the popular Longmire series (the next installment, âHell and Back,â arrives in September), shares his favorite banned books in a recent interview. âIâm always consistently amazed by this, because I guess my first question to these people that are trying to ban these books would be, âHave they read them?ââ
Summer reading with Boris: âSummer for me can be a bit of a busmanâs holiday, as I fill up on fall books weâre planning to cover,â says Times Books editor Boris Kachka. âThis year thatâs everything from Cormac McCarthyâs dizzying upcoming novels, âThe Passengerâ and âStella Maris,â to âWhich Side Are You On,â Ryan Lee Wongâs punchy tale of a young activist and his Korean-born mother arguing politics as they drive all over L.A. But itâs also a season for catching up on meaty, demanding older books. Iâm delightedly digging deeper into Mike DavisâââCity of Quartz,â a fascinating crash course in L.A. history from a labor-left angle â but really every angle. You get the intellectual history, the union and anti-union movements, the birdâs-eye view of industrial and political forces jockeying to soak up the sun and diverted water for themselves as they sell an impossible dream.â
Booked up: Finally, the new L.A. Times Book Club merch is here, and the collection includes hats, socks and a cool crewneck that âDirty Dancingâ star Jennifer Grey showed off at our July book club night in Hollywood.
![A woman wearing glasses holds up a white sweatshirt with the words "I'm Booked" on it in blue.](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/146c84f/2147483647/strip/true/crop/3024x4032+0+0/resize/1200x1600!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F17%2Fb9%2F1d7f277940e5955966e4e16df450%2Fjennifer-grey.jpg)
ICYMI, you still can watch Grey discuss her memoir, âOut of the Corner,â and see her relive the infamous lift scene with co-start Patrick Swayze. âItâs like watching home movies for me,â she told interviewer Amy Kaufman. âI remember every moment.â
![Two women sit onstage as a clip from "Dirty Dancing" plays on a screen above their heads.](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/164a606/2147483647/strip/true/crop/989x1236+0+0/resize/1200x1500!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fc3%2F98%2F48402ea2414483ef98f6f4a46ab6%2Fjennifer-grey-and-amy-kaufman-with-dirty-dancine-scene.jpg)
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