Saturday, July 18, 2020

Bust Into New Genres with Oysters Ebook Subscription Service

Bust Into New Genres with Oysters Ebook Subscription Service This post  is sponsored by Oyster. Oyster offers readers the opportunity to browse thousands of titles whenever and wherever the urge strikes them. They offer immediate and unlimited access to more than 500,000 titles, ranging from familiar favorites to books from across the genre spectrum. Readers will find award-winners and bestsellers and the titles that have been staring at them from bookstore displays, begging to be read. Their time has finally come. Oyster is designed specifically for reading on-the-go, with apps available for iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch.   _________________________ Ive been using Oyster since  it launched last fall, way back before it was  a  Book Riot sponsor, and one of my  favorite thingsand, I think, one of the best thingsabout the service is how easy Oyster  makes it to try new  books and genres. Its an all-you-can-read model for $9.95 a month, so if you start  reading a book and just arent digging it, you can move on to something else without feeling like you wasted your hard-won book dollars. Experimentation becomes a low-risk  possibility, and you can expand your  readerly horizons in all kinds of new directions. If, like me, youre  looking to bust into new genres, here are some  recommendations from Oysters digital  library. Since were talking about trying out  books you havent wanted to commit to before, its probably appropriate to begin with a Big, Long Classic. Oyster has its own specially designed edition of Moby-Dick, so you can chase the white whale and be free to bail if you wanna. Short stories often get short shrift in the book world. They require us to flex a different set of muscles than novels do, and Ive heard more readers than I can count say they just dont get short fiction. To understand how fewer words can pack a more powerful punch, read The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty. Then level up with Jhumpa Lahiris award-winning debut collection Interpreter of Maladies. If youre not hooked from the opening piece, A Temporary Matter, about a couple who begin telling each other their secrets as they sit in the dark during daily power  outages, I dont know what to do for you. Speaking of  books that get short shrift, we need to have a serious talk about how SO MANY readers (and so many authors of so many click-bait editorials) still labor under the misperception that  books about young adults are only for young adults. Silver Sparrow by Tayari Jones is one  beautiful example of  the  booksand they are myriadthat tell coming-of-age stories and tackle big, important issues. Readers of all ages will find value and insight within these  pages. Readers of all ages will also love A Series of Unfortunate Events. I held out on  reading these for SO LONG because sometimes I forget how great kids  books can be. Dont be like me. Read these! Of all the genres I was curious about, romance is the one where I most felt like I didnt know where to start. A friend recommended Sarah MacLean, and Im happy to report that her combination of steamy sex scenes, smart heroines, and avoidance of silly euphemisms for body parts is exactly what blows my skirt up. Kick off your adventures in romance with her regency tales, beginning with Nine Rules to Break When Romancing a Rake.   For a look at sex and relationships through the lens of science rather than imagination, dig into Sex at Dawn by Christopher Ryan and Cacilda Jetha. This book is so packed with interesting tidbits about sex and culture, youll be stocked with  dinner party anecdotes for several years. Did a bad experience in school ruin you for the notion that educational reading can be fun?  You might love The Canon: A Whirligig Tour of the Beautiful Basics of Science by Natalie Angier. Angier is a veteran science reporter with a charming voice and a knack for explaining big concepts in language that is straight-forward but not dumbed down. She trusts her readers to be smart, and she rewards them for their attention with funny asides and stories from her career. For readers who love science and research and examining human behavior, Dan Arielys Predictably Irrational is a must. We humans like to think our decisions are rational, but, well, theres a whole lot of evidence (many of it from Arielys fascinating studies) to the contrary. Youll see your brain and behavior in a whole new light. Bust all your preconceived notions about speculative fiction with Blindness by Jose Saramago. This is a book about loss and survival and the limits of humanity, and it begins when people in an unnamed city are struck with an epidemic of white blindness. Rather than darkness,  all they see is white. Its a striking premise and a riveting story, just one piece of the considerable body of work  that earned Saramago the Nobel Prize for  Literature. Just when I thought the vampire story had been totally played out, I fell for The Strain by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan. These arent traditional vampires in the blood-sucking, cloak-wearing sense, but they are every bit as mean and terrifying, and they are blessedly devoid of sparkling sense and romantic sensibilities. If you just read that vampire recommendation and were all, Keep the vampires, but Ill take the suspense, then I want to point you in the direction of Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane. Go ahead and forget the movie with Leonardo DiCaprio. This is weird, page-turning stuff with surprises you wont see coming. And now, for a little bit of everything all in one, I give you The Best  American Nonrequired  Reading.  Every year, the teens from Dave Eggers awesome 826 National program read a lot of everythingnews stories, short stories, comics, essays, transcripts from Occupy Wall Street meetings, you name itand cull the very best pieces into a collection. The only criterion for inclusion is that the piece is interesting and entertaining. Big names, fame, and previous  publishing credits dont matter to these editors, and the result every year is an anthology of great work that will no doubt introduce you to new  favorites. Have you been using Oyster to try out new books? Tell us about your adventures!

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.