Ibi Zoboi quickly situates her readers in Detroit, through Fabiola’s view of American Street. And Zoboi’s 2017 novel feels particularly timely as Fabiola arrives in the United States with her mother, but continues her journey alone—after her mother is detained by immigration authorities.
Fabiola stays in her mother’s sister’s house on American Street (with her cousins, too) and she longs for her mother to join them all. Meanwhile, she adjusts to life in Detroit. It’s very different from Haiti, and Zoboi makes you want to help her adjust, help her settle into another kind of home.
“I pull back the curtains and this little slice of Detroit opens up to me—an empty paved road and small houses with only a narrow space separating one from the other.”
This is my cross-border reading with Rachel, who’s celebrating American Independence Day today. (She reviews it here. Pre-project.) It’s nicer weather than we had for Canada Day on July 1st, and I have the day off today, too, enjoying a long weekend.
Soon I’ll be reading magazines and newspapers outside, under the sun umbrella. Playing a little more with the Canada Day puzzle from the Globe & Mail. (I only managed the first 100 clues on the holiday.)
Mr BIP is out buying lemons right now, so our lemonade glasses can sweat and leave rings on the table while we read. (But it’s only 24 degrees: no complaints.

Here’s a glimpse of part of my summer stack, but I’m standing at one end of the bridge looking across, without having done any reading yet. And already these ideas for summer reading are out-of-hand. It’s usually my slowest reading season because humidity knocks me flat, so it’s ridiculous to have so many big ideas now.
But I’m loving the idea of reading some favourite children’s series. Look, Rachel: it’s Yotsuba&! Series’ reading reminds me of summers past, when I could inhale book-after-book on a hot afternoon, drinking Koolaid and absent-mindedly scratching mosquito bites. It’s summer when the Yotsuba&! series opens, but it’s the serial element that’s drawing me back to her antics.

I’ve also got some outdoor-inspired fiction, including Theresa Kishkan’s The Weight of the Heart, set in the west-coast landscape (which pays homage to Ethel Wilson’s fiction, and I spotted a reference to Sheila Watson too). And Emma has recommended Peter Heller’s fiction repeatedly, so I’ve borrowed a copy of The River, which seems appropriately summery and pageturnery.
For moments when flipping pages is more fun than reading them, I have options including many illustrations, like a picture book by Melanie Florence and Karlene Harvey, Kaiah’s Garden. And Margaret E. Derry’s Killarney Memoir: Summers over a Century.
And I treated myself to a duology of Michel Rabagliati’s series of Paul graphic novels: Formule Vacances! I’ve read Paul’s Summer Job, which is from 2002, but I haven’t read Paul in the North (2015). So, part re-read and part fresh-read.
These are in French, but there aren’t many words on a page. I love that there are little puzzles at the end of each section, as though you can imagine being stuck in the backseat of a car on a family vacation with a pencil and a puzzle. (This scene courtesy of fiction, not real-life experience.)
There’s part of me that also looks at the summer as an opportunity to read not something lighter and warmer but something thinky and bulky. So I’ve finally started Miguel De Palol’s The Garden of Seven Twilights (in translation by Adrian Nathan West).
It’s on my #ShelfofMexico (but it’s actually Spanish-language, not Mexican fiction). It reminds me of Julio Cortazar’s Hopscotch (/waves to Reese) so far, but the chapters are longer and the cast of characters seems to have real heft.
Also a hefty volume, I started reading Margaret Walker’s Jubilee on Juneteenth, which was inspired by her great-grandmother (she’s Vyry in the novel). It’s nearly as long as De Palol’s novel but a more conventional and engaging story, a family saga moving through American history.
The 50th-anniversary edition I’m reading has an introduction by Nikki Giovanni, which I’m looking forward to reading, but I’ve avoided it for now, convinced it’s full of spoilery bits! This reminds me of reading through the Jalna books through one summer too. Family sagas somehow feel summery to me (even without a Juneteenth element).

I also have a hot-weather setting in Tupelo Hassman’s Girlchild, chosen because of the cover but set in Nevada. My core temperature rises just thinking about the desert. And I have a cold-weather back-up in case that soon overwhelms.
And a horror novel, because I spent a few summers reading Stephen King voraciously. I thought about reading one of his, to more clearly draw the link to summers past, but then chose The Haunting of Room 904 instead, by Erika T. Wurth.
My first summer King was his collection of short stories, Night Shift, and I loved it, even though I wasn’t really into short stories at that time. But it’s Holly that is tempting me this summer. I might succumb to that temptation yet: this is only a portion of the books I’ve been contemplating for summer. And it doesn’t include any of the books I’m reading for other reasons right now, which might fit better with other summer options as the weeks shift.
One solidly lodged book in my stack, though, is Margaret Renkl’s The Comfort of Crows with a lovely summer passage:
Oneendless summertime evenings, on cool and generous summertime evenings, let us speak kindly of the red bat, the homely little bat with the smushed face and the hairless infants clinging to her fur by teeth and thumbs and feet. In daylight, she dangles one-footed from a tree branch, masquerading as a dead leaf. At nightfall she unfolds her canny wings and skitters to her work in the sky, circling under the streetlights, clearing the air of moths whose larvae eat our trees, sweeping up all the biting, stinging creatures we swat at in the dark.
And what about you: what’s in your stack today? And are you reading seasonally, whether that’s summer or winter for you right now?
I like that glimpse you gave us of American Street, which I hadn’t heard of before. Sounds wonderful. My reading tends to tail off in the summer too, partly because the heat makes me lethargic but also because I tend to read mostly in the evenings, and the long days mean that I stay active for longer and only get to read for a short time when it’s already late and I’m tired. But I have read and enjoyed a novel by Maggie O’Farrell, and am starting a Japanese classic now whose name I can’t remember and I can’t even reach over for Kindle to look it up – that’s the lethargy at work!
All winter, I think I would read more in the evenings, if only it didn’t get dark so soon. Then, in the summer, just as you say, because the days are so long and bright, I find so many other things to do, other than reading. I’ve never got on with a Maggie O’Farrell novel, but I persist in thinking I will try again. Maybe in the winter. /snortylaugh
It’s been a good summer for reading outside so far – not as hot and sticky as the last few summers. And you have such a fun variety of books, including the ones that aren’t as “fun.” How is that chunkster going?
I read River a few years ago and found it wasn’t quite what I wanted, but now I can’t remember why. I’ll be curious to see what you think.
This summer I’ve been focused on my Seaboard Review books. Right when I felt like I was finally catching up, the list grew again. Lol
I love reading outside, but I also get (happily) distracted a lot by all the critters in the yard (two-legged ones too)! heheh
Ohhhh, I am so glad I did not try to read that book from the library: it is probably going to take me all year. lol I need to make a schedule for it, I think!
Now I’m curious about that too: do you remember if you wrote it up, maybe there’s a clue there (but I don’t want to look in case there’s more than a clue).
That’s how it goes with reading, isn’t it: always more!
I didn’t write about that one – it was just for fun! I might have just thought it was going to be more intense than it was?
Mmm, maybe I know what you mean; I had thought the tone would be a little different, but just in a few pages realised it might be… more… escapist? than I’d thought? I think I’ll be craving that kind of read soon…
Not reading seasonally apart from the fact I’m panicking about not getting through my 20 Books of Summer, which I do every July …!
As soon as one makes a list, one begins to worry about whether those goals are reasonable, eh?
Stephen King is a very ‘summertime’ author for me too. Mainly because a few of his worn paperbacks are on my cottage’s shelf in Muskoka, it’s where I first discovered him. I think I read Holly a few years ago when it came out? I always enjoy his books. They don’t stay with me very long, but I like them. I don’t personally have many summer reading plans, other than trying to get to things I’ve been wanting to for awhile 🙂
His books stay with me more than most: his balance between character and story really works for me.
That feels like a fall kind of goal to me, rather than a summer goal, but my own ideas about what summer reading means are ALL OVER the place, so who am I to say? lol
Hopscotch! I keep thinking about rereading that according to the other set of instructions.
The heat has definitely made a mess of my reading lately. We’re heading north, off-grid, next week, and I’m deciding what stack of books will benefit from the enforced concentration.
I still think it’s hilarious that we read it “together” but independently each elected for the opposite chronology. I think you read it straight? (i.e. sans hopping?)
I can’t seen to secure where exactly you go (south and west of Sudbury, I think? above Lake Superior?) but I wonder if you ever go to Parry Sound to Bearly Used Books en route?
Espanola is the closest town on a map to where we are and our place when we got it was on the edge of Killarney Provincial Park, but is now completely surrounded by it. We sometimes stop in Parry Sound, but I’ve never been to Bearly Used Books. Should I go? (I should not…but do I want to?)
We can have a second Hopscotch reading and each reverse our approach…
Sounds like some great summer reading plans.
We’ll see what actually happens. (You’ll notice I’m still ignoring series… apparently. /eyeroll)
Ambitious! Also, your deck looks so inviting, and with lemonade…<3
I just can’t seem to decide what exactly summer reading seems to me: so I’m not sure, is that ambition or confusion?! hehe
As ever, plenty of writers and books I’ve never come across before, which always makes things interesting. Summer is well underway here, so I’m hoping to lean into it with some seasonal reading.
How are you finding your reading of South American Lit so far? Is is living up to expectations? Any big surprises / major discoveries for you?
I am absolutely loving my #ShelfofMexico reading; I find it hard to check my excitement, because it feels like when I joined my first online bookgroup, with soooooo many writers and styles of interest to me all at once! I just finished Mexican author Carlos Fuentes’ Great Latin American Novel (from 2011, in translation from Dalkey), and it provided the context I was craving but took time and concentration (and talk about crashing hard into my TBR lol), so I have just started back into fiction again.
You have such a lovely tree-filled view from your deck!
I recently finished my first Stephen King novel, Pet Sematary, and you know what? I loved it! By the time I was finishing it on the long train ride home from Scotland I couldn’t get the book closer to my face or the pages turning any faster. I sure hope his others are this addictive (and no scarier).
I have had another book by Renkl, Late Migrations, on my bedside stack for quite some time. Occasionally I’ll read a piece or two before sleep.
I think my neighbour actually keeps a small lemon tree in a pot. That would be so useful for cooking and baking, as well as for cocktails! I always seem to run out lemons just when I want one.
That ridge is amazing, isn’t it?! Those spans are common here but, when it comes to personal property, many opt to clear all their trees, and very very few exist to offer shade for sidewalks/pavements.
LOL That’s exactly how it read for me, too. I thought you would love it, but I wasn’t certain, because I was 14 when I first read him (I’m not always sure about younger-reading-me). There are only a few that I don’t think you’d enjoy as much (the openly stylized ones that pepper his oeuvre) but I don’t think you would actually DISlike those either: he is extraordinarily reliable. I can’t wait to hear which you’ll read next!
They’re perfect for that. But the undercurrent of grief has shifted them to earlier-evening reading for me. I’d LOVE to have a lemon tree, but I also LOVE snow. #impossiblechoices
We’re having an extraordinary summer here which I’d love to just sit back and enjoy but it’s started too early, we’ve had no rain for gardens/crops and it’s impossible to ignore what’s brought it about. Happy reading!
We are not having that kind of year, but I do understand exactly what you’re saying. In some seasons, such complicated emotions because you are aware of the bigger picture but, locally, you are reaping a benefit: holding in your mind those contrasting realities.
Firstly you’ve reminded me that my sister in law thrust on me a bag of lemons from her tree and I still forgot to bring them home (my own tree, in a pot on the balcony, yielded two lemons last month. I thought there’s be more but they seem to disappear while I’m away at work). I’m sure I’ve ‘been’ to Detroit more than once, but the only instance I can think of today is Darling living there when she first arrives from Rhodesia (We Need New Names), and I’m afraid the Canada side is a complete blank. Have all the car part factories there been closed down by the stable genius’s tarrifs?
More appropriately for your season, you could have a hot lemon ginger tea (a favourite of mine in winter, but all our citrus comes from Mexico). There’s a ginger that grows in Ontario, a slightly milder variety, but very nice.
You’re correct, the Canadian side is routinely overlooked. Culturally, we pay attention to American culture but that’s wholly satisfying on its own for many Americans; it’s not too surprising that some believe Canada might as well be the 51st state, because they don’t think of writers and artists and musicians here as being distinct from American culture.
There’s a lot about the auto industry in Windsor in the book I’ve been reading…I’ll share soon. There have been some lines suspended temporarily, but AFAIK no shut-downs per se.