Book Gang

Amy Allen Clark

Are you looking for your next book recommendation? This book podcast celebrates debuts, backlist, and under-the-radar book selections. Expand your book stack with these recommendations and look at the book industry behind the scenes with Amy Allen Clark (MomAdvice.com). She shares the microphone with her favorite writers and bookstagrammers to help you have your best reading year ever.

  1. Little Movements: A Grown-Up Coming-of-Age in Motion

    5D AGO

    Little Movements: A Grown-Up Coming-of-Age in Motion

    Debut author Lauren Morrow joins us to discuss Little Movements, a sharp, funny, and deeply perceptive literary novel set in the world of professional dance. Lauren Morrow joins Book Gang to discuss her satirical novel, Little Movements, which follows Layla, a Black choreographer navigating a fragile marriage, a long-delayed hope of motherhood, and a career-defining opportunity at a prestigious arts institution. When Layla relocates alone to create a new piece from the ground up, she finds herself confronting not just the physical demands of dance but the subtler pressures of tokenization, institutional expectations, and who gets to define what her work "means." Drawing from Morrow's background in dance and arts publicity, Little Movements offers an insider's view of how cultural organizations frame progress, how money shapes artistic freedom, and how women—especially Black women—are often asked to carry symbolic weight they never volunteered for. In this fascinating conversation, we explore: 📚 From MFA to debut novel: Lauren takes us back to the earliest seed of Little Movements, how her time at the Helen Zell Writers' Program shaped the book, and what her path to publication looked like once the manuscript was complete. We also talk candidly about celebrating the "yes" and what it really entails to debut with a literary novel. 📚 Writing the politics of art: We dig into the behind-the-scenes realities of the dance world as a Black woman, including institutional language, and the quiet pressure placed on artists to make their work "say something," for others. 📚 Capturing movement on a page: Lauren shares how she approached putting dance on the page, given its inherent visual and kinetic qualities. We discuss the techniques she used in her prose to make readers feel the movement on the page, even if they haven't danced themselves. 📚📚  BONUS BOOK LIST: Don't miss this week's companion list with These 21 Books About Ballet Took Me Back to the Barre to reserve now to celebrate the arts! Patrons will receive weekly printable checklists for their next library visit! Meet Lauren Morrow Lauren Morrow studied dance and creative writing at Connecticut College and earned an MFA in fiction from the University of Michigan's Helen Zell Writers' Program. She was a Kimbilio Fellow, an Aspen Words Emerging Writer Fellow, and the recipient of two Hopwood Awards, among other prizes. Her writing has appeared in Ploughshares and The South Carolina Review. She worked in publicity at BAM (Brooklyn Academy of Music) and Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and is now a publicity manager at Dutton, Plume, and Tiny Reparations Books. Originally from St. Louis, she lives in Brooklyn.   Mentioned in this episode:Download Today's Show Transcript Buy Me a Coffee - I'm grateful for your support this year! NEW BOOK LIST: These 21 Books About Ballet Took Me Back to the Barre Join the February Book Club 2/26 at 8 PM ET (People of Means) 2026 MomAdvice Book Club Books (All 12 Selections) Little Movements by Lauren Morrow Junie by Erin Crosby Eckstine Alvin Ailey's Revelations Dance Theater of Harlem Ailey II Naima Coster Heads of the Colored People by Nafissa Thompson-Spires Before You Suffocate Your Own Fool Self by Danielle Evans Luster by Raven Leilani Come and Get It by Kiley Reid James by Percival Everett Erasure by Percival Everett American Fiction The Spectacular by Fiona Davis The Bright Years by Sarah Damoff Sarah Damoff - The Bright Years Podcast Interview The Feath3r Theory Bookshop.org pays a 10% commission on every sale and matches it with 10% to support independent bookstores. Connect With Us:Join the Book Gang Patreon Connect With Lauren Morrow on Instagram or Her Website Connect with Amy on Instagram, TikTok, or MomAdvice Get My Happy List Newsletter Get the Daily Kindle Deals Newsletter

    54 min
  2. February Book Club: People of Means

    FEB 6

    February Book Club: People of Means

    Author Nancy Johnson joins us to discuss People of Means, our February Book Club selection for Black History Month, a powerful, moving dual-timeline novel. Nancy Johnson joins Book Gang to discuss her richly layered second novel, which explores race, class, ambition, and resistance in 1960s Nashville and 1992 Chicago, offering readers a perfectly baked reading experience for Black History Month. In this deeply thoughtful conversation, Nancy reflects on writing a novel that spans decades—from the Jim Crow South and the Fisk University protest movement to the corporate corridors of the early 1990s and the aftermath of the Rodney King verdict. We talk about generational inheritance, the pressures of Black excellence, and the quiet, everyday decisions that shape history just as much as headline-making acts of protest. Nancy also shares what it was like to speak at Fisk University, a moment that mirrors the heart of People of Means, and how beginning her fiction career later in life shaped both her confidence and her creative freedom. From navigating second-novel pressure to crafting two distinct voices for Freda and Tulip, this conversation offers insight into both the craft of writing and the moral questions at the center of the book. In this enlightening conversation, we explore: 📚 Privilege, "Black excellence," and the cost of being exceptional: Through Freda and Tulip, People of Means interrogates the idea of excellence as both inheritance and burden. Nancy unpacks how upward mobility creates opportunity while also setting expectations that can be overwhelming. 📚 Dual timelines as moral mirrors:  Spanning 1960s Nashville and 1992 Chicago, the novel places two women of means at pivotal historical moments—the Fisk University protests during Jim Crow and the Rodney King and Latasha Harlins aftermath. Nancy shares how she differentiated Freda's and Tulip's voices while maintaining an emotional throughline. 📚 Everyday resistance and the responsibility of those with "means": Rather than centering grand acts of activism, People of Means asks what responsibility looks like in daily life—at work, within families, and in moments where silence feels safer than speaking up. 📚📚  BONUS BOOK LIST: Don't miss this week's companion list: 29 Dual-Timeline Novels that use this as the heart of their story structure. I am including my all-time favorites and a few new releases I can't wait to read. Patrons will receive weekly printable checklists for their next library visit! Meet Nancy Johnson A native of Chicago's South Side, Nancy Johnson worked for more than a decade as an Emmy-nominated, award-winning television journalist at CBS and ABC affiliates nationwide. Her second novel, People of Means, published by William Morrow/HarperCollins, was named one of PEOPLE Magazine's Most Anticipated Books of 2025, with praise from NPR, Real Simple, Southern Living, Woman's World, and more. Her debut novel, The Kindest Lie, was a New York Times Editors' Choice and received widespread critical acclaim. A graduate of Northwestern University and UNC–Chapel Hill, Nancy lives in downtown Chicago, where she works as a director of brand journalism and storytelling for a major healthcare nonprofit. Mentioned in this episode:Gratitude to Our Show Patrons: This week's episode is open to all listeners thanks to generous donations made through Buy Me a Coffee and your community memberships. If you'd like to keep the conversation going, you're invited to join our Patreon Book Club chat on February 26 at 8 PM ET, where we'll dive deeper into spoilers, themes, and reader reactions. Membership is $5 a month, or you can prepay for the year and save 10%. Download Today's Transcript NEW BOOK LIST: 29 Dual-Timeline Books to Read Now Join the February Book Club 2/26 at 8 PM ET (People of Means) 2026 MomAdvice Book Club Books (All 12 Selections) People of Means by Nancy Johnson The Kindest Lie by Nancy Johnson Fisk University Speech Diane Nash The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett Bookshop.org pays a 10% commission on every sale and matches it with 10% to support independent bookstores.  Connect With Us:Join the Book Gang Patreon Connect With Nancy Johnson on Instagram or Her Website Connect with Amy on Instagram, TikTok, or MomAdvice Get My Happy List Newsletter Get the Daily Kindle Deals Newsletter

    51 min
  3. Family of Spies and the Secrets That Shaped a Family

    JAN 30

    Family of Spies and the Secrets That Shaped a Family

    Journalist Christine Kuehn joins us to discuss Family of Spies and her gripping emotional reckoning with her family’s shocking personal ties to Nazi espionage. The book begins in 1994, when a single letter from a historian pierces Kuehn’s quiet suburban life, revealing a secret she never suspected. Kuehn discovered that members of her own family were Nazi intelligence agents. What follows is a thirty-year investigation that pulls from FBI files, government and family archives, photographs, correspondence, and interviews. In today's Book Gang conversation, Kuehn reflects on reporting on her own lineage, the ethical and emotional stakes of uncovering a truth that implicates the people who raised her, and how she structured the book across dual timelines to hold both the global history and her personal reckoning. This episode airs the week of National Holocaust Remembrance Day. This moment calls us to remember not only the victims of Nazi violence, but also the systems, enablers, and silences that allowed it to spread. Christine now uses her research to support Jewish organizations, which you will hear about in today's conversation as we unbox the past together. In this emotional conversation, we explore: 📚 A letter that rewrote a life: Christine walks us through the 1994 moment that sent her on a decades-long quest for truth. We talk about disbelief, denial, and what it feels like to realize your family story is not the one you were told. 📚 Investigating your own inheritance: Drawing on her background as a journalist, Christine explains how her research methods evolved as new archives opened and technology advanced, how she assessed unreliable or conflicting memories, and what it was like to work alongside her husband while racing against her father’s dementia. 📚 Espionage hidden in plain sight: We unpack the book’s most chilling revelations. Nazi agents embedded in 1930s Hawaii, social fronts built on glamour and charm, and how everyday excess eventually drew the FBI’s attention. 📚📚  BONUS BOOK LIST: This week’s companion book list features 22 Books About Spies that include both fiction and nonfiction titles to give Christine's book a landing place. Patrons will receive printable checklists for their next visit to the library! Meet Christine Kuehn Christine Kuehn was cocooned in the sanctity of a quiet suburban life when, in 1994, a letter from a historian pierced that bubble, sending her on a thirty-year quest to uncover a horrendous family secret kept hidden for half a century. Following a career in journalism, public relations, and nonprofits, Christine now lives in Maryland with her husband, close to their three grown children. Family of Spies is her debut book.  Mentioned in this episode:Download Today's Show Transcript Buy Me a Coffee - I'm grateful for your support this year! NEW BOOK LIST: 22 Books About Spies to Read Now Join the February Book Club 2/26 at 8 PM ET (People of Means) 2026 MomAdvice Book Club Books (All 12 Selections) People of Means by Nancy Johnson Milo Todd is Reclaiming Trans History (The Lilac People) Family of Spies by Christine Kuhn Best Offer Wins by Marisa Kashino Table for Two by Amor Towles Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon At Dawn We Slept by Gordon W. Prange Shirley Temple in Hawaii Royal Hawaiian The World’s 30 Greatest Women Spies by Kurt D. Singer Bookshop.org pays a 10% commission on every sale and matches it with 10% to support independent bookstores.  Connect With Us:Join the Book Gang Patreon Connect With Christine Kuehn on Instagram Connect with Amy on Instagram, TikTok, or MomAdvice Get My Happy List Newsletter Get the Daily Kindle Deals Newsletter

    59 min
  4. When Pain Becomes Content (Just Watch Me)

    JAN 23

    When Pain Becomes Content (Just Watch Me)

    Author Lior Torenberg unpacks her debut Just Watch Me, a darkly funny livestream novel that exposes the cost of performing pain online, and our hunger to watch. Debut author Lior Torenberg joins us to talk about Just Watch Me, a bold, internet-shaped novel that unfolds over seven days of nonstop livestreaming. Together, we dig into what it means to write fiction rooted in our current digital moment, and why stories about performance feel so urgent right now. We talk about Torenberg’s path from initial concept to publication, the realities of debuting with a formally inventive novel, and the creative risks of building a narrative around livestream chats, audience participation, and escalating dares. She also walks us through the choice to compress the story into a single week, and how that story structure intensifies both tension and intimacy. In this fun conversation, we explore: 📚 Writing inside internet culture: Lior discusses the creative risks of anchoring a debut novel so firmly in 2020s livestream culture, why she wasn’t afraid of the book “dating” itself, and how she captured the chaos of livestream chats—misspellings, slang, trolls, and all—while keeping the story readable and propulsive. 📚 Performance, pain, and the cost of being seen: We unpack the escalating hot pepper challenges, Dell’s physical vulnerability, and the darker questions the book raises about what audiences are willing to watch (and what creators are willing to endure) when financial survival depends on strangers. 📚 Loneliness, debt, and the gig-economy cliff edge: Beneath the dark humor and inventive form, Just Watch Me is a deeply human story about grief, medical debt, and the feast-or-famine reality of online survival. Lior reflects on how she wanted readers to feel about Dell by the end—and what the novel reveals about our collective longing to be noticed. 📚📚  BONUS BOOK LIST: This week’s companion list features 43 Debut Books of 2026, including every upcoming release currently on my radar (plus future podcast guests) so you can start reserving library holds and building your TBR early. Patrons will receive printable checklists for their next visit to the library! Meet Lior TorenbergLior Torenberg’s work has been published by One Story, MAYDAY, the Poetry Society of New York, and others. She received her MFA in Creative Writing from New York University and is a graduate of the Lighthouse Writers Workshop’s Book Project. Just Watch Me is her first novel.   Mentioned in this episode:Download Today's Show Transcript Buy Me a Coffee - I'm grateful for your support this year! NEW BOOK LIST: These Debut Books of 2026 Should Not Be Missed Join the January Book Club 1/29 at 8 PM ET (Eleanore of Avignon) 2026 MomAdvice Book Club Books (All 12 Selections) Eleanore of Avignon by Elizabeth DeLozier Just Watch Me by Lior Torenberg NYC Hot Sauce Expo TTYL Series by Lauren Myracle Margot’s Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe Hot Ones Bookshop.org pays a 10% commission on every sale and matches it with 10% to support independent bookstores. Connect With Us:Join the Book Gang Patreon Connect With Lior Torenberg on Instagram or her Website Connect with Amy on Instagram, TikTok, or MomAdvice Get My Happy List Newsletter Get the Daily Kindle Deals Newsletter

    54 min
  5. January Book Club: Eleanore of Avignon

    JAN 16

    January Book Club: Eleanore of Avignon

    Author Elizabeth DeLozier joins us to discuss Eleanore of Avignon, our January Book Club pick, and her bold debut, shaped by plague, medicine, and female power. In this free conversation, Elizabeth DeLozier takes us behind the scenes of Eleanore of Avignon—a richly researched historical novel set during the Black Death, written during the modern pandemic that reshaped how many of us think about illness, fear, and survival. Elizabeth shares how long it took to bring this ambitious debut from first idea to finished book, what it was like to pitch such a high-stakes story as a first novel, and how her background in medicine deeply informed the way she wrote Eleanore’s work as a healer and midwife. We also talk about writing outside of traditional MFA pathways, balancing historical plausibility with emotionally resonant characters, and what surprised her most while researching 14th-century Avignon. Gratitude to Our Show Patrons: This week's episode is open to all listeners thanks to generous donations made through Buy Me a Coffee and your community memberships. If you’d like to keep the conversation going, you’re invited to join our Patreon Book Club chat on January 29 at 8 PM ET, where we’ll dive deeper into spoilers, themes, and reader reactions. Membership is $5 a month, or you can prepay for the year and save 10%.   In this fascinating conversation, we explore: 📚 Writing a big, ambitious debut: From outlining and pitching to finding an agent and selling the book, Elizabeth walks us through the long road to publication and what she learned along the way. 📚 Medicine, midwifery, and historical research: How Elizabeth’s medical background shaped Eleanore’s role as a healer, the realities of early medical practices, and the most astonishing details she uncovered while researching the period.  📚 Plague stories then and now: The eerie parallels between 1347 and the present day, why readers keep returning to historical plague narratives, and how Eleanore of Avignon sits in conversation with books like Hamnet. 📚 📚 BONUS WEEKLY BOOK LIST: Don't miss this week's companion list with 18 Unforgettable Midwife Books, perfect for readers who want to explore these themes further. Patrons will receive printable checklists for their next visit to the library! Meet Elizabeth DeLozier Elizabeth DeLozier holds a BA in Spanish literature, a BS in biological anthropology, and a doctorate in physical therapy. A practicing pelvic floor physical therapist, avid traveler, animal lover, and history nerd, she lives in Southern California with her husband, twin sons, and rescue dogs. Eleanore of Avignon is her debut novel, and her sophomore novel, The Whitechapel Full Moon Society, will be published in 2026. Mentioned in this episode:Download Today's Show Transcript NEW BOOK LIST: 18 Unforgettable Midwife Books Join the January Book Club 1/29 at 8 PM ET (Eleanore of Avignon) 2026 MomAdvice Book Club Books (All 12 Selections) Eleanore of Avignon by Elizabeth DeLozier abookolive The Great Mortality by John Kelly Station Eleven A Distant Mirror by Barbara Tuchman Hamnet Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell The God of the Woods by Liz Moore Taylor Swift - The End of an Era The White Chapel Full Moon Society by Elizabeth DeLozier Bookshop.org pays a 10% commission on every sale and matches it with 10% to support independent bookstores.  Connect With Us:Join the Book Gang Patreon Connect With Elizabeth DeLozier on Instagram or her Website Connect with Amy on Instagram, TikTok, or MomAdvice Get My Happy List Newsletter Get the Daily Kindle Deals Newsletter

    57 min
  6. How a Journey to the Arctic Shaped This Found-Family Story

    2025-12-19

    How a Journey to the Arctic Shaped This Found-Family Story

    Head to the Arctic with Nathaniel Ian Miller and discover the true story that inspired his debut, The Memoirs of Stockholm Sven, for our final episode of 2025. For our final episode of 2025, we’re bringing forward a beloved conversation from the Book Gang archives with debut novelist Nathaniel Ian Miller, discussing his magical winter read, The Memoirs of Stockholm Sven, and the enduring pull of a great winter story with found-family themes. This episode originally aired for patrons in 2023, and it felt like the perfect moment to share it more widely, along with some gentle reflections from this year, including YOUR best book club book of the year. In this funny conversation, we discuss: 📚 Writing at the edge of the world: How Nathaniel’s participation in the Arctic Circle Expeditionary Program—partly born out of the very real cost barriers of research—became foundational to this charming book’s atmosphere and authenticity.📚 The freedom of a “fictional memoir”: Why Sven’s story demanded a looser, more intimate form, how his character surprised Nathaniel as the novel evolved, and why this mid-thirties coming-of-age story feels as expansive as the frozen landscape itself.📚 How real historical events anchored the characters and scenes in this story: From writing morally complex moments that challenged the author’s own convictions to rethinking the historical role of women in polar narratives, Nathaniel unpacks the layered choices that give Sven’s world its depth.📚 BONUS BOOK LIST: Don't miss this week's celebration of winter reads- 25 Impeccable Winter Books to Savor by the Firelight. Patrons will receive printable checklists for their next visit to the library! Meet Nathaniel Ian MillerNathaniel Ian Miller is the author of the critically acclaimed debut novel The Memoirs of Stockholm Sven, longlisted for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize and translated into five languages. A former journalist for newspapers across New Mexico, Colorado, Wisconsin, and Montana, he now lives with his family on a farm in Vermont. The Memoirs of Stockholm Sven and Red Dog Farm, his second novel, are both available on store shelves now. Mentioned in this episode:Download Today's Show Transcript Buy Me a Coffee - I'm grateful for your support this year! NEW BOOK LIST: 25 Impeccable Winter Books To Savor By the Firelight 2026 MomAdvice Book Club Books (All 12 Selections) Brick For Your Phone Hamnet Movie Trailer How to Read a Book by Monica Wood The Memoirs of Stockholm Sven by Nathaniel Ian Miller  Mosquitoland by David Arnold  NYT Review Sundays with Writers: Mosquitoland by David Arnold London Seance Society by Sarah Penner  Lost Apothecary by Sarah Penner  The Birthday Boys by Dame Beryl Bainbridge Expeditionary program at Arctic Circle Salomon Andree The Secret Life of Albert Entwistle by Matt Cain  A Woman in the Polar Night by Christiane Ritter  Refiners Fire by Mark Helprin  Power of One by Bryce Courtenay  Borstal Boy by Brendan Behan  Office Space Flair Wanny Woldstad Svalbard’s Daughters John Franklin’s Canadian expedition Bookshop.org pays a 10% commission on every sale and matches it with 10% to support independent bookstores.   Connect With Us:Join the Book Gang Patreon Connect With Nathaniel Ian Miller on Instagram or his Website Connect with Amy on Instagram, TikTok, or MomAdvice Get My Happy List Newsletter Get the Daily Kindle Deals Newsletter

    1h 3m
  7. Your 2026 TBR Jumpstart With Backlist Picks

    2025-12-12

    Your 2026 TBR Jumpstart With Backlist Picks

    Get ahead of 2026’s biggest releases this year. We highlight ten must-read backlist books from authors with upcoming titles, so you have your best library day. What could be better than a discussion on 2026’s biggest releases? We wanted to do something fun (and genuinely helpful) to help you plan next year's TBR. Today, Jessica Bearak is back, and she’s bringing her idea to pair readers with books we don’t want slipping through the cracks. We’ve gathered ten brilliant backlist titles from authors with major books arriving next year, so you can reserve your library holds, fill your Kindle, and feel delightfully ahead of the curve before celebrating their next book. Think of it as your literary pre-game for the year ahead. In this fun conversation, we discuss: 📚 A literary pre-game you can actually use: Jessica and I kick things off with the ten major 2026 releases we’ve got our eyes on—so you can start plotting your reading year long before the hype machine starts spinning.📚 Backlist gems to read while you wait: We pair each upcoming title with a backlist book you can grab right now at your library or favorite bookstore, giving you something delicious to dive into while you count down to release day.📚What the buzzy lists missed: We close by chatting about the standout books we think deserved more end-of-year attention—because great reads don’t always make the roundups, and we’re here to fix that.📚 BONUS BOOK LIST: Don't miss this week's new book guide! 47 Fresh 2026 Book Releases to Reserve Now. Patrons will receive printable checklists for their next visit to the library! Meet Jessica BearakJessica is a lifelong book lover who embarked on her literary journey at three, immersing herself in childhood classics like “The Velveteen Rabbit” and “The Phantom Tollbooth.” Jessica actively participates in two in-person book clubs and regularly engages in many online discussions. She has been an invaluable member of the MomAdvice Book Club. Mentioned in this episode:Download Today's Show Transcript Buy Me a Coffee - I'm grateful for your support this year! Join the December Book Club TONIGHT at 8 PM ET (James by Percival Everett) NEW BOOK LIST: 47 Fresh 2026 Book Releases to Reserve Now Once and Again by Rebecca Serle  Expiration Dates by Rebecca Serle  Friends Are For by Wade Rouse  Magic Season by Wade Rouse  A Day in the Life of a Book Publicist (Kathleen Carter Episode) Off the Record by Sara Goodman-Confino  Don’t Forget to Write by Sara Goodman-Confino  Score by Kennedy Ryan  Reel by Kennedy Ryan  The Kennedy Ryan Phenomenon: Inclusive Narratives with Heart (Kennedy Ryan Episode) Orson Welles Voodoo Macbeth Dog Person by Camille Pagán  The Spectacular Life Lessons from Books About Road Trips with Colleen Oakley (Podcast with Colleen Oakley) A Dog’s Purpose by W. Bruce Cameron Stunning Books About Bookstores (Book List) Life and Other Near-Death Experiences by Camille Pagán  Meg Shaffer Interview (The Wishing Game) The Wishing Game by Meg Shaffer  How Braving a Literary Seminar Shaped The Last Story with Meg Shaffer (Interview with Meg Shaffer) The Book Witch by Meg Shaffer  The Lost Story by Meg Shaffer  Cozy Fantasy Books to Lower Your Stress Levels (Book List) Five by Ilona Bannister  All the Colors of the Dark by Chris Whitaker  When I Ran Away by Ilona Bannister  Orphan Train by Christina Baker Kline  The Foursome by Christina Baker Kline  A Piece of the World by Christine Baker Kline  35 Books About Twins That Double the Drama (Book List) Christina’s World painting Liberty Street by Heather Marshall  Looking for Jane by Heather Marshall The Jane Collective  All You Have To Do Is Call by Kerri Maher  Ask for Jane The Janes Eleanor of Avignon by Elizabeth DeLozier  With Love From Harlem by ReShonda Tate  The Queen of Sugar Hill by ReShonda Tate  Good Joy, Bad Joy by Mikki Brammer  The Collected Regrets of Clover by Mikki Brammer  Mad Mabel by Sally Hepworth  The Burning Side by Sarah Damoff  The Bright Years by Sarah Damoff  Sarah Damoff - The Bright Years Podcast Interview The Sideways Life of Denny Voss by Holly Kennedy   Bookshop.org pays a 10% commission on every sale and matches it with 10% to support independent bookstores. Connect With Us:Join the Book Gang Patreon Connect With Jessica on Instagram Connect with Amy on Instagram, TikTok, or MomAdvice Get My Happy List Newsletter Get the Daily Kindle Deals Newsletter

    1h 2m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Are you looking for your next book recommendation? This book podcast celebrates debuts, backlist, and under-the-radar book selections. Expand your book stack with these recommendations and look at the book industry behind the scenes with Amy Allen Clark (MomAdvice.com). She shares the microphone with her favorite writers and bookstagrammers to help you have your best reading year ever.

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