Welcome back to Sylly, a podcast for the curious and critical. We’re your hosts, Mbiye Kasonga and Tembe Denton-Hurst. In episode 14, we’re coming to you with our annual summer reading special. Before we get to the books, we take stock of summer as a season and a feeling: the joy, the pressure, the ennui, and why August is, as Tembe puts it, “the Sunday of the year.” We also get into the song of the summer debate (is it Drake’s? Is it ever anyone’s anymore?), the lineage of Corinne Bailey Rae, Denise Williams, and Minnie Riperton, and why the Congolese national team’s airport fits deserve their own conversation. Then we get to the actual reading matrix: sexy vs. banal, short story vs. epic, and share our picks for the season, which range from a gorgeous Rastafari memoir to a 727-page Argentine horror novel, with stops at Zadie Smith, James Baldwin, and a very surprising debut. We also make a case for summer as the right time to read something devastating, something transportive, and yes, something sexy. We round things out with some relationship advice nobody asked for, and a reminder from Tembe that we owe each other everything. As always, if there’s anything you want us to talk about on the pod during our office hours, email us at: syllythepod@gmail.com. Sylly Summer Reading ListHow to Say Babylon by Safiya SinclairOur Share of Night by Mariana EnriquezOn Beauty by Zadie SmithIf an Egyptian Cannot Speak English by Noor NagaLeave Your Mess at Home by Tolani AkinnolaAnother Country by James BaldwinOther Books We DiscussedThe Sisters by Jonas Hassen KhemiriSong of Solomon by Toni MorrisonSeven Days in June by Tia WilliamsThe Death of Vivek Oji by Akwaeke EmeziHomebodies by Tembe Denton-HurstPool House by Mary H.K. Choi Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.