Zilla Novikov's Blog, page 18
January 2, 2024
Baozhi dumplings with The City We Became by NK Jemisin
Fiction To Sink Your Teeth Into, a feature from author and professional chef Rohan O’Duill!
As the characters take on their roles as city boroughs and scramble to find each, other they get offered a plate of Mrs. Yu’s Baozhi dumplings. It is hungry work becoming a city after all. These dumplings do require a bit of skill but they will be well worth it as you bite into one and enjoy Jemisin’s beautifully written book.

Snack/meal Ingredients
Dough
• 250g plain flour
• 1 tsp dried yeast
• 1 tsp sugar
• 1 tbsp oil
• Warm water until forms a dough
Filling
• 1 carrot
• ½ courgette
• 1 small onion
• 2 cloves garlic
• 1 thumb of ginger
• Tsp 5 spice
• Tsp honey
• Tbsp soya sauce
Alternatives: you can use all kinds of veg in your filling as well as pork, chicken, beef or prawn.
Equipment
Stand mixer, frying pan, steamer. (I picked up my steamer in the local Asian market for about a 10 euro. You just pop it on top of a pot.
Method
Put all the dry ingredients for the bread dough into the mixing bowl. With the dough hook start to beat, slowly add the water until you get a nice dough consistency.(It should come away from the edges) pour over the oil and stand in a warm place for two hours.
Finely dice your vegetables and gently fry until golden brown, add the spice and fry for another minute.
Add honey and soya sauce and allow to reduce to a sticky sauce, (should only take a couple of minutes.) Once your dough has risen, put it back into the mixer and mix until it is back down to its original size. Cut the dough up into ten portions.
To make the parcels is difficult to describe, so I am going to leave it to the expert. Check out this youtube video to see how it should be done.
Once you have your dumplings, place on a small piece of parchment in the steamer and put over a pot of cold water. Heat the water and turn sown to a steady simmer. Cook for 15 minutes. You will need to rotate through the steamer twice. But don’t worry, these dumplings will last for a few days if you don’t get through them all in one sitting.
Now you are ready to sit down with this truly absorbing book and get stuck in to your delicious baozhi. Enjoy!
December 26, 2023
Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview
Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Sabitha: If you like your science fiction deep, clever, and thematic, but still enjoy a good time while you read, you can’t go wrong with Sarena Ulibarri. Today she’s bringing us Steel Tree , a science fiction retelling of The Nutcracker . Sarena, can you tell us a bit about this wonderful book?
Sarena: In the agricultural bread basket for humanity’s new colony, there wasn’t supposed to be any native animal life, but farmers have been going missing and rumors abound of something lurking in the shadows. At Klara Silber’s winter harvest party, the introduction of a new android nutcracker should have been the big news—but that’s before one of the guests transforms into a giant rat and goes on the attack.
Sabitha : What inspired you to write this book?
Sarena: One of my husband’s favorite Christmas traditions is to watch a production of The Nutcracker ballet. One year, I was particularly struck by the scene in which Drosselmeyer gifts two automatons to the Stahlbaum children. I wondered if anyone had reimagined The Nutcracker in a futuristic setting, with the “toys” being robots. When I couldn’t find anything even close to that, I knew I needed to write it.
Sabitha : I’m glad you did! Now that you’ve written it, if you could meet your characters, what would you say to them?
Sarena: What can an author ever say to their characters except, “I’m sorry I put you through that”?
Sabitha : How much research did you need to do for your book?
Sarena: Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker ballet is based on a novella by Alexandre Dumas, which is itself a reimagining of a story by E.T.A. Hoffmann called “The Nutcracker and Mouse King”. I picked up a book that contained both versions, plus a lengthy intro with historical context, and read the whole thing twice. Like anything written by Hoffmann, it’s weird.
I borrowed as much from the original as from the ballet, and I also researched a lot about the history of the ballet itself. Every name in the book is a reference—for example, the Pirlipat nut is named after Princess Pirlipat, who is cursed by the Mouse Queen to transform into an ugly doll, and Petipa Colony is named after Marius Petipa, the choreographer who first took this strange story and adapted it into a ballet.
Sabitha : Who did you imagine reading your book as you wrote it?
Sarena: I’ve always hoped this could be a book that people would gift to each other for the holidays—and it turned out to be a perfect stocking stuffer size. I wrote it for a general adult audience, but the Publishers Weekly review says, “the prose skews slightly toward younger readers,” which I suppose is true enough. If you’ve seen The Nutcracker a dozen times (whether because of love or obligation) and want to see it with fresh eyes, I hope you’ll enjoy Steel Tree.
Sabitha : Thanks for sharing your story and your process. We’re looking forward to reading! Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?
Sarena: These days I’m mostly on Mastodon or Bluesky, though I also have an Instagram account @sarenaulibarriauthor. You can find Steel Tree on Amazon or direct from Android Press.
December 20, 2023
Rachel A. Rosen’s 3 favorite reads in 2023

If you’re looking for your next great read, how do you find it?
Rachel A. Rosen is the author of Cascade, a fantasy ecofiction about trying to do the right thing at the end of the world. Check out her top reads in 2023 here!
December 19, 2023
Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview
Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Sabitha: We love the wild, the playful and the offbeat, and so we jumped at the chance to interview Jennifer Kilgore-Caradec about her poetry collection, Raw. Jennifer, can you tell us about your work?
Jennifer: My creative work is a collection of poems called Raw, published in August 2023 at Le Lys Bleu Editions in Paris. It weaves together a number of different threads, including a historical vision of the present (with climate anxiety), the value of the arts, teaching before-during-and-after covid, and a quotation from the original Star Trek series.
Sabitha: I love everything you’ve just said about this project. But moving beyond the written word—is there a playlist for your book Raw?
Jennifer: Since it appeared I have discovered the unlikely coincidence of the ZZ Top Album Raw that was released in 2022. There is an eclectic playlist for my poetry, but it does not include hard rock (if my brother Tim is reading, he’s laughing at this point).
The playlist is classical (Bach, Berlioz, Haendel, Debussy, Dutilleux…), includes jazz (Ella Fitzgerald, the Dorseys, Brubeck, Haynes, Shorter…), and rock songs (1960s-1990s). The beat of the book alternates between rhythms of Motown, French popular hits by Reggiani and Montand, and rap by women.
Sabitha : What book do you tell all your friends to read?
Jennifer: I’ve been recommending the poetry of Geoffrey Hill for a couple of decades …
Sabitha : How much research did you need to do for your book?
Jennifer: Interesting question. For a novel, it would be two or three years of research. For poetry there was certainly just as much— if not more —, but it is much harder to quantify since so much of it happened before knew I would write a poem about one subject or another…
Sabitha : Do you have any suggestions to help people in our community become better writers?
Jennifer: Writers write (several hours a day and/or binge-writing through whole weekends or vacations).
Listen to your muse. When inspiration strikes, record it immediately.
Keep essential reference works handy: it is impossible to write without dictionary and thesaurus.
Devote as much time to reading as to writing.
Indulge in pastiche and parody.
Read F. Scott Fitzgerald’s notebooks.
Learn a foreign language (said T.S. Eliot).
Read literature from other countries (in translation as needed).
Cultivate as many areas of knowledge as you can in a broad general sweep (read several good
newspapers from different regions/countries regularly).
Read Literary reviews like the TLS or the NYRB.
Read little-known and well-known poetry magazines and the magnificent websites of the Poetry
Foundation and the American Academy of Poets.
Sabitha : What is your next writing project?
Jennifer: I have finished translating Charles Péguy’s L’Argent (1913) and am looking for a publisher. Péguy sounds like he is speaking to our present time, where the only value seems to be about making a profit.
After that appears, who knows, maybe another collection of poems… ?
Sabitha : Thanks for sharing your story and your process. We’re looking forward to reading! Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?
Jennifer: I teach at the University of Caen in Normandy and can also be found here. Many of my articles are on the internet, or see “Poems Alive” on Substack. Raw can be purchased directly from Lys Bleu.
December 14, 2023
The best collections of little stories that link to tell big stories

If you’re looking for your next great read, how do you find it?
Shepherd’s website lets authors suggest their favourite books on a theme. Dale Stromberg naturally picked “little stories that link to tell big stories” to match Melancholic Parables. Read his suggestions here.
December 12, 2023
Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview
Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Sabitha: We have Vivianne Knebel here, a woman whose lived an extraordinary life and produced a remarkable memoir, From Rubble To Champagne. Vivianne, can you introduce us to your book and your life?
Vivianne: My memoir, From Rubble To Champagne, is a story of survival, struggle, and success starting in the ashes of Nazi Germany. The book was turned into a documentary, An Unimportant Girl.
Sabitha : You describe the importance of your family . How did your mother show her love for you and your sister? How did this love impact you?
Vivianne: My mother was a single mom who kept us alive from falling bombs and Soviet attacks. She worked in the black market to be able to feed us. In her loving arms she made us feel secure, always encouraging us to never let go of a dream that things will get better. A couple wanted to adopt me . Even though it would have made life easier for her to have one less mouth to feed, she would not hear of it. Motherhood was her true calling. She instilled good values in us. This impacted us greatly. To this day my sister and I always looked out for each other. She taught us the importance of love a sense of responsibility and empathy.
Sabitha : You‘ve been an immigrant in more than one country, and even as a child where you were born, you faced struggles to fit in. What does home mean to you and where did you find it?
Vivianne: My values are squarely centered around security, stability, and the value of freedom, which I found in America where so many immigrant dreams are built. This country welcomed me with open arms and it is home to me.
Sabitha : I’m so glad you were welcomed to a happier life. What parallels do you see in your story and other refugees, from Ukraine to Syria and beyond?
Vivianne: Often they arrive in a new country without being in command of the language. Not knowing anyone and no one to fall back on is difficult. Seeing the potential in this country and the hope to build a new life.
Sabitha: Thanks for sharing your story. We’re looking forward to reading! Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?
Vivianne: You can find me on my website, or on Instagram. You can buy my books on Amazon.
December 6, 2023
Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview
Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Sabitha: Today we’ll talk to John Hartley (or maybe to his alter ego, Johny Nocash) about his musical memoir, Capturing the Wry. John, can you introduce us to your book?
John: Howdo. I’m John; Hartley by birth, Johny Nocash by artistic alter ego since ooh, about 1989. I’ve currently a couple of things for sale in the big wide world: an official biography of the UK indie band BOB (entitled From Banwell to Berlin and Beyond) and, more personally, a memoir of my time in an ultimately unsuccessful indie band the Irony Board, entitled Capturing the Wry. I’ll chat more about the latter, if that’s ok?
Sabitha : Sounds good to me! Let’s start with—what inspired you to write this book?
John: Well, part ego and part fear of longer term memory loss I suppose. Despite our ultimate failure to make it big, I had a whale of a time in the band and remain very proud of the songs we recorded. I wanted to document this for my bandmates and for my family. I kept loads of letters, notebooks, cuttings and flyers during the time, and kept a gig diary too with setlists and a description of each gig, so that certainly helped me along the way. Plus, my old English teacher drummed into me, “write what you know.”
Sabitha : Do you have a fan-cast?
John: Ha! That’s a great question. Who would play me and my friends in a movie of that time of our lives? I’d like to think Johnny Depp could play me—he’s a guitarist after all, but he’s also way too controversial now. He’s also far too good looking to play me. Being from the northwest of England we could be played by actors from Coronation Street I suppose. Realistically, we’d be played by young up-and-coming actors hoping to break through to the big time.
Sabitha : What book do you tell all your friends to read?
John: I’ve started to write fiction for the Young Adult market, and am currently close to self-publishing a book called The Broken Bottle. With that in mind, I would point people to The Kingdom By The Sea by Robert Westall, a fantastic tale set in wartime England. I’ve bought The Scheme For Full Employment by Magnus Mills for several people. He’s a fantastic writer.
Sabitha : Do you have any suggestions to help people in our community become better writers?
John: I often get to the stage of wrangling with myself over what I want for my books. I’d love to be able to write for a living—being a school leader in special education is what keeps a roof over my head and food on the table—but I think I would hate the publicity that goes with it. With that in mind my suggestion would be to enjoy writing for the sake of writing, and don’t get hung up on the end result. If you write something for pleasure and ten people love it, it will probably be more gratifying on an artistic level than having to write something you don’t gain pleasure from. Also, chat with other writers, let them read your stuff, read theirs, enjoy the constructive criticism that can be mutually offered.
Sabitha : What’s your next writing project?
John: The Broken Bottle is failing to entice the literary agents, so that’ll be self-published soon. The sequel How Green Are Your Eyes is being read by my mum and my niece before its second draft. I am currently second-drafting a story I wrote for my family entitled Searching for the Sound of Riduna, about a tiny record label on a tiny island in the middle of the English Channel. I’ve written and recorded all their songs too…
Sabitha: Thanks for sharing your story and your process. We’re looking forward to reading! Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?
John: I can be found trading as @JohnyNocash on Twit-X, Instagram and Threads. On Mastodon I am @JohnyNocash@indiepocalypse.social. My books can be found here, or the BOB book can be found here.
November 30, 2023
Boullion and Sandwiches with Roadside Picnic by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky
Fiction To Sink Your Teeth Into, a feature from author and professional chef Rohan O’Duill!
I tried to come up with something that you could have as part of a roadside picnic. Boullion is mentioned in the book and I have created a very quick consommé recipe that hopefully approximates what was intended. To go with it there are some sandwiches which you might have been served in the Borscht Café.

Serves 2
Ingredients for the soup:
1 tbsp of sunflower oil1 onion, finely diced2 carrots, finely diced2 cloves of garlic, crushed1 stock cube3 cups of water1 tsp vinegarSalt and pepperIngredients for the sandwiches:
Sourdough breadMayoCheese, sliced (Harvarti if you can get it, but if not, don’t worry. Any will do.)Kielbasa sausage sliced (or any cold cut meat will do)Cucumber, slicedDirections:
Saute the onion, carrots and garlic in the oil until they are golden in colour.Add the stock cube, the water and vinegar. Bring to the boil and simmer for 10 minutes.Season to your liking.Slice the bread, spread some mayo on the surface then add the cheese, meat and cucumber to top.Serve with some nice tea and lemon, and you. Spread out the picnic blanket, sit back with a good sunhat and enjoy your meal along with this sci-fi classic. If you see any golden spheres, I would suggest staying well clear.
November 28, 2023
Behind the Screens: Tuesday Author Interview
Every Tuesday, get to know a bit about the stories behind the books you love, and discover your next favourite novel.

Sabitha: Nothing better than a queer romance—except a queer romance that’s also a thriller! M. A. Melby’s got the book for us. M. A., can you tell us a bit about Bad Memory?
M.A.: The story is from the point of view of two roommates, Jaimes who is promiscuous and fun and Nik is shy and neurotic. The beginning sets you up for a sweet familiar story about opposites falling in love, you know, a roommate romance with friends to lovers. Even the event that starts the drama, a prank going wrong, seems in line with that type of story, but it spirals down into some pretty dark places…so be warned.
However, it’s not all gloom and doom. Friends come to the rescue. There’s also computer hacking, a sci-fi/fantasy convention, and a spattering of quippy dialog. I even included a couple references that Boy Love fans will get a kick out of.
Sabitha : That sounds like such a fun read. What inspired you to write this book?
M.A.: During the pandemic, I watched a ridiculous number of Thai Y-series (boy love stories). How could I not attempt to write a roommate romance that accidentally became a thriller?
If you watch Thai Y-series, you’ll notice a few of the common scenes, character types, and plot devices, obviously with my own spin. I took the “wound tending” scene a bit far!
Sabitha : If you could meet your characters, what would you say to them?
M.A.: I’m so sorry.
I grew up watching shows where the characters would get horribly injured or abused but would be perfectly fine before the next episode. I was determined to avoid that and make recovery difficult and meaningful, not, at all, magically going back to “normal”.
Sabitha : I’m sorry for the characters—but not for us readers! How much research did you need to do for your book?
M.A.: One of the main characters is a phlebotomist, so I incorporated language and situations I remembered from being in the hospital, but also looked up several medical procedures and terms.
The plot also involves computer hacking. I’ve been around pretty intense computer folks, but my own knowledge is limited. I tried to avoid getting too technical.
Sabitha : Do you have any suggestions to help people in our community become better writers?
M.A.: Write so that you are proud of your work and enjoy it. Your skills will improve as you write and receive feedback, but find yourself, your own style and voice. Don’t try to be anyone else.
Sabitha : So true. So, M.A., what’s your next writing project?
M.A.: I wrote an epic fantasy novel before this one that’s very close to my heart. I wrote it very quickly, practically in a cathartic fugue state. So currently, it’s a little bit of a mess!
I’m working on revising it to make it beautiful, so that it can be meaningful to my readers and not only to me. I’m very excited about it, and I hope it finds an audience.
The working title is The Epic Threesome. I might be cheeky enough to keep the title, we’ll see.
Sabitha: Thanks for sharing your story and your process. We’re looking forward to reading! Where can the Night Beats community find you and your book?
M.A.: You can find Bad Memory at most online bookstores, at Amazon, or read reviews on Goodreads. I’m on Facebook, Mastodon, and BlueSky, and I have a website.
November 24, 2023
Dale Stromberg’s 3 favorite reads in 2023

If you’re looking for your next great read, how do you find it?
Dale Stromberg is the author of Melancholic Parables, a collection of short stories exploring the questions, “Are we the same person we were last year? Or last week? Or last story?”.
His top 3 reads in 2023 includes Night Beats’ own Cascade, plus 2 other amazing books. Check it out here!


