Samia

Wild Card Reads

Samia (bookaroundandfindout)

Welcome to the Wild Card Reads. I'm Samia (@bookaroundandfindout on TikTok & Instagram). I read across every genre so you don't have to — and I'm here to help you discover diverse authors, great books, and your next obsession.

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Sci-Fi Recs

Eternals

Samia

Wild Card Reads

Samia (bookaroundandfindout)

Welcome to the Wild Card Reads. I'm Samia (@bookaroundandfindout on TikTok & Instagram). I read across every genre so you don't have to — and I'm here to help you discover diverse authors, great books, and your next obsession.

Get a Rec

Sci-Fi Recs

Eternals

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Hi friends — and welcome to the very first Wild Card Dispatch. This is my newsletter to share with you my thoughts and book rants and updates to how this Bindery works! First of all, thank you so much for being here, it really means the world to me. 🥹

So I literally just moved to new apartment this weekend after six years. Moving has been chaos in the best way, but the part I'm genuinely obsessed with is plotting out my little reading nook with bookshelf galore and my plants and a cosy sitting spot and ahhh!!!

Because May was AAPI Month, I made a real point of filling my stack with AAPI authors. And because I'm physically incapable of staying in one genre for more than five minutes, the haul ended up being a horror, a satire, two romances, a literary mystery, and a historical fantasy epic — which is the most "me" sentence I've ever typed and exactly what Wild Card Reads is supposed to feel like.

So let's get into it, in literally no particular order at all.

The Winged Game — Sophie Kim ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

You know that feeling when you need a book to just remind you that reading is fun? This was that book for me. It's a fantasy SPORTS romance — yes, both of those things, together, and I had no idea I needed it — with enemies-to-lovers banter so good that Taissa and Kion's internal monologues had me cackling out loud. There's real depth under all the humor too, with backstories and a found family I got genuinely attached to, plus I learned an alarming amount of Scottish slang along the way. I'm a Sophie Kim girl now, no notes, and I will be reading 800 more pages in this world if she'll let me. It really brought joy to my heart.

Out of Her League — Ava Rani ⭐⭐⭐

A cute, sparkly beach-day read, and I'm being honest with you the way I always am: it was a solid time, not a life-changer. What I loved was an FMC who refuses to sacrifice her career for anyone, real rep for women in medicine, a genuinely sweet and understanding MMC, and that supportive-best-friend energy I'm always a sucker for. It lost a little shine for me with some repeated lines and an ex-boyfriend storyline I expected more tension from. But if you want something low-stakes and warm to read with an iced coffee in the sun, this does the job nicely.

Yellowface — R.F. Kuang ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

The moral of the story? White women are crazy. June steals the work of her Asian friend Athena (who's dead) and then somehow convinces herself she's the victim, and watching her gaslight everyone — including herself — was a hilarious ride. It's a razor-sharp look at how publishing decides which books are "bestsellers" and how Asian authors basically have to be brilliant just to get in the door. I listened on audio and cannot recommend it enough; the narrator's sarcasm is hysterical. This is literary satire for sure and I know a lot people didn't like it but I think I came in with such low expectations that I ended up being surprised.

The Girl with a Thousand Faces — Sunyi Dean ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

This one starts as a ghostly detective tale set in 1940s Hong Kong, post-invasion, and slowly unfolds into something so much bigger — a story about war's scars, revenge, and how generational trauma lingers even thirty-plus years later. The layered structure absolutely hooked me, and the blend of real history with the supernatural felt both completely fresh and deeply moving. There were parts of the book told in second person as well and it was weird because I don't think I've read that much second person POV. If you're drawn to ghost stories that actually have a beating heart and historical weight behind them, this might be for you. It's not really scary or horror I would say, so if you were apprehensive let that change your mind and try it out!

Men Like Ours — Bindu Bansinath ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Let me be upfront: this book made me deeply uncomfortable, and I think that was entirely the point. It's set in a South Asian suburban enclave in New Jersey where a man is found dead in his BMW and the women of the neighborhood get pulled into figuring out what happened. The mystery kept me turning pages, but what it's really about is what happens to people when community becomes a pressure cooker of unfulfilled lives. It takes some of the most painful tendencies that can exist in South Asian culture and concentrates them all into one street, and it's stressful precisely because none of it is invented — but it's also not all of us. One of the main characters, Anita, lived in my head rent-free because you wanted to hate her but you also deeply sympathized with the cards she got. It was bleak, dark, strange, but oddly hard to put down.

Burn the Sea — Mona Tewari ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

I genuinely did not expect a book about Portuguese colonizers reimagined as giant half-snake sea monsters to wreck me this much, but here we are. Watching Abbakka go from a reluctant queen shoved onto a throne she never asked for into an actual hero for her whole country was everything — you feel every ounce of her doubt and grief, so by the end she's earned every inch of that strength. What stuck with me most was how the book handles grief: the way sometimes you don't get to stop and fall apart, you just keep moving until you're somewhere safe enough to actually feel it. The South Asian culture on the page was so beautiful I felt genuinely seen, and knowing this is Mona's debut, written because she wanted to see herself in fiction, makes it land even harder. (Tiny proud-aunt moment: this one's a Bindery Books title, and championing debuts like this is exactly why I'm here.)I am THIRSTING for book two.


Suprise: the Wild Card Book Club is officially happening 📚!

Woooo! So, the whole reason I built Wild Card Reads was to have a place where we could actually talk about books beyond a 60-second video where I'm gesturing wildly at a cover. So I'm genuinely thrilled to tell you the Wild Card Book Club is here.

Here's how it works:

  • Everyone — free members too — gets into the Discord, where we hang out, scream about plot twists, and post unhinged reactions in real time. Come say hi!

  • $5 members get the heart of it: our monthly live virtual book club session (real faces, real conversation, actual humans!), potential guest appearances by authors, early reveals of what we're reading next so you can grab the book in time, and a say in what we pick together. You and me, building the TBR of our lives.

  • $12 members get everything above, plus first dibs on the bigger stuff I'm dreaming up for down the road — including, fingers crossed, some in-person meetups one day. 🤞

Our first pick and the full details — how to join the live session, the date, and a guest I'm very excited about — are dropping in a dedicated post later this week. Keep your eyes peeled. 👀


okay, now help me out of my slump

I hope you pick up one of these books or if you have already read one message me in the Discord chat so we can yap!

Now I need you, what should I read next? I've started a few books while I wait for my copy of The Ballad of Fallen Dragons to arrive so I need some recs. What did you read for AAPI Month that I have to get my hands on? Come yell at me in the Discord — and not for nothing, a few of these picks could be on the book club shortlist. 👀

Thank you for being here for dispatch #1. I hope someone read this to the end because I YAPPED.

Talk soon, Samia 🌷

Newsletter: Wild Card Dispatch ✦ AAPI Month Recap + Hello!


6 books

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I dunno if anyone cares but here’s my 2026 BookCon Review. Some thing’s I didn’t mention: - the gro

I dunno if anyone cares but here’s my 2026 BookCon Review. Some thing’s I didn’t mention: - the grove : I wasn’t there long enough so don’t have an opinion it seemed ok nothing fancy or crazy - evening events : I didn’t go to any cuz your girl was tired - indie alley : I happen to meet all the amazing indie authors I love in random places but I didn’t get to spend much time in indie alley like I would have liked This is my personal opinion and impressions! @bookfinityofficial you really made me smile #bookcon #bookstagram #bookcommunity #readingcommunity #unpopularopinion


Do you wanna read more diverse authors ? I got all the recs for you - check out these books in all d
Do you wanna read more diverse authors ? I got all the recs for you - check out these books in all d

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I’m a huge scifi fan and I was like hmmm why don’t I convert people to the new and trendy scifi that
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