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Casa Mexicana

Jonathan Bell, illus. by Edmund Sumner. Thames & Hudson, $65 (304p) ISBN 978-0-500-02797-4

Wallpaper* editor Bell (Carchitecture) offers an opulent survey of homes that showcase Mexico as a “country of contrasts.” His tour of the nation’s “massive range of architectural ambition” is divided into four sections. The first covers creative spaces, including artist studios and residencies like the Casa Wabi arts complex in Oaxaca, which mixes concrete with traditional palapa roofing, and the remote Casa Terreno, a self-sufficient artists’ home that aims to make a statement about “raw nature and the ways in which to artificially control it.” The next section, on experimental structures, features a “puzzle-like” apartment building east of Mexico City, a house inspired by “the feeling of pulling up a bedsheet around oneself for security,” and an eye-catching cube-shaped home. The seaside houses in the “architectural retreats” section include a home built on a land reserve with sea and jungle views and a stunning eco-friendly oceanfront resort. The final section highlights functional family houses, including a super-modern structure and a ranch-style abode. Common attributes run throughout—many of the projects mix wood and concrete, emphasize a dissolved border between indoors and outdoors, and feature brutalist vibes, and the concept sketches and site plans that accompany each home are a nice touch. It adds up to a transportive study in luxury. (June)

Reviewed on 06/13/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Slow Style Home: Take Your Time, Use What You Have, and Translate Your Vision into a Home You Love

Zandra Zuraw. Gibbs Smith, $40 (224p) ISBN 978-1-4236-6762-9

Slow Style Home podcaster Zuraw debuts with a user-friendly guide to ditching the “anonymous chain store behemoth[s]” when it comes to interior decorating. She cautions readers against limiting their taste to strict categories such as “boho” and “farmhouse,” which in her view stymie creativity and make for “flash-in-the-pan” trends. To counter that way of thinking, Zuraw outlines her “slow style” approach, which draws on the 1970s slow food movement and the early 2000s slow fashion movement to counter mass production, help readers accumulate meaningful items over time, and consider the environmental impact of their purchases. She provides guidance on antique shopping (newbies should opt for a small shop rather than a huge fair), touts DIY projects and handmade objects, and takes a particularly impassioned stance on collecting art, noting that it doesn’t have to be pricey to be meaningful. Her decorating tips are whimsical—she suggests choosing a room’s colors by picking a bird’s feathers as inspiration—and readers new to design will benefit from the fun exercises, as when Zuraw lays out a step-by-step guide to creating a vignette with items one already owns. Conscious consumers ready to redecorate should check this out. (June)

Reviewed on 06/13/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Goodbye to Inflammation: Your All-Natural Plan to Reclaim Health, Lose Weight, and Feel Better Than Ever

Sandra Moñino, trans. from the Spanish by Katherine Cummings. HarperOne, $19.99 trade paper (240p) ISBN 978-0-06-344392-1

Inflammation is the root of chronic disease, according to this encouraging debut manual from nutritionist Moñino. She posits that inflammation, a “natural process” in which one’s immune system responds to a perceived attack by sending cells to counter it, can make weight loss more complicated, exacerbate digestive issues, cause “constant fatigue,” and contribute to autoimmune disorders. Explaining that nutrition is crucial in grappling with inflammation, Moñino contends that restrictive diets can make things worse because they can cause emotional stress, which boosts inflammation, and because everyone’s intestinal microbiota is different, so what works for one person might not be successful for another. Instead, she suggests an anti-inflammatory diet that includes fruit, healthy fats, and lots of fiber. She sensibly points out a slew of other factors key to maintaining one’s health, including getting adequate sleep, having an active lifestyle, and getting moderate sun exposure to maintain Vitamin D levels. Moñino also offers a handful of anti-inflammatory recipes, including a carrot pizza crust, homemade nut milk, and chocolate donuts, and provides a QR code to scan for a handy shopping list. Readers worried about inflammation will find plenty of useful information. (July)

Reviewed on 06/13/2025 | Details & Permalink

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When Women Get Sick: An Empowering Approach for Getting the Support You Need

Rebecca Bloom. Broadleaf, $26.99 (222p) ISBN 979-8-88983-231-7

Bloom (Breast Cancer in the Workplace), a former employee benefits attorney, delivers a powerful resource for women dealing with serious illnesses. Aiming to help readers address healthcare and workplace concerns, Bloom offers valuable advice on navigating HIPAA laws, fighting arbitrary insurance denials, combating incorrect bills, and building emotional strength. She encourages readers to draft a team of advocates to help with appointments and other matters; to be cautious when doing research on the internet; and to get familiar with their workplace benefits and be comfortable using them, noting that doing so “is not accepting charity.... You’ve earned them.” Along the way, the author shares her experience helping her mother and sister with their breast cancer diagnoses, and her forthrightness and hopeful spirit permeate every page, as when she writes, “Maybe your case won’t be the case that finally makes the world stand up and notice how broken the system is, but at least you can protect yourself during your healing journey and come back in fighting shape.” Women contending with a difficult diagnosis will find Bloom’s impassioned advocacy and solid mix of logistical and emotional guidance a boon. (July)

Reviewed on 06/13/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Merry & Chic: Your Most Dazzling Christmas Ever

Kathryn O’Shea-Evans. Gibbs Smith, $40 (224p) ISBN 978-1-4236-6848-0

In this amusing and useful guide, journalist O’Shea-Evans (Alpine Style) shows how to amp up the holiday spirit in one’s home. Design tips cover tablescapes, Christmas trees, and children’s rooms, and O’Shea-Evans points out that dark tablecloths work well to hide inevitable party spills. Recipes are “high in calories but not in kitchen agony,” and include focaccia with a rosemary Christmas tree; “Christmas in Puglia Pasta,” made to “make you feel like you’re spending Christmas in southern Italy”; and “confetti chocolate bark” adorned with orange slices and potato chips. O’Shea-Evans has homemade gift ideas, too, such as bath bombs and flavored olive oil. Elsewhere, she includes a dinner party playlist, encourages readers to donate gifts to a family in need, and provides a list of TV shows to watch while wrapping gifts. Though a month-by-month holiday guide, which urges readers to “take inventory” in April, might be overkill for the non “Christmas-aholic,” O’Shea-Evans’s tips are for the most part practical. They’re also full of heart—readers will appreciate her encouragement to embrace imperfections and put stress to the side: “The reality is that showing up for the holidays and making memories... is the best gift of all.” This brings the cheer. (Aug.)

Reviewed on 06/13/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Witchy Stitching: 25 Patterns to Haunt Your Home

Meg Black. Herbert, $22 trade paper (192p) ISBN 978-1-78994-224-8

Black, whose company Witchy Stitcher makes cross-stitch kits, debuts with a delightful collection of patterns inspired by gothic art, Halloween, and witchcraft. Black provides step-by-step instructions for creating basic cross stitches, back stitches, pinhead stitches, and French knots. For materials, she recommends aida cotton fabric (beginners will benefit from its grid-like structure) and DMC embroidery floss thanks to its color variety. Technique instructions cover how to prepare fabric on an embroidery hoop; Black notes that the fabric shouldn’t be pulled too tight or it will distort the weave. Her designs run the spooky gamut: some are playful, including “Bat Coven,” which depicts a trio of bats dressed like witches, and “Happy Easterween,” which features a skeleton flaunting bunny ears and an Easter basket. Scarier options include the “Creepy Carnival,” a wide-eyed cat with a Cheshire grin, and the “blood-red” “Dracula’s Castle.” To finish, Black walks readers through framing and washing completed projects (a soft-bristle toothbrush can be used to remove any stains). The projects are suitable for stitchers of all levels, and frequent “ghost tips,” which provide extra information, are a nice touch (one encourages crafters to take breaks and stretch their hands). Fans of Lindsay Swearingen’s Creepy Cross Stitch should snap this up. (Aug.)

Reviewed on 06/13/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Potluck Desserts: Joyful Recipes to Share with Pride

Justin Burke. Countryman, $29.99 (264) ISBN 978-1-682-68824-3

“Food in queer communities is more than just sustenance; it’s a way to forge relationships, create safe spaces... and collect our narratives,” writes Burke in the introduction to his appealing debut, which gathers 75 personally meaningful dessert recipes in celebration of queer potluck culture. Prefaced by anecdotes about family and friends who played a pivotal role in Burke’s journey toward acceptance and belonging, these recipes have a charmingly retro vibe. Chapters are organized by baking pan types: rectangular and square, sheet, loaf, casserole, and round. While many recipes rely on convenience foods or come from vintage back-of-the-box and magazine clippings, Burke updates each with new twists. The three-layered Shirley’s Cake, for example, comes together using box cake mix, instant pudding, and canned mandarin oranges to honor family friend Shirley with a “kickass cake for a kickass life.” Peanut and grape cheesecake squares “capture the soul of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.” Chocolate cherry soda cake features a maraschino cherry buttercream, while pistachio fluff “salad” offers a creamy mix of pineapple and marshmallows. Poke cakes, dump cakes, and self-saucing puddings abound. These tried-and-true, crowd-pleasing treats are ideal for any gathering. (June)

Reviewed on 06/13/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Sewing with Heavy Duty Fabrics: Practical Projects to Last

Laura Sinikka Wilhelm. Search, $25.95 trade paper (160p) ISBN 978-1-8009-2317-1

Textile designer Wilhelm (Stylish Sewing) offers a solid collection of projects meant to “be used and loved for a lifetime.” Each design uses weighty materials including canvas, sailcloth, waxed canvas, and leather, which hold up to wear and tear and “acquire character in the process.” A section on necessary materials and accessories explains how to choose leather (or faux alternatives), and notes that binding screws are useful for attaching leather straps to fabric. As for tools and equipment, crafters will need denim needles, a craft knife for cutting leather, and a sewing machine (the author recommends buying secondhand rather than getting a “cheap, new” one). Wilhelm’s projects are labeled according to three difficulty levels: hanging herb baskets, a roll-up utensil pouch, and a canvas log basket are perfect for beginners; a stunning waxed cotton backpack and retro bag inspired by bowling bags are for more experienced crafters; and a bike bag and shopper tote fall in between. Project-specific tips are peppered throughout, Wilhelm’s straightforward instructions will help crafters take her guidance off the page, and the photos that accompany each step are a boon. Sewers seeking to expand their skill set should give this a look. (July)

Reviewed on 06/13/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Galette!: Sweet and Savory Recipes as Easy as Pie

Rebecca Firkser. Artisan, $30 (240p) ISBN 978-1-5235-2706-9

Food writer Firkser dials in on the galette—a convenient open-faced pie that is eminently suited to “riffability”—in her focused and innovative debut. She provides a master recipe for dough, complete with step-by-step photographs and meticulous instructions for making it by hand or using a food processor, followed by a few variations, including a chocolate version and one made with buckwheat. A handful of sauces and toppings also open up possibilities for experimentation. Filling options lean classic but with a twist, like plums sprinkled with black pepper and tarragon, and thin lemon slices over a cream cheese mixture. The author also plays with form, as in recipes for individual chocolate-hazelnut hand pies, and a deep-dish peach treat. Savory choices include a slab pie with radishes and red onion and another with an eggplant parm filling. A chapter of galettes made with pantry staples—marinated artichoke hearts, rotisserie chicken—is particularly clever. Firkser is quick with a tip, like how to use leftover dough to make cookies, and her explanations of the method for assembling galettes, which always includes a quick set in the freezer, are clear and colloquial. The result is a promising first outing that is greater than the sum of its 50 recipes. (June)

Reviewed on 06/13/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Wednesday Night Wine-Down: 52 Drinks for Low-Alcohol Midweek Sipping

Jen Newens. Collective Book Studio, $19.95 (152p) ISBN 978-1-68555-929-8

In this breezy if somewhat uneven collection, Newen (Monday Night Mocktails) serves up 52 wine cocktails recommended for low-proof weeknight relaxation. The recipes are rendered in simple prose, paired with attractive photography, and sorted by season: from glogg (spiced port) in winter to mimosa variations in spring, watermelon frosé in summer, and a cider-vermouth cocktail in autumn. Newens’s premise occasionally stretches thin, leading to some unusual drinks that may raise eyebrows among both classic cocktail lovers and oenophiles including a whiskey sour with a cabernet sauvignon float, and a chilled stout and sparkling wine combo garnished with dark chocolate shavings. For the less adventurous, there are myriad appealing spritzes, including a festive sugar-rimmed sparkling cranberry flute, and some familiar favorites, like a lightly elevated tinto de verano made with fresh squeezed citrus and simple syrup instead of lemon-lime soda. The result is a lighthearted and whimsical offering for the wine cocktail curious. (May)

Reviewed on 06/06/2025 | Details & Permalink

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