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photo: Stephen O'Donnell |
Longtime bookseller Gigi Little is the author of the novel Who Killed One the Gun? (Forest Avenue Press, October 7, 2025) and the art director of the picture book A Tree of My Own. She's also a book designer and the editor of City of Weird: 30 Otherworldly Portland Tales. Her writing can be found in journals and anthologies including Portland Noir, Spent, and Dispatches from Anarres. She lives in Portland, Ore., with her husband, fine artist Stephen O'Donnell.
Handsell readers your book in 25 words or less:
One the Gun, a time-looping detective, tries to solve Five the No Longer Alive's murder--and his own--in this campy, surreal noir/sci-fi mashup.
On your nightstand now:
Right now, I'm reading Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer. Oh, it is so smart and beautiful and important. A gentle manifesto. You ask for a favorite quote from a book below, but here's one from her book that particularly struck me--it's so simply and quietly profound and gives a good sense of what readers get in this book: "Why is the world so beautiful? It could so easily be otherwise. Flowers could be ugly to us and still fulfill their own purpose. But they're not."
Favorite book when you were a child:
In the Night Kitchen by Maurice Sendak was a definite favorite. The spare, sweet wordplay. The way he built a whole world out of a kitchen. It's some of Sendak's most lush and vivid art of his career. Full of so many wonderful details to look at. And three bakers who are all Oliver Hardy for some reason. It's ridiculous and joyful and lovely.
Your top five authors:
No fair! I really can't pick. Let's see, as a child it was Maurice Sendak (and another thing to say about him is his poetic wordplay. An example from Outside over There: "Now Ida glad hugged baby tight." No "the" before baby, no comma around "glad."There's a magical differentness to the language that captivates me.). As a tween/teen/young adult, Stephen King (with The Stand being my favorite). As an adult I'll say Tom Spanbauer (I Loved You More--more on him below), Kathleen Lane (The Best Worst Thing--lovely, clever middle grade book), and Margaret Malone (People Like You--dry, wry humor, quirky short stories).
Book you've faked reading:
Hmm, I'm going to say The Red Pony by John Steinbeck. I remember having to read that in maybe fourth grade and hating it (I don't remember why) and giving up on it and faking my way through the quiz questions like "What was Billy Buck's fatal flaw?" And then being horrified in fifth grade to find out we were being assigned it again. Oh, you know what? I just googled the book and after being reminded of what happens to the pony in part one of that book, I know exactly why I didn't want to continue reading it. Jeez! Why would a school inflict that trauma on nine- and 10-year-olds!
Book you're an evangelist for:
I'm going to hijack this question and say that what I'm a real evangelist for is indie press books. There's a huge world of wonder out there in indie presses but still they struggle to get representation and display space in bookstores. My love for the unique and imaginative stuff that comes out of small presses was one of the reasons that when it came time for me to think about marketing my own novel, I went straight for a favorite indie. And here's one of their titles that I am specifically an evangelist for: Robert Hill's The Remnants, which is one of the oddest, cleverest, and loveliest books I know.
Book you've bought for the cover:
One recent-ish one was Noor by Nnedi Okorafor. I loved the colorway, I loved the heat that seems to radiate off of it, the way sci-fi is hinted at in the figure, the type treatment and layout. I loved all of it, and I somehow hadn't read Okorafor before and absolutely loved the book. Well worth buying for the cover.
Book you hid from your parents:
Gosh, I can't think of a book I hid from my parents. Most of the books I read when I was young came from my parents. Music too. I wanted to love everything they loved and so I did. They were both avid readers. My mom tells about a trip we went on where they could only fit a few paperbacks so my dad would read about a third of a book, tear that part off the book, and give it to my mom, and she'd then read that while he continued. They read (and happily destroyed) four or five novels that way on that trip.
Book that changed your life:
The Man Who Fell in Love with the Moon by Tom Spanbauer. The first book of his that I read, which taught me a whole new way of looking at writing. That book was the start of a journey of reading Tom and studying under Tom, that gave me invaluable learning, and community, and self-confidence for the first time.
Favorite line from a book:
Another hard one. I used to have a collection of them but somehow it got lost and that breaks my heart. Here's a favorite passage:
"Our snow was not only shaken from whitewash buckets down the sky, it came shawling out of the ground and swam and drifted out of the arms and hands and bodies of the trees; snow grew overnight on the roofs of the houses like a pure and grandfather moss, minutely ivied the walls and settled on the postman, opening the gate, like a dumb, numb thunderstorm of white, torn Christmas cards." --Dylan Thomas, "A Child's Christmas in Wales"
Five books you'll never part with:
Oh my gosh, I feel like I'll never part with any books. Seriously there are piles of books in front of my bookcases.
Book you most want to read again for the first time:
I was going to say I'd like to read The Red Pony for the first time but as an adult to see if it was a great book that I just was too immature for, but then, yeah, I googled it. I think there are plenty of books, though, that I read too young to fully understand, that would be wonderful to read for the first time with a mature, grown-up brain. But I think I'm going to pick Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., if only so that I could experience, again, the sheer wonder I felt when I first read it. The inventiveness that hid such realness, the playfulness that hid such darkness, the language and voice. It was one of those books I was in awe of, and I'd love to feel that again.