Categories
New Books

Awkward Love Letters, Elvis’s Twin Brother, and More New Books!

It is winter here in Maine, winter with a capital “OMG THERE’S SO MUCH SNOW!” Luckily, I have a house full of books to keep me busy. (Not that I really leave the house when I’m not snowed in, LOL.) I have a few great books to tell you about today, and you can hear about more wonderful books on this week’s episode of the All the Books! Rebecca and I talked about a few awesome books we loved, such as Lincoln in the Bardo, Girls on Fire, and American Street. Also, I’m delighted the new Lissa Evans novel, Their Finest, is finally available in the US today. She’s so wonderful! (Did you read Crooked Heart? It’s AMAZING.)

This week’s newsletter is sponsored by Age of Order by Julian North.

In a world where all people are not created equal, Daniela Machado is offered the rarest commodity: hope. For a girl from Bronx City, the opportunity to attend school in Manhattan is too tempting to turn down. There, among the highborn, Daniela discovers a world of unimaginable splendor. But her opportunity turns into peril as Daniela discovers that those at society’s apex will stop at nothing to keep power for themselves. She may have a chance to change the world, if it doesn’t change her first.

“Both YA and adult readers will be transfixed by this novel” — Kirkus (Starred Review)

SPECIAL $.99 NEW RELEASE OFFER.

shadowbahnShadowbahn by Steve Erickson

I am not even going to pretend the premise isn’t crazy. Twenty years after they fell, the Twin Towers reappear in South Dakota. They are as they were before 9/11…except they seem to be singing and they are also completely devoid of people, save one: Jesse Garon Presley, the twin brother of Elvis (who, in our reality, died at birth). I KNOW, RIGHT?! It’s bonkers. But more than just a bananapants premise, it’s a gorgeous novel of loss and alternate history deeply tied into American culture. I was transfixed.

Backlist bump: Zeroville by Steve Erickson (This has my favorite ending of any novel, ever.)

notes to boysNotes to Boys: And Other Things I Shouldn’t Share in Public by Pamela Ribon

If you need cheering up or just need a reminder why you wouldn’t want to live your teenage years over, this book is for you! Ribon kept all the letters she wrote – and mostly delivered – to boys when she was young, and they are just as awkward and painful as you can imagine. But paired with her hilarious commentary, they make for a charming, thoughtful read. So cringe and laugh your way through her teen melodrama (while secretly being relieved that no one is publishing your teenage diary).

Backlist bump: Let’s Pretend This Never Happened: A Mostly True Memoir by Jenny Lawson

all back fullAll Back Full by Robert Lopez

Out from the fabulous indie Dzanc Books, this is an examination of a marriage over the course of a day, told in three acts. Lopez catches the details of unspoken words between sentences and the ways in which we hurt and help the ones we love, and how we sometimes sit by as our lives collapse.

Backlist bump: Good People by Robert Lopez.

gilded cageGilded Cage by Vic James

If you’re looking for a fun new dystopian series, this should do the trick! In an alternate modern England, people with magic powers are called Equals, and the rest of the country’s citizens must each spend a decade of their lives in their service. Teenage Abi is sent to the home of a family of infamous Equals, but her brother, Luke, must work in a brutal slave camp. Both will scheme to secure their freedom and keep their lives, and dark secrets and hidden powers will decide the fates of everyone involved. It’s great fun!

Backlist bump: Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard

all that's left to tellAll That’s Left to Tell by Daniel Lowe

Marc Laurent is a hostage in Afghanistan. Every night, he is blindfolded and tied up and then visited by Josephine, who asks him questions. At first their conversations are of a hostile nature, but soon Josephine and Marc are discussing more personal matters, such as his daughter back home, and their nightly ritual becomes something of a comfort for them both. All That’s Left to Tell is a powerfully unsettling, gripping novel.

Backlist bump: Say Her Name by Francisco Goldman

YAY, BOOKS! That’s it for me today – time to get back to reading! (I know, like I do anything else, right?) You can find me on Twitter at MissLiberty, on Instagram at FranzenComesAlive, or Litsy under ‘Liberty’!

Be excellent to each other.

Liberty

Categories
Giveaways

Currie Giveaway

We have 10 copies each of The One-Eyed Man and Everything Matters by Ron Currie to give away to 10 Riot readers.

Here’s what The One-Eyed Man is about:

Meet K., a man whose tragic past has left him unable to grasp metaphors, plowing headlong through a life lived literally, until a surprising turn of events lands him a starring role in a new reality TV show. Together with Claire, a grocery store clerk with a sharp tongue and a yearning for celebrity, he travels the country ruffling feathers and gaining fame at the intersection of politics and entertainment—and finding out the hard way that the world will fight viciously to preserve its self-delusions.

Go here to enter the giveaway, or just click the image below. Good luck!

Categories
This Week In Books

Mary Shelley and Virginia Woolf Coming to the Big Screen: This Week in Books

New Films to Portray Mary Shelley and Virginia Woolf

We like to think we stay pretty on-top of book-related film news around the Riot, but this week brought notice of to new-to-us films about landmark female writers. A biopic of Mary Shelley, focusing on her relationship with Percy Bysshe Shelley, has (apparently!) been in the works for a few years now. Bop on over to Tor.com for a first look at Elle Fanning as the Frankstein scribe. Meanwhile, from the Department of We Couldn’t Be More Excited, Eva Green and Gemma Arterton will play Vita Sackville-West and Virginia Woolf in a film about the historic pair’s longterm romantic relationship.

Anonymous Book Fairy Distributes Free Books to Support the Resistance

A customer of San Francisco’s beloved Booksmith purchased 50 copies of George Orwell’s 1984 last week and left them at the store, where they were displayed with a sign exhorting customers to “Read up! Fight back!” Booksmith owner Christin Evans reports that the copies were quickly snapped up, prompting the unnamed benefactor to a repeat performance with Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and Erik Larson’s In the Garden of Beasts. Other customers have since been inspired to follow suit. This is rad in its own right, but could it be the start of a larger movement to use reading to encourage resistance?

New Salman Rushdie Novel to Take on Trump

Speaking of books as resistance, news broke this week that Salman Rushdie’s thirteenth novel, The Golden House, due out this September, will take on the last eight years in American politics and feature “the insurgence of a ruthlessly ambitious, narcissistic, media-savvy villain sporting makeup and coloured hair.” Rushdie is certainly no stranger to the intersection of literature and politics. His history makes him uniquely positioned to resist threats of retribution, and his record of success and critical acclaim will make him a tough target for the predictable backlash tweets asserting he’s a washed up has-been. Sad! This will be a good one to watch.


Thanks to The Cruelty by Scott Bergstrom for sponsoring This Week in Books.

Taken meets The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and The Bourne Identity in this action-packed debut thriller (optioned for film by Jerry Bruckheimer) about a girl who must train as an assassin to deal with the gangsters who have kidnapped her father.

 

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Riot Rundown

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Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by A Tragic Kind Of Wonderful by Eric Lindstrom.

For Mel Hannigan, bipolar disorder makes life unpredictable. Her latest struggle is balancing her growing feelings in a new relationship with her instinct to conceal her diagnosis by keeping everyone at arm’s length. But when a former friend confronts Mel with the truth about the way their relationship ended, deeply buried secrets threaten to upend her shaky equilibrium.

As the walls of Mel’s compartmentalized world crumble, she fears that no one will accept her if they discover what she’s been hiding. But would her friends really abandon her if they learned the truth? More importantly, can Mel risk everything to find out?

Categories
The Goods 2

Book Mail 3 Reveal

It’s no secret that book mail is the best mail, and (obvi) books about books are the best, too. Our latest Book Mail box gives you a double dose of that bookalicious magic.

In this box, you’ll get two amazing books about the transporting power of reading, special exclusive content from one of the authors, a personal library kit, custom pencils (exclusive to Book Mail), and two rad pairs of literary socks. Snag one now!

Categories
Giveaways

Sci-Fi and Fantasy Giveaway

Another week, another Mailbag giveaway! This week we’re giving away a haul of ten sci-fi and fantasy novels (a combo of book mail and some BR faves) to promote our SFF newsletter, Swords and Spaceships! Written by our resident SFF expert Jenn Northington, Swords and Spaceships brings news and book recs (old and new) from the world of SFF to your inbox.

And in case you missed them, we have giveaways running for a Nook Glowlight Plus and Scratch: Writers, Money, and the Art of Making a Living.

To enter the sci-fi & fantasy giveaway, go here, or just click the image below:

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Riot Rundown

020917-TheClairvoyants-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Henry Holt and Co., publisher of The Clairvoyants by Karen Brown.

The Clairvoyants is a modern gothic ghost tale filled with psychological thrills that follows the life of an unusual young woman. Ever since she was a child, Martha May could see ghost around her family home on the sea. Now a young woman, she desperately hopes to escape her past by fleeing inland to a small college town. Martha is swept up in a new life—young love, distance from a dysfunctional family, and unobservant of news of a disappeared woman. Until the missing woman appears outside of Martha’s apartment, in a down coat, her hair coated with ice.

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The Stack

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Today’s The Stack is sponsored by It’s All Absolutely Fine by Ruby Elliot.

It’s All Absolutely Fine is for anyone who struggles with not feeling absolutely fine. Tackling the not-so-simple subjects of depression, anxiety, and body image, Ruby’s unique, humorous, and brutally honest voice and eccentric illustrations will remind readers that they’re not alone—and that it’s okay to struggle and to talk about struggling.

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks!: February 9, 2017

This week’s Audiobooks! Newsletter is sponsored by Playster.

Playster is the world’s first all-in-one entertainment service. It takes care of everything — ebooks, audiobooks, music, movies, TV shows and games — and gives you unlimited access to millions of titles for one flat monthly fee. That’s right! Playster lets you enjoy unlimited audiobooks and ebooks — no restrictions, no credit systems.

The service is accessible through all web browsers, and Playster’s Android and iOS apps, on virtually any device. What’s more, the offline mode lets you save all of your favorites for on-the-go reading when there’s no Internet access around. Sign up today to get your free 30 day trial!


Hi fellow listeners, the Audie Award finalists were announced late Wednesday to honor the best audiobooks of the year, and I have some first impressions to share with you!

I’m amped that The Underground Railroad and Another Brooklyn have each received TWO nominations, both for Literary Fiction/Classics and Best Female Narrator. And I’m excited to see several more of Book Riot’s favorite listens, too, like You Can’t Touch My Hair, Around the Way Girl, Shrill, Sleeping Giants, IQ, and Homegoing.

Filed under “surprise,” Born a Crime and Behold the Dreamers didn’t get any nods. Born a Crime likely came out too late in the year, but Prentice Onayemi’s performance on Behold the Dreamers is a Book Riot favorite. I also did a double take at the category for Shrill… the humorous feminist essay collection is a finalist for Business/Personal Development??

On the inclusivity front, the Audies did really well in some categories but is still very uneven in others. We like the inclusivity we see in Literary Fiction/Classics and Humor, but too many categories are still 100% white and male (or 100% white and female). See the full list of finalists here.

Finally, You Can Listen To The Full Little House on the Prairie Series

Fans of Laura, Pa, Ma, Mary, Carrie, and Jack: all nine books of the Little House series by Laura Ingalls Wilder are now available on Audible, read by the fantastic Cherry Jones! We’ll always have a soft spot for these books told from Laura’s point of view about her pioneer family’s life in a little log cabin on the edge of the Big Woods in the late 1800s. I might not fall asleep to the sound of Pa’s fiddle at night, but I wouldn’t mind drifting off to Cherry Jones reading these familiar stories <3

John Cleese’s New Audiobook: “I Think It’s the Best Thing I’ve Ever Done”

Calling all Monty Python and Fawlty Towers fans! When he finished writing his memoir So, Anyway…, John Cleese felt creatively drained, and that wasn’t the mental place he wanted to be in while recording the audiobook. So he gave himself permission to wait until he was recharged and ready to do it properly. The payoff? “I think it’s the best thing I’ve ever done,” he told Book Riot’s Swapna Krishna.

Read on for John Cleese’s thoughts on comedy, self care for creatives, and why So, Anyway… is even better on audio! (Hint: he miiight have rewritten it a little bit as he went along.)

These Audiobooks are Up for Grammys

The Grammy Awards are this Sunday, and books by Amy Schumer, Carol Burnett, Patti Smith, Elvis Costello, and John Doe are all up for Best Spoken Word Album. You can listen to excerpts from all five titles at EW (if you’re not blinded by all that whiteness).

Smalls out! Thanks for nerding out about audiobooks with me. If you want to stay in touch and swap audiobook recommendations before the next Audiobooks! Newsletter, you can find me on Twitter at Rach_Smalls or on Instagram at Ladybits Knits.

High five,
Rachel

Categories
Giveaways

Win a CHRONICLES OF NARNIA Prize Pack!

This giveaway is sponsored by HarperAudio, publisher of The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis.

Take The Voyage of the Dawn Treader audio tour! Journey through an interactive map of audio excerpts from Lucy, Edmund, Eustace and Caspian’s trip to the eastern end of the world in C. S. Lewis’ The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, then enter for a chance to win the ultimate Chronicles of Narnia prize pack! PLUS, take advantage of a limited time offer to buy the digital audio edition of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader for $4.99 (70% off retail)!

This Prize Pack includes:

  • Audiobook CD and hardcover editions of The Complete Chronicles of Narnia Box Set
  • Skullcandy Headphones
  • Travel Journal

Visit the site for details and official rules.

Go here to enter the giveaway, or just click on the cover image below: