Categories
Giveaways

Win a Copy of ETERNAL LIFE by Dara Horn!

 

We have 10 copies of Eternal Life by Dara Horn to give away to 10 Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

Rachel has a problem: she can’t die. Her recent troubles are only the latest in a litany spanning dozens of countries, scores of marriages, and hundreds of children. In the 2,000 years since she made a bargain to save the life of her first son back in Jerusalem, she’s tried everything to free herself. As the twenty-first century begins and her children and grandchildren develop technologies that could change her fate, Rachel knows she must find a way out. Eternal Life celebrates the bonds between generations, the power of faith, the purpose of death, and the reasons for being alive.

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click on the cover image below. Good luck!

Categories
TestRiotRundown

012518-WalkingTheDead-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Walking The Bones by Randall Silvis.

The bones of seven young girls, picked clean and carefully preserved… that’s all Sergeant Ryan DeMarco knows about the unsolved crime he has unwittingly been roped into investigating during what is supposed to be a healing road trip with his new love, Jayme.

DeMarco is still reeling from the case that led to death of his best friend months ago and wants nothing more than to lay low. Unfortunately, the small southern town of Jayme’s idyllic youth is not exactly a place that lets strangers go unnoticed—especially strangers who have a history of solving violent crimes. And if there’s anything DeMarco knows, it’s that a killer always leaves clues behind just waiting for the right person to come along and put all the pieces together.

Categories
The Stack

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Enter to win your very own library cart (in your favorite color!) Click here, or on the image below to enter:


Categories
Today In Books

FIRE AND FURY Sales Reach 1.7 Million Copies: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Penguin Teen, publishers of Reign of the Fallen by Sarah Glenn Marsh.


Fire and Fury Book Sales Reach 1.7 Million Copies

Henry Holt announced that it has sold 1.7 million copies of Michael Wolff’s Fire and Fury across all formats. After excerpts from the book about Trump’s first year in office were leaked, and Trump’s personal attorneys sent cease and desist letters to the publisher and author, the book reached No. 1 on Amazon’s bestsellers list. Bookstores sold out, and Amazon reported shipping delays, but the publisher announced that there are now 1.5 million hardcover books in print.

The Big Sick Co-Writer Will Adapt The Nest For Amazon

Oscar-nominated screenwriter Emily V. Gordon will adapt Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney’s best-selling novel The Nest for Amazon. Gordon received her nomination for best original screenplay for the summer indie The Big Sick. The team adapting the novel for film also includes Transparent’s Jill Soloway who will produce. The Nest follows four middle-aged siblings as they grapple with new realities in light of a depleted inheritance.

Elif Shafak Joins Goldsmiths Prize Judging Panel

Elif Shafak joins Deborah Levy, Nicholas Lezard, and Adam Mars-Jones on the judging panel for the 2017 Goldsmiths Prize for fiction. Shafak is the award-winning author of Three Daughters of Eve, and is the most widely read female writer in Turkey. The Goldsmiths awards a £10,000 prize to the fiction novel that “breaks the mould or extends the possibilities of the novel form”; it’s only open to novels written by authors from the UK and the Republic of Ireland.

 

Don’t forget–you could win your very own library cart! Enter here.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships UKLG

Hello, fellow travelers. Today we’re going to talk about the life and works of Ursula K. Le Guin, one of the grandest dames of SF/F, who died on January 22, 2018.


This newsletter is sponsored by The Night Market by Jonathan Moore.

A mind-bending, masterfully plotted novel that will captivate fans of Blake Crouch, China Miéville, and Lauren Beukes, The Night Market follows Inspector Ross Carver as he works to untangle a web of conspiracy that spans the entire nation. This near-future thriller from an author who consistently gives us “suspense that never stops,” (James Patterson) will make your most paranoid fantasies seem like child’s play.


I first encountered Le Guin’s works by picking up a copy of The Dispossessed in my local bookstore at the age of 13, purely for the cover. Then a school friend asked me if I’d read the Earthsea books — the answer was no. I’ve been building my collection ever since.

large and varied stack of UKLG books

My grief at her passing is not about her life — she lived a long, productive, and prolific one. It’s entirely for me. It’s about knowing that now, I will never meet her. Now, I’ll never get one of my many books signed. Now, there will never be another installment of words from a woman whose writing changed the way my brain works.

Some of you share my grief; others may only have heard of her. For all of you, here are a few links about her and her life:

– In 1987, Le Guin beautifully turned down blurbing an all-male anthology.

– John Scalzi wrote about encountering her work for the first time as a teenager.

– The NYT obit charts the arc of her career.

– Le Guin gave a prescient speech about art and profit at the National Book Awards in 2014.

– And this commencement address she gave at a women’s college in 1983 is about rejecting the language of masculinity (and made me cry).

The reason her works were so influential for me, so pivotal to my development as a person and a reader, is that many of them were my first exposure to concepts that now, as an adult and a citizen of the 21st century, we may take for granted. And she wasn’t subtle about it; I’ve heard from readers who came to Le Guin in recent years that they were annoyed by some of her more didactic prose (The Dispossessed is full of it). While it’s basically impossible to find any true “comps” for Le Guin, whose style was so uniquely her own, I offer you a few favorites alongside current writers who have played with those same concepts. May you read them with an open mind and in good health!

A story can explode your brain: The Lathe of Heaven
This is the one I’ve reread the most. In an alternate version of Portland, Oregon, a man named George Orr is convinced he can change the world with his dreams. Featuring a domineering psychiatrist, a love story, and turtle aliens (no really), this book took my brain places it could never have imagined, but that I’ve been revisiting ever since.
Current comp: Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee (I’m still picking up the pieces of my brain that this book exploded)

Gender is fluid: The Left Hand of Darkness
On the planet known as Winter, gender is intermittent and changeable. The humanoid inhabitants take on gender only when mating, in response to their partners’ and their own desires, and not necessarily the same gender every time. For interplanetary ambassador Genly Ai, this is puzzling enough; then he gets sucked into a political struggle involving warring nations.
Current comps: Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie (you try explaining gender markers to a sentient spaceship, see if you do any better)
The Mirror Empire by Kameron Hurley (high fantasy plus LOTS of varying gender structures plus LOTS OF BLOOD AND GUTS)

Our present social/political structure isn’t inevitable or unmutable: The Dispossessed
Shevek is a physicist living on an anarchist planet. When he discovers that his world is not as free as it seems, he begins a journey to the neighboring, consumerist/capitalist planet of Urras to try to find a balance.
Current comp: Infomocracy by Malka Older (could micro-democracy work?)
Gnomon by Nick Harkaway (a nesting-doll of a book that also meditates deeply on direct democracy and surveillance)

The nuclear family is not the only family: “Mountain Ways” (read it at Clarkesworld, also collected in The Birthday of the World and Other Stories)
On the planet O, marriages involve 4 people, two of whom you’re expected to have sex with and one of whom you’re not allowed. When Shahes and Enno fall in love, they must try to find a way to honor their traditions while honoring their hearts.
Current comp: The Long Way To a Small Angry Planet by Becky Chambers (because found families can include people who are humans, aliens, AI, you name it)

A fantasy world can grow and change with you: The Earthsea Cycle
A Wizard of Earthsea is a deeply male book — men have real magic, women are witches, men who want magic can’t sleep with women, also there’s a coming-of-age story. But with each successive book in the cycle, which now contains five novels and a short story collection, Le Guin unpacked more and more of this sexist trope, and expanded her world to offer new vistas and new opportunities.
Current comp: The World of Riverside, by Ellen Kushner and now many others (Swordspoint has a lot of very satisfying, vaguely European men who love each other and also occasionally stab each other with swords; each new addition brings more diversity and representation to the story, which is still growing)

Short stories can be just as satisfying as a novel: The Wind’s Twelve Quarters
This collection contains short stories playing in her Hainish worlds, Earthsea, and lots of others that only exist for the space of the story. I cannot tell you how many times I read my copy; enough that it fell apart beyond repair.
Current comp: The Djinn Falls In Love and Other Stories, edited by Mahvesh Murad and Jared Shurin (which maybe one day I will stop talking about, but that day is not today)

And that’s a wrap. You can (and should!) enter our very exciting library cart giveaway right here. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. If you’re interested in more science fiction and fantasy talk, you can catch me and my co-host Sharifah on the SFF Yeah! podcast. For many many more book recommendations you can find me on the Get Booked podcast with the inimitable Amanda.

Your fellow booknerd,
Jenn

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks for Drunks

Hey there audiobook fans,

I missed you last week, but I know Amanda took good care of you in my absence.

So, what are y’all listening to? I’m listening to Bonfire by Krysten Ritter (you may also know her as the actress who kicked major ass as Jessica Jones, among other roles). I’m just going to come out and admit what a jerk I am: because I knew Ritter as an actress and not a writer, I didn’t expect this to be a super well-written book. Writing is a craft, I figured, and if you’ve been focusing on a different craft (acting/producing, etc.) you might not have time to practice the craft of writing. That’s my own ignorance, obviously, because I have no idea what Ritter spends her days doing. But she’s an impressive writer.

Abby Williams was eager to leave her small town in Indiana to become an environmental lawyer in Chicago. But when evidence emerges of contaminated water in the town where she grew-up, Abby has to revisit her hometown, and all the secrets she was so eager to leave behind. I enjoy a good thriller and read them enough to be familiar with the formula and tropes of the woman-uncovering-mystery/corruption genre and Bonfire falls into a few of those traps. But there were also many times I thought the plot was headed for one of those tropes and it careened in another direction. Ritter’s prose is vivid and engaging, though, and it’s an entertaining listen. I would have assumed that Ritter narrates it but she doesn’t. Karissa Vacker narrates and gives a strong performance, which is how I managed to get through a whole bunch of chores on Saturday.

Giveaway Timez! My librarian heart is particularly happy with this giveaway–-a library cart! You can even pick whatever color you want! Enter here. And keep an eye out for our new librarian newsletter, Check Your Shelf.

So, today, January 24th marks 10 years since I quit drinking (to be honest, this anniversary makes me feel more old than proud, but whaddaya gonna do?). Books, audio or otherwise, were hugely important during those first years in recovery and, seeing as the addiction epidemic continues to spiral wildly out of control, odds are you know someone who has struggled with an addiction. Even if you don’t, a better understanding of addiction is something we would all collectively benefit from. So here are a few audiobooks that got me through the confusing days of early sobriety (publisher description in quotes).

Beautiful Boy: A Father’s Journey Through His Son’s Addiction by David Sheff

What most resonated with me early in sobriety were memoirs about people who had struggled with addiction themselves, but let us not forget the impact that addiction has on the family and loved ones of the person struggling. This is the central issue in David Sheff’s book about his son, Nic. “Before meth, Sheff’s son, Nic, was a varsity athlete, honor student, and award-winning journalist. After meth, he was a trembling wraith who stole money from his eight-year-old brother and lived on the streets. With haunting candor, Sheff traces the first warning signs, the attempts at rehabilitation, and, at last, the way past addiction. He shows us that, whatever an addict’s fate, the rest of the family must care for one another, too, lest they become addicted to addiction.”

You can also hear Sheff’s son’s perspective in his memoir: Tweak: Growing Up on Methamphetamines and We All Fall Down (for what it’s worth, I’ve read both, and prefer We All Fall Down.

Drinking: A Love Story by Caroline Knapp

This is arguably the most important book I’ve ever read. Years before I got sober, Caroline Knapp pulled me into this book with her gorgeous prose. I read this book for the first time before I got sober (and listened to the audio after). Before I even realized I had a problem with drinking, I saw myself if Knapp’s writing. This is one book that I treasure in all formats. A must read for…anyone.

High Price by Dr. Carl Hart

Before he was a neuroscientist and Columbia University’s first tenured African-American professor in the sciences, Dr. Carl Hart himself struggled with drug addiction. In this memoir, Hart “recalls his journey of self-discovery and weaves his past and present. Hart goes beyond the hype of the anti-drug movement as he examines the relationship among drugs, pleasure, choice, and motivation, both in the brain and in society. His findings shed new light on common ideas about race, poverty, and drugs, and explain why current policies are failing.”

Hole in my Life by Jack Gantos

This isn’t about addiction per say, but…well, it’s just a great book. “When he was a senior in high school, writer Jack Gantos agreed to help sail a sixty-foot yacht loaded with a ton of hashish from the Virgin Islands to New York City, where he and his partners sold the drug until federal agents caught up with them. In Hole in My Life, Gantos describes how– once he was locked up in a small, yellow-walled cell – moved from wanting to be a writer to writing, and how dedicating himself more fully to the thing he most wanted to do helped him endure and ultimately overcome the worst experience of his life.”

Lit by Mary Karr

Memoirs about getting sober need at least a dash of humor to be tolerable. Fortunately, Mary Karr is freaking hilarious and her sobriety memoir has witty, dry (pun intended, thank you very much) humor on every page. We were introduced to Mary’s “charismatic but troubled” mother in Cherry. Discussions about motherhood, alcoholism, and life’s chaos make this a memorable (and surprisingly fun, given the content) listen.

And finally, here are some audiobook(ish)-related links that may be of interest.

Listen to Nick Offerman read a Denis Johnson short story via Literary Hub

Not entirely audiobooky, but interesting bookish news: HBO has released a teaser trailer for Fahrenheit 451, and Catch-22 is coming to Hulu.

Finally, we’ve talked before about how to become an audiobook narrator, but if you’re looking for another narrator’s advice, here ya go:

https://www.backstage.com/advice-for-actors/backstage-experts/voiceover-audiobooks-advice-auditions/

 

As always, you can find me on twitter at msmacb or shoot me an email at katie@riotnewmedia.com.

 

Until next week,

~Katie

 

 

Categories
What's Up in YA

Plan Your Next Vacay With These YA Literature Festivals Around The US In Early 2018

Hey YA Readers!

This week, it’s all about the plans you’ll want to be making for your bookish travel in the first part of ’18.

“What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by This Is Not A Love Letter by Kim Purcell from Disney Publishing Worldwide.

This contemporary YA tearjerker about an interracial relationship paints a poignant portrait of first love and loss and opens up important conversations about prejudice and mental health.


You’re here because you love YA books. And chances are if you love YA books, you’d love a good YA book festival (even the introverts among us don’t mind a bookish event where we can be around so many others like us!). To get the wheels spinning, I thought it’d be worthwhile to round-up the YA/Teen literature focused conferences and festivals happening around the US in the first part of 2018.

This list is far from comprehensive. There are events that are missing, particularly smaller events that happen at public libraries. Since not all conferences have announced dates, locations, or speakers yet for this year, some of the information you’ll find below is bare bones.

But the beauty of this is it’s a resource for you to keep returning to and planning around. Because even if you can’t actually attend one of these events, who doesn’t enjoy dreaming up a fantasy bookish trip?

I’ve stuck with specific to teen/YA lit events, except in cases which events were focused entirely on children’s literature more broadly and showed a wealth of YA events with it. If you know of other events fitting these parameters happening before June, drop a line and let me know so I can include it on my master list (for sharing in the future!). Know of great international YA lit-focused fests? Drop me a line about those, too!

We’ll revisit this list in May some time, with information about fall festivals you can plan your trips — real or imagined — around.

 

The African American Children’s Book Fair: February 3, Philadelphia, PA

 

Teen Book Fest By The Bay: February 17, Corpus Christie, TX

 

National Latino Children’s Literature Conference: February 22-24, San Antonio, TX

 

Ontario Teen Book Fest: March 3, Ontario, California

 

Southeastern Young Adult Book Festival: March 8-10, Murfreesboro, TN

 

NoVA Teen Book Festival: March 10, Arlington, VA

 

Children’s Literature Festival: March 18-20, Warrensburg, MO (at the University of Central Missouri)

 

New York City Teen Author Festival: March 18-25, New York City, NY (Site will be updated reflecting this year’s information soon)

 

Teen Book Con: March 24, League City, TX

 

Chicago Young Adult Book Festival: April 14, Chicago, IL

 

Colorado Teen Literature Conference: April 14, Denver, CO

 

North Texas Teen Book Festival: April 20-21, Irving, TX

 

Southern Kentucky Book Fest: April 21, Bowling Green, KY (They hold a teen and children’s day)

 

YA Fest PA: April 21, Easton, PA

 

Hudson Children’s Book Festival: May 5, Hudson, NY

 

Yall West: May 5, Santa Monica, CA

 

Lit Up Teen Book Festival: May 12, Kansas City, MO

 

Twin Cities Teen Lit Con: Date Yet Unannounced, but usually occurs mid-May, Twin Cities area, MN

 

Romantic Times Teen Day: Unannounced, but happens during the RT Convention in mid-May, this year in Reno, NV.

 

Greater Rochester Teen Book Festival: May 19, Rochester, NY

 

Queens Book Festival Youth Day: June 9, Queens, NY

____________________

Love what you read here and work in/want to work in/love libraries? You’ll want to sign up for the new Check Your Shelf newsletter for librarians. It’s a biweekly roundup of everything librarians would want to know about how to best serve their readers. I’m co-writing the newsletter with Katie McLain, and if you sign up before February 5, you can be entered to win a (wait for it~) library cart in the color of your choice. Do the thing!

____________________

Sweet Cheap Reads…

Begin a new science fiction series with Illuminae by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff for $2.

Pick up the book you keep meaning to read for $2, Meg Cabot’s The Princess Diaries.

Or go deep into mermaidlandia with The Mermaid’s Sister by Carrie Anne Noble.

 

Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you again next week. Until then, grab a good book or ten to keep you company.

— Kelly Jensen, currently reading Americanized: Rebel Without a Green Card by Sara Saedi

 

Categories
The Goods

ISBN Thinking of You – Last Day

It’s now or never, book friends! Order your ISBN Thinking of You tee today, or forever hold your peace. With 5 styles to choose from, you’re sure to find your perfect match.

Categories
Giveaways

Win Your Very Own Library Cart!

 

Whether you actually need one for your work in a library, or just want to add a fancy and nerdy dash of extra bookishness to your home, the truth remains: you need a library cart. And we want to give you one.

We’re giving away one library cart to one winner—and you get to pick the color!

Go here to enter for your chance to win, or just click on the image below. Good luck!

Categories
Kissing Books

Cover Reveals and More Revelations

How goes, KBers? I was feeling a bit down earlier this week, after getting some disappointing news about an author I hadn’t read but who had some potential, but books, amIrite?


Sponsored by Penguin Books

A quirky collection of illustrated vignettes about love in its many forms. With simple and elegant illustrations, You & Me & Why We Are in Love tells us about love in all its forms, not concerning itself with who or what you love, but above all, how you love. There’s the requited love that Daisy has for nature, and then there’s David who buys flowers for his wife of twenty years, not to mention Jean, the punk rocker who is secretly looking for a girl who is just like his grandmother.


New stuff

AAAAAAAAHHHHHH IT’S SO PRETTY

This thread is a couple weeks old now, but will never get old. Representation is hella important, and not just to the people who are part of those diverse groups.

Your regular reminder that Beverly Jenkins, Nora Roberts Lifetime Achievement Award recipient and veteran romance author, is still running a GoFundMe to get the film adaptation of Deadly Sexy off the ground.

Have you tried out Book+Main? They recently sent out a guide to making the best of it; could definitely be useful for potential power-users!

We all love foodie romances featuring a chef who thinks he’s more Hell’s Kitchen, but is more Master Chef Junior, right?

Want some bonus scenes? Check out this hot one from Alexis Daria and some fun from Tessa Dare!

I recently met Callalily on the interwebs and her new site, Sense and Disability, is pretty awesome.

Holy Jesus this is a lot of work. But we’re all better for it. 

HE DID IT. He came out to the world (in more ways than one) and we’re all fucking proud. I hate why he felt he had to do it, but I hope he doesn’t regret it. And now we have a face to go with the final two Five Boroughs novels, which have both been announced!

Deals

If you’re lolling about in Forbidden Hearts limbo, Alisha Rai’s Falling for Him is 99 cents.

Under Her Skin by Adriana Anders is too!

If you’re a preordering kind of person, Exposed, a new anthology featuring works by Santino Hassell, Robin Covington, Tiffany Reisz, and more is available for that same 99 cents!

Darynda Jones’s First Grave on the Right is 2.99 right now.

Over on Book Riot

Dudes. DUDES. When in Romance. It’s a thing that lives. (Listen to Episode 0!)

How did you learn about sex? Probably not this way. 

We’re giving away a library cart! Enter to win here!

Recs!

This week, let’s talk about two books that take very different approaches to the fling trope. Two people have strong sexual chemistry, but their time together is limited. They’re not going to risk their hearts for some hot sex, but…well, you know how it goes.

Under His Kilt
Melissa Blue

Somehow I ended up with two copies of this book; I must have requested an ARC or something and let it get buried. But I got a fresh copy (for free) on Amazon, and was in the mood to read it pretty much immediately. Fair warning: there aren’t actually any kilted men in this story, which is sadness upon sadness. But there is a delicious Scot with a delicious accent, and delicious…other things.

Jocelyn’s museum is hosting a traveling exhibit for which Ian is overseeing the installation. Both love their work, and are good at their jobs. Jocelyn is turning thirty soon, and wants to ring out her twenties with a bang. Literally, if she can help it. But she doesn’t see that happening with Ian, who seems to be excessively professional. But one conversation changes all that, and the two enter into an arrangement that allows for some fantasy on both ends, with a set end date—when it’s time for Ian to move on after the exhibit’s installation. The book is brief, but packs a punch. And there are more!

Playing the Part
Robin Covington

Romance novelist Piper James is excited that one of her books is being adapted to film. What she’s less excited about is the fact that she’s been called upon to be a consultant to the film’s leading man, an action hero who is trying to break into more dramatic roles. The only problem? He’s having a little trouble with bringing his character to life in the more romantic scenes. Piper is willing to help him in order to stay in good graces with her publishers, with whom she’s still on thin ice after a bit of drama the year before. And when she and Mick, the biracial ball of hotness she’s been brought in to tutor in romance, immediately hit it off, she’s open to a repeat and continued performance—as long as it stays out of the press and ends when she heads back to New York. Well. As we know, in Hollywood, nothing ever goes as planned.

If you’re looking for more, there’s also One True Pairing by Cathy Yardley, which I think I’ve talked about here before. That one also has another favorite trope: fake relationship. So great.

What are your favorite fling-turned-more stories?

New and Upcoming Releases

Rogue Acts anthology

When Love Calls by Sharon Cooper

Twice in a Lifetime by Jodie Griffin

My Last Love Story by Falguni Kothari

Game of Hearts by Cathy Yardley (in the same series as One True Pairing!) (Jan 30)

Tempest by Beverly Jenkins (Jan 30)

The Wedding Date by Jasmine Guillory (Jan 30)

That’s good for a week, right? As usual, catch me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or send me an email at jessica@riotnewmedia.com if you’ve got feedback or just want to say hi!