Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships May 25

Happy Friday, you hoopy froods, and happy Towel Day! Today we’re talking MEM by Bethany C. Morrow and The Queen of Sorrow by Sarah Beth Durst, young Aragorn, the Nebulas, and more.


board game pieces, similar to chess, but shaped like five separate individuals, set on a blue illustrated surfaceThis newsletter is sponsored by Penguin Teen.

Unforgivable betrayals, devious motives, and forbidden love collide in the first installment of internationally bestselling author Sally Green’s epic new fantasy series, perfect for Game of Thrones fans.

In a land tinged with magic and a bustling trade in an illicit supernatural substance, destiny will intertwine the fates of five players:
A visionary princess determined to forge her own path.
An idealistic soldier whose heart is at odds with his duty.
A streetwise hunter tracking the most dangerous prey.
A charming thief with a powerful hidden identity.
A loyal servant on a quest to avenge his kingdom.
All are driven by ambition, honor, and desperation on the cusp of war. But who will be left standing when the smoke clears?


The Nebulas have been awarded! Huge congratulations to the winners — there are a lot of personal and Book Riot favorites in here, and I talked about Rebecca Roanhorse’s “Welcome to Your Authentic Indian Experience TM” in the Short Fiction episode of SFF Yeah.

Elementary, my dear Watson: Along with the many in the mystery/thriller genre, here are a few speculative takes on Sherlock Holmes. (I’m a huge fan of that Aliette de Bodard series as well!)

There’s been no official statement yet, but rumors abound that Amazon’s new Lord of the Rings TV series will follow Aragorn. This sounds at least plausible to me (although I have to say that if I had my druthers we would get the Adventures of Galadriel).

Let’s get steamy: Need more erotic fantasy and sci-fi in your life? Here’s a list. There are some classics on there, as well as a few surprises.

Emo zombies! It’s a thing. This headline made me laugh so hard, and then I actually read the piece, and can’t really argue with any of their recommendations. I will add, however, that if you need a “cozy” zombie movie to chase all those feelings (BECAUSE THAT ALSO EXISTS), may I recommend Fido?

Because you don’t have enough nerdy swag, here are some very excellent further options. I need the Octavia Butler AND the Ursula Le Guin shirts, to round out my collection (which already includes this one).

Today’s reviews include got extracted memories and tree spirits.

MEM by Bethany C. Morrow

a pale, washed-out image of a bank vault doorWhat if you could pull a memory from someone’s mind? Set in Montreal in an alternate 1900s, MEM plays with identity, personhood, and medical ethics. In the process of playing with these concepts, Morrow delivers a thought-provoking and page-turning novel.

The inventors of the procedure specifically wanted to help their patients heal from trauma — and what better way than to just remove the trauma entirely? A human can undergo the treatment up to three times in their lives, and many of those able to afford the procedure do just that. The resulting Mems are embodied, zombie-esque creatures, stuck in the loop of the memory that created them until they die. All except for Elsie, a.k.a. Dolores Extract #3, who has survived for decades as a fully functioning being. While she’s not exactly granted full personhood, and remains the property of the original Dolores, she is granted a certain level of freedom. But then she’s recalled to the Vault; procedures are going awry, Dolores is in failing health, and the scientists think Elsie holds the information they need to make things work again.

As Elsie learns more about both herself and the science that created her, she’s also thrown into interactions with new people that shake up the life she’s known. What does it mean to be a person? What makes one memory different from another? What makes Elsie so special? The answers are connected in MEM, and the journey to them is an excellent one.

Atmospheric, beautifully detailed, and thought-provoking, MEM is a strong debut, and I can’t wait to see Morrow’s next works.

The Queen of Sorrow (Queens of Renthia #3) by Sarah Beth Durst 

a blue and purple tinted image of two people looking towards a castle on a mountain, with birds flying all around themLast June, I reviewed Books 1 and 2 in the Queens of Renthia series, and I can’t believe it’s been almost a year since. I said it then and I’ll say it again now: this is a great summer reading series, full of blood, magic, intrigue, and heroines you can’t help root (ahem) for.

Daleina, Naelin, and their friends and family survived the invasion of Renthia and are focused on rebuilding. It should be fine: there are two queens now, working together. What could go wrong? Naelin’s children getting kidnapped, that’s what. As Naelin struggles to control her emotions and do what’s best for her family as well as her country, Daleina has to try to out-think her former best friend, now her greatest threat.

The main plot alone would make this a good third book; the expansion of the world makes it a great one. As Daleina and Naelin head out on their adventures, they dig deeper into the origins of Renthia and the neighboring countries. Why are the spirits the way they are? What if there was another way to co-exist? And just what is Baen anyway? Durst deepens her world-building as she expands the scope of the story, with the result that while I’m content with how the current story arc has tied up, I need MORE. Thankfully, in the afterword she mentions she’s working on a companion story; hopefully we won’t have too long to wait.

And that’s a wrap! 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.

Always know where your towel is,
Jenn

Categories
The Goods

Books! Books! Books!

Put your love of books up in neon lights with this limited-edition tee. Available in 5 styles for just $19.99.

In the mood for something a little more magical? Meet our shiny new Harry Potter book cover tees!

Categories
Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

052418-AmazonMay18-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Amazon Publishing.

From chilling thrillers and epic adventures to inspiring non-fiction, discover your next summer read from Amazon Publishing starting at only $0.99.

Categories
Today In Books

Prolific Novelist Philip Roth Passes Away: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Disney Publishing Worldwide’s Neanderthal Opens the Door to the Universe.


Philip Roth (1933-2018)

The literary world is remembering prolific novelist Philip Roth, who passed away in New York this week. Contributor Rachel Manwill notes that “The only major literary prize Roth hadn’t won was the Nobel, though he was often considered a favorite among speculators. He reportedly waited for a call from the Nobel committee every year at his agent’s office, ready to embark on a publicity tour for the elusive honor that never came.” The New York Times has collected the reviews they gave his work over the years if you’d like to read more.

Romance Novelist Becomes Gubernatorial Nominee

There are so many reasons to be excited that Stacey Abrams is now the Democratic nominee for governor of Georgia. But the most delightful reason is that Abrams is also Selena Montgomery, author of eight romance thrillers.

Idris Elba Hunches His Back for Netflix

Netflix is giving us a feature film modern retelling of The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Idris Elba is going to have his fingerprints all over it. He’s starring in it, directing it, and producing it, and we can’t wait!

Categories
Giveaways

Win a Copy of JULIAN IS A MERMAID by Jessica Love!

 

We have 10 copies of Julian Is A Mermaid by Jessica Love to give away to 10 Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

While riding the subway home from the pool with his abuela one day, Julián notices three women spectacularly dressed up. Their hair billows in brilliant hues, their dresses end in fishtails, and their joy fills the train car. When Julián gets home, daydreaming of the magic he’s seen, all he can think about is dressing up just like the ladies in his own fabulous mermaid costume: a butter-yellow curtain for his tail, the fronds of a potted fern for his headdress. But what will Abuela think about the mess he makes — and even more importantly, what will she think about how Julián sees himself? Mesmerizing and full of heart, Jessica Love’s author-illustrator debut is a jubilant picture of self-love and a radiant celebration of individuality.

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the cover image below:

Categories
Audiobooks

More Celebrity Narrators, and Audiobook News

Happy Thursday, audiophiles!

Whatchyall listening to? I powered through The Favorite Sister, a book by Jessica Knoll, the author of The Luckiest Girl Alive. I enjoyed The Luckiest Girl Alive but I couldn’t stop listening to The Favorite Sister. When I read the summary I, like a judgemental dum-dum, assumed that because it had something to do with reality television it would be like reality television itself: a fairly shallow guilty pleasure (no judgment about shallow guilty pleasures, I have approximately 769,928 of my own).


furybornSponsored by Furyborn by Claire Legrand

The stunningly original, must-read fantasy of 2018 follows two fiercely independent young women, centuries apart, who hold the power to save their world…or doom it.

When assassins ambush her best friend, Rielle Dardenne risks everything to save him, exposing herself as one of a pair of prophesied queens: a queen of light, and a queen of blood. One thousand years later, Eliana Ferracora, a bounty hunter for the Undying Empire, joins a rebel captain and discovers that the evil at the empire’s heart is more terrible than she ever imagined. As Rielle and Eliana’s stories intersect, shocking connections between them ultimately determine the fate of their world—and of each other.


Anyway, I really enjoyed The Favorite Sister. It’s a dark, funny, surprising thriller that I think fans of Megan Abbott (The Fever, Dare Me, etc.) would really enjoy. The audiobook has three different narrators–-and while one of the voices kind of bugged me at first, I appreciated the distinction among the three voices because the different personalities and voices (both literally in the audiobook and figuratively in the novel as a whole) really shape the trajectory of the plot. If you give it a listen, hit me up at katie@riotnewmedia.com or twitter at msmacb and let me know what you think!

HEY, WE’RE GIVING YOU MONEY! We are giving away a $500 gift card to the bookstore of your choice! Enter here!

Thanks to all who wrote in sharing their favorite celebrity narrators! Here are just a few of your many, many comments and suggestions.

Tara reached out on twitter to say that her favorite celebrity narrator is “Santino Fontana doing Carolyn Kepnes’ You and Hidden Bodies. Just amazing.” Fontana has many talents and I know he’s narrated a few audiobooks but for any readers who might be unfamiliar, he also played Greg on the first few seasons of My Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, a character whose departure from the series I’m definitely still not over. That said, it sounds like Santino makes a 180 degree shift character-wise in narrating You and Hidden Bodies, as his character, Joe, is described as “charmingly sociopathic” (the title of the latter may give you an idea of some of the results of Joe’s sociopathic tendencies).

Sonya says her favorite celebrity narrator is James Marsters reading Jim Butcher’s Harry Dresden series.

Lisa just finished listening to The Chaperone by Laura Moriarty, narrated by Elizabeth McGovern and says “it was fantastic!”

Sarah recommends, “Cosmos by Carl Sagan, with an intro by Sagan read by Seth Macfarlane and the body read by LeVar Burton. And, yep, LeVar narrates about how you expect; I have no idea how that man can be so awed by every word that comes out of his face, but he is and it’s infectious!

Juliet Stevenson, who has been in tons of movies and shows, but who I will always remember as Kiera Knightly’s awesomely insane mother in Bend It Like Beckham, has an extensive library of narrations. My favorites are classics: Middlemarch, multiple Jane Austen, Jane Eyre…but her more contemporary titles, like Kate DiCamillo’s The Magician’s Elephant are excellent as well.

She also recommends Edward Hermann’s narrations of “hulking long histories like Doris Kearns Goodwin’s The Bully Pulpit make the minutes fly by.”

Sarah knows a thing or two about audiobooks with celebrity narrators and she has a boatload more celebrity narrator recommendations:

PARKER POSEY NARRATES THE FEMININE MYSTIQUE, Y’ALL! How I have lived my whole life without knowing that, much less listening to it at least 3 times a month, I don’t know but it’s a mistake I need to rectify ASAP.

Book Riot Audiobook Posts You May Have Missed:

Rioter Anna Cramer explores the question: can a good audiobook make running less terrible? She says, “ “Confession: I hate running. I mean I really hate it. I try to run at least 3 times a week anywhere from 2 to 10 miles (let’s be honest, the 10-miler happened once) and without fail, I end up hating pretty much hating every mile. Each mile sucks. Every mile is hard. But, as Nike’s motto goes, I just do it. Could a bomb a** book on tape save me?”

I mentioned how much I loved having multiple narrators in The Favorite Sister and Rioter Christine Hoxmeier is also a big fan of multiple narrators. She says. “One of the great joys of listening to audiobooks is discovering titles that are well suited to the format. Perhaps it’s a narrator who can take on each character with a different and unique voice, or the production gives it a radio play quality (like the new Star Wars books), and sometimes it’s the fact that a book with several POVs decides to actually use multiple narrators. What a thought! These are some great and enjoyable YA books in their own right, but when consumed in audible form, the story and characters are enhanced by the use of audiobooks with multiple narrators.”

Too many audiobooks, too little time, right? Here are 20 Things to do while listening to Audiobooks that aren’t chores: https://ohayou.bookriot.com/2018/05/02/things-to-do-while-listening-to-audiobooks/

Finally, this isn’t from Book Riot but is interesting nonetheless. Mental Floss has some behind the scenes secrets of audiobook narrators. Check them out here.

Until next week,

~Katie

 

Categories
Kissing Books

Procrastibaking and the End of RT

Hey there folks! I’m back in the hot part of the desert after a refreshing few days without seeing the sun (okay, so maybe that wasn’t the best for me). RT was a blast, and I hope those of you who might be going to RWA (the Romance Writers of America National Conference) and the following Book Bonanza enjoy yourselves as much as I did!


Sponsored by Penguin Teen

Meet Daisy Winters, an offbeat sixteen-year-old Floridian with mermaid-red hair; a part time job at a bootleg Walmart, and a perfect older sister who’s nearly engaged to the Crown Prince of Scotland. Daisy has no desire to live in the spotlight, but relentless tabloid attention forces her to join Ellie at the relative seclusion of the castle across the pond.

The dashing young Miles has been appointed to teach Daisy the ropes of being regal, the prince’s roguish younger brother kicks up scandal wherever he goes, and tries his best to take Daisy along for the ride. The crown–and the intriguing Miles–might be trying to make Daisy into a lady . . . but Daisy may just rewrite the royal rulebook to suit herself.


News and Useful Links

Do you procrastibake? Mia Hopkins does.

Romantic Times is going away. The digital publication, the awards, the conference. Kathryn Falk announced it on Tuesday, declaring the intent to retire. After 38 years, I’d say she’s earned it. With that announcement came a second, closely related one: while RT Booklovers Convention is no more, the first annual BookLoversCon will be happening in New Orleans next May. So we’ll see what happens there. With the number of blogs, sites, and other folks dedicated to reviewing romance, I’m not sure what hole the loss of the publication will leave, but the awards, you all.

Since it was a reviewers’ choice awards, there wasn’t the whole thing with authors having to self-nominate, and therefore there was less gatekeeping when it came to the finalists and winners. I hope there’s going to be a way that can continue. Somehow.

Yes, #RomBkLove continues. Get lost in that hashtag, folks, and kiss your manageable TBR goodbye.

Sarah MacLean is back with her recent favorites.

Penny Reid and forty of her friends are getting together to produce Cocktales, with proceeds going to anyone who needs help with legal fees thanks to #byefaleena.

Steps are being made to get the trademark terminated.

And if you’re not quite Cocky’d Out, here’s the most recent statement from Sam at Set Sail Studios.

And of course there had to be more trademark drama. Heidi McLaughlin’s people submitted an application to trademark the word “forever” (because that is a hardly-used word that can definitely be limited to just that one author) but that clap-back was strong and quick. The author claims she’d had some trouble with identity theft and had intended the trademark to help, but really. Come on. She has since requested the application be rescinded.

Stacey Abrams won the Georgia Primary! I know very little about her platform, but not only would she be the first black woman governor of Georgia, but seriously, more romance authors need to be in charge.

Deals

Alexis Daria’s Take the Lead and Dance With Me are both on sale right now! It’s for a limited time, though, so if you’ve been holding out, now would be the time.

Enrage by Rachel Van Dyken is 1.49 right now.

Marie Harte’s Dragon’s Demon is 99 cents right now. I’ve been noticing more and more dragon shifter romances, and I’m going to sit down sometime soon and just gorge myself on them.

If you dig the dragon thing, Dahlia Rose’s A Dragon’s Promise is 3.99. And there are a dozen more after that.

Over on Book Riot

Trisha and I got to record When in Romance at RT and it was fabulous to look at her face!

Not yet had your fill of billionaires? There are definitely some I have to try on this list!

“Don’t push anyone down the stairs. Drunkenly falling down them yourself is permissible.” Yes, this is advice for fathers in romance novels.

And of course, we’re giving away $500 to the bookstore of your choice! Enter here!

Recs!

Once Upon a Marquess
Courtney Milan

[CW for suicide and substance abuse/addiction]

With the release of After the Wedding, I realized that I was incredibly behind on Courtney Milan Victorians. When Once Upon a Marquess was on a rare sale, I went ahead and bought it, and picked it out of several books I’d downloaded to my iPad for the flight to RT.

Y’all. It was a good thing my husband was the one sitting next to me. Barely a page in, I was already cackling. Loudly. With snorts. Courtney Milan is masterful at alternating serious family drama (in this case, treason, suicide, transportation, and destitution) with absolutely hilarious scenes involving willful younger sisters and gay avian lovers.

Judith Worth is the oldest of four siblings. Her father, after accused of being a traitor, committed suicide in jail, and her brother was lost at sea after being Transported. Her oldest younger sibling elected to live with a relative, but her two younger ones, both teenagers, are in her care. But Christian Trent, Marquess of Ashford, comes running the moment she writes, and the two embark on a path to solve several mysteries at once—including whether they could ever be what they were.

Now I’m just wondering if I want to devour After the Wedding now or wait until I have more to read afterwards. It’s a hard choice to make.

***

In the meantime, I’m reading His Cocky Valet by Cole McCade, because there was no way I wasn’t going to hop into that river immediately. While there are people who might be squicked by the use of “My Young Master” as practically an endearment, so far I am enraptured with the combined approach to young dude getting shit together, learning to rely on someone, learning to run a business, and learning about power dynamics that aren’t quite D/s.

I’m not sure what’s coming after that. I still have to crawl my way out from under the piles of books from RT and the stacks of library books I had waiting for me when I got back.

New and Upcoming Releases

Grumpy Fake Boyfriend by Jackie Lau
Rogues Rush In by Tessa Dare and Christi Caldwell
The Controversial Princess by Jodi Ellen Malpas
Too Wilde to Wed by Eloisa James (May 29)
Touched by You by Elle Wright (May 29)

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!

Categories
Today In Books

An Activism Anthology From the Parkland Students: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Julian Is A Mermaid by Jessica Love, from Candlewick Press.


An Activism Anthology From The Parkland Students

The students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School are contributing to an anthology of personal essays, articles, and photographs around social activism. We Say #NeverAgain: Reporting from the School That Inspired the Nation will include students’ first-hand accounts of the Parkland school shooting, and will be edited by MSD journalism and broadcasting teachers Melissa Falkowski and Eric Garner.

The Man Booker International Prize Winner Is…

Flights by Olga Tokarczuk, translated from the original Polish by Jennifer Croft. The £50,000 prize celebrates works of translated fiction from around the world, and is split equally between author and translator. Flights is described as “a novel of linked fragments, from the 17th century to the present day, connected by themes of travel and human anatomy.”

Reese Witherspoon Brings Hello Sunshine To Audible

Audible is partnering with Reese Witherspoon’s female-driven media brand and book club to bring Hello Sunshine to the audiobook subscription service. In June, the partnership will launch with a spotlight on audio performances featuring strong female characters, and Audible subscribers will gain access to previous titles from Witherspoon’s book club. Original audio productions are in the works with an inaugural title to be announced later this year.

 

Don’t forget we’re giving away $500 to the bookstore of your choice! Enter here!

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Mean Girls + Whodunnit + A Horror Movie Body Count!

Hello mystery fans! I’ve got three books this week that could not be more different from each other if that had been my goal. AND Book Riot is giving away $500 (look at those zeros!) to the bookstore of your choice! Enter here, you lucky people!


Sponsored by The 49th Mystic (Beyond the Circle Series #1) by Ted Dekker.

Some say the great mystery of how one can live in two worlds at once died with Thomas Hunter many years ago. Still others that the gateway to that greater reality was and is only the stuff of dreams.

They are wrong.

In the small town of Eden, Utah, a blind girl named Rachelle Matthews is about to find out just how wrong.

So begins a two-volume saga of high stakes and a mind-bending quest to find an ancient path that will save humanity. The clock is ticking; the end rushes forward.

Ready? Set?

Dream.


Mean Girls + Adam Silvera Breakup/Relationships + Whodunnit + A Bit of a Horror Movie Body Count! (TW: rape)

cover image: silhouette of two people in a forest holding flashlights everything washed in blue colorsWhite Rabbit by Caleb Roehrig: This felt like a mashup between a bit of a YA coming-of-age with a whodunnit mystery being solved by an amatuer sleuth. Rufus Holt is having a hard time: he still hasn’t gotten over his ex-boyfriend, his dad is a terrible person, his mom is struggling to pay the bills, and his step-sister needs his help to prove she isn’t a murderer. Trying to solve a murder is hard enough as a teen that has no training in sleuthing, but it’s even harder to do with your ex-boyfriend (who you’re clearly not over) and for your step-sister (who isn’t very nice and comes from the family that pretends you don’t exist because they’re rich and you’re not). But Rufus has to help because his sister dangles the carrot of money in front of him, which he needs to help his mom. And so did Rufus’ step-sister murder her boyfriend and now she’s playing Rufus? Or did someone else kill Fox? Either way, Rufus is gonna be kicking a hornet’s nest when he starts investigating… A good mystery with a horror-ish feeling, that has a great main character to follow as he struggles through family, relationship, and anger issues.

Dark Nonfiction About A Brazilian Hitman (TW: child rape/ torture)

cover image: a statue of a man's face with dark hair and beard and the title words crossed out over itThe Name of Death by Kléster Cavalcanti, Nicholas Caistor (translator): This is for people who like dark crime reads because I’ll admit I felt sick by the end of it. This is not a book about a psychopath who wanted to kill people so he became a hitman. Instead, it’s about a teen boy living in a village in the Amazon in Brazil who doesn’t understand electricity because he’s never seen it. A teen boy who looks up to his uncle, unaware that his uncle is a terrible person. The book takes you into Julio Santana’s life, as he reported it to journalist Klester Cavalcanti, from his first kill at seventeen–for his uncle–to his time in the military fighting communists. Towards the end of the book, Santana pulls out the book where he kept the information on all of his kills and some of the stories of specific murders are revealed, including how his wife discovered what he really did to make money, to an accidental murder, and the time he was arrested. While Santana looks back with regret, wishing he’d gone a different route–and still hopes to be forgiven by God–it is impossible not to think of all the victims and how easy the choice is to not kill someone. It was sad, interesting, and awful to see the reasons people choose to hire a hitman, and the way people move the line of what is right or wrong to fit their greed and agenda. (I could have done with much less pages of male gaze losing-my-virginity story.)

Great Character Driven Crime Novel

cover image: silhouette of the profile of a woman looking over a balcony to a blurred out street at nightThe Lonely Witness by William Boyle: I can see why people get frustrated with characters that don’t react/respond in situations the way a reader would, but for me I think we most likely won’t react the way we think we will in extreme situations. Also, I don’t find it interesting to watch characters behave like me. I enjoy reading the exploration of “But why would you do that?!”–and that was certainly the main character Amy. Living in a Brooklyn neighborhood, Amy has reduced her life after her girlfriend left her. She’s donated her time to the church and offers communion to elderly residents at their homes. It’s on one of these visits where the trouble begins: Mrs. Epifanio thinks her caretaker’s son murdered his mom, and that’s why she hasn’t shown up and he’s been coming instead with his mom’s key and rummaging in Mrs. Epifanio’s bedroom. Amy ends up trying to help Mrs. Epifanio by following the son, and finds herself witnessing a crime and opening the door to danger. A good crime novel that explores loneliness, regret, forgiveness, and whether we can ever make ourselves small enough to avoid the world, and our past, from hurting us again.

Recent Releases

cover image: a black teen girl sitting down facing the camera with the cover and photo washed in redMonday’s Not Coming by Tiffany D. Jackson (Great YA mystery about a girl who won’t give up looking for her best friend.)

Cult X by Fuminori Nakamura, Kalau Almony (Translator) (Japanese mystery about cults that is high on my TBR list.)

Paper Ghosts by Julia Heaberlin (TBR: just downloaded the audiobook.)

The House Swap by Rebecca Fleet (TBR: domestic suspense.)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, and Litsy–you can find me under Jamie Canaves.

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own you can sign up here.

Categories
In The Club

In the Club May 23

Welcome back to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met and well-read. Let’s dive in.


This newsletter is sponsored by Epic Reads.

A young black girl sitting down, wearing shorts and sneakers, against a bright red background.Monday Charles is missing, and only her best friend Claudia seems to notice. As days turn to weeks with no sign of Monday, Claudia knows something is wrong. Monday wouldn’t leave her to endure tests and bullies alone. Claudia needs her best—and only—friend more than ever. But Monday’s family refuses to give Claudia a straight answer.

As Claudia digs deeper into Monday’s disappearance, she discovers that no one remembers the last time they saw Monday. How can a teenage girl just vanish without anyone noticing that she’s gone?


Enter this giveaway for a $500 gift card to the bookstore of your choice, and you could buy your book group SO MANY BOOKS.

It is Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage month! So this list is timely, but you should read them regardless because they are So Good.
Book group bonus: For extra thematically-appropriate-reading points, pick The Astonishing Color of After for your next read; it’s both by an Asian American and deals with mental health (as May is also Mental Health Awareness month!)

Translated works galore: The shortlist for the Best Translated Books of 2018 has been announced!
Book group bonus: Pick a translated novel to read, and then read a novel about a translator — I recommend An Unnecessary Woman by Rabih Alameddine.

Get on that ToMo train: Haven’t read Toni Morrison yet? Or not since high school/college? We’ve got some starting points for you.
Book group bonus: Whether or not you decide to read Beloved, you should definitely make these biscuits for your ToMo discussion meeting.

Speaking of food, one of our contributors hosts a cookbook club, and she’s got club-approved recs for you.
Book group bonus: Everyone picks a recipe from the assigned book, naturally!

For when you want an adventure: Here are 10 books about intrepid girls, and I extremely cosign Adaptation and The Epic Crush of Genie Lo.
Book group bonus: Pair one of these with a nonfiction read about women. I recommend Wonder Women by Sam Maggs, illustrated by Sophia Foster-Dimino — it’s fun, reads quickly, and you could probably manage it in the same month as one of the above YA novels!

How about another regionally themed reading list? Here are Latina authors, specifically Dominican and Dominican American, that you should know.
Book group bonus: I am particularly fond of Julia Alvarez, and have been yearning to do a discussion of her adult works (for example, In the Time of the Butterflies) alongside her children’s books (for example, Return to Sender). Does her voice change with the audience? Any major differences in structure or tone? So much to think about.

There’s a whole movie, just about book club. And it’s called …. Book Club!
Book group bonus: Group outing! Popcorn for all.

And that’s a wrap: Happy discussing! 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 (including the occasional book club question!) you can find me on the Get Booked podcast with the inimitable Amanda.

Your fellow booknerd,
Jenn

More Resources: 
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page