Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships June 6

Happy Friday, explorers and Erinyes! Today I’m reviewing All Systems Red by Martha Wells and Mongrels by Stephen Graham Jones, and talking about July releases, grimdark, audiobooks, and more.


This newsletter is sponsored by Flatiron Books and Legendary by Stephanie Garber.

After being swept up in the magical world of Caraval, Donatella Dragna has finally escaped her father and saved her sister Scarlett from a disastrous arranged marriage. The girls should be celebrating, but Tella isn’t yet free. She made a desperate bargain with a mysterious criminal, and the time to repay the debt has come.


Need some great reads this month? Swapna rounds up some of July’s new releases to consider, including Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik (which I’ll be talking about next week!).

Prefer moral complexity to clear right and wrong? Here’s some grimdark for you. And while I’d never seen NK Jemisin’s The Fifth Season classified this way before, I’m hard-pressed to disagree with the rationale.

Need basically the opposite of grimdark? Have some funny fantasy! (Shout-out to Sarah Kuhn’s Heroine Complex series, they are the perfect summer reads.)

SFF for your earholes: If you’re heading out on a road trip, to the beach, on a plane, or cannot summon the energy to physically turn pages because this heat is just TOO MUCH, Alex has some fantasy audiobook suggestions for you.

Adaptations update! Here’s an overview on Tor.com of what’s in process right now. It is helpfully organized by release date, so go ahead and mark your calendars. (I can’t believe they are rebooting Gambit AGAIN.)

D&D alignments were my original Hogwarts-House sorting, so I was delighted with this post on kids book character alignments! Harriet is totally true-neutral.

It seems like we’ve seen every bit of sci-fi swag there is, and then a new Book Fetish post comes out. That Black Panther tote!!!!

Today in reviews we’ve got a found family plus AI and a family of origin plus werewolves.

All Systems Red (The Murderbot Diaries #1) by Martha Wells

a suited, helmeted figure stands in a field surround by tall trees, with planetary rings showing in the skyIt only took a bajillion awards and the repeated insistence of various Book Riot Insiders for me to finally read All Systems Red, and I am happy to finally be on this bandwagon.

Despite the ominous name of the series, it’s surprisingly light on gore. All Systems Red follows the self-described Murderbot (technically a cyborg programmed to be a security guard) as it works to protect an exploratory team of humans on an uninhabited planet. This becomes very complicated when their comms go down, and dangers start to come from the least expected places. There are gun-battles, giant worms, and plots aplenty, but it’s ultimately more optimistic and fun than anything else — ideal summer reading.

It is a novella, so telling you much more about the story would be very spoilery. Instead, I will tell you that Wells envisions her AI character with wit and panache. Imagine if Spock and a computer had a painfully shy baby that just wanted to watch K-dramas all the time — that is Murderbot, more or less. Add to that the dynamics of the crew as they interact (or don’t) with their security bot and struggle to understand its personhood, and you’ve got a heartfelt, captivating story with great action and pacing. And there are sequels! Artificial Condition is out now, Rogue Protocol will be out on August 7, and Exit Strategy will be out in October.

Mongrels by Stephen Graham Jones

Trigger warning: domestic violence, body horror

an illustration with a red-tinged silhouette of a wolf in the foreground and a standing person in front of power lines and a car against a yellow backgroundWe did an Octavia Butler read-alikes show on Get Booked recently, and I picked Mongrels for my Fledgling comp. I do not take comparisons to Octavia Butler lightly, but this book blew me away. Let me tell you a little bit about why.

In the same way that Butler took the vampires trope (traditionally white, traditionally romanticized) and exploded it, Graham Jones takes the werewolf trope and turns it inside out. Sometimes literally — this book is gross. Just flat-out gross. I’m not much of one for body horror, and have put books down for similar reasons, but somehow Mongrels kept pulling me back in, even as I cringed away.

The story follows a young boy who lives with his aunt and uncle (siblings, not a couple) as they constantly move from place to place, trying to outrun the law both for their actions as humans and potential discovery of their werewolf nature. As of yet, our narrator has shown no signs of inheriting the ability to change — and it’s all he wants in the world, even as he sees how difficult it makes life for his relatives. The stories that have been handed down to him, the truths that they conceal, and the realities of life when magic is mundane, all swirl together to form a thoroughly captivating narrative.

It’s a messy, complicated, hardscrabble life that Graham Jones has given his characters, and one that many will recognize. Right and wrong have almost no meaning for these characters; there is only survival, from one day to the next. And yet their love for each other and their fundamental humanity makes it impossible to dismiss them, if not flat-out love them like I ultimately did. This book is a stunner, and you should read it immediately.

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.

Stay frosty,
Jenn

Categories
Unusual Suspects

“Let’s Be Very Angry”

Hi mystery fans! It’s Friday, but we had a day off on Wednesday and all the days are confused so I’m gonna start by recommending something non-mystery related: Hannah Gadsby’s Nanette on Netflix is fantastic, you should go watch it. And now back to our previously scheduled mystery content!


cover image: profile silhouette of a woman in a bathing suit behind an umbrella at the beachSponsored by Pegasus Books’ The Seasonaires by Janna King

An idyllic Nantucket summer begins like a dream for scrappy Mia, Southern beauty Presley, handsome introvert Cole, sultry Jade, energetic young designer J.P., and party-boy Grant, all of whom are working as seasonaires—influential brand ambassadors—for the clothing line Lyndon Wyld. But like all things that look too good to be true, the darkness lurking underneath slowly rises to the surface. Corporate greed, professional rivalries, and personal conflicts mix with sex, drugs, and the naiveté of youth, exploding in a murder that sullies their catalog-perfect lives.


From Book Riot and Around the Internet

I rounded up new paperback releases for beach reading over at Novel Suspects.

Dick Smith is offering a $5000 reward to anyone who can solve one of Australia’s most enduring mysteries: “Twenty years after a pilot first spotted The Maree Man — a mysterious large-scale artwork carved into the desert in a remote part of Australia — its origins and the people behind it are still unknown.”

cover image: a black and hot pink smokey graphic with the title and author name in block lettersAt EW Amber Tamblyn’s debut novel expands the #MeToo conversation: “The novel for me really felt, even as I was writing it, like an indictment of our culture — including myself and most readers — for how we are either complicit or complacent when it comes to the culture of rape.”

Giveaway (Hug a Luck Dragon and enter): Book Riot is giving away $500 of the year’s best YA fiction and nonfiction so far! Some great mysteries on the list: White Rabbit, Undead Girl Gang (Reviews for both here), and Before I Let Go (Review). 

Adaptations and News

Vivien Chien revealed the cover for the third book in the Noodle Shop Mystery series!

sharp objects show poster: a white woman sitting on a chair with an older white woman standing behinder her, hand on her shoulder, and a white teen with her head in the lap of the woman sitting downMegan Abbott had a great chat with Gillian Flynn at Vanity Fair: “There’s a huge place for anger right now—particularly for the many, many women who’ve been violated—and this is a time to be angry. Let’s be very angry. Constructive anger is a very useful tool, and is a very important thing to express.” (The adaptation premieres this Sunday on HBO)

Remember how the Grantchester adaptation was losing James Norton but we didn’t know who would be joining the series? Now we know: Tom Brittney has joined the PBS mystery show. “Santer added, ‘I’m delighted that Tom is joining the cast. He’s a hugely likable and talented actor, and will make both a fine vicar of Grantchester and a great crime-solving partner for Geordie Keating.'”

Last year Emma Cline’s ex-boyfriend hired lawyers over copyright, and other, claims regarding her debut novel The Girls. A federal judge has just dismissed the copyright claims–however the claims involving key-logging software to access personal info were not dismissed.

A South Carolina police union has objected to a high school reading list–yeah, you read that correctly. One of the books is The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, a book that delves into police brutality. The police union claims they “received an influx of tremendous outrage” and that the book is “almost an indoctrination of distrust of police.” There’s a lot happening here, starting with people calling the police about book lists (what is happening?), and none of it is good.

True Crime

Why Are We Obsessed With Mothers Accused Of Murder? “Yet all together — and whatever one might think about their subjects’ guilt or innocence — they make a compelling, sometimes unintentional case that problematic assumptions and a gendered moralism can lead the public imagination, and the judicial apparatus, astray.”

7 British True Crime Documentaries You Won’t Want To Believe Happened In The UK

Gone Fishing: New true crime podcast launches

Discarded napkin helps US police crack 32-year-old murder mystery

Is True Crime as Entertainment Morally Defensible?

Kindle Deals

Megan Abbott’s brilliant noir Queenpin is $1.99! (Review)

Hollywood Homicide (Detective by Day #1) by Kellye Garrette is $0.99!!!!!! (Review)

The Name of Death by Klester Cavalcanti, Nick Caistor (Translation) is $3.99! (Dark Nonfiction About A Brazilian Hitman: Review) (TW: child rape/ torture)

Bit of My Week In Reading

cover image: black and white image of a tree trunk and rootsI did a lot of muppet arming over getting my hands on Tana French’s upcoming The Witch Elm so naturally I started that IMMEDIATELY. And it’s so good. SO FREAKING GOOD I don’t want to finish it because then it’ll be over–*insert crying emoji.

I inhaled, INHALED, the first half of Orphan X by Gregg Hurwitz. I am a sucker for fictional assassins that I care about–let’s not explore this too deeply–and anything that gives me ’90s action/thriller movie vibes. Basically I am loving this read at the moment.

And I received Keigo Higashino’s upcoming Newcomer which I’m going to read this weekend–sorry other books that were first in line, I LOVE Japanese crime and I LOVE Higashino.

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
True Story

Nonfiction Backlist Favorites

Hello readers! Associate Editor Sharifah here, stepping in while Kim is away. And since I’m only around for a moment, I decided to take a detour from your regularly scheduled content to talk about some backlist nonfiction I’ve enjoyed recently, that might’ve gone under the radar.


Sponsored by Lion Forge Comics.

Green Almonds: Letters from Palestine is the graphic novel collaboration and true story of two sisters. Anaële, a writer, leaves for Palestine volunteering in an aid program, swinging between her Palestinian friends and her Israeli friends. Delphine is an artist, left behind in Liège, Belgium. From their different sides of the world, they exchange letters.

Green Almonds is a personal look into a complex reality, through the prism of the experience of a young woman writing letters to her sister about her feelings and adventures in the occupied territories.

In stores July 10 from Lion Forge!


Let’s get right into it!

Recently Read Backlist Favorites

braiding sweetgrass by robin wall kimmererBraiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer

Basically, everyone at the Riot is reading this right now. Or maybe it just feels that way. Robin Wall Kimmerer–scientist, ecologist, professor, mother, member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation–brings Indigenous stories to life, recounts powerful moments from history and her own past, and moves readers to consider the important connections between humans and nature. I read this one for the 2018 Read Harder Challenge (read a book about nature), and found myself compelled to get out of the apartment and into the great outdoors.

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt

I realized after listening to the full audiobook that there’s an abridged version, and that this significantly shorter version exists because you don’t get to the true crime part of the book until about eight hours in. But it didn’t matter. I got so wrapped up in the lives of Savannah, Georgia’s old money, new money, its eccentrics and powder kegs–I didn’t want to miss a second. John Berendt tells this true crime tale with such panache, I kept forgetting it wasn’t fictional. Pour yourself a martini, recline in your historic mansion, and enjoy.

who thought this was a good idea by alyssa mastromonacoWho Thought This Was a Good Idea? by Alyssa Mastromonaco

I’d been hearing a lot about some funny books coming from Obama-era White House staffers and, feeling anything but up to reading those tell-all books coming out of this country’s current presidency, jumped into Alyssa Mastromonaco’s memoir about her work with Barack Obama before his run for presidency, and then as the White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations. Mastromonaco is wry, super smart, hilarious, totally open about her experiences, and absolutely someone to look up to whether you’re a young woman considering a career path or an adult in search of empowering stories. I LOLed and I felt all the feels.

the beast by oscar martinezThe Beast: Riding the Rails and Dodging Narcos on the Migrant Trail by Óscar Martínez

This is a tough read. Especially with the recent, truly awful stories about families separated at the border. But Óscar Martínez took some incredible risks to tell these stories, giving a voice to those traveling the migrant trail from Central America and across the U.S. border. I found it as eye-opening as it was heartbreaking. Definitely take breaks while reading about the dangers these individuals face both at home and on their way out.

My Soul Looks Back by Jessica B. Harris

There’s a lot of name dropping around this book, but Harris’s prose and the pulsing life of the black intellectual scene in a bygone New York captivated me more than any one specific person in her social circle. Harris talks about a different era of activism, and what it was like to be a black artist and intellectual back when. She had a fascinating life, but I should note that she doesn’t take center stage in this book, even though it looks like a memoir at first glance. You end up hearing more about the people she knew, which included Maya Angelou, James Baldwin, and Toni Morrison, and about her first love. I enjoyed Harris’ writing, and I hope she returns with a book focused on her life or around the culinary expertise for which she’s known and celebrated.

That’s it for me! Kim will be back for the next issue, and you can find me on Instagram at @szainabwilliams.

 

And don’t forget–we’re giving away $500 of this year’s best YA books (so far)! Click here to enter.

Categories
Today In Books

Banksy Offers Support to Libraries: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Diode Editions.


Banksy Offers To Support Bristol Libraries

Bristol Mayor Marvin Rees announced that graffiti star Banksy has volunteered to help keep Bristol’s 27 libraries open. Sweeping cuts would have closed 17 of the 27 libraries. The Banksy news arrived with the announcements that there would be a reprieve on the cuts and that all of Bristol’s libraries would remain open.

Barnes & Noble Fires CEO

The struggling company fired CEO Demos Parneros for violating company policies, though B&N didn’t specify which policies Parneros violated. They did say his termination “is not due to any disagreement with the Company regarding its financial reporting, policies or practices or any potential fraud relating thereto.”

Goodreads Readers Choose Today’s Great American Novelist

Goodreads posted the results of a Facebook and Twitter survey asking readers to choose who they think is the greatest living American novelist. The top picks included Toni Morrison, Stephen King, Donna Tartt, and Jesmyn Ward. Click here to see the full list.

 

And don’t forget–we’re giving away $500 of this year’s best YA books (so far)! Click here to enter.

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Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

070518-RNMGYADEV-Riot-Rundown

We’re giving away $500 of the year’s best YA! Click here, or on the image below to enter:


Categories
Kissing Books

Upcoming Adaptations and Making Good Trouble

Happy July, folks! I hope your June wasn’t terrible, and let’s get you all prepared to face the month with some romance!

News and Useful Links

That Frolic, always giving us the Good Content. And also this one about Fabio.


Sponsored by Frolic Media

Frolic is a new media destination dedicated to all things Romance and Pop Culture. Co-founders Sarah and Lisa were both searching for a destination to indulge their inner alpha-heroines and geek out about the little things they love and their life-long obsessions. They couldn’t find it, so they decided to build it. Our mission is simple: We are devoted to building a destination in Romancelandia that celebrates optimism, romance novels and love of books and pop culture. We have daily content on our site from some of the biggest authors, bookstagrammers and bloggers.


Are you a Passionflix member? They recently decided they had to turn their next film, the adaptation of Driven, into a six-part series, because they needed all the filmed content. That’s dedication to the cause. And also that’s what happens when you own your platform. So high five to them. I hope to see the same care given to their next project, which is the adaptation of Brenda Jackson’s A Brother’s Honor.

Do you follow bookish live-tweets? Fangirl Musings has been doing it for Wicked and the Wallflower and it’s sort of making me sad I’ve already read the book. But also glad I’ve already read the book so I can come across each tweet and be like “YES, that is exactly what I was feeling.” So if that’s your thing, check her out. And then check out her youtube page. (Also, I almost wrote “Wicked and the Wallpaper” and that would have just been the best misprint and also I want that short about a certain couple setting up house.)

Find out where authors who previously wrote for Kimani will be publishing after the line closes.

Talia Hibbert and Jennifer Hallock both wrote really interesting things about people of color in historical fiction. AND Talia might have made an announcement about an upcoming project. So you definitely want to read both of these.  

Deals!

there are two young asian women. one has her hair in a ponytail and is wearing a black catsuit, kicking a cupcake with teeth. the other is wearing a hoodie and a tshirt and holds a ball of fire in her right hand.Sarah Kuhn’s Heroine Complex is 1.99 but I’m not sure for how long. So you might want to get it ASAP 😉

Alexis Daria’s Take the Lead is 1.99 for a very limited time.

The Hellion by Christi Caldwell is 2.49 right now!

Christins Lauren’s Roomies is 1.99 this month, too. Read it before they make the movie, you know?

Tiffany Reisz’s The Siren is 99 cents right now. I’ve heard that it’s crazypants, but actually awesome. (I’ve been meaning to read it forever! Thanks for the reminder, Amazon!)

Over on Book Riot

Annika decided that there were a bunch of romcoms than need novelizations, and I definitely can’t disagree with any of these. Hell, I’ll even pull a Levithan and offer to write a couple.

Is a Tiffany Reisz reading pathyway what you didn’t know you needed in your life? Yeah, it is.

Avon True Romance, we hardly knew ye.

Dragon. Shifter. Romances.

Sexy comics. There goes my monthly buying allowance.

Missed the last giveaway? No worries! Now you can enter for $500 worth of the best new YA. Five. Hundred. Dollars’. Worth.

And of course, Trisha and I talked about some stuff. There might have been nudists involved.

Recs!

Today, instead of my mini recs, I’m doing a brief list. I wanted to share some books that end well but are also about folks in love and Making Good Trouble. Some live in our time, some in the past, but they’re always looking to make a difference in their world.

A Seditious Affair by KJ Charles

Meet Silas, whose pamphlets written under the name Jack Cade call for the people to oppose the pressures put upon them by the House of Lords and the rest of the aristocracy. The man he’s been meeting for sexytimes and conversation once a week doesn’t know that, of course. Otherwise, it would make his role in the Home Office pretty awkward.

Loving the Secret Billionaire by Adriana Anders

Veronica Cruz has been hitting the pavement trying to win an election. She’s completely grassroots, knocking on doors with the few volunteers she’s got. When she knocks on Zach’s door, she earns an unexpected supporter and ends up on the path to quite the relationship.

(And of course, check out all three Rogue anthologies, starting with Rogue Desire, where the original version of this story existed (this one has been expanded). So much Good Trouble packed into those pages!)

cover of courtney milan's the suffragette scandal woman in blue dressThe Suffragette Scandal by Courtney Milan

Free Marshall runs a newspaper written by women, for women. She’s a suffragette, and will continue to be so even when it looks like it’s hopeless. Luckily for her, the snarky, negative man who falls in love with her will stand behind her to the last breath.  

His Convenient Husband by Robin Covington

Victor Aleksandrov is a visiting principal dancer in the United States. While he’s in the US, he’s also seeking asylum, as a gay man very outspoken about the injustices done to his fellow people in Russia. When that asylum request doesn’t turn out as expected, he can count upon a new friend, Isaiah, to marry him. That’s what friends do, right?

Let Us Dream and Let It Shine by Alyssa Cole

Alyssa Cole is not afraid of making good trouble with her characters. Whether it’s a woman using her position as a club owner to educate women in the working classes on their rights for when they finally get the vote, or a young woman finding her voice and joining the Freedom Riders, there’s all kinds of trouble her characters find themselves in. And these are just a couple.

Don’t Feed the Trolls by Erica Kudisch

This is more of a romance-adjacent story about self-discovery, but there is an awesome romantic element featuring a kick-ass love interest who does some kick-ass things later in the book that I can’t talk about because it’s a secret. Just read this one.

New and Upcoming Releases

cover of cherish me by farrah rochonCherish Me by Farrah Rochon (THAT COVER THO)
Guarding His Heart by Synithia Williams
Inevitable Addiction by Christina C. Jones
A Gentleman Never Keeps Score by Cat Sebastian (July 10) (YAAAAAY!!!!)
Concerto in Chroma Major by Naomi Tajedler (July 10)
Unfit to Print by KJ Charles (July 10)
The Real Deal by Lauren Blakely (July 10)

OMIGOD Y’ALL JULY TENTH IS GONNA BE AN AMAZING DAY. I might have to take it off just to read. 

As usual, catch me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or send me an email at jessica@riotnewmedia.comif you’ve got feedback or just want to say hi!

 

Categories
Today In Books

South Carolina Police Object to Summer Reading List: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by The Edge of Over There by Shawn Smucker.


South Carolina Police Object To Reading List

A police union has objected to the inclusion of Angie Thomas’s The Hate U Give and Jason Reynolds’ All American Boys on a high school summer reading list. Both books tackle police brutality. The president of the Fraternal Order of Police Tri-County Lodge #3 said the books’ inclusion is akin to an indoctrination of distrust of police, and claims they received an influx of “tremendous outrage” over the book selection. Perhaps Neil Gaiman said it best: “Because when people don’t like the books their kids are asked to read, they call the police.”

Judge Dismisses Plagiarism Lawsuit Against Emma Cline

A judge dismissed the copyright infringement lawsuit brought against The Girls author by her ex-boyfriend. Chaz Reetz-Laiolo claimed Cline plagiarized his work to write The Girls. But the judge ruled that the works had “few objective similarities and no substantive ones.”

Reese and Emma Summer Book Club Picks

Reese Witherspoon and Emma Watson chose their summer book selections for Reese’s Book Club x Hello Sunshine and Our Shared Shelf, respectively. Witherspoon chose Next Year in Havana by Chanel Cleeton, and Watson chose the club’s first poetry read, Milk and Honey by Rupi Kaur.

 

And don’t forget–we’re giving away $500 of this year’s best YA books (so far)! Click here to enter.

Categories
What's Up in YA

The Most Underrated 2018 YA So Far + A Call For Your Mid-Year Favorites

Hey YA Fans: Let’s talk about some of the books that haven’t been talked about enough so far this year.

“What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by The Edge of Over There by Shawn Smucker.

Abra Miller carries a secret and a responsibility she never expected.

Abra finds a clue to the whereabouts of the next Tree of Life when an ominous woman—who looks exactly like a ghost from her past—compels her to travel to New Orleans where she’ll find one of seven gateways between this world and Over There. As Abra enters the Edge of Over There and begins her pursuit of the Tree once more, she doesn’t know whom to fear or whom to trust.

She’s also starting to think that some doorways should never be opened.

____________________

Welcome new subscribers and long-timers! This week kicks off “What’s Up in YA?” going twice a week. You’ll see all of the YA news and talk in your inboxes on Mondays and Thursdays.

Those who’ve been around the newsletter for a while know that every year I like to ask for your favorites, and this mid-year is no exception. Today, I’ll share a small number of YA titles from the first half of 2018 that I think deserve a little more love, and I’d love if you’d fill out this quick, painless survey to tell me what 1. your favorite YA book published so far in 2018 has been and 2. what YA book published so far this year you think deserves a shout out. I’ll do a top ten of each and round them up later this month. Drop your picks in this form by July 23 to be included.

Here are a few of the books I think deserve a little more reader love this year. All have been published and are available now from your favorite bookstore or library. My reading tends toward a lot of contemporary fiction, so know this list reflects that (which is precisely why I like asking y’all to throw your titles at me!):

All That I Can Fix by Crystal Chan

This was my first Chan book but it will certainly not be my last. Set in a small town in Indiana, the story follows 15-year-old Ronney as he navigates a father struggling with mental illness, a little sister who is a genius, a crush on a girl who has been his best friend but seems like she’s keeping a secret from him, and oh, a bunch of wild animals on the loose thanks to a heavy wind storm.

At times funny, this book is ultimately a slice of life about a boy who doesn’t know how to be who he truly is around people who aren’t the people he thought they were. The exploration of mental illness here is powerful, and the way that we see Ronney deal with his crush’s pulling away from him makes the heart ache (and never does she become a manic pixie dream girl nor become faulted for her decisions). Be aware this one talks about suicide.

…And I didn’t even talk about the kid who is stalking Ronney, begging him for his jeans. Worth noting, too, that Ronney is a mixed-race kid in small town Indiana and that plays an important role in the book.

Down and Across by Arvin Ahmadi

When I say this is a book to hand to fans of John Green, I mean it.

Scott has a history of being a quitter, and this is something his immigrant parents cannot stand. They want him to have a better life, and they’re determined to help him do so by encouraging him to discover grit and power through the things he doesn’t love.

But when the parents go out of the country, Scott decides to ditch his internship and travel down to Washington, D.C., in order to befriend a professor who studies grit. He believes she’ll be able to help him solve his problems.

Except, of course, he only encounters more along the way. This book is about finding your own path, about crossword puzzles, and about how to live up to the expectations of your parents (though maybe without the running away from home part? Or maybe WITH it).

Mary’s Monster: Love, Madness, and How Mary Shelley Created Frankenstein by Lita Judge

Part comic, part verse, and entirely nonfiction, this book blew me away with how well constructed and creative it was. As the title suggests, it’s a look at the life of Mary Shelley and how it was she created the classic Frankenstein.

It’s not what you think.

Judge’s book shows us the back story of Shelley, from her youth through her publication of the famous book, and it explores in depth the truth behind the myth that she wrote the book on a dare. Sure, there was a dare involved, but by leveling her talent with that, her hard work and thinking about the story prior to that are undermined.

Smart, captivating, and one you’ll want to pick up for the construction itself.

The Way You Make Me Feel by Maurene Goo

I’ve tried to highlight books I haven’t talked about in the newsletter so far (or featured an author interview/essay for), but I honestly cannot remember if this is one I’ve talked about yet. In either case, it’s worth mentioning (again, maybe).

Goo writes some of the best rom-coms in YA. This one follows Clara Shin, perhaps best described as a bit…squirrely. She likes to have attention and cause trouble, but it’s nothing that’s especially destructive. Just mildly disruptive. But one joke that goes too far causes her father to step in and decide that her punishment will be a summer spent working his food truck….with the girl from school she absolutely cannot stand.

It goes about as well as you might expect.

Toss in a boy named Hamlet, a sweet relationship between Clara and her father, and food trucks (!!), the recipe here is for a satisfying and funny romp. Maybe pair this one up with Siobhan Vivian’s Stay Sweet for two great reads about girls working in food over the summer…with weirdly similar outcomes, despite very different means of getting there.

____________________

See you again on Thursday, where we’ll round up some recent YA news, great book deals, and more. And don’t forget to drop your favorite reads and most underrated YA picks of 2018 so far in the form.

— Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars on Twitter and Instagram.

Categories
In The Club

In the Club Jul 4

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 Portrait of a Sister by Laura Bradford.

a framed photo of an Amish woman walking through a field. the framed photo is resting on top of a quilt.Two Amish sisters, who made vastly different choices in life, are forced to come together after the death of their mother. One sister has chosen the Amish life, while the other enjoys the freedoms of an “English” lifestyle. National bestselling author Laura Bradford delivers a poignant novel of what it means to be torn between two worlds, the duty of family, and the desires of one’s own heart.


Announcing our latest giveaway! Want to win $500 worth of this year’s best YA books (so far)? You can enter right here.

Speaking of best: Our Best Books of 2018 So Far is live!
Book group bonus: Which of these has your group read? Which are on your list? Which will you add?

The Tonight Show is starting a book club, and the first pick is Tomi Adeyemi’s Children of Blood and Bone!
Book group bonus: This is a great example of how book group voting can work on a large scale; Fallon originally picked 5 books and let his audience choose. If you’ve never done a book group vote, there’s no time like the present!

Put all this sunshine to good use: Susie picked the top beach reads of 2018.
Book group bonus: Poll your club for their top beach reads and then plan a trip to the beach with a book swap!

Let’s talk about neurodiversity! Jaime put together 50 must-reads across both fiction and nonfiction.
Book group bonus: If you want to tick two boxes with one read, Talia Hibbert’s A Girl Like Her is not only an #ownvoices novel about a woman on the autism spectrum, it’s a lovely feminist romance with a ton of fodder for discussion. Traditional male and female roles, relationship dynamics, family dynamics, small-town situations, it’s really got it all.

And speaking of how brains work, June was Brain Awareness Month and I forgot I was sitting on this round-up.
Book group bonus: The adaptation of Brain on Fire is now on Netflix, so you could do a great Page-to-Screen discussion for this one!

Does your summer reading have a playlist? Thanks to this post, I’m now inspired to make one.
Book group bonus: This would be a fun exercise both to do as a group and to do separately and then discuss! Plus you get to argue about what your book group’s theme song would be. And then maybe stage a slow-motion walk towards a camera while playing it. (What, y’all don’t do that?)

Spotlight on: Anger is a Gift by Mark Oshiro

I first met Mark at LeakyCon (before it was GeekyCon), and was so impressed with his humor and thoughtfulness as he spoke on various panels. And then I fell down the rabbithole of Mark Reads, which is one of the most interesting interactive fan projects I’ve had the pleasure to see. Then he came to Book Riot Live, both years! So to say that I was excited when his debut novel came out was an understatement — and then I read it.

I could summarize it for you, but I’ll let Mark do that with this great video. You can immediately see why I think it will make a great book club pick — there’s so much to talk about both within the novel itself, and in terms of the connections Mark is drawing to what’s going on in the present-day United States. And to help you out a bit more with discussion points, here’s an interview with Mark from Book Riot.

Mark mentions in the interview that he originally conceived the novel as sci-fi. We didn’t get that (and I can see why he changed it), but we did get a short sci-fi story Mark wrote as part of the Future Tense project. Using that as a writing sample, you could talk about his style with sci-fi verses contemporary fiction as well.

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

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Irish Crime Fiction–So Good!

Hello mystery fans! Hope you’re in the mood for Irish crime, thrills, and a dark, the-past-is-coming-for-you! AND at the end there’s a new HUGE giveaway.


cover image: digital art of the silhouette of a girl sitting in a cut out circle with the nigth sky behindSponsored by Epic Reads

The daughter of two astronauts, Romy Silvers is no stranger to life in space. But she never knew how isolating the universe could be until her parents’ tragic deaths left her alone on the Infinity, a spaceship speeding away from Earth.

Romy tries to make the best of her lonely situation, but with only brief messages from her therapist on Earth to keep her company, she can’t help but feel like something is missing. It seems like a dream come true when NASA alerts her that another ship, the Eternity, will be joining the Infinity.

Romy begins exchanging messages with J, the captain of the Eternity, and their friendship breathes new life into her world. But as the Eternity gets closer, Romy learns there’s more to J’s mission than she could have imagined. And suddenly, there are worse things than being alone….


The Past Is Still Coming (TW: rape/ suicide)

cover image: silhouette of a profile of a woman looking up blended into a black backgroundIt All Falls Down (Nora Watts, #2) by Sheena Kamal: This sequel was one I was anticipating and it didn’t disappoint! Nora has had a tough life, and the events of the first book only added more traumatic events, but she never quits nor stops moving forward, which is what leads her to leave one of the only people in her life–on his death bed–to find answers about her father. We travel from Vancouver to Detroit as Watts puts distance with her past to uncover who her father was, but her past in Vancouver isn’t going to stop coming for her no matter how far away she is–including PI Brazuca. Watts is the kind of woman that life has beaten–repeatedly–and left her hard, mistrusting, and determined, and I love watching her navigate through the world on difficult journeys. The book has a lot of different parts–the previous “case,” her caring for a dying man, her current mission to learn about her family, working on a new relationship, and Brazuca’s current work and case–but they all flow well with each other and come together in the end leaving me once again having read a really good book and wanting more Nora Watts. (You technically do not have to read The Lost Ones because this book does catch you up BUT it gives away a lot of the solves from the first book. Plus, the first book was a great thriller so you should read it.)

Irish Crime Fiction–So Good (TW: child abuse/ suicide/ rape)

cover image: a marsh wtih green and pink lightThe Ruin (Cormac Reilly #1) by Dervla McTiernan : The adaptation rights for this put it on my radar and I’m so glad it’s getting adapted and that it’s the beginning of a series because it’s a great read. Twenty years ago a wet-behind-the-ears cop ended up taking two young children away from a home their mother was dead in. Now one of those children, Jack, has died by suicide and the other, Maude, is refusing to believe her brother–who she didn’t have a relationship with–died by suicide. And that wet-behind-the-ears cop is now a detective assigned once again to Jack’s case. The novel follows a few characters, including Jack’s girlfriend, and really explores their lives while equally focusing on the mysteries which is really one of my favorite types of crime novels. Great pick for those who love mystery novels like The Dry.

I Inhaled This Audiobook In One Day! (TW: rape/ suicide)

cover image: silhouette of a woman in a long coat standing at a train platformThe Banker’s Wife by Cristina Alger:  It follows two women: Marina Tourneau, a recently engaged journalist on vacation and Annabel, an expat whose husband was on a plane that crashed in the Alps. Marina is marrying into a political family who wants her to quit her job—hahaha this is a great book so that isn’t going to happen–and Annabel, an ex NY socialite now living in Switzerland, who is discovering that the work her husband did at Swiss United may not have been what she thought… I really liked the characters, the pace, the whole journalist-won’t-let-go-of-the-bone, and I loved the ending–which of course I can’t talk about in any way. If you’re a fan of movies/novels where a journalist keeps picking, and you like watching how all the pieces come together grab this one. (I’d also really like to see this one get adapted into a film.)

Recent Releases

cover image: blue water with the reflection of forest treesStill Water (Still #2) by Amy Stuart (A good thriller with multiple mysteries–You won’t be confused not having read Still Mine but this one does reveal a lot from the first book.) (TW: domestic abuse/ child death/ addiction)

City of Devils: The Two Men Who Ruled the Underworld of Old Shanghai by Paul French (Currently Reading: True crime about two gang leaders in 1930’s Shanghai underground.)

Scandal Above Stairs (Kat Holloway Mysteries #2) by Jennifer Ashley (TBR: Historical mystery)

The Night Ferry (A Konrad Simonsen Thriller) by Lotte Hammer, Søren Hammer, Charlotte Barslund (Translator) (TBR: Dark, Scandinavian crime.)

The Last Thing I Told You by Emily Arsenault (Currently reading: Alternating POV between detective solving a therapist’s murder and a former patient.)

cover image: jean pocket with a pink heart pin that says undead girl gangGiveaway (Hug a Luck Dragon and enter): Book Riot is giving away $500 of the year’s best YA fiction and nonfiction. There are SO MANY amazing books on this list including one’s I’ve shouted about White Rabbit, Undead Girl Gang (Reviews for both here), and Before I Let Go (Review). Also on this excellent list are some of my favorite, FAVORITE, reads: From Twinkle, With Love; The Poet X; Dread Nation.

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.

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