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Unusual Suspects

I Can’t Resist A Baby Elephant!

Hello mystery fans! This week I have a baby elephant, dark true crime, and Australian crime for you.


Today’s newsletter is sponsored by our $250 All the Books Barnes and Noble gift card giveaway! Enter here.


I Can’t Resist A Baby Elephant! (TW mentions suicide/ child & domestic abuse off page but mentioned with detail)

The Perplexing Theft of the JEwel in the Crown by Vaseem Khan cover imageThe Perplexing Theft of the Jewel in the Crown (Baby Ganesh Agency Investigation #2) by Vaseem Khan: This series walks a line between mystery and cozy mystery and should have a mass appeal because of that. It doesn’t shy away from real problems in the world and things that are dark, but it doesn’t sink into them which keeps the book feeling much lighter than many mysteries. It also moves at a much quicker pace than a lot of cozy mysteries. And while Inspector Chopra has a baby elephant as a “partner,” this really does stay in the plausible, if unlikely–but still realistic enough that I plan to retire with a baby elephant that will help me solve mysteries. In this book Inspector Chopra, still retired from the police due to a heart condition, is running a restaurant, solving mysteries, and caring for a baby elephant and a runaway child. At the heart of the book is the mystery of the stolen Koh-i-Noor diamond, but Chopra is also called upon for a friend who claims to be wrongfully imprisoned, a stolen bust, and plenty of chaos and drama involving the restaurant, caring for a baby elephant, and a runaway child. I love that baby Ganesha is given a full character, being that elephants really are very intelligent and emotional creatures. It’s a really enjoyable series to sink into and I always look forward to more Ganesha, and seeing how Inspector Chopra and his wife Poppy’s lives continue to evolve.

Excellent Dark True Crime (TW incest discussed/ rape/ torture/ suicide attempt/ self-harm)

People Who Eat Darkness cover imagePeople Who Eat Darkness: The True Story of a Young Woman Who Vanished from the Streets of Tokyo–and the Evil That Swallowed Her Up by Richard Lloyd Parry: This is one of those true crime books that has a dark and sad case at the heart of it, and I appreciate that Parry focused on the victims (even if I could have used a bit less of his opinion in a few spots). There is a banana-pants aspect to this, there’s a dive into Japanese clubs where men pay for women to flirt with them, there’s the look into the Japanese justice system, and misogyny. Lucie Blackman was a young British woman working as a hostess in Japan when she disappeared. Her family traveled to Japan, treating this the way British/US media would treat a white young woman missing, but discovered that in Japan things are done differently. At this point I swear Lucie’s father reminded me of Nick Dunne in Gone Girl, where we expect people to behave certain ways in certain situations but sometimes they don’t. The book reads parts of Lucie’s diary (I’m personally never comfortable with this unless their diary starts with “If I die you can publish this…”), takes medium-depth dives into some aspects of Japanese culture and history involving the racist treatment of Koreans in Japan, follows the case of what happened to Lucie, and the trial which goes a bit off the rails from what Japanese courts were accustomed to. There are a lot of interesting things in this book wrapped around a sad and avoidable murder of a young woman and a lot of things that would now get labeled #metoo. If you’re a true crime reader and had missed this one, definitely pick it up.

Australian Procedural (TW domestic violence/ rape/ suicide)

The Dark Lake cover imageThe Dark Lake (Gemma Woodstock #1) by Sarah Bailey: Detective Sergeant Gemma Woodstock is a person with secrets, including that she’s having an affair with her partner–what could go wrong? She’s also just had a miscarriage she hasn’t told anyone about, including her boyfriend who she’s raising a son with. Adding to her stress is her new case: a strangled woman found in a lake who Woodstock knew from high school. The case is filled with complications, starting with: as much as Rosalind Ryan seemed to be a popular drama teacher, much of her life raises more questions than answers, and no one seemed to really know her, or why someone would murder her. Told in then and now, and also first person and third person, you mainly get to know Woodstock as she deals with the case at hand, her current chaotic life, and her reliving high school and what she knew of Ryan. This one should satisfy procedural fans who like complicated main characters.

Recent Releases (Okay, so this is going to be minimal until the new year, not because I’m getting lazy but because publishing slows down in November and December and then has a book explosion in January.)

The Novel Art of Murder cover imageThe Novel Art of Murder (Mystery Bookshop #3) by V.M. Burns (If you’re looking for a cozy mystery with a bookstore setting.)

Kingdom of the Blind (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache #14) by Louise Penny (I’m curling up with this one this week since Penny always delivers a satisfying procedural.)

Hellbent (Orphan X #3) by Gregg Hurwitz (Mass Market Paperback) (I really enjoyed the first one in this series, which was super action packed fun thriller, and look forward to continuing.)

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.

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Today In Books

Book Concierge Is Back: Today In Books

Sponsored by Glimmer of Hope by The Founders of March For Our Lives

Glimmer Of Hope cover image


NPR’s Book Concierge Of 2018

I know you can’t look anywhere without spotting a Best Of list–’tis the season after all–but I love how NPR’s Book Concierge is designed and how eclectic it is. You’re bound to see favorites while also discovering tons of new-to-you books.

Thriller Without Violence Award Goes To:

Australian novel, On the Java Ridge by Jock Serong. The Staunch prize, this is it’s first year, was created to award a thriller “in which no woman is beaten, stalked, sexually exploited, raped or murdered.” Read more about the prize, those who oppose, and about Serong’s novel here.

We Have Another Dictionary Chosen Word Of The Year

Dictionary.com has selected “misinformation” as the 2018 word of the year. “The rampant spread of misinformation is really providing new challenges for navigating life in 2018,” Dictionary linguist-in-residence Jane Solomon told The Associated Press. “Mainstream” and “representation” were among the runner-ups.

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Giveaways

Win a Prize Pack of 10 Comics!

 

We have 10 sets of this prize pack to give away to 10 Riot readers!

Cozy up this holiday season with a set of books from Lion Forge! This collection of titles is perfect for every level of reader with titles ranging from This Is a Taco! for early readers, Sheets for middle grade readers, Mae Vol. 1 for teens, and Upgrade Soul for older readers. Enter for your chance to win one of ten sets of these books and more from Lion Forge!

Here is a full list of the titles included:

This Is A Taco!
This Is A Whoopsie!
Sheets
Mae Vol. 1
Summit Vol. 1: The Long Way Home
Love Letters To Jane’s World
Puerto Rico Strong
Upgrade Soul
Fraternity
Goldilocks And The Infinite Bears: A Pie Comics Collection

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

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The Stack

112718-RNGMATB250-The-Stack

Today’s The Stack is sponsored by sponsored by our $250 All the Books Barnes and Noble gift card giveaway! Click here for more info.

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Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

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Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Penguin Random House

For fans of Black Mirror and Westworld, this compelling, mind-bending novel is a twisted look into the future, exploring the lengths we’ll go to remake ourselves into the perfect human specimen and what it means to be human at all.

Today our bodies define us. We color our hair; tattoo our skin; pierce our ears, noses. We lift weights, run miles, break records. We are flesh and blood and bone.

The future is no longer about who we are—it’s about who we want to be. Science will make us smarter, healthier, flawless in every way. Our future is boundless.

 

Categories
In The Club

In The Club – Nov 28

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met and well-read.

How we doing, friends? Welcome back! Congrats to all my US peeps who survived awkward talks with racist relatives around the Thanksgiving table. You did good! Now let’s get back to our happy place.

Let’s talk bookish prizes, bookish gifts, big romance reads, and money money money money (*falsetto*) MONEY! Ready? Vamos al club.


Today’s newsletter is sponsored by sponsored by our $250 All the Books Barnes and Noble gift card giveaway!

Enter to win a $250 gift card to Barnes and Noble in support of our All the Books! podcast. Click here for more info.

 


It’s All About the Benjamins, Baby – “I don’t like money, and I’m no millionaire. I work a 9-5 job. I teach yoga on the side. I sell some of my writing for small amounts of cash. I’m not a homeowner. So really, what I’m saying is: I’m totally normal.” I love this line by Rioter Aisling Twomey in her post on books about money.

  • Book Club Bonus: Money talk can be uncomfortable but knowing more about it – especially as women and/or persons of color – is vital to our empowerment. Read a book about money with your pals for book club and get real about money matters. Share your experiences with the pay gap, strategies for saving, investing, retirement plans, how hard it is out here in these streets, etc. Crush the stigma around money matters and remember that knowledge is power.
  • Related: It’d be like a day without orange juice if I didn’t sneak a 90s rap lyric into a header, wouldn’t it? Fun fact: my dad is terrible with names and refers to Diddy, the artist formerly known as Puff Daddy, as “el Big Daddy Puff.” Carry on.

Come Bearing Gifts – Alright folks. Thanksgiving has passed and it’s officially acceptable to start the holiday talk. Looking for some budget-friendly gifts for your bookworm besties this season? Check out these 25 easy DIY gifts for book lovers.

  • Book Club Bonus: We’re knocking on December’s doors and end of year busyness can make reading time scarce for some. If your book group is strapped for assigned reading time but can squeeze in time for a meet-up, have a holiday gathering. Bring food and drink like I mentioned last week, exchange small gifts, and share your favorite reads of the year (book club picks or otherwise). Tis the season! Fit in the book love however you can.

Give her the Giller and the Rest of the Things – Esi Edugyan’s Washington Black is this year’s Giller Prize winner (not to mention a shortlist pick for a gaggle of other literary awards)! Read more about the one book Flare says you should read this year.

  • Book Club Bonus: Washington Black isn’t your typical slavery narrative. George Washington Black is a eleven-year-old slave on a Barbados sugar plantation run by a sadistic master – ok, familiar. Then his master’s brother Christopher takes him under his wing and plot twist!!! Instead of subjecting Washington to further cruelty, he ends up taking the boy for a ride in a hot air balloon to places like Morocco, Novia Scotia, and the Arctic. His story becomes one of salvation and adventure, of self-invention and the wonder of youth. Discuss how Washington is able to overcome his circumstances, how his curiosity is crucial to his survival.

cover of The Changeling by Victor LaValleFantasy Wins! – The 2018 World Fantasy Award Winners were announced earlier this month! A few of these titles have been sitting on my TBR and are waving at me like, “Hey girl! Yeah we see you! Remember us?!?” While I avoid eye/spine contact, check out the list of winners and find your next fantastic read!

  • Book Club Bonus: Bruuuuuuuh. Victor Lavalle’s The Changeling is such a perfect book club pick! You’ll just be minding your own business and reading this nice story when BAM! A thing will happen and you’ll question everything you know to be good and true in this world. We read this at the bookstore in October and we all had a lot of feelings; it’s part fairy tale, part horror story with tons of commentary on the black experience, racism, fatherhood and … trolls.

Great Big Romance Read – The gals at the Ripped Bodice are out here killin’ it. They’ve inked a TV deal with Sony, they’re running the only romance bookstore in the country and tearing down stigmas, and now they’re bringing us The Great Big Romance Read. Their goal is “to connect romance readers all over the world and celebrate a shared love of romance by reading the same book during the month of December.”

  • Book Club Bonus: I love when I get to share news with a built-in book club and this is one of those times! Lots of in-person and online discussion groups are already scheduled to talk about 2018’s selection, which so happens to be my fave Pride by Ibi Zoboi. Grab your friends and go to a meet-up if you can, or join in on the online fun for this fantastic classics remix (find the schedule here).

Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter for tips and latest listens and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

Happy Tuesday, book lovers! I’m happy to be back again with more great new books! The year is winding down, but there are still amazing books coming down the pike. I’m going to share a few of today’s great books below, and you can hear about some of our anticipated reads of 2019 on this week’s episode of the All the Books! Rebecca and I talked talked about The Nickel Boys, An Orchestra of Minorities, Southern Lady Code, and more great books. (We also talked about her new puppy because PUPPY.)


Today’s newsletter is sponsored by our $250 All the Books Barnes and Noble gift card giveaway!

Enter to win a $250 gift card to Barnes and Noble in support of our All the Books! podcast. Click here for more info.


how long 'til black future monthHow Long ’til Black Future Month?: Stories by N. K. Jemisin

I was not lucky enough to get my hands on this speculative fiction collection before it came out, but I had to bring it to your attention, because it’s freaking N.K. JEMISIN, winner of three Hugo awards THREE years in a row! It’s at the top of my to-buy list for sure.

Backlist bump: The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin

the razorThe Razor by J. Barton Mitchell

An action-packed science fiction adventure about an inmate on a hard labor prison planet, who must rely on some of the galaxy’s most dangerous criminals after the prisoners are abandoned by their guards and left to die. Think The Martian meets The Shawshank Redemption.

Backlist bump: Lightless by C.A. Higgins

the museum of modern loveThe Museum of Modern Love by Heather Rose

Based around a real exhibit by performance artist Marina Abramović, this thought-provoking novel is about a fictional character named Arky. Down on his luck and aimless in his life, things change when Arky encounters Abramović’s performance art at the museum and realizes what he need to do with his own life.

Backlist bump: The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even by Chris F. Westbury

That’s it for me today – time to get back to reading! If you want to learn more about books new and old (and see lots of pictures of my cats, Millay and Steinbeck), or tell me about books you’re reading, or books you think I should read (I HEART RECOMMENDATIONS!), you can find me on Twitter at MissLiberty, on Instagram at FranzenComesAlive, or Litsy under ‘Liberty’!

Thanks so much for visiting me here each week! Y’all are the best.

xoxo,

Liberty

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships Nov 27

Hello and happy Tuesday, vagabonds and Vogons! Today we’re talking about Doctor Who, notable SF/F of 2018, new She-Ra books, a couple new releases, N.K. Jemisin’s collection How Long ‘Til Black Future Month?, and more.


This newsletter is sponsored by Rebel Base Books and The Spectral City by Leanna Renee Hieber.

a black cover with red glowing occultic designs and the outline of an eye in the centerIn 1899 New York City, the police have a secret spiritual go-to for solving the city’s most haunting crimes. Her name is Eve Whitby, gifted medium and leader of The Ghost Precinct. With her group of female psychics and wayward ghosts, nineteen-year-old Eve holds her own against New York’s darkest threats. But when her ghostly conduits begin to disappear, Eve realizes that a malevolent force is out to destroy the balance between two realms. Now, she must brave the darkness to make sure no one is ever left for dead.


Here’s the latest very handy round-up of SF/F adaptations in the works on Tor.

The NY Times picked their 100 notable books of 2018, and congrats go out to the genre books that made the list: Eternal Life by Dara Horn (reviewed here), Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik, and Washington Black by Esi Edugyan (critically acclaimed and high on my TBR).

We’ve got a trailer and a fancy shmancy website for the Harry Potter AR game over at Wizards Unite, and it’s very appealing to this Potterhead at least.

Where my Scots at? Scotland is getting its own SF, F, and Horror festival in 2019, and it looks very interesting.

In gifty news, my fellow Bitch Planet fans and I can now rock a non-compliant boot tag!

Get your pre-ordering engines ready; there will be Little Golden Books for He-Man and She-Ra in July!

Doctor Who actor Tom Baker has written a Doctor Who novel, based on a script that never saw the light of day. (Doctor? Doctor!)

New releases you might also be excited about:

Aladdin: A New Translation, translated by Yasmine Seale (very interested in this!)

The Mortal Word: An Invisible Library Story by Genevieve Cogman

Today’s review is for this week’s most exciting new release, AT LONG LAST!

How Long ‘Til Black Future Month? by N.K. Jemisin

a photo of a young black woman with natural hair pulled up into a fauxhawk, accessorized with beautiful flowers and objects and a large white beaded necklace, shown in profileThe first short story of Jemisin’s I ever came into contact with was “Non-Zero Probabilities,” which she read at a group event in Brooklyn years ago. I gushed over it, thinking it was new, only to find out that it had come out in 2009 and was a Hugo award nominee. (DERP.) The chance to read it again here, having since read all of her novels and some other short works, was a delight. And let’s get right to it: I love this collection. Not only does it contain my favorite Jemisin short stories plus exciting new ones, it also includes an Introduction and Acknowledgements that shed light on her writing process (for all you aspiring writers/process lovers).

Whether they are from 2009 or 2004 or 2017, all of these stories hold up, and I couldn’t have told you from a first read which were more recent than others. (If anyone wants to really nerd out and read them in chronological order, they’re listed as such on the copyright page.) Instead, I just lost myself in each one. Each showcases in its own way her huge imagination and willingness to experiment with structure, voice, and place.

The collection kicks off with “The Ones Who Stay and Fight,” which is both a response to Ursula K. Le Guin’s “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas” and a clarion call for accountability that is all too relevant in the current political climate. Others, including “The You Train,” “Non-Zero Probabilities,” “The City Born Great,” and “Cuisine des Mémoires,” are just the slightest bit off from our present world. Still others play with history (“The Effluent Engine”), and then there’s the hard sci-fi of “The Evaluators,” which is rare for Jemisin and most welcome to this reader. Longtime readers of hers will be delighted by “Stone Hunger,” which takes place in the Broken Earth ‘verse and contains some familiar characters, and “The Narcomancer,” which revisits the world of the Dreamblood Duology. And if I were going to make a playlist for this collection, which I am strongly tempted to do, I would pair “Sinners, Saints, Dragons, and Haints, in the City Beneath the Still Waters” with Beyoncé’s “Formation.” Read it, and you’ll see why.

Whether she’s exploring alien life forms or political machinations, self-sacrifice or monsters in New Orleans, Jemisin’s characters are boldly drawn, complex, and so engaging. This is a great gift for any long-time fan and a solid introduction to her work for the curious, and I highly recommend you grab yourself the gorgeous hardcover version.

Bonus! You can read (either before or after the collection, suit yourself!) the piece entitled “How Long ‘Til Black Future Month?” that the collection was named after but does not contain.

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, or on Twitter as jennIRL.

You gotta tip on the tightrope,
Jenn

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Today In Books

Islamophobic Graphic Novel Pulled By Publisher: Today In Books

Sponsored by Libby, the one-tap reading app from your library and OverDrive.


Publisher Pulls Publication Of Upcoming Graphic Novel

Abrams will no longer publish A Suicide Bomber Sits in the Library by Jack Gantos and Dave McKean after many publicly objected to the Islamophobic comic. The Asian Author Alliance wrote a public letter that was signed by more than 1,000 teachers, writers, and readers: “The simple fact is that today, the biggest terrorist threat in the US is white supremacy. In publishing A Suicide Bomber Sits in the Library, Abrams is willfully fear-mongering and spreading harmful stereotypes in a failed attempt to show the power of story.”

The Fourth Doctor Is Writing A Doctor Who Novelization

Tom Baker has co-written with author James Goss a novelization based on a Doctor Who film that had been planned but never made. You can read more about Scratchman over at EW.

For The Honor Of Grayskull

We are getting Little Golden Books in 2019 of She-Ra and He-Man! While we wait for the adorable I Am She-Ra and I Am He-Man I very much recommend the new She-Ra series on Netflix–it’s fantastic!

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The Goods

Cyber Monday 30% Storewide

T-shirts and hoodies and tote bags, oh my! Get 30% off all your favorite bookish goodies for Cyber Monday.