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Today In Books

The Strand Bookstore Doesn’t Want To Be A City Landmark: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Waterhouse Press.


The Strand Bookstore Doesn’t Want To Be A City Landmark

The iconic Greenwich Village bookstore is saying “no” to being a New York City landmark. The owner, Nancy Bass Wyden, spoke at a public hearing with the Landmarks Preservation Commission: “By landmarking the Strand, you can also destroy a piece of New York history,” she said. “We’re operating on very thin margins here, and this would just cost us a lot more, with this landmarking, and be a lot more hassle.”

Wondering How Much Beatrix Potter’s First Editions Would Sell For?

There’s an auction with 60 Beatrix Potter first editions, selling in 27 separate lots at Keys Fine Art Auctioneers in Aylsham, Norfolk. Included is The Tale Of Peter Rabbit published in 1902, which is estimated to sell for £800 to £1,200.

Trailer Time!

Here’s the trailer for BBC One’s Watership Down adaptation which has a heck of a cast including James McAvoy, Olivia Colman, Daniel Kaluuya, Nicholas Hoult, Ben Kingsley, John Boyega–just to name some. And in case you didn’t already spend the day watching the new Captain Marvel trailer on a loop–it me!–here you go.

Categories
Audiobooks

New Releases, New Ears Resolutions, and More Audiobooks

Welcome to December, Audiophiles! It’s the first newsletter of the month so you know what that means: time for new releases! Let’s get right to it then- the less I yammer on, the more time you have to listen.


Sponsored by Book Riot’s 10 Best Nonfiction Books of 2018 Giveaway.

We’re giving away ten of our favorite works of nonfiction of the year! Click here to enter.


Pero first: a giveaway! Enter here to win an audiobook prize pack!

New Releases: December 2018

Milkman by Anna Burns, narrated by Brid Bennan (release date 12/04/2018)

Eek! I have been dying to get my hands on this bad boy since it won the Booker prize winner back in October. Set in the 70s in an unnamed city in Northern Ireland, it’s about an 18-year-old girl referred to only as “middle sister” who is coerced into a relationship with an older paramilitary known as the milkman. The publisher’s summary called it “a story of the way inaction can have enormous repercussions, in a time when the wrong flag, wrong religion, or even a sunset can be subversive.” I needs dis.

Once Upon A River by Diane Setterfield, narrated by Juliet Stevenson (release date 12/04/2018)

Finally! It’s happened to me! A new book from the woman who brought us The Thirteenth Tale is here!! On a dark night in an inn on the Thames, the locals are sitting around telling stories when a stranger bursts in the door badly hurt and holding the lifeless body of a little girl. Then hours later, that little girl is decidedly not dead and everyone is like WTF? Atmospheric English setting? Check. Folklore, magic, and myth? Double check. I. can’t. wait.

Stronger, Faster, and More Beautiful by Arwyn Elys Dayton, narrated by Michael Crouch, Karissa Vacker, and Brittany Pressley (release date 12/04/2018)

This title sounds all kinds of awesome weird! It’s comprised of six tales that explore the ethics of medical and scientific human modification. It sounds like a mashup of Divergent, The Twilight Zone and Black Mirror. So much yes.

My Favorite Half-Night Stand by Christina Lauren, narrated by Shayna Thibodeaux and Deacon Lee (release date 12/04/2018)

Female-serial-killer expert (#Ichosethewrongjob) and professor Millie is great at the forensic analysis thing but not so great with people and dating. When she and some her colleagues make a pact to find plus-ones for a work party on dating apps, Millie and one the guys in that circle o’ friends end up hooking up with each other for a seriously steamy half night o’fun. They decide they’re better off as friends and keep their romp a secret, going ahead with Operating Dating App to find gala baes instead. Pero online dating is a cesspool for women and also there are feelings, so….I think I see where this is going and I’m in.

This is Cuba: An American Journalist Under Castro’s Shadow by David Ariosto, narrated by the author (release date 12/11/2018)

I am a little bit beguiled by the very idea of Cuba – its culture, its soul, its complicated history. I’m traveling there next year and have been looking forward to this book in anticipation, wherein author Daviod Ariosto finds that “…beyond the classic cars, salsa, and cigars lies a country in which black markets are ubiquitous, free speech is restricted, privacy is curtailed, sanctions wreak havoc, and an almost Kafka-esque goo of Soviet-style bureaucracy still slows the gears of an economy desperate to move forward.” Still Cuba is changing, albeit slowly and in not-so-simple ways. I can’t wait to get to know Cuba a little bit better both in person and in my ear buds.

Pandemic by Robert Cook, narrated by George Guidall (release date 12/11/18)

A healthy young woman in New York City collapses on the subway and dies upon reaching the hospital, and her case is giving veteran medical examiner Jack Stapleton some very unpleasant deja vu. In the autopsy he discovers that the woman had a heart transplant and that  her DNA matches that of the transplanted heart. Whaaat? More people begin to drop dead as he tries to figure out what TF is happening and finds himself confronting the ugliness of the organ transplant market. This is all happening on the 100th anniversary of the influenza pandemic of 1918, which we are of course observing in real life. Yikes.

Influenza: The Hundred Year Hunt to Cure the Deadliest Disease in History by Dr. Jeremy Brown, narrated by Holter Graham (release date 12/18/18)

Yeah, another flu book. What can I say, it’s flu season! Heh heh heh. *slaps leg, is way too proud of self*. This one is non-fiction and sounds terrifying compelling: an exploration of the flu virus on the 100th anniversary of the pandemic of 1918 that asks a lot of tough questions: should you get the flu shot? Are we ready for the next pandemic? Is another outbreak inevitable? Double yikes.  

Half of What You Hear by Kristyn Kusek Lewis, narrated by Candace Thaxton (release date 12/31/18)

This sounds like the perfect mix of the juicy drama of Big Little Lies and the small-town gossip of a cozy mystery. Former White House employee Bess Warner has been forced to leave her job under a cloud of scandal and decides she’s ready for a simpler life. She and her family pack up and head for her husband’s quaint little hometown, but her new neighbors aren’t too jazzed to see someone new moving in. When Bess is approached with the opportunity to write a puff piece about one of the town’s most famous residents, she begins to understand that this town is rife with gossip and secrets of its very own.

The Fork, the Witch and the Worm by Christopher Paolini, narrated by Gerard Doyle (release date 12/31/18)

This family-friendly listen is brought to you by the author of the beloved Inheritance Cycle tetralogy, set a year after Eragon has departed Alagaësia in search of a place to train the next generation of Dragon Riders. “Then a vision from the Eldunarí, unexpected visitors, and an exciting Urgal legend offer a much-needed distraction and a new perspective.” I’ve been meaning to read Christopher Paolini forever! Looks like I’d better get on it.

From the Internets

The Penguin’s Picks It’s the most audi-ful tiiiiime of the year, all the best book lists flowing and everyone going, “Hey listen to theeeeese”… If you haven’t abandoned me for that lame little remix, check out Penguin Random House’s picks for best audiobooks of the year

Over at the Riot

A List of One’s OwnIt’s the most audi-ful tiiiiime of the…. just kidding. It really is though! Here’s the Riot’s very own list of the year’s best audiobooks.

New Ears ResolutionsIt’s New Ears Resolution Week! As 2018 draws to a close, it’s time to consider what we each want the new year to look like. To help kickstart the New Year’s Resolution/goal-setting mindset, we taking time this week to talk new year/new you strategy and how audiobooks are part of the plan!

Here are just a few of the awesome posts up now.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter for book club tips & tricks and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Also… word on the street is that SOMEONE you know ehhemitsmeehhem will be hosting the 2019 Read Harder Podcast, an exclusive pod for members of Book Riot Insiders. It’s probs a good time to get in on that, ya know?

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
What's Up in YA

📚 8 More 2019 YA Titles To Stack Up

Hey YA Fans: Let’s check out some awesome 2019 YA to the TBR.

“What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by Book Riot’s 10 Best Nonfiction Books of 2018 Giveaway.

We’re giving away ten of our favorite works of nonfiction of the year! Click here to enter.


As the calendar pages on 2018 become fewer and fewer, it seems appropriate to highlight a few more YA books hitting shelves next year to get excited by. Find below a range of titles from well-known, highly acclaimed writers, as well as debuts and emerging voices across a range of genres.

Descriptions come from Goodreads, since my TBR has had many of these added, too.

Awake In The World by Jason Gurley (February 12)

A boy, a girl, an impoverished oil town, and a star-crossed romance saved by the fight for survival.

As the sun sets off the coast of the small California town of Orilla del Cielo, you can see the silhouettes of the oil rigs. Their shadows look jarring against the serene backdrop, their sharpness a reminder of unfulfilled promises. To Zach, they are a reminder of loss—his father, an oil worker who drowned years before. With a poor family struggling to make ends meet, Zach’s future feels equally bleak. Until he meets Vanessa, an optimistic girl whose sights are literally set on the stars. Inspired by her idol, Carl Sagan, she plans to study astronomy at Cornell. But as oil prospectors in search of black gold know, the future is uncertain . . . and fortunes can always be flipped.

Forward Me Back To You by Mitali Perkins (April 2)

Katina King is the reigning teen jujitsu champion of Northern California, but she’s having trouble fighting off the secrets in her past.

Robin Thornton was adopted from an orphanage in Kolkata, India and is reluctant to take on his future. Since he knows nothing about his past, how is he supposed to figure out what comes next?

Robin and Kat meet in the most unlikely of places — a summer service trip to India to work with survivors of human trafficking. As bonds blossom between the travel-mates, Robin and Kat discover the healing superpowers of friendship.

At turns heart-wrenching, beautiful, and buoyant, Mitali Perkins’ new novel explores the ripple effects of violence — across borders and generations — and how small acts of heroism can break the cycle.

The Importance of Being Wilde at Heart by R. Zamora Linmark (August 13)

Readers of Adam Silvera (They Both Die at the End) and Elizabeth Acevedo (The Poet X) will pull out the tissues for this tender, quirky story of one seventeen-year-old boy’s journey through first love and first heartbreak, guided by his personal hero, Oscar Wilde.

Words have always been more than enough for Ken Z, but when he meets Ran at the mall food court, everything changes. Beautiful, mysterious Ran opens the door to a number of firsts for Ken: first kiss, first love. But as quickly as he enters Ken’s life, Ran disappears, and Ken Z is left wondering: Why love at all, if this is where it leads?

Letting it end there would be tragic. So, with the help of his best friends, the comfort of his haikus and lists, and even strange, surreal appearances by his hero, Oscar Wilde, Ken will find that love is worth more than the price of heartbreak.

Keep This To Yourself by Tom Ryan (May 7)

It’s been a year since the Catalog Killer terrorized the sleepy seaside town of Camera Cove, killing four people before disappearing without a trace. Like everyone else in town, eighteen-year-old Mac Bell is trying to put that horrible summer behind him—easier said than done since Mac’s best friend Connor was the murderer’s final victim. But when he finds a cryptic message from Connor, he’s drawn back into the search for the killer—who might not have been a random drifter after all. Now nobody—friends, neighbors, or even the sexy stranger with his own connection to the case—is beyond suspicion. Sensing that someone is following his every move, Mac struggles to come to terms with his true feelings towards Connor while scrambling to uncover the truth.

In The Key of Nira Ghani by Natasha Deen (April 9)

Nira Ghani has always dreamed of becoming a musician. Her Guyanese parents, however, have big plans for her to become a scientist or doctor. Nira’s grandmother and her best friend, Emily, are the only people who seem to truly understand her desire to establish an identity outside of the one imposed on Nira by her parents. When auditions for jazz band are announced, Nira realizes it’s now or never to convince her parents that she deserves a chance to pursue her passion.

As if fighting with her parents weren’t bad enough, Nira finds herself navigating a new friendship dynamic when her crush, Noah, and notorious mean-girl, McKenzie “Mac,” take a sudden interest in her and Emily, inserting themselves into the fold. So, too, does Nira’s much cooler (and very competitive) cousin Farah. Is she trying to wiggle her way into the new group to get closer to Noah? Is McKenzie trying to steal Emily’s attention away from her? As Farah and Noah grow closer and Emily begins to pull away, Nira’s trusted trumpet “George” remains her constant, offering her an escape from family and school drama.

But it isn’t until Nira takes a step back that she realizes she’s not the only one struggling to find her place in the world. As painful truths about her family are revealed, Nira learns to accept people for who they are and to open herself in ways she never thought possible.

Patron Saints of Nothing by Randy Ribay (June 18)

A powerful coming-of-age story about grief, guilt, and the risks a Filipino-American teenager takes to uncover the truth about his cousin’s murder.

Jay Reguero plans to spend the last semester of his senior year playing video games before heading to the University of Michigan in the fall. But when he discovers that his Filipino cousin Jun was murdered as part of President Duterte’s war on drugs, and no one in the family wants to talk about what happened, Jay travels to the Philippines to find out the real story.

Hoping to uncover more about Jun and the events that led to his death, Jay is forced to reckon with the many sides of his cousin before he can face the whole horrible truth — and the part he played in it.

As gripping as it is lyrical, Patron Saints of Nothing is a page-turning portrayal of the struggle to reconcile faith, family, and immigrant identity.

Professor Renoir’s Collection of Oddities, Curiosities, and Delights by Randall Platt (July 23)

In this vivid, entertaining, and authentic historical novel set in the world of a traveling carnival in 1896, two fourteen-year-old girls—one a giant and the other a dwarf—start out as enemies but soon come to depend on one another to escape the clutches of an evil carnie owner who wants to kill and stuff their beloved animals. For fans of The One and Only Ivan and Water for Elephants.

The year is 1896, and Fern “Babe” Killingsworth is fourteen years old, six-foot-nine inches, and weighs 342 lbs. When her father sells her for a hundred dollars to Professor Phillipe Renoir, Babe has nothing to lose. She’s hoping she’ll find something worthwhile working alongside the other “freaks” in Professor Renoir’s Collection of Oddities, Curiosities, and Delights.

When Babe meets Carlotta, the tiny performer seems like nothing more than a spoiled diva. “I’m a dwarf, not a midget!” says the diminutive dancer—but soon the two are partners in crime, eventually disgusted by the conditions and treatment they experience in carnie life, and especially afraid of Renoir’s threats to kill and stuff their beloved animal companions, an elephant, a chimp, and a bear. When the two girls get good news in a letter, they run away from Renoir and find themselves in a much better situation at the home of Carlotta’s aunt—but will it be the last stop for Babe?

The Spaces Between Us by Stacia Tolman (July 23 — no link yet!)

Two outcast best friends are desperate to survive senior year and break away from their rural factory town in this unforgettable YA debut.

Serena Velasco and her best friend Melody Grimshaw are dying to get out of their shrinking factory town. Until now, they’ve been coasting, eluding the bleakness of home and the banality of high school. In a rebellious turn, Serena begins to fixate on communism, hoping to get a rise out of her blue-collar factory town. Her Western Civ teacher catches on and gives her an independent study of class and upward mobility—what creates the spaces between us. Meanwhile, Grimshaw sets goals of her own: to make it onto the cheerleading squad, find a job, and dismantle her family’s hopeless reputation. But sometimes the biggest obstacles are the ones you don’t see coming; Grimshaw’s quest for success becomes a fight for survival, and Serena’s independent study gets a little too real. With the future of their friendship and their lives on the line, the stakes have never been so high.

____________________

Thanks for hanging out and we’ll see you again next week. In the mean time, get some good reading in your life.

— Kelly Jensen, @veornikellymars on Twitter and Instagram

Categories
The Goods

$12 Totes

Today’s deal is tote-ally rad (sorrynotsorry). All totes are $12!

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Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

120418-Riddance-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Riddance; or, The Sybil Joines Vocational School for Ghost Speakers & Hearing-Mouth Children by Shelley Jackson.

What happens at a mysterious boarding school called The Sybil Joines Vocational School for Ghost Speakers & Hearing-Mouth Children? Children use their speech “impediments” to commune with the dead, of course. Shelley Jackson’s thrilling and innovative novel Riddance follows eleven-year-old Jane Grandison as she navigates her new life at the institution—and her newfound ability to visit the world of the dead— with the help of the brilliant (but possibly murderous) Headmistress Sybil Joines. Riddance is a richly detailed illustrated and “researched” novel in the vein of Lincoln in the Bardo. Read more here [link to: http://bit.ly/2QUnRR2].

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – Dec 5

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met and well-read. I think I’ve somehow managed to give you zero holiday-themed recommendations in the first newsletter in December?? Oh well, there’s still time. For now let’s talk Book Riot book club, yogic reads, handmaids, and border stories.

Off to the club we go!


This newsletter is sponsored by Penguin Random House Audio. Keep up with your reading by listening to the audiobook – and never miss a book club meeting!

Keep up with your book club reading by listening to the audiobook. Audiobooks are the perfect complement to your busy schedule. Listen to new releases such as The Kennedy Debutante by Kerri Maher and read by Julia Whelan, and you can enjoy a whole new book club experience. For more listening suggestions, visit Tryaudiobooks.com/BookRiot.


Nevertheless, We Persisted – That’s right, friends: Persist is back!  We’re hosting the last edition of our feminist Instagram book club for the year and we’ve announced this quarter’s pick! Head on over to the gram for the Instagram live discussion schedule. Be there!

  • Book Club Bonus: You should definitely join us for Persist, but also: don’t be afraid to use the internets for your own book club purposes. You and your bookish companions don’t have to live in the same geographic area to get in on the book club action. Get your Skype/FaceTime/Slack/Instagram Live on – whatever works for you.

Good Reads + Deep Breaths – Yoga isn’t all backbends and headstands; it’s breath and reflection and mindfulness. Get centered and still with these 5 yoga books for yogic thinking. Namaste!

  • Book Club Bonus: Bring book club to the yoga mat! Pick a yogic read for all of your yogis to enjoy and then attend a class together as a group. If there’s an instructor among you, have them lead your group in a flow at a location of your choice. Again, it doesn’t have to be a seriously physical practice; concentrate more on breath, stillness, and calm.

the handmaid's taleReturn to Gilead – Margaret Atwood will pen a sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale! Maybe the premise of the first one started to feel like and less like fiction? Welp, back to Gilead we go! Under his eye.

  • Book Club Bonus: If you haven’t already read The Handmaid’s Tale in book group, set some time aside to do so. There’s plenty to talk about there, but dive a little deeper and share your thoughts for where the sequel will go. Will it continue with Offred’s storyline or will it pick up in the future? Do you think it will align with the second season of the Hulu series? What terrifying predictions do you have?

An Interview with Gabino Iglesias – “I had this idea in my head: pulp walks into a bar and smashes a bottle in the face of literary fiction while reciting poetry.” Read more about Iglesias, his unique brand of barrio noir, and the wave of indie lit about the immigrant experience that he’s helping to usher in.

  • Book Club Bonus: I’d love to host a book club that read three titles on the immigrant experience: anything by Gabino Iglesias plus Yuri Herrera’s Signs Preceding the End of the World and In the Distance by Hernan Diaz. These distinct works of fiction all tackle the same subject with very different modalities but are all hugely impactful and thought-provoking. I challenge you to unpack all of the commentary these titles have to offer: how Diaz’s use of a white character changes the narrative, how Iglesias tackles fear-based othering of brown people, Herrera’s mythological rendering of a border crossing tale. Dios mio, the possibilities.

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!

Also… a little birdie told me that someone whose names sounds a lot like Schmanessa Schmiaz is going to be hosting the exclusive Read Harder Podcast in 2019. Now would be a great time to join Book Riot Insiders if you haven’t already… jus sayin.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

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

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

Happy Tuesday, Riot faithful! Vanessa here subbing in for Liberty this week. While I am so not worthy to fill Lib’s hungry hungry bookeating (and bat-winged!) shoes, I’ll do my best to do her proud and give you the skinny on some fresh reads.

To the books!


Sponsored by Gallery Books.

By the New York Times bestselling author who “hilariously depicts modern dating” (Us Weekly), My Favorite Half-Night Stand is a laugh-out-loud romp through online dating and its many, many fails. Perfect for fans of Roxanne and She’s the Man, Christina Lauren’s latest romantic comedy is full of mistaken identities, hijinks, and a classic love story with a modern twist. Funny and fresh, you’ll want to swipe right on My Favorite Half-Night Stand.


Milkman by Anna Burns

I have been dying to get my hands on this bad boy since it was named the Man Booker prize winner back in October! Set in the 70s in an unnamed city in Northern Ireland, it’s about an 18-year-old girl who’s coerced into a relationship with an older married paramilitary guy known as the milkman. The publisher’s summary called it “a story of the way inaction can have enormous repercussions, in a time when the wrong flag, wrong religion, or even a sunset can be subversive.” Umm YES PLEASE.

Once Upon A River by Diane Setterfield

GAH I’M SO EXCITED! The writer of the much beloved The Thirteenth Tale is back and I may have pulled a muscle in a sad attempt at a hurkey when the galley for it came in. This one opens on a dark night in an inn on the Thames where the locals are sitting around telling stories when a wounded stranger bursts in the door holding the lifeless body of a little girl. Then hours later, that little girl is suddenly… not dead and no one can really explain why. Atmospheric English setting? Check. Mix of folklore, magic, and myth? Double check.

Backlist bump: I mean obvi The Thirteenth Tale.

Theater of the World: The Maps that Made History by Thomas Reinertsen Berg

I can’t get enough of this kind of non-fiction lately! This one is a gorgeous full-color illustrated history of mapmaking and how it both informed and shaped worldwide exploration. It goes as far back as the Stone Age to break down how we got to a place where Google Earth is a thing. I have my eye on this one for a few of the history buffs in my life this holiday season.


That’s all I’ve got for you today! If I haven’t scared you off, shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com to say hola or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In the Club and Audiobooks newsletters for tips, tricks, and latest listens by yours truly, and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
Today In Books

Tuk Tuk Library Spreads Joy of Books: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Penguin Random House Audio.


We Found Another Helper

Jakarta’s poorest neighbourhoods are being visited by Sutino “Kinong” Hadi and his tuk tuk filled with books. While the three-wheeled vehicles have been banned in Jakarta, Indonesia, the government has given him a special waver to continue using his for books. “Before he could even lift the covers up, the children had stuck their heads inside and were grabbing books.”

Diversity-Focused Crime Imprint

In very much needed news: Polis Books is launching the new imprint Agora Books. The first three books will release in 2019: “Three-Fifths by John Vercher, the story of a biracial man who discovers a childhood friend has become a neo-nazi; Remember by Patrica Smith, a novel about woman forced to reconcile with a painful past; and The Ninja Daughter by Tori Eldridge, the tale of a woman who dedicates herself to becoming a modern day ninja after the murder of her daughter.” Can’t wait!

Want To Fall Down A Rabbit Hole Of Accusations Of Plagiarizing?

Here’s a story that’s been unfolding on Twitter for days: A Pushcart Prize nominee has been accused of lifting words/images from other poets. It started with one poet comparing the works and since more poets have come forward to say they believe their work was also lifted.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships Dec 4

Hello and happy Tuesday, demon-hunters and Daredevils. Today we’ve got the first of what will probably be many rounds of nerdy gift guides, some new book news and adaptations, a couple excellent e-book deals, a review of Empire of Sand by Tasha Suri, and more!


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.

 


In gift, adaptation, and book news:

Let’s kick off December with the first nerdy gift guide to appear in my inbox! The honor goes to Unbound Worlds.

We here at Book Riot also have a gift guide, which includes but is not limited to SF/F stuff.

Not to be outdone, here is PW’s (scroll down for the SF/F section), which includes An Ocean of Minutes by Thea Lim (reviewed here) and Trail of Lightning by Rebecca Roanhorse (reviewed here).

Also also in gift news, here is lots of amazing Tamora Pierce/Tortall swag.

We’re getting another installment in the world of The Machineries of Empire from Yoon Ha Lee! It’s a short story collection called Hexarchate Stories, but it won’t be out til June 2019 (:weeps:).

Netflix is cancelling Daredevil, but I’m doing fine because Runaways will be back on December 21.

Meanwhile, Blade Runner is getting an anime series. Dare I hope that the showrunners have read the original, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick, and we’ll get some specifics from that? Anyway I confess I am interested.

V.E. Schwab’s got another adaptation deal, this time for her novel City of Ghosts!

And it’s probably not a sea monster that caused some mysterious quakes … but could it be an orogene?!?! BRB, have to stuff my copy of The Fifth Season into my go-bag.

Some new releases for this week to keep an eye on:

Queen of Air and Darkness by Cassandra Clare

Of Blood and Bone (Chronicles of the One #2) by Nora Roberts

And here are two great ebook deals:

Wintersong by S. Jae Jones (reviewed here), $2.99

Under the Pendulum Sun by Jeanette Ng, $1.99

And today in reviews, we’ve got a young woman on an epic quest — always a good time!

Empire of Sand (The Books of Ambha #1) by Tasha Suri

a curved dagger with a white hilt and jeweled base, set against a red-tinged backdropLooking for a high fantasy to fill that Dreamblood Duology and/or The City of Brass and/or The Grace of Kings and/or Kushiel’s Legacy-shaped hole in your life? Look no further — Empire of Sand is a page-turner and an enthralling start to a new series.

Mehr is the illegitimate but pampered daughter of an imperial governor, raised in luxury and seclusion but with relatively little power, influence, or choice. Her mother, exiled from her daughters since Mehr was a little girl, is part of a tribe persecuted for their beliefs and their magic. Between avoiding her stepmother’s ire (basically impossible) and hanging on to what little she remembers of her mother and her culture, Mehr tries to live as best she can. When she discovers she inherited powers along with her mother’s blood, she draws the attention of the Emperor and is offered a choice that’s no choice at all — bring down the wrath of the Emperor on herself and her family, or marry an intimidating, aloof mystic and use her newly discovered powers for others’ dark purposes. And the choices she must make only get more complicated from there…

Suri has written an epic, high-stakes fantasy here, one that revolves around a question often implicit but less often directly addressed: what does choice mean in the grips of compulsion and coercion? The world-building, inspired in part by Mughal India, is immersive and lush — which is a weird word to use about a desert empire, but it really does feel vibrant and rich. The colors and textures of Mehr’s world practically sparkle on the page. There are demons, battles, and politics aplenty, plus a gorgeously complicated storyline about love and family.

Perhaps my favorite thing about this book is that it stands beautifully by itself — Suri sets everything up for more adventures, but the main plot is brought to an immensely satisfying close. While I can’t wait to see what’s next for these characters, I’m relieved that I will not have to wail and gnash my teeth for however long it takes til Book 2 comes out. So for all the high fantasy enthusiasts out there, particularly those looking for #ownvoices South Asian-inspired stories, treat yo’self to this one.

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.

Stay frosty,
Jenn

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Giveaways

Win one of 250 (!) Audiobooks of FREEFALL by Jessica Barry!

 

We have 250(!) early digital audio downloads of Freefall by Jessica Barry to give away to 250 Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

“A daring tightrope walk of a novel.”- AJ Finn, author of the #1 NYT Bestselling The Woman in the Window

Told from the perspectives of a mother and daughter separated by distance but united by an unbreakable bond, Freefall by Jessica Barry is a riveting debut written with the intensity of Luckiest Girl Alive and Before the Fall, about two tenacious women overcoming unimaginable obstacles to protect themselves and those they love. Freefall is on sale 1/8/19 in audio, hardcover, and ebook formats. Experience it before everyone else by entering for a chance to win one of 250 early digital downloads of the audio edition performed by Hillary Huber, Karissa Vacker, and MacLeod Andrews, fulfilled by Libro.fm.

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