Categories
Check Your Shelf

DUBLIN MURDER News, Bad Sex Award in Fiction, and a Vending Machine For Books

Welcome to Check Your Shelf! This is your guide to all things book talk worth knowing to help librarians like you up your game when it comes to doing your job (& rocking it).

“Check Your Shelf” is sponsored by Penguin Teen.

In this riveting, unflinching tale of sacrifice and hope, critically-acclaimed author Natalie C. Anderson delivers another tour-de-force that will leave readers at the edge of their seats.
When Abdi’s family is kidnapped, he’s forced to do the unthinkable: become a child soldier with the ruthless jihadi group Al Shabaab. Forced to become a child soldier, a sixteen-year-old Somali refugee must confront his painful past in this haunting, thrilling tale of loss and redemption for fans of A Long Way Gone and What is the What.


Libraries & Librarians

Book Adaptations in the News

Books in the News

Award News

All Things Comics

Audiophilia

Best Books of 2018

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in LibraryReads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

____________________

Thanks for hanging out and I’ll see you again next week!

–Katie McLain, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading Unmasked by the Marquess by Cat Sebastian.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships Dec 7

Happy Friday, bards and brigands! I’m in a bit of a reading slump (it happens to all of us, alas), so today is a double-sized dose of linky goodness including more Best Of lists, interviews and guest posts from some favorite authors, holiday-themed reading, nerd gear, and more.


This newsletter is sponsored by Once a King and HMH Teen.

For twenty years, Channelers—women with a magical ability—have been persecuted in Malam by those without magic. Now King Aodren wants to end the bloody divide and unite his kingdom. But decades of hatred can’t be overcome by issuing decrees, and rumors of a deadly Channeler-made substance are only fueling people’s fears. Lirra has every reason to distrust Aodren. Yet when he asks for help to discover the truth behind the rumors, she can’t say no. With Lirra by his side, Aodren sees a way forward for his people. But can he rewrite the mistakes of the past before his enemies destroy the world he’s working so hard to rebuild?


This week on SFF Yeah!, Sharifah and I gave our favorite picks for gift-giving (to yourself or others!) this holiday season.

The Best of 2018 lists, in all their various permutations, continue to roll in! Here’s a round-up:
Goodreads Choice Awards (Fantasy: Circe by Madeline Miller; Sci-Fi: Vengeful, V.E. Schwab)
Autostraddle (scroll down for the SF/F category, which includes So Lucky by Nicola Griffith, The Merry Spinster by Daniel Mallory Ortberg, and The Descent of Monsters by JY Yang)
NPR’s Book Concierge (with shout-outs to Witchmark, The Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein, A Thousand Beginnings and Endings, Record of a Spaceborn Few, Gnomon, How Long Til Black Future Month, and many more)
NYPL’s Top 100 (Circe and Spinning Silver made the top 10, there is definitely a pattern here)

Last year I crunched the SF/F titles on these lists for the most-picked, and I’ve decided to do it again. Tune into SFF Yeah!‘s 12/19 episode for those details!

On the flip side of “best of,” here’s a list of 2018 YA fantasy that Namera thinks were hugely underrated (including For a Muse of Fire, reviewed here).

And not an official “best of,” but here’s a round-up of 21 amazing horror books by women (including personal favs Tananarive Due, Mira Grant, Nalo Hopkinson, and Lauren Beukes).

Are we in a Golden Age of interplanetary stories? Here’s a list with compelling evidence (and an earworm for you).

A very happy Chanukah to those celebrating; here’s a list of Jewish SF/F for all of us to add to our TBRs.

I just reviewed Empire of Sand by Tasha Suri (here), so I was delighted to see this thoughtful guest post from her about magic’s role in faith and history.

Also in “I just reviewed that!” (here), NK Jemisin is making the interview rounds for How Long Til Black Future Month, and these two pieces are worth a read: Vulture chronicles her trajectory as a writer and looks at her forthcoming urban fantasy; and GQ talked to her about the mythology of cities, particularly New York, and political despair.

How do people really behave during an apocalypse? There’s research around this, and as Arkady Martine discusses, it’s not what you might think.

Waterworld but better: here’s a round-up of undersea SF/F, including some deep cuts that I now desperately need to read.

This post of fantasy-inspired makeup looks makes me want to get way better at makeup.

Do you or a loved one need a really fancy Hoth-inspired parka? Columbia is on it.

Also in the Star Wars-gifts realm, here’s a coffee table book of blueprints.

And in a final gifty deep-dive, here are three biographies for the Madeleine L’Engle completist in your life.

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.

May the odds be ever in your favor,
Jenn

Categories
The Goods

$15 Kids & Baby

Bookish kids are the best kids. Deck them out this season with $15 kids’ and baby gear, today only!

Categories
Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

120618-PRHAHoliday18-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Penguin Random House Audio.

Make your holiday travels, errands, cooking sessions, and all the rest more enjoyable by listening to an audiobook. From bestsellers, to thrillers, to self-care, you can find the perfect listen for any moment. Give yourself the gift of audio this holiday season.

Categories
The Stack

120618-TrueStoryGiveaway-The-Stack

Today’s The Stack 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.

Categories
Today In Books

CALL ME BY YOUR NAME Is Getting A Sequel: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE DUKE, a delightful Regency holiday romance by Janna MacGregor.

The Good the Bad and the Duke_Cover


Call Me By Your Name Is Getting A Sequel

While the conversation about whether there will be a sequel to the film adaptation of the novel continues, André Aciman, the author of Call Me By Your Name, stated on Twitter there will be a book sequel: “I would actually love a sequel to Call Me by Your Name. In fact I am writing one.

Twelve New Poem-a-Day Guest Editors for 2019

Poets.org shares previously unpublished poems by poets daily and Poem-a-Day will have 12 new guest editors in 2019 who will each curate a month of poems. Click that link to learn more about the awesome guest editors and let’s all read more poetry in 2019!

The 2018 Honorees Of AFI Awards Have Been Announced

And I immediately spotted 4 films that were book adaptations! Congrats to BlacKkKlansman based on Ron Stallworth’s Black Klansman: Race, Hate, and the Undercover Investigation of a Lifetime; Black Panther based on the comic book character; If Beale Street Could Talk based on James Baldwin’s novel; Mary Poppins Returns based on Pamela Lyndon Travers’ series.

Categories
The Goods

$8 Socks & Boxers

This week of rad deals rolls on! Get socks and boxers for 8 bucks.

Categories
Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

120518-NewYorker-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by The New Yorker — get 12 weeks for just $6, plus a free tote.

The New Yorker represents the best writing in America today. Both online and in print, The New Yorker delivers unparalleled reporting and commentary on politics, international affairs, business, technology, popular culture, and the arts, along with humor, fiction, and cartoons. Subscribe today and get 12 weeks of The New Yorker for just $6, plus an exclusive tote!

Categories
Kissing Books

Apparently, Hanukkah is for Bakers

Hanukkah Sameach, folks!

The days leading up to the Festival of Lights were…something else, but this year’s Hanukkah miracle seems to be that romancelandia has been pretty drama free since the first candle was lit. (Let’s cross our fingers it’ll continue to be quiet for awhile.)


Sponsored by Harlequin DARE

Bad boys are her weakness…Is he too magnetic to resist? Storming into psychologist Holly Scott-Leigh’s life, bad boy billionaire Noah Moore is so hot he leaves Holly breathless with just a glance. He’s her potential client and she’s never crossed that line before. But delicious Noah tempts her to sin… This festive season, from his hip London loft to a luxurious Paris hotel, Noah will show Holly how good it feels to be on the naughty list!


News and Useful Links

Just hours after I finished writing last week’s Kissing Books, a popular debut YA author tweeted about a wildly famous romance author’s book having a similar name. I follow said debut author, so I saw this, rolled my eyes, and kept scrolling. I have a very thorough “do not engage” contract with myself, and this was not going to be a person I was going to break that for. But apparently while I was pretending that tweet didn’t happen, her followers started going a little wild with the righteous indignation, and then romance Twitter got involved. There were some bad shots fired on both “sides,” but it actually got ridiculous when Beverly Jenkins tweeted a reaction and then was chided about her white privilege blinding her to why it was important to note that the author in question was Nigerian-American and the author she’d challenged was Nora Roberts.

Yes. You read that right.

To be fair, Ms. Bev’s twitter photo was not at the time a picture of her face. But a quick click over to her profile might have told the person something.

Anyway. I thought you all might want to know about that, just to be in the know.

Also, Nora Roberts is not on Twitter, so she didn’t respond, but she wrote a blog post about it, and communicated with the author, who tweeted an apology of sorts. (I will say, while I respect Nora for all of her work in and for romance, I could have done without her whole thesis about social media. It felt…icky.)

Okay, actually moving on. Sorry.

In other news:

Danielle Steel still writes on a typewriter and still feels self-doubt 174 (one-hundred-and-seventy-effing-four) books in.

The Goodreads Choice Awards are done, and I am not surprised at all by the winner of the romance category. An honor well deserved! (Spoiler: it’s The Kiss Quotient.)

Have you seen the lineup for KissCon? That’s a heck of a reason to go to Chicago. I’m actually really sad I’ve already got a couple trips lined up in the first half of the year (one of which is to Book Lovers Con in New Orleans, so at least there’s that), but man. Please go, and then tell me all about it.

Also, now that November is over, now is a good time to wander through the #rombklove hashtag to fluff your TBR for any time off you might be snowed in.

Oh. PS. Talia Hibbert is writing a short holiday story called “That Festive Feeling” over on Frolic. She started on Monday.

Deals!

cover of going down easy by Erin NicholasLooking for “no strings attached oh wait what’s that” romance with beignets? Going Down Easy by Erin Nicholas is 1.99.

If you didn’t get it when I mentioned it last week, Merry Inkmas is still free. F-R-E-E.

Brenda Jackson’s An Honorable Seduction is also 1.99.

Over on Book Riot

Annika is a dork and I adore her and her Hallmark Holiday Romance generator.

Did I mention Trisha and I had done our holiday gift recommendation episode? Listen and stock up! (You might even find something for someone else while you’re at it.)

Have you been reading up during New Ears Resolution week? There have been some great posts about all kinds of listening.

Recs!

It’s Hanukkah, and do you know what? There are Hanukkah romances. A surprising number of them, actually. I promise not to talk about them all. But I did want to talk about a few.

Hearts Alight
Elliot Cooper

Elliot Cooper is a new author to me, but I’m definitely going to look for more of his work. This novella is quick, delightful, and just a touch magical. Dave is a young man who isn’t certain what he wants to do with his life, and he’s okay with that. He’s not been very successful dating people of any gender, but he’s got a bit of a crush on his BFF/Brother-in-Law’s uncle. Big, handsome, silent Amit is a mystery to Dave, but in a moment of vulnerability, reveals that he’s actually a golem. Yes. A golem. I will admit to having expected a little more conflict around that bit, but I was happy with how easy the story was. Yes, there’s a little more D&D gameplay that might generally be necessary, but it’s all fun and will just leave you with the warm fuzzies.

(Also, there is another cover for this book that’s a little more “romance-y” but I really like the lightheartedness of this one.)

cover of ben's bakery and the hanukkah miracleI got distracted with reading Hearts Alight, though, and didn’t finish the other two Hanukkah romances I started over the weekend. (Who am I kidding; my weekend actually got eaten by a series of interconnected Trash OT3 Timeless fics and I got a late start to this week’s reading.) Anyway. The two m/m romances I set out to read were both wildly entertaining, but they both had a point to make: bakers apparently love Hanukkah. Okay, not really. But both Ben’s Bakery and the Hanukkah Miracle and The Remaking of Corbin Wale (which is 99 cents right now!) center Jewish bakers and delectable pastries like sufganiyot, the round jelly-centered donuts that are a Hanukkah staple. Those donuts, in particular, play a central role in the love stories of each couple. The books and the romances have very different tones, though. Ben’s Bakery has a light tone, featuring two men not afraid of going for what they want, even if it means there have to be apologies and they have to figure out an international divide. Corbin Wale, on the other hand has a melancholy air, with Roan Parrish’s signature angst right there to rip you apart and put you back together. So whatever kind of baker you’re looking for, one (or both!) of these should satisfy you.

cover of lighting the flames by Sarah wendellNext on the list is Sarah Wendell’s Lighting the Flames (also 99 cents!), which is a friends-to-lovers romance set during a Hanukkah camp. The protagonists, Jeff and Gen, have known each other since they were seven, and now they’re staff at the camp where they spent their summers. They had a bit of time where they were out of each other’s orbit, and now they have to figure this thing out. I’m not always a friends-to-lovers person, but I’m curious to see how this works between these two kinds of friends, and in this kind of setting.

What’s your favorite Hanukkah romance? These are definitely not the only ones!

New and Upcoming Releases

cover of their perfect melody by Priscilla Oliver'sTheir Perfect Melody by Priscilla Oliveras
Reindeer Games: A Holiday Romance Anthology by All The People
Dance All Night by Alexis Daria (available in paperback, December 11 ebook)
New Tricks by Andrew Grey (December 11)
Taking Chances by Erin McKenzie (December 11)
Best Women’s Erotica of the Year, Volume 4 (December 11)(with stories by more people than I can name, including Alyssa Cole, Megan Hart, Suleikha Snyder and Alessandra Torre)

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

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Mysteries That Didn’t Get The Attention They Should Have

Hello mystery fans! We’ve made it to the end of this veeeeeeery long year, which you’ve probably noticed since everything is now dripping in holiday decor (Happy Hanukkah) and everywhere you look are Best Of 2018 lists. Since Best Of is really a “My favorite reads out of the books I read this year” I started thinking about the books that didn’t get the attention they should have so I’m going talk about some of those today. And if there’s a 2018 crime book you think didn’t get the love it should, email me at jamie@riotnewmedia.com and I’ll share the list in an upcoming newsletter.


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.


For Historical Mystery Fans

The Impossible Girl by Lydia KangThe Impossible Girl by Lydia Kang: New York in the mid-1800s you get grave robbing, anatomists, those obsessed with physical anomalies–and a young woman with two hearts! And if that woman would like to not end up on a slab for her hearts she better find out who is killing people with body anomalies. And that’s why she spends the night as a grave robber pretending to be her own twin brother. It’s awesome! (Full review)

A Death of No Importance cover imageA Death of No Importance (Jane Prescott Series #1) by Mariah Fredericks: A ladies’ maid for the rich in 1910 New York tries to figure out who murdered the fiancé of her mistress because it looks like either her mistress or her anarchist friend may be suspects–scandalous! This plays out amongst the upper-class while the city deals with anarchists and awful working conditions for the lower-class and has a great main character. (Full review) (TW pedophilia)

Psychological Suspense & Thriller

When You Find Me cover imageWhen You Find Me by P.J. Vernon: If you’re a fan of writers like Gillian Flynn just go pick this one up without knowing anything about it. Socialite Gray King returns home for the holidays and wakes up hungover, with no memory, and her husband Paul missing. Between Gray’s addiction, the small town secrets, family drama, and a stranger leaving a message claiming to know where Paul is you won’t be able to put this one down… (Full review) (TW alcoholism/ pedophile/ animal cruelty)

Death Notice cover imageDeath Notice by Zhou Haohui, Zac Haluza (Translator): Great cat-and-mouse thriller filled with tension and action! This follows a vigilante who is toying with the police by putting out a “death notice” and watching the police scramble to save the person before they get what the vigilante thinks they deserve. (Full review) (TW rape/ suicide)

 

Character Driven Mystery

Newcomer cover imageNewcomer by Keigo Higashino, Giles Murray (Translator): If you’re a fan of character-driven novels this one is super interesting as each section follows a different set of characters that are living and/or working in a Japanese business district where a woman was murdered in her apartment. Detective Kaga, a very perceptive man, must navigate all of their secrets and drama to piece together what may be related to his actual case. This one also works for fans of cozy mysteries that are looking for something set outside of the U.S. (Full review)

British Procedural

Salt Lane cover imageSalt Lane (DS Alexandra Cupidi #1) by William Shaw: This was such a good from-beginning-to-end-procedural that has a complicated lead that you’re totally rooting for. Really one of the best procedures this year that I think no one heard about–which is a huge shame! DS Alexandra Cupidi not only has a difficult Jane Doe case but she’s just moved to a new town and department, her daughter is rebelling, and her mother keeps showing up. To solve this case, and survive her personal life, Cupidi is going to have to learn to keep her temper and quick mouth in check, and if she wants to stay alive she’s going to have to be less careless! (Full review) (TW rape)

Recent Releases

Love Hope and Marriage Tropes by Abby L Vandiver cover imageLove, Hopes, & Marriage Tropes (A Romaine Wilder Mystery Book 2) by Abby L. Vandiver (Currently Reading: This is a fun cozy mystery with a zany side character and humor centering around a funeral home.)

Into the Night (Gemma Woodstock #2) by Sarah Bailey (TBR: the followup to The Dark Lake — an Australian procedural I recently enjoyed and reviewed. Great for fans of complicated leads.)

Hong Kong Noir (Akashic Noir Series) by Jason Y. Ng (Editor), Susan Blumberg-Kason (Editor)

Broken Ground (Inspector Karen Pirie #5) by Val McDermid (TBR: Follows DCI Karen Pirie of Police Scotland’s Historic Cases Unit.)

Hearts of the Missing by Carol Potenza (TBR: Procedural that won the Tony Hillerman Prize in 2017.)

Murder at The Mill (An Iris Grey Mystery #1) by M.B. Shaw (Tilly Bagshawe) (Cozy English whodunnit)

The Man who Would be Sherlock: The Real Life Adventures of Arthur Conan Doyle by Christopher Sandford (Biography/True Crime)

What You Don't Know paperback cover imageWhat You Don’t Know by JoAnn Chaney (Paperback) (If you haven’t gotten to this one yet and you like dark serial killer books run to this one! Full review) (TW rape)

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.