Categories
True Story

New Nonfiction About Pregnancy, Evolution, and Warrior Women

Hello hello, nonfiction readers! As I started to put together this week’s new books newsletter, I realized it’s a relatively quiet week for new books in general and new nonfiction in particular. That’s ok though, I’ve still got three great titles to highlight this week… and a ton to try and squeeze in next week. Let’s get going!


Sponsored by our giveaway of $100 to Amazon in support of Swords and Spaceships, our sci-fi/fantasy newsletter!

Swords and Spaceships is our biweekly newsletter about all things sci-fi and fantasy literature, and we’re giving away a $100 gift card to Amazon to one lucky reader! Enter HERE by signing up for the newsletter (if you win, send us a pic of all the SFF books you buy with it!), and enjoy a regular dose of your favorite genre news, recs, and more, in your inbox.


Kid Gloves: Nine Months of Careful Chaos by Lucy Knisley – Lucy Knisley is one of my favorite comics writers out there, and I have loved watching her grow up in her series of comic memoirs. Her newest is about pregnancy, from fertility issues to miscarriages, to the challenges of her successful pregnancy and dramatic labor and delivery. I think this one is going to be stellar, I can’t wait to read it.

Further Peeking | Lucy Knisley’s Instagram is great, but if you’re specifically interested in the book check out her posts with the #kidglovescomic hashtag for some great behind the scenes facts from the book.

This View of Life: Completing the Darwinian Revolution by David Sloan Wilson – David Sloan Wilson is a professor of biology and anthropology who has written several books about how to apply the ideas of evolutionary theory to contemporary human issues. In this book, he looks at how this view “provides a practical tool kit for understanding … the fast-paced changes that are having an impact on our world and ourselves.”

Backlist Reading | I enjoyed one of his previous books, The Neighborhood Project, which applied evolutionary and experimental thinking to issues that come up in local neighborhoods.

Women Warriors: An Unexpected History by Pamela D. Toler – Historically, the idea of women warriors has been that they’re the exception, not the rule. But that may not be true! In this book, Pamela Toler shares stories of women who took up arms, why they did it, and what happened when they broke out from traditional roles for women. The list of women she writes about is diverse and interesting, I can’t wait to get this one!

Further Reading | Pamela Toler’s blog – History in the Margins – is a great read. She’s got some fascinating posts about women who bucked the system that I found inspiring.

And that’s it’s for this week! You can find me on Twitter @kimthedork, on email at kim@riotnewmedia.com, and co-hosting the For Real podcast here at Book Riot. Happy reading! – Kim

Categories
Today In Books

CRAZY RICH ASIANS Film Was Almost Super Shexy: Today In Books

You could win a six-month subscription to an amazing Romance box! Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the image below:

Fresh Fiction romance box ad


Someone Film These Missing Scenes, Please!

At the Women in Film Oscar Party screenwriter Adele Lim explained her first screenplay adaptation of Crazy Rich Asians had “all these hot, steamy, getting-it-on scenes.” She was obviously reigned in and we got a rom-com for all but I’d like to petition for some bonus scenes to be filmed for a special DVD release. And if Hollywood truly just hates making money then, um, sell that first script.

Shexy Voice Runs In The Family

Okay, I promise last shexy related news item–I didn’t choose this theme it apparently chose me! James Earl Jones’ son, Flynn, is a romance audiobook narrator and everything about this just feels so right.

I Had No Idea It Was An Adaptation

The creator and author of the show The Love Boat, which was adapted from her nonfiction book Love Boats, Jeraldine Saunders has died at 96. “Jeraldine was an active woman who never lost her interest in dancing, younger men, and the written word.”

Categories
What's Up in YA

“Never let a cruel jerk make himself the center of your story”: Author Tehlor Kay Mejia on Latinx YA, Queer Couples, and More

Hey YA Fans: I’ve got an awesome interview today with a debut author with a new book you’ll be adding to your TBR so fast you get finger burn.

“What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by An Affair of Poisons by Addie Thorley.

She’s a deadly poisoner. He’s a bastard prince. They are sworn enemies, yet they form a tenuous pact to unite the commoners and former nobility against the Shadow Society. But can a rebellion built on mistrust ever hope to succeed? After Mirabelle helps to poison King Louis XIV, she is forced to see the Shadow Society in a horrifying new light: not heroes of the people, but murderers. Herself included. Josse is more kitchen boy than fils de France. But when the Shadow Society assassinates the King, he must become the prince he was never meant to be.


I have one semi-strict rule when it comes to my personal reading habits. I don’t like to read the first book in a series before the rest of the series is out. I have a hard time remembering details by the time book two or three rolls around, and more, I just want to devour them all at once if I’m loving the story. I’m okay not reading the series when it’s new and hot.

But I broke that rule accidentally with We Set The Dark on Fire by Tehlor Kay Mejia. I didn’t realize it was a duology until I was half-way through this fierce, fiery feminist fantasy and now I sit, impatiently waiting for book two. I’m not sad I read it. I am just sad now I have to wait for the second book.

Mejia’s book is her debut, and it’s set in a near-future, but recognizable, world. I won’t say too much about it, but it’s about girls helping other girls, it features a queer romance, and it’s about privilege, borders, and the ways the Haves treat the Have Nots.

I asked Tehlor to talk a bit about her book, as well as some of the books and stories that have inspired her. I’m thrilled to share this conversation and to tell you to put this book on your radar right now.

Tell us about We Set The Dark On Fire. What’s the pitch and what inspired the story? For readers who want the fastest summary possible, can you also describe it in three words and three words only?

The pitch! A Latinx-based fantasy world on the brink of a class revolution. Two young women assigned to one sneering upper class man-child of a husband. Spies, forbidden romance, questionable loyalties, destructive secrets galore.

In three words?! How about…Secrets, kissing, patriarchysmashing. (It’s one word now)

 

While Dani is our main character and one torn between an array of loyalties, the secondary characters in this story are not only well-drawn, but they’re as — if not more! — compelling because we aren’t privy to their loyalties except through Dani’s eyes. Who is your favorite character in the story and why?

Thank you so much! Honestly I think Sota was probably my favorite character to write. I loved getting the chance to explore the fact that just because you’re on the right side of history doesn’t mean you can’t still have a lot to learn. And then he’s such a fun character, too. The enigma of him and this sort of mercurial, mischievous front he puts up — plus banter is my favorite thing to write, and he’s so charming he could literally banter with a rock.

 

Your story is a Latinx fantasy/fairy tale. Can you share some of the Latinx stories that inspired you as you were growing up and what stories inspired We Set The Dark On Fire? 

Honestly, sad as it is to say, this book was based more on the lack of Latinx stories I experienced growing up. I’m biracial, and a third generation Latina, so I was really in a place of feeling disconnected from the more traditional folktale type stories my culture had to offer, while still not feeling seen by the speculative stories I loved. That absence is definitely what eventually led to this story.

 

Though the bigger world building in the story focuses on how women become accessories for men — a Primera and a Seguna are offered to a man to serve as essentially guidance and as a beautiful play thing respectively — one of the big moments in the book is the budding romance between Primera Dani and Segunda Carmen. Can you talk a bit to that?

Yes! I knew from the beginning that I wanted Dani to have a transformative love story. I feel like love can affect us so profoundly, whether it’s locking us into remaining the people we are, or enticing us to become the people we’re meant to become. I think Dani’s overall course would be the same with or without Carmen — her growth and radically shifting empathy as a character is based on something deeply personal for her — but because of the repressed way she was raised and trained, I wanted to show the other ways it would change her to turn everything she knew and believed about femininity and womanhood on its head through this big, earth shattering romance with the last person she expected to connect with.

 

That, of course, begs the question: who have been some of your favorite queer couples in YA lit?

Oh there are so many! Top three off the cuff are:

-Sam and Miel from Anna-Marie McLemore’s WHEN THE MOON WAS OURS

-Ari and Dante from Benjamin Alire Sáenz’s ARISTOTLE AND DANTE DISCOVER THE SECRETS OF THE UNIVERSE

-Alex and Rishi from Zoraida Córdova’s LABYRINTH LOST

 

Your book is fiercely feminist for many reasons, but it’d be interesting to hear you explain why and how it’s a feminist read and what some of the best feminist YA titles you’ve read are.

Ahh, thank you again! Pretty sure “fiercely feminist” is my favorite thing anyone has ever said about the book. Personally, I hope people consider this a feminist book because it shows that agency is something you can acquire, even if you’re not born with it, and the world has truly conspired to make sure you don’t ever get it.

So many heroes and heroines in books already seem so powerful in their own ways, but in Dani I wanted to show that you can begin from a powerless place. You can be lost. You can be scared. You can have the wrong idea about the world. And that so many, many people start there. I wanted to show that the inner work of discovering who you are and where you stand and what tools are at your disposal comes first. Before you can organize or march or burn things down, before you can do anything visible, there’s the quiet, deeply personal work of finding out who you are and what part you have to play.

I deeply believe that every one of us has a skill or a voice or a passion that lends itself to the revolutionary work of doing what is right. Even when it seems impossible. I hope young women especially feel empowered by how seemingly unremarkable Dani starts out, and how much inner strength she’s able to muster just by finding out who she is and what she wants.

In terms of feminist books, I could go on all day, but I want to specifically shout out UNDEAD GIRL GANG by Lily Anderson, HOME AND AWAY by Candice Montgomery, as well as the upcoming WITH THE FIRE ON HIGH by Elizabeth Acevedo, and ALL OF US WITH WINGS by Michelle Ruíz Keil.

 

What do you hope readers take away from We Set The Dark On Fire?

It’s probably cliché, but I’m going to say hope? With a hint of responsibility. The feeling that even though things are terrible, what you believe matters. What you do matters. How you treat people matters.

Also, to never let a cruel jerk make himself the center of your story.

 

If you could go back in time and hand your 12-year-old self any book, what would it be and why?

GABI, A GIRL IN PIECES by Isabel Quintero. Probably a little old for most 12-year-olds but I think tiny Tehlor would have been consumed by it in the best way.

 

 

Big thank you to Tehlor for this fantastic interview. I don’t know about you, but MY TBR grew some here, too! 

____________________

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

— Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars on Instagram and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

Categories
Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

022619-WeAreOkay-HoldStill-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Penguin Random House

We Are Okay is Nina LaCour at her finest. This gorgeously crafted and achingly honest portrayal of grief will leave you urgent to reach across any distance to reconnect with the people you love.

Hold Still is the indelible debut that launched Nina LaCour. Her breakthrough novel, now in a beautiful new edition, examines unspeakable loss and the fight back to find renewed hope.

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 2/27

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

Well wow, friends! I got so many awesome responses to our inaugural Question for the Club segment! So we’re going to (hopefully) keep that same energy going with a different question every week and see how this thing goes.

Keep on reading for this week’s query, results from last week’s question, and some other book club business: fake book clubs, comics that cook, a little bit o’ sex ed and more.

To the club!


This newsletter is sponsored by Flatiron Books, publishers of Girls Burn Brighter by Shobha Rao, now in paperback.

An electrifying debut novel about the extraordinary bond between two girls driven apart by circumstance but relentless in their search for one another. Shobha Rao’s Girls Burn Brighter introduces two heroines who never lose the hope that burns within.


Question for the Club – You all have some seriously creative club names and some pretty cool stories to go along with them. It was so hard to choose, but here are ten (okay ten-ish) of my faves below.

  • The MACs (Middle Age Chicks) – They’ve been meeting for 15 years!
  • War and Peas – A literary supper club where everyone brings a dish inspired by the book. YUM!
  • The Insane Circle of Glittering Biblio Babes – These ladies have been meeting for 21 years!
  • Novel Women – It gets right to the point and I love it.
  • Book Bosomed Babes – yaaasss.
  • Ten Shades of Grey (made up of ten retired gentlemen) and Filling in the Blancs (readers who drink wine) – These and several other names were shared by a reader who manages the Riverina Regional Library Book Club program which has over 80 registered clubs in Australia!
  • The Critical Chicks – These ladies range in age from 40-66 and have been meeting for 18 years!
  • Ruffians Bearing Cakes– When one group member had a knee replacement, she left her front door open to let the rest of the group into her home. They came with cake and she remarked, “When you leave the door open you never know who will wander in — perhaps even ruffians bearing cakes!” For the record, I left my door open all day and have yet to encounter a single cake-bearing ruffian. Rude!
  • Book, Book, Goose! – It’s held at a bar called The Dutch Goose which is already perfect, but this reader also has a forthcoming zine club in the works called Store Subject. Brilliant!
  • Fake Book Club – yes that’s the name and oh my gatos, I love the concept. In fact, I’m going to elaborate more below.

Thank you to all who shared! Here is this week’s question (oh and please send responses to vanessa@riotnewmedia.com !)

We’re So Fake – Reader Andy shared this awesome book club idea that I had to pass on to you fine book club people: fake book club! “It’s all about overdosing on THRILLERS only. It fits into everyone’s schedule because there are NO MEETINGS. Our group loves Thrillers and can share the stories, or a scary part, etc. –  in the short amount of time it takes to ride the elevator, walk the flight of stairs, or a quick gab at a break or lunch. This makes the books exciting, even when everyone is reading their own thing!” You know, this is sort of genius.

    • Book Club Bonus: For those who just don’t have the time – and some of us really, really don’t – for a formal club gathering, this is a fast and loose but still ultimately bookish way to talk books with friends. If you’ve found that committing to a meeting isn’t working, maybe give it a try!
  • Related: Don’t forget the value of online book clubs too. My friends and I all live scattered across the country and had a book club going for about a year where a lot of what we discussed was done through emails. It worked!

Will Cook for Comics – I need to read more comics and enticing me with food is an easy way to me there. Are you nodding and thinking, “Same”? Check out this list of mouth-watering comics with recipes.

  • Book Club Bonus: Can you tell I like book clubs where someone cooks (and also when there’s wine)? You probably already know then that I’m going to suggest reading comics like these and whipping up the recipes for your meetups. If the comic is short enough, read it at your meetup. Have every person read a few pages aloud and then pass it on to the next club attendee.
  • Related: Since this basically sounds like story time plus snacks, it might be a great idea for a kids book club. 

Pop the Pill, Ignore the Pope – A recent NHS study out in the UK now advises that women take the pill continually all month long. That week of placebo pills? Unnecessary. In fact, that practice’s sole purpose was to appease the pope back then into “accepting” some form of contraception. Go ahead: scream. When you’re done, check out this list of books on sex ed, contraception, and reproductive justice and learn some more stuff you may not -but need to- know.

  • Book Club Bonus: I started to say that I thought women and feminism-focused book clubs should read these kinds of books but scratch the hell out of that idea: we ALL need to read these kinds of books. So many of the most frustrating parts of the discourse over reproductive rights seem to be rooted in an extreme lack of knowledge or misinformation on women’s bodies, women’s health, contraception, policy… you name it. So, all my book club people: consider dedicating one month (or better yet a quarter) of book club to learning a little more about these very important subjects.
  • Related: Anyone else think the Vatican owes us all checks for the money we’ve spent on tampons??

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, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Another Fantastic Lady Spy!

Hi mystery fans! This week I have a psychological thriller, historical mystery, and true crime that is sadly very relevant. Also, if you’ve been anticipating Chelsea Cain’s One Kick adaptation it premieres tonight on WGNAmerica. It’s titled Gone and stars Leven Rambin, Chris Noth, and Danny Pino–I’m making popcorn!


Sponsored by Fierce Reads and What We Buried by Kate A. Boorman

What We Buried cover image“Do you ever just want to be believed?” Siblings Liv and Jory Brewer have grown up resenting each other. The only thing they have in common is contempt for their parents. When their parents mysteriously vanish, Jory and Liv are forced to work together. What starts as a simple overnight road trip soon takes a turn for the dangerous and surreal. And as the duo speeds through the deserts of Nevada, brother and sister will unearth deep family secrets that force them to relive their pasts as they try to retain a grip on the present.


Psychological Thriller (TW suicide)

The Stranger cover imageThe Stranger by Melanie Raabe, Imogen Taylor (Translator): I needed something for my brain to obsess on in order to ignore *gestures wildly over there at all the stress * and this delivered. Sarah’s husband disappeared seven years ago and she’s finally started to accept that he isn’t returning, and so she’s moving on with her life with her young son. And then she gets the call that her husband Philip has been found and is returning home. That’s when everything goes WTF because as soon as Sarah sees him, she says, “That’s not my husband.” The beginning of the novel had me questioning behaviors too much to fully sink in but the what-is-happening kept me engaged. And then it turned into almost a cat-and-mouse between Philip and Sarah trying to outdo the other’s reactions to the situation: he has her blackmailed with “I know what you did” as she tries to prove that he isn’t Philip. I kept thinking “but if this is true, then this is implausible,” throughout which kept me having to turn the page because I had to know. I like the way Raabe “settled” the WTF-is-happening.

Another Fantastic Lady Spy! (TW suicide)

transcription cover imageTranscription by Kate Atkinson: This was my first Atkinson novel and I can see why so many love her work. She managed to write a great spy novel for crime fans and a great novel for historical fiction fans, while having the depth readers want in literary fiction. It’s RUL good! It’s two timelines: In 1950 Juliet Armstrong is a BBC radio producer for a children’s program when her past shows up. In 1940, just barely an adult, Armstrong is recruited into MI5 and trained to monitor British Fascist sympathizers by transcribing audio recordings. This isn’t a jumping-off-buildings-during-chase spy thriller, instead it’s filled with tension and fascinating scenes as it follows a group of spies during WWII. What I loved most was Armstrong’s character and her dry humor and observations in all the situations she’s placed in. I went with the audiobook, which I fully recommend for full immersion into this great story that will especially have you holding your breath as you reach the end.

Difficult But Important Read (TW mass shooting/ homophobia/ ableism/ suicide (thoughts included)/ PTSD and survival guilt discussed)

Columbine cover imageColumbine by Dave Cullen: So yes, I’m technically late to this one in that it published ten years ago, but there are so many important things to ponder and learn from that it’s never too late to read this investigation into the high school massacre that occurred April 20, 1999. I’ll say straight out it’s not an easy read, as it takes you into the tragedy with details, but to this day there is still so much wrong information associated with what happened and the book does an excellent job of not only giving the correct information but of showing how the misinformation started and how it spread. In a time when mass shootings continue, and social media changes the way we digest news, and journalism many times aims for being the first rather than the most accurate, there is so much to sit with and discuss while and after reading this book.

Recent Releases

Last Night cover imageLast Night (The Searchers #2) by Karen Ellis (I’m excited to read this next since I enjoyed the first in the series which follows FBI Agent Elsa Myers.)

The Lost Night by Andrea Bartz (“What really happened the night Edie died? Ten years later, her best friend Lindsay will learn how unprepared she is for the truth.”) (TW suicide)

The Huntress by Kate Quinn (“English journalist and a Russian female bomber pilot who join forces to track the Huntress, a Nazi war criminal gone to ground in America.”)

Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland by Patrick Radden Keefe (True crime in Ireland)

Down the River Unto the Sea cover imageDown the River Unto the Sea by Walter Mosley (Paperback) (Character driven PI–full review) (TW rape)

I’ll Be Gone in the Dark: One Woman’s Obsessive Search for the Golden State Killer by Michelle McNamara (Paperback) (One of the best true crime memoirs–full review) (TW rape)

Lying in Wait by Liz Nugent (Paperback) (Cruel AF–full review) (TW revenge porn/ Heads-up a character deals with fat shaming throughout the entire novel.)

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 Canavés.

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

Categories
Today In Books

Dickens Tried To Banish Wife To An Asylum: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Flatiron Books.

NIght Tiger cover image


Charles Dickens’ Wife’s Unseen Letters Reveal A Lot

That Charles Dickens’ was a dickens to his wife was already known–the dude separated from her when he started having an affair with an eighteen-year-old. But now, thanks to ninety-eight previously unseen letters written by Edward Dutton Cook– Dickens neighbor and friend–to a fellow journalist revealing what Catherine had shared with him before she died, we know he was even worse. You can read about Dickens gaslighting and trying to have Catherine locked away in an asylum here.

His Dark Materials Teaser

Watch the thirty second teaser for the upcoming adaptation of Philip Pullman’s trilogy. The BBC has yet to release an official premiere date for the series–which stars Dafne Keen, Ruth Wilson, James McAvoy, Clarke Peters, and Lin-Manuel Miranda–but it’s expected sometime this year.

You Can Now Peruse 800 Medieval Manuscripts Online

800 manuscripts, dated between 700 and 1200, from the collections of the British Library and the Bibliothèque nationale de France are now available online thanks to a two year project which digitized and organized the manuscripts by themes, authors, places and centuries. *Shines history nerd badge and dives in. *

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

It’s Tuesday! You know what that means – say it with me now: NEW BOOOOOOOKS! It’s already the last Tuesday in February (HOW?!?), but there’s still lots of great stuff hitting the shelves today. I have a few of today’s fabulous new releases below, and you can hear about more awesome reads on this week’s episode of the All the Books! Vanessa and I talked about The Priory of the Orange Tree, The Good Immigrant, Kid Gloves, and more great books.


Sponsored by Epic Reads

At the Medio School for Girls, distinguished young women are trained for one of two roles in their polarized society. Depending on her specialization, a graduate will one day run a husband’s household or raise his children. Both paths promise a life of comfort and luxury, far from the frequent political uprisings of the lower class. Daniela Vargas is the school’s top student, but her pedigree is a lie. She must keep the truth hidden or be sent back to the fringes of society. And school couldn’t prepare her for the difficult choices she must make after graduation, especially when she is asked to spy for a resistance group desperately fighting to bring equality to Medio.


Huntress coverThe Huntress by Kate Quinn

When the Nazis attack the Soviet Union, Nina Markova decides to become a member of the Night Witches, a legendary all-female bomber pilot regiment. But when Nadia is stranded behind enemy lines, she becomes the target of The Huntress, an infamous Nazi murderess. Combined with the stories of an English journalist who hunts war criminals, and a young woman in post-war Boston who senses there’s something wrong about her new German stepmother, this is a meticulously well-researched novel of war and revenge.

Backlist bump: The Alice Network by Kate Quinn.

the body mythThe Body Myth by Rheea Mukherjee

Mira, a teacher living in Suryam, gets mixed up in the lives of a mysterious woman named Sara, and her husband, Rahil. As her relationship with each of them intensifies, Mira, a widow, becomes more caught up in their strange, toxic chemistry. A magnificent achievement of restraint, Mukherjee delivers a wonderful novel about loss and attraction.

Backlist bump: Florence in Ecstasy by Jessie Chaffee

mother countryMother Country: A Novel by Irina Reyn

This is a powerful novel about immigration, belonging, and a mother’s love. Nadia is a Russian immigrant living in The United States. She suffers through two loathsome jobs, and feelings of not belonging anywhere in the world, while she waits for her daughter’s immigration status to be approved by the Department of Homeland Security. But when Nadia learns her daughter is no longer getting the medicine she needs to survive, Nadia decides to do something about their separation herself. TL;DR: Don’t come between a mother and her cub.

Backlist bump: A Mountain of Crumbs: A Memoir by Elena Gorokhova

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

xoxo,

Liberty

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Wormholes in IKEA and Necromancers in Space: Swords and Spaceships for Feb 26, 2019

Hello and happy Tuesday, darklings! It’s me, Liberty! I have attached myself to Jenn’s brain stem, and I am now driving the mother ship. Or she asked me to fill in for her today. One of these things is true. Either way, I am excited to be here! Today we’ve got the teaser for His Dark Materials, wormholes in IKEA, upcoming new releases, a review of Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir, and more.


Sponsored by Flatiron Books

The Night Tiger pulls readers into a world of servants and masters, age-old superstition and modern idealism, sibling rivalry and forbidden love. Ji Lin is a dancehall girl to help pay off her mother’s Mahjong debts. But when one of her dance partners accidentally leaves behind a gruesome souvenir, she may finally get the adventure she’s been longing for. Eleven-year-old houseboy Ren is also on a mission, to fulfill his former master’s dying wish: that Ren find the man’s finger, lost years ago, and bury it with his body. Ji Lin and Ren’s dangerous paths crisscross in this dazzling novel.


I’d believe there are wormholes in IKEA: Says Tor editor Carl Engle-Laird: “I’m very pleased to announce that Tor.com Publishing has acquired Finna, a new science fiction novella from Nino Cipri. When an elderly customer at a big box furniture store slips through a portal to another dimension, it’s up to two minimum-wage employees to track her across the multiverse and protect their company’s bottom line. Multi-dimensional swashbuckling would be hard enough, but our two unfortunate souls broke up a week ago. Can friendship blossom from the ashes of a relationship? In infinite dimensions, all things are possible.” SIGN. ME. UP.

This week in ‘strange merchandising’: The final season of Game of Thrones premieres on April 14th, and to celebrate, they’ve teamed up with Nabisco for GOT-themed Oreo packaging. They’re the perfect treat for the guests at your Red Wedding! (Okay, now I’ve just had a mental image of Walder Frey trying to eat an Oreo, and I need brain bleach.) (GOT-related: Have you seen my shark?)

And speaking of Game of Thrones, here’s new footage from HBO, as well as another peek at Watchmen. (I’m not sure I’m going to, er, watch the new Watchmen adaptation, because I still feel very Tales of the Black Freighter or GTFO, just like I did when the movie came out.)

Here’s the latest on the Children of Blood and Bone adaptation: Rick Famuyiwa, director of the coming-of-age movie Dope, has signed on to direct Fox 2000’s adaptation of the best-selling YA novel by Tomi Adeyemi.

The first teaser trailer for the BBC’s adaptation of His Dark Materials is out: 

Me: I don’t want to watch another His Dark Materials adaptation.

BBC: We give you the gift of Ruth Wilson.

Me: *sobs into my Darth Vader onesie* This is all I ever wanted.

For thou are crunchy and taste good with ketchup: Here are five fantasy books about human and dragon friendships.

And speaking of dragons: IDW Publishing is rolling out a new 5-part comic book miniseries next month based on Dungeons & Dragons.

SYFY WIRE has an exclusive peek at G. Willow Wilson’s new sci-fi comic series from Dark Horse Comics titled Invisible Kingdom.

The Oscars might not have been able to stick the landing but at least Black Panther won three awards.

It’s not just happening inside your head, Harry: The latest attraction at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter will be Hagrid’s Magical Creatures Motorbike Adventure. Because Dobby’s Final Moments wouldn’t be as fun. (Too soon? I know, I know, I’m a monster.)

The 2018 Nebula Award finalists have been announced: So many amazing contenders! I am Team Murderbot all the way.

It’s another great week for exciting new releases:

the priory of the orange treeThe Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon

Four Dead Queens by Astrid Scholte

Rise of the Dragons by Angie Sage

The Raven Tower by Ann Leckie

We Set the Dark on Fire by Tehlor Kay Mejia

The Big Crush by David J. Schow

The Very Best of the Best: 35 Years of The Year’s Best Science Fiction by Gardner Dozois

Captain Marvel: Liberation Run by Tess Sharpe

Season 2 of The Haunting of Hill House will take on The Turn of the Screw. Here’s a list of other literary haunted houses the show could tackle.

And speaking of haunted houses: I would like to apologize in advance for today’s review, because the book doesn’t come out until September. But it is my new obsession, and Jenn said I could talk about whatever I want, so here we are. Really, you need this much advance notice so you can prepare, because it’s going to BLOW YOUR MINDS.

gideon the ninthGideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir

So as I just said, yes, I am OBSESSED with this book. I received an advance copy, and I’ve read it three times now. It’s like nothing I’ve ever read before! It’s so unusual that I am not sure I can explain it in less than 50,000 words, but I’m going to try. Here goes:

Gideon the Ninth is a swordswoman who has lived in servitude to the Ninth House her whole life. The realm of the Ninth House is a bleak one, gray, dusty, and dark, and filled with animated skeleton slaves and reanimated corpses. Gideon’s nemesis is Harrowhark Nonagesimus, Reverend Daughter of the Ninth House and necromancer. Harrow’s favorite hobbies are using bone magic to perform a multitude of things, and tormenting Gideon.

At the beginning of the book, Gideon gets caught trying to get off the planet, having only packed her sword and dirty magazines. Harrow makes Gideon a deal: The Emperor has issued a summons to each heir of the Nine Houses. The heir, accompanied by their cavalier, is to compete in a deadly trial of wits and skill. The winner will be made immortal. The rest will die. Harrow promises Gideon that if she accompanies her to the First House, she will give Gideon her freedom. If they win, that is. If they don’t win, they’ll be dead, so the deal won’t really matter, will it?

Gideon agrees, because she’s tired of hanging around in Deathland, and so they take a shuttle to the First House, a giant, decaying structure. Here they meet the necromancer and cavalier for each of the other houses. Teacher, their host and guide, shows them to their quarters, and explains the simple rules. You must solve the puzzles of the house to win. And don’t open any door you haven’t been given permission to open. That’s it. Sounds easy, right? Except no one knows what the puzzles might be, the building is filled with haunted souls and monsters, and someone (or something) has started murdering the heirs. Will sworn enemies Harrow and Gideon succeed in working together without being killed – or killing each other?

This is the wildest, funniest, most inventive fantasy book I think I have ever read. If I had to guess, I would say the five most frequently used words are ‘blood’, ‘bones’, ‘skeleton’, ‘sword’, and ‘death’. It’s like an undead Westing Game. It’s like Skeletor’s wet dream. I could clearly imagine every vivid second of this book! And it’s also sweet, and scary, and gross. Romance! Duels! Swimming pools! GAH. I am truly not doing it justice. You will just have to trust me, and mark it down now. You’ll thank me later, I promise.

This is the first book in a series, and as Jenn said about her book last week, the ending wraps up very nicely and ties up all the major plot threads while leaving the door open for further adventures. There are going to be two more books in the trilogy. I CANNOT WAIT. Tamsyn Muir is a mad genius. I want to get this book tattooed on my face.

TL;DR: Lesbian necromancers and swordswomen in a spooky-ass space house. You’re welcome.

And that’s a wrap! You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. (I don’t have the keys to the Goodreads account, but I’m sure Jenn will add Gideon when she gets back.) If you’re interested in more science fiction and fantasy talk, you can catch Jenn and Sharifah on the SFF Yeah! podcast. If you want to check out more of my bookish enthusiasm, you can find me on All the Books! and All the Backlist!, or sharing tons of pictures of my cats and books on Instagram at @franzencomesalive. Be excellent to each other!

Categories
Kissing Books

More from Helen Hoang and an Interview with Adriana Herrera

Happy…Monday? I guess. Let’s talk romance.


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News and Useful Links

Nora Roberts had something to say about people who plagiarize her words. She isn’t on social media, so it took her a little longer to discover this whole thing.

In happier news: HELEN HOANG IS WRITING FIVE MORE BOOKS FOR BERKLEY Y’ALL.

This author did a comprehensive dig into #copypastecris and it’s definitely an interesting read. I still have no idea what’s going on but there’s so much more to know.

Did you see the cover reveal of Andie J. Christopher’s upcoming book, Not the Girl You Marry? It’s a fun, updated version of How to Lose a Guy in Ten Days and I’m excited to read it when it’s out!

Suzanne gave us some important words, and I’m definitely grateful for them. It’s necessary work to point out the kinds of books that will be hurtful to different kinds of people, and Suzanne approaches it thoughtfully and clearly.

Looking for some F/F romances? Here’s a great list.

Do you read Women.com? They recently posted an article about inclusivity in romance novels, and it turns out they have a pretty sizable backlog of romance coverage. (And obviously they would, it’s WOMAN DOT COM.)

Have you been following the #YMBIARN hashtag on twitter? It was started by Jennifer Porter, and took off like wildfire. Just when we thought it was dying away, it showed up again. Some are simple, some are silly, but the majority of them are just delightful (and often hilarious).

So the one good thing to come out of that whole Cristiana thing? There were some great quotes on Twitter last week, including “Romancelandia: Fierce, sword-wielding bitches” and “Pterodactyl Vengeance Unit” and there are now T-shirts. And other things.

Reminder: Love’s Sweet Arrow is a thing that should happen. Let’s make it so!

Also a note: last week, I made a flippant comment about skipping Kindle Unlimited, and while I wasn’t serious, I know how much value that subscription actually has when it comes to discovering new authors—especially marginalized authors. I know all the #copypastecris stuff has made some people hesitant to support the service, but I hope letting the few drag down the many isn’t something that actually happens. I, personally, don’t use KU because I can’t afford to pay ten dollars a month to access books I’m not going to read (if the free example of my local library is any indication), but I acknowledge how important it is to a lot of authors who are doing all the right things to find new readership.

Deals!

Cover of helping hand by Jay NorthcoteDid you read A Family For Christmas back when I was excited about it? If you did, but like me didn’t read more Jay Northcote when you had the chance, now’s the time! Helping Hand, the first book in his Housemates series, is 2.99 right now. If you didn’t read A Family For Christmas, this one is a great starting point for the new Jay Northcote reader. (I mean, so’s the other, but it’s not Christmas anymore so…)

Cover of let me love you by Alexandria HouseIf you’re looking for a new author to try and are interested in a romance between divorcees, I would check out Let Me Love You by Alexandria House. There’s a single mother, a divorced rapper, and the chemistry that won’t let go of either of them. It’s the first book in a series and it’s 3.99 so check it out!

More of that Different Thing

We got such a good reaction from the KJ Charles interview that I decided to keep going! So check back the last Monday of every month for a new author feature! This month, it’s Adriana Herrera, author of American Dreamer, which comes out on March 4. Check it out, put it on your list, or hey, preorder it!

What was the first romance you ever read?

It was this young adult romance, Sissi, Emperatriz (Empress) and it was from a set my mom got me for my tenth birthday. I inhaled them and never looked back! The Princess Sissi series, I believe was first published in German, and then got translated into other languages including Spanish. I’m not sure how my mother found them in 1988 in the Dominican Republic, but she did, and I am forever grateful!

What’s the most surprising thing you’ve learned from a romance novel?

Romance novels are always full on interesting morsels of random information. One of the most striking things I learned was reading Indigo by Beverly Jenkins, although I learn from all her books. I didn’t know that there have been free men who voluntarily sold themselves back into slavery, so they could be reunited with their loved ones. After reading about it in Indigo I began researching about it. It was heartbreaking and astounding to think of people loving that intensely and selflessly.

Who has been your favorite character to write?

I loved writing Nesto’s mom. I liked writing the relationship between her and Nesto how open and easy it was. I cheated a bit though, and sneaked in a bit of my mom’s humor in there! They’re a big part of the Dreamers series, the moms. The relationships between the heroes and their mothers are at the core of who they are, and how they learned to love. Latinx moms are complicated creatures. They can be way too much in your business, and honestly do the most sometimes, but they love their kids so fiercely.

What, besides reading, has had the biggest influence or made the most impact on how you write?

My culture, where I come from and where I’ve been, and my work. I’m from the Dominican Republic and lived there until I was twenty-three. In 2002 I left my homeland and immigrated on my own to New York City for graduate school. After a few years there I married and my spouse and I went overseas. We worked with humanitarian relief organizations for seven years, and lived in Ethiopia for five of them and two in Honduras, before coming back to New York in 2011. I believe all those experiences and the people I’ve gotten to know and work with, have given me a gaze that shapes how I render my characters and their stories. I think lived experience and understanding of the wider world gives a story a texture that otherwise would not be there. I think of it like the difference between seeing something under a glass case in a museum and opposed being able to touch it. It just feels different.

Do you have a Swiss Army romance recommendation?

I have two! Take the Lead by Alexis Daria. It’s fun, sexy, smart and I love the banter between Gina and Stone so much! The other is Out in the Field by Kate McMurray, it’s an M/M baseball romance and one of the heroes is Dominican (Yassss). It’s sexy, sweet, the romance is swoony and all the baseball references are on point.

cover of american dreamer by Adriana HerreraThanks so much for your answers and your words, Adriana! You can see what she’s doing on twitter and check out her website. And don’t forget to preorder American Dreamer, available on March 4!

As for me, catch me as usual 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!