Categories
Unusual Suspects

Did Grace Jones Just Quit Bond 25?!

Hello mystery fans! This is not an adaptation but the trailer for Knives Out seems perfect for fans of a good whodunnit–and Chris Evans swearing and a fantastic cast. It definitely nods at Agatha Christie and Clue so you know I’m excited.


Sponsored by Book Riot’s Amazon store. Shop our favorite summer reads (including some of our favorite books of 2019 so far), bookish accessories, deals, and more.


From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Searching for Sylvie Lee cover imageJean Kwok on how Searching for Sylvie Lee became this summer’s book club sensation

United States of a Mystery: Essential Florida Crime Fiction

A Teen Assassin and Other Favorite Mysteries And Thrillers!

Chanelle answered our questions about her inspiration, The Gone Dead audiobook–narrated by Bahni Turpin–and her love of independent bookstores!

Post-Gone Girl, Here’s How These Authors Are Moving the Psychological Thriller Genre Forward

Giveaway: Your House Will Pay by Steph Cha

Rioters Chose Their Best Books Of 2019 So Far and of course there’s a mystery/thriller section.

This week’s All The Books has Liberty talking about three mystery releases she enjoyed: Second Sight by Aoife Clifford, Girls Like Us by Cristina Alger, Lock Every Door by Riley Sager. (And Rebecca talked about a nonfiction release I loved: I Like to Watch: Arguing My Way Through the TV Revolution by Emily Nussbaum.)

News And Adaptations

Idris Elba On The Racism That’s Impacted His Viewpoint Of Playing James Bond

Report Says Grace Jones Quit ‘Bond 25’ Shortly After Arriving On Set Due To Lack Of Lines

Agatha Raisin producer Free@Last TV is developing a TV detective drama based on Freeman Wills Crofts’ classic Inspector French novels.

He’s already working on his next project, one he started before writing The Nickel Boys: a crime novel set in Harlem in the 1960s.” (Colson Whitehead is writing a crime novel!)

Kindle Deals

A Necessary Evil cover image: silhouette of man in coat and hat standing in a lush forestFor historical mystery fans A Necessary Evil (Sam Wyndham #2) by Abir Mukherjee is $1.99! (Review) (TW suicide/ addiction)

For cozy mystery fans Dim Sum Of All Fears (Noodle Shop Mystery #2) by Vivien Chien is $2.99! (Review) (TW suicide)

For a twisty domestic read For Better and Worse by Margot Hunt is $1.99! (Review) (TW brief discussion about child suicide/ pedophilia)

Follow Her Home cover imageAND HAPPY DAY to you all Steph Cha’s Juniper Song PI trilogy is on sale–and they are never on sale! Follow Her Home (Review); Beware, Beware (Review); Dead Soon Enough (Review) are $2.99 each! (Off memory I think the series has TW for suicide and rape.)

Watch Now

In case you needed a reminder the first three seasons of Veronica Mars are now streaming on Hulu. And, it’s not an adaptation, but I just saw that The Spy Who Dumped Me is streaming on Hulu and if you want a funny “spy” thriller totally watch it. It stars Mila Kunis and Kate McKinnon and I really want there to be a sequel!

And A Bit Of My Week In Reading

the gone dead cover imageI finished reading: Stephanie Oakes’ The Arsonist which had a character I loved, and I really enjoyed the story even if it felt predictably slotted. The audiobook has great narrators! And The Gone Dead by Chanelle Benz has the amazing Bahni Turpin narrating and was a great Southern Lit, return home, past mystery!

All my library audiobook holds came in at once, as they do, so these will be my in-my-ears-book friends: Tan France’s memoir Naturally Tan (I love him so much!); A Nearly Normal Family by M.T. Edvardsson, Rachel Willson-Broyles (Translation) (Scandinavian legal thriller!); The Last House Guest by Megan Miranda (I’ve enjoyed all her mysteries!)

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

Library Of Congress Made D&D More Accessible: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Carina Press, publisher of Saint by Chantal Fernando.

Saint cover image


Library Of Congress Made D&D More Accessible

The National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped at the Library of Congress has made Dungeons and Dragons more accessible by having a Player’s Handbook in a “fully navigable audio form.” There will also be an upcoming Dungeon Master’s Guide and Monster Manual. For more details read on here.

Harry Potter TV Series Being Developed

This was really only just a matter of time! Seems like Warner Bros. is in the early stages of creating a series for their upcoming streaming service that will take us to Hogwarts and around Europe, and will be set as a prequel to the Harry Potter series. More on the bits known here.

BOOM! And LB Are Giving Us Novels Of Two Fave Comics

Boom! Studios and Little, Brown Books for Young Readers are making the best team by bringing us a middle grade novel series and a YA novel series of comics Goldie Vance and Fence. Lilliam Rivera wrote Goldie Vance: The Hotel Whodunit and you can check out the cover here, and is it March 17, 2020 yet?!

Categories
The Goods

20% Off Beautiful Literary Art

Chances are, you’ve seen Obvious State’s beautiful literary art around the bookish internet. This week, you can get 20% off all of their prints, totes, mugs, and more. Use code SUMMER19 at checkout through Friday, July 5.

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Giveaways

070219-MacmillanDealsEAC-Giveaway

We have a $250 gift card to Barnes & Noble available to win, courtesy of Macmillan’s eDeals Newsletter! Here’s what it’s all about:

The Macmillan eDeals newsletter includes an array of e-book bargains. Every month, the newsletter offers discounts on a diverse selection of fiction and nonfiction titles spanning every genre and subject imaginable, including bestsellers and award-winners. 

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the image below. Good luck!

Categories
Unusual Suspects

A Whydunnit, A Whodunnit, And So Many Reveals!

Hello mystery fans! It’s a new month and I’m starting you all off with three new releases: I’ve got a whydunnit, a return home mystery, and a past and present mystery stuffed with all the reveals.


Sponsored by Book Riot’s Amazon store. Shop our favorite summer reads (including some of our favorite books of 2019 so far), bookish accessories, deals, and more.


Whydunnit! (TW child abuse/ suicide attempt)

The Best Lies cover imageThe Best Lies by Sarah Lyu: This was a page-turner for me that opens with you knowing the crime: Elise shot and killed her best friend Remy’s boyfriend. We get Remy in the present talking to her lawyer, and a police detective, as she explains what happened that night. And we get the recent past where we see Remy meet Elise and Jack, separately, and how their relationships evolve. Adult and YA toxic friendship novels are not new, and I’ve read a ton of them, but this one could have taken many turns it didn’t and surprised me with the ones it did in a good way. It felt thoughtful. It explored quite a few things while always keeping the suspense and tension of the why threaded through–especially when we learn Remy is lying… If you like a whydunnit and toxic friendship novels this was a really good read.

Return Home Mystery! (TW addiction/ PTSD/ statutory rape/ suicide mention with detail)

Girls Like Us cover imageGirls Like Us by Cristina Alger: I really enjoyed Alger’s previous novel, The Banker’s Wife, and was thrilled to discover that this one, while totally different, is also super good. It hits a lot of notes for different crime fans: return home; FBI agent on leave; murder mystery; procedural; thriller ending. A thing I really liked about this novel was that it set up a lot of things that are tropes for the genre but never took the worn path. For example the main character Nell Flynn, is an FBI agent on leave after being shot who returns home for her father’s funeral. You think she’s going to be self-destructive and angry but she’s not. And I say this as someone who loves a hotmess, self-destructive woman character–it’s just nice to get something that feels different in the current trends. Flynn ends up assisting a local detective, her father’s last partner, on a murdered woman’s case and quickly finds herself in over her head when things start pointing at her father leading her to question what she actually remembered from the long ago night when her mother was murdered… If you like mysteries with thriller endings, past and present mysteries, and a main character you root for don’t miss this one. And while it’s a great standalone I’d love for it to be the start of a series so I can get more Flynn.

Past And Present Mystery With So Many Reveals! (TW suicide/ child murder/ past pedophile without detail/ partner abuse/ rape mention/ sexual harassment/ addiction)

Never Look Back cover imageNever Look Back by Alison Gaylin: This is one of those vacation reads for me: it had a great hook in the first 60 pages; was plot driven; kept making me lean forward with the reveals whether I saw it coming or not. I’m going to give you a bare bones summary of the plot–you can find the full everywhere else–but I loved going into this one not knowing the initial reveal. Quentin Garrison is a true crime podcast host and he’s currently working on one about two teenage killers from the ’70s. But it’s a personal podcast for him, since he has a connection to one of the crimes… This one is told from multiple points of view, although mostly from three: Quentin Garrison; one of the teen killer’s letters; Robin Diamond, an online columnist. If you want a twisty book, filled with reveals, and don’t mind “diary” type entries amongst the chapters lay back and enjoy the ride!

Recent Releases

the gone dead cover imageThe Gone Dead by Chanelle Benz (Currently listening to the audiobook– with the amazing Bahni Turpin narrating!–and it’s a really good Southern past mystery.)

Stone Cold Heart (Cat Kinsella #2) by Caz Frear (Good new-ish British procedural series.)

Lock Every Door by Riley Sager (Apartment sitter at mysterious apartment building starts to uncover secrets, including that sitters disappear…)

Second Sight cover imageSecond Sight by Aoife Clifford (Looking forward to reading this Australian crime.)

Give Me Your Hand by Megan Abbott (Paperback) (One of my favorite crime authors–Review) (TW suicide)

This Body’s Not Big Enough for Both of Us by Edgar Cantero (Paperback) (Dark comic noir.)

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
True Story

New Nonfiction + Diverse Books for the 4th of July

Greetings to all, I am Alice Burton, your nonfiction news provider this week, and co-host with Kim of For Real, Book Riot’s nonfiction podcast. I’m delighted to meet you all. Let’s explore some new releases and backlist picks!


Sponsored by Dynamic Dames by Sloan De Forest

Celebrate 50 of the most empowering and unforgettable female characters ever to grace the screen, as well as the artists who brought them to life! Through engaging profiles and more than 100 photographs, Dynamic Dames looks at some of the most inspiring female roles in film from the 1920s to today. The characters are discussed along with the exciting off-screen personalities and achievements of the actresses and, on occasion, female writers and directors, who brought them to life. Among the stars profiled are Audrey Hepburn, Josephine Baker, Barbra Streisand, Julia Roberts, Meryl Streep, Gal Gadot, Emma Watson, and many more.


New Releases

What Do We Need Men For?: A Modest Proposal by E. Jean Carroll — Columnist Carroll and her poodle head out on a road trip from Vermont to Louisiana to ask the women she meets: “what do we need men for?”

American Predator: The Hunt for the Most Meticulous Serial Killer of the 21st Century by Maureen Callahan — The story of serial killer Israel Keyes, how he planned murders across the United States, and the slip-up that led to his capture.

The Lie: A Memoir of Two Marriages, Catfishing & Coming Out by William Dameron — A shocking memoir of stolen identity, addiction, divorce, coming out, and healing.

Reading Behind Bars: A Memoir of Literature, Law, and Life as a Prison Librarian by Jill Grunenwald — Grunenwald recounts her time as a librarian at a minimum security prison in Ohio; what she learned; and which parts of a library remain the same, no matter where they are.

Backlist Picks

It’s the week of July 4th, so let’s check out some diverse books about the people who have contributed to what is now the United States.

An Indigenous People’s History of the United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz — A story of over 400 years of history that “examines the legacy of Indigenous peoples’ resistance, resilience, and steadfast fight against imperialism.”

The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America’s Great Migration by Isabel Wilkerson — The story of the decades-long migration of six million African Americans in the 20th century from the rural South to northern and western cities.

The Making of Asian America: A History by Erika Lee — A history of Asian Americans, from sailors coming across the Pacific in the 16th century to the problematic 21st century label of “model minority.”

 

You can find me on Twitter @itsalicetime, and co-hosting the For Real podcast here at Book Riot. Last week, Kim and I shared some great reads about the ocean and what you can find in “mysterious fathoms below.” Happy reading! – Alice

Categories
Today In Books

Activist In The U.S. Arrested After Reading Poem: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Dynamic Dames by Sloan De Forest.

Dynamic Dames ad


Activist In The U.S. Arrested After Reading Poem

Thirty-six hours after reading Dear America, a poem critical of the U.S.’s immigration policy, student activist Jose Bello was arrested. The ACLU has filed a court petition wanting a valid reason for his arrest stating, “the arrest violates the first amendment because ICE agents targeted activists who publicly criticised its immigration enforcement practices.”

#BookstoresAgainstBorders Fundraiser

Gretchen Treu, co-owner of the Madison, Wisconsin indie bookstore A Room of One’s Own, is leading the fundraising campaign #BookstoresAgainstBorders and asking fellow Indie bookstores to join by donating a percentage of July 5th weekend sales to the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services. RAICES is “a Texas-based organization that provides low-to-no-cost legal services to the people who are incarcerated in the immigrant camps run by the U.S. Border Patrol.” You can also donate directly at the fundraiser page here.

Idris Elba On Playing James Bond After The Racist Backlash

In a new Vanity Fair interview, Idris Elba talked about how the racist backlash over the idea of him playing James Bond impacted his view of the role: “And it really turns out to be the color of my skin. And then if I get it and it didn’t work, or it did work, would it be because of the color of my skin? That’s a difficult position to put myself into when I don’t need to.” You can read more on that bit here and for the full article here.

Categories
In The Club

Sit Down, Karen

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

Howdy, club folk! It’s July, and even though I always say I won’t do it, I checked my reading stats this morning and panicked a little! I’ve read 40+ books which by many standards is plenty and yet some of you are out here with three-digit reading habits. I’m trying not to feel judged by you pero… I feel like you’re looking at me funny. 

While I recover from all the shade, I’m excited to start a new club query! I’ll recap the results from last month’s question and weave in a little princess talk + books to inspire change.

Let’s do the thing, shall we? To the club!!


Sponsored by Book Riot’s Amazon Storefront: shop our favorite reads of the year so far, and bookish summer faves!


Question for the Club

In June I asked: what would (or did!) make you leave a book club. I got so many responses! 

Sometimes life made the decision for you (relocation for school or work, having to care for an ailing family member), but other times… well, read on!

  • Bad discussion, or none at all! – In one example, the group “leader” had a list of questions that they expected specific answers for and would ask everyone to “get back on track” whenever someone tried to delve deeper into a question. Umm… sit down, Karen. We gots things to discuss!
  • Disrespectful club members – You know the deal: rudeness and unwillingness to hear other people’s opinions. In one case, one group member always drank too much and had the loudest opinion in the room despite not having read the book OR read the wrong book… yikes. 
  • Missing the point – Club members seemed ignorant of or unwilling to consider the cultural context of the book. When said context speaks to racism, sexism, etc… that’s a problem. 
  • Lack of Variety – Reading the same type of book over and over + unwillingness to stray from that type.
  • Racism or bigotry – I was so impressed by how many of you took the high road and just walked away. I rolled my eyes and cussed in Spanish all to myself on your behalves. 

Take this info back to your clubs! Examine the vibe and be mindful of the factors that push people away. Book club should be a safe space! Let’s keep it that way. #unintentionalrhyming

New month, new query! Here’s July’s question:


Power to the Princess
– I’m notoriously terrible at keeping up with popular TV shows; I generally arrive to the party several seasons late and then annoy everyone with reeeeally old references that I swear are brand new. So sorry to everyone I yelled “Shame!” or “The North remembers!” at earlier this year. 

It is then no surprise that I hadn’t heard of The Spanish Princess, the feminist historical costume drama airing now on Starz. It’s loosely based on a couple of Philippa Gregory novels and features badass ladies like Catherine of Aragon and Margaret Tudor. If you’re a fan like I’m pretty sure I will be, this reading list is for you

Book Club Bonus: With the Democratic debates fresh on my mind, I’ve been thinking a lot about the way our society treats confident, competent, and assertive women compared to their (not necessarily equally competent) male counterparts. I’ve thought a lot in particular about Cleopatra as chronicled by Stacy Schiff, and how a very savvy strategist and negotiator has generally been reduced by history to the sum of her sex appeal and womanly wiles. Give Cleopatra: A Life a read and then explore the parallels in how women candidates (and women, period!) are treated today. 

The Book that Changed my Life – You’ve heard the phrase before: “That book totally changed my life!” For some, this rings a little truer than others; check out some amazing stories of books inspiring major life changes in the most recent episode of Annotated

Book Club Bonus: True story: reading The Thirteenth Tale inspired me to leave a career in management and sales, live in the English countryside for a few months, then pursue writing and bookselling full time when I came back. That’s how I ended up at the Riot – tada! I am therefore ALL about this life-changing-magic-of-a-book thing and want to see a book club edition. While you can’t always manufacture inspiration, I do think you can find a read that will spark some kind of magic in book group. 

Ideas: 

  • Read Cherly Strayed’s Wild and then plan a challenging hike
  • Read Elizabeth Acevedo’s With the Fire on High or Ruth Reichl’s Save Me the Plums and then take a cooking class
  • Read Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott and start a writing group
  • Read Red Clocks by Leni Zumas, then volunteer at a local Planned Parenthood or other clinic providing reproductive care

Suggestion Section

PBS’s July book club pick is Luis Alberto Urrea’s The House of Broken Angels. 

The LA Times book club will read Laila Lalami‘s The Other Americans.

We’re not just giving away The Gentleman in Moscow; we’re giving you ten copies for your book club!


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
What's Up in YA

📗📗 Two and Done: 7 Excellent YA Duologies

Hey YA readers! Let’s talk duologies.

“What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by Book Riot’s Amazon store. Shop our favorite summer reads (including some of our favorite books of 2019 so far), bookish accessories, deals, and more.


I’m terrible about reading series, which I’ve talked about quite a bit on Hey YA. It’s not that I don’t like series books; it’s that I can’t wait between books and need to enjoy the whole series in one go. This is why I’ve been waiting eagerly for the final book in Libba Bray’s “The Diviners” series because I know I’m going to love those books — but I need them all in order to get started.

Enter duologies. They’ve always been around, but in the last few years, as trilogies have waned a bit in popularity, duologies have found more shelf space. Duologies are only two books long, meaning that enjoying the whole of a series doesn’t take as long an investment or as long of a wait between titles.

Let’s take a look at a handful of recent duologies that can be read start to finish right now — or very soon. Since I haven’t read these all myself (so many books, etc.), I’ve used Amazon descriptions of the first book to give a sense of what they’re about and avoid spoilers.

Note that sometimes, even though books are duologies, a third book may come along later on. That might happen with any of these but take heart: usually there’s a real conclusion at the end of book two, and the third book is a “bonus” chapter in the saga.

“Akata Witch” by Nnedi Okorafor, starting with Akata Witch

Sunny Nwazue lives in Nigeria, but she was born in New York City. Her features are West African, but she’s albino. She’s a terrific athlete, but can’t go out into the sun to play soccer. There seems to be no place where she fits in. And then she discovers something amazing—she is a “free agent” with latent magical power. And she has a lot of catching up to do.

Soon she’s part of a quartet of magic students, studying the visible and invisible, learning to change reality. But as she’s finding her footing, Sunny and her friends are asked by the magical authorities to help track down a career criminal who knows magic, too. Will their training be enough to help them combat a threat whose powers greatly outnumber theirs?

“Contagion” by Erin Bowman, starting with Contagion.

After receiving a distress call from a drill team on a distant planet, a skeleton crew is sent into deep space to perform a standard search-and-rescue mission.

When they arrive, they find the planet littered with the remains of the project—including its members’ dead bodies. As they try to piece together what could have possibly decimated an entire project, they discover that some things are best left buried—and some monsters are only too ready to awaken.

“The Death and Life of Zebulon Finch” by Daniel Kraus, starting with The Death and Life of Zebulon Finch, Volume One: At The Edge of Empire

May 7, 1896.

Dusk. A swaggering seventeen-year-old gangster named Zebulon Finch is gunned down by the shores of Lake Michigan. But after mere minutes in the void, he is mysteriously resurrected.

His second life will be nothing like his first.

Zebulon’s new existence begins as a sideshow attraction in a traveling medicine show. From there he will be poked and prodded by a scientist obsessed with mastering the secrets of death. He will fight in the trenches of World War I. He will run from his nightmares—and from poverty—in Depression-era New York City. And he will become the companion of the most beautiful woman in Hollywood.

Love, hate, hope, and horror—Zebulon finds them. But will he ever find redemption?

“The Girl From Everywhere” by Heidi Heilig, starting with The Girl From Everywhere

As the daughter of a time traveler, Nix has spent sixteen years sweeping across the globe and through the centuries aboard her father’s ship. Modern-day New York City, nineteenth-century Hawaii, other lands seen only in myth and legend—Nix has been to them all.

But when her father gambles with her very existence, it all may be about to end. Rae Carson meets Outlander in this epic debut fantasy.

If there is a map, Nix’s father can sail his ship, The Temptation, to any place and any time. But now that he’s uncovered the one map he’s always sought—1868 Honolulu, the year before Nix’s mother died in childbirth—Nix’s life, her entire existence, is at stake. No one knows what will happen if her father changes the past. It could erase Nix’s future, her dreams, her adventures . . . her connection with the charming Persian thief, Kash, who’s been part of their crew for two years.

“Rebel Seoul” by Axie Oh, starting with Rebel Seoul

EAST ASIA, 2199. After a great war, the East Pacific is in ruins. In brutal Neo Seoul, where status comes from success in combat, ex-gang member Lee Jaewon is a talented pilot rising in the academy’s ranks. Abandoned as a child in the slums of Old Seoul by his rebel father, Jaewon desires only to escape his past.

When Jaewon is recruited into the most lucrative weapons development division in Neo Seoul, he is eager to claim his best shot at military glory. But the mission becomes more complicated when he meets Tera, a test subject in the government’s supersoldier project. Tera was trained for one purpose: to pilot one of the lethal God Machines, massive robots for a never-ending war.

With secret orders to report on Tera, Jaewon becomes Tera’s partner, earning her reluctant respect. But as respect turns to love, Jaewon begins to question his loyalty to an oppressive regime that creates weapons out of humans. As the project prepares to go public amidst rumors of a rebellion, Jaewon must decide where he stands–as a soldier of the Republic, or a rebel of the people.

Pacific Rim meets Korean action dramas.

“Reign of the Fallen” by Sarah Glenn Marsh, starting with Reign of the Fallen

Without the dead, she’d be no one.

Odessa is one of Karthia’s master necromancers, catering to the kingdom’s ruling Dead. Whenever a noble dies, it’s Odessa’s job to raise them by retrieving their soul from a dreamy and dangerous shadow world called the Deadlands. But there is a cost to being raised: the Dead must remain shrouded. If even a hint of flesh is exposed, a grotesque transformation begins, turning the Dead into terrifying, bloodthirsty Shades.

A dramatic uptick in Shade attacks raises suspicions and fears around the kingdom. Soon, a crushing loss of one of her closest companions leaves Odessa shattered, and reveals a disturbing conspiracy in Karthia: Someone is intentionally creating Shades by tearing shrouds from the Dead–and training them to attack. Odessa is forced to contemplate a terrifying question: What if her magic is the weapon that brings the kingdom to its knees?

Fighting alongside her fellow mages–and a powerful girl as enthralling as she is infuriating–Odessa must untangle the gruesome plot to destroy Karthia before the Shades take everything she loves.

“Want” by Cindy Pon, starting with Want

Jason Zhou survives in a divided society where the elite use their wealth to buy longer lives. The rich wear special suits, protecting them from the pollution and viruses that plague the city, while those without suffer illness and early deaths. Frustrated by his city’s corruption and still grieving the loss of his mother who died as a result of it, Zhou is determined to change things, no matter the cost.

With the help of his friends, Zhou infiltrates the lives of the wealthy in hopes of destroying the international Jin Corporation from within. Jin Corp not only manufactures the special suits the rich rely on, but they may also be manufacturing the pollution that makes them necessary.

Yet the deeper Zhou delves into this new world of excess and wealth, the more muddled his plans become. And against his better judgment, Zhou finds himself falling for Daiyu, the daughter of Jin Corp’s CEO. Can Zhou save his city without compromising who he is, or destroying his own heart?


Thanks for hanging out and we’ll see you later this week!

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

Categories
The Goods

The Best Books of the Year So Far

We’ve rounded-up our favorite new releases of 2019 so far, from every genre and for every reader. Take a look!