Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks – 8/29

Hola Audiophiles!

Dios mio, y’all. It’s pretty much a wrap on August. Know what that means? 1. I’m going to be a Portland resident in just a few days. 2. The deluge of fall book releases is coming! There are soooo many books coming out next week alone and it’s kinda sorta maybe still summer?! It was so hard to choose just a few to highlight today, but I’m really excited about these picks.

Ready? Let’s audio!


New Releases – September 3rd (publisher’s descriptions in quotes)

A Fortune for Your Disaster: Poems by Hanif Abdurraqib, narrated by the author – I feel like we all need more poetry audiobooks in our lives. Poetry was meant to be read out loud! If you don’t know Hanif Abdurraqib, he is the brilliant poet, essayist, music critic, and excellent Twitter follow (so many literal LOLs) behind personal favorite Go Ahead in the Rain, a touching and funny love letter to A Tribe Called Quest, plus several other poetry collections. This one is a book of poems about “how one rebuilds oneself after a heartbreak, the kind that renders them a different version of themselves than the one they knew.”

  • Narrator note: I think this is the first time Hanif narrates his own work and I’m so, so glad that he did. I’ve heard him read in person and he is so dynamic: not animated per se, but an understated funny. And that voice! I’d listen to him read me the contents of my shampoo.

Dear Haiti, Love Alaine by Maika and Maritza Moulite, narrated by Bahni Turpin – Alaine is a 17-year-old Haitian American from Miami who’s been suspended from school and shipped off to Haiti: “Thanks to ‘the incident’ (don’t ask), I’m spending the next two months doing what my school is calling a ‘spring volunteer immersion project.’ It’s definitely no vacation. I’m toiling away under the ever-watchful eyes of Tati Estelle at her new nonprofit. And my lean-in queen of a mother is even here to make sure I do things right. Or she might just be lying low to dodge the media sharks after a much more public incident of her own…and to hide a rather devastating secret.”

  • Narrator Note: You know wassup. Bahni Turpin, everybody.

The Secrets We Kept by Lara Prescott, narrated by Carlotta Brentan, Cynthia Farrell, Mozhan Marnò, full cast – “A thrilling tale of secretaries turned spies, of love and duty, and of sacrifice – inspired by the true story of the CIA plot to infiltrate the hearts and minds of Soviet Russia, not with propaganda, but with the greatest love story of the 20th century: Doctor Zhivago.”

  • Narrator Note: You know how I feel about full cast recordings! All of the narrators have plenty of audio credits to their name, my fave being Mozhan Marnos’ performance of Wonder Woman: Warbringer by Leigh Bardugo.

Strange Birds: A Guide to Ruffling Feathers by Celia Perez, narrated by Rebecca Soler – We get asked a lot about family-friendly audiobooks and I think this would be a great one! If you loved Celia Perez’ First Rule of Punk, make this “story of four kids who form an alternative Scout troop that shakes up their sleepy Florida town” your next listen.

  • Narrator Note: I really liked Rebecca Soler’s performance of Empress of a Thousand Skies (yay space opera!). She’s also the voice behind all of your faves: Marissa Meyer’s Cinder, Scarlet, and Renegades, Melissa Albert’s Hazel Wood, Stephanie Garber’s Caraval series, and so much more.

Tunnel of Bones by Victoria Schwab, narrated by Reba Buhr – I think it’s time I just acknowledge that Victoria/V.E. Schwab is one of my favorite authors. This is the second book in the Cassidy Blake middle grade series; the first book City of Ghosts is a ghost-hunter caper set in Edinburgh that I absolutely love! In Tunnel of Bones, we follow Cassidy, her parents, and her ghost BFF Jacob to Paris to find out what lurks in those catacombs. Sold!

  • Narrator Note: Reba Buhr narrated City of Ghosts too and does a great job at performing in a children’s voice that doesn’t feel forced.

From the Internets

A headline that made me chuckle: Audible forced to defend the legal difference between audiobook transcripts and, uh, “books”

From African American studies to engineering, Bustle recommends nonfic audiobooks based on your subject of interest.

SFF publisher Baen Books and RBmedia have teamed up to produce audiobooks.

Over at the Riot

How audiobooks improve one reader’s mental health and reading life

Rioter Christine put together this list of self-improvement listens that I love! It isn’t the same fluffy stuff I see recommended all the time. No one telling me to just wash my face and whatnot.


That’s all I got today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter, peep the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
Riot Rundown

082919-ChaseDarkness-Riot-Rundown

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for August 30

Happy Friday, shipmates! You made it! This is Alex to bring in the weekend with some news and desert-related book noodling. Oh, and a strong recommendation that you should watch Missy Elliott’s VMA performance because it’s sci-fi as all heck too.

News and Views

The Campbell Award has been renamed. More context on this over at Book Riot if you’ve missed what’s going on. Related: Was John W. Cambpell A F***ing Fascist, or Merely a Fascist?

Fonda Lee (author of Jade War) wrote us a great list about siblings in fantasy.

Star Trek: The Motion Picture forty years later.

New Wild Cards story over at Tor.com!

The TSA has banned “thermal detonator” soda bottles from Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge in both carry on and checked baggage.

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about the Hugo awards and the Blade trilogy.

S.L. Huang (author of Null Set) on the danger of swords. Somewhat related: a freelance photographer went to a medieval battle reenactment and got some amazing pictures.

I feel required to mention that the final trailer for Joker is out.

Marvel comics no. Marvel comics why.

I am excited about this documentary on Alien.

Here’s a long piece about The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance‘s journey to the screen.

Thanks to some really questionable choices by big tech, the necessity of ethics is coming back into discussion–and science fiction is part of it.

How firenados work. This is some dragon-level stuff.

You had me at “16,000-year-old puma poop.”

And some cool, science-y nail art!

Free Association Friday

Apparently this August has been one of the top five warmest on record for my city, and I believe it. Colorado has a lot of land that’s near-desert or desert, rainfall-wise, and you can feel it most in the summer when the dry meets the hot. (Which is probably why so much of my writing, like my novels, is set in the desert.) So how about some desert books to capture this August feeling?

a curved dagger with a white hilt and jeweled base, set against a red-tinged backdropThere is a lot of desert-based fantasy, and so much of it is really good. Tasha Suri’s Empire of Sand is my hands-down favorite because it’s so much about the wild, dangerous magic of the desert. City of Brass by S.A. Chakraborty is a close second, though it spends a lot more time in the city of the djinn than out in the sands. That book starts in Cairo, which immediately brings to mind E. Catherine Tobler’s Rings of Anubis if you’re feeling a bit more steampunk to go with the magic, or N.K. Jemisin’s The Killing Moon if you’re looking for something more ancient and deeply mythological. Throne of the Crescent Moon by Saladin Ahmed goes fully fantasy adventure–as does Rebel of the Sands by Alwyn Hamilton, with added gunslingers. Alif the Unseen by G. Willow Wilson combines hacking and magic in a fictional Middle Eastern state.

City of Bones by Martha Wells takes us to an entirely unfamiliar world, still fantasy, where relic hunters sift through bone. The start of Stephen King’s Dark Tower series, The Gunslinger, has that same sort of combined fantasy and science fiction with blowing dust feel.

The weird thing I noticed as I was making my list of these books is that there’s so much more desert fantasy than there is sci-fi. Because while there might be science fiction that touches on a desert location, it lacks that deep connection to place that has provided so much meat for fantasy. With exceptions, of course. Technically speaking, any book set on Mars that isn’t about a transformed and terraformed version of it is about a desert planet; let’s just take Kim Stanley Robinson’s Red Mars as the prime example of that. And of course, there’s the grandaddy of all desert SFF: Frank Herbert’s Dune. I’d also offer up Iraq + 100 as science fiction much closer to home; it’s short stories by Iraqi authors that imagine their country 100 years in the future.


See you, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
Book Radar

MOON GIRL AND DEVIL DINOSAUR Headed to the Disney Channel and More Book Radar!

It’s that time again! I have some cool stuff to share with you today. A bit of end-of-summer news and some exciting tidbits. (Also, how is summer over???) As you can imagine, I spend a LOT of time looking at catalogs and book news, so I like being able to transfer the stuff I put in my brain to this newsletter to share with everyone else. So kick back, relax, and enjoy. I hope you have a great rest of your week, and remember to be kind to yourself and others.  I’ll see you again on Thursday, because Monday is a holiday. Which reminds me of this. – xoxo, Liberty

Trivia question time! How many of Emily Dickinson’s poems were published during her lifetime? (Scroll to the bottom for the answer.)

Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

the gifted schoolBruce Holsinger’s new novel The Gifted School will be adapted for television.

Here’s Hailee Steinfeld as Emily Dickinson in the new trailer for Dickinson, debuting this fall on Apple TV+.

Rainbirds author Clarissa Goenawan announced her new book.

And Sarah Gailey announced a third title coming from them in 2020.

Moon Girl And Devil Dinosaur to be an animated series for the Disney Channel.

Here’s Meryl Streep in the trailer for The Laundromat, based on Jake Bernstein’s non-fiction book Secrecy World.

And here’s the trailer for The King with Timothée Chalamet and Robert Pattinson, inspired by Shakespeare’s Henry work.

Tor.com revealed the cover for Hearts of Oak by Eddie Robson. (Tor.com, March 17, 2020)

Shiny! Here’s the cover for Godshot by Chelsea Bieker. (Catapult, April 7, 2020)

Book Riot Recommends 

At Book Riot, I work on the New Books! email, the All the Books! podcast about new releases, and the Book Riot Insiders New Release Index. I am very fortunate to get to read a lot of upcoming titles, and learn about a lot of upcoming titles, and I’m delighted to share a couple with you each week so you can add them to your TBR! (It will now be books I loved on Mondays and books I’m excited to read on Thursdays. YAY, BOOKS!)

Excited to read:

the knockout queenThe Knockout Queen by Rufi Thorpe (Knopf, April 28, 2020)

I JUST learned about this last night and I am over the moon! I love, love, love her other novels, The Girls of Corona del Mar and Dear Fang. I love them like WHOA. She is amazing, and I cannot wait to read this! It’s about two high school students who learn each other’s lives are not as they seem. SIGN ME UP.

What I’m reading this week.

the deep rivers solomonThe Deep by Rivers Solomon with Daveed Diggs, et al.

Think Black: A Memoir by Clyde W. Ford

The Silvered Serpents by Roshani Chokshi

This Tender Land: A Novel by William Kent Krueger

And this is funny.

THIS IS THE CUTEST. (NSFW: There is a curse word in the body of the tweet, but it’s the cutest video, I promise.)

Trivia answer: Ten. 

You made it to the bottom! High five. Thanks for reading! – xo, L

Categories
Kissing Books

The Whole FIT Trilogy For Less Than Three Dollars

We’re heading into what for some of us will be a three-day weekend, and I can’t wait to get somewhere near caught up. I mean, that’s never actually going to happen, but I like to feel like I’m trying. Or something.

Over on Book Riot

Natalya got to chat with Kennedy Ryan about her RITA win and all kinds of things.

I waited as long as possible to open Sil’s list of 19 great romance series to start, because I just cannot right now. But if you’re looking for a good read to dip into, you can’t go wrong with any of these.

Want a free copy of an intriguing Brenda Novak book?

Katherine wrote a rundown of what’s happening at Barnes and Noble, if you still do that kind of thing. My main thought: if their goal is now to better meet customer demand instead of selling what the publishers want them to, are we going to see a broader, larger range of romance? My local store isn’t terrible when it comes to stocking romance, but they could definitely be more aware of what people are buying from other venues.

I used to be a page folder, but some random shift happened in my brain and now I hoard bookmarks. And I want all of these.

Deals

cover of Fit by Rebekah WeatherspoonHave you read Rebekah Weatherspoon’s Fit trilogy? All three books (Fit being the first, then Tamed and Sated) are 99 cents each right now. If your only trek into Rebekah Weatherspoon’s universe has been Rafe, you’re in for quite a treat with these. The first features a television producer who decides to try a new fitness routine and the trainer that she ends up with. There’s also a lovely D/s element (is lovely the right word? Probably not.) that just makes everything a touch more…sweltering hot.

And if that wasn’t enough, That Could Be Enough, Alyssa Cole’s historical novella that first appeared in Hamilton’s Battalion, is also 99 cents! This is an amazing bit of f/f set in Antebellum New York with two women that you just can’t help loving even when they bug you to death. If you haven’t yet tried it out, now is definitely the time.

New Releases!

So many books came out this week (and I missed a couple last week being distracted by the shinies) and it is good.

cover of Man vs. Durian by Jackie LauMan vs. Durian
Jackie Lau

I told you last time you’d hear more about this one, and I can tell you it did not disappoint. Jackie Lau is the queen of what some would call “low stakes” romance. Here, Valerie, who we met in The Ultimate Pi Day Party, pretends that she has a boyfriend named Peter during a bad conversation with her mother. So when she accidentally dumps durian ice cream on a guy who turns out to be named Peter, she asks him to be her fake boyfriend. And he agrees…because he’s already interested. Valerie, on the other hand, needs time to trust before intimacy blooms—I don’t think she says she’s demisexual but I wouldn’t say she’s not demisexual—and would rather this thing with Peter just be…what it is. For now.

CW for mentions of sexual harassment

There are a few other books I’m looking forward to checking out, of course:

Cover of Training my Heart to Love You by Monica WaltersTraining My Heart to Love You by Monica Walters (I’ll admit: I judged this book by its cover)
Butterfly in Frost by Sylva Day (I KNOW)
Dalliances & Devotion by Felicia Grossman
Nothing to Fear by Juno Rushdan
Flashed by Zoey Castile
Tiny House, Big Love by Olivia Dade
How to Love A Duke in Ten Days by Kerrigan Byrne
Sidelined by Suzanne Baltsar
Handle With Care by Helena Hunting
On The Corner of Love and Hate by Nina Bocci
Bootie and the Beast by Falguni Kothari

That’s…plenty. Right?

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, bookrecs, or just want to say hi!

Categories
Today In Books

Most Used Adjectives For Men And Women: Today In Books

Most Used Adjectives For Men & Women

When data proves what we already know: 3.5 million books published in English were computer analyzed to see the difference in how men and women were described. “We are clearly able to see that the words used for women refer much more to their appearances than the words used to describe men. Thus, we have been able to confirm a widespread perception, only now at a statistical level.” Check out all the data here.

Marley Dias Rocks!

The Guardian has done a great profile on Marley Dias–the girl who started a movement for Black girl lead books after being assigned too many books in school “…about a white boy and his dog.” From the hashtag #1000BlackGirlBooks to the White House, she’s still inspiring girls to find their passion and help others–and she even has a memoir: Marley Dias Gets it Done: And So Can You!

Andrew Carnegie’s Money And Public Libraries

In a time where there is a lot of discussion about wealth and not being able to take it with you when you’re 6 feet under, this is a really interesting article from The Atlantic about how much money Andrew Carnegie gave to public libraries. Starting in 1883, and for around 35 years, Carnegie donated money that helped build about 1,700 libraries in the U.S. and 800 around the world.

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 8/28

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

‘Sup, club nerds? The time has come! This is the last newsletter I will write as a San Diego resident (at least for the foreseeable future). I’m mostly packed, very excited, and more than un poquito emo as I prepare to say my goodbyes. I’m also nursing one hell of a headache because my going away party’s theme was apparently tequila.

Let’s get to club business so I can go back to avoiding bright lights and loud noises.

Ready? To the club!!


As I prepare to leave the place I’ve called home for most of my life, I’ve reflected on how privileged I am to be moving under these circumstances. For many, leaving home isn’t some fun and emotional adventure; it’s a matter of life and death, a harrowing journey fraught with peril in pursuit of shelter, safety, a chance.

Today’s book club suggestions each examine the immigrant experience: two unique works of fiction on the journey itself and one nonfiction title about Dreamers. They should get your clubs talking about what it means to be an immigrant.

Signs Preceding the End of the World by Yuri Herrera, translated by Lisa Dillman – Yuri Herrera is one of Mexico’s most exciting contemporary novelists. In this tiny but powerful quest novel, a young Mexican woman crosses the border to deliver a letter to her brother at her mother’s request. It’s a border story unlike any I’ve read before; the maybe-magical realism, the play on language, the haunting dream-like quality… so good.

  • Book Club Bonus: First, and perhaps especially if you do speak Spanish: do yourself a favor and read the translator’s note first. It’s at the end of the book but I don’t feel like it spoils anything. When you’re done, discuss the translator’s word choice as discussed in that note; the author’s choice not to name specific destinations; how the story draws from other quest and hero journeys.

In the Distance by Hernan Diaz – When I tell you I’m recommending a powerful immigrant narrative, odds are you aren’t expecting a western about a Swedish dude. That’s precisely what this Pulitzer finalist novel is though! Håkan is just a boy when he’s sent to America by his father and is separated from his brother when he gets on the wrong boat. He embarks on an eastbound cross-country journey on foot to find him while everyone else is migrating west in the American 1800s.

  • Book Club Bonus: What Hernan Diaz does with the immigrant story by making the protagonist a very safe white male is just brilliant. Brilliant, I say! Discuss the language device (yeah, it’s weird, but also kind of genius), the cast of characters he encounters; how Håkan’s physical size as he grows into manhood is a metaphor for his legend; the physical and less tangible characteristics that we use to “other” people.

Just Like Us: The True Story of Four Mexican Girls Coming of Age in America by Helen Thorpe – I was in my early twenties when this work of nonfiction made me think a little harder about the ways in which the immigrant experience varies from person to person, and that’s coming from the child of immigrants. We meet four Mexican teens, all of whom have grown up in Colorado and two of whom are undocumented. This is an intimate view into their lives and specifically the plight of the Dreamer: poverty, citizenship status, and increasing fear of immigrants are just some of the threats they face in pursuit of an education, and their friendship often suffers in turn.

  • Book Club Bonus: This book was published in 2009, but I don’t have to tell you just how many of the topics discussed could easily have been plucked from 2019. Compare and contrast each young woman’s situation and the ways in which the system helped or failed them. Do some extra reading on the DREAM Act and DACA while you’re at it.

Suggestion Section

How a tiny Edinburgh book club grew to reach over 20 countries worldwide.

I know many of you won’t need help here, but for those that do: how to start a boozy 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

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

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Then There’s Another Death…🔪

Hello mystery fans! This week I’m coming at you with a historical fiction mystery I loved, a dark-ish British serial killer with a past and present mystery, and an exploration of true crime.

Historical Mystery (TW suicide)

The Frangipani Tree Mystery (Crown Colony #1) by Ovidia Yu: Set in 1936 Singapore a local teen, SuLin, was orphaned young and left with a limp from Polio but, thanks to her aunt, received an education. Now, rather than allowing herself to be married off, she wants to work. Which works out for her because the nanny in the Acting Governor’s house is murdered and a new nanny is needed. Not the work she wanted but SuLin–who is smart, perceptive, and kind–finds herself trying to help the girl in her charge while navigating the upstairs, downstairs and racial politics–Oh, and figuring out what happened to the nanny! She finds herself working in a way with Chief Inspector Thomas LeFroy as he tries to solve the murder and she tries to get a handle on the family living in the Governor’s House. Then there’s another death…I especially loved the setting, characters, “partnership” and am really glad it’s the start of a series with two more books already out!

British Serial Killer (TW addiction/ child abuse, murder/ pedophile)

The Whisper Man cover imageThe Whisper Man by Alex North: If you’re looking for a dark-ish British thriller and enjoy past and present mysteries, this was a good read–and audiobook! A recently widowed father, Tom Kennedy, moves to a small-town, Featherbank, with his young son hoping for a fresh start. But it’s hard to make a fresh start when a town has a grizzly past–a serial killer that preyed on children 20 years before. Now with a young boy missing, two DI’s on the case–one who thought he’d caught the serial killer years ago, but never found one of the children–and Tom’s young son seeing things and talking to an imaginary girl in their new home things take a creepy turn. What is happening now, and what happened all those years before?… It’s told from multiple points of view–giving you part procedural, part family drama–with a monstrous serial killer weaving in terror, but the core of the book is about father and son relationships.

Exploration Of True Crime (TW basically everything)

Savage Appetites cover imageSavage Appetites: Four True Stories of Women, Crime, and Obsession by Rachel Monroe: I have so many thoughts on this book I could write an entire review for each of the four sections. It starts and ends with the author attending a true crime con. In between it focuses on one fascinating woman and three cold cases which are looked at from a different angle then just the actual case–women’s obsession is the “thesis” for the book. First, we learn about Frances Glessner Lee who in the 1940s created true crime scene dioramas like dollhouses and was very influential about creating what we know as forensics science today. I loved learning about her and think she should be widely known! I could have done without blips of the author’s harsh-ish judgement of Lee which seemed unwarranted, and even if warranted unnecessary. The second section is about a woman who burrowed her way into the Tate family and I only read half of it–I’ve been done with everything Manson related for a long time. The treatment for so long has upheld everything that is wrong with true crime, and while it completely makes sense it’s in this book, I just personally couldn’t. The third section was back to fascinating for me: It focuses on a N.Y. landscape architect who saw a documentary about a convicted child murderer (West Memphis Three) and sought him out, married him, then dedicated her life to proving his innocence. This was one of those (in)justice system stories that should have more focus and brought me back to why I’d picked up this book. And finally a young woman’s obsession, and pockets of the internet/social media, with Columbine and her own attempt at a mass shooting–which sadly could not be more timely. If you read true crime and don’t know these stories this book will most likely work really well for you. If you read true crime and are starting to branch out in exploring the genre’s issues this is also a good pickup. If you firmly sit in the camp that true crime is exploitative and all the genre’s issues need to be addressed this book will probably meet you 1/2 way but everything else you want said will be just out of reach.

Recent Releases

Wonton Terror cover imageWonton Terror (A Noodle Shop Mystery #4) by Vivien Chien (Currently reading: Always enjoyable cozy mystery that leaves me starving for Chinese food.)

A Better Man (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache #15) by Louise Penny (Excellent series for fans of procedurals/detectives who want a Canadian setting.)

The Truth Behind the Lie (Kouplan #1) by Sara Lövestam (TBR: Iranian refugee PI working in Sweden for clients who can’t go to the police.)

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

LITTLE WOMEN and Women in Politics

Hello, nonfiction friends! I cannot believe it’s the last week of August – the summer has absolutely flown by me. This week is another great one for nonfiction new releases. I’ve got three books to feature, plus six more that caught my eye. Let’s get going!

March Sisters: On Life, Death, and Little Women  by Kate Bolick, Carmen Maria Machado, Jane Smiley, and Jenny Zhang – In celebration of the 150th anniversary of Little Women, four authors write about their connections to the novel, including “what it has meant to them and why it still matters.” This is such an interesting combination of writers, and I have such a soft spot for Little Women – it’s right in my wheelhouse.

Bookish Reading: Since this book is so short, I want to direct you to previous/future work by each of the authors – Spinster by Kate Bolick (memoir), In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado (memoir), The Man Who Invented the Computer by Jane Smiley (nonfiction), and Sour Heart by Jenny Zhang (short stories).

The Optimist’s Telescope: Thinking Ahead in a Reckless Age by Bina Venkataraman – If you have ever wondered why making the decision that will benefit you most in the long-term is so hard, this is a book for you. Bina Venkataraman, a writer and former Obama administration advisor on climate change, explores the biology, psychology, and economics of making better decisions over time and shares practices we can adopt ourselves and as a society.

Further Reading: It’s not super recent, but Venkataraman’s 2018 article about why we should rethink the idea of a forced quarantine was interesting.

See Jane Win: The Inspiring Story of the Women Changing American Politics by Caitlin Moscatello – The November 2018 midterm elections resulted in a record number of women running for and winning elected offices. In this book, journalist Caitlin Moscatello follows four candidates (one for Congress, three for state offices) through their campaigns and the “brutal realities of running for office while female.”

Further Reading: Earlier this year, Moscatello wrote about the work of Millennial women in Congress and how they’re fighting back against the sexist, ageist rhetoric trying to convince them to keep their heads down and wait their turn.

And finally, a few more titles that I am curious about:

Hooray, new books! 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

Above The Clouds Bookstore! Today In Books

Above The Clouds Bookstore!

On the 52nd floor of Shanghai Tower–Shanghai’s tallest building!–is Duoyun Books’ flagship store called Books Above Clouds. Because literally it is. And this bookstore is ridiculously amazing and gorgeous and who do I speak to so I can live inside it?! Check out the photos, and fantasize about living there with me, here.

Heartbreaking

The National Immigration Detention Hotline–“free and confidential resource offering legal assistance to people who are in immigration detention since 2013”–was featured on this final season of the Netflix show Orange Is The New Black and then ICE shut it down. “It is concerning that ICE’s response to criticism is to block avenues of free and safe communication.” You can read the full story here.

Well This Is Violent

Netflix’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s Henry The IV and Henry V has a trailer. And heads will roll. Literally. The King, starring Timothée Chalamet as the I-don’t-want-to-be-King, will hit theaters and stream on Netflix starting September 2nd.