Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 10/30

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

Thank you to all of you again who continue to reach out with condolences over my grandfather. We buried him last week and he’s at peace now. It gets easier every day.

As for this week’s theme, I’m suddenly very aware of how little time is left in this year (and decade, good grief). Thanksgiving is but a few weeks away, which got me thinking a lot about the ways we’ve constructed narratives that paint American history in such a glossy and positive light. I want to dedicate some time in book club to reckon with the truth, be it ugly, pretty, or all of the above.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

Hmm… what snacks go with ugly truths and conspiracy?! I suppose good ol’ comfort food, because we’re gonna need it!

Personally, I look for any excuse to enjoy fall foods. Try this butternut squash soup for a starter and this pork shoulder with basil sauce for the main course. If you don’t feel like basil sauce, I think chimichurri would be so perfect here too. If you’re down for some seafood instead, this scallop dish with a brown butter and lemon pan sauce comes together pretty quickly and it’s SO good. I always add extra lemon zest

For dessert, try these delectable baked apples that I can legit eat three of if left unsupervised. I might top these with a little cream cheese whipped with some brown sugar and a splash of vanilla extract because I do what I want.

For sips, go with some good ol’ American beer, or try this Fall From the Tree cocktail I’ve been meaning to try (bourbon, apple juice, cinnamon, and a few other fun things).

Umm…That’s Not How I Heard It

The version of history most of us got in school is not even close to the whole story (Columbus Day, I’m lookin’ at you, bruh). The truth is, of course, much less happy-pilgrims-and-natives-sharing-maize and a lot more this-land-was-your-land-but-now-its-ours-move-or-die-also-here’s-some-small-pox. So let’s read up, get informed, and then unpack the darker parts of our country’s legacy. Discuss which of the facts you encounter were the most shocking, and get into how the ground we laid when the country was founded directly correlate to the issues that divide us today.

Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Mrurders and the Birth of the FBI by David Grann

I used to handsell this all the time at the bookstore and my line every time was, “How the hell did we never learn about this?” The people of the Osage Nation were the richest people per capita in the world in the 1920s when oil was discovered on their land (land that, by the way, they were pushed onto in the first place). That’s when the Osage started dying one by one, and not by natural causes. Many of those who tried to investigate these suspicious deaths ended up dead too, so the newly-formed FBI eventually got involved under the direction of J. Edgar Hoover. What really happened to the Osage people is a downright scandalous conspiracy that I cannot believe I knew nothing about until two years ago.

These Truths: A History of the United States by Jill Lepore

I call this my “I need a Christmas gift for my history-loving father-in-law” recommendation, but it’s a great read for anyone who wants a broader and more accurate view of the United States’ past. It’s a meaty tome that goes back to 1492 and attempts to provide a more accurate and sobering account of our nation’s history. It’s nowhere near as pretty and altruistic as our textbooks have made it out to be; in fact, the truths told here are often uncomfortable and ones it’s about time they were reckoned with.

How to Hide an Empire: A History of the Greater United States  by Daniel Immerwahr

I own but have not yet taken on what is by numerous accounts a “fascinating, meticulously researched, & highly readable ‘revisionist history’ of the US shown through the lens of the territories and colonies that have been at the outlying edges of the American empire” (ripped that from the staff picks section of the indie I worked at, courtesy of owner Seth Marko). This book shows in very black and white terms that the objective has always been domination, expansion, capitalistic supremacy. Again, a lot of this narrative ain’t pretty, but of vital importance for any informed American.

Suggestion Section

We have some book club questions for Becoming for ya.

Today suggest these discussion points for Ann Patchett’s The Dutch House

From the Good Morning America Book Club: the recipe for Ana’s Pastelito Love Bites from Dominicana

This book club has been meeting for over 6 decades!

This feels a little Late to the Party of NBC, but here’s their list of celeb book clubs you might enjoy. They even went and threw in some up-and-comers: Oprah and Reece something?


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
True Story

Prince, the Science of Hearing, and More Nonfiction

Hello hello, nonfiction friends! Can you believe it’s the last Wednesday of October? Bananas! This week is another pretty big one for new nonfiction, but it looks like things will be lightening up soon. Next week, November 5, is a huge day, but I think after that things will calm down so we can all just catch our breath a bit. Or maybe that’s just me, looking at my increasingly impossible 2019 TBR pile?

This week’s featured nonfiction includes a memoir of growing up poor and Puerto Rican in Miami, a look at the science behind hearing, and a story of immigrants in a small Maine community. They all seem great, I can’t wait to share!

The Beautiful Ones by Prince – As a Minnesotan, I’m obligated to tell you that Prince’s memoir is out this week. The book has four parts – the memoir Prince was writing when he died, a look at his early musical years, his evolution through images, and the “handwritten treatment for Purple Rain.” It also includes private photos, scrapbook images, and song lyrics. I haven’t read any part of this book yet, but it’s Prince and so I have to imagine that it’s a beautiful piece of work.

 

Volume Control: Hearing in a Deafening World by David Owen – This book explores the science of hearing and the technology being developed to help us hear better. David Owen explores the biology of processing sound, the social cost of poor hearing, and the different ways science is looking to address all of the ways hearing can be difficult or damaged in our increasingly loud world. I think this one looks fascinating.

Home Now: How 6000 Refugees Transformed an American Town by Cynthia Anderson – After losing industrial jobs the town of Lewiston, Maine seemed like it was on the decline. But over the course of 15 years, “the city became home to thousands of African immigrants and, along the way, turned into one of the most Muslim towns in the U.S.” Cynthia Anderson grew up in Lewiston, so she brings an insider’s perspective to the complexity and humanity of this place. I really want to read this one.

And finally, it wouldn’t be a fall nonfiction new release newsletter without links to several other books that look great but I don’t have time to write about in more detail:

October has been a great month for 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. At the suggestion of a listener, this week’s episode is all about medical mysteries. Happy reading (and listening)! – Kim

Categories
Unusual Suspects

So She Goes Rogue 🔪

Hi mystery fans! This week I have for you a fun-ish novel about vigilante spies, a look at online amateur sleuths solving missing person’s cases, and a procedural with a thirty year cold case.

Vigilante Spies! (TW human trafficking/ addiction/ child rape, death)

The Athena Protocol cover imageThe Athena Protocol by Shamim Sarif: This is one of those books that, because of the subject matter of the “cases,” could have been dark to dark AF. But, instead, it veers away from that and felt more like a fun-ish novel thanks to the crew of vigilante women trying to take down the evil of the world. Which is what the Athena Protocol is: a top secret organization–with zero ties to any agency–that is led and run by women enacting vigilante justice. It starts with the group freeing girls from human traffickers, but the assignment goes wrong when Jessie Archer ignores protocol. Now, Archer finds herself kicked out of the group but unable to let the work go. So she goes rogue, continuing to help with missions even though her former spy partners have strict orders to bring her in… If you need a good dose of women kicking ass and saving the day, this did that with a good balance of great characters (character growth included) who have their own baggage and issues while trying to help others. If this is the start to a series, count me in as definitely reading the sequel.

Online Amateur Sleuths! (TW basically everything is talked about)

The Skeleton CrewThe Skeleton Crew: How Amateur Sleuths are Solving America’s Coldest Cases by Deborah Halber: I love falling down rabbit holes and have always been kind of obsessed with human behavior–sit me on a bench to people watch and I’ll never bore. Which is why this book was kind of perfect for me as it takes a look at the online communities/web sleuths that take it upon themselves to solve missing persons cases by matching them to unidentified bodies that have been found (in all kinds of decay). Halber basically ping pongs (think nonlinear narrative) between cases, web sleuths, the creation of online communities–including the infighting because humans, of course–, law enforcement’s view on these groups/individuals, and opens up discussion for questions like, where is the line between helping and overstepping into people’s trauma and should law enforcement have all the power or is it good that these individuals are in a way bringing some power back to communities?

Procedural! (TW past child abuse/ rape, partially on page)

She Lies In Wait cover imageShe Lies in Wait (DCI Jonah Sheens #1) by Gytha Lodge: My brain just needed a procedural to read where I could sit back and watch people work on solving something. In this case it’s the 30 year mystery of Aurora Jackson, a 14-year-old girl, who disappeared while camping with her older sister and her sister’s friends. Until now, when her body is found near the campsite, meaning she’d been there all along, so someone who’d been there that night must have been the killer? Or at least knows something they’ve never shared since? Told in past and present, we watch as investigators currently try to solve what happened to Jackson while also being taken back to 1983 as Jackson takes us into the excitement of tagging along with the older kids. Which timeline will reveal what happened first?…

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

It’s Superman And Lois! Today In Books

It’s Superman & Lois!

The CW is adding to its superheroes family! Currently in development is a modern day hour-long drama following Superman and Lois as they work and raise their kids. Tyler Hoechlin and Elizabeth Tulloch will play Superman and Lois Lane, and while they’ve already played the characters on other CW shows, this won’t be a spinoff.

Another Great Book List!

Foyles, the English bookseller once listed in the Guinness Book of Records, has announced their Books Of The Year shortlist! There’s seven books for each category of best 2019 book for fiction, nonfiction, and children’s & YA. It’s a great list of books and the winners will be announced at the end of November.

Aretha Franklin’s Coffee Table Book

Aretha Franklin will certainly live on forever in music. But now also with this coffee table book, The Queen Next Door, a collection of rare and personal photos starting in 1983 when Franklin enlisted journalist Linda Solomon as a personal photographer. And the just released 214-page book is already in its second printing!

Categories
Giveaways

102919-ReadBlissEAC-Giveaway

We’re teaming up with Read Bliss to give away a 6-month subscription to The Fresh Fiction Box to one lucky reader.

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

Here’s what Read Bliss is all about:

Read Bliss is your video destination for all things romance and reading! Tune in to Read Bliss on YouTube for videos by romance fans, for romance fans―including book roundups, author interviews, trope spotlights, bookish DIY projects and more from Read Bliss’s team of romance BookTubers. Stay up to date with the latest videos, news and book recommendations from Read Bliss with our email newsletter. Watch. Read. Love!

 

Categories
What's Up in YA

📚📚 Don’t Miss These Late 2019 YA Books!

Hey YA Readers!

I don’t know about you, but I find the “best of” list creep annoying. Do we need to know the BEST books of 2019 in October? I don’t — and I don’t know if I really understand the point beyond getting to claim being the first. Publishers Weekly released their “best of” last week and as a reminder, that’s not the end of the year.

We’ve got two full months left.

I think December “best of” lists, even end-of-November, is far more acceptable. And the big reason?

There are still so many books to come in November and December.

Certainly, editors read those books while making their lists. But those lists overshadow the books still to come.

So to do a little making up for that, let’s highlight a few upcoming YA book releases in November and December. This newsletter will be a bit longer than normal, as I want to pack in a wide range of titles.

I’ve read only one of these (so far!) since I don’t tend to read ahead more than a month or so. That means I’m using Amazon descriptions. I’ve stuck to quieter books, since it’s probably the case you’re well aware there’s a new Maggie Stiefvater (Call Down The Hawk) book, as well as the sequel to Children of Blood and Bone (Children of Virtue and Vengeance) hitting shelves in November and December. Oh, and the last book in Holly Black’s new series, The Queen of Nothing. Maybe you also know about Neal Shusterman’s The Toll.

Go ahead and save those “best of” lists in your to-read lists for later in the year. For now, get excited about these books coming soon!

A * means it’s a new entry into a series.

All-American Muslim Girl by Nadine Jolie Courtney (Nov 12)

Allie Abraham has it all going for her–she’s a straight-A student, with good friends and a close-knit family, and she’s dating cute, popular, and sweet Wells Henderson. One problem: Wells’s father is Jack Henderson, America’s most famous conservative shock jock…and Allie hasn’t told Wells that her family is Muslim. It’s not like Allie’s religion is a secret, exactly. It’s just that her parents don’t practice and raised her to keep her Islamic heritage to herself. But as Allie witnesses ever-growing Islamophobia in her small town and across the nation, she begins to embrace her faith–studying it, practicing it, and facing hatred and misunderstanding for it. Who is Allie, if she sheds the façade of the “perfect” all-American girl? What does it mean to be a “Good Muslim?”And can a Muslim girl in America ever truly fit in?

This one was fabulous! 

Crying Laughing by Lance Rubin (Nov 19)

Winnie Friedman has been waiting for the world to catch on to what she already knows: she’s hilarious.

It might be a long wait, though. After bombing a stand-up set at her own bat mitzvah, Winnie has kept her jokes to herself. Well, to herself and her dad, a former comedian and her inspiration.

Then, on the second day of tenth grade, the funniest guy in school actually laughs at a comment she makes in the lunch line and asks her to join the improv troupe. Maybe he’s even . . . flirting?

Just when Winnie’s ready to say yes to comedy again, her father reveals that he’s been diagnosed with ALS. That is . . . not funny. Her dad’s still making jokes, though, which feels like a good thing. And Winnie’s prepared to be his straight man if that’s what he wants. But is it what he needs?

Caught up in a spiral of epically bad dates, bad news, and bad performances, Winnie’s struggling to see the humor in it all. But finding a way to laugh is exactly what will see her through.

Dangerous Alliance by Jennieke Cohen (Dec 3)

Lady Victoria Aston has everything she could want: an older sister happily wed, the future of her family estate secure, and ample opportunity to while her time away in the fields around her home.

But now Vicky must marry—or find herself and her family destitute. Armed only with the wisdom she has gained from her beloved novels by Jane Austen, she enters society’s treacherous season.

Sadly, Miss Austen has little to say about Vicky’s exact circumstances: whether the roguish Mr. Carmichael is indeed a scoundrel, if her former best friend, Tom Sherborne, is out for her dowry or for her heart, or even how to fend off the attentions of the foppish Mr. Silby, he of the unfortunate fashion sensibility.

Most unfortunately of all, Vicky’s books are silent on the topic of the mysterious accidents cropping up around her…ones that could prevent her from surviving until her wedding day.

*Daughter of Chaos by Sarah Rees Brennan (Dec 26)

Half-witch, half-mortal sixteen-year-old Sabrina Spellman has made her choice: She’s embraced her dark side and her witchy roots. Now her power is growing daily… but will it come at too high a price?

 

*Girls of Storm and Shadow by Natasha Ngan (Nov 5)

In this mesmerizing sequel to the New York Times bestselling Girls of Paper and Fire, Lei and Wren have escaped their oppressive lives in the Hidden Palace, but soon learn that freedom comes with a terrible cost.

 

Gravity by Sarah Deming (Nov 12)

Gravity “Doomsday” Delgado is good at breaking things. Maybe she learned it from her broken home.

But since she started boxing with a legendary coach at a gym in Brooklyn, Gravity is finding her talent for breaking things has an upside. Lately, she’s been breaking records, breaking her competitors, and breaking down the walls inside her. Boxing is taking her places, and if she just stays focused, she knows she’ll have a shot at the Olympics.

Life outside the ring is heating up, too. Suddenly she’s flirting (and more) with a cute boxer at her gym–much to her coach’s disapproval. Meanwhile, things at home with Gravity’s mom are reaching a tipping point, and Gravity has to look out for her little brother, Ty. With Olympic dreams, Gravity will have to decide what is worth fighting for.

Reverie by Ryan La Sala (Dec 3)

All Kane Montgomery knows for certain is that the police found him half-dead in the river. He can’t remember anything since the accident robbed him of his memories a few weeks ago. And the world feels different… reality itself seems different.

So when three of his classmates claim to be his friends and the only people who can truly tell him what’s going on, he doesn’t know what to believe or who he can trust. But as he and the others are dragged into unimaginable worlds that materialize out of nowhere―the gym warps into a subterranean temple, a historical home nearby blooms into a Victorian romance rife with scandal and sorcery―Kane realizes that nothing in his life is in accident, and only he can stop their town from unraveling.

Sisters of Shadow and Light by Sara B. Larson (Nov 5)

The night my sister was born, the stars died and were reborn in her eyes….

Zuhra and Inara have grown up in the Citadel of the Paladins, an abandoned fortress where legendary, magical warriors once lived before disappearing from the world―including their Paladin father the night Inara was born.

On that same night, a massive, magical hedge grew and imprisoned them within the citadel. Inara inherited their father’s Paladin power; her eyes glow blue and she is able to make plants grow at unbelievable rates, but she has been trapped in her own mind because of a “roar” that drowns everything else out―leaving Zuhra virtually alone with their emotionally broken human mother.

For fifteen years they have lived, trapped in the citadel, with little contact from the outside world…until the day a stranger passes through the hedge, and everything changes.

Song of the Crimson Flower by Julie Dao (Nov 5)

Will love break the spell? After cruelly rejecting Bao, the poor physician’s apprentice who loves her, Lan, a wealthy nobleman’s daughter, regrets her actions. So when she finds Bao’s prized flute floating in his boat near her house, she takes it into her care, not knowing that his soul has been trapped inside it by an evil witch, who cursed Bao, telling him that only love will set him free. Though Bao now despises her, Lan vows to make amends and help break the spell.

Together, the two travel across the continent, finding themselves in the presence of greatness in the forms of the Great Forest’s Empress Jade and Commander Wei. They journey with Wei, getting tangled in the webs of war, blood magic, and romance along the way. Will Lan and Bao begin to break the spell that’s been placed upon them? Or will they be doomed to live out their lives with black magic running through their veins?

In this fantastical tale of darkness and love, some magical bonds are stronger than blood.

A Thousand Fires by Shannon Price (Nov 5)

10 Years. 3 Gangs. 1 Girl’s Epic Quest…

Valerie Simons knows the Wars are dangerous―her little brother was killed by the Boars two years ago. But nothing will sway Valerie from joining the elite and beautiful Herons with her boyfriend Matthew to avenge her brother. But when Jax, the volatile and beyond charismatic leader of the Stags, promises her revenge, Valerie is torn between old love and new loyalty.

Where The World Ends by Geraldine McCaughrean (Dec 8)

Every time a lad went fowling on the stacs, he came home less of a boy and more of a man. If he went home at all, that is.

Every summer Quill and his friends are put ashore on a remote sea stac to hunt birds. But this summer, no one arrives to take them home. Surely nothing but the end of the world can explain why they’ve been abandoned―cold, starving and clinging to life, in the grip of a murderous ocean. How will they survive such a forsaken place of stone and sea?

This is an extraordinary story of fortitude, endurance, tragedy and survival, set against an unforgettable backdrop of savage beauty.


Love this newsletter? I’d love if you’d forward it to a friend and/or encourage them to sign up for it here!

Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you again on Saturday with a roundup of excellent YA book deals. It’s a new month, so we’ll see a whole host of new and exciting finds.

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

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for October 29: New Releases and New Fossils

Happy Tuesday, shipmates–and happy Halloween-eve-eve! (That’s totally a thing, I swear.) It’s Alex, with some new releases for your perusal, and some fun news… including an exciting paleontology item that was pretty close to home for me.

Thing that made me smile this week: I am so proud of Demon Dad (aka Ted Danson) for getting arrested with GOAT Jane Fonda at a climate change protest.

New Releases

The Light at the Bottom of the World by London Shah – Leyla is a submersible racer in a drowned world, where sea creatures swim through the ruins of once great cities–including her home, London. The Prime Minister has promised that the winner of the annual submersible marathon can have anything they wish, so Leyla decides to compete in the hope of freeing her father, who was arrested under false charges. But the race takes an unexpected turn, and she must face a corrupt government that will do anything to keep its secrets hidden.

Sisters of the Vast Black by Lina Rather – The Order of Saint Rita crosses the galaxy to give help to those in need, traveling in their living ship, Our Lady of Impossible Constellations. When they respond to the distress call of a new colony, they find themselves caught in a web of politics and corruption that runs from both the central government and the church.

a river of royal bloodA River of Royal Blood by Amanda Joy – Eva is a descendent of the Queen Raina, a practitioner of dark magic who slew thousands–including her own sister. Eva’s blood thrums with that same dark magic, and she too must kill her own sister if she wishes to ascend to the throne. But when she’s attacked by an assassin weeks before that scheduled, traditional battle, she realizes that there are more people than her sister who would like to see her dead.

Alien: Prototype by Tim Waggoner – Venture, a rival corporation to Weyland-Yutani, is happy to engage in industrial espionage and any other shady behavior to gain an advantage over the competition. Then one of their spies acquires a strange, leathery “egg” and takes it to a testing facility where colonial marine Zula Hendricks is trying to train the staff how to survive hostile environments… (What could possibly go wrong?)

Gravemaidens by Kelly Coon – Kammani dreams of becoming a healer in her home city of Alu, wanting to follow in her father’s footsteps and reclaim her family’s good name. When the ruler of Alu falls ill, Kammani’s sister is chosen to be a gravemaiden, following him into death. Kammani hatches a plan to heal the ruler and save her sister.

 

 


News and Views

The 2019 Nommo Award winners were announced! Akwaeke Emezi’s Freshwater won the Ilube Award for novel.

The case for calling all vampires “Draculas.”

Oh my gosh you have to see this gorgeous new box set of Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower and Parable of the Talents.

Well, if you’d like some Game of Thrones TV-related hyper yikes, you can read about what Benioff and Weiss had to say at the Austin Film Festival. Because Y I K E S. Though in related but definitely non-yikes news, keep fancasting the books you love.

Daleks spotted at a bridge in Bristol that was supposedly closed for inspection.

The Captain Janeway Bloomington Collective is raising funds for a Captain Janeway monument.

Another really good piece about HBO’s Watchmen: Some Watchmen fans are mad that HBO’s version is political. But Watchmen has always been political.

Scientists from the Denver Museum of Nature and Science have found a massive treasure trove of fossils that illustrate plant and animal life’s recovery after the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event at the Corral Bluff Open Space near Colorado Springs. This is even more exciting than the Snowmastodons!

Wired has a great look at photos taken of the surface of the Moon during moon walks.


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
Check Your Shelf

The Publisher’s Weekly Best of 2019 List, Plus an Anonymous Tell-All Book

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


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

New & Upcoming Titles

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About


All Things Comics


Audiophilia


Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Adults


Level Up (Library Reads)

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

Thanks for hanging! See you on Friday!

–Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading The Ruin by Dervla McTiernan.

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

New Children’s Book Releases for October 29, 2019!

Hi Kid Lit Friends,

We are at the last Tuesday of October! And may I just say that I expect to see lots of adorable bookish Halloween costumes in my Twitter and Instagram feeds this Thursday. (Pets as well, please!) I’ve got some great new releases for you today; take a look and let me know what you think. As always, if I’ve had the chance to read one of these books and loved it, I marked it with a ❤. Please note that all descriptions come from the publisher.

 

Picture Book New Releases

❤ A Day So Gray by Marie Lamba, illustrated by Alea Marley

Once you start to notice, colors and reasons for gratitude are everywhere, and that changes everything! Celebrate the hues and comforts of a cozy winter day as a discontented girl at first notices only dull grays and browns in a snowy landscape but is coaxed by her friend to look more closely. Soon she finds orange berries, blue water, purple shadows, and more. Warm friendship and a fresh way of seeing things transform a snow-covered landscape from bleak to beautiful!

❤ Finding Kindness by Deborah Underwood, illustrated by Irene Chan

Celebrate kindness in all its many forms. This is a powerful story of community, compassion, and generosity of spirit―perfect for sharing!

Kindness is sometimes a cup and a card, or a ladder, a truck, and a tree. A scritch and a cuddle. A rake and a yard.

❤ Red Rover: Curiousity on Mars by Richard Ho, illustrated by Katherine Roy by Richard Ho, illustrated by Katherine Roy (nonfiction)

Mars has a visitor.
It likes to roam…
observe…
measure…
and collect.

It explores the red landscape―
crossing plains, climbing hills,
and tracing the bottoms of
craters―in search of water
and life.

It is not the first to visit Mars.
It will not be the last.
But it might be…
the most curious.

The Space Walk by Brian Biggs

Astronaut Randolph Witherspoon wants to take a walk–a space walk, that is! But Ground Control has other ideas. Randolph must eat some lunch, get some exercise, and then he can go outside, provided he dresses warmly and doesn’t talk to strangers. But Randolph’s mission doesn’t exactly go to plan, leading to an unexpected new friend.

Snow Much Fun by Nancy Siscoe, illustrated by Sabina Gibson

The first snowflakes are finally falling—and Berry and Ginger are SNOW ready!

They can’t wait to be sledding, ice-skating, and snowman-building. But Willow is not so sure…

A celebration of friendship and winter wonder, this is a cozy treat for young readers.

Chicken Break! by Cate Berry, illustrated by Charlotte Adler

Chicken Break, a children’s picture book from writer Cate Berry and illustrator Charlotte Alder, is simple fun with some wild and crazy chickens…

 

Chapter Two is Missing! by Josh Lieb, illustrated by Kevin Cornell

Do not be alarmed, but the second chapter of this book appears to be missing! It was here a minute ago, but now it seems to have simply walked off. Not only that, but some of the punctuation has gone topsy-turvy, a bunch of letter Ms are hiding in Chapter 5, and Chapter 45 appears to be from another book entirely! The narrator is going to need some assistance getting things in order, especially with the unhelpful detective who keeps butting in and that shifty janitor lurking about. Luckily he has you–the reader–to help!

❤ How to Put a Whale in a Suitcase by Guridi

What happens if you suddenly have to leave your home and put everything you love into one suitcase? How do you begin to fit everything in? As the boy in the book tries to squeeze his whale into a suitcase, it becomes clear that the whale symbolizes something much larger.

 

 

❤ The Big Little Thing by Beatrice Alemagna

It unexpectedly arrived. It brushed passed someone in the street. It weaves its way in and out of people on the street. It catches people completely unawares. But what is this It? They call It . . . happiness!

 

 

Early Reader

❤ Penny and her Sled by Kevin Henkes

When Penny, a sweet and curious mouse, gets a new sled, she can’t wait to use it. But there’s one big problem—there’s no snow! Patiently, Penny waits and watches for the snow to appear. She puts on her scarf and hat. She sleeps with her mittens. Maybe if she’s ready, the snow will finally come. But day after day, the snow does not arrive. Finally, Penny decides she will use her sled for other things—it’s too wonderful not to!

 

Middle Grade New Releases

Black Canary Ignite by Meg Cabot, illustrated by Cara McGee (graphic novel)

Thirteen-year-old Dinah Lance knows exactly what she wants, who she is, and where she’s going. First, she’ll win the battle of the bands with her two best friends, then she’ll join the Gotham City Junior Police Academy so she can solve crimes just like her dad. Who knows, her rock-star group of friends may even save the world, but first they’ll need to agree on a band name. When a mysterious figure keeps getting in the way of Dinah’s goals and threatens her friends and family, she’ll learn more about herself, her mother’s secret past, and navigating the various power chords of life.

❤ Poems to Fall in Love With by Chris Ridell

This gorgeously illustrated collection celebrates love in all its guises, from silent admiration through passion to tearful resignation. These poems speak of the universal experiences of the heart and are brought to life with Chris’s exquisite, intricate artwork.

 

What are you reading these days? I want to know! Find me on Twitter at @KarinaYanGlaser, on Instagram at @KarinaIsReadingAndWriting, or email me at karina@bookriot.com.

Have you checked out Book Riot’s Kidlit These Days podcast yet? I co-host it with my friend, school librarian Matthew Winner. We chat about the intersection of children’s books and what’s going on in the world today. Give it a listen and let us know what you think!

Until next time!
Karina

*If this e-mail was forwarded to you, follow this link to subscribe to “The Kids Are All Right” newsletter and other fabulous Book Riot newsletters for your own customized e-mail delivery. Thank you!*

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

Happy Tuesday, readers! I’m still trying to cram scary books into my brain before Halloween. I’m not entirely sure why I am pretending I don’t read them all year long, lol. I read a few more great ones for the Dewey’s readathon this past weekend, which I will be sure to share when they come out. You can hear about other awesome reads on this week’s episode of the All the Books! Jenn and I discussed Nothing to See Here, The Cheffe, Sisters of the Vast Black, and more great books!

And now, it’s time for everyone’s favorite gameshow: AHHHHHH MY TBR! Here are today’s contestants:

the in-betweensThe In-Betweens: The Spiritualists, Mediums, and Legends of Camp Etna by Mira Ptacin

There have been a lot of books recently where weird things happen in the Maine woods – and with good reason. Weird things DO go on in the Maine woods. In Ptacin’s latest book she investigates Camp Etna, a community in the Maine woods started in 1848 by two sisters who claimed they could speak to the dead. Ptacin explores not only the camp, but she examines both our historic and present-day searches – our need – for signs that something else is out there. Fascinating stuff!

Backlist bump: Ghostland: An American History in Haunted Places by Colin Dickey

heroine by gail scottHeroine by Gail Scott

Coach House is releasing a reissue of this feminist classic with a new introduction by Eileen Myles. It’s about a woman in a bathtub in a rooming house is Quebec trying to make major transitions in her life as the decade rolls over from the 1970s to the 1980s. She wants to get out of an affair with a left leader, and start taking more control over her own life. It’s an edgy bit of experimental feminist writing.

Backlist bump: Problems by Jade Sharma

the beautiful onesThe Beautiful Ones by Prince

Okay, I haven’t read this but it’s PRINCE. I cannot wait to get my hands on it. He was in the process of writing it when he died. So at least we know that he intended for us to have it, unlike a lot of works that are published posthumously. It includes never-before-seen photos, original scrapbooks and lyric sheets. And it’s PRINCE. I miss him so much.

Backlist bump: Prince: The Last Interview: and Other Conversations by Prince

See you next week!

xoxo,

Liberty