Categories
Unusual Suspects

Murder, Blackmail, & Unsolved Mystery

Hello mystery fans! What do I have for you this week? A slow-burn suspense, a NY procedural, and a modern Nancy Drew. Something for everyone!

Untamed Shore cover imageUntamed Shore by Silvia Moreno-Garcia: This is a great slow-burn suspense novel that, depending on your relationship with Jaws, may have an eerie setting. And by that I mean it’s set in 1979 Baja California, and there are a lot of dead sharks, guts included.

Eighteen-year-old Viridiana wants out of the town because her mom expects her to work in her shop and marry a man Viridiana has broken up with and has zero interest in getting back with. She also grew up aware that she’s the reason her mom got anchored to her father and stuck with a life she didn’t want, something Viridiana refuses to let happen to her. And so when wealthy tourists show up with a writer looking for an assistant Viridiana takes the job, including moving into a room in their rented home. You know this tale, and you know someone is going to die in an accident, or maybe not an accident… As the cracks widen and the secrets begin to spill who will protect themselves and who will come out on top?

If you like character driven suspense, and are looking for an interesting setting you’ve probably never read before, definitely pick this one up! (TW domestic abuse/ past suicide mentioned, detail)

Don't Look Down cover imageDon’t Look Down (Shadows of New York #2) by Hilary Davidson: This is the sequel procedural to One Small Sacrifice (Review) which I enjoyed so much last year I grabbed this one ASAP. It’s a great new series for fans of procedurals, detective partners, multiple point of view, and books that focus on the case at hand.

We open with Jo Greaver, a victim of blackmail, going to drop off the money at an apartment, but nothing goes as planned–does it ever?–and she ends up shot and shooting her blackmailer. She doesn’t stick around to find out what happens next, and goes back to work, and her life, as if a bullet in the arm won’t stop her. When NYPD detectives, Sheryn Sterling and Rafael Mendoza, show up on the scene, the evidence and witness accounts don’t make sense. And it also doesn’t add up with what we saw happen with Jo, which leads the detectives and readers to have to piece together not only who the blackmailer is, but what they’re blackmailing Jo with, and what really happened in that apartment?!

If you like page-turning, twisty procedurals that give you character depth but stay focused on the case and mystery at hand you’ll love escaping into this series. (TW sex trafficking/ past domestic abuse mentioned/ past drug overdose/ suicide, detail)

A Good Girl's Guide to Murder cover imageA Good Girl’s Guide to Murder (A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder #1) by Holly Jackson: Pip, a high school girl, decides to do a research paper on finding out what really happened to Andie Bell five years ago. The problem is that Andie Bell has already been declared dead, even if her body was never found, and her boyfriend, even though he died by suicide, has already been proven guilty of murdering her in the court of public opinion. Pip thinks there are too many what-ifs, questions, lack of evidence, and that there was racist reporting that never actually closed this case for her. So she’s asking questions–barred from speaking to the Bell family and told the project will immediately be cancelled if she doesn’t do this delicately–and trying to figure out what really happened to Andie Bell. Pip is naive in a lot of ways, not having been one to attend parties, date, rebel in any way and she’s going to find herself wading into school secrets, family secrets, friend secrets, and the age-old question: do you ever really know anyone?

This is a great, twisty read for fans of YA and I’m definitely picking up the sequel–this reads like a standalone so don’t worry if you don’t like series. And bonus: the audiobook has an awesome multicast which bravo to the publishers for doing. (TW past suicide, with detail/ mentions self harming/ cyber exploitation/ talk of statutory, date rapes discussed/ dog dies)

Recent Releases

Egg Drop Dead cover imageEgg Drop Dead (A Noodle Shop Mystery #5) by Vivien Chien (A really good cozy series following a young woman working at her family’s restaurant in an Asian mall who constantly finds herself solving crime.)

Watching from the Dark (DCI Jonah Sheens #2) by Gytha Lodge (If you’re looking for another good recent procedural series here’s the sequel to She Lies In Wait.)

Firewatching (Detective Sergeant Adam Tyler #1) by Russ Thomas (A procedural following the only detective in the South Yorkshire Cold Case Unit!)

Trouble Is What I Do cover imageTrouble Is What I Do (Leonid McGill #06) by Walter Mosley (The PI who is always walking the line of staying clean and falling into the dark underbelly of NY is back! The audiobook has a fantastic narrator: Dion Graham, whose voice you know from The Wire, The First 48, Dear Martin and Black Leopard, Red Wolf.)

Pretty as a Picture by Elizabeth Little (A remote island with a film editor working on a project gets drawn into the sets rumors and accidents and the film’s previous editor’s disappearance. Oh, and the real-life murder mystery the movie is based on!)

On the Lamb (Kebab Kitchen Mystery #4) by Tina Kashian (A cozy mystery series set in a Mediterranean restaurant on the Jersey Shore!)

Follow Me by Kathleen Barber (The author of Are You Sleeping is back with a stalker book.)

Say Nothing by Patrick Radden Keefe cover imageSay Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland by Patrick Radden Keefe (Fantastic true crime history now in paperback.)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. Get Tailored Book Recommendations!

Until next time, keep investigating! 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

Not A Good Look For Disney: Today In Books

Not A Good Look For Disney

We cheered when Disney+ announced they were adapting Becky Albertalli’s novel into a series, Love, Simon. But now we’re booing as the streaming company no longer wants to air the show: “Disney felt many issues explored on the show, including alcohol use and sexual exploration, would not fit in with the family-friendly content on Disney Plus.” Hulu, owned by Disney and Comcast in a joint venture, will air the 10-episode season in June.

Library of Congress Acquires 100,000 New Pictures

For the first time, a Washington, D.C. institution has acquired a comprehensive archive of work by an African American photographer: Shawn Walker. His photographs, negatives, and transparencies show life in Harlem from 1963 to the present. “I am so satisfied that this work has found a home in such a prestigious institution and can finally be shared with the world.”

Project Luminous Revealed

More Star Wars books! Spanning across genres and age categories, Project Luminous will release a series of books, in phases, set in the High Republic Era, 200 years before The Skywalker Saga. The first five books have been announced individually written by Justina Ireland, Daniel José Older, Charles Soule, Cavan Scott, Claudia Gray.

Categories
What's Up in YA

YA Book News and New Releases

Hey YA Lovers!

Time to dig into the latest in YA news, as well as take a peek at the great new books that hit shelves this week.

YA Book News

Lots of news to catch up with this week, particularly when it comes to adaptations in the works.

New YA Book Releases

Grab your TBR because it’s about the grow. A * means I’ve read the book and recommend it!

*Bent Heavens by Daniel Kraus

Deadfall by Stephen Wallenfels (paperback)

Jane Against The World by Karen Blumenthal (nonfiction)

Rebelwings by Andrea Tang

Red Hood by Elana K. Arnold

Red Mantle by Maria Turtschaninoff (series, in translation)

The Shadows Between Us by Tricia Levenseller

The Sound of Stars by Alechia Dow

Soul of the Sword by Julie Kagawa (series, paperback)

The Truth App by Jack Heath (series)

We Unleash The Merciless Storm by Tehlor Kay Mejia (series)

 

This Week at Book Riot

Don’t miss the great talk over on Book Riot this week about YA, either.

 

It’s a good day to read YA, y’all. Why not tell everyone that all the time? Shirt available in tons of colors. $29 and up.

 


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

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

**Psst:  you can now also preorder my upcoming August release, Body Talk: 37 Voices Explore Our Radical Anatomy!

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

Happy Tuesday! It’s time for another amazing day of new books, because despite my best efforts, time keeps marching forward. (We need an extra weekday just for reading! )

There are a bunch of great books out today, like the other Tuesdays this month. February slapped. At the top of my list of today’s titles that I want to pick up are Apartment by Teddy Wayne, Egg Drop Dead: A Noodle Shop Mystery by Vivien Chien, and Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women That a Movement Forgot by Mikki Kendall. I did not manage to get my hot little hands on them early, and I am SO excited to read them.

You can hear about some of the new books coming out that I did get to read on this week’s episode of the All the Books! Patricia and I discussed Bent HeavensHood FeminismToo Much, and more!

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

The Hidden Girl and Other Stories by Ken Liu

Liu does a lot of amazing translation work, but it’s also very exciting when we are treated to his own writing! This is an excellent collection of sixteen of his stories from the last five years, plus a novelette. They are fantastic, often serious tales about xenophobia, war, aliens, spies, virtual reality, cryptocurrency, AI, and more. These are in no way light: they examine some of today’s very serious issues, such as mass shootings and bullying, through a sci-fi lens.

Backlist bump: The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories by Ken Liu

cover of a cowboy to remember by Rebekah WeatherspoonA Cowboy to Remember (Cowboys of California Book 1) by Rebekah Weatherspoon

A romance novel! It has been a long time since I read one of these. But I had to read the new Rebekah Weatherspoon, because she is aces! This one is the first in a new series. It’s about Evie Buchanan, a famous chef, who winds up in the hospital with amnesia after a fall. Her assistants scramble to contact her family and end up reaching out to former rodeo champion Zach Pleasant, who shows up at Evie’s bedside. Evie doesn’t know how she knows Zach, but she recognizes him. What she also doesn’t know is that she and Zach were once friends whose relationship ended badly when he refused to admit his feelings for her, and he’s now at the hospital to ask for a second chance. Will Evie love him a second time around, or has she truly forgotten him?

Backlist bump: Rafe: A Buff Male Nanny by Rebekah Weatherspoon

Greenwood by Michael Christie

As soon as I saw this cover, I thought of Sweetland by Michael Crummey. Apparently, I have a thing for novels with one-word titles set in Canada that are written by men named Michael C.? Moving on: This is a novel of the Greenwood family, from the year 2038 and back through the last century, revolving around the lives of trees. Christie reveals the secrets and crimes that run through the family like veins of gold in a river. I need more outdoor-nature-y reads like this.

Backlist bump: Barkskins by Annie Proulx

You made it to the bottom! Thanks for reading.

xx,

Liberty

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

New Children’s Book Releases for February 25, 2020

Hello readers!

We’re all about the girls this week at TKAAR towers. I’ve picked out a mixture of new releases written by women and which celebrate everything great about being a girl. Whether your small readers are political activists, passionate readers, environmental warriors, or inventive young minds that won’t sit still, there’s a book here for them and their dreams. Who run the world? Girls! [insert Beyoncé  gif here…]

Help Wanted, Must Love Books by Janet Sumner Johnson, illustrations Courtney Dawson

Shailey loves her bedtime routine, but her dad’s new job is getting in the way – so she posts a Help Wanted sign! Some very familiar faces apply – but they all come with problems and none of them are as good as her dad. Soft, rich artwork underscores this fun look at daddy / daughter bonds (and also the unsuitability of giants for bedtime stories…).

Wood, Wire, Wings: Emma Lilian Todd Invents An Airplane by Kirsten W. Larson, illustrations Tracy Subisak

Meet Emma Lilian Todd, inventor. Her story towards inventing an airplane is told in this charming non-fiction biography. It gets bonus points for those intensely evocative illustrations, and also for telling the little-heard story of a remarkable woman. This is perfect for all your little inventors!

My Friend Earth by Patricia MacLachlan, illustrations by Francesca Sanna

Start your Earth Day 2020 (22nd April) preparation now with this love letter to our planet. It comes from the author of Sarah, Plain and Tall and the author / illustrator of The Journey, so that’s a great team to begin with. Coupled with the fact that it’s a beautiful read and beautifully produced, this is an absolute winner.

Fight of the Century: Alice Paul Battles Woodrow Wilson for the Vote by Barb Rosenstock, illustrations Sarah Green

Celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment with this potent, fierce book. It uses the metaphor of a boxing match to explore the battle for women’s suffrage – merging a vintage aesthetic with some pointed political commentary.

Yusra Swims by Julie Abery, illustrations Sally Deng

Yusra Mardini is a swimmer who competed in the 2016 Olympic Games as part of the Refugee Olympic Athletes Team after having to leave her home country of Syria. This is the story of that journey – and all it entailed. It’s told with restraint and eloquence in a series of rhyming couplets alongside some beautiful and moving artwork.

 

Okay, that’s all for this week! Don’t forget that you can say hello to me on social media @chaletfan. and also elsewhere on Book Riot co-hosting the biweekly litfic podcast Novel Gazing. And of course, I’ll always be found in the nearest book store accidentally on purpose buying something new to read.

Louise.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Everyone Has a New Picture Book Coming Out…Except Me.

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

RA/Genre Resources

On the Riot


All Things Comics

On the Riot


Audiophilia

On the Riot


Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Adults

On the Riot


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.

The next newsletter will be coming to you live from Nashville! Catch y’all later!

Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Today In Books

Who Should Decide Which Books Are Allowed In Prison? Today In Books

Who Should Decide Which Books Are Allowed In Prison?

It’s not just schools where books are being banned, prisons in the U.S. routinely ban books to the detriment of inmates. Books that teach languages like Arabic and American Sign Language are banned along with books about justice and showing POC/marginalized voices humanity. Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf however is not banned in Kansas state prisons. The policies behind the bans are not transparent and totally inconsistent.

Jane Goodall’s New Book

Jane Goodall, the primatologist known for her research work with chimpanzees in Africa, has teamed up with The Book Of Joy author Doug Abrams for an upcoming book: The Book Of Hope. “Through both Jane’s observation and the latest scientific research, readers will experience the resilience of nature to recover from the harm we have inflicted and the resilience of the human spirit in the face of loss and devastation.”

R.L. Stine + Garbage Pail Kids!

No, I didn’t just randomly throw darts at a board filled with pop culture things and come away with those two. The Goosebumps author R.L. Stine will be writing a middle grade series based on Garbage Pail Kids! The first book, Welcome to Smellville, will be out this fall. Yes, there are stickers and the cover looks exactly as you’d imagine!

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for February 25

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! And you know what that means–it’s time to load up the book cannon with black powder and fire off a broadside of new releases. It’s Alex with some books you might want to check out and some news from the last few days.

Two things to make you smile for Tuesday:

Thanks to Twitter, I learned that Lee Pace has a farm and does selfies with his chickens.

And my favorite science diagram that looks like a shitpost of the week.

New Releases

Rebelwing by Andrea Tang – Prudence Wu, a prep school student who makes money on the side selling banned media across the border into a country ruled by an evil corporation, thought her life couldn’t get more complicated. Then one of her smuggling deals goes wrong. Then she gets rescued from it by a cybernetic dragon, which is her government’s major weapon in the coming war with the evil corporation. Then it turns out that the dragon’s imprinted on her.

Finna by Nino Cripri – I cannot summarise better than this: “When an elderly customer at a Swedish big box furniture store ― but not that one ― slips through a portal to another dimension, it’s up to two minimum-wage employees to track her across the multiverse and protect their company’s bottom line.” There’s carnivorous furniture and multi-dimensional swashbuckling to be had. (Full disclosure: Nino and I share an agent.)

Black Leviathan by Bernd Perplies, translated by Lucy Van Cleef – If you replaced the white whale of Moby Dick with a black dragon and the Pequod with an air ship that hunted him through the cloud seas, you’d end up with this book. Do you really need to know more?

Carved From Stone and Dream by T. Frohock – During the Spanish Civil War, members of Los Nefilim, who wield music and light in the supernatural war between angels and daimons, are on the run for the French border with the Nationalists at their heels. As the angelic forces try to survive in the Pyrenees, Diago, who comes from both angelic and daimonic descent, must choose between saving his family and betraying Los Nefilim.

The Sound of Stars by Alechia Dow – A misunderstanding between humans and invading aliens has killed one-third of earth’s population dead. The survivors in the alien-controlled cities are not allowed to express emotion, and music and books have been made illegal. Seventeen-year-old Ellie breaks the rules by keeping a secret library. Lab-created M0R1S should be turning Ellie in for her crime, but instead finds himself drawn to the art… and her. Together they embark on a perilous journey with a bag of books and a collection of their favorite albums.

The Hidden Girl and Other Stories by Ken Liu – A collection of seventeen short stories (sixteen reprints and one brand-new novella) from one of the best short story writers currently out there.

News and Views

Congratulations to the 2019 Nebula Award finalists!

Drew Williams and Arkady Martine talk about crafting space opera

I Went to Hogwarts for Seven Years and Did Not Learn Math or Spelling, and Now I Can’t Get a Job

Tangentially related and written by Silvia Moreno-Garcia: The Girl in the Mansion: How Gothic Romances Became Domestic Noirs

The best part of Avatar: The Last Airbender was its villains.

Exploring Disney World’s Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge

Seven new characters cast for The Witcher’s next season

Physics undergrads did the math on how long it would take to fill the Enterprise with tribbles.

A new method for searching for exoplanets, which involves observing disturbances of the star’s aurora, has yielded its first find!

On Book Riot

If you’re in Canada, you’ve got until 11:45 PM tonight to enter this giveaway for a copy of Of Curses and Kisses.

Sci-fi Reads Based on Your Favorite Star Trek: The Next Generation Character


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
Kissing Books

Wanna See A 1981 Commercial for Harlequin?

It’s the last week of February, folks. Anybody doing anything for Leap Day? It’s a Saturday, so there must be some fun happening around the world. I don’t actually know what it is that people do on Leap Day, but I know there’s a romcom (which I haven’t seen) about it? Anyway, let’s talk books.

News and Useful Links

Since last we spoke, the Independent Ethics Audit requested by RWA was completed and the company involved released their report. You can dig all you want into the longer documents, but there’s also an executive report.

Book Riot contributor Carole V. Bell wrote this great article about Black historical romance for Shondaland! How cool is that?

Kickstart Suzanne Brockmann’s new project! This is a great thread about the story and the people involved.

And a reminder that the #RomanceClass Taal Relief Bundle is still available for purchase.

Do you want to see a 1981 Harlequin commercial? I think you do.

Jennifer Prokop wrote a great article for Kirkus about Johanna Lindsey and how we—and the world—look at and talk about romance authors.

…Which is a great lead-in to this AITA that has so much of the internet screaming to throw the whole man away.

This is only sort of romance adjacent, but I know a lot of us romance readers are also fans of “transformative works” as the scholars call them, and this is a fascinating look at what today would be called fanfiction.

Deals

cover of the ultimate pi day party by jackie lauIt’s still February, but if you’re gearing up for March, you can get The Ultimate Pi Day Party for free! Jackie Lau is one of my favorite contemporary authors right now, and her Baldwin Village books are so delightful, full of fun, puns, and food. So much food. This one also has math jokes, so if you’re looking to expand your holiday reading, have at this one before March 14 happens and you’re out of luck.

Black History Highlight

Here’s another good BGSU Pop Culture Library thread on Black romance, this time about author Chassie West, who wrote romance and occasionally wrote in other genres. (She was even one of the Carolyn Keenes!) She wrote some romances featuring Black characters, and many more with white characters. She started out writing YA, but then went on to publish Unforgivable, the first adult romance by a Black author with Black main characters, for Silhouette.

Recs

You ever have an author on your radar so long, you’re sure you’ve had to have read one of her books? That’s what happens anytime I hear Kristen Callihan’s name. I can pull up clear images of the covers of some of her books, some of which I’ve owned for more than half a decade. But now I actually do have to go back and read them all, because I made a rookie mistake: I checked out the first two books in the VIP series from the library. And they have holds on them. So I had to read them instead of waiting until the day they were due and renewing them.

So I read them. Back to back. In three days. And I hate that I don’t have the next one.

cover of Idol by Kristen CallihanIdol

The first book in the series has one of my favorite Meet Disasters. A drunk man carves his way through Liberty’s lawn in the middle of the night, and she sprays him with the hose. They develop an antagonistic relationship that gradually becomes a reluctant friendship when it turns out he’s renting the house across the street, but he doesn’t immediately tell her that he’s the lead singer of one of the biggest rock bands in the world. He’s recovering from trauma from his friend and fellow band member attempting suicide, and is also afraid of his relationship with Libby turning into something different from what it’s become.

There’s a lot more to this story, but Killian and Liberty have a love story for the ages that also includes a good look at what fame means and who wants to live in the limelight. It’s also where we’re introduced to Scottie, one of the protagonists of Managed, which is tropetonite city. I’m talking grumpy-sunshine, sharing a bed, I-cuddled-with-this-guy-on-a-plane-and-turns-out-he’s-sort-of-my-boss tropetonite. (Plus another one that I want you to discover for yourself.) But definitely start with Idol.

There’s a lot of content that informs the rest of the series and how the protagonists act (and in Managed’s case, how one of the protagonists is reacted towards), and you’ll be able to get through the other books without it, but be better off with the formative knowledge. There’s also a third book, Fall, about Jax, the band’s lead guitarist and said suicidal friend, which I hope to get my hands on soon. A fourth book lives on Goodreads but the release date says 2019 so we’ll see what happens with that one.

CW: discussion of suicide, mention of clinical depression and recovery, drunk driving, death by drunk driver, sexual harassment and non-rape sexual assault on the page.

If you like this kind of book/series, might I point you towards:

Cover of Riven by Roan Parrish. Black background with black haired bearded man in titleRiven by Roan Parrish

Feels Like Summer by Six de los Reyes

Listen to Me by Kristen Proby

One True Pairing by Cathy Yardley

Trade Me by Courtney Milan

Syncopation by Anna Zabo

Intercepted by Alexa Martin

Flashed by Zoey Castile

(These are all tagged “famous flings” on my Goodreads account, where I’m trying to do better at categorizing by trope.)

What are you reading this week?

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

Categories
Today In Books

Here’s the Sci-Fi Series That Inspired Elon Musk: Today in Books

She Used Library Books To Learn How To Run. Next, She’s Racing At The Olympic Trials.

In the realm of “wow, libraries can teach you how to do anything,” check out this story about Paula Pridgen, who is set to run in the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials. What makes her story so incredible is that she came to running in her early twenties, and taught herself how to run by checking out books from the library. Even though she’s grateful to just be running in the trials and doesn’t expect to win, we wish this library power user all the luck!

Asian American Content Banner Launches With Valence Media Investment

A new production company with a special focus on developing Asian American stories for film and TV has just launched, and here’s the most exciting bit–one of their first options is Maurene Goo’s YA novel, I Believe in a Thing Called Love! We really hope it makes it into production!

Elon Musk Shares The Science Fiction Book Series That Inspired Him To Start SpaceX

Any guesses as to which foundational sci-fi series inspired Elon Musk, the founder of SpaceX, to reach for the stars? (Hint, hint.) Unsurprisingly, it’s Isaac Asimov’s Foundation series, which Musk recommended on Twitter last week. He’s spoken before about his desire to help humanity keep moving forward, and he sees space exploration as an integral part of that step. Here’s hoping he helps bring sci-fi possibilities to life!