Categories
The Kids Are All Right

New Children’s Book Releases for March 31, 2020

Hello readers,

It’s the last day of March! I know, I can’t quite believe it either. This month has seemed endless. I hope you and your loved ones are doing well in this brave new world we live in, and that these lovely new releases from the world of children’s books bring you joy.

A brief reminder, if you’d like to stay in touch with COVID-19 updates from the bookish world, you can do so through that. I’m very fond of this article of 7 of the best educational comics for homeschooling – if you haven’t yet discovered Hilda, then now’s the time…

So to books!

Two Bicycles In Beijing by Teresa Robson, illustrated by Junyi Wu

Lunzi and Huangche came out of the bicycle factory together, side by side. They watch Beijing from their shop window, until the day when a girl comes in and buys Huangche and rolls him away. With the help of a delivery boy, Lunzi sets out to find her friend…

This is a lyrical, lovely thing, which introduces readers to the sights and sounds of Beijing with the added bonus of some simple Mandarin. It’s very charming and that artwork is lovely.

How to Make Friends with the Sea by Tanya Guerrero

Pablo lives with his mum and the two of them have never stayed in one country for long. Their latest move is to the Philippines where his mum works at a wildlife refuge – and she’s too busy to realise that Pablo might need saving too. His anxieties are overwhelming him, and the last thing he needs is his mum taking in an orphaned girl…

Touching on topics such as selective mutism, friendship, family, and the management of complex anxieties, and doing so with a lot of sensitivity, this is a strong and unusual debut.

What Stars Are Made Of by Sarah Allen

Libby is twelve, and pretty great at science. She was also born with Turner Syndrome and that means she finds some things hard. When she discovers that her big sister Nonny is pregnant, she can’t help but worry. Libby knows all too well that babies aren’t always born healthy – and that Nonny and her husband been struggling with money. So Libby makes a deal with the world. She’ll enter a science competition and if she wins, she’ll give the money to Nonny and her family. And the baby will be perfect.

A sparky scientist, winning first-person narrative, #ownvoices representation, and a celebration of family and love? Sign. Me. Up.

Hound Won’t Go by Lisa Rogers, illustrated by Meg Ishihara

(This cover speaks to me on quite the deep emotional level, let me tell you that). Hound has decided that he’s had enough of his walk. The only problem is that he’s decided this right in the middle of a busy intersection… uh oh! Hound won’t go!

Perfect for anybody who’s ever encountered a dog at their most stubborn, this pairs tight, clean rhymes with vibrant illustrations. It’s a perfect read aloud.

My Mindful Walk with Grandma by Sheri Mabry, illustrated by Wazza Pink

As a young girl walks through the woods with her grandma, she’s more focused on the destination than the journey. But the journey is full of surprises and excitement – and Grandma will help her discover them.

We’re all wrestling with a world that is changing every single second, and so this soft and rich story about appreciating the moment may have some particular resonance right now. It’s a beautiful, beautiful thing.

Okay! That’s all from me for now. I’ll be back with more new releases next week, but until then you can say hello to me on social media @chaletfan (Let’s talk Moomins…) and elsewhere on Book Riot co-hosting the biweekly litfic podcast Novel Gazing.

Take care,

Louise.

Categories
Today In Books

HIS DARK MATERIALS Joins Fight Against COVID-19: Today In Books

His Dark Materials Joins Fight Against COVID-19

In truly trying times it is nice to see people stepping up: the costume designers who worked on His Dark Materials, the BBC/HBO adaptation of Philip Pullman’s novel, are putting their talents to sewing scrubs for medics in the UK working to fight COVID-19. “The Helping Dress Medics initiative was launched by costume maker Dulcie Scott over the weekend and has raised more than £8,000 ($10,000) on GoFundMe to help supply protective clothing to local hospitals.”

Jennifer Weiner Fans Rejoice

If your life really needs a summer book escape, Jennifer Weiner wrote one of those, Big Summer, and is releasing it two weeks early so readers can escape quicker. You can escape with friendship and Cape Cod starting May 5th!

Don’t Miss Live Chat

Author Ibi Zoboi will be doing a live Instagram chat April 1st at 7pm with  Dr. Yusef Salaam, one of the exonerated Central Park 5, to discuss their upcoming co-written YA novel: Punching The Air. “We’re focusing our discussion & Q&A on young people who are having a really hard time with all this—when you’re scared, the future is uncertain, and all you want to do is be outside with your friends. This will be especially useful for Black & Brown boys living in urban spaces.” See you there!

And an update on yesterday’s news about Powell’s rehiring employees with a response from the union.

Categories
Kissing Books

RWA Has A New President

I’ve been trying to come up with some kind of weekly greeting besides “Happy Monday” but I think many of you are probably happy to have the assurance that it is, in fact, Monday. So, yeah. Welcome to a new work week, or just a new week, if you’re doing other things.

News and Useful Links

If you’ve been as attached to your phone as I’ve been these past several days, you might have seen some conversation around book piracy on Twitter. Essentially, the Internet Archive, who does some legitimately good things with out of print and public domain books, has created a “National Emergency Library,” which allows people to borrow any of their 1.4 million copyrighted books without waitlists. This would be fine and dandy if they, like a real library, had purchased licenses for that kind of use, and the publishers had given permission. Also, if they’d offered real ebooks instead of scanned copies of library and/or personal copies of books. To make it worse, the site got a good number of publicity for it, including from NPR, and so people who have no idea how any of this works don’t even realize they’re pirating books. Several romance authors, including Beverly Jenkins, have been working to get their books removed, but it sounds like a long, arduous process. I hope this gets resolved soon and quickly.

On March 23, which was somehow both seven days and ten million years ago, RWA announced the winners of their special election. I haven’t heard much since about how the new president and board members will go about the business of turning the ship, but we’ve all been a little busy.

While it happened over the weekend, you might want to check out the available recordings from the VirtualJaneCon that Drunk Austen put on (lightning fast!). There are some super interesting topics if you’re into that sort of thing.

If your catharsis is through reading what your favorite fictional characters are doing right now, check out Meg Cabot’s Corona Princess Diaries on her blog.

Jen is offering personal book recommendations to people who donate to 57th Street Books. Many of us have bookstores that are special to us, so if we can support someone’s favorite, why not?

I recently got to do a guest rec in Lucy Eden’s newsletter, Notes From Paradise, and I gotta tell you I love what she does every month. I subscribe to a lot of author newsletters, and love how different they all are.

Do you follow WOC in Romance on Twitter? The weekly new release thread is worth it.

Deals

If you’re looking for some grumpy-sunshine neighbor action (and have already read Talia Hibbert’s A Girl Like Her—and if you haven’t, get a move on!) Laura Jardine’s Tempting Her Neighbor is free right now. The second book in the duology, Seducing His True Love, is 3.99, so you could get the whole series for as little as four dollars. This is an Entangled/Macmillan title, and I’ve heard that a lot of their first in series are free right now, but I haven’t been able to figure out the best way of finding them without going painstakingly through each book as a title search. Seriously, if anyone knows a way to search Amazon by publisher, I’d love to see it! The closest I’ve gotten is pricing all romance books low to high, but every single book that’s in KU is in the low end of the bracket so it’s pretty useless.

Recs!

Including a new Danielle Allen book last week reminded me that I hadn’t yet read a book of hers that has been regularly hitting my radar every couple of months since the summer of 2018 when it came out. The cover was definitely the talk of the town around its release, and every so often someone mentions the content. And now, I’ve finally picked it up.

Sweatpants Season
Danielle Allen

Akila is the dictionary model for Competent. She’s a skilled writer with a double degree in creative writing and journalism, and girl can turn a phrase. Her name is out there and she’s set to get her dream job at a magazine run by her idol. But she hasn’t dated in months, and part of it is the misogyny inherent in dating culture as seen in the very popular podcast featuring a group of men who call themselves The Lost Boys. When she meets English teacher Carlos in the photography workshop they’ve both joined in order to take their work to the next level, he’s basically perfect—until she discovers that he’s a member of said Lost Boys. Her life is further upended when she and Carlos end up working on a special project…now if only she can think of something besides what he looks like wearing sweatpants.

I’m going to say explicitly that I’m only partway through this book and while I’m absolutely loving Akila and the writing, I have a feeling I know where this is going (and read a few reviews to confirm). Because of her feelings on how The Lost Boys objectify women and give blanket permission for other men to do the same, she is going to do something regarding “sweatpants season” as a commentary on toxic masculinity and the male gaze. It’s gonna be serious, and probably cause some top-tier conflict between the protagonists. So if that’s not your jam, hold off on this one for a while.

Otherwise, I’ve been reading a lot of what’s called “Fandom YA” because it’s got that level of feel-good familiarity that we all could use right now. There’s something about being surrounded by fake dorks who you’d be following around in awe because they’re so much more comfortable in their fandoms than you were at that age. But I’d love to read more in adult romance that hits the same notes, something like Cathy Yardley’s Fandom Hearts series (One True Pairing is my ultimate fandom/fake relationship/found family romance). So if you have recommendations, send them my way!

You can do that by finding me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or sending me an email at wheninromance@bookriot.com. Feel free to get in touch if you’ve got feedback, bookrecs, or just want to say hi!

Categories
Riot Rundown

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Categories
Today In Books

KILLING EVE Season 3 to Premiere Early: Today in Books

Powell’s Books Rehires Over 100 Employees After Surge Of Online Orders

Thanks to the power of the Internet and online ordering, some good news: Powell’s Books in Portland, OR has re-hired over 100 employees that they had originally let go due to COVID-19 closure, in order to fulfill online orders. The store warned that some orders may be slow to ship because they’re taking the proper health and safety precautions, but that’s good news for so many booksellers who are especially hard-hit during this time. Keep ordering from indie bookstores, and consider donating to BINC.

KILLING EVE Season 3 Premiere Moved Up By 2 Weeks

Look, this global pandemic is a total disaster, but if you’re stuck at home, here is a silver lining! Season three of Killing Eve, based on the books by Luke Jennings, is coming to your screen a couple weeks sooner. If you like murder and humor and two strong heroines, then you need to get on this show ASAP. The first two seasons are streaming on Hulu, and season three will be on AMC.

DC Details How Comic Book Retailers Will Be Supported Amid Coronavirus Outbreak

Like many industries, the comic book industry has felt the impact of COVID-19. With some major distributors halting shipping of new releases and ceasing publication of digital content, DC is supporting comic shops by making all releases between March 18 and June 24 fully returnable, and they’re covering shipping. This will help ease some of the financial burden that comes from loss of sales, and DC is looking into a more flexible distribution system to support brick and mortar retailers.

Categories
Today In Books

Liqueur Company Starts Virtual Book Club: Today In Books

Liqueur Company Starts Virtual Book Club

The liqueur company Pomp & Whimsy has started a 10-week virtual book club, beginning April 2, at 8 p.m. EST. The first book chosen is When Life Gives You Lululemons and of course the book club hosts will be making an accompanying cocktail. It’s totally free to participate, and you can donate $10, which will go to New York City food pantry. Cheers!

Amazing Librarians

A lot of focus during the COVID-19 pandemic has been on the shortage of supplies, including protective face masks. Enter Columbia University librarians: Columbia University Cardiology Fellow Dr. Pierre Elias contacted Librarian Madiha Choksi about using the library’s staff and 3D printers. “Dr. Elias provided a design for a face shield visor posted by Budmen Industries. Choksi took the Budmen design and optimized it, cutting the printing time by one third.” And now there’s a guide for quickly making face shields using 3D printers and household items.

Books Move Over For Food

People are stocking Little Free Libraries with nonperishable food and goods for those who may be in need. Little Free Library’s executive director Greig Metzger, who used to be a food shelf executive director, supported the idea and even reminded members that this could be the first step in also helping food banks in their area. Keep being amazing helpers, you beautiful bibliophiles.

Categories
Riot Rundown

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Categories
Today In Books

A Hogwarts Digital Escape Room: Today In Books

Hello bibliophiles! We made it through the week: let’s take a deep breath, release our shoulders from our ears, and when needed take it just one minute at a time. We collected this week’s COVID-19 pieces for you, with some staying informed and a lot of needed escape reading. Remember to check in on each other, help where you can, and be kind.

A Pennsylvania library created a Hogwarts digital escape room; boredom be gone, we’re headed to Hogwarts!

Wondering how your favorite PRIDE AND PREJUDICE character would react to COVID-19 related social distancing? Cue dream sequence.

If you want one less thing to think about, including which book to read next, take this quiz and find your next book series to read while social distancing.

School has closed and the kids are quarantined at home? We have the best educational comics to start your sudden homeschool journey (and save your sanity).

One reader takes solace in and shares some advice on social distancing from WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING.

Looking for a quarantine reading list? Book Riot contributors list the books they’re planning to read while they stay home and practice social distancing.

Dear Sugar is back! Cheryl Strayed is giving advice as Sugar this Friday on the first episode of Live Wire House Parties.

Creative ways to keep your book life alive during quarantine.

Categories
Book Radar

THE DARK DESCENT OF FRANKENSTEIN is Coming to Television and More Book Radar!

Welcome to Monday, readers! I hope you were able to relax a little this weekend and read something wonderful. I know it’s hard right now. I recommend screaming into a pillow. No, really. Let it out!

Unfortunately, there’s not much more going on in the book world right now than delays and cancelations, but I have a few exciting things to tell you. And here’s where you can learn more about COVID-19 Updates from the Bookish World. We continue to update it regularly.

Whatever you are doing or watching or reading this week, I am sending you virtual hugs. Please try and enjoy the rest of your week as best you can, and remember to stay inside and wash your hands. We’re going to be okay. I’ll see you again on Thursday. – xoxo, Liberty

Here’s Monday’s trivia question: “The Knitting Done” is the title of the second-to-last chapter in what classic book? (Scroll to the bottom for the answer.)

Deals, Reels, and Squeals! 

Ibi Zoboi will chat live online next week with Dr. Yusef Salaam, one of the exonerated Central Park 5, about their upcoming YA novel.

The Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein by Kiersten White is being made into a series.

Axie Oh and Rory Power announced new novels coming in 2022.

Tor.com revealed the cover of The Fourth Island by Sarah Tolmie.

And Tor’s new horror imprint, Nightfire, will be publishing Nothing But Blackened Teeth by Cassandra Khaw.

Melissa Febos announced a new essay collection.

Subterranean Press is publishing a new Aliette de Bodard novella.

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!

Excited to read:

Ring Shout by P. Djèlí Clark (Tor.com, October 13)

I am a big fan of The Black God’s Drums, so I can’t wait to get my hands on Clark’s newest novella. This one is a supernatural twist on D.W. Griffith, The Birth of a Nation, and the Ku Klux Klan. In it, Griffith is a sorcerer, and he and the Klan are preparing to open Hell on Earth. Looking to stop them is bootlegger Maryse Boudreaux, who has a magic sword and a sharpshooter friend. I love supernatural twists on history!

What I’m reading this week:

Malorie: A Novel by Josh Malerman

The Invisible Life of Addie La Rue by V.E. Schwab

The Kidnap Years: The Astonishing True History of the Forgotten Kidnapping Epidemic That Shook Depression-Era America by David Stout

Earthlings: A Novel by Sayaka Murata

The Eighth Life: for Brilka by Nino Haratischvili

Pun of the week: 

A magician decided to incorporate the use of trapdoors in his shows. But it’s probably just a stage he’s going through.

Here’s a cat picture:

This goofball.

And this is funny.

Everything needs pockets.

Trivia answer: A Tale of Two Cities.

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

Categories
The Fright Stuff

Quarantine and Plague Horror

I don’t know about y’all, but I’m struggling. My anxiety is usually pretty under control, and as far as I know, I have not been exposed to the virus, plus I’ve been following all of the protocol, but the paranoia builds in me every time I reach to touch a doorknob, turn on a light, or even cross the street so as to avoid coming within six feet of someone, waving even as I do it because, I mean, I’m not a monster… I just want to stay away from your gross body and your nasty cooties.

Normally, when I’m anxious about something, I just dive deeper into the crevasse. Meaning, if I’m scared of home invasion, I’ll watch a thousand Lifetime documentaries featuring B&Es, et cetera, because I feel like the better informed I am, the better I can protect myself against whatever I’m afraid of (and I have anxiety, so, like, I’m afraid of everything). To paraphrase Karen Kilgariff from My Favorite Murder, I need to know all of the most horrible shit so that I can avoid it.

It usually works for me. If you’re reading this horror newsletter, it might probably work for you, too. By the way, I’m Mary Kay McBrayer, and you’re in The Fright Stuff, Book Riot’s weekly newsletter featuring the latest and greatest in horror. I structured this newsletter a little differently from the others because, well, desperate times call for desperate measures.

So, here are the greatest books that I know of about plague and/or quarantine:

the old driftThe Old Drift by Namwali Serpell

This impeccable debut novel admittedly makes this list because of a small portion that is narrated by a swarm of mosquitos in Zambia, who are self-proclaimed as man’s greatest nemesis. Still, the Old Drift, a colony established generations before, sees change through three families plagued by magical maladies and less magical epidemics like AIDS.

 

Room by Emma Donaghue

Jack, the five-year-old “Bonsai Boy” narrates this novel in which a woman has been abducted and held in a shop-turned-bunker for years. It’s compelling, sweet, and devastating. I had this book on audio, and I highly recommend that option.

 

 

Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk

This collection of stories shares a frame narrative with the Canterbury Tales… sort of. A bunch of writers go to a lock-in retreat where each of them thinks they’ll sabotage the stores and rations just to make things a little more interesting. It unsurprisingly turns into a survival situation pretty quickly, and they all get what they wanted: something to write about.

 

her body and other parties“Inventory” by Carmen Maria Machado in her collection Her Body and Other Parties

I mentioned this story recently, but I think it bears repeating. Not only is Machado one of THE most interesting voices in horror now, but this story compiles an inventory of sexual experiences which the narrator writes to keep her mind off of being one of–if not THE–last surviving person of a plague.

 

the brief history of the dead by kevin brockmeierThe Brief History of the Dead by Kevin Brockmeier

This fascinating novel braids two storylines: in one of them, the City is inhabited by souls that have departed earth, but have not yet been forgotten by the living, and yet their number is decreasing. Meanwhile, Laura Byrd’s supplies dwindle in her Antarctic research station, and all she can find on the radio is static. Both groups wonder what is happening, and the story progresses, meeting in the middle to illustrate it to the reader as the characters unpack the mystery.

Zone One by Colson Whitehead

If you’re looking for pandemic literature, you can’t skip this one: a pandemic has sorted out all of earth’s inhabitants into the living and the living dead. The narrative follows Mark Spritz, a member of one of the sweeper units that clears lower Manhattan of the remaining feral zombies, and the rest of the population deals with the post-apocalyptic stress disorder that HAS to be a thing–THANK YOU.

 

clay's ark by octavia butlerClay’s Ark by Octavia Butler

It’s our woman science fiction author prototype, Octavia Butler, again! This novel follows a family as they are kidnapped by Eli, the only survivor of a space mission gone awry, crash-landed in the Mojave desert, and in which he was infected with an alien microorganism. In effort to slow its transmission to the rest of the human species, Eli isolates himself in a “family” situation quarantine. Yikes.

The Last Man by Mary Shelley

We most likely know Mary Shelley from the book that made her famous, the allegedly first science fiction novel, born of an orgy/party hosted by Lord Byron, Frankenstein. This book, too, focuses on a theme of science fiction. After all of humanity has been wiped out by the plague, the Last Man wonders, “And what does our narrator do, alone in the world? “I also will write a book, I cried—for whom to read?” He calls it “The History of the Last Man,” and dedicates it to the dead. It will have no readers. Except, of course, the readers of Shelley’s book.” (This last quotation comes from “What Our Contagion Fables are Really about.”)

The latest in horror:

In keeping with the regulations on how to decrease the spread of COVID-19, I’m just going to list a whole bunch of dope books that have just/are about to release. There isn’t a theme. Or, the theme is, books whose authors/publishers have taken one for the team in limiting their exposure by canceling book releases and launches, thereby directly affecting their books’ sales. In case you missed that subtext: BUY OR PRE-ORDER THESE BOOKS. They’re not getting the exposure that they deserve because their authors, publishers, publicists, et al, have a high regard for human life. (This list is by NO means comprehensive, and if I missed YOUR book or one that you love, pleeeeease let me know. My contact info is in the signature!)

The Fish & the Dove by Mary-Kim Arnold

This collection of poems reflects the history of the Korean War, its effects on generations afterward, and the institutionalized language that it produced. Arnold says, the “legendary Assyrian warrior goddess Semiramis haunts this book,” which I love.

 

 

and I do not forgive youAnd I Do Not Forgive You: Stories & Other Revenges by Amber Sparks

This collection of short stories in unmissable–it blends elements of the fairy tale, mythology, contemporary ideals, and apocalyptic technologies to illustrate feminine narratives in hilarious and horrifying ways. You’re gonna love it.

 

 

lakewood by megan giddingsLakewood: A Novel by Megan Giddings

This book narrates a horror of medical experimentation as it addresses class and race. It’s described as part Handmaid’s Tale and part Immortal Life of Henrietta LacksDON’T MIND IF I DO.

 

 

No Bad Deed by Heather Chavez

When a veterinarian pulls over to help at a bad car wreck, one of the survivors leaves her with an impossible choice: she can either let the other victim die, or she can die.

 

 

 

Here are more books (not exclusively horror) whose releases have been affected by the quarantine.

Harbingers (FKA as news):

Do you want to know what our contagion fables are really about? Check out this article on The New Yorker. (Bonus: I learned that heating books in the oven at 160 degrees kills bed bugs WITHOUT damaging the books.)

Rachel Harrison (author of the newly-released title The Returnexplains on CrimeReads how a sense of dread is the essential ingredient of a good dark fiction story.

Want to know how Snowpiercer might be a dark sequel to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory? Of course you do.

Want to learn about how the first myth of alien abduction was born? I don’t–you might remember that I’m exxxtra afraid of aliens. But maybe you do?

Did you see that Audible just made hundreds of audiobooks free to stream? The list includes some horror classics like Frankenstein, The Picture of Dorian Gray“The Yellow Wallpaper,” and a collection of Edith Wharton short stories.

Also, let’s just say that going “deeper into the crevasse” just isn’t working for you, or let’s just say you’re not that into horror right now because the world is scary enough. Here’s a list of books in which NOTHING BAD HAPPENS.

And y’all know I always make jokes about Dante and being your Virgil, but real talk, this time, Italy is about to celebrate its first Dante Day, as the 700th anniversary of his death approaches.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this edition of THE FRIGHT STUFF, and hopefully it made you feel that you weren’t alone, even if you are physically alone. I’m Mary Kay McBrayer, and you can find me on Twitter or Instagram– make sure y’all get at me with any important news that I missed, okay? But y’all keep in mind, too, that while I DO DEFINITELY want to know my mistakes, I also work real hard on this, so y’all be nice about it. Stay safe and sequestered!

Until next week,

Your Virgil (y’all know I’m a stick to my guns on this name),

Mary Kay McBrayer
Co-host of Book Riot’s literary fiction podcast, Novel Gazing