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Check Your Shelf

Time Traveling Serial Killers, Coming to a TV Screen Near You!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Blaine and I are now the proud owners of my parents’ old L-shaped couch, which actually isn’t that old, and is probably the most comfortable thing I’ve ever sat on. I’ve barely moved from the couch since Monday evening. I am slowly becoming one with the couch. The couch is all.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Worth Reading


Book Adaptations in the News


Books & Authors in the News


Award News


Pop Cultured


Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous


On the Riot


Take a breath and take care of yourselves, folks. I’ll see you next week, if I can bring myself to move from the couch!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for July 31: Greetings from CoNZealand

Happy Friday shipmates! It’s Alex, bringing you greetings from CoNZealand, this year’s WorldCon. No Hugo news for you quite yet (the awards ceremony will be happening probably a few hours after this hits your inbox), but there’s other fun stuff going on. This is my first virtual convention, and in some ways it’s kind of nice (cheap, can wear sweatpants whenever I want, I control the climate in all the “conference rooms”) and in others it’s sad, since I was really hoping to be in New Zealand right now. Like everyone else, I’m making the best of the situation—my housemate and I have planned a fancy New Zealand menu, and it’s NZ-approved!–and looking forward to attending a lot of SFF readings and panels. Stay safe out there, space pirates.

Non-SFF thing that made my day: Time lapse painting

Looking for non-book things you can do to help in the quest for justice? blacklivesmatter.card.co and The Okra Project.

News and Views

The Guardian did a great profile of author Tade Thompson. I had no idea he’s a doctor!

Linguistic world building in N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth Trilogy

The 2020 World Fantasy Award final ballot has been announced. Congratulations to all the finalists! It’s a great list.

Well, July 29 was the day GRRM said we could imprison him if he wasn’t done with the book… except as io9 points out, he’s scot free from that promise because none of us are actually going to New Zealand! George knew! He knew!

The Recognize Fascism SFF anthology Kickstarter has… started.

Jordan Peele and Issa Rae will adapt Leyna Krow’s short story Sinkhole.

Ars Technica did a roundup of trailers from Comic Con.

From the Department of Unsurprising, But Still YIKES: If you already had a feeling Marvel’s Netflix shows Daredevil and Iron Fist were real racist, turns out there’s a reason for that.

Star Trek: Discovery has an official season 3 start date: October 15!

Possible live volcanoes on Venus!

Scientists discover the source of Stonehenge’s largest stones

On Book Riot

13 fantastic Black fantasy authors

Enter before the end of the month and you could win The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires by Grady Hendrix, a year of free books, or a $250 Barnes and Noble gift card.

Free Association Friday: SFF and Te Ao Māori

A panel I was really excited to attend at CoNZealand was SFF and Te Ao Māori, in which four Māori writers of speculative fiction discussed being Māori writers, their influences, and what they’d like to see in the genre moving forward. (More stories in space! Erotica! Horror! Stories of people cooperating with their worlds rather than fighting them!) It was an intensely interesting conversation to listen in on, and here’s hoping it might end up being a public offering of CoNZealand, since it was recorded.

The four writers on the panel were:

Cassie Hart writes as J.C. Hart and Nova Blake. Check out her books: The Way the Sky Curves is paranormal romance about a woman with a deadly magical power and a man who can sense that power, who wants to protect her but has secrets of his own. Ebony Slumbers is urban fantasy about a woman with a murky past she doesn’t even understand herself, so protectively smothered by eight men who claim they stand between her and death that she can think of nothing but escape.

Steph Matuku writes YA and children’s fiction. Flight of the Fantail is about the teenaged survivors of a bus crash, stranded in the bush. Help is strangely slow to arrive, and some of the kids soon start acting strangely and having nosebleeds. Also, her children’s book Whetū Toa and the Magician looks super cute.

Whiti Hereaka writes plays and screenplays to go along with novels. Her novel Legacy is about a seventeen-year-old Māori boy who is hit by a bus and wakes up in Egypt in 1915, where he begins living through his great-great-grandfather’s time in the Māori contigent. And she also has this incredible Twitter thread where she’s been posting a book by a different Māori author every day.

Dan Rabarts writes fantasy and a bit of horror. A place to start on his books is Brothers of the Knife, in which poor Akmenos, who just wants his souffle to come out right, gets swept into a tangled web of politics and murder when an elvish prince ends up dead at his banquet.

A few more books they recommended along the way:

Ruahine: Mythic Women by Ngahuia Te Awekotuku – Retellings of Māori myths about women.

The Dawnhounds by Sascha Stronach – On his Twitter, he describes it as cops being bastards. There are also conspiracies, a pandemic, and a warlock who used to be a cop trying to shut it all down. And it’s apparently queer as hell. I’m sold.

Once Upon a Time in Aotearoa by Tina Makareti – A short story collection in which the mythic is part of everyday life, and magic happens.

Bonus Fijian recommendation:

Black Ice Matter by Gina Cole – A short story collection that explores both ice and heat from a Fijian perspective.


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

A Friends To Fake Married To Real Married Story

It’s the last Kissing Books of July, and I hope the rest of the year goes in a nice waterslide-speed downfall. Black Lives still matter, COVID-19 is still real, and billionaires are still ridiculous.

Romance novels are great, though! So let’s talk about them.

Over on Book Riot

Look, I know very little about Enneagram. People have been asking me my number for years, and just from these brief descriptions of romance novels by Enneagram number, I’m guessing I’m a two. And of course, I want to read all about it.

Trisha and I did something a little different this week.

How much do you know about ebook production and monetization? Cause it’s fascinating.

There are apparently different ways to organize your books by color.

Not all of these are romance, but they’re all good stories about pansexual characters.

Do you follow booktubers?

Deals

Word is a few of Beverly Jenkins’ books are marked down on Amazon, including Jewel, which I haven’t recommended before. This one is a friends to fake married to real married story, in which a man who has turned his life around since his appearance in Vivid must be married in order to complete a business venture…and he asks his friend Jewel to pretend just for a night. But then, things happen, and they have to continue the marriage, and you know. Stuff happens. Y’all know how I feel about Beverly Jenkins, fake relationships, and married people who have to fix their marriage (in this case because they hadn’t intended to get married), so this is one I’ll be picking up real soon.

New Books

I’d intended to read at least one of the new releases this week, because there are so many great ones. But in true 2020-Jess fashion, that didn’t happen. But I’m in line to pick up one tonight, and it might be Deal with the Devil, just because I haven’t picked up a spec-fic romance in a long time.

Things Hoped For
Chencia C. Higgins

Look. I went to preorder this book like six times, only to be reminded by Amazon that I had already ordered it so chill out, okay?

This is the fourth book in a series, but like most romance series, you can read this one and then fill in any weird relationship gaps by going back to the beginning later. Here, Trisha relocates to Houston on a whim, only to have a chance encounter with Xenobia, a musician who is getting more and more popular by the minute. Neither has really thought they could have a true relationship, but there’s a light at the end of the tunnel for them, as long as life doesn’t get in the way. I’m excited for this one for multiple reasons: y’all know how much I love music romances, and anything that has a social media element? Definitely. Also, this is the first romance I will have picked up with a stud protagonist. And it’s soft. I love soft. So yeah, saving this for after the near-future crumbling America story that is Kit Rocha’s new book.

And then we’ve got this treasure trove of other books out this week:

Would I Lie to the Duke by Eva Leigh (Eva has been celebrating its release by posting Theo James GIFs so…)
The Scottish Boy by Alex de Campi
The Way You Tempt Me by Elle Wright
The Care and Feeding of Waspish Widows by Olivia Waite (Look, this cover has some weird photoshop stuff happening but I am excited for the bees)
Marry Me Twice by Monica Walters
Hairpin Curves by Elia Winters (More Carina Adores, yay!)
Lotus Flower Bomb by Kenya Goree-Bell
King of Durabia by Naleighna Kai (I have no idea what these books are like but I am hella intrigued)

What are you reading? (Or hoping to eventually read if you could just pick the damn thing up?)

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!

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Riot Rundown

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The Stack

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Audiobooks

Audiobooks 7/30

Hola Audiophiles! It’s still hot and there’s still a pandemic and I’ve played Lana del Rey’s “Summertime Sadness” more times than is strictly healthy. Long walks through Portland’s beautiful parks + audiobooks have thankfully helped keep my mood up, so let’s talk about the week’s new releases and another great romance for your ears.

Warning: gratuitous body roll references ahead.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – July 28  (publisher descriptions in quotes)

Deal with the Devil by Kit Rocha, read by Lidia Dornet (science fiction) – This is the first in a series called “Mercenary Librarians,” and it’s being pitched as Orphan Black meets the Avengers. Oh word?? Nina and her team of mercenary librarians use their knowledge to help the hopeless in a crumbling near-future America. Knox and his squad of supersoldiers went AWOL to avoid killing innocent people, now he’s battle-weary and fighting to survive. It’s only a matter of time before Nina and Knox’s paths collide, and the world may burn when they do. Or they might just team up, in more ways than one. Insert body roll here.

Narrator Note: I was unsure about Lidia Dornet from the sample of this book but I don’t think it’s representative of the whole performance. I listened to samples from other works like Eva Chase’s Academy of the Forgotten and liked what I heard.

I hold a wolf by the earsI Hold a Wolf by the Ears by Laura van den Berg, read by Amy Landon (short stories) – I very rarely do a straight copy-paste of a publisher’s whole book blurb, but I do when I can’t possibly top it: “I Hold a Wolf by the Ears draws listeners into a world of wholly original, sideways ghost stories that linger in the mouth and mind like rotten, fragrant fruit. Both timeless and urgent, these eleven stories confront misogyny, violence, and the impossible economics of America with van den Berg’s trademark spiky humor and surreal eye. Moving from the peculiarities of Florida to liminal spaces of travel in Mexico City, Sicily, and Spain, I Hold a Wolf by the Ears is uncannily attuned to our current moment, and to the thoughts we reveal to no one but ourselves.”

Narrator Note: You may recognize Amy Landon from Ted Chiang’s Exhalation or Carmen Maria Machado’s Her Body and Other Parties.

It Is Wood, It Is Stone by Gabriella Burnha, read by Gisela Chípe (fiction) – This debut novel by Brazilian author Gabriella Burnha explores class, colorism, and sexuality. Linda is feeling unmoored, lonely, and isolated after moving from the US to São Paulo for her husband’s professorship. Her maid Marta is grappling with Brazil’s complex history and racial tensions and finds Linda’s instability exasperating. When Linda leaves home one day with a beguiling artist, she binds her life to Martha’s in ways neither of them saw coming.

Narrator Note: Gisela Chipe is an actress and writer who was born in Brazil and grew up speaking Portuguese, a language I find so pleasing to the ears and hope to hear in this performance!

the silence of the white cityThe Silence of the White City by Eva Garcia Sáenz, read by Henry Levya (mystery/thriller) – This book is already a bestseller in Spain and Latin America, a fast-paced thriller set in Basque country. Unai López de Ayala is a young inspector better known as “Kraken” (I know: badass) who’s charged with investigating a series of ritualistic murders, ones that bare an eerie resemblance to a different set of grizzly murders that took place two decades ago. Police were positive that a prestigious archaeologist was responsible for the killings and have had him in jail ever since. Kraken must now determine whether that guy had an accomplice or whether he’s been wrongfully incarcerated all these years.

Narrator Note: I don’t know much about Henry Leyva but his voice is exactly what I want and expect from a book with this premise.

Latest Listens

I was staring at my Libro.fm app over the weekend trying to pick my next listen when my best audioamiga Jamie sensed a disturbance in the force. She somehow knew that I was trying to make a decision and text me to recommend Boyfriend Material by Alexis Hall. Thirty seconds later, I pressed play.

The plot: Luc O’Donnell is the son of rockstar parents who split up when he was a kid. Luc’s in-and-out-of-rehab dad is bracing for a professional comeback which means Luc is in the public eye, too, and a compromising photo lands Luc in hot water at the charity where he works. Fearing that Luc’s “particular variety of queer” will cause the charity to lose donors, his boss basically orders him to find a nice, normal, fake boyfriend to clean up his image. Luc decides serious, straight-laced, squeaky-clean barrister Oliver is the perfect partner to fake date, and Oliver agrees to the arrangement for work-related image issues of his own. They appear to have tragically little in common, but the more time they spend together… ya know. Treat yourself to the visual of me doing an embarrassingly unsexy body roll.

I have apparently been really into romances with queer English people! Red, White, and Royal Blue and Take A Hint, Dani Brown have been some of my favorite reads of the year and I think Boyfriend Material will be, too. Luc is just a hopeless, charming mess, and it’s so satisfying to watch him work through his issues even when he gets it wrong. Then there’s Oliver, who seems pretty wound up but has an ooey-gooey heart of gold beneath that polished exterior. Every time he (via narrator Joe Jameson) says Luc’s full name, Lucien, with that gorgeous accent, a weird purring sound plus that body roll I mentioned earlier make an awkward appearance. Luc’s coworker Alex is theeee most posh, out-of-touch rich boy ever and should be absolutely intolerable, except he’s clearly written that way on purpose and the satire? It’s delicious. And the love story itself is my favorite kind: a lil’ enemies to lovers, a lil’ mess, a lil’ healthy communication and emotional maturity, and of course: some sexy.

Go ahead and pick this up if you need some happy English queer love, too. Joe Jameson was a ton of fun to spend time with as a narrator, even if a few of his lady character voices bordered on ridiculous. Based on the characters he was portraying, the performance makes sense.

From the Internets

Comic-Con@Home: What We Learned from the “Star Wars Audiobooks: Doctor Aphra” Panel

Travel around the world with these audiobooks. Yes, more travel-themed stuff, but who can blame anyone for wanting a little escape?

This piece on the harmful nature of Audible originals brings up a lot of valid points. As a writer friend pointed out though, we need to be careful not to come down on authors who aren’t in a position to make these big negotiations.

Over at the Riot

More Short Story Collections on Audio for Your TBR

Get some literal #OwnVoices in your ears! Check out these 30 audiobooks written and read by Black authors.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
Today In Books

Help Digitize The Boston Public Library’s Anti-Slavery Collection: Today In Books

Help Digitize The Boston Public Library’s Anti-Slavery Collection

With about 40,000 items in their anti-slavery collection the Boston Public Library is asking for help to turn into text “handwritten correspondence between anti-slavery activists in the 19th century.” The goal is for the works to be digitized in order to make it easy for students, teachers, researchers, and anyone who wants access, to find and read the items.

Millie Bobby Brown And Jason Bateman Team Up For Adaptation

Tess Sharpe’s upcoming thriller The Girls I’ve Been is already being adapted into a Netflix film. Millie Bobby Brown is attached to star and also to produce through her company PCMA Productions along with Jason Bateman’s Aggregate Films Banner. While you wait for her upcoming thriller, Tess Sharpe has a great catalog of crime novels: Far From You and Barbed Wire Heart (which works for Ozark’s fans, and makes sense Bateman signed on to her upcoming thriller.)

1918 Flu Rhyming Poetry And Skeptical Satire

We may have made a lot of advances in technology and medicine but history is always here to remind us how far we also haven’t come–or how we just repeat ourselves. All the current TikToks and memes responding to the current COVID-19 pandemic have similar, albeit through different mediums, “posts” back during the 1918 Flu including poetry and satirical pieces. “While our collective memory of 1918’s flu suggests that people universally cooperated with quarantines and mask-wearing, this poetry tells a different story.”

Looking For A Reading Challenge?

Participate in #TheSealeyChallenge by reading a poetry chapbook or full-length collection a day for 31 days, and share your reads with the hashtag.

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Book Radar

The Witcher Prequel Coming to Netflix and More Book Radar

Hey, book nerds! Happy Thursday! I hope you’re all having a lovely week, and if you’re having a not so great week–well, it’s almost the weekend, so hold on. I hope you’ve got a giant stack of books awaiting you!

I’ve got more book news and excitement for you, but remember to be kind to yourself if you’re feeling stressed–we’re in the middle of a global pandemic after all–and wash your hands and wear a mask!

Trivia time: What’s Starr’s dad’s name in The Hate U Give?

Deals and Squeals:

Expect more of The Witcher content in your life! Netflix is moving forward with a six-part limited prequel series.

Tor has announced the 2020 World Fantasy Award Finalists!

Speaking of finalists, the Book Prize Longlist has been announced, and we’re thrilled to see Real Life by Brandon Taylor, Such a Fun Age by Kiley Reid, and How Much of These Hills is Gold by C Pam Zhang on the list!

The limited series TV adaptations of Little Fires Everywhere and Watchmen have been nominated for an Emmy!

In the yikes category, Newsweek reported that Patrick Rothfuss’s editor reacted to an article published on Book Riot, Authors Don’t Owe You Books, by claiming she hasn’t seen book three of Rothfuss’s series, and that she doubts that Rothfuss has even been working on it in recent years. She expressed lots of frustration felt by fans, but it definitely seems like something that should have been addressed with the author and his agent, not on Facebook!

Ethan Herisse, who starred in Ava DuVernay’s When They See Us, will narrate the audiobook of Punching the Air by Ibi Zoboi and Dr. Yusef Salaam. Herissa portrayed Salaam in DuVernay’s film.

Song of the Sun God by Shankari Chandran is being adapted into a six-part TV series. The novel covers three generations in a Sri Lankan family following the country’s independence in 1948 to the present.

Riot Recommendations

At Book Riot, I’m a cohost with Liberty on All the Books!, plus I write a handful of newsletters including the weekly Read This Book newsletter, cohost the Insiders Read Harder podcast, and write content for the site. I’m always drowning in books, so here’s what’s on my radar this week!

Want to Read: A Map to the Sun by Sloane Leong

I’m always, always on the lookout for gorgeous new graphic novels, and just look at this cover! This book is about two girls who forge a friendship on the basketball court, only for one girl to move away and fall out of touch. When she shows up again years later, the former friends find themselves both on a newly formed women’s basketball team at their school, trying to rebuild their relationship and trust each other again. I absolutely cannot wait for my copy to arrive. It’ll be out next week, August 4th!

My book acquisitions this week:

Being Toffee by Sarah Crossan

Once You Go This Far by Kristen Lepionka

Where Dreams Descend by Janella Angeles

Trivia answer: Maverick! And fun fact–Angie Thomas’s new novel Concrete Rose stars Maverick as a teen!

Read on Book Riot: Screen Time is Money: How Authors Make Money on Ebooks

I hope you have a fantastic weekend full of socially-distanced summer fun! I’ll leave you with a picture I snapped of my hammock reading session with Something to Talk About by Meryl Wilsner, which was probably the most fun I’d had…in a while. There’s something great about enjoying a book while hanging suspended in the air, and this one was extra great!

Happy reading,

Tirzah

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Giveaways

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We’re giving away an audiobook prize pack to one lucky Riot reader!

Enter here for a chance to win, or click the cover image below!

Here’s what it’s all about:

Join Page Chaser for the I Heart Audio sweepstakes! Page Chaser is giving away an audiobook 12 audiobooks and a pair of wireless earbuds! Enter for a chance to win, and be sure to join Page Chaser on FacebookInstagram, and Pinterest.

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The Kids Are All Right

Kidlit Deals for July 29, 2020

Hey kidlit pals! I hope you’re keeping cool and staying busy this week. I can hardly believe that July is winding down already. No matter what your school situation is looking like for August, here’s to staying healthy, safe, and well-stocked in reading material. We’ve got more great book deals for you this week, so let’s dive in!

All book deals were accurate at the time of writing, so get them before they’re gone!

The Princess in Black series by Shannon Hale, Dean Hale, and LeUyen Pham are some of my favorite chapter books, and many of the books in the series are on sale! Check out the latest book, The Princess in Black and the Bathtime Battle, for only $1!

And speaking of Shannon Hale and LeUyen Pham, their graphic novel Best Friends is only $3!

The lovely picture book Along the Tapajós by Fernando Vilela is $1.

For a fun book set on a farm, check out Unusual Chickens for the Exceptional Poultry Farmer by Kelly Jones for $5.

Glory Be by Augusta Scattergood is $4.

The Last Musketeer by middle grade powerhouse Stuart Gibbs is $5–and it’s the first in a series!

We’ve got another great deal from award-winning writer Pam Muñoz Ryan–Becoming Naomi León is $4.

Calling all Rick Riordan fans! Shadows of Sherwood by Kekla Magoon is a fun Robin Hood retelling, and it’s $3.

Looking for a mystery? Girl’s Best Friend is the first in a series by Leslie Margolis, and all the books under under $5!

The Magic Half by Annie Barrows (author of Ivy and Bean!) is a magical, time traveling middle grade book about a girl who wishes she was a twin.

Happy reading!

Tirzah