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Today In Books

John Green’s Next Book Will Be Nonfiction: Today In Books

John Green’s Next Book Will Be Nonfiction

John Green, the author known for YA hits Looking for Alaska and The Fault in Our Stars, will be publishing a nonfiction title for the first time. The Anthropocene Reviewed, which is also the title of his monthly podcast, will be an expansion of the essays heard on his podcast mixed with favorites. “…I’ve begun to understand these reviews as an attempt to chart the contradictions of human life as I experience it – how we can be so compassionate and so cruel, so persistent and so quick to despair, and how consciousness is at once depraved in its meaninglessness and profoundly sacred in its meaning.”

Another First By A Major Publisher

These are always bitter sweet, “yay” for the first but also shame on publishing for taking this long. According to Simran Jeet Singh, the author of the new children’s book Fauja Singh Keeps Going, it is the first kid’s book by a major publisher to center a Sikh character. The book tells the true story of a British Sikh centenarian, Fauja Singh, believed to have been the oldest person to run a marathon in 2011.

Trailer For Sherlock’s Teen Sister Adaptation

Sherlock’s teen sister has a series of books written by Nancy Springer, which Netflix has adapted into a film starring Millie Bobby Brown, with Henry Cavill playing her older brother, Sherlock. Available to stream on September 23rd, you can watch the trailer for Enola Holmes now, as Enola discovers her mother (Helena Bonham-Carter) is missing and sets out to solve the mystery.

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Giveaways

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We’re giving away $50 to spend at your favorite independent bookstore (your selected store must sell e-gift cards)! All you have to do is sign-up for our YA Promotions newsletter and get special offers, new products, and interesting bookish stuff from the world of young adult literature!

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

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Riot Rundown

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The Kids Are All Right

Children’s Books About Cats! 🐈

Hi Kid Lit Friends,

During the pandemic, a lot of us are spending more time at home with our pets. A lot of my friends have adopted animals in the past few months. As you probably remember, I have three cats and they have been doing a great job keeping us company as we continue to spend most of our days in our apartment.

It is no surprise to anyone that I love books that feature animals. I’ve been reading a lot of them lately, and here are some of my favorite cat books.

They All Saw a Cat by Brendan Wenzel is a brilliant picture book about perception and seeing. The cat walked through the world, with its whiskers, ears, and paws . . . In this glorious celebration of observation, curiosity, and imagination, Brendan Wenzel shows us the many lives of one cat, and how perspective shapes what we see. When you see a cat, what do you see?

Cats Are A Liquid by Rebecca Donnelly, illustrated by Misa Saburi is a hilarious picture book inspired by an Ig Nobel Prize–winning investigation of how cats behave like liquids. This book introduces some of the physical properties of liquids―they adapt to fit a container, they flow like fluids―and is just pure fun. Back matter includes a brief introduction to the different physical states: solid, liquid, gas.

 

Bad Kitty Gets a Bath by Nick Bruel is a perfect book for newly independent readers. Bad Kitty really needs a bath, and she is forced to take one in this hysterical new illustrated how-to. The following are some items you will need for Kitty’s bath: one bathtub, plenty of water, dry towels, a suit of armor, a letter to your loved ones, clean underwear (because stressful situations can cause “accidents”), an ambulance in your driveway with the engine running, and, oh, yeah, you’ll also need Kitty . . . but good luck with that! Kitty is at her worst in this riotous how-to guide filled with bad smells, cautionary tales of horror, and hopefully by the end . . . some soap.

The School for Cats by Esther Averill is a wonderful classic children’s book about Jenny Linsky, everyone’s favorite shy New York City cat. In this book, Captain Tinker (Jenny’s owner) sends her to a boarding school in the country to learn the special knowledge of cats—manners and cooperation—she is a little afraid, among strangers, and so far from home. As soon as she’s settled in, another student named Pickles chases Jenny and she runs away from school terrified.

 

The Complete Chi’s Sweet Home by Konami Kanata is a must have for graphic novel enthusiasts. Chi is a mischievous newborn kitten who, while on a leisurely stroll with her family, finds herself lost. Separated from the warmth and protection of her mother, feels distraught. Overcome with loneliness she breaks into tears in a large urban park meadow, when she is suddenly rescued by a young boy named Yohei and his mother. The kitty is then quickly and quietly whisked away into the warm and inviting Yamada family apartment…where pets are strictly not permitted. Try to keep from reading these quickly – I recommend reading one chapter a day.

Lost Cat by Caroline Paul, illustrated by Wendy MacNaughton, is a wonderfully illustrated book. Author Caroline Paul was recovering from a bad accident and thought things couldn’t get worse, but then her beloved cat Tibia disappeared. She and her partner, illustrator Wendy MacNaughton, mourned his loss. Yet weeks later, Tibia waltzed back into their lives only to disappear again for days at a time. They began to investigate where Tibia was going, and what ensues is a hilarious investigation into Tibia’s whereabouts.

What are you reading these days? Let me know! Find me on Twitter at @KarinaYanGlaser, on Instagram at @KarinaIsReadingAndWriting, or email me at KarinaBookRiot@gmail.com.

Until next time!
Karina

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

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Today In Books

Powell’s Will No Longer Sell On Amazon: Today In Books

Powell’s Will No Longer Sell On Amazon

Powell’s Books in Portland, Oregon released a letter to customers announcing it would no longer sell books on Amazon. While it relied on the sales that came from Amazon, the independent bookstore was forced to focus on website sales during the pandemic as Amazon prioritized other items over books.

Today’s Bookish Google Doodle

Author of The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo, Alexandre Dumas is celebrated in today’s Google Doodle–technically a swashbuckling adventure slideshow. Check out the doodle and the history of Dumas’ work.

400 Years Later, Library Acquires Book It Coveted For £2.5m

Duke Augustus, who died in 1666, helped acquire hundreds of thousands of books that make up one of the world’s oldest libraries: Herzog August Bibliothek. One of the books he really wanted was the album amicorum (friendship book) but he was unsuccessful. Now, so many years later, thanks to a Sotheby’s private sale, the book has found its way (with a serious price tag) onto the Herzog August Bibliothek shelves.

Donating Books During COVID-19

In the midst of a global pandemic, we’ve all done some cleaning. Here’s a guide to donating books during COVID-19.

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The Fright Stuff

When is a Ghost Not a Ghost?

Hey there ghost hunters and ghostly haunters, I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghoulish and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff.

Let’s talk about haunted house boooooo-ks.

If I had to pick one horror plot to read for the rest of my life, it would be the haunted house. No other plot offers such a wealth of story telling options. It’s a recurring motif in horror literature, with some recognizable tropes and beats, but it’s also a plot made of silly putty. The more a writer pulls the more it stretches, and they can stretch it in any direction they please. Why? Because a ghost is never just a ghost.

the haunting of hill house by shirley jackson coverSteven J. Mariconda described the haunted house story as “amazingly flexible” in its variety of themes such as “good versus evil, science versus the supernatural, economic conflict, class, gender, and so on” (“The Haunted House”, Icons of Horror and the Supernatural, p. 269). In her critical study The Literary Haunted House, Rebecca Janicker adds to that list “capitalism, consumerism, domestic turmoil, and race” (11), and goes further to posit that the motif of the haunted house “affords a distinctive type of literary encounter with ideological forces, one tied to specific socio-historical contexts through the physical spaces in which hauntings occur” (11).

Put simply: A ghost is never just a ghost because it always represents something more than itself. Something that you try not to think about. Something unpleasant you try to ignore or repress until you can’t any more and it rises up to – quite literally – haunt you.

beloved by toni morrison coverPerhaps one of the best examples of this phenomenon is Toni Morrison’s harrowing novel Beloved. Like all the best ghost stories, it’s ambiguous in its approach. You are constantly left wondering if the ghosts in question are real, or projections of the trauma of Sethe’s past. And is a ghost any less real if it is in fact a memory? Or are all ghosts memories? Grady Hendrix wrote a wonderful piece about Beloved’s place in horror history for Tor.com’s blog a few years ago, and in it he describes ghost stories as being “about one thing: the past. Even the language we use to talk about the past is the language of horror: memories haunt us, we conjure up the past, we exorcise our demons.”

Sethe’s guilt, the brutal violence she encountered in her life as a slave, and a history of racism that continues to haunt this country even today; all these things are the ghosts of Beloved.

The Shape of Night cover imageIn The Haunting of Hill House, another classic haunting novel, Eleanor’s anxieties and the emotional trauma of her shuttered life lived at the back and call of her overbearing mother, are either the source of, or a source of energy for, the forces that roam Hill House (depending on your reading). In Tess Gerritsen’s The Shape of Night, the ghost that haunts the main character punishes her for the guilt she feels for fatal mistakes in her past. In Helen Oyeyemi’s oft recommended White is for Witching, family history, family secrets, and race all serve as an impetus for the haunting of the Silver family home.

Hauntings come from us. From, as Hendrix pointed out, our past, and our fears, our sufferings, our longings, and our rage. We make ghosts of things that leave scars. Whether they be on us, on the physical locations where they took place, or on the world. And just like scars, Ghosts linger long after the initial pain has passed. They poke their fingers into our weak spots and the places where we still hurt.

white is for witching helen oyeyemi coverMaybe that’s why I can’t get enough of ghosts. These days the past is a contentious issue. If you try to right – or even just acknowledge – the wrongs that left nothing but suffering and hatred in their wake, you’re “destroying the past”. But to ignore the dark, ugly corners of history entirely is to permit them to happen again and again, and never learn from our mistakes. And I guess for some people that’s rather the point. The past is a lot prettier when you’re wearing the rose colored classes of “the way things used to be”. I think that’s why, like Hendrix said, we “conjure up the past” with ghosts: so that we never forget. If the past is full of violence, pain, and injustice, then like hell should it rest in peace.

Maybe we deserve to be haunted.

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

they threw us away by daniel kraus coverDaniel Kraus’s forthcoming MG book They Threw Us Away is about discarded teddy bears on a mission to escape a terrifying dump landscape and find their way back into the arms of someone who will love them, and I am obsessed with the slightly creepy, painfully adorable cover. There’s also a book trailer!

Hailey Piper has a new cosmic horror book coming out November 15th, from Off Limits Press – The Worm and His Kings – and the plot promises a 90’s New York underground peopled with “enigmatic cultists” and “shadowy creatures”.

Rev up your CBS All Access subscriptions folks, because in the year of our Plague Lord Covid-19, the new adaptation of Stephen King’s The Stand will be premiering December 17!

Nightfire Books has an interview with Adam Cesare whose delightfully autumnal new YA horror, Clown in a Cornfield, is climbing the charts left and right! Have you got your copy yet?

Matt Redmon compiled a creature feature list of werewolf horror reads over on the Night Worms blog, and Kallie Weisgarber shared her eco-horror book and movie recommendations along with some tips on reducing your ecological footprint.

Emily Martin has also written a list of the Best Eco Horror Novels over at Book Riot, if Weisgarber’s list leaves you hungry for more!

Updates about The Haunting of Bly Manor (season two of Mike Flanagan’s Haunting series, this time based on Henry James’s eerie The Turn of the Screw) are finally starting to surface and I have ZERO chill.


As always, you can catch me on Twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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Giveaways

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We’re giving away five copies of The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson to five lucky Riot readers!

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

 

Here’s what it’s all about:

In this cross-dimensional examination of identity, privilege, race, and belonging, multiverse travel is finally possible—and traversers are in high demand. The only catch: no one can travel to a world where their doppelgänger is still alive. Enter Cara, whose parallel selves happen to be exceptionally good at dying—from diseases, from turf wars, from vendettas they couldn’t outrun. Of all three hundred and eighty Caras, only eight have survived to adulthood.

But trouble finds Cara when one of her eight remaining doppelgängers dies under mysterious circumstances, plunging her into a new world with an old secret.

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What's Up in YA

YA In Translation To Celebrate Women in Translation Month

Hey YA Readers!

As we round out August, I didn’t want to miss the chance to talk about one of the big literary events of this month: Women in Translation Month. You can read through the link to discover how rare it is for women to be published in translation in the US, and you can add an even more narrow percentage when you account for the number of women writers in translation for young adult readers.

Three percent of the books published in America are in translation, even smaller for women in translation, and even smaller for YA by women in translation.  

Let’s highlight a handful of the excellent YA in translation by women published in 2019 and 2020, though, perfect for adding a more global array of books to your TBR. 

Descriptions come from Amazon, but I’ve noted where I’ve read the title. I’ve stuck to the author identifying as female in these books, and in some cases, the translator may not share that gender identity. 

Almond by Won-Pyeong Sohn, translated by Sandy Joosun Lee from Korean

Published by an adult imprint, I read this one and can say it’s got great YA appeal and, being published for young adults in its home country, see no reason it doesn’t belong here!

This story is, in short, about a monster meeting another monster. 

One of the monsters is me.

Yunjae was born with a brain condition called Alexithymia that makes it hard for him to feel emotions like fear or anger. He does not have friends—the two almond-shaped neurons located deep in his brain have seen to that—but his devoted mother and grandmother provide him with a safe and content life. Their little home above his mother’s used bookstore is decorated with colorful Post-it notes that remind him when to smile, when to say “thank you,” and when to laugh.

Then on Christmas Eve—Yunjae’s sixteenth birthday—everything changes. A shocking act of random violence shatters his world, leaving him alone and on his own. Struggling to cope with his loss, Yunjae retreats into silent isolation, until troubled teenager Gon arrives at his school, and they develop a surprising bond.

As Yunjae begins to open his life to new people—including a girl at school—something slowly changes inside him. And when Gon suddenly finds his life at risk, Yunjae will have the chance to step outside of every comfort zone he has created to perhaps become the hero he never thought he would be.

b, Book, and Me by Kim Sagwa, translated by Sunhee Jeong from Korean

This is another one I’ve read and encourage you to, too.

Best friends b and Rang are all each other have. Their parents are absent, their teachers avert their eyes when they walk by. Everyone else in town acts like they live in Seoul even though it’s painfully obvious they don’t. When Rang begins to be bullied horribly by the boys in baseball hats, b fends them off. But one day Rang unintentionally tells the whole class about b’s dying sister and how her family is poor, and each of them finds herself desperately alone. The only place they can reclaim themselves, and perhaps each other, is beyond the part of town where lunatics live―the End.

In a piercing, heartbreaking, and astonishingly honest voice, Kim Sagwa’s b, Book, and Me walks the precipice between youth and adulthood, reminding us how perilous the edge can be.

The Beast Player by Nahoko Uehashi, translated by Cathy Hirano from Japanese

Elin’s family has an important responsibility: caring for the fearsome water serpents that form the core of their kingdom’s army. So when some of the beasts mysteriously die, Elin’s mother is sentenced to death as punishment. With her last breath she manages to send her daughter to safety.

Alone, far from home, Elin soon discovers that she can talk to both the terrifying water serpents and the majestic flying beasts that guard her queen. This skill gives her great powers, but it also involves her in deadly plots that could cost her life. Can she save herself and prevent her beloved beasts from being used as tools of war? Or is there no way of escaping the terrible battles to come?

Castle in the Clouds by Kerstin Gier, translated by Romy Fursland from German

Way up in the Swiss mountains, there’s an old grand hotel steeped in tradition and faded splendor. Once a year, when the famous New Year’s Eve Ball takes place and guests from all over the world arrive, excitement returns to the vast hallways.

Sophie, who works at the hotel as an intern, is busy making sure that everything goes according to plan. But unexpected problems keep arising, and some of the guests are not who they pretend to be. Very soon, Sophie finds herself right in the middle of a perilous adventure―and at risk of losing not only her job, but also her heart.

Escape Room by Maren Stoffels, translated by Laura Watkinson from Dutch

There’s no escape from this room. Full of menace and suspense, it’s an unputdownable thriller–and a paperback original!

Alissa, Sky, Miles and Mint are ready for a night of fun at the Escape Room.
It’s simple.
Choose their game.
Get locked in a room.
Find the clues.
Solve the puzzles.
And escape the room in 60 minutes.
But what happens if the Game Master has no intention of letting them go?


Want more? Over on my personal blog last year, I compiled 50 YA books in translation

Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you later this week!

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

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Riot Rundown

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True Story

2020 Nonfiction Highlights (So Far)

Wow, we are almost 3/4 through 2020 and I haven’t done any kind of “here’s some great releases from the year!” email. Dang. I’m gonna focus on the first half of the year, but some later ones might sneak in. If you didn’t catch these the first time around, here’s your chance!

Hidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family by Robert Kolker. I mention this because Kim, formerly of this newsletter and still of For Real, read it and LOVED it. It’s about a family with 12 children, half of whom were diagnosed with schizophrenia. “Their story—and samples of their DNA—would prove invaluable to quest to understand and hopefully cure schizophrenia.” This was also an Oprah’s Book Club pick, if that has any sway with you.

 

American Sherlock cover imageAmerican Sherlock: Murder, Forensics, and the Birth of American CSI by Kate Winkler Dawson. Not only is it true crime, but it is STILL everywhere on my #bookstagram wanderings. It’s the story of Edward Oscar Heinrich, the American Sherlock Holmes, a crime science investigator who worked in both the field and in the lab. One of his particularly Holmesian feats was finding literally dozens of clues from ONE pair of overalls left at a crime scene. Amazing.

 

Me and White Supremacy cover imageMe and White Supremacy: Combat Racism, Change the World, and Become a Good Ancestor by Layla Saad. I can’t believe this only came out this year. Saad’s sold-out-this-summer book “challenges you to do the essential work of unpacking your biases, and helps white people take action and dismantle the privilege within themselves so that you can stop (often unconsciously) inflicting damage on people of color.” This is all about being more aware, learning, and doing better.

 

Uncanny Valley: A Memoir by Anna Wiener. We’ve heard the male story of Silicon Valley for quite some time, so how about another perspective? Wiener moved from a New York job in book publishing (hello!) to tech in San Francisco. This highlights the time when “the tech industry rapidly transformed into a locus of wealth and power rivaling Wall Street” and looks at its changing role from “self-appointed world savior to democracy-endangering liability.” It’s both nostalgia-inducing and relevant!

 

cover image of Hood Feminism by Mikki KendallHood Feminism: Notes from the Women That a Movement Forgot by Mikki Kendall. It’s a story going back to at least the suffragists of the nineteenth century — middle and upper class white women in the women’s rights movement tend to ignore the needs of others as necessary to achieving equality. Or, as Kendall says, mainstream feminists “rarely talk about meeting basic needs as a feminist issue.” I love the description of this book as “a ferocious clarion call to all would-be feminists to live out the true mandate of the movement in thought and in deed.”

 

There are a TON more great books that have come out this year, so I’ll try to do a few more of these in the months to come. If you’ve read any particular great 2020 nonfiction releases, let me know @itsalicetime. You can also find me co-hosting the nonfiction For Real podcast with Kim here at Book Riot every two weeks (subscribe!). Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.