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Read This Book

Read This Book: The Things She’s Seen by Ambelin and Ezekiel Kwaymullina

Welcome to Read This Book, a weekly newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!

The Things She's Seen cover imageThis week’s pick is a powerful novel from Australia–The Things She’s Seen by Ambelin and Ezekiel Kwaymullina!

Content warning: assault, death, depictions of grief

Published as Catching Teller Crow in Australia, this is a YA novel about Aboriginal teen Beth Teller, who is a ghost. She died before the book begins in a car accident, and now she lingers on Earth, visible only to her grieving dad. Beth can’t stand to witness how he pushes away their beloved extended family, and so she encourages him to go back to work and take on a case. Her father is a police officer, and he reluctantly accepts a job overseeing the investigation of a fire in a small town that claimed the lives of two people–one the police has been able to identify, and one who remains a mystery. Beth is eager to be useful and is happy to see her father take interest in something again, but when they discover a young woman, Isobel Catching, who is able to see Beth, Beth learns that this case might have a profound effect on her own ability to move on.

For a book that’s under 200 pages, this novel packs a surprisingly powerful punch. It has so many intriguing and unsettling elements, and the small Australian town setting really comes alive as Beth and her father attempt to unravel its secrets. I loved that this book really showcases the relationship between Beth and her father, as they come to terms with this new reality and learn that even though Beth is dead, their relationship is still intact, just different. The book actually weaves back and forth from Beth and Isobel’s perspectives, and Isobel’s chapters are haunting and lyrical as they draw the reader–and Beth–closer and closer to the terrible truth about the crime. But it’s only in confronting the causes for the fire and the consequences it has on the community that Beth finds the key to moving to the next plane of existence–a transition as joyous as it is heartrending for those left behind.

This novel has some of the most beautiful and sensitive writing when it comes to describing the despicable things that some people do to one another, and even though it explores a terrible crime, it prioritizes and values the voices of those directly affected, ensuring that justice is served. I’m of the opinion that some of the best YA books come from the Australian market, and this book just further proves my theory!

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, All the Books, and Twitter.

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Categories
Unusual Suspects

The Women of Canadian Crime Fiction

Hi mystery fans! It’s Friday, which means I’ve got roundups, trailers, something new to almost watch, and Kindle ebook deals.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Winter Counts cover imageOn this week’s All The Books! Liberty and Patricia discuss Winter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden, among other new releases.

‘We already have a Black writer’: Black Chicago crime fiction author Tracy Clark, others talk about the fight for recognition

Enola Holmes official trailer–Netflix’s adaptation of the Enola Holmes Mysteries by Nancy Springer, which follows Sherlock’s teen sister.

Who Is Enola Holmes and Why Didn’t We Know Sherlock Had a Sister? Here’s Your Answer

Death on the Nile Official Trailer–20th Century Studios’ adaptation of Agatha Christie’s murder mystery novel.

Dark Horse to Publish, Distribute Print Editions of Comixology Originals (including The Black Ghost Vol. 1 by Alex Segura, Monica Gallagher and George Kambadais!)

Broken Places cover image4 Great Mystery and Thriller Audiobooks From Black Authors

Mexican Gothic author Silvia Moreno-Garcia shares what fans can expect from Hulu series

The Making of a Fierce and Badass Black Heroine

The Women of Canadian Crime Fiction: A Roundtable Discussion

Enter to Win $50 to Your Favorite Independent Bookstore!

(Almost) Watch Now

Netflix: The Wallander series, which follows the Swedish detective Kurt Wallander and is based on Henning Mankell‘s series, will get a prequel series on Netflix streaming on September 3rd. Here’s the trailer for Young Wallander.

Kindle Deals

If you’re looking for translated work, the author of The Hole has a new crime novel: The Law of Lines by Hye-young Pyun (Author), Sora Kim-Russell (Translator) is $1.99!

If you’ve yet to read the most recent release in the Samantha Brinkman series: Final Judgment by Marcia Clark is $1.99! (The series generally has most major trigger warnings)

If you need a lovely escape here’s a Sherlock meets Fantastic Beasts series starter for a completed series: Jackaby by William Ritter is $1.99!

no exit by taylor adams cover imageAnd if you want something awesome and intense as your form of escape: No Exit by Taylor Adams is $5.49! (Review) (TW racial slurs/terminally ill parent not on page/pedophile not on page)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases and 2021. 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

Watch Ursula K. Le Guin Doc For Free This Week: Today In Books

Watch Ursula K. Le Guin Doc For Free This Week

The feature documentary Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin, which was produced over a decade with Le Guin’s participation and directed by Arwen Curry, is available for free streaming on PBS’s site until August 30th, 2020. Part of the PBS American Masters series, the documentary takes viewers into Ursula K. Le Guin’s groundbreaking career in her own words and with interviews of authors like Margaret Atwood and Neil Gaiman.

Beverly Jenkins Series Adaptation

Al Roker Entertainment, Inc. has partnered with Brave Road Entertainment to adapt Beverly Jenkins’s Blessings series into a TV series, Hopetown. Screenwriters Shari Simpson and Charlie Shahnaian will be writing the adaptation about a wealthy African American woman who buys a childless town with the intention of turning it into a foster-family community.

Where The National Book Critics Circle Is At

In June an internal email written by National Book Critics Circle v-p of grants Carlin Romano, regarding the board’s drafting of a diversity statement about Black Lives Matters, was leaked by poet/essayist Hope Wabuke who tweeted: “It is not possible to change these organizations from within, and the backlash will be too dangerous for me to remain.” Many board members resigned over the issue of feeling the organization did not support authors of color and marginalized voices, which eventually led to a special meeting to decide whether Romano would remain on the board: 28% of the NBCC’s membership voted and he will remain until 2022. Romano allegedly “threatened to sue the rank-and-file members” during the meeting.

Celebrate Independent Bookstore Day 2020 With These Official Online Events

Celebrate Independent Bookstore Day 2020 with a host of online events, including author panels and drawing demonstrations.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

But What About the Library Cats??

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. There’s been another police shooting, and this one has taken me aback because I grew up very close to Kenosha, Wisconsin, and now it’s on the national news. And there are too many news articles about property damage and supposed rioters, and not enough articles questioning why the police (and their white male supporters with assault rifles) are given free rein to act as judge, jury, and executioner on the streets. It just keeps going.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Cool Library 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. If you need something cute, here are photos of Houdini exploring our bathroom. I’ll see you all next week.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for August 28: Gothic Archetypes

This has been another incredibly difficult week, shipmates. It’s Alex, and I wish I could write a cheery intro for you right now, but I can’t. I spent every spare minute of my day doomscrolling Twitter, looking at the news out of Kenosha. I promise the end of the newsletter gets much sillier, and I did find some fun links if you need the distraction. Take care of yourselves, be safe, and solidarity with protestors and strikers.

If you’re as angry and upset as I am right now, here’s a place you can help: Milwaukee Freedom Fund

New Releases That I Cannot Believe I Missed on Tuesday

Elatsoe by Darcie Little Badger – Elatsoe is a Lipan Apache girl who lives in an America a little different from our own, one that has been shaped by magic, monsters, and legends. After her beloved cousin is murdered, she has to venture into a town that very much does not want her to pry beneath its picture-perfect facade and unearth its horrifying secrets. But she has magic of her own: the ability to raise the ghosts of dead animals, a gift passed down through her family. And she will use every skill, every trick, all of her wits, and help from her friends to protect her family.

Beowulf translated by Maria Dahvana Headley – Honestly, I’m not that much of a Beowulf stan (or that much into epic poetry) but the more I hear about this translation, the more I feel like I must read it (like translating “Hwæt!” as “Bro!”).

News and Views

Worlds Without End has reproduced (with permission) Nisi Shawl’s Crash Course in the History of Black Science Fiction

Nisi Shawl on music, spirituality, and the creative process

You can stream PBS’s documentary about Ursula K LeGuin for free until August 30.

Arkham Board of Health Feedback on Miskatonic University’s Draft Plan for a Safe Campus Reopening

You can explore the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum in Klingon

Chuck Wendig’s Wanderers is getting closer to being on TV.

An online exhibit celebrating Ray Bradbury

A new short story from Malka Older: Tear Tracks

Look, Idris Elba has been in enough science fiction films that he totally counts as SFF news even if he’s launching a boxing school.

On Book Riot

10 books that explore the multiverse

5 eco-dystopian novels that explore environmental worst-case scenarios

8 writers discuss how fairy tales can disrupt the status quo

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about diving into fanfiction

This month you can enter to win $50 at your favorite indie bookstore and a 1-year Kindle Unlimited subscription.

Free Association Friday: Gothic Archetype Edition

mexican gothicI mentioned on Tuesday that I finished Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, but I didn’t really have the space to expound upon my love for it. Which is to say, I read that book in less than 24 hours. Just shotgunned it. I haven’t mainlined a book that fast since Catching Fire. And it’s even more impressive when you consider I’m a giant weenie and there’s a non-zero amount of spooky stuff in this book, and I was finishing it up at approximately 2 in the morning, right before bed.

My favorite part, though? The book is tonally perfect for a gothic novel, and it’s set in the 1950s. I will cop to not being the most widely read in the gothic genre (it is a place of prose that crosses over from lush and into impenetrable, in my opinion), but it’s one that normally lends itself to being a bit further back in history, perhaps to aide the requisite “lady in a very large dress running from a spooky house.” And of course the required decaying mansion often feels displaced in time, a moldering corpse that died several decades back and hasn’t yet gotten the memo. Mexican Gothic is pitch-perfect in all these senses, and it’s got eminently readable prose, and it’s got all sort of crunchy issues in it that I can’t get into without spoiling it.

But I can tell you what gothic archetypes you will meet, in a non-spoilery way—and the fact that these all exist in pitch-perfect harmony in this book is a delight that tells me Silvia Moreno-Garcia knows her genre inside and out and loves it enough to just have fun with it by playing with the tropes. In this book, you will meet:

    • The plucky, beautiful heroine who is in over her head.
    • The woman of the house who is fanatically strict about extremely arcane rules for no apparent reason.
    • The Faceless Lady Ghost.
    • The hot but extremely creepy guy who thinks manipulating women makes him even hotter.
    • The rotting patriarch who stands as a god over his moldering domain and reminisces over his alcohol of choice about how great Empire was.

  • The female invalid who everyone is trying to keep hidden and no one will actually admit why.
  • Eerie servants.
  • The regretful sad sack destined to be played by Tom Hiddleston in the movie version.

I cannot wait for the television show of this. In the meantime, maybe I’ll just rewatch Crimson Peak or give We Have Always Lived in the Castle another read.


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.

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Riot Rundown

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The Stack

082720-VenusintheBlindSpot-The-Stack

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Audiobooks

Audiobooks 08/27

Hola Audiophiles! How goes it on this fine (hahahah, “fine”) Thursday? Let’s get right to the audiobook thing before thinking too hard about anything else makes my blood pressure spike.

Let’s audio.


New Releases – week of August 25  (publisher descriptions in quotes)

Darius the Great Deserves Better by Adib Khorram, read by Michael Levi Harris (contemporary YA fiction) – This is the sequel to Darius the Great is Not Okay. Darius is back home in the U.S., playing soccer, dating his very first boyfriend, and maintaining a long distance friendship with Sohrab. Then things sort of fall apart: his new internship at a tea shop doesn’t go according to plan, Sohrab sort of ghosts him, and both of Darius’ grandmothers are in town. Darius has to decide whether to accept that this is just how life goes, or if he perhaps deserves better,

Narrator Note: Michael Levi Harris is back! If you enjoyed his reading of Darius the Great Is Not Okay, you’re back in good hands for the sequel.

Useless Vanessa Note: There’s such a thing as a tea shop internship??? Why wasn’t I informed?!

Winter Counts cover imageWinter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden, read by Darrell Dennis (mystery/thriller) – Virgil Wounded Horse lives on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota where he’s basically an enforcer; when the American legal system or the tribal council fail to being about justice, people come to him for help of a certain kind. “But when heroin makes its way into the reservation and finds Virgil’s own nephew, his vigilantism suddenly becomes personal.”

Narrator Note: You may recognize Darrell Dennis as one of the narrators of Tommy Orange’s There There.

Desperate Plea from Vanessa Note: Can we, maybe… call Rosebud? I need someone to enforce on 2020’s ass.

cover image of The Great Offshore Grounds by Vanessa VeselkaThe Great Offshore Grounds by Vanessa Veselka, read by Xe Sands (fiction) – It’s been years since half sisters Cheyenne and Livy have seen each other, but Cheyenne is back in Seattle and crashing on Livy’s couch after a failed marriage. Livy restores boats for a living and is beginning to resent Cheyenne for her free-loading ways when they get in the way of plans to fish off the coast of Alaska. The light at the end of the tunnel for everyone is the promise of financial security: on the day of their estranged father’s wedding, the sisters set out to claim their inheritance. Plot twist! Their father gives them not money, but a name, a name that leads to the unearthing of a wild family secret.

Narrator Note: Xe Sands has a lot of audiobooks under her belt, and I personally cosign her performance of Sarah Gailey’s Magic for Liars. Magic school! Noir! A hardened P.I. jealous of her magical sister! TEENAGERS! She does it all so well.

Latest Listens

I am about to dive into Tehlor Kay Mejia’s River of Tears, a middle grade fantasy adventure based on the Mexican legend of La Llorona (the crying woman, aka the source of many Mexican children’s nightmares). This latest book from the Rick Riordan Presents line is everything Little Vanessita would have wanted way back when! Adult Vanessa will read it gleefully on her behalf.

The Cutting Season by Attica Locke coverIn the meantime, let me dig into some backlist and recommend The Cutting Season by Attica Locke, read by Quincy Tyler Bernstine. Before I go any further, please be advised that this book takes place on a plantation in modern day and contains discussions of slavery and related violence. It’s been some time since I read it so I don’t recollect how detailed or graphic those scenes are; I can tell you that I am very sensitive to violence and sexual assault and was still able to enjoy the story.

The plot: Caren Gray is a young black single mother who manages Belle Vie, a massive antebellum plantation in Louisiana where the past and the present bleed into one another most creepily. Belle Vie has been turned into a ridiculous tourist attraction featuring full-dress re-enactments and fully restored slave quarters (why yes, now would be a good time to scream). Caren is caught up in her own issues—the challenges of raising a daughter on her own, questioning her life choices and career trajectory—when she discovers the body of a migrant worker on the plantation grounds. The search to find the killer unearths another mystery from the plantation’s past.

I was reminded just how much I love this book after talking about Bluebird, Bluebird on the latest episode of the Read Harder Podcast. Like Locke’s Highway 59 series, The Cutting Season is a riveting mystery paired with discussions of race in America as well as motherhood, the complicated legacy of the South, and human nature’s darkest proclivities. Quincy Tyler Bernstine, who was part of the ensemble cast of Jacqueline Woodson’s Red at the Bone, delivers a wonderful performance. Her voice is rich, warm, and a little bit breathy, all in perfect measure based on the intensity of the scene. Pick this one up if you’re in the mood for a thrilling read that examines this country’s ugly history of racial violence. Also, plantations: PORQUE?

From the Internets

Audible has unveiled a new subscription plan structure.

Libro.fm has released its list of Fall’s Most Anticipated Audiobooks (or as they call it, their TBLT—to be listened to, I presume?). It features titles by (deep breath) Walter Mosley, Lindy West, David Sedaris, Dolly Parton, Megan Rapinoe, Rebecca Roanhorse, Desus & Mero, Elena Ferrante and okay I’m out of breath now but there are so many more.

File this BuzzFeed piece under “relatable content:” Audiobooks Are — And I Can’t Stress This Enough — Saving My Sanity During COVID-19

Over at the Riot

I love when I find an entire audiobook series to really sink my teeth (ears?) into, don’t you? Here’s a list of juicy series to keep you busy for days.

On audiobooking while you sleep – I’m so curious to know how many people do this!


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
Kissing Books

So Many New Romances This Week

Well, folks. It’s Thursday. I’m more grateful than ever for romance novels, because the world sucks so bad. I hate it here. But we’ve got these lovely little packets of joy and serotonin to stare at for hours at a time, so hooray for that.

Over on Book Riot 

Trisha and I talked about the impact Corey Alexander made on the romance community. And recommended sports romances.

This is a fascinating dive into a book I haven’t read that also isn’t a romance. But. It’s a look into a long distance relationship that looks a lot like what some COVID relationships might look like. I’d be curious to read a romance take on it.

Is this your coffee table?

You’ve still got time to enter the giveaway for a gift card to your favorite indie bookstore…or a year of Kindle Unlimited. I mean, you could end up winning both, you never know.

Deals

Do you want something fun, funny, and sexy…that also addresses the concept of sex work and the change technology has made on culture? You might want to drop a couple bucks on Fans Only by B. Love. This friends-to-lovers story about a pair looking to do online sex work together until they’ve “met their financial goals” is definitely for those of you who like to watch sex complicate things between friends.

New Books

It’s another good week for books and I got so distracted by hockey that I haven’t started a one of them, but I am super duper excited for these to be in the world.

Better Than People
Roan Parrish 

I did actually read this one, a long time ago, for my conversation with Roan and others for Bookstore Romance Day. (I will be honest, I forgot its release date.)

Jack often prefers the company of his menagerie of pets to that of most people. Sure, he likes his brother, and has some friends, but if there’s one thing he knows, people will betray you. But when he falls into a ditch after chasing one of his more skittish dogs, he has to find someone to spend the quality time with his pets that he can’t with his badly-broken leg. But an app for pet lovers introduces him to Simon, who also prefers pets to people.

Mainly because they don’t laugh at or insult people who are just trying their best.

Simon has such severe social anxiety that he has trouble getting his words out, even when he wants to. His quiet intensity is immediately intriguing to Jack, who finds him beautiful, as well as the Pack. The two slowly bring out the best in each other, while also helping each other realize the best parts of themselves.

CW: severe anxiety and panic attacks; selective mutism and other neurodivergent behaviors; frustration and depression related to injury; checked ableist language; discussion of past parental death;

Here to Stay
Adriana Herrera

I’m also pretty excited for this one, in part because of the setup of the relationships—not just between love interests, but a whole found family. I know what it’s like to be a transplant in a new town that has a whole different environment, different weather, different people, and to find your people. So when I saw that the center of this story was about folks like that, I was all in. And of course, it’s Adriana. So I’m ready to pick this one up and live in it for a little while.

But wait! There’s more! (So much more!)

The Sugared Game by KJ Charles

Birthday Shot by Rilzy Adams

The Rose that Got Away by Christina C. Jones

The Wedding Date Disaster by Avery Flynn

Like Lovers Do by Tracey Livesay (and now I’m singing Xscape, thanks Tracey)

Who Wants to Marry a Duke by Sabrina Jeffries

You Lucky Dog by Julia London

Priya’s Ex by Sookh Kaur

Touch Me Gently by JR Loveless

Whoa by Alexandra Warren

Season of the Wolf by Maria Vale

Scandalous Secrets by Synithia Williams (Oh, I read this one, too! Interesting setup—it’s technically a second-chance romance, but only for one of the characters)

A Winning Season by Rochelle Alers

The Flapper’s Scandalous Elopement by Lauri Robinson (More flappers! This is the sister I’m most intrigued by!)

The Tokyo Bicycle Bakery by Su Young Lee

The Siren and the Deep Blue Sea by Kerrelyn Sparks

The Sound of Serendipity by Cynthia A. Rodriguez

Fairy Suited by Rebel Carter

Middle Ageish by Shirley Goldberg

Emerald Blaze by Ilona Andrews (I know it’s not technically a romance but I know a bunch of y’all love this series and might have forgotten it was coming out)

Entangled Pursuits by Brenda Jackson (A NEW BRENDA JACKSON BOOK)

Taunting Callum by Kristen Proby

Firefighter Shifter’s Second Chance by Naomi Sparks (look, that’s a lot of words that mean things, okay?)

Ancient Enemy by Katie Reus

Can’t Help Falling by Cara Bastone

Trade Deadline by Avon Gale and Piper Vaughn (which I mentioned last time but just in case)

The Reason Is You by Nikita Singh (this one isn’t actually new but it came up in my scrolling and is probably not well known, and if I have to sing that blasted song over and over you all have to come with me…jk I love that song but it sticks, huh?)

Okay goodness gracious I’ve stopped shopping when my eyes are bigger than my stomach now. There’s so much stuff, I hope you find something fun to check out for the weekend! And guess what? Next week is September!

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
Book Radar

Marley Dias Has a Netflix Show and More Book Radar!

Hi there, book nerds! I hope you’re making it through the week all right! We’ve seen a resurgence of summer heat in Michigan that makes it hard to believe that next week is September, but I am so ready for cool breezes and fall leaves.

Here’s this week’s round up of book news and excitement! Stay safe out there in the big world, and keep wearing those masks!

Trivia question: What kind of sandwich does Charles Wallace make Mrs. Murry in the first chapter of A Wrinkle in Time?

Deals and Squeals:

mexican gothicSilvia Moreno-Garcia talks about what she hopes to see in the Mexican Gothic limited series adaptation at Hulu.

Noughts + Crosses by Malorie Blackman has been made into a TV series by BBC, and it’ll be available in the U.S. through Peacock TV!

Audible users will now have the opportunity to access Audible’s exclusive content for just $7.95 per month.

A new series starring Batman as a Black man is in the works!

Check out the trailer for Bookmarks: Celebrating Black Voices, a new Netflix show from Marley Dias!

Courtney Milan has a new romance hitting shelves in September!

New book deal alert: Ayana Grey’s Beasts of Prey looks amazing!

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!

cover of A Rogue of One's Own by Evie DunmoreWant to Read: A Rogue of One’s Own by Evie Dunmore

Last fall I listened to Bringing Down the Duke because everyone was talking about it and I fell so hard and fast for the characters in the League of Extraordinary Women series. The series is set in 1870s England, and it follows a group of fierce feminists fighting for their rights and for love. Book two is out next week, and I’m so excited to read about Lady Lucie, who must go head to head with Lord Ballentine if she’s to secure a London publishing house to promote the suffragists’ cause! Elizabeth Jasicki narrates both books in the series and I can’t wait!

Book Acquired This Week: 

You Have a Match by Emma Lord

Stalking Jack the Ripper by Kerri Maniscalco

Seafire by Natalie C. Parker

Trivia answer: Liverwurst and cream cheese. Yum?

I leave you with my most triumphant acquisition as of late: the limoncello flavored La Croix! It’s my new favorite but I’m already worried that I won’t ever be able to find it again, it’s been so scarce! I would love to know what your favorite La Croix flavor is (and what you’re reading!), so hit me up on social media!

Happy reading!

Tirzah