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Unusual Suspects

Murder On A Luxury Ship!

Hello mystery fans! This week I have for you an interesting historical fiction with eclectic characters and a YA mystery I inhaled that I think fans of A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder will also like.

A Decline in Prophets cover imageA Decline in Prophets (Rowland Sinclair #2) by Sulari Gentill: Okay, this is (so far) a ten book historical mystery series with Rowland Sinclair, a wealthy Australian artist, as the sleuth. Of course me being me I started with the second book–I just really wanted to read a remote set murder mystery, and the beginning of the book gave me the information I needed to not be confused so win-win for me. However, I enjoyed this so much I’m going back to the first. And with that out of the way on to this book!

It’s set in the 1930s and while I find that a lot of historical mysteries kind of blend into feeling much like the same, this one really stood out for a few reasons: the unique and varied characters; the moving settings; I can’t recall reading many Australian sleuths or artists. We start on the R.M.S. Aquitania, a luxury liner, filled with an eclectic mix of characters that are friends, and not, and have various different religions and beliefs–and of course someone ends up murdered. Rowland Sinclair just happened to have decked the murder victim before he turned up dead so guess who is a suspect?!

We keep following the group of characters–Theosophists, Freemasons, Protestants, mystics, Catholic Bishop and Priest, model, artist, poet–through New York and Sydney and we find that people keep being murdered. And not only is there drama in Sinclair’s group of friends but in his family, because his older brother is determined to make Sinclair the proper gentlemen. But who is following this group of eclectic people around the world and offing them? And why? Come for the murder mystery and stay for a fun look at the wealthy in 1930s Australia. I went with the audiobook and it was like listening to a radio play, which added to the delight of this book for me. I’d also say this works for fans of cozies in that there is plenty of murder that is explained but it never goes into the gore and details. (TW brief attempted assault, not detailed/ alludes to past assault without detail/ murder made to look like suicide, detail/ parent with dementia/ antisemitism)

I Hope You’re Listening by Tom Ryan: I enjoyed Ryan’s previous mystery, Keep This To Yourself, so I was already looking forward to this book. Then I got to the hook and I was so very much sold. I read this in two sittings because it rang all my bells: great opening hook; awesome, loving family; strong voice from the start; a true crime podcast; a past and present missing persons mystery; one of the most intense endings I’ve read in a while.

Dee and her best friend Sibby went to play in the woods when they were seven and only Dee returned; Sibby has never been seen or heard from since. (The book summary gives you all the deets, but the book takes time to unveil it all so you decide if you want to know beforehand or not.) Now, Dee is 17 and has never gotten over the trauma of what happened in the woods or the fact that she knows everyone in town sees her and thinks of what happened. Feeling helpless, but having zero desire to be an actual sleuth herself, she started a crime podcast where she talks about missing person cases. She then opens it up for armchair sleuths (who she calls laptop detectives) to help figure out the mystery, and then she passes along any relevant information to the police.

Her podcast has become huge but no one, except her best and only friend, knows she hosts it as she’s kept herself anonymous all this time. She’s also never discussed her case nor plans to. Then a girl goes missing, from the same block, and how can they not be related? Especially when someone she knows is arrested…

I really liked Dee, who is reserved and a loner due to the past trauma but has a lovely family relationship, a best friend, and a new girl neighbor she falls for. This ended up being a satisfying mystery that looked at how hard it is to move on from something when there aren’t any answers, and how easy it is to only see the damage something does to you.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming releases for 2020 and 2021. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and 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
Read This Book

Read This Book: THE HANDMAID’S TALE by Margaret Atwood

Welcome to Read This Book, the newsletter where I recommend a book you should add to your TBR, STAT! I stan variety in all things, and my book recommendations will be no exception. These must-read books will span genres and age groups. There will be new releases, oldie but goldies from the backlist, and the classics you may have missed in high school. Oh my! If you’re ready to diversify your books, then LEGGO!!

It’s still Banned Books Week, which means recommending another oft-challenged book that corresponds to this year’s theme of Censorship is a Dead End. Find Your Freedom to Read. The book that fits the bill is The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. Not only was it one of the Top 10 Challenged Books of 2019, The Handmaid’s Tale is #29 on the list of the 100 Most Banned and Challenged Books from the last decade.

The Handmaid's Tale Book CoverOffred is a Handmaid in the Republic of Gilead. Once a day, she is allowed to leave the Commander’s home and go to the food markets where the signs are now pictures instead of words because women are no longer allowed to read. Once a month, she prays for the Commander to make her pregnant. In a time of declining births, Offred and the other Handmaids are only as valuable as their viable ovaries. There was a time when she lived with her husband and daughter and had a job and money of her own, but that is gone now.

I read The Handmaid’s Tale about a year after the election of President Trump, and this book was a serious gut punch. I’m sure if you read it in our current environment with both a generation-defining election and Supreme Court nomination in the balance, The Handmaid’s Tale would leave you with a similar feeling. Although I felt slightly underwhelmed by the novel as a whole since it seems to be white feminism’s cautionary tale, I enjoyed the disjointed narration between Offred’s life before Gilead and her current life as a Handmaid.

This story kept my attention from the beginning and made me wonder which women in The Handmaid’s Tale I would be, but I was unsatisfied with the ambiguous ending. Lately, I’ve been wondering if my questions were answered in The Testaments, but I’m not excited to read the sequel, so I guess I may never know.

Until next time bookish friends,

Katisha

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Categories
True Story

New Releases: What IS the Meaning of Mariah Carey?

Happy end-of-September! We’re moments from Halloween Time. And we have new nonfiction releases!

The Meaning of Mariah Carey by Mariah Carey with Michaela Angela Davis. There are some memoirs you want to read just because the author could say anything. What did Mariah Carey dictate to her co-writer for this book? She says “it’s been impossible to communicate the complexities and depths of my experience in any single magazine article or a ten-minute television interview.” I frankly cannot WAIT.

 

Big Dirty Money: The Shocking Injustice and Unseen Cost of White Collar Crime by Jennifer Taub. Ok, I cannot put it better than this: “Selling loose cigarettes on a city sidewalk can lead to a choke-hold arrest, and death, if you are not among the top 1%. But if you’re rich and commit mail, wire, or bank fraud, embezzle pension funds, lie in court, obstruct justice, bribe a public official, launder money, or cheat on your taxes, you’re likely to get off scot-free (or even win an election).” Taub looks at how we got to this “post-Enron failure of prosecutorial muscle.” Yes, Jennifer Taub! Tell me.

 

Black Fatigue: How Racism Erodes the Mind, Body, and Spirit by Mary-Frances Winters. Black fatigue is “the intergenerational impact of systemic racism on the physical and psychological health of Black people,” i.e. racism creates an exhaustion that gets passed down and compounded through the generations. Winters talks about how from economics to education, work, criminal justice, and health outcomes—”for the most part, the trajectory for Black people is not improving.”

 

As always, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime and co-hosting the nonfictionFor Real podcast with Kim here at Book Riot. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

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Giveaways

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The Stack

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Riot Rundown

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Check Your Shelf

Books for Bisexual Visibility Day, Essential Election Reading, and More

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Let’s all put some collective positive energy back into the universe this week, because we all need it.


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

  • Publisher’s Weekly has a Spanish edition now.
  • New England booksellers announce a major diversity reading initiative. I really appreciate it when I see these types of challenges that are aimed at the booksellers and the librarians, who are out there promoting books to people. We aren’t exempt from reading diversely.

New & Upcoming Titles

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

RA/Genre Resources

On the Riot


All Things Comics

On the Riot


Audiophilia

On the Riot


Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Adults

On the Riot


Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

Catch you on the flipside, everyone.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

Welcome to the last Tuesday of September, aka bonus new book Tuesday! We’ve got some excellent new books to round out your month, and I can’t wait to read them all. In addition to these three books, I also have a copy of The Nesting by C.J. Cooke that I’m excited to dive into, and I’ve got my eye on Becoming Muhammed Ali, a novel for young readers by James Patterson and Kwame Alexander.

Ties That Tether by Jane Igharo

Azere is a young Nigerian-Canadian woman who feels trapped by a promise she made to her dying father to marry a Nigerian man one day and preserve her culture. Her mom tries to help–but when a dating disaster sends Azere running, she meets Rafael, who is very handsome, very into her, and very white. As their fling turns into something serious, Azere has to decide if keeping her promise is something she can or is willing to do, and if she breaks it, how will it affect how she sees herself and her culture?

A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik

Head back to magic school in this dark and funny new fantasy from Naomi Novik! El is a student at Scholomance, a magical school where students either learn their lessons and graduate, or literally die trying. El is uniquely prepared for this educational experience, but her dark powers also come with a caveat: she might kill everyone in the school if she unleashes them. Fortunately, she doesn’t want that. Unfortunately, there is one particular student named Orion Lake that she wouldn’t mind taking down with her. This is the first in what’s sure to be a funny and deadly series.

Backlist bump: If the combination of dark humor and magic in this book appeals to you, you might want to check out Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir, a Book Riot favorite.

The Talented Miss Farwell by Emily Gray Tedrowe

In this homage to Patricia Highsmith, Rebecca Farwell is living a double life in the late 1990s: in New York, Miss Farwell is known as Reba, a successful, stylish, and cutthroat art dealer who has made a killing in recent years. In a small town in Illinois, Becky is the town treasurer and controller, living in a farmhouse and dressing in sensible clothing, the type of person no one would suspect of fraud of money laundering–yet that’s exactly what Becky is doing. This is a taut novel about a brilliant con artist.

Backlist bump: Want more Patricia Highsmith readalikes? Pick up Genuine Fraud by E. Lockhart.

This will be the last New Books newsletter from me–Liberty will be back next week with more new book fun, and knowing her I’m sure she’s bursting with loads of new book excitement to share with you!

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

New Children’s Book Releases For September 29, 2020

Hey readers!

Welcome to another week of new releases!

Will You Be My Friend? by Sam McBratney, illustrated by Anita Jeram

Beloved children’s book author McBratney passed away last week. Out this week is his new book, a followup to Guess How Much I Love You in which Little Nutbrown Hare sets out to find a playmate and discovers a sweet white bunny named Tipps.

 

Becoming A Good Creature by Sy Montgomery, illustrated by Rebecca Green

If you loved Sy Montgomery’s adult memoir, How to Be A Good Creature, you will also enjoy this reprise for kids, written in picture book form. This imparts wisdom to young people in much the same way as Montgomery’s memoir, just adjusted to be accessible for a younger audience. It’s no less moving, however, to see what humans can learn from animals.

 

Animals Brag About Their Bottoms by Maki Saito

This cute picture book is exactly what is says: animals brag about their bottoms. With animal butts drawn against white backdrops, various animals take the opportunity to speak highly about how adorable they are. It’s fun and cute, and doesn’t include a single poop joke.

 

Loretta Little Looks Back by Andrea Davis Pinkney, illustrated by Brian Pinkney

This historical fiction picture book follows three members of the Little family (Loretta, her brother Roly, and Roly’s son Aggie) as they tell their stories, from Loretta’s life as a sharecropper to a young Aggie’s efforts to register voters in the Jim Crow south.

 

Everything Comes Next: Collected and New Poems by Naomi Shihab Nye, illustrated by Rafael Lopez

For poetry lovers, this new collection rounds up poetry from Naomi Shihab Nye, the current Young People’s Poet Laureate. The collection includes her best works over the past forty years as well as new, never-before-published poems. It also includes writing prompts, making it a great addition for kids who are aspiring poets themselves.

 

Pepper’s Rules for Secret Sleuthing by Briana McDonald

This fun mystery follows 11-year-old Pepper, who travels with her dad to her Great Aunt Florence’s mansion. While waiting for the will to be read, Pepper becomes suspicious of her Aunt Wendy, and with her mom’s Detective Rulebook in hand, she sets out to figure out what’s going on. This also makes a good pick for people looking to broaden their middle grade collections to include more queer characters. Joining Pepper on her adventure is Jacob, a trans boy who lives nearby, as Pepper works out her feelings for another girl at school.

 

Saucy by Cynthia Kadohata

In this heartwarming story, Becca decides she wants to have a “thing”. Like her brothers, who have hockey, music, and the belief they all live in a simulation. So when Becca discovers a sick piglet on a walk, she makes rescuing it her “thing”. Named Saucy, Becca’s pigley becomes a treasured part of the family, accompanying Becca on her journey of self-discovery as she takes on everyday challenges.

Until next week!

Chelsea (@ChelseaBigBang)

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for September 29

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! All hands on deck—new releases spotted off the port bow! It’s Alex, and there’s a bunch of new books to check out this week, as well as some fun news. The weather here has really turned and it’s starting to feel properly like autumn, cool and breezy and hopefully soon to be less on fire. This weekend I made two cakes and one of them turned out all right, so I’ll take my victories where I can. Stay safe, keep sailing, and I’ll see you again on Friday.

Need something to smile about? Fat Bear Week is coming!

Looking for non-book things you can do to help in the quest for justice? Louisville Community Bail Fund


New Releases

Burning Roses by S.L. Huang – Red Riding Hood and Hou Yi the Archer are both middle-aged, tired, and very ready to be REtired. But when sunbirds begin to ravage the countryside, they join forces to save everything they’ve come to love—and embark on an epic quest now with the wisdom of years even if they lack the vigor of youth.

Battle Ground by Jim Butcher – Harry Dresden has a problem. A big problem. Enormous. Titanic, even. Because the Last Titan has declared war on Chicago, and as if she’s not a big enough problem on her own, she’s also bringing an army with her. The only chance that Harry and the entire city have is to kill her, which will change the world forever.

Skyhunter by Marie Lu – Talin is a refugee from the Federation, a terrifying and aggressive empire that conquers and destroys everything in its path using mutant monsters called Ghosts. Talin finds a new home on the last free nation in the world, Mara, and becomes a member of its elite fighting force, a Striker. A mysterious prisoner captured from the Federation may make Talin wonder who he is, but she never questions her loyalty or her determination to fight to the death for the home she loves.

The Loop by Jeremy Robert Johnson – A small tourist town in western Oregon falls victim to a swift and terrifying epidemic of violence perpetrated by the children of executives at a local biotech firm. Lucy is a lonely young woman who’s an outsider in the close-knit community, but she becomes a leader of a band of fellow outcasts. If they stick together, they just might survive.

A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik – Scholomance is a magic school that regularly pits its students against each other or outright kills them. El is determined to survive the school; she may be unprepared upon arrival, but within her lives a dark power that can level mountains and kill millions. She doesn’t want to kill millions—just Orion Lake, the annoying popular boy who has now saved her life twice.

Spell Starter by Elsie Chapman – Aza Wu has her magic back, and has managed to pay off her parents’ debt to Saint Willow. Unfortunately, the cost of accomplishing those two all-important goals has put her in the permanent employ of a gang leader. But while she can try to settle into that life, Saint Willow has other ideas. She’d rather have Aza as a fighter she can control.

News and Views

The Old Drift by Namwali Serpell is the winner of the Arthur C Clarke Award.

Speculative Fiction for Dreamers: A Latinx Anthology is kickstarting

Dear Tolkien Fans: Black People Exist

Check out the trophies for the Ignyte Awards.

Patrick Stewart vs Mark Hamill

The Hidden Girl is becoming a TV series.

Disney has unveiled its tribute mural to Chadwick Boseman

Tomi Adeyemi is one of Time’s 100 Most Influential People of 2020, and John Boyega wrote about her.

Cory Doctorow is doing a virtual lecture series in October.

On Book Riot

8 YA fantasy novels set in far-flung corners of the Earth

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about Arrival.

This month, you can enter to win $50 to spend at your favorite indie bookstore and a free 1-year audible subscription.


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.