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What's Up in YA

Your YA Ebook Deals This Weekend

Hey YA Fans!

I hope you’re enjoying a nice weekend, whatever it might look like. As we near the end of another month, here’s a reminder that if you see a deal, snag it sooner, rather than later. Often, the deals change at the start of a new month.

As always, these are as current as possible. Find your new favorite read below!

Need a read that’ll make you feel good? Dumplin‘ by Julie Murphy is $2.

Monday’s Not Coming cover image

Seeking a darker read? Tiffany D. Jackson’s Monday’s Not Coming is a must-read. $2.

A historical read about teen pregnancy and feminism? Count me in for Randi Pink’s Girls Like Us, $2.

A fantasy featuring magic and science? Grab Between The Water and the Woods by Simone Snaith. $2.

Melissa de la Cruz’s Because I Was A Girl is an excellent nonfiction book about girls and their stories around the world. $3.

I adored Tiffany Sly Lives Here Now by Dana L. Davis and you will, too. $3.

If you liked The Hate U Give and similar stories, you’ll want to make sure you read Tyler Johnson Was Here by Jay Coles. $2.

Hearts Unbroken by Cynthia Leitich Smith is $1.

Get started on a fast paced mystery series with Truly Devious by Maureen Johnson. $3.

The boarding school drama/mystery They Wish They Were Us by Jessica Goodman, which came out in August and has been optioned for the screen, is only $3.

All Your Twisted Secrets by Diana Urban is one for fans of thrillers. $3.

If you haven’t yet read Leigh Bardugo’s Six of Crows, for $3, no better time than now!

For rom-com seekers, The Best Laid Plans by Cameron Lund is $3 (also a book that came out this year!)


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you again on Monday!

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

Categories
The Fright Stuff

Try the Grey Matter, It’s Delicious

Coming to you mostly alive from the land of the living, I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghastly 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.

Welcome to this week’s issue of The Fright Stuff or In Which Jessica Deals With Her Pandemic Anxiety by reading post-apocalyptic zombie horror books. Because 2020 might be the year on fire, but at least there aren’t zombies. (Yet?)

Bonus points to everyone who recognized the reference in the title and give a dark chuckle. Yes it is I, here to ruin beloved childhood films.

Zone One by Colson Whitehead

Alternative pandemics in which things could actually have been worse, take one. As the plague which caused the zombie apocalypse finally wanes, America is busy rebuilding and reclaiming lands overrun by the dead. What is left of the nation’s government is operating out of Buffalo, but they have their eyes set on a bigger prize: Manhattan. The tip of the island, south of Canal St, has been liberated, but even in Zone One there is still clean up work to be done. That’s where Mark Spitz comes in. He’s part of one of the civilian teams charged with eliminating the most docile of the remaining undead. But while the job itself is supposed to be easy enough, Spitz isn’t just slaying monsters in the street. He’s also battling them in his head, assailed by memories of his battle to survive the outbreak and struggling to reconcile himself with the devastated world he now inhabits. And when things start to go belly up in Zone One, he once again finds himself chest deep in the blood and ruin of the end of the world.

Feed by Mira Grant

Feed is the first novel in Mira Grant’s zombie-tastic Newsflesh Trilogy. Once again, the rider on the pale horse is making the rounds. In trying to cure humanity’s every ill, from cancer to the common cold, a terrible virus was created that spread unchecked. It took over bodies and minds and turned ordinary people into ravenous monsters obeying a primal, fundamental command to feed. 20 years after the virus devastated the population, Georgia and Shaun Mason are chasing the truth in a post-apocalyptic world. Who was responsible for the event now known as the Rising? How did it happen that something meant for good caused so much destruction and death? But when they discover the dark truth behind it all, Georgia and Shaun find themselves faced with an even more fraught situation: the truth will out, but getting it out there might just kill them.

The Living Dead by George Romero and Daniel Kraus

When it comes to zombies who else do we turn to but the father of modern zombie tale? There is no denying that George Romero forever changed the zombie narrative, and without him some of our favorite undead adventures on film or page would not be possible. His passing in 2017 was marked with great sadness by the whole horror community. So when Daniel Kraus, a talented horror author in his own right, was tasked with completing George Romero’s last work – the unfinished The Living Dead – the buzz was, understandably, massive. And most reviewers will agree, Kraus out did himself and in doing so did justice to Romero’s legacy. The Living Dead begins, as zombie stories do, with a body that won’t stay dead. And since zombies are a bit like the rodents of the undead, their numbers quickly spread. Romero and Kraus’s novel follows several simultaneous stories through the incipient apocalypse – an African American teenager and a Muslim immigrant battling the undead in a Midwest trailer park, a death cult taking shape on a US aircraft carrier, a lone news anchor broadcasting to a world that might no longer be listening, and an autistic federal employee compiling data against an unlikely future. Who will survive until the end, and what the end will be, only time will tell.

cover of Brown Girl in the Ring by Nalo Hopkinson

Brown Girl in the Ring by Nalo Hopkinson

In a crumbling, dystopian Toronto, young mother Ti-Jeanne helps her grandmother heal the people who live inside the barricaded city. The rich and privileged abandoned the inner city, blocking off the roads and retreating to the surrounding country side. Inside the walls there is no electricity, no modernity – the inhabitants have rediscovered older ways of living, growing food, bartering for goods, and healing through herb lore like that practiced by Ti-Jeanne and her grandmother. But when the rich outside the city start preying on those inside, harvesting their bodes for organs, Ti-Jeanne must embrace an ancient power to face down threats from both without and within the city walls. Even knowing how high the cost might be.

Bonus link: CBC Radio’s IDEAS Radio for the Mind ran an episode called “The Coming Zombie Apocalypse”, which featured Hopkinson as a guest. You can listen to the hour long program on the CBC website and I highly recommend that you do! It is both fascinating and horrifying.

Fresh From the Skeleton’s Mouth

If like me you’re seeking catharsis in the form of worst case scenario narratives, make sure to check out this new list of Post-Apocalyptic book recommendations over at Book Riot.

On Episode 55 of Dead Headspace, Gemma Amor, Laurel Hightower, and Cina Pelayo guest star to talk about their forthcoming anthology We Are Wolves, which you have heard me tale about before and which I am SO excited about.

The Midnight Society has announced that it is crowdfunding Volume II of The Midnight Pals! If you missed out on Volume I, or are just excited to get your hands on more campfire hijinks from your favorite hypothetical gathering of horror authors, make sure to get your contributions in. The deadline is in mid-December!

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

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book: The Rules Do Not Apply by Ariel Levy

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!

This week’s book has a Thanksgiving connection! I hope all you Americans celebrating had a great turkey day and that you had pumpkin pie for breakfast! Before we dive into this week’s pick, content warning for pregnancy/infant loss, alcoholism, and trauma.

The Rules Do Not Apply: A Memoir by Ariel Levy

Back in 2013, Ariel Levy wrote an essay for The New Yorker called “Thanksgiving in Mongolia,” a devastating piece of writing that described how she went to Mongolia on assignment over Thanksgiving, while pregnant, and while she was there went into premature labor and lost her baby. It’s an essay I highly recommend, and it captivated me when it first published. This memoir is an extension of that essay, giving you more details about her life and context to her trip.

The Rules Do Not Apply is a relatively short memoir, but it starts with Ariel’s childhood and describes in beautiful detail her upbringing, the unconventional relationships her parents held, and how she first got her start in journalism. She covers how she learned to love travel and relished in being the type of woman who would go off on a moment’s notice to a new country and dive into exciting new opportunities. This mindset informs her decisions later on in life, as she met her wife and they were married before marriage equality passed, so they made up a lot of the rules as they went.

Levy is also painfully honest about the troubles in her marriage, how she and wife fell apart after their son’s death, and her infidelity. The honesty isn’t always pretty or easy to read, but it’s painfully raw and real, and that’s what makes this book so memorable to me. Levy writes about exhilarating happiness and success, but also about the miserable lows and grief she experienced, and how she had to rebuild her life after loss. This memoir may not be for the faint of heart, but it’ll certainly stick with you!

Bonus: I listened to the audiobook, which Levy narrates herself! It’s a great way to experience this memoir.

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, All the Books, and Twitter. If someone forwarded this newsletter to you, click here to subscribe.
Categories
True Story

Early Native Americans

The history of Thanksgiving is, of course, a loaded topic. If you grew up around when I did (or are older!), you might be familiar with the Thanksgiving play in the movie Addams Family Values, where Wednesday plays Pocahontas (Jamestown! Pocahontas was at the Jamestown settlement!) and says to the Pilgrims:

“You have taken the land which is rightfully ours. Years from now, my people will be forced to live in mobile homes on reservations; your people will wear cardigans and drink highballs. We will sell our bracelets by the roadside; you will play golf and enjoy hot hors d’oeuvres. My people will have pain and degradation; your people will have stick-shifts. The gods of my tribe have spoken. They have said, ‘Do not trust the Pilgrims, especially Sarah Miller.’”

So we’re going to focus on Native American history today. With a lean towards early American history (17th/18th centuries).

An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz

This covers from the 1600s to the 2010s, and looks at United States history from some of the “more than five hundred federally recognized Indigenous nations” that still exist. It goes from colonization to imperialism and beyond. Shorter than 300 pages, this might be a good beginning-of-2021 read for your list.

Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War by Nathaniel Philbrick

This book totally changed my ideas about the Pilgrims and early America. There can be a tendency to harken back to when everyone was kinder and better, etc, but the more you study history, the more you learn that people have always been horrible (and good! but also horrible). I will never think of Miles Standish the same way again.

This Land Is Their Land: The Wampanoag Indians, Plymouth Colony, and the Troubled History of Thanksgiving by David J. Silverman

The story of Thanksgiving is basically the story of a group of religious fanatics who came to a place where other people lived and then promptly started starving to death because they didn’t know how to farm the crops there. I grew up rolling my eyes at this “liberal” version of the story, but then I became an adult and read what is reported to have actually happened, and yep. Historian Silverman looks at what led to the Wampanoag/Pilgrim alliance and what destroyed it.

Sioux Women: Traditionally Sacred by Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve

We know there’s a tendency to speak of Native Americans as one cohesive unit, when that is categorically false. In Sneve’s book, she focuses on how “Sioux women are the center of tribal life and the core of the tiospaye, the extended family. They maintain the values and traditions of Sioux culture, but their own stories and experiences often remain untold.” For this hundred page read, she combed through “the winter counts” and oral records of her ancestors to discover their past.

That’s it for this week! For more nonfiction reads, check out the For Real podcast which I co-host with the excellent Kim here at Book Riot. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Police Sketches of Literary Characters Based on Their Book Descriptions

Hello mystery fans! Your inbox is probably filled with Black Friday everything meaning I am either lost in that sea of sales or the thing that sticks out as not. The week of holidays–even if holidays are cancelled in 2020–are always really quiet but I still found you some good posts and roundups to read, podcasts, Kindle deals, and a bit of my reading life.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Rincey and Katie get geared up for the holiday season with a giant pile of books that you could give to someone (or yourself) on the latest Read or Dead.

The Eighth Girl cover image

Maxine Mei-Fung Chung, author The Eighth Girl on Crime Writers of Color podcast.

Police Sketches of Literary Characters Based on Their Book Descriptions

Washington Post’s Best thriller and mystery books of 2020

Amazon put out their top 20 books of 2020 with Blacktop Wasteland and Deacon King Kong making the list. And they also have top genre lists with 20 best mystery & thrillers including And Now She’s Gone, Winter Counts, and The Searcher.

Stacey Abrams Has Been Pivotal for Voter Turnout—But She’s Also a Romantic Suspense Novelist

Jennifer Moffett’s ‘Those Who Prey’ Is Your New True-Crime Obsession

See a first look of Claire Fuller’s follow-up to Bitter Orange

Mystery Writers Of America Announced 2021 Grand Master and Raven Award Recipients

This reads like a spy novel: How German Librarians Finally Caught an Elusive Book Thief

Kellye Garrett Talks Television, Crime Fiction, and #OwnVoices

Giveaway: Sign Up for a Chance to Win a Free iPad and Win a Free Fiction Book Just for Entering!

Giveaway: Win an iPad!

Giveaway: Enter to win a $250 Barnes and Noble Gift Card!

Bookish 2020 Holiday Gift Guide

Kindle Deals

Memorial Drive: A Daughter’s Memoir by Natasha Trethewey

Here’s a memoir that falls into the true crime category as Trethewey, a Pulitzer Prize–winning poet, writes about her mother being murdered by her stepfather. It’s currently $3.99.

The ABC Murders (Hercule Poirot series Book 13) by Agatha Christie

If you like to read the classics over the holidays here is one of Christie’s best mysteries–trying to catch a serial killer–currently on sale for $1.99!

Two Can Keep a Secret by Karen M. McManus

If you’re a fan of small-town unsolved mysteries here’s one currently on sale for $1.99! (Review)

A Bit of My Week In Reading

Firekeeper’s Daughter by Angeline Boulley

As soon as I got an early copy of this 2021 mystery title written by an enrolled member of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians I started reading it. The voice from the beginning grabbed me and took me away and it has one of my favorite things ever: an elderly person that says whatever they want whenever they want and is hilarious. I can’t wait to spend the weekend curled up with this book.

sissy

Sissy: A Coming-of-Gender Story by Jacob Tobia

I’m finally getting to all the nonfiction audiobooks I’ve been dying to read, including Hidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family by Robert Kolker and Sissy. Both are wildly different from each other while also being about the treatment of marginalized voices and both are excellent books with great narrations


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, Goodreads, 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.

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Giveaways

112720-ReadBlissEAC-Giveaways

Book Riot is teaming up with Read Bliss this month to giveaway a new iPad to one lucky winner! Entering is as easy as filling out the form here or click on the photo below to subscribe to the Read Bliss newsletter.

Here’s a little more about Read Bliss: Read Bliss is your destination for all things romance and reading. With the latest in romance book news, genre, discussions, author interviews, reading challenges and more, you won’t want to miss a single moment. Watch. Read. Love.

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Riot Rundown

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Giveaways

112520-BarelyFunctionalAdult-Giveaway

We’re giving away six copies of Barely Functional Adult by Mechi Ng to six lucky Riot readers, and one grand prize winner will also receive a Barely Functional Adult plush toy!

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

Here’s what it’s all about:

From the creator of Barely Functional Adult, a painfully relatable webcomic with over 130k followers on Instagram, comes a never-before-seen collection of incriminating short stories about exes, murder, friendship, therapy, anxiety, Hufflepuff, sucking at things, freaking out about things, calming down momentarily, melodrama, wrinkles, pettiness, and other wonderful delights. In this beautiful, four-color collection, Meichi perfectly captures the best and worst of us in every story, allowing us to weep with pleasure at our own fallibility. Hilarious, relatable, and heart-wrenchingly honest, Barely Functional Adult will have you laughing and crying in the same breath, while taking solace in the fact that we’re anything but alone in this world.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for November 27

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with a random selection of books (or not so random in this case) for Friday fun and a bit of genre news. We had a typical Colorado snow this week, in that it was a sloppy nightmare with cars getting stuck in the roads in the morning, and then everything had melted off the streets approximately six hours later. But it definitely feels like we’re heading into winter, which I consider to be also a superior season because it causes the cats to be more cuddly. Hope you had a safe holiday if you’re in the US, or a most excellent (and also safe) Thursday if not. See you next Tuesday!

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

Silvia Moreno-Garcia has revealed the cover for her upcoming sword and sorcery novella, The Return of the Sorceress

WorldCon 2021 (aka DisCon III) will be doing a special Hugo Award for video games.

Amazon has released its picks for Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of 2020.

Locus pulled the genre titles from The New York Times Best Books of 2020 list.

The beta version of the Chinese Science Fiction Database has been released.

Elizabeth Bear talks about diversity, mental health, and queers in space over at PopMatters

A health and book update from Connie Willis

John Boyega continues to fight the good fight

The Twitter roasting of Ready Player Two has commenced. I have made popcorn.

Captain Jack Harkness is coming back to Doctor Who!

A Brief History of Dragons Throughout Western Literature

Monolith in Utah!!!!!

On Book Riot

This month you can win a YA Fantasy and Sci-Fi book bundle and/or a $250 dollar Barnes and Noble gift card.

Free Association Friday: Alex’s Housemate Recommends

November is just going to be the month for slightly self-indulgent Fridays, because it’s a month of excellent birthdays–mine included, and my housemate’s as well. My housemate, Corina, reads at a pace that leaves me absolutely stunned, so I asked her what books she wants people to read for her birthday. She came up with a varied list.

This Alien Shore by C.S. Friedman

This is Corina’s favorite book of all time, which I regretfully still haven’t gotten around to reading yet and I need to do it soon if we’re going to stay friends. Along with its long awaited sequel, This Virtual Night and Malka Older’s Infomocracy, these are also books she loosely groups as imagining what the internet could be in the future.

Archangel by Sharon Shinn

Sharon Shinn and Guy Gavriel Kay (her number one pick for him is Ysabel) are her automatic go-to authors for comfort reads that she returns to again and again. Archangel is extra cool because it’s science fiction masquerading as fantasy, which is always fun.

Master of Poisons by Andrew Hairston

This is an epic fantasy with a gorgeous environmental message that hit Corina, as the child of two Colorado mountain hippies, particularly hard and really stuck with her. The prose requires some work to read but is incredibly rewarding, and you’ll be thinking about it for months after you’ve finished it.

Zero Sum Game by S.L. Huang

This is another double feature recommendation, sitting alongside Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee. Both are books about people who are really good at math in absolutely reality-bending ways. which is extra cool if you’re a person who’s not necessarily that great at math but still thinks it’s really neat on the principle of the thing.

a curved dagger with a white hilt and jeweled base, set against a red-tinged backdrop

Empire of Sand by Tasha Suri

I told Corina she had to read this book because, and I quote myself here, “it’s about disaster heteros.” She has seen the wisdom of my assessment. It’s a gorgeous Mugal fantasy book, but more importantly, you spend most of the pages wanting to squish the two main characters’ faces together so that they’ll just kiss already.

The Merciful Crow by Margaret Owen

This book has reincarnation, it’s all about classism/caste, and the main character is a lady who takes absolutely zero crap off anyone.

Use of Weapons by Iain M. Banks

Beyond the fact that this is a Culture novel and therefore has AI in it (one of Corina’s favorite things in a book, other than dragons), this particular novel has a really cool narrative structure that comes to fruition near the end–and does some really awesome character reveal work.

Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas

This is just a delightful, queer book to begin with. In addition, growing up in Colorado meant having grown up around a lot of Latinx culture… and it wasn’t something either of us saw reflected in much of what we read as kids. Cemetery Boys is a celebration of that familiar (if observed from the outside) culture–and such a beautiful story about being loved and accepted for who you truly are.


See you, space pirates. 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
Today In Books

German Librarians Game Of Cat & Mouse Catches Book Thief: Today In Books

German Librarians’ Game of Cat & Mouse Catches Book Thief

For thirteen years, German librarians played a game of cat and mouse with a book thief who expertly sliced out maps from antique books. This very real story reads like a spy thriller.

Lorde Has A Photo Book With Proceeds Going To Climate Change Research

New Zealand singer and songwriter Lorde took a trip to Antarctica with her friend Harriet Were, and now you can purchase a photo book of Were’s photos and Lorde’s writings. The book, Going South, is up for preorder on Lorde’s website and it will start shipping in February. All proceeds will be “donated by Lorde to Antarctica New Zealand to support a postgraduate scholar to study climate change science.”

Chicago Public High School Students/Staff Get Obama Memoir for Free

In a virtual assembly, Barack Obama announced to Chicago public school students and staff that they’ll have free access to digital, audio, or print copies of his presidential memoir, A Promised Land, through the rest of the year. In the new year, there will also be “a little book club.”

How To Find Audiobooks For Sleep

Meditation and relaxation can look different for everyone. Click for some suggestions for finding the audiobooks for sleep that work for you.