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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for February 26

Happy Friday, shipmates! Well, that was sure a week just now, wasn’t it? It’s Alex, come to you two days from the end of February with some Black SFF to preorder and a smattering of fun links. I’ve got to tell you, the thing that made me squee most this week was the film Space Sweepers (on US Netflix), which is a Korean SF movie about a crew of space-trash-hunting disaster gremlins fighting against corporatist space exploration at its absolute worst. It’s colorful and fun and is the most enjoyable SF movie I’ve watched in years. Look it up if you feel like watching something instead of reading for a bit (and I should make a list of SF books that give me Space Sweepers vibes… maybe for a future newsletter). Stay safe out there, shipmates, and I’ll see you on Tuesday!

Happy thing for today: Kate Mulgrew definitively won one of the recent Twitter meme challenges

Let’s make 2021 better than 2020. A good place to start? The Okra Project and blacklivesmatter.carrd.co


News and Views

Congratulations to the 2020 British Fantasy Award Winners!

2021 Rhysling Award Nominees have been announced

Democracy Now! has re-released a 2005 interview with Octavia Butler

Tasha Suri shares some gorgeous art of her characters from The Jasmine Throne

Is there such a thing as a necessary prequel?

On Book Riot

20 must-read 2021 young adult fantasy releases

Howl’s Moving Castle gifts that will capture your heart

10 speculative short story collections to enjoy in 2021

10 amazing classics and fairytale queer retellings you need to read

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about dream adaptations and dream casts.

This month you can enter to win $100 at a bookstore of your choice, a bundle of YA books plus a $250 Visa gift card, and/or a Kindle Paperwhite. And only for Canadian Rioters, a $100 Indigo gift card.

Free Association Friday: Preorders Are Love

As we head out of Black History Month 2021, let’s check out some awesome-looking SFF books by Black authors. Preorders are love!

Home Is Not a Country by Safia Elhillo (March 2)

Nima, the daughter of an immigrant, feels both too much like an outsider and not enough in her home in the suburbs. As she grapples with social upheaval, she meets the phantom of another life, that of Yasmeen, the name her parents almost gave her—but Yasmeen is far more real than she seems. This is also a novel in verse, and it looks gorgeous.

The Unbroken by C.L. Clark (March 23)

Touraine is a soldier who was conscripted as a child. She’s now been sent back to her homeland with her company to stop a rebellion, and there she meets Luca, who just needs a turncoat to get her uncle off her throne.

Witches Steeped in Gold by Ciannon Smart (April 20)

Two witches–one imprisoned since birth, the other the daughter of the queen–make an alliance to take down a common enemy, ensuring revenge for one and survival for the other. But the chase is long and the violence intoxicating, and each will go to extreme lengths to get what she wants.

Son of the Storm by Suyi Davies Okungbowa (May 11)

Danso is a disillusioned scholar in the city of Bassa who wants only to escape his social and political obligations as one of the elite. He gets his wish when a skin-changing warrior named Lilong shows up wounded in his barn, claiming she’s from lands that everyone knows don’t exist and quickly dragging him into a world of magic and conspiracy.

Sorrowland by Rivers Solomon (May 4)

A pregnant woman escapes from a religious compound to give birth to her twins in the woods. But cults don’t let go easily, and she’s forced to fight against that community and the outside world to defend her family–a battle that begins an uncanny metamorphosis of her body that can only be understood by facing the past.

A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark (May 11)

Fatma is the youngest woman working for the Ministry of Alchemy, Enchantments, and Supernatural Entities in 1912 Cairo, and she’s already prevented the destruction of the universe once. Now she’s called on to investigate a mysterious murder, one committed by someone who claims to be the famous al-Jahiz, who pierced the veil between magical and mundane realms 40 years ago, now returned to judge the world for its societal sins.

The Taking of Jake Livingston by Ryan Douglass (July 13)

Jake Livingston has two major problems as a 16-year-old: he’s a medium who sees ghosts everywhere, and he’s surrounded by racist teachers at the private school in which he’s one of the few Black students. But when a new Black student named Allister arrives, at least he might have a shot at romance. Too bad the ghosts are getting more insistent, and one of them, the spirit of a school shooter, has his own plans for Jake.

The Sisters of Reckoning by Charlotte Nicole Davis (August 10)

Now that the Good Luck Girls are free, most have crossed the border to pursue new lives, while Aster tries to help more girls escape. But when she finds out about a new welcome house opening, she decides that helping individuals isn’t enough. She hatches an ambitious and dangerous plan to free all dustbloods, and calls upon her friends to make it a reality.


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
True Story

Deep-Dive Reads

You know how sometimes you’re like, okay, I don’t have time to take a class about this thing, but I would like to feel like I am pretty informed about it/know more about it than I would learn from a Wikipedia skim? And sometimes you go on and are like, okay, but I would like to learn a LOT about this thing. That’s why we have deep-dive reads! Books where the author rolled up their sleeves and said, we are going to get into this today. Let’s learn some stuff:

Punishment Without Crime: How Our Massive Misdemeanor System Traps the Innocent and Makes America More Unequal by Alexandra Natapoff

We hear about “crimes and misdemeanors” but what are misdemeanors? Natapoff “reveals the inner workings of a massive petty offense system that produces over 13 million cases each year” and punishes people before they’re convicted, many of them poor and people of color.

The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer by Siddhartha Mukherjee

This history of cancer treatment and research won the Pulitzer and is on approximately one million lists for best nonfiction. Mukherjee starts in Egypt 4,600 years ago and continues all the way to the 21st century. He also covers the history of hospice and palliative medicine. This one’s massive, but worth it.

The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee: Native America from 1890 to the Present by David Treuer

Popular culture over the past century has portrayed Native American history as ending in the 1890 massacre at Wounded Knee. Treuer, a member of the Ojibwe nation, shows how “the story of American Indians since the end of the nineteenth century to the present is one of unprecedented resourcefulness and reinvention.”

A Terrible Thing to Waste: Environmental Racism and Its Assault on the American Mind by Harriet A. Washington

My friend pointed me to this 2019 release about the impact of environmental racism. Just TWO facts from it: “Nearly two of every five African American homes in Baltimore are plagued by lead-based paint. Almost all of the 37,500 Baltimore children who suffered lead poisoning between 2003 and 2015 were African American.” Get a thorough grounding in the effects of environmental racism and what can be done to remedy it.


For more nonfiction new releases, 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.

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Today In Books

Paul McCartney Publishing 900-Page Lyrical Biography: Today in Books

Paul McCartney Publishing 900-Page Lyrical Biography

Former Beatle Paul McCartney is set to publish The Lyrics, a two-volume “self-portrait in 154 songs.” The books will cover McCartney’s compositions from the first song he wrote at the age of fourteen all the way to present day. With each song, McCartney will explore, based on conversations the musician had with poet Paul Muldoon, “the circumstances in which they were written, the people and places that inspired them, and what [McCartney] thinks of them now.” The Lyrics will be released November 2.

America Ferrera Makes Directorial Debut with Netflix’s Adaptation of I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter

America Ferrera is making her feature film directorial debut with Netflix’s adaptation of the novel I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter by Erika L. Sánchez. The film is being produced by Anonymous Content and the script will be written by Linda Yvette Chávez. Erika L. Sánchez will serve as co-producer.

Charles Yu Establishes Creative Writing Prize in Honor of His Parents

National Book Award-winning author Charles Yu has established the Betty L. Yu and Jin C. Yu Creative Writing Prizes, in collaboration with TaiwaneseAmerican.org. The award is named in honor of Yu’s parents and is “intended to encourage and recognize creative literary work by Taiwanese American high school and college students, and to foster discussion and community around such work.” The submission deadline is March 31. Winners and finalists will be announced in May 2021.

Who Can Get Your Book Grades Accessibility in the Age of Exclusives, Restrictive Licensing

Who Can Get Your Book is a new tool to showcase the damage exclusives, embargoes, and licensing agreements have on book accessibility.

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book: The Less People Know About Us by Axton Betz-Hamilton

Welcome to Read This Book, a 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!

Today’s pick is a memoir that I inhaled earlier this year because it contains a level of WTF that I couldn’t wrap my head around at first. Many readers have shared with me that they first heard of this story on a popular episode of the Criminal podcast, but if you’ve not heard of Axton Betz-Hamilton, then get ready for a bonkers true story, which was a 2020 Edgar Awards winner!

The Less People Know About Us: A Mystery of Betrayal, Family Secrets, and Stolen Identity by Axton Betz-Hamilton

Axton Betz-Hamilton grew up in rural Indiana in the 1990s. After her grandfather died when she was 10, her family began to notice their mail going missing. What started off as annoying but seemingly innocuous became more sinister when their utilities would get shut off for nonpayment…and then the strange bills started showing up. Someone had stolen her parents’ identities, and no one seemed to know who might be at fault, or how the thief kept obtaining personal information. Axton spent the second half of her childhood living in a family clouded by suspicion because the only logical conclusion was that someone close to them must be the thief. As a result, they began to withdraw from friends and family, and became suspicious of everyone. The claustrophobic environment was too much for Axton, but when she escaped to college, she discovered something horrifying–her own identity had also been stolen, and her credit was wrecked, going back to when she was a child. She became determined to find the truth.

I feel like I read this memoir holding my breath. Betz-Hamilton does a brilliant job demonstrating that identity theft is not a victimless crime, starting out with the paranoia that she and her parents experienced, and detailing the financial and emotional effects of a ruined credit score and constant paranoia. She mines the depths of her family’s distress and anxiety and shows how that shaped her childhood and the adult she would become. The events of this book began before identity theft was seen as the threat it is now, and people who found themselves victims of this crime often found themselves helpless, with nowhere to turn. That had a tremendous effect on Axton, and when she realizes the extent of the fraud, she becomes extremely motivated to research the crime. The chapters devoted to her becoming an identity theft expert and investigating her own case are both vindicating and fascinating, but it’s the shocking reveal about who was really behind the theft that readers will remember most from this book. It’s a revelation that leaves Axton shocked and revisiting every moment in her past to see events in a completely different light, and those moments of reckoning are equally powerful. Ultimately, this memoir is engrossing, well-written, and measured, and it demonstrates how a nonviolent crime can have devastating effects on people’s lives.

If you’re intrigued by this story and this is the first time you’re hearing about it, I advise not Googling the author or looking up the author’s episode on Criminal unless you want some major spoilers! If you listened to the podcast, I highly recommend this book for its in-depth and fascinating look at Axton’s life, and the aftermath of her discovery.

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
Unusual Suspects

Hillary Clinton & Louise Penny Wrote A Thriller!

Hi mystery fans! I love when it rains awesome news and I can link to so many great things.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Making ALL the popcorn for this: Hillary Clinton wrote a political thriller with author Louise Penny: State of Terror

5 of the Best Mystery Books Like DEAD TO ME

Walter Mosley’s Easy Rawlins series will be adapted into a TV series!

Mystery & Thriller Books Coming This March

Mila Kunis to Star in Jessica Knoll’s “Luckiest Girl Alive” at Netflix

Sherlock Holmes gets a supernatural twist in first look at Netflix’s The Irregulars

Anthony Bourdain’s Crime Novel to Become TV Series

Finalists in 25 competitive categories for the 2021 Audie Awards have been announced!

The Women Pushing Espionage Fiction Into New Territories: A Roundtable Discussion

Nikki Dolson’s story Neighbors will be in the Best American Mystery and Suspense 2021 anthology!

Sonia Faleiro talks to Shondaland about her new book, “The Good Girls: An Ordinary Killing” and the future of women in India.

On February 27, 2021, The Unconvention will host four online panels to introduce the 2021 Lefty Nominees and their books.

The Lingering Terror of Silence of the Lambs

For the Spy Novelist Robert Littell, The Cold War Never Ended

The Marsh King’s Daughter: Daisy Ridley to headline Neil Burger thriller

Flight Attendant’s Debut Novel Drops First Trailer

Stacey Abrams on Her New Thriller ‘While Justice Sleeps’ and Why She Stopped Using a Pen Name

The Dry adaptation is coming to North America on May 21!

Win a Year of e-Reading!

Kindle Deals

Homegrown Hero (Jay Qasim, Book 2) by Khurrum Rahman

The sequel to East Of Hounslow (the most reluctant MI5 spy ever!) is only $0.99!!! Get thee this book and the first if you’ve yet to read it.

Barbed Wire Heart by Tess Sharpe

Barbed Wire Heart by Tess Sharpe

If you’re a fan of dark crime shows like Ozarks this book is for you and it’s $1.99 and I will read anything Sharpe writes! (Review)


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

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Book Riot is teaming up with Early Bird Books to give away a 1-year subscription to Scribd! Fill out the form here and subscribe to the Early Bird Books Newsletter for a chance to win!

Here’s a little more about the Early Bird Books Newsletter: Love to read? Love great deals? Early Bird Books brings you free and bargain eBooks that match your interests. You can sign up for free, read the books on any device, and the books are yours to keep. Sign up to our eBook deals newsletter and start getting great deals on bestselling titles today! Learn more at earlybirdbooks.com

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Riot Rundown

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The Stack

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Audiobooks

Audiobooks 02/25/21

Hola Audiophiles! Welcome back to another week of audiobook love. There are some really great titles out this week, including releases from Nalini Singh, Joe Ide, Ransom Riggs, and Charlaine Harris. I’m going to tell you about some books that may have flown under your radar, and then immediately run outside to soak up the sun that decided to show itself today.

Ready? Let’s audio.

New Releases – Week of February 23

publisher descriptions in quotes

cover image of The City of Good Death by Priyanka Champaneri

The City of Good Death by Priyanka Champaneri

On the banks of the Ganges sits India’s holy city of Banaras, the place where pilgrims come to be released from the cycle of reincarnation by purifying fire. Pramesh has lived quite contently in Banaras for ten years managing a death hostel, shepherding the dying who who come to the holy city in search of a good death. But one day a lifeless form of a man is pulled from the river, a man with an uncanny resemblance to Pramesh. It turns out it’s his estranged cousin Sagar, and his presence casts a shadow over the life Pramesh and his wife Shobha have built for their family. (fiction)

Read by Manish Dongardive (Mumbai Noir by Altaf Tyrewala) – I’m unfamiliar with Manish’s work, but that sample sold me in seconds! Soothing, smooth, very “tell me more.”

Confident Women: Swindlers, Grifters, and Shapeshifters of the Feminine Persuasion by Tori Telfer

Toriiiii! I met Tori Telfer (and her mom) when I was still a bookseller in San Diego during an event for her first book, Lady Killers and I’m jazzed to hear about this next effort. This is a look at some of history’s notorious but often forgotten female con artists and the crimes they dared to commit. (nonfiction, true crime)

Read by Jaime Lamchick (Crooked Magic by Eva Chase) – Jaime is another narrator I’m not familiar with, but the sample feels like she’s the perfect person to read this book. Her reading gives me equal parts “this subject is fascinating” and “can you believe women get looked over even in the subject of crime?” Yessss.

Escaping Exodus: Symbiosis by Nicky Drayden

Check this: in the far future nearly a thousand years removed from Earth, humanity survives inside of giant space animals called Zenzee. Cool cool cool. Humanity has also just about driven their giant space friends to extinction with this exploitation. Even better! The good news is that thanks to careful oversight by new minted ruler Doka Kaleigh and sacrifice by all of its crew, life inside the Parados I is now on the brink of utopia. But Doka’s rivals feel threatened by that success; “when a cataclysmic event on another Zenzee world forces Doka and his people to accept thousands of refugees, a culture clash erupts, revealing secrets from the past that could endanger their future.” The stakes are even greater for Doka, and that much stickier; he’s fallen for the one woman he is forbidden to love—his wife. (science fiction)

Read by Staci Mitchell (Colonize This! edited by Daisy Hernández and Bushra Rehman) and James Fouhey (The Hazel Wood by Melissa Albert)

Latest Listens

cover image of Gilded Ones by Namina Forna

The Gilded Ones by Namina Forna

I said I was going to buy this one in print because look at that cover! I love me some Shayna Small though and I’m impatient, so I listened to it instead. Shayna (and Namima Forna) did not do me wrong!

It’s the day of the ritual blood ceremony that will determine if 16-year-old Deka be allowed to remain in her village and she really needs her blood to run red. But of course, her blood runs a brilliant gold, the color of the impure. In an instant, the village and family she’s known all her life want nothing to do with her, and she’s subjected to a fate worse than death. She wakes up some time later, dazed and confused in a room with a mysterious woman who makes her an offer: she can stay in the village and submit to her fate, or she can join an army of girls like her and go fight for the emperor. Seeing no other viable option, she follows the woman to join that army. The further she gets into the empire’s mission to eradicate a legion of demons knows as Deathshrieks, it becomes clear that none of what she’s taken for truth in her life is what it seems.

I loved everything about this conflicted heroine marching into battle armed with abilities she knows not the full power of, a young woman who though soft and tender is also as fierce as her blood is gold. Her origins are as much a secret to her as they are to us, and that slow revelation is just pure wow; it’s so satisfying to watch her question authority and trust her intuition, and of course embrace the power she was always taught to fear and despise. Then there’s the pure joy of the friendship she develops with the band of young women alongside her on the battle field, women with physical and emotional scars who ride as hard for Deka as she does for them. There is so much power and Black girl magic vibrating through this whole narrative, it gives me chills. I remember when there were little to no Black and brown girl heroines in YA fantasy (or you know, lit at large). Spending this time with (and rooting for) Deka was really special.

And if I haven’t sold it to you hard enough, here’s this amazing pitch: an African-inspired world that “basically imagines what would happen if the Dora Milaje from Black Panther were stuck in The Handmaid’s Tale and decided they weren’t going to take it anymore.” YES.

Shayna Small (The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett, Trouble the Saints by Alaya Dawn Johnson) delivers another solid performance here, giving us the full range of accent work in her repertoire. Small delivers all of them richly and passionately, bringing to life each of the characters’ distinct personalities. The audiobook clocks in at just under 13 hours, but it felt like half that. Go get it!

From the Internets

at Audible: Voices of Audible: Celebrating Black Poetry

at Audiofile: Soak in the Sun and Solve Crimes with these Mystery Audiobooks

at Libro.fm: Traci from The Stacks: Black History Month Audiobook Picks

Over at the Riot

Meet the 2021 Audio Awards finalists!

6 of the best audiobooks for your LGBTQ+ book club. Homie and Red, White & Royal Blue are two of my favorite audiobooks of the last couple of years!

7 Audiobooks for Times When Being an Adult is Too Much. Been there!


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

Thanks again to our sponsor OrangeSky Audio, publishers of Nightmare House and Mischief by Douglas Clegg. In the chilling Harrow series, a man goes to claim an inheritance and ends up unlocking the long-buried secrets of a sinister mansion—eek! This gothic horror series is perfect for fans of The Haunting of Hill House, Paul Tremblay, and Stephen King.

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Today In Books

Poet and Activist Lawrence Ferlinghetti Dies at 101: Today in Books

Poet and Activist Lawrence Ferlinghetti Dies at 101

Lawrence Ferlinghetti—poet, political activist, publisher, and owner of the famed San Francisco bookstore City Lightsdied in his home on Monday at the age of 101. Ferlinghetti became well-known for his poetry collection A Coney Island of the Mind. The poet is considered the “spiritual godfather of the Beat poetry movement.” Even at the end of his life, Ferlinghetti continued to write, publishing new work as recently as 2017.

Angel Manuel Soto to Direct DC Films’ First Latinx Superhero Movie Blue Beetle

Angel Manuel Soto (Charm City Kings) has signed on to direct DC Films’ first Latinx superhero movie Blue Beetle. While the Blue Beetle character was first introduced in 1939, Soto’s film will focus on the most recent version of Blue Beetle which was introduced in 2006. In this version, the Blue Beetle is a Mexican-American teenager named Jaime Reyes.

Hillary Clinton Writes Political Thriller with Author Louise Penny

Former secretary of state and first lady Hillary Clinton has written a political thriller novel with co-author and friend Louise Penny. The novel State of Terror will be published by Simon & Schuster and St. Martin’s Press in October of this year.

Meet the 2021 Audie Awards Finalists

The Audio Publisher’s Association has announced the finalists for the 2021 Audie Awards. Find out who’s been nominated in all 25 categories.