Categories
Giveaways

040221-MacmillanEAC-Giveaways

Book Riot is teaming up with FSG’s Work in Progress Newsletter to give away a year’s subscription to TBR at the hardcover level! Our book subscription service pairs you with a professional book nerd who creates your own tailored book recommendations. You get the best books you didn’t know you were looking for, and a reading experience that’s expertly-curated with recommendations that are as diverse and exciting as books and readers are. Fill out the form here for a chance to win!

Here’s a little more about FSG’s Work in Progress Newsletter: A weekly literary fiction newsletter with a compendium of original works, exclusive excerpts, and interviews with authors from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Categories
Riot Rundown

040221-TheVines-RR

Categories
Today In Books

TO ALL THE BOYS Spinoff Series in the Works: Today in Books

Randall Park Makes Feature Film Directorial Debut with Adaptation of Graphic Novel Shortcomings

Randall Park is taking on directing duties for the upcoming film Shortcomings. The movie is based on Adrian Tomine’s graphic novel Shortcomings, which follows Ben Tanaka, Miko Hayashi, and Alice Kim, three young people living in the Bay area and grappling with what it means to be Asian-American. Randall Park had previously directed the series finale episode of Fresh Off the Boat, the ABC sitcom in which he starred as Louis Huang. This will be Park’s feature film directorial debut. Park will also be producing alongside Michael Golamco and Hieu Ho’s Imminent Collision.

To All the Boys Spinoff Series in the Works

After the To All the Boys film trilogy turned out to be a major success for Netflix, the screen franchise from Awesomeness and ACE Entertainment is looking to keep the magic going with a TV series spinoff. The new project, which is still in early stages of development, would follow Kitty Song Covey, the youngest of the Covey sisters, on her quest to find true love. Anna Catchcart, who played Kitty in the To All the Boys movies, is on board to reprise her role. Jenny Han, author of the To All the Boys novels, would be the creator, writer, and executive producer of the potential series. She’s currently working on a pilot script with Siobhan Vivian.

Asian American Writers’ Workshop Hosts Women Warriors: A Solidarity Reading

On Thursday, April 8, Asian American Writers’ Workshop is hosting Women Warriors: A Solidarity Reading. About the event, the organization said, “In the aftermath of the horrific murders in Atlanta, GA, we offer this space as one for grieving, healing, and empowering. During a time marked by tragedy, anger, and loss, we look to our artistry to find and celebrate the resilience and brilliance of each and every woman warrior.” Tune in for readings from authors including Susan Choi, Kimiko Hahn, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Jia Tolentino, C Pam Zhang, and many others. This event will be streamed on the Asian American Writers’ Workshop YouTube channel.

Meet the Book Riot New Release Index: How it Works and Why You’ll Love It

Looking to keep up with all of the latest book releases? Have you heard about the Book Riot New Release Index?

Categories
Unusual Suspects

13 Thrillers That Should Be Movies

Hello mystery fans! I have your weekly things to click because no TBR has enough books. Plus, some news, Kindle deals, and a bit of my reading.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

This week Katie and Nusrah talk about mystery/thrillers that transport you to a particular time and place on the latest Read or Dead!

“It Was Self-Defense But Help Me Hide The Body!” Crime Novels

10 Fascinating Books Like THE FLIGHT ATTENDANT

On the latest All The Books! Patricia and Liberty talk new releases including The Water Rituals by Eva Garcia Sáenz.

Tiffany D. Jackson revealed the cover for her upcoming YA psychological thriller, White Smoke, and come to me my pretty!

13 Thrillers That Should Be Movies (If Not Just So We Can Claim the Book Was Better)

Armie Hammer Dropped From Another Film, ‘Billion Dollar Spy,’ in Wake of Sexual Assault Allegations

The Forgotten Crime Thriller Series You Can Stream On HBO Max (Apparently the machine is based on The Watchers by Shane Harris according to this.)

Stacey Abrams Is a Power Player in Her First Legal Thriller

Rachel Howzell Hall has an audible original: How It Ends !

Giveaway: Win $100 to Spend at Books of Wonder

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

The Decagon House Murders by Yukito Ayatsuji, Ho-Ling Wong (Translator)

It is so hard to be working right now because all I want to do is go finish this book! It starts with an unnamed narrator telling you part of their revenge plot. Then you meet the university students who are in a mystery club–nicknamed after famous writers–on their way to an island where unsolved horrible murders were committed. It’s like a Japanese ode to Agatha Christie and I just got to the point where they are gonna start to die and I’m so excited (do not judge me!).

I’m planning on continuing my awesome nonfiction streak by listening to Megan Rapinoe’s memoir One Life. Why yes I did shout goooooooooooal in my head while writing that sentence.

And Razorblade Tears by S. A. Cosby landed on my doorstep and I squealed–I loved Blacktop Wasteland–so I read the first chapter while walking the book to my physical TBR and I already love it and am ready for it to break my heart? Take me on a wild ride? I don’t know and I don’t care, I’m in.

Kindle Deals

Perfect Days cover image

Perfect Days by Raphael Montes

If you’re in the market for a crime thriller that also works for horror fans (If Annie Wilkes and Norman Bates birthed a book) and is set in Brazil, here’s one for $4.49. (TW I don’t remember but think dude kidnaps woman to make her love him.)

cover image: zoomed in on half of a japanese woman's face as tear rolls down her face

Penance by Kanae Minato

If you like dark, character driven Japanese crime novels, here’s one that unfurls from one event: a girl’s murder and her mother’s threat on four girls. And it’s $1.99! (I don’t remember TWs, sorry.)

She Said: Breaking the Sexual Harassment Story That Helped Ignite a Movement by Jodi Kantor, Megan Twohey

If you’re on a nonfiction kick like me, here’s a great one for fans of journalism for $5.99. (TW gaslighting/ rape/ sexual harassment/ suicide attempt mentioned)

A Lady's Guide to Etiquette and Murder Cover

A Lady’s Guide to Etiquette and Murder (A Countess of Harleigh Mystery Book 1) by Dianne Freeman

If you want a fun light historical mystery book, here’s a great recent series starter for $2.99!

In the Woods cover image

In the Woods (Dublin Murder Squad, Book 1) by Tana French

And if you STILL haven’t read Tana French and are in the mood for a procedural in Dublin, her first book is $1.99! (TW rape/ child death)


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.

Categories
True Story

Women’s History Books

That’s right! More women’s history books! Because I can! And because it’s the very end of Women’s History Month, which TBH is more of a year-round thing for me, but I love a themed month/week/day/party. So we’re going to take this opportunity to examine some women’s history books. Which is truly one of the broadest topics imaginable since it’s half the population on the globe, and yet NOT a field of study until the last like 50 years. Hm.

Inferior: How Science Got Women Wrong and the New Research That’s Rewriting the Story by Angela Saini

Of course the second science started being the “it” thing, dudes decided to start using it to prove they were awesome. Well, their science was bad and they should feel bad. This book explains why this was all nonsense and what contemporary science is in fact telling us about how things work.

Ivory Vikings: The Mystery of the Most Famous Chessmen in the World and the Woman Who Made Them by Nancy Marie Brown

The Lewis chess pieces are awesome. Ninety-three separate pieces carved from walrus ivory, found on a beach in Scotland in the early 1800s. Really distinctive and just so cool to look at. And apparently made by not only a woman in the 12th century, but a woman named “Margret the Adroit.” From Iceland! I’d never heard of this book or of Margret and this looks so interesting.

Medical Bondage: Race, Gender, and the Origins of American Gynecology by Deirdre Cooper Owens

We’ve got some more nonsense science! Including the Idea That Actual Doctors Believed about how Black women could feel pain less than white women. Because of this, Black women were used as test subjects for procedures like experimental caesarean sections, ovariotomies, and obstetric fistula repairs. In the midst of some actual advancements in medicine, “these doctors were legitimizing, for decades to come, groundless theories related to whiteness and blackness, men and women, and the inferiority of other races or nationalities.”

a history of islam in 21 women cover

A History of Islam in 21 Women by Hossein Kamaly

Love a series-of-profiles book. From Mecca in the 600s to present day Europe and America, Kamaly tells the stories of 21 Muslim women and their impact on society, including “first believer” Khadija, Mughal empress Nur Jahan, and acclaimed architect Zaha Hadid, who “liberated architectural geometry,” which is a pretty cool thing to be said about yourself.


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 nerd

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Bookmobiles For Justice

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Someone I was talking to recently said something along the lines of “The days are too long, and the weeks are too short,” and boy, ain’t that the truth? I feel like I spend half my time wondering how the heck it’s not Friday yet, and then panicking that there’s only a couple days left to get stuff done. But as we all know, time is a flat circle, and pandemic time is just completely messed up.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

(TW: violence towards library staff) Six people were injured and one woman was killed at the Lynn Valley public library in North Vancouver after a man started stabbing people. This is just horrifying on so many levels.

A Pennsylvania representative introduces the GRINCH Bill to “safeguard” kids books from the “woke horde.” (I hope the sarcasm is coming through in my quotation marks.)

As Louisville’s public libraries welcome patrons back inside, staff worry about safety.

A man was arrested for assault after refusing to wear a mask in a Salt Lake City library.

Recent funding cuts to accessible books for Canadians with print disabilities will be devastating.

Cool Library Updates

How libraries are expanding internet access.

The Association for Library Service to Children launched their Book & Media Awards Shelf, listing almost 2,000 titles that have won ALSC awards over the last century.

The Free Black Women’s Library in Brooklyn, New York has found a permanent home.

Worth Reading

Building staff morale during a pandemic.

Libraries are key tools for people getting out of prison, even during a pandemic.

Bookmobiles for justice.

Book Adaptations in the News

A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas is being adapted as a TV series for Hulu.

David Duchovny is planning a series adaptation of his latest book, Truly Like Lightning, with himself in the leading role.

Liane Moriarty’s forthcoming Apples Never Fall has already sold adaptation rights.

American Gods has been canceled after three seasons, but it could return as a TV movie.

George R.R. Martin is extremely busy not writing the latest book in the Game of Thrones series: he’s working on a stage version of Game of Thrones for Broadway, and he signed an enormous deal with HBO to develop more Game of Thrones-adjacent content.

Casting updates for The Good Nurse, The Terminal List, and The Lincoln Lawyer.

The trailer for Shadow and Bone just dropped, and readers have some questions.

Books & Authors in the News

Beloved children’s author Beverly Cleary has died at the incredible age of 104.

Larry McMurtry, author of Lonesome Dove, has died at 84.

This is a devastating article about author Sara Gruen’s fight to free an incarcerated man, which left her broke and critically ill.

Award News

The winners of the National Book Critics Circle Award have been announced.

Shortlists for the Agatha Awards, the Dublin Literary Award, and the Dylan Thomas Prize.

Carmen Maria Machado wins the Rathbones Folio Prize for In the Dream House.

Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o is the first writer to be nominated for the International Booker Prize as both author and translator of the same book. He’s also the first nominee writing in an indigenous African language. Here’s a look at the rest of the longlist.

Pop Cultured

Jessica Walter, iconic actress and star of Arrested Development and Archer, has died at 80. (Yes I know I posted about this in the last newsletter, but I’m still sad about it!)

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

BookClub, a virtual book club platform driven by author-led book discussions, is planning on a spring launch.

All the questions about Book TikTok you wanted to know, but felt too old to ask.

On the Riot

Are you a library power user?

8 books about mobile libraries.

How I learned to be less productive and feel okay about it.

Our pettiest bookish nitpicks.


Have a good weekend, everyone. I’ll see you on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading Catherine House by Elisabeth Thomas.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for April 2

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with some books fresh from the Antipodes and some fun links today. I’m also just about vibrating out of my seat with excitement–by the time you’ve read this, I’ll have gotten my first dose of the Moderna Covid vaccine! Colorado just opened it up for all adults, and I got very lucky. Wishing you best luck and good health as well! Stay safe out there, and I will see you on Tuesday for the first new releases of April.

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


News and Views

Strange Horizons has released its special issue dedicated to Palestinian science fiction!

Cheryl Morgan on queering Medusa

A profile of Chinese science fiction writer Chen Qiufan

I talk more about the novels below, but here’s the full short list for the Aurealis awards, which includes a lot of really great short fiction!

Cora Buhlert’s monthly roundup of indie speculative fiction for March

Nerds of a Feather has started releasing their transcripts for ConZealand Fringe from last year.

An answer to which superhero we should call if the Suez Canal gets a boat stuck in it again

Vulcan salute monument!

On Book Riot

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about series spin-offs.

The 5 finger fantasy rule: a plea for mercy from SFF authors

This month you can enter to win a $100 Books of Wonder gift card.

Free Association Friday: Aurealis Awards Finalists

The Aurealis Awards have been going since 1995, after being founded by Chimera Publications, the publishers of Aurealis magazine. Their purpose is to recognize Australian SFF and horror. I wanted to put a spotlight on the finalists this year, because particularly in the US, we don’t get to hear a lot about the SFF scene in Australia. So here are the finalists for Best science fiction and best fantasy novel! Congratulations to all!

(Since I’m reporting the award short list in its entirety, please note that the authors aren’t quite as diverse as we normally try to get.)

Aurora Burning by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff

An ancient evil is about to be unleashed on a galaxy it would like to consume, and it’s up to a squad of misfits and losers to stop it… if they can take care of their interpersonal drama and the other hornets nests they’ve recently kicked over first.

Ghost Species by James Bradley

Two scientists are recruited by a tech billionaire to spearhead his foundation’s effort to half climate change–and re-engineer and revive species long since lost. This effort includes Neanderthals… and when the first child is born, she struggles to figure out if she is human or not.

The Animals in That Country by Laura Jean McKay

A hard-drinking, no-nonsense grandma who likes animals better than people finds herself in the midst of a pandemic for which the chief symptom is the accelerating ability to understand animal languages before those sickened go mad.

Fauna by Donna Mazza

In her desperation to have another child, Stacey is recruited into an experimental program that will help her conceive and carry, as long as she allows the embryo to be blended with ‘edited’ cells.

Repo Virtual by Corey J. White

In a city made of nesting realities from concrete to the virtual, Julius is a repoman for the online and a thief for the real. But when he finds out his latest job caused him to steal the first sentient AI, his payday might become deadly.

The Mother Fault by Kate Mildenhall

When Mim’s husband goes missing and can’t be tracked, she must go on the run and find him or risk losing her children to the notorious BestLife.

Unfortunately, The Mother Fault may be difficult to find in the US. If you want to try another of Kate’s books, you can get Skylarking, though!

Hollow Empire by Sam Hawke

With the ancient spirits awoken, the city-state of Silasta must remake itself in a world now filled with magic and beset by assassins and witches.

The Left-Handed Booksellers of London by Garth Nix

After a long search, Susan finds the father she’d never met, just in time to see him be turned to dust by a left-handed bookseller named Merlin. Merlin is part of a group of magical beings who police the mythic and legendary, and he’s got a quest of his own: to find the entity that had his mother killed.

Monstrous Heart by Claire McKenna

Arden has been tasked with keeping the lighthouse at Vigil burning with her magic, showing the way over a sea teeming with monsters. Her mysterious leviathan-slayer neighbor, Jonah, is rumored to have murdered his wife–and Arden can’t get him out of her mind.

Conquist by Dirk Strasser

In 1542, Cristóbal de Varga led 400 conquistadors through a doorway in the mountains of Peru and into a far more mysterious world from which they never returned…

Sadly, this book is not currently available in the US, but if you want to check out another of Dirk’s books, try Zenith.

The Vanishing Deep by Astrid Scholte

Tempe lives in a world of endless water, but the ruins of the civilization destroyed by the Great Waves 500 years ago call to her from far below. The treasures she finds in them will buy a 24 hour return to life for her sister, who died bearing a terrible secret that Tempe needs to know.

The Ninth Sorceress by Bonnie Wynne

After seventeen years of innocent safety as an herbalist’s apprentice, Gwyn finds herself pursued by wizards and hunted by an ancient goddess.


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
Giveaways

040121-TheCurrentEAC-Giveaways

Categories
The Stack

040121-TheCurrent-The-Stack

Categories
Riot Rundown

040121-SingMeForgotten-RR