Categories
Kid Lit Giveaways

042921-MerciSuarez-KidLitGiveaway

We’re giving away 10 copies of Merci Suárez Can’t Dance by Meg Medina to 10 lucky Riot readers!

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

Here’s what it’s all about:

Dancing makes Merci Suárez almost as queasy as love does, especially now that Tía Inés, her merengue-teaching aunt, has a new man in her life. Unfortunately, Merci can’t seem to avoid love or dance for very long. She used to talk about everything with her grandfather, Lolo, but with his Alzheimer’s getting worse each day, whom can she trust to help her make sense of all the new things happening in her life? The Suárez family is back in a touching, funny story about growing up and discovering love’s many forms, including how we learn to love and believe in ourselves.

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Children’s Books About Colors!

Hi Kid Lit Friends!

As we approach warmer weather in the northern hemisphere, I have had color on my brain. There have been a LOT of new books about colors lately. I thought I would round up the ones that caught my eye!

Festival of Colors by Surishtha Sehgal and Kabir Sehgal, illustrated by Vashti Harrison

Holi, the Indian Festival of Colors, is celebrated every spring. Siblings Mintoo and Chintoo have lots of preparation to do. One of their main duties is to gather flowers to make into colorful powders to toss during the festival. When at last the big day comes, they gather with their friends, family, and neighbors for a vibrant celebration of fresh starts, friendship, forgiveness, and, of course, fun!

Mixed: A Colorful Story by Arree Chung

It all started with red, yellow and blue. They lived peacefully until Red declared that reds were the best. Understandably, the other colors and miffed about this and they decided to separate, until a Yellow, a Blue, and a never-before-seen color step in to save the day!

Kaleidoscope of Creatures: The Colors of Nature Explained by Cath Ard and Greer Stothers

This fantastic animal book categorizes animals in a whole different way: by color! Each page spread is filled with gorgeous illustrations and fun facts about animals. They are grouped by color and then by other fun visual characteristics like iridescence, changing color, spots, and stripes. A terrific book for any reader who loves animals!

What Can Colors Do? by Liz Yohlin Baill (May 11, 2021, Princeton Architectural Press)

As the Collections Interpreter for Youth and Families at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Liz Yohlin Baill is particularly well suited to write a picture book about how vibrant works of art help us discover how artists use color to help us see and think in new ways. This fun book is best for preschoolers and early elementary children!

True Colors by Gonçalo Viana (June 1, 2021, Princeton Architectural Press)

This book is interactive, hilarious, and a sight to behold. As the reader begins, a white tree causes the narrator to pause. Trees aren’t white! This illustrator, the narrator observes, must be terrible. But things only get more bizarre from there as the narrator implores the reader to help as townspeople, a group of scientists, and the town tailor all try to determine what is going wrong. A very fun book!

Sight: Glimmer, Glow, SPARK, FLASH! by Romana Romanyshyn, illustrated by Andriy Lesiv

For older readers who are interested in all aspects of sight, pick up this wonderful book! This science-intensive exploration of how sight essentially impacts our everyday lives is a great, informational book that includes eye anatomy and how different animals see things. A fascinating book!


What are you reading these days? Let me know! Find me on Twitter at @KarinaYanGlaser, on Instagram at @KarinaIsReadingAndWriting, or email me at KarinaBookRiot@gmail.com.

Until next time!
Karina

Correction: In the April 25, 2021 The Kids Are All Right newsletter, the author of Code Breaker, Spy Hunter was mistakenly attributed to Laurie Hallmark. The author’s name is Laurie Wallmark. Many apologies for this error.

*If this e-mail was forwarded to you, follow this link to subscribe to “The Kids Are All Right” newsletter and other fabulous Book Riot newsletters for your own customized e-mail delivery. Thank you!*

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Possums and Potatoes

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. So, what’s happened in the life of Katie this week? I finally replaced my ancient, cracked phone, my husband and I have officially caught up on Killing Eve, and we’ve started on a healthy smoothie kick, so our freezer is absolutely stuffed with frozen fruit, and our fridge is full of almond milk, yogurt, and spinach. Should be some tasty concoctions in our future though!

Let’s library.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The newest board member of the Lafayette Parish Library Board of Control wants the library to remove “recreation, cultural enrichment” from its mission statement.

Midland (TX) libraries have removed their Pride displays after community complaints.

Cool Library Updates

The Iowa City Bike Library has received money from the city’s social justice and racial equity program, and plans to put the money towards a new guided bike tour of local Black-owned businesses and Black historical sites.

Well, now I’ve seen everything. The Rochester Public Library has a potato library.

Opossums at the Alexandria (LA) Zoo get their library cards!

Worth Reading

Academic library leaders are not confident in their organizations’ diversity strategies.

Librarian, market thyself.

Book lovers are excited to head back to the library stacks as the pandemic eases.

Book Adaptations in the News

Ava DuVernay is adapting The Wings of Fire books by Tui Sutherland into a Netflix animated series.

Sarah Dessen’s Along for the Ride is being adapted for Netflix.

Did someone say Mindhunter Season 3???

Casting updates for Life After Life and The Lincoln Lawyer.

First teaser trailer for Nine Perfect Strangers.

Here’s a guide for the Shadow and Bone adaptation on Netflix.

Books & Authors in the News

Authors respond to the Texas school district book ban.

If you’ve seen the viral news story from the New York Post about Kamala Harris’ children’s book Superheroes Are Everywhere being distributed at migrant shelters and the subsequent uproar from conservatives, just know that it’s not true, and the journalist who wrote the original article has resigned after being “ordered to write” the story which she knew wasn’t true.

Simon & Schuster will die on the hill that is Mike Pence’s multimillion dollar book deal.

In-person author tours probably won’t be back for awhile.

Award News

Danielle Evans wins the Joyce Carol Oates Prize.

Chloé Zhao makes Oscars history as the first woman of color to win Best Director (Nomadland).

The shortlist for the International Booker Prize has been announced.

Louise Erdrich wins the Aspen Words Literary Prize for The Night Watchman.

Here are the finalists for the 2020 This is Horror awards.

Pop Cultured

LeVar Burton is guest-hosting Jeopardy!

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Instagram, jacket design, and judging books by their covers.

On the Riot

The Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh: free to the people.

Bowling for Books: A library program to get kids moving.

15 horror movies based on books.

A quick-and-easy 34-step strategy for making Booktube videos.

Why don’t we have more illustrated books for adults?

This reader’s most mundane post-pandemic bookish fantasy.

How to read when you have a baby.

How fiction showed this reader the reality of being a parent.

Books anchor me in an increasingly chaotic world.


Hope the weather’s nice for everyone this weekend! Go get some fresh air if you can, and I’ll see you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently listening to You Can’t Touch My Hair: And Other Things I Still Have to Explain by Phoebe Robinson.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for April 30

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with a look at some award-nominated books (what can I say, it’s awards season) and some links to take you into the weekend. This week we’re trying something new–there are some ebook deals to check out as well, and I’ll be hunting up three (or more) for you every Friday. Today’s an exciting day for me–I’m getting my second dose of the Moderna vaccine! Things are looking up here, and I hope they are for you too. Stay safe out there, shipmates, and I’ll see you on Tuesday!

Thing that made me smile this week: Pedro Pascal and his Oscar

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


News and Views

Interview with Martha Wells

Interview with Suyi Davies Okungbowa

The European Astrobiology Institute is running a Kickstarter for an anthology of science fiction short fiction and accompanying essays by scientists, titled Life Beyond Us

The winners of the 2020 Xingyun Awards have been announced

Chinaka Hodge will be the head writer for Marvel’s Ironheart Disney+ series

Idris Elba on being Bloodsport in James Gunn’s The Suicide Squad. I’m still mad that I actually want to see this.

Is Babylon 5 secretly the most influential TV show of the past 25 years?

This 2019 interview with astronaut Michael Collins is well worth reading. Rest with the stars, sir.

The new warp drive possibilities (video from PBS)

SFF Ebook Deals

Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho is available for $1.99

The End of the Ocean by Maja Lunde is available for $1.99

The Glamourist by Luanne G. Smith is available for $1.99

On Book Riot

This week’s SFFYeah! podcast is a bit of a grab-bag.

13 of the best middle grade science fiction books

Today is the final day you can enter to win your own library cart, an iPad, a year of free books, and $100 to spend on comics.

Free Association Friday

This week I want to highlight the 2021 Ignyte Awards finalists. While there is (unsurprisingly) a lot of overlap between the finalists for the Ignyte, Nebula, and Hugo finalists, there are some books being recognized for excellence by FIYAHCon that aren’t on the other shortlists, and they’re well worth a look!

Cover of The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones

The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones

Nominated for Best Novel – Adult. Four Native American men find themselves haunted by a deadly incident that happened in their youth–and now as adults, it threatens their families as well. Hunted by a vengeful entity, the only help for them might be the traditions they have long since left behind.

Cover of Stone and Steel by Eboni Dunbar

Stone and Steel by Eboni Dunbar

Nominated for Best Novella. Titus is a city ruled by Queen Odessa, who is also a stone mage. When General Aaliyah returns to her home in triumph, she finds not prosperity and peace, but an imbalance between ruler and ruled that she must figure out how to repair.

Cover of Vagabonds by Hao Jingfang

Vagabonds by Hao Jingfang, translated by Ken Liu

Nominated for Best Novel – Adult. In the wake of a civil war between Mars and Earth, humanity tries to rebuild peace. Mars sends a group of young people to live on Earth and try to rebuild bonds… but what they find there is no friends, no home, and no help but what they find in the community they struggle to build.

Cover of Sky Beyond the Storm by Sabaa Tahir

A Sky Beyond the Storm by Sabaa Tahir

Nominated for Best Novel – YA. The jinn, free of their long imprisonment, are on the attack. The Nightbringer is first seeking vengeance on the humans, but he has much greater plans; his ally, Commander Keris Veturia declares herself Empress and makes her first target the Blood Shrike and what little family she has left. An apocalypse is coming for the humans, and their only hope could damn them or save them.

Cover of Song Below Water by Bethany Morrow

A Song Below Water by Bethany Morrow

Nominated for Best Novel – YA. Tavia is a siren living among humans; she has no choice but to hide her powers at all times. Her best friend, Effie, is all-too-human, but has her own family problems and literal demons from her past nipping at her heels. But when a siren is murdered and Tavia accidentally reveals her powers at the worst possible moment, it’s these two best friends against the world.

Also, check out the full Anthology/Collection category for some awesome short fiction:


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
The Stack

042921-TheCurrentEAC-The-Stack

Categories
Riot Rundown

042921-LocalWomanMissing-RR

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks 04/29/21

Hola Audiophiles! I’m back from my mini-vacay feeling refreshed, very slightly more tan, and missing my niece and nephew something fierce. Still, I’m happy to be back in the springtime wonderland that is the Pacific Northwest right now, even if this pollen is killing me softly with this song.

There are just a couple of days left in April and National Poetry Month, so let’s close the month out with some poetry audiobooks to soothe the soul, stir the senses, and hopefully inspire a little hope.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – Week of April 27th

publisher descriptions in quotes

audiobook cover of You Are Your Best Thing by Tarana Burke and Brene Brown

You Are Your Best Thing: Vulnerability, Shame Resilience, and the Black Experience by Tarana Burke, Brené Brown

I love this book’s origin story so much. Brené Brown and Me Too movement founder Tarana Burke are friends who’d recently been exchanging home decor ideas when Tarana reached out to Brené to ask if she was free to jump on a call. Brené expected wallpaper talk and got something much more serious: Tarana confessed that as a Black woman, she often felt like she had to do serious work to see herself in Brené’s words. Tarana suggested working together on a book about the Black experience with vulnerability and shame resilience, and the idea for You Are Your Best Thing was born. Contributors include Kiese Laymon, Imani Perry, Laverne Cox, Jason Reynolds, Austin Channing Brown, and more. (nonfiction, essays)

Read by Tarana Burke, Brené Brown, and the book’s contributors, as well as Mirron Willis, Bahni Turpin, JD Jackson, L Morgan Lee (in other words: hot fire!!)

audiobook cover image of Dial A For Aunties by Risa Mei

Dial A for Aunties by Jesse Q. Sutanto

I knew I needed this book about a woman who accidentally kills her blind date (whoopsie!) when Jamie highlighted it in this list of “It Was Self Defense! But Help Me Hide the Body!” crime novels. Meddelin Chan’s meddlesome mother calls her even more meddlesome aunties to help get rid of the body, and that turns out to be a lot harder than it seems. The corpse kiiiinda ends up in a cake cooler en route to the billionaire California coast wedding that the Chan women are working. What could possibly go wrong? (mystery)

Read by singer and actress Risa Mei

audiobook cover image of White Magic by Elissa Washuta

White Magic by Elissa Washuta

Elissa Washuta grew up surrounded by cheap imitations of Native spiritual tools, superficial interests in occult trends, “starter witch kits” full of sage and crystals, and the like. After a decade of abuse, addiction, PTSD, and a misdiagnosis of bipolar disorder, she found herself drawn to the real spirits and practices of her displaced ancestors in her search to find love and meaning. Here she writes about “land, heartbreak, and colonization, about life without the escape hatch of intoxication, and about how she became a powerful witch” as she explores “questions of cultural inheritance and the particular danger, as a Native woman, of relaxing into romantic love under colonial rule.” (nonfiction, essays)

Read by Kyla Garcia (There There by Tommy Orange, I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter by Erika L. Sánchez)

audiobook cover image of An Earl, the Girl, and a Toddler by Vanessa Riley

An Earl, the Girl, and a Toddler (Rogues and Remarkable Women Series #2) by Vanessa Riley

I don’t usually see the word “toddler” in a romance title, so when I do, I need to know more. The Widow’s Grace is a secret society that helps ill-treated widows regain their reputations, their families, and even find true love. After barely surviving a shipwreck en route to London from Jamaica that leaves her imprisoned and with a case of amnesia, Jemina St. Maur is relying on the society to unearth her true identity. Barrister Daniel Thackery, Lord Ashbrook, who was widowed by that same shipwreck, betrays the law he holds so dear to free Jemina from prison. But can he be trusted? Can she? As “ruthless adversaries close in, will the truth require him, and Jemina, to sacrifice their one chance at happiness?” (romance)

Read by Bahni Turpin (The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead, The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas)

Latest Listens – Poetry Spotlight

audiobook cover image of The Hill We Climb by Amanda Gorman

The Hill We Climb: An Inaugural Poem for the Country by Amanda Gorman

Amanda Gorman: ever heard of her? Consider this a reminder to revisit the stunning, powerful, soul-shaking poem first read at President Biden’s inauguration. This nine-minute recording is just of the titular poem, but what a standout nine minutes those are. Don’t forget to check out her debut collection (The Hill We Climb and Other Poems) when it hits shelves in September.

Read by the author

audiobook cover image of At Blackwater Pond by Mary Oliver

At Blackwater Pond by Mary Oliver

Mary Oliver was the first poet that made me feel like I “got” poetry and her work resonates with me differently every time I read it. Her poetry is as soothing as it is striking in its perfect simplicity and so accessible, too. This audio collection of forty of the late great’s favorite poems is so special because it’s a rare one: in her decades long career, she rarely performed her poetry in live readings. Enjoy this very special treat and take a moment for some reflection.

Read by the author

audiobook cover image of Alone Together Love, Grief, and Comfort During the Time of COVID-19

Alone Together: Love, Grief, and Comfort During the Time of COVID-19 edited by Jennifer Haupt

I don’t normally do Audible originals as a rule, but this one feels special enough to make the exception. This collection isn’t strictly poetry but a mix of essays, poems, and interviews by and from over 90 authors including Kwame Alexander, Andre Dubus III, Nikki Giovanni, Pam Houston, Caroline Leavitt, Ada Limón, Dani Shapiro, David Sheff, Garth Stein, and Luis Alberto Urrea. Themed in the possibility of hope and change in the age of isolation and uncertainty, the book is divided into five sections (What Now?, Grieve, Comfort, Connect, and Don’t Stop).

The full cast of narrators is every bit as impressive as the author list, including the likes of January LaVoy, Dion Graham, Julia Whelan, Adenrele Ojo, Emily Woo Zeller, Thérèse Plummer, Adjoa Andoh, Almarie Guerra, and more.

From the Internets

at Audible: The Best Audiobooks for Soothing Anxiety

at Audiofile: Listening to Poetry on Audio

at Libro.fm: If You Like These Oscar-Nominated Movies, You’ll Love These Audiobooks

also at Libro.fm is their annual Independent Bookstore Day Recap. Yay Indies!

at The Wall Street Journal: The Special Comfort of Audiobooks During Covid-19 and Trying Times

at Vice: ‘It’s a Crazy Issue’ – The Bizarre World of Scam Audiobooks — Yikes! Be on the lookout for these dupes.

Over at the Riot

5 of the Best Audiobooks for Your Next Sick Day

On the Companionship of Audiobooks and Podcasts


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
Today In Books

GREAT GATSBY Musical Scored by Florence Welch and Thomas Bartlett Heading to Broadway: Today in Books

Game of Thrones Spinoff Television Series House of the Dragon is Officially in Production

HBO has announced that production has officially begun on its new HBO Max television series House of the Dragon, which is a prequel to Game of Thrones. This new series is set 300 years before the events of Game of Thrones and focuses on the ancestors of Daenerys Targaryen, specifically King Viserys, who was chosen by the lords of Westeros to succeed Jaehaerys Targaryen at the Great Council at Harrenhal. Season one of the series will be 10 episodes long and will premiere on HBO Max in 2022.

The Great Gatsby Musical Scored by Florence Welch and Thomas Bartlett Heading to Broadway

A new musical adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s beloved classic The Great Gatsby is heading to broadway. The score of the new Gatsby musical was written by Florence + the Machine’s Florence Welch and pianist, producer, and singer Thomas Bartlett. Florence Welch said, “This book has haunted me for a large part of my life. It contains some of my favorite lines in literature. Musicals were my first love, and I feel a deep connection to Fitzgerald’s broken romanticism. It is an honor to have been offered the chance to recreate this book in song.” Other people working on the project include Pulitzer Prize winner Martyna Majok, who wrote the musical’s book, and Olivier Award nominee Rebecca Frecknall, who will direct. The timeline for a pre-Broadway engagement should be announced soon.

Amazon Announces the Cast for its Paper Girls Series

Earlier this week, Amazon announced that the four main characters have been cast for the new Paper Girls series. The series is an adaptation of Vaughan and Cliff Chiang’s acclaimed comic Paper Girls, which tells the story of four newspaper-delivery girls in 1988 who have a run-in with travelers from the future and find themselves also traveling through time. So who are the four actresses playing the titular paper girls? Sofia Rosinsky, Camryn Jones, Riley Lai Nelet, and Fina Strazza. Paper Girls will start filming in Chicago this year.

Post-Pandemic Entertaining: 13 Books to Inspire You

As we start transitioning into meeting up in small groups post-pandemic, entertaining might feel like a lost art. Here are 13 books about entertaining to inspire you.

Categories
Book Radar

Florence Welch to Write the Score for GREAT GATSBY on Broadway and More Book Radar!

It’s Thursday! Er…it is Thursday, right? I can’t keep the days straight. Yesterday I said it was both Tuesday and Thursday at different times, when in fact it was Wednesday, lol. Anything exciting going on out there in the world? It has been a quiet week for me, although I am excited to tell you I will be in conversation with author Aidan Truhen about his latest crime novel next Tuesday, if you want to check it out. I love doing author talks!

Moving on to today’s newsletter: I have exciting book news for you about adaptations and book covers, and I’ve included a picture of one of my ridiculous orange monsters, some trivia, and more! I love writing these newsletters and I appreciate your support so much. Whatever you are doing or watching or reading this week, I hope you good bob and we same place again very now. I’ll see you again on Monday. – xoxo, Liberty, Your Friendly Neighborhood Velocireader™

Trivia question time! What famous mystery writer once worked as an ophthalmologist? (Scroll to the bottom for the answer.)

Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

Cover of All Systems Red by Martha Wells

Tordotcom Publishing has acquired six more Martha Wells books, including three more in the Murderbot Diaries series. The first is Witch King, a fantasy novel coming in 2022.

Florence Welch and Thomas Bartlett will score The Great Gatsby for Broadway.

Here’s the first look at We Light Up the Sky by Lilliam Rivera. (I loved this book!)

Here’s a preview of Impostor Syndrome by Kathy Wang. (I also loved this book!)

The Paper Girls series adaptation has cast its Paper Girls.

Here’s the first trailer for Hulu’s adaptation of Nine Perfect Strangers.

Destin Daniel Cretton is attached to direct an adaptation of the upcoming book Facing the Mountain by Daniel James Brown.

Here is the cover reveal for Rise: A Pop History of Asian America from the Nineties to Now by Jeff Yang, Phil Yu, and Philip Wang.

A reboot of The Borrowers is in the works.

Here’s the cover reveal for High-Risk Homosexual: A Memoir by Edgar Gomez.

Reese Witherspoon has launched the LitUp Fellowship for Underrepresented Women Writers.

The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates by Wes Moore is being adapted for the big screen, with Stephen Curry attached to produce.

Walton Goggins, Marsha Stephanie Blake, and Omar Miller are among five new actors to join the adaptation of Walter Mosley’s The Last Days Of Ptolemy Grey.

Don Winslow’s debut novel A Cool Breeze On The Underground is being adapted into a series.

Guillermo Del Toro’s Trollhunters: Rise Of The Titans adaptation gets a Netflix release date and teaser trailer.

Here’s the trailer for Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway.

Book Riot Recommends 

At Book Riot, I work on the New Books! email, the All the Books! podcast about new releases, and the Book Riot Insiders New Release Index. I am very fortunate to get to read a lot of upcoming titles, and learn about a lot of upcoming titles, and I’m delighted to share a couple with you each week so you can add them to your TBR! (It will now be books I loved on Mondays and books I’m excited to read on Thursdays. YAY, BOOKS!)

Excited to read: 

Cover of Bibliolepsy by Gina Apostol

Bibliolepsy by Gina Apostol (Soho Press, January 4, 2022)

I know I have talked about Insurrecto and The Revolution According to Raymundo Matatwo, two of Apostol’s other novels, here and on the podcast. I think her work is fantastic, and I am even more excited to read this next one, coming at the beginning of 2022, because it involves books! My life math is simple: Books = yay! Books about books = OMG YAY.

This is Apostol’s Philippine National Book Award-winning debut novel, available in the US soon for the first time. It’s about a book lover, living under Ferdinand Marcos’s brutal rule, who wants to find happiness and live her life by getting to know the authors she loves. It sounds intriguing and it has great reviews, so it’s going right to the top of anticipated books of 2022!

What I’m reading this week.

Luck of the Titanic by Stacey Lee 

Emma Who Saved My Life by Wilton Barnhardt

A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking by T. Kingfishr

White Smoke by Tiffany D Jackson 

The Perishing by Natashia Deón

Song stuck in my head:

I Want Everything by Cracker (Also, I’m still really into listening to songs I loved when I was young. You can listen to a lot of them in this playlist I made!)

And this is funny:

Welp, I finally found an epitaph for my headstone.

Happy things:

Here are a few things I enjoy that I thought you might like as well:

  • Knights of Basassdom: Yep, back on this nonsense. It’s so ridiculous, plus I heart Jimmi Simpson. I always put it on when I can’t decide what I should watch.
  • Jeopardy: I’m big into trivia right now. I don’t play any online, because there’s always too much nonsense attached, even with the Jeopardy app. I don’t want to pick levels, spend points, or other trivial (heh) things they make you do just to answer a question. So for now, I will continue to watch old episodes of quiz shows.
  • Purrli: This website makes the relaxing sounds of a cat purring.

And here’s a cat picture!

Orange cat on stop pf a bookcase with one arm stretched out

You put your left paw in, you put your left paw out…

Trivia answer: Arthur Conan Doyle.

You made it to the bottom! High five. Thanks for reading! – xo, L

Categories
Kissing Books

A Whole New (Supernatural) World

Greetings fellow romance lovers. It is I, PN Hinton, your guide into the world of romance. If you’re new to the newsletter, welcome and enjoy your stay. If you’re a long-time reader, welcome back; it’s good to see you again. 

We’re on the second to last day in April before May and the pre-summer shenanigans start. Present me is writing with the optimistic hope that future me (meaning the me on the day when this newsletter comes out) is feeling fine since I’m due for my second dose on Wednesday. I’m both excited and nervous. I’m excited because I will feel better about going out and about once it’s done, but I’m nervous about possible side effects.

Still, it’s better than getting COVID-19. 

Last weekend I made it out to my local bookstore for Independent Bookstore Day with two of my book club buddies and had a blast. I’m proud that I didn’t break my bank too much and only got two books. Surprisingly enough, both were outside the romance genre. A lot of that has to do with knowing the size of my TBR pile already and not wanting to add too much to it. There is also the fact that I do try to be mindful of money; while I would love to go all out in a bookstore, I lack both the funds and space to go full on crazy. Another part is that, while romance is my go-to, I also really enjoy other genres, with the exception of nonfiction or true crime. 

That said, the next book up for us is I’ll Be Gone in the Dark, and I am not dreading it. So yay for reading outside my comfort zone. 

Around the Web in Romance

If you’re looking to dive into Tracy Wolff, Aurora’s got just the pathway for you.

Miss Oprah came out with a list of some of her most anticipated romances heading our way this year. I will say this is a nice mixture of genres and authors, so good on them for being diverse. Luckily for me, a good number of these were ones I’ve already read or are presently on my TBR, so I didn’t add too much more.

Pour yourself a glass of wine and play this game put together by the wonderful librarians of the White Oak Library District. I may or may not have played a handful of times to get a variety of happily ever afters…Also, I love that these select your own outcome stories seem to be making a comeback, and they’re making them for adults.

Read on to find out why Sariah Wilson enjoys writing ‘sweet’ (meaning sex off the pages) romances. Personally, I really don’t mind these types of romances at all; I just like to know what flavor I’m getting into.

Recommendations

I talked on Monday about the upcoming erotic short featuring the Headless Horseman, which got me to thinking about other supernatural romances. Not necessarily dark or monster ones, but ones where the world either is completely in or co-exists with the paranormal. Now, I know the go-to for paranormal romances (or PNR) are vampires and shifters. But there are a plethora of other supernatural hotties out there if you’re looking for a little bit of variety in your reading world. Here are some of my recommendations for those if you’re looking to branch out.

Genie Knows Best by Judi Fennell

This is a light-hearted fluffy romance in where Samantha finds herself the new owner of Kal, a genie. He is surprised and pleased to have a female master and starts their relationship intent on seducing his way into freedom. I know it seems like it may be darker with that premise and there is a ‘lying by omission’ factor. But I remember it being cute and enjoyable when I read it, so it may be a good mental break. Also, it’s nice to read about a male genie for once. This is a series, but I don’t remember there being a connection, apart from the genie factor.

Phantom Pleasures by Julie Leto

Hotel developer Alexa gets her hands on a prime piece of property perfect for her next luxury resort. The reason that it came so easily to her? It’s rumored to be haunted by ghosts and dark magic. She doesn’t believe this until she accidentally releases Damon, who has been trapped in his portrait. His joy at being released is short-lived when he finds he is still confined to the castle and by the dark magic that originally trapped him. Will they be able to break the curse or will they end up being the other’s undoing?  This is another series, so if you enjoy reading about this sexy ghost, he has brothers that may also strike your fancy.

Tall, Dark, and Deadly by Kharma Kelley

Dhampir Chloe is a vampire who, due to her crimes when she was running with a group of vampires, is now working off her debt to the Bureau. Her boss is the sexy, no-nonsense Ethan who senses potential in her even as he tries to fight his attraction to her. When her old gang gets their hands on a mysterious box, they must work in close quarters to stop whatever Armageddon they may be trying to release. And, okay, so, yes there is a vampire in this novel but she’s not the only supernatural creature present. I’m listing this here for Ethan and what he is. I won’t spoil that ending though since that’s part of the surprise.


And that’s all for now. I hope y’all have a great weekend and start May off right. If you want to hear a little bit more from before Monday, give me a follow at @Pscribe801 at Twitter. Until next time.