Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

Happy Tuesday, book lovers, and a big welcome to all the people joining me from Book Radar for the first time! To celebrate this new change in my work schedule, I have added a couple new bits to the bottom of the newsletter. You’ll now find the “On your mark…get set…add to your TBR!” section, where I’ll included an upcoming book each week that I have read and loved. (You know how I can never talk enough about books!) You’ll also find a cat picture, and some other miscellany. I’m also thinking of overhauling the monthly megalist, so WATCH THIS SPACE.

Moving on to today’s books: I am excited to get my hands on several new releases. At the top of my to-buy list are Cazadora (Wolves of No World) by Romina Garber and Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Could Be by Nichole Perkins. And speaking of today’s great books, for this week’s episode of All the Books! Tirzah and I discussed some of the wonderful books that we’ve read, such as Velvet is the Night, Never Say You Can’t Survive, Chasing the Boogeyman, and more.

And now, it’s time for everyone’s favorite gameshow: AHHHHHH MY TBR! Here are today’s contestants:

cover of All In: An Autobiography by Billie Jean King, featuring a black and white photo of the author mid-tennis match

All In: An Autobiography by Billie Jean King

I was really interested to read this memoir, mostly because I really knew nothing about Billie Jean King (probably because when I was little, the Billie Jean I was into was the 1985 Legend of Billie Jean movie). This is King’s story of her life as a groundbreaking, world class athlete, and champion not only of tennis but many important causes, such as civil rights, feminism, and LGBTQ rights. She discusses her many public moments, such as her “Battle of the Sexes” match with Bobby Riggs, her eating disorder, the nonstop sexism on the circuit, and coming out at age fifty-one. It’s a fascinating look into the life of a legend.

Backlist bump: Seeing Serena by Gerald Marzorati

cover of Redemptor (Raybearer by Jordan Ifueko, featuring a head and shoulders illustration of a young Black woman wearing a spiky silver crown

Redemptor (Raybearer Book 2) by Jordan Ifueko

Yes, this is a sequel, but the first book, Raybearer, is so freaking good that I had to draw your attention to it again. I mean, this one is also fantastic, but let me tell you about Raybearer, in case you haven’t read it yet. Tarisai was raised in isolation from a young age, kept away from other people and her town, and looked after by servants. She occasionally sees her mother, a distant and cold woman called The Lady, who is waiting for Tarisari to be old enough so she can send her to be one of the Crown Prince’s Council of 11. Once this happens, The Lady can start dismantling their rule from the inside, or so she thinks. She wants Tarisari to kill the Crown Prince. But when the time comes to move to the kingdom and put her mother’s plan in motion, Tarisari discovers she likes her time at the palace, and the people around her. Will she follow her mother’s orders, or learn to stand on her own?

Backlist bump: Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi

cover of The Smashed Man of Dread End by J.W. Ocker, featuring an illustarton of several children looking down the open bulkhead doors into a dark basement

The Smashed Man of Dread End by J.W. Ocker

And last, but not least, here is a delightful—and scary!—book about a young girl whose family moves to a new home, and she discovers there is something terrible in the basement. Noe isn’t thrilled about having to change homes or schools, but it might help her to put a terrible slumber party incident behind her. On her first day at her new home, the neighborhood children warn her not to go in the basement, but Noe is a sleepwalker, and awakens mid-stroll to find herself down there anyway. And what she sees is the stuff of nightmares! (I don’t want to tell you what it is because I thought the monster was SO creepy and effective!) It’s up to Noe and the other neighborhood kids to figure out a way to rid their cul-de-sac of evil once and for all. But can they do it? This is a fun Stranger Things-esque scary middle grade story. I am not usually a fan of parents not believing children when they tell them something is wrong, but the point of this monster is that only children can see it, so it adds an extra scary layer to the story!

Backlist bump: Small Spaces by Katherine Arden

On your mark…get set…add to your TBR!

cover of Yinka, Where Is Your Huzband? by Lizzie Damilola Blackburn, featuring illustration of a Black woman, with four more Black women standing far back behind her profile

Yinka, Where Is Your Huzband? by Lizzie Damilola Blackburn (Pamela Dorman Books (January 18, 2022)

If you want something funny, smart, and wonderful to read, then January can’t come soon enough for you! This is a delightful Bridget Jones-ish story about Yinka, an Oxford-educated British Nigerian woman who believes in true love, even if it means waiting a long time to find it. Unfortunately, her meddling mother and aunties don’t think it’s happening fast enough. Yinka’s sister is having a baby and her cousin just got engaged, and it has really turned the heat up on Yinka, whose family literally prays that she finds a husband. Her family makes Yinka feel bad about herself, and it frustrates her.

Yinka is happy to have her career and her freedom, but does think that finding someone to love would be nice. She recently got out of a relationship, and her heart is still bruised. She’s not thrilled with her family trying to set her up with strangers, but she’d really like a date to her cousin’s upcoming wedding—especially since she found out her ex is going to be there. So she decides she’s going to go about finding a boyfriend the smart way: with a spreadsheet. But life has a way of surprising you, even when you think you have it all planned out.

This is an utterly charming novel full of heart. I loved the witty banter, especially with her would-be suitors, and I loved Yinka’s best friend Nana. The book is peppered with text messages and actual spreadsheets. And like Bridget Jones, there are a lot of funny, awkward mishaps, but there’s also an important message about societal and cultural pressures and independence. Hooray for Yinka!

(CW for mentions of infidelity, racism, death of a family member, body shaming, and disordered eating.)

an orange cat sitting in a large silver mixing bowl and leaning heavily to out one side

This week: I’m currently reading Marion Lane and the Deadly Rose by T.A. Willberg and I’ve made it to Night Shift in my Stephen King reread. Outside of books, I’m rewatching Veep, I’ve gotten back into cryptograms, and the song stuck in my head is Ring the Bells by James. And as promised, here is a cat picture! Just when you think Zevin sitting in a bowl can’t get any sillier, he leans out the side.

Thank you, as always, for joining me each week as I rave about books! I am wishing the best for all of you in whatever situation you find yourself in now. And yay, books! – XO, Liberty ❤️