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Check Your Shelf

Is it Worth Your 2500?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, where it’s been a bit of a week, and I’m very much looking ahead to the weekend. By the time you read this newsletter, I’ll be at Wrigley Field watching the Cubs play the White Sox, and even though my heart is still shattered into a million Bryant/Rizzo/Baez-less pieces, it’ll be good to enjoy some live baseball.

Okay, let’s talk about libraries now.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

New York Public Library’s staff members are speaking out about their growing concerns around COVID-19.

Whitefish Bay (WI) residents and a social justice group protest the library’s removal of a sign addressing systemic racism.

A Drag Queen Story Hour program was canceled in Nebraska after receiving numerous threats.

Carmel (IN) parents share outrage over “sexually explicit” content in library books.

Shelly Millender Jr., who helped desegregate the Birmingham Public Library, dies at age 86.

For all your patrons who still use their old Kindles: certain older models will start losing internet access beginning in December.

Cool Library Updates

This sixth-grade author helped launch a pop-up library in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Bay Area librarians bring information to inmates, one letter at a time.

Libraries across the United States are eliminating late fees.

Worth Reading

A new study reveals that the majority of academic librarians have experienced sexual harassment in the workplace.

Connecticut libraries see a lot more book removal requests, but few actually get pulled from the shelves.

Why other libraries should be paying attention to the #SaveNilesLibrary Campaign.

Book Adaptations in the News

Paramount has acquired the rights to Seanan McGuire’s Wayward Children fantasy series, with the plan to create a franchise around this series and its characters.

We’re getting two new Octavia Butler adaptations: one for Fledgling and one for Parable of the Sower.

A Jaws-themed musical (yes, MUSICAL) is in the works for 2022. SIGN. ME. UP.

A TV series based on the life of Malcolm X is in the works at Sony, which will be based on the novels X, by Kekla Magoon and Ilyasah Shabazz and The Awakening of Malcolm X by Tiffany D. Jackson and Ilyasah Shabazz.

Empire of Wild by Cherie Dimaline is being adapted as a series.

Mercedes Lackey’s Valdemar universe is being adapted for TV.

Garth Greenwell’s novel What Belongs to You is being adapted as an opera.

Love, Victor has been renewed for a third season on Hulu.

Natalie Portman’s adaptation of Elena Ferrante’s Days of Abandonment is no longer moving forward at HBO.

Casting updates for Killers of the Flower Moon and the new Exorcist trilogy.

Amazon’s Lord of the Rings series teases a release date.

Trailers for the Dexter revival series and the last season of The Walking Dead.

Books & Authors in the News

Crime author Mo Hayder has died at age 59. (This woman wrote some of the most horrifying crime fiction I’ve EVER read, and if you know me, that’s meant as the highest possible compliment.)

A new wave of “concerned citizens” discover and challenge the classic book It’s Perfectly Normal: Changing Bodies, Growing Up, Sex, and Sexual Health.

A fake Cormac McCarthy account is causing a stir on Twitter.

Numbers & Trends

Is it worth your 2500? (Don’t worry if this puts you into a temporary existential crisis…that’s what it did for me.)

Americans read nearly 25% more during the pandemic, according to new research.

Award News

The RWA has stepped in it again by presenting a VIVIAN Award to a book with a genocidal “hero.”

The National Book Foundation plans to hold a limited, in-person ceremony for the National Book Awards in November.

Awkwafina is hosting the 2021 PEN America Literary Gala.

The 2021 Comedy Women in Print Award longlists have been announced.

The Newberry Library announces a $25,000 Chicago-specific book award.

Pop Cultured

Mystery, mayhem, and nostalgia: inside the intense world of Nancy Drew computer game fans.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Hemingway “wannabes” celebrate the author with a lookalike contest held in Key West.

A brief history of summer reading.

On the Riot

Why this reader values their trips to the library with their son.

Diversifying Little Free Libraries: learn, support, and get inspired.

5 lessons learned from working at your childhood library.

The most popular in-demand books in US libraries from April – July, 2021.

Book pirates buy more books, and other unintuitive book piracy facts.

Investigating punny mystery titles.

The legacy of Jane Eyre.

Where to buy signed books.

15 amazing Indigenous Bookstagram accounts to follow.


Okay, that’s it for me, everyone. Mask up, stay safe, and remember to hydrate and moisturize! Catch you all next week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading The Happiest Girl in the World by Alena Dillon.

Categories
Kid Lit Giveaways

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We’re giving away five copies of Stowaway by John David Anderson to five lucky Riot readers!

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

Here’s what it’s all about:

When scientists discover a rare and mysterious mineral in the Earth’s crust, they have no idea that it happens to be a material so precious that alien forces are willing to start a war over it.

Soon, Leo and his family decide it’s best for them to leave Earth behind. But when their ship is attacked and Leo’s father is kidnapped, Leo and his brother find themselves stranded in space. Now the only chance they have is for Leo to stow away on a ship of mercenary space pirates to help him find his father…and maybe even help save Earth.

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The Stack

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Riot Rundown

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Events

It’s Environmental Lit Day!

Calling all nature-lovers, whether you’re a camping pro, always down to get dirty, or prefer to enjoy the view from a distance and ideally indoors, thanks very much! Today we’re exploring everything from ecofiction to sustainability, hopepunk to Indigenous nature-writing, environmental themes for kids to murder in the wild, and beyond. Come along for the ride, won’t you?

a photo of a clear marble balanced on a rock in fron of a lake, reflecting the rocks and water
Categories
Today In Books

Awkwafina Will Host the PEN America Literary Gala: Today in Books

Brendan Fraser Joins the Cast of Killers of the Flower Moon

Brendan Fraser is joining the cast of the Apple and Paramount Studios adaptation Killers of the Flower Moon, the bestselling book from David Grann. Martin Scorsese is directing the film. Robert De Niro, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Jesse Plemons are also already attached to the project. Fraser will play lawyer W.S. Hamilton in the film, which is set in 1920s Oklahoma and follows the brutal murders of the Osage Nation known as the “Reign of Terror.”

Awkwafina Will Host the PEN America Literary Gala

Golden Globe-winning actor, writer, producer, rapper, and comedian Awkwafina will be the host of this year’s PEN America Literary Gala, which will take place in person at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City on October 5. PEN America CEO Suzanne Nossel said, “Awkwafina is unapologetic, smashing through barriers in the entertainment business and setting a new course for representation in popular culture. She’s a leader in the industry, and we’re excited to bring her to our stage this fall to celebrate the freedom to speak and the freedom to write.”

Xolo Maridueña Cast as Blue Beetle in HBO Max Film

Xolo Maridueña, star of Cobra Cai, has been cast as the Blue Beetle for upcoming HBO Max film about the superhero. Blue Beetle will be a film about the Blue Beetle’s third incarnation Jaime Reyes, a Mexican-American teenager who becomes bonded with an alien scarab. Angel Manuel (Charm City Kings) will direct the adaptation, and the script will be written by Gareth Dunnet-Alcocer. Blue Beetle will be the first DC film to star a Latinx superhero. Production will begin in 2022.

New Wave of “Concerned Citizens” Discover and Challenge It’s Perfectly Normal

The classic It’s Perfectly Normal—a children’s book that encourages normalizing the changing body during adolescence—was recently rereleased to include more inclusive language. Now, conservatives across the country are challenging the book. Here’s a look at why and what you can do.

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Let’s Show Queer Bookstores Some Love

This weekend, I got to spend some time with my family and — most importantly — pet everyone’s dogs. My mom recently got a puppy in addition to her older dog, and he is the cutest. My sister also adopted a dog in the last year, so between the three of us, we have 5 dogs that all got to play together. Please enjoy this picture of Finn (my mom’s puppy) after she freed him from getting himself trapped in the bed’s box spring.

A cocker spaniel and Australian Shepherd mix puppy rolling around on the floor with a goofy grin

I also wanted to start doing something in this intro paragraph other than ramble, so I’ve decided to start talk about a different LGBTQ charity every week. (Shout out to Alex at the Swords & Spaceships newsletter for the inspiration.)

This week, I wanted to highlight The Okra Project, which is a collective that provides meals and resources to Black trans people. They’ve done a ton of great work providing support, including free therapy, during the pandemic. You can learn more about them or donate here.


Queer Bookish Resources

Speaking of highlighting queer resources, I wanted to let you know about a handy site, in case you weren’t already aware of it: The Queer Science Fiction and Fantasy Database. It’s run by Sarah, an asexual lesbian SFF reader and book cover designer famous for her tumblr slideshows of queer book recs.

The title image of Sarah's Sci-fi and Fantasy Books by Trans and Non-Binary Authors! slideshow
One of Sarah’s tumblr slideshows of book recs

The Queer SFF Database is a curated collection of sci-fi and fantasy books with queer main characters, tagged so that you can search for exactly what you’re looking for. Mix and match the queer identity (trans, bisexual, aromantic, etc), relationship (F/F, M/F, NB/NB, etc), intersecting identity (Jewish, fat, Black, over 40, etc), page length, year published, genre (cyberpunk, portal fantasy, space opera, etc), and miscellaneous tags (no queer characters die, polyamory, no sexual content, etc) you’re looking for, and it will generate the books that match ALL of the criteria.

You can also leave as many blank as you’d like, so if you’re just looking for any queer space opera book, you’d just click space opera and leave the identities section blank. Likewise, if you’re looking for any nonbinary SFF book, you can leave the genre section blank.

Click on the cover and you’ll get the description, what kind of representation the book has, content warnings, and links to reviews from own voices reviewers of at least one of the identities of the main character.

Sarah has also included a ton of links to other queer book reviewers in the sidebar, including book bloggers, Goodreads reviewers, and a few BookTubers. If you’re a fan of queer SFF books, you can’t get much better of a resource than the Queer SFF Database! I used it a ton while researching my post on fantasy novels set in worlds without homophobia or transphobia.

All the Links Fit to Click

Book Riot LGBTQ Posts

New Releases This Week

cover of Radiant Fugitives: A Novel by Nawaaz Ahmed

Radiant Fugitives by Nawaaz Ahmed (Lesbian Fiction)

Seema has made a successful career for herself working as a consultant for Kamala Harris’s attorney general campaign in San Francisco, but she’s still hurting from when her father exiled her from the family because she came out as a lesbian. Now, she has to rely on her religious sister and sickly mother when she finds herself single and pregnant. Told from the point of view of Seema’s unborn son, this follows three generations of a Muslim-Indian family, each a flawed and three dimensional character.

Afterparties cover

Afterparties: Stories by Anthony Veasna So (LGBTQ Short Stories)

A Roxane Gay book club pick, this collection focuses on Cambodian American life as well as queer and immigrant communities. These stories mix together absurdity and tenderness, and they come with rave reviews from Brit Bennet, Bryan Washington, George Saunders, and more.

Fresh by Margot Wood cover

Fresh by Margot Wood (Bisexual New Adult)

This book singlehandedly pulled me out of a reading slump. It’s very loosely inspired by Emma — if Emma was a bisexual girl with ADHD who went to an artsy college but is mainly interested in getting laid. It’s from a first person point of view, and it sure sounds like a college freshman telling you a story, complete with weird asides in footnotes. This is a much-needed addition to the all-too-small category of queer new adult that will leave older and wiser readers shaking our heads fondly at the rollercoaster of college relationships.

A Lesson in Vengeance cover

A Lesson in Vengeance by Victoria Lee (Lesbian YA Fantasy)

One of the most anticipated queer books of the year, this is a sapphic dark academia title set at a boarding school haunted by its rumored history of witchcraft. There’s also own voices representation of depression. This an atmospheric read with a writer main character (always a plus for dark academia) that I can’t wait to curl up with on a crisp Fall evening.

cover of the dead and the dark by courtney gould

The Dead and the Dark by Courtney Gould (Lesbian YA Thriller)

Logan has spent her life on the road, as her dads scouted locations for their ghost-hunting show, ParaTroopers. But now she’s stuck in her dads’ hometown of Snakebite, they’re keeping secrets from her, and teens keep going missing or turning up dead. An out lesbian in a deeply homophobic small town, Logan finds an unlikely partnership in Ashley: they both want to find out the truth about what’s happening. Ashley, in order to find her boyfriend alive, and Logan, in order to clear her dads’ names. This is an atmospheric, creepy read that I loved, and I highly recommend the audiobook version!

Burly Tales edited by Steve Berman (M/M Short Stories)

All Are Welcome by Liz Parker (Sapphic Fiction)

The Perfume Thief by Timothy Schaffert (Queer Women Historical Fiction)

I Kissed a Girl by Jennet Alexander (F/F Romance)

Fake It by Lily Seabrooke (Trans main character, F/F Romance)

The Desert Prince (Nightfall Saga #1) by Peter V. Brett (Intersex Fantasy)

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Court of Lions (Mirage #2) by Somaiya Daud (F/F YA Fantasy) — Paperback release

Like Other Girls by Britta Lundin (Lesbian YA)

The Wild Ones by Nafiza Azad (Lesbian YA Fantasy)

Julie and the Phantoms: Whatever Happens (Julie and the Phantoms #1) by Candace Buford (Gay Middle Grade)

Black Boy Joy by Kwame Mbalia (LGBTQ-inclusive Middle Grade Short Stories)

Oh, What a Lovely Century by Roderic Fenwick Owen (Gay Memoir)

The Fixed Stars by Molly Wizenberg (Queer Memoir) — Paperback release


That’s it for me this week! Until next time, you can find me at the Lesbrary as well as on Twitter @danikaellis. You can also hear me on All the Books on the first Tuesday of the month, and I post weekly New Releases videos on the Book Riot Youtube channel. You can bet I sneak in as many queer titles as I can.

Happy reading!

Danika

Categories
Book Radar

LOVE, VICTOR Gets A 3rd Season And More Book Radar!

Hello Radar readers! I am not Liberty. Thought I should get that out of the way, but don’t worry she’s just on vacation eating books. I’m Jamie Canavés and while I don’t have puns, or naughty cats made out of liquid, I do have an angry goat trapped in a dog at war with a raccoon. Anyhoo, let’s do books!

Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

cover for Kalamata's Kitchen

The fourth book in Kalamata’s Kitchen, about culture and cuisine, has published from Random House Books for Young Readers.

Announcing Nona the Ninth, a New Addition to The Locked Tomb Series From Tamsyn Muir!

‘Black Widow’ Legal Battle: Inside the Fallout After Scarlett Johansson Sues Disney

Crime novelist Mo Hayder dies aged 59 from motor neurone disease

In the happiest of news: ‘Love, Victor’ Renewed for Season 3 at Hulu

Margaret Cho joins upcoming film “described as a modern gay take on ‘Pride and Prejudice.'”

Reese Witherspoon’s Hello Sunshine to Be Sold to Media Company Backed by Blackstone

Brendan Fraser Joins Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon

Buffy the Vampire Slayer gets a YA sequel trilogy from Disney Books

Read an excerpt from Stephen King’s new thriller Billy Summers

‘Lord of the Rings’ Amazon Series Sets Premiere Date, Drops First-Look Image

The adaptation of the Elena Ferrante’s novel The Days of Abandonment will no longer move forward at HBO after Natalie Portman stepped down.

Book Riot Recommends

I write Book Riot’s Unusual Suspects newsletter and am Tailored Book Recommendations‘ Administrative Coordinator so I am always looking at upcoming books, and generally squealing about them, and getting my hands on galleys when I can.

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These Toxic Things by Rachel Howzell Hall

I’m currently reading These Toxic Things by Rachel Howzell Hall (September 1st) and you may be like “wow, jumping the gun you haven’t even finished yet” but she’s an automatic read author for me and I’m loving it. It is many things I like already: a murder mystery; a great balance between the mystery and the lead’s personal life; an interesting job–think making virtual scrapbooks where you can ask to recall a memory from your life and have it projected for you with the narrated story from that day and the images. There are definitely some “past is gonna come get some people” vibes going on right now and I love it.

While you wait, Rachel Howzell Hall put out a great standalone PI mystery last year, And Now She’s Gone, about a missing woman case where things aren’t adding up right. She also has a procedural series worth marathoning that follows homicide detective Elouise “Lou” Norton out in LA, Land of Shadows.

What I’m reading this week.

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A Lot Like Adiós by Alexis Daria

My Sweet Girl by Amanda Jayatissa

Slippery Creatures (The Will Darling Adventures #1) by K.J. Charles

Secret Identity by Alex Segura

And that’s it for me but I’ll leave you with something that made me laugh.

Categories
Audiobooks

Closing Out Disability Pride Month & New Releases!

Hello Audiophiles! I looked up a few days ago and realized August has arrived — I thought I had more time for summer listening! Plus, it’s women in translation month, and I’ve been setting aside dozens of books throughout the year just so I can read them in August. I doubt that I’ll get through thirty books in thirty-one days, but I feel like I need to try, right?

Every year, a couple friends – Matthew Sciarappa and Jennifer Helinek – and I host the #WITreadathon, which encourages folks to read books by women in translation. There’s a group read, some prompts, and all sorts of celebratory enthusiasm over on Twitter, so feel free to check it out and join us if you feel so inclined!

So stay tuned for all sorts of women in translation content. And let me know if you have any women in translation recommendations!

Other than that, this week has just been my spouse and I celebrating our corgi’s birthday, showering him with gifts, and telling him how beautiful he is. Ah, how our definition of a successful party has changed since the beginning of the pandemic! Of course, here is a photo of the birthday boy and his new toy yak.

A photo of Dylan, the red and white Pembroke Welsh Corgi, sitting on a white furry blanket next to his new toy yak.

Onto the audiobooks!

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Growing Up Disabled in Australia edited by Carly Findlay

With the end of Disability Pride Month last week, I found myself thinking about books by disabled authors. Previously in the newsletter, I shared my love for Disability Visibility. I also love Growing Up Disabled in Australia edited by Carly Findlay. Both anthologies celebrate disability in all of its many forms, but I loved learning more about disabled folks’ experiences in Australia.

The editor, Carly Findlay, also has an excellent memoir called Say Hello, in which she shares her experience living with a rare skin condition. Findlay is such a huge disability rights advocate, particularly for people with facial differences.

Findlay narrates both Growing Up Disabled in Australia and Say Hello, performing each book like a pro. I cried at points during both books, so I’m not entirely sure how Carly managed it. She’s able to communicate the frank realities that many disabled folks face while maintaining poise, but there’s still so much emotion and heart in her delivery.

Both books are available as audiobooks here in the US, so definitely go check them out!

Recent Releases

A graphic of the cover of When the Reckoning Comes

When the Reckoning Comes by LaTanya McQueen

Mira fled her small town of Kipsen to find a better life, but she finally returns home to attend her friend Celine’s wedding. Hoping to reconnect with her childhood friends, Mira tries to make nice, but the plantation’s dark history looms over the event, casting everything in its shadow.

Narrated by Kara Young

A graphic of the cover of The Husbands

The Husbands by Chandler Baker

Pitched as a gender-swapped The Stepford Wives, The Husbands features Nora Spangler, a successful woman who seems to have it all. But Nora often feels like her husband doesn’t work nearly as hard as she does. When she decides to buy a new house, she can’t help but feel drawn to a neighborhood where all the men seem so perfect. My guess is that she may just realize that these men might be too good to be true.

Narrated by Allyson Ryan (Long Bright River by Liz Moore and Fleishman Is in Trouble by Taffy Brodesser-Akner)

A graphic of the cover The Turnout

The Turnout by Megan Abbott

Megan Abbott is back with another engrossing read. The Turnout includes all of the signature Megan Abbott elements, including a thrilling plot, dancers, and intricately drawn characters. The novel revolves around two sisters and one sister’s husband who all run a dance studio together with precision—until it all seems to go wrong.

Narrated by Cassandra Campbell (Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng and The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot)

A graphic of the cover of Damnation Spring

Damnation Spring by Ash Davidson

I have a huge weakness for books about trees, so from the moment I heard that this audiobook was about a family who owns a logging company in California, I knew I had to listen to it. Set in 1977, Damnation Spring centers around Rich, his wife Colleen, and their young son. There’s lots of drama around the business, a grove of redwoods, and all sorts of shenanigans. Where do I sign up?!

Narrated by CJ Wilson, Rebecca Lowman, Mark Sanderlin, and Candace Thaxton

A graphic of the cover of Death in Castle Dark

Death in Castle Dark by Veronica Bond

Nora Blake accepts a new job and goes to live in Castle Dark. With a name like that, you’d think she would know that sinister things are about to happen. Alas, when a man at the castle dies, she’s completely surprised, but she soon recovers and begins trying to figure out who is guilty of the crime.

Narrated by Imani Jade Powers (The Beautiful Ones by Silvia Moreno-Garcia and Where Dreams Descend by Janella Angeles)

A graphic of the cover of Shallow Waters

Shallow Waters by Anita Kopacz

Shallow Waters follows a young Yoruba woman named Yemaya who travels from her home to America in the mid-1800s. When we meet Yoruba, she has no idea that she possesses the power of an Orïsha a deity in the religion of the Yoruba people. Her journey takes her from Africa to North America as she tries to find a mysterious man who may have some answers for her.

Narrated by Michelle Kopacz

Around the Internet

5 Questions with Narrator Catherine Ho” (Audiofile Magazine) – I love a narrator Q&A!

Over on Book Riot

10 of Libro.fm’s Most Preordered Books of Fall 2021” – I share some of Libro.fm’s most popular preorders!

12 LGBTQIA YA Audiobooks to Listen to in the 2nd Half of the Year” – Sarah Nicolas shares even MORE audiobooks for your “to be listened to” lists for the fall!


I’d love to hear from you! Drop me a line at kendra@readingwomenpodcast.com or say hi over on Instagram @kdwinchester. For even MORE audiobook content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy listening, bookish friends!

~ Kendra

Categories
Kissing Books

Real Life and Real Romance

Welcome to the Kissing Books newsletter y’all. I’m P.N. Hinton, your guide to the world of romance novels. I hope your spirit is doing well today. Whether it’s a backlist, new release, or an under the radar delight, I aim to help you find a book or two that you can get lost in. If you’re new to the Kissing Books newsletter, welcome and enjoy your stay. If you’re a long-time reader, welcome back; it’s good to see you again. 

Romance News:

The Heart Principle book cover

As promised, I did a bit more research into the discourse surrounding The Heart Principle by Helen Hoang. My take on it is that most people as so upset because it’s not a rom-com. To which I say…did you really expect it to be? I love this author’s work and feel she’s a romance writer. But I would not ever classify her work as rom-com.

The Kiss Quotient was advertised as a gender-swapped Pretty Woman. So, many went in thinking it was a rom-com. Those expectations were shattered within the first forty pages though when Stella pretty much has a panic attack while trying to have sex with Michael for the first time and he rightfully put a stop to it. For me, this showed that this would be a romance that ‘got real’ and dealt with real issues. 

Don’t get me wrong; the cover for this book is very misleading as are the others in the series. But neither one of the other books are rom-coms; so, I really don’t understand why anyone would expect THP to be. We all know by now that most times authors have no say on their covers and they can be deceptive. There’s a reason we say to not judge a book by its cover. 

If you didn’t like this book, please don’t take this as “you’re not a real romance reader.” I could easily name five books that are beloved in the genre that weren’t for me and that’s okay. But I don’t think this book should get the amount of hatred it is getting, to the point where the author apologized for it, simply because it’s not a rom-com. 

Most of us are well past the age of sanitized fairy tales where the Princess never gets her period, the Prince never farts, and woodland creatures clean the house. In real life and relationships, you’re going to see the ugly parts of your partner. You may have to deal with them realizing late in life that they are neurodivergent or they have a mental health issue. Chances are you will have to help them bury one or both of their parents which, speaking as someone who’s been on both sides, is very hard.

Grief and suffering doesn’t always have an overnight fix and I don’t expect it to be that way in any of my novels. In fact, I get insulted when it does. And it seems a bit odd that, in a genre that is always criticized for having unrealistic endings, when one does, it is still criticized harshly. We can’t win for losing. 

The RWAs also happened last weekend and the drama surrounding that is something else. There was only one winning book by an author of color, and a book that opened with a hero committing genocide won for ‘Best Romance with a Religious or Spiritual Element’. That’s a whole lot of ‘nope’ from me. Fellow Rioter Sarah fleshes it out a bit more in her news piece here which pretty much is how much of Romancelandia is feeling right now.

What makes it even more insulting is this was the first year the awards were called the Vivians. I mean, we all suspected it, but this really showed that this change was just a form of performative allyship. They also released a ‘statement’ which again is a whole lot of yikes.

I’m happy to see that one of my new favorites, Reese Ryan, took away an award though. I was rooting for her.

Around the Web in Romance:

And now, in lighter topics…

Fellow Rioter Annika has a round-up of some of the best love scenes in books.

Are you interested in hearing a bunch of awesome writers write about their equally awesome books? Then you may want to sign up for the Summer Date Night. It takes place August 13th and is hosted by Loyalty Books.

Check out this cover reveal for The Bachelor’s Valet.

Recommendation:

Yes there is only one recommendation today and that is going to be Kennedy Ryan’s Reel. If you’re a regular reader you know it took me a bit to finish this book, because I was absolutely savoring it.

Reel book cover

This book was rich in its storytelling. I literally had to keep reminding myself that Dessi Blue was not a real person whenever we got the snippets of the script. The realism of what Black entertainers during that time had to deal with was heart wrenching. But it was the realism of the relationship between Neevah and Canon that did it for me. Without going too much into spoilers, they had to deal with a lot when their relationship became physical and known to the rest of the crew. They also had to deal with something that not every couple can work through. And it was hard. It was hard to see and read and imagine how a newly established couple deals with something that can (and has) broken long-standing ones.

This is a great book. Its page count is a beast but it’s worth it. So, if you haven’t picked it up yet, take this as your sign to go ahead and do it soon.

And that’s all for today friends. I’ll be back next Monday with more updates for you. If you want to give me a follow on Twitter, I can be found under @PScribe801. Until then.