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In The Club

Poetic Justice

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.

I said goodbye to the latest test prep class I was teaching this past weekend. In the last discussion we had before actually starting class, I asked them what career fields they wanted to go into. It’s a basic enough icebreaker type of question, but one I hadn’t asked yet—I had always focused on the fun stuff like their favorite video games and food, naturally.

As before, their answers were so interesting. There was a range of interests. One student wanted to continue her love of dancing while also working in law. Another wanted to go into music, and a third wanted to be a dentist with a café. I love how they all already knew what they wanted to do and were willing to step outside the box and do things that interested them.

This was one of the funnest groups I’ve had, and I’ll really miss them. In my final go-forth-and-prosper spiel to them, I told them to be proud of what they had accomplished so far and to go easy on themselves as standardized tests were never meant for us— as in people of color or non-rich people— to do well on. Afterwards, one of them said I was a G and a real one. Excuse me while I cry thug tears.

Now, let’s get to the club!


Nibbles and Sips

Today I present to you vegan lomo saltado. It doesn’t have to be vegan, that’s just the way Alexis Marie Montoya of The Bronx Vegan prepared them. Feel free to use the usual steak in this Peruvian dish, especially since Alexis said the fake steak wasn’t exactly cutting it. Here’s another non-vegan recipe by Tasty.

Now, let’s get to the books!

Poets as Novelists

Poetry requires such an acute command of language that makes poets excellent novelists. I’ve heard of poets’ prose being likened to having a Midas touch as far as their ability to construct sentences goes. Below are a few novels by poets for you and your book clubs to see for yourselves.

cover of On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong

A son writes a letter to a mother that can’t read. He writes of the details that make him different —a generational curse of abuse, life in Vietnam before immigrating, and an alienating otherness— building up the stories of himself until a great revelation. When You’re done with this novel, consider Vuong’s 2016 book much lauded book of poetry, Night Sky with Exit Wounds (or even read the poetry first).

cover of Memorial Drive by Natasha Trethewey

Memorial Drive by Natasha Tretheway

At nineteen, as Tretheway set out to start her life, her mother’s was brutally ended. An abusive former stepfather first tried to kill her mother and was imprisoned. Once he was released, he tried again and succeeded. Tretheway examines all of her life leading up to that fateful moment, including recounting her happy childhood in the south as a child of a Black mother and white father, and traveling back to the place her mother was killed. With poetic precision, she reopens old wounds and wades through her grief. Tretheway won a Pulitzer for Native Guard and was appointed the United States Poet Laureate in 2012.

cover of How the Word Is Passed by Clint Smith

How the Word Is Passed by Clint Smith

Smith takes the history of slavery and shows us where it exists in the physical. He does this by bridging the gap between historical fact and what some feel is present day relevance. He passes through Monticello, Angola Prison, and more, showing how each place tells of their involvement in slavery. In addition to being a poet, Smith is a staff writer for the Atlantic. His collection of poetry, Counting Descent, won a Black Caucus of the American Library Association Literary Award.

Book Club Bonus: Select a few poems of the authors’ to discuss alongside their novels.

Suggestion Section

For Banned Book Week, Te-Nehisi Coates shares his thoughts on recent book bannings.

The Tragedy of Macbeth, starring Denzel Washington and Frances McDorman, is out in December.

Rioter Kelly Jensen writes about libraries, accessibility, and ebooks here.


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_ . You can also catch me choppin’ it up with Kelly Jensen on the Hey YA podcast every couple of weeks.

Until next week.

-E

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Perfect Fall Reading: September Mystery Releases

Hi mystery fans! I hope your to-do plans for fall are just reading because the new releases pile is stacked! Here are a bunch of great reads for different tastes including a few for horror fans because ’tis the season!

cover image of Never Saw Me Coming by Vera Kurian

Never Saw Me Coming by Vera Kurian

Here’s a fun revenge thriller meets murder mystery that I inhaled the audiobook of! Bonus: it did not do the “mental illness is the boogeyman” thing! A professor at a university is doing a study on sociopaths by offering them scholarships to the school if they’ll work with him. It’s a secret program and the students enrolled don’t even know who the others are. One happens to be faking being a sociopath. One is only there to murder the guy who assaulted her as a teen. And one may be killing them all?…

(TW nonconsensual drugging/ past tween rape/ adult child abuse/ briefly recounts teacher student statutory relationship, not graphic/ webcam hacking and non-consensual distribution of sexual images/ past suicide briefly mentioned, detail)

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White Smoke by Tiffany D. Jackson

One of my favorite reads of the year, and perfect for fall reading, here’s a social-thriller meets “is the house haunted?” horror novel (not slasher or gory)! A blended family moves into a new house where strange things are happening as the teen daughter tries to get situated, leaving her past behind. But either there is something seriously wrong with this house or someone is trying to scare her…

(TW addiction/ past overdose mentions, not graphic/ obsessive thoughts/ past child murder mentioned, not graphic or detailed)

cover of Friends Like These by Kimberly McCreight, red with white font

Friends Like These by Kimberly McCreight

The author of the legal thriller A Good Marriage is back with a new thriller. This time a group of four friends who went to Vassar College have now come together for an intervention for the fifth member of their group. Years before they covered something up at school and they’re all willing to do whatever it takes to keep that a secret… For fans of multiple POV and past and present mysteries.

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The Night She Disappeared by Lisa Jewell

I think if you want Liane Moriarty, but amped up into the thriller category or more focused on the mystery, Lisa Jewell is your author. This time around we have a young mother who goes missing on a date night. Years later in the area she was last seen, someone comes across a note on a tree that says “dig here”…

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Miss Kopp Investigates (Kopp Sisters #7) by Amy Stewart

For historical mystery fans! If you’re looking to read a historical mystery set in the early 1900s that is based on a real person: Constance Kopp was the a deputy sheriff of Bergen County, New Jersey and then started a detective agency with her sisters. If you’re looking to start at the beginning pick up Girl Waits with Gun.

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My Sweet Girl by Amanda Jayatissa

If you love psychological thrillers, unreliable narrators, and past and present chapters, absolutely pick this one up. Also great in audio and also did not use mental illness as the boogeyman. Paloma just found her roommate dead, but when the police arrive he’s suddenly gone. That starts the beginning of her mindfck “I swear I saw him dead but did I make it up somehow?” It doesn’t help that he was blackmailing her before he died… We get to see Paloma’s time growing up in a Sri Lankan orphanage up until she was adopted, and now as she moves back into her parents home trying to figure out what is happening…

(TW child abuse/ past child suicide attempt briefly mentioned, detail/ ableism/ colorism/ pedophile/ PTSD/ Blackout drinking)

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RedHanded: An Exploration of Criminals, Cannibals, Cults, and What Makes a Killer Tick by Suruthi Bala and Hannah Maguire

For true crime readers and true crime podcast listeners, here’s a book by the hosts of the true crime podcast RedHanded. Suruthi Bala and Hannah Maguire don’t believe that victims just happened to be at the wrong place nor that killers are monsters. They explore real cases with an exploration of society, gender, poverty, and culture.

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All These Bodies by Kendare Blake

Here’s a horror novel I think mystery fans will like, or that can be a nice step into horror if you’re curious. A family was brutally massacred and a young girl is accused–she was covered in all their blood–and will now only talk to one person: the local sheriff’s son who has agreed to interview her for an article.

(TW brief mention of possible suicide, detail/ child abuse/ mentions past teen grooming assumed assault, not graphic and not on page)

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As Good As Dead (A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder #3) by Holly Jackson

The trilogy conclusion to A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder! This series is for fans of true crime podcasts in fiction who are looking for a series that is a limited commitment.

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The Man Who Died Twice (Thursday Murder Club #2) by Richard Osman

If you’ve been anticipating the sequel to The Thursday Murder Club, it’s here! This is one of those series that has mass appeal for mystery readers as it deals with real things but never goes very graphic or dark. It also has the fun element of a group of folks in a retirement community who have a true crime club of armchair detectives.

cover of Your Guide to Not Getting Murdered in a Quaint English Village by Maureen Johnson and Jay Cooper, featuring oen and ink illustration of a quaint village, with a pair of shoes sticking out from behind a building

Your Guide to Not Getting Murdered in a Quaint English Village by Maureen Johnson, Jay Cooper (Illustrator)

If you’re looking for humorous nonfiction that is what the title says here you go. Bonus: it’s written by the author of the Truly Devious series!

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The Ninja Betrayed (Lily Wong #3) by Tori Eldridge

Here’s a thriller series that follows a Chinese-Norwegian modern-day ninja. And if you’re looking for some armchair traveling, this time around Lily Wong travels with her mom to Hong Kong where democracy movements and business family takeovers take over (heh). If you want to start at the beginning: The Ninja Daughter.

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Personal Effects: What Recovering the Dead Teaches Me About Caring for the Living by Robert A. Jensen

I wouldn’t call this true crime, but I think it’s adjacent and a nonfiction book that crime readers would be interested in reading. As the owner of the world’s leading disaster management company, Robert A. Jensen takes you into his world.

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Whitesands by Johann Thorsson

If you like thrillers and horror and books starring homicide detectives, here’s one to read this fall! And did I mention there’s also a locked-house mystery?

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The Hawthorne Legacy (The Inheritance Games #2) by Jennifer Lynn Barnes

The sequel to The Inheritance Games (not a fantasy!) is here! I recommend starting with the first book about a young woman being left basically everything in a ridiculously rich person’s will. However she had no idea who he was or why he left her everything. But his family sure is NOT happy. Time to dig through the mystery of why and dig up all those family secrets.

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Rizzio by Denise Mina

If you’re looking for a historical crime novella that dramatizes the murder of David Rizzio, private secretary of Mary, Queen of Scots, Denise Mina has got you covered!


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

Massive New Release September, The Finaling

HERE WE ARE. End of September. Autumn foliage. If you live somewhere where that happens. We are now three-quarters through the year, which is exciting if you decide to do a final quarter reading challenge.

You all. This year is literally the slowest reading year in years for me. I thought it would be 2020 because of the start of the pandemic and also I got married, but 2020 was my best reading year? And then 2021 has been like, hey, what are books. And honestly, no matter how much you’re reading, you’re doing a great job and I am proud of you for even having the energy to care about books. A+, you.

Here are many new releases for the week!

Feeding the Soul cover

Feeding the Soul (Because It’s My Business): Finding Our Way to Joy, Love, and Freedom by Tabitha Brown

Did you watch Olivia Lux do a terrible job as Tabitha Brown on Drag Race season 13? That’s the first time I heard of Tabitha Brown, but she seems like a delight. She is a vegan and TikTok star! In her book, she talks about struggling with chronic autoimmune pain and “shares the wisdom she gained from her own journey, showing readers how to make a life for themselves that is rooted in nonjudgmental kindness and love, both for themselves and for others.”

Revolution in Our Time: The Black Panther Party’s Promise to the People by Kekla Magoon

Guardians of the Trees: A Journey of Hope Through Healing the Planet by Kinari Webb

Out of the Sun: On Race and Storytelling by Esi Edugyan

cover image Please Don't Sit on My Bed in Your Outside Clothes by Phoebe Robinson

Please Don’t Sit on My Bed in Your Outside Clothes: Essays by Phoebe Robinson

It’s a book by Roxane Gay’s imprint, Tiny Reparations Books! And by the hilarious Phoebe Robinson. She shares “stories about her mom slow-poking before a visit with Mrs. Obama, the stupidly fake reassurances of zip-line attendants, her favorite things about dating a white person from the UK, and how the lack of Black women in leadership positions fueled her to become the Black lady boss of her dreams.” YAY.

Desperate: An Epic Battle for Clean Water and Justice in Appalachia by Kris Maher

Believing: Our Thirty-Year Journey to End Gender Violence by Anita Hill

White Borders: The History of Race and Immigration in the United States from Chinese Exclusion to the Border Wall by Reece Jones

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How to Examine a Wolverine: More Tales from the Accidental Veterinarian by Philipp Schott, DVM

What is it like to be a veterinarian! And what do you need to know. Schott answers this, as well as all-important topics like “the mysteries of catnip, dog flatulence, and duck erectile dysfunction.” Really just covers it all there. I hope I never have to examine a wolverine, but I am interested in HOW one does it.


For more nonfiction reads, 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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Riot Rundown

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Giveaways

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We’re giving away five copies of High Stakes by Iris Johansen to five lucky Riot readers!

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

All bets are off as #1 New York Times bestselling author Iris Johansen introduces gambler Logan Tanner. He lives the exhilarating life of a professional gambler, but all the glitz and glamor hide a dark and violent past as an extractor—a world that comes rushing back to him when the beautiful and innocent Lara Balkon enters his life. Logan is drawn into a conflict between two Russian mafia bosses over Lara, her life hanging in the balance. But Tanner will discover that Lara is a force to be reckoned with in her own right.

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The Stack

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Today In Books

Netflix Releases Footage from Upcoming SANDMAN Adaptation: Today in Books

James Patterson and Scholastic Book Clubs Launch The United States of Readers

Bestselling author James Patterson, in partnership with Scholastic Book Clubs, is launching The United States of Readers. The program is a fully-funded version of Scholastic Book Clubs that’s designed to reach children in Title 1 schools. Five times a year, teachers will receive age-appropriate flyers to hand out in their classrooms. The students then choose their books, and the teacher submits a class order. Then the books arrive at school for the children to keep and take home with them. The program hopes to serve five million students by the year 2026. Look for applications at the beginning of 2022 so you can nominate your Title 1 school.

Netflix Releases Footage from Upcoming Sandman Adaptation

As part of their #TUDUM event, Netflix has released a scene from the upcoming adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s Sandman. The series has no release date yet, but we do know Sandman will be executive produced by Neil Gaiman, Allan Heinberg, and David S. Goyer, and it stars Tom Sturridge as Morpheus. While you wait for the release date to be announced, you can check out the cast here.

Here’s a Sneak Peek at Ayana Gray’s Highly Anticipated Novel Beasts of Prey

Ayana Gray’s highly anticipated YA novel Beasts of Prey will be available everywhere tomorrow, Tuesday, September 28th. But today you can get a sneak peek at a chapter from the book at Entertainment Weekly. Gray’s debut novel is the first in a planned trilogy in which two Black teenagers journey into a mythical jungle to fight against a monster that threatens their home. Gray was inspired to write the novel after visiting Ghana, and her story mixes in Pan-African lore with her own fantasy world.

8 Stunning Debut Novels to Read This Fall

Summer reading season might be wrapping up, but your reading doesn’t have to slow down as we roll into fall! Here are 8 stunning debut novels that will keep you reading through the fall months.

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

Happy new release day, my little book gourds! I am very excited about all of the incredible books out today. This Tuesday’s awesome new releases include A Calling for Charlie Barnes by Joshua Ferris, Believing: Our Thirty-Year Journey to End Gender Violence by Anita Hill, and The Best American Poetry 2021 edited by Tracy K. Smith and David Lehman. I am wildly curious to get my hands on Unrequited Infatuations: A Memoir by Stevie Van Zandt—give me all that E Street Band and Sopranos hot goss! (Did you know his show Lilyhammer was Netflix’s first original content series???) I’m also excited to pick up a copy of It’s Decorative Gourd Season, Motherf**kers by Colin Nissan, because yes, yes it is. 🎃

And speaking of today’s great books, for this week’s episode of All the Books! Patricia and I discussed some of the wonderful books that we’ve read, such as Cloud Cuckoo Land, Light from Uncommon Stars, The Matzah Ball, and more.

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

Cover of Summer Sons by Lee Mandelo, featuring a human hand underwater wrapped in weeds reaching for a skeleton hand wrapped in weeds

Summer Sons by Lee Mandelo

It’s always time for scary books, but it’s especially time right now, with Halloween only four-ish weeks away. This is a fantastic queer Southern Gothic about young man who travels to Nashville to find out why his best friend and soon-to-be roommate, Eddie, died by suicide. Andrew was supposed to join Eddie, but now he’s in a house with roommates he doesn’t know in an unfamiliar town. And worse, there are some scary secrets coming to light, and possibly something horrible haunting the house. Is Andrew now forever haunted? This one is going to slowly creep you out. (CW for racism and homophobia, trauma, grief, and suicide.)

Backlist bump: Ghost Summer: Stories by Tananarive Due

cover of Beasts of Prey by Ayana Gray, featuring a hissing snake wrapped in ferns wrapped around the title

Beasts of Prey by Ayana Gray

I don’t know about you, but I cannot get enough of the YA fantasy novels of the last few years. They are out of this world! This is another excellent one to add to the list. It’s about the Night Zoo, a place populated by magical creatures. Sixteen-year-old Koffi works at the Zoo as an indentured servant to pay her family’s debts, but when her family is threatened by the Zoo’s horrid boss, she accidentally conjures a power she didn’t know she had. Koffi is destined to cross paths with a young warrior, Ekon, and the two of them must team up to make sure their futures are safe. But their paths are fraught with danger and—wait for it—beasts of prey. (CW for kidnapping, enslavement, violence and gore, death, chemical use, mental illness, physical and verbal abuse, sexism, and murder.)

Backlist bump: A Song of Wraiths and Ruin by Roseanne A. Brown

cover of The Beatryce Prophecy by Kate DiCamillo and Sophie Blackall, featuring an illustration of a young woman with a shaved head, wearing a purple robe and carrying a red book, and petting a goat

The Beatryce Prophecy by Kate DiCamillo and Sophie Blackall 

Okay, I know this is going to sound bananas, but this was my first Kate DiCamillo! I am familiar with all her backlist, but somehow have never read any of them. So I have to say, this is a great place to start because it’s a wonderful book! It’s about a young girl who mysteriously appears at the Order of the Chronicles of Sorrowing monastery. It turns out her name is Beatryce, and she holds many stories within her, and is sought by the King, because of a prophecy. Beatryce knows that her existence at the monastery puts everyone in danger, so she must figure out how to stop the King. It has amazing stories-within-stories, lots of action and adventure, and one great goat named Answelica. And it includes lovely illustrations by Sophie Blackall.

Backlist bump: The Inquisitor’s Tale: Or, The Three Magical Children and Their Holy Dog by Adam Gidwitz and Hatem Aly

On your mark…get set…add to your TBR!

cover of Memphis by Tara Stringfellow, featuring illustrations of four Black women sitting amongst grass and flowers

Memphis by Tara Stringfellow (The Dial Press, March 1, 2022)

THIS NOVEL. It will destroy you, so get ready for that. This is one of the best debut novels I have read in a long, long time, but please be ready, because it is filled with hard, heartbreaking subject matter.

The focus of the novel is three generations of Black women in a Southern family. Told over seventy years, it’s about these strong women, with Joan at the center of the narration. A young girl when her mother flees Joan’s abusive father with her younger sister, they wind up back at her mother’s ancestral home in Memphis, living with her aunt and cousin. Each of them has a trauma they are dealing with, and they learn to trust and depend on each other and the other women in their neighborhood to help them heal, including a neighbor with a gift for curses.

Told back in forth in time, we also learn about Joan’s ancestors and their hopes and hardships. It’s set against the backdrop of history from the segregated South, to the assassination of Martin Luther King, to 9/11. It is an astounding gut-punch of a book, and all of the characters are so real and the story unfolds perfectly. They have hopes and dreams in the face of impossibilities, and make mistakes and try again, and you can’t help but cheer them on. I am not doing this novel justice, so you’re just going to have to trust me that it is amazing.

(CW for mentions of racism and racialized violence and murder, partner abuse, sexual assault of a child and an adult, war violence, terrorist violence, illness, death, loss of a parent, loss of a spouse, and police violence.)

orange cat sitting on a blue blanket like a human. photo by Liberty Hardy

This week: I’m currently reading Magic, Lies, and Deadly Pies by Misha Popp and I’ve moved on to Brimstone in the Agent Pendergrast series from Preston and Child. Outside of books, I have been watching the new season of Nailed It!, and the song stuck in my head is Frying Pan by Evan Dando. And as promised, here is a cat picture! Zevon cannot seem to relax like a cat. He thinks he’s a person. ❤️


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 ❤️

Categories
In Reading Color

Un-banned Books

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

So apparently, there’s a chance my home state, Tennessee, may enter the ring with Pennsylvania and Texas for recent book bans. *heavy sigh* This isn’t much of a surprise, considering how they had already banned schools from teaching Critical Race Theory a little earlier this year. The far right group waging war against books isn’t just after those that center non white narratives, though. They’re also coming for books about sea horses, hurricanes, and Galileo. Galileo. As in, the Galileo who already caught a case back in 1633 for saying that the earth revolved around the sun. My mans can’t even catch a break in death almost 400 years later. You hate to see it.

The protest against Galileo is fitting, though, I think. It shows how this brand of thinking is literally antiquated and seems to be at least partially a result of a response to increased diversity. I doubt it’s a coincidence that the types of books that tend to be banned center queer people and people of color. Because of that, and the start of Banned Book Week, I’m highlighting books that have been banned or otherwise publicly contested.

Rebel with a Book

cover of Fry Bread by Kevin Noble Maillard, illustrated by Juana Martinez-Neal

Fry Bread: A Native American Family Story by Kevin Noble Maillard, Juana Martinez-Neal (illustrator)

This adorable picture book extols fry bread, a traditional bread made by Indigenous people that originated as a result of forced relocation. In 1864, Native Nations were forced on the “Long Walk,” in which they had to travel 300 miles to unfamiliar lands. After many starved, the U.S. government stepped in to give rations of flour, baking powder, and salt — ingredients for the beloved fry bread. The dish is not without its critics, though.

cover of Sulwe by Lupita Nyong'o, illustrated by Vashti Harrison

Sulwe by Lupita N’yongo and Vashti Harrison (illustrator)

Academy Award winning actor and Black Panther’s boo, Lupita N’yongo’s book about a girl trying to find her way is beautifully illustrated. We follow Sulwe, whose beautiful dark skin leaves her feeling less than confident. She pines to have lighter complexion like her mother and sister. Once she goes on her magical journey, though, her thoughts around beauty change and her confidence is reinvigorated.

I wanted to make sure to include a couple children’s books to show how even those aren’t safe from banning. Look at these precious covers! How do you look at that and think negatively?

cover of The Book of Unknown Americans  by Cristina Henriquez

The Book of Unknown Americans by Cristina Henríquez

Arturo and Alma Rivera leave Mexico with their daughter Maribel. They hope that living in the U.S. will help Maribel to heal from a serious injury. They soon realize just how many obstacles there are in the way of them achieving their American dream, however.

Meanwhile, Maribel is having realizations of her own. The neighbor’s kid, Mayor, and her have a burgeoning romance that inspires gossip. But the two teenagers see in each other what others fail to notice in this novel showing how incorrectly immigrants are labeled.

cover of None of the Above by I.W. Gregorio

None of the Above by I.W. Gregorio

What if what you thought you knew about yourself was wrong? That’s the case for Kristen Lattimer, whose life seems to be going pretty well when we first meet her. She’s got scholarships lined up for college, friends, and a great boyfriend. One day, when she and her boyfriend decide to take the next step and attempt to have sex, Kristen realizes something is wrong. She goes to the doctor and finds out she’s intersex and has male chromosomes. In addition to this revelation, she has to contend with the rest of her high school finding out. This book explores how deeply entrenched gender is with our identity, and what it means to identify as male, female, or intersex.

cover of Ghosts in the Schoolyard- Racism and School Closings on Chicago's South Side by Eve Ewing

Ghosts in the Schoolyard by Eve Ewing

“Failing schools. Underprivileged schools. Just plain bad schools.”

Ewing opens Ghosts in the Schoolyard with this straight-to-the-point description of Chicago’s public schools before the Mayor announced an unprecedented amount of school closings in 2013. The idea, according to Mayor Rahm Emanuel, was to make way for better schools by combatting lower enrollments rates, budget woes, and purging the bad schools. This sounds well and good until you consider how the decision was met with widespread protest, which begs the question: if the schools were so bad, why did parents, teachers, and students still want them open? Ewing answers this question by examining the elements of race and class that have influenced Chicago’s public education system. This may focus on Chicago, but I reckon many of the things explained here are mirrored in many cities across the United States.

A Little Sumn Extra

More on banning books by Kara Yorio at School Library Journal.

This is cool: open source e-reader you can make yourself from parts

Lena Waithe and Gillian Flynn to Start Book Imprints


Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with reigning Queen of YA, Kelly Jensen, as well in the In The Club newsletter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Stop Not Judging a Book By Its Cover

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I spent this afternoon on a boat watching a group of humpback whales flash their fins, and it was SO COOL! I was planning to share my video of a couple humpbacks diving in tandem next to the boat, but Twitter’s not letting me upload. You’ll just have to take my word for it that it was amazing as hell!

And now…books.


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Amazon and the Big 5 publishers asked a federal court to dismiss the ebook price-fixing lawsuit.

Lena Waithe and Gillian Flynn are starting book imprints with the new indie publishing company, Zando.

Author Sara Gran has launched a new independent publisher, Dreamland Books.

Phoebe Robinson talks about her new book imprint, which launches this month.

The Guardian Review section has closed after almost 20 years.

New & Upcoming Titles

Sonia Sotomayor has a picture book coming out in January 2022 called Just Help!

Chuck Palahniuk is serializing his next novel on Substack.

Here’s a look at Gregory Maguire’s upcoming middle grade novel, Cress Watercress.

Take a peek at Casey McQuiston’s third novel, I Kissed Shara Wheeler.

Preview for Hernan Diaz’s upcoming novel, Trust.

Weekly book picks from Bustle, Crime Reads, New York Times, and USA Today.

September picks from Crime Reads (debuts) and Goodreads (mysteries/thrillers).

October picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, children/teens) and Epic Reads.

Fall picks from AARP, BookBub (romance), Buzzfeed (SFF), Chicago Reader, and LitHub.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Bewilderment – Richard Powers (New York Times, NPR, Seattle Times, Washington Post)

Peril – Bob Woodward & Robert Costa (LA Times, NPR, Slate, Washington Post)

Cloud Cuckoo Land – Anthony Doerr (The Guardian, New York Times, Seattle Times)

The Book of Form and Emptiness – Ruth Ozeki (New York Times, USA Today)

The Right to Sex: Feminism in the Twenty-First Century – Amia Srinivasan (LA Times, New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

Readalikes for Peril by Bob Woodward & Robert Costa.

Sally Rooney readalikes.

The dark reality behind cozy mysteries.

The absence of elderly sleuths in detective fiction.

Why noir and science fiction are still a perfect pairing.

On the Riot

Weekly book picks to TBR.

8 new YA fantasy series from your favorite authors.

35 new YA horror novels to devour.

Reading pathways for Rochelle Alers.

How to start reading fiction (when you only read nonfiction).

10 authors like Shirley Jackson.

Why “don’t judge a book by its cover” is bad advice.

All Things Comics

3 new extra-unusual graphic novels.

On the Riot

On being a comics reader vs. being a comics fan.

Horror manga artists to fuel your nightmares.

6 (more) Sherlock Holmes comics.

Audiophilia

Audiobooks take off with students during the pandemic.

Hispanic Heritage Month books to listen to on audio.

On the Riot

6 awesome mysteries and thrillers on audio.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

22 YA books to read if your school won’t teach critical race theory.

Historical fantasy YA book recommendations to send you back in time.

Teen books featuring secret societies.

Adults

Recommended books for Hispanic Heritage Month from Bustle and OprahDaily.

15 novels by Dominican authors to add to your reading list.

12 books by women that Gabrielle Union is recommending the most.

9 novels starring bisexual+ main characters.

Romance suggestions based on your favorite romantic comedy films.

The 22 best Agatha Christie books, according to Goodreads users.

10 of the best horror books just in time for spooky season.

10 books about ghosts to scare the you-know-what out of you.

12 historical fiction books that will transport you around the world.

10 criminal characters motivated by good intentions.

On the Riot

The best Bible story books for kids.

14 music books for kids to teach and inspire.

10 magical middle grade reads.

The best YA pirate stories.

YA books about fat girls kicking butt.

Books for fans of Gossip Girl.

20 unabashedly bi books for Bi Visibility Day.

16 French books in English translations

9 of the best romance anthologies.

10 delicious coffee shop romances.

The best horror novels of the decade.

8 horror novels about the ocean.

8 more Indigenous horror novels to haunt your shelves.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


All right friends, I’ll catch you on Friday, by which point I will be preparing for my trip to the Upper Peninsula.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.