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Giveaways

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We’re giving away five prize packs from WONDERBOUND, the new Young Readers graphic novel imprint, to five lucky Riot readers!

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

Grab a ticket to wonder, and explore lands full of magic, marvels, mysteries, and monsters!

Wonderbound is the new Young Readers graphic novel imprint publishing science fiction, fantasy, and spooky graphic novels for middle grade and tween readers – and the young at heart.

Wonderbound launches in September and October 2021 with four fantastic stories of friendship, adventure, magic, and mystery.

Enter to win a prize pack of the following titles: Wrassle Castle Book 1: Learning the Ropes (9/21), Verse Book 1: The Broken Half (9/28), The Unfinished Corner (10/19), Hello, My Name is Poop (10/26).

From faraway and mythical lands to the neighbor next door, wonder is everywhere!

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Hungry Ghosts, Ominous Stars, Deadly Schools, and Other New Releases

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I come bearing news that it’s the very last Tuesday of September, and WOW are there a lot of new releases coming out this week. So many, and all of them look so good, that I’m just giving you new books to look at — the news links are going to have to wait for Friday, though there are a couple of things at Book Riot you might want to cast your eyeballs on. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/, anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co, and Jane’s Due Process.


New Releases

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

Andrew and Eddie are best friends, closer than brothers, and the longest they’ve been apart is when Eddie heads off to start his graduate studies at Vanderbilt, on the understanding that Andrew will be moving out to join him in six month. But just days before Andrew’s arrival, Eddie is dead, apparently of suicide, and he leaves behind questions and secrets and a hungry ghost that Andrew must now deal with.

The Morning Star by Karl Ove Knausgaard, translated by Martin Aitken

A group of ordinary people go about their lives as one day, a huge star suddenly begins burning in the sky. No one knows what could have caused it; after the initial excitement, people return to their ordinary routines. Strange things begin happening across the world, at the fringes of human existence… but it won’t stay on the fringes for long.

Cover of The Last Graduate by Naomi Novik

The Last Graduate by Naomi Novik

El has made it to her senior year in the deadly school known as Scholomance, where the very institution tries to do its best to kill its students. She’s made a few allies along the way, but it’s not enough — the school seems desperate to kill her unless she accepts her destiny of dark sorcery. But she is determined to survive, to find her own fate, and to get herself and her friends out alive.

Steelstriker by Marie Lu

Mara has fallen to the Karensa Federation, and Striker Talin is forced to betray her fellows and the remains of her nation if she wants to save her mother from the hands of the Premier. She must become one of the Federation’s Skyhunters, though hope is not wholly lost. Red remains as well, and though his link with Talin is weak, together they might be able to salvage their home.

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

Koffi is sixteen years old and has been indentured at the Night Zoo to pay off her family’s debts. But she has a secret of her own–magic that should not exist flows in her blood, and if that is found out, she will be killed. But when she has to used her power against the cruel master of the Night Zoo, she flees for her life and accidentally saves the young warrior Ekon from a fabled monster called the Shetani. Together, they form a tentative alliance and hunt down the beast, Ekon for redemption, and Koffi for freedom.

For All Time by Shanna Miles

Tamar and Fayard have lived thousands of lives across the history of the world, with one thing in common — their love for each other and the lengths they’ll go to be together. The one thing they’ve never experienced is how their story ends — and to see that, they must break the cycle. But it may require more than they’re willing to sacrifice.

cover of Light From Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki

Light From Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki

Shizuka made a literal deal with the devil to escape damnation. The price? She has to convince seven of her fellow violin prodigies to trade their souls for success. She’s managed to swindle sixth, but in her pursuit of the final soul, she runs into complications she could have never imagined: a retried starship captain who she can’t help but love and a runaway with a wild talent who all too quickly feels like family.

Activation Degradation by Marina J. Lostetter

Unit Four is a biological robot created to oversee a Helium-3 mine in Jupiter’s atmosphere. It is activated in the middle of a crisis, with aliens attacking. It should seem a simple matter of ship-to-ship combat and following its handler’s orders, but something is wrong. There are missing files, missing information, and more afoot, and Unit Four will need to become something more than a simple tool in short order.

Cover of The Orphan Witch by Paige Crutcher

The Orphan Witch by Paige Crutcher

Persephone has never known her family; she was abandoned as an infant and spent her childhood being shuttled around the foster care system. And she’s was a weird child at that, with inexplicable things always happening around her. As an adult, she has remained rootless, moving from town to town and working only temporary jobs. After accidentally showing off her magic, she quickly moves on… only to be invited to Wile Isle by the one friend she’s managed to make. There, she begins to find answers about herself and her family… and the curse that haunts them.

On Book Riot

“What did I know of mortal babies?”: six parenthood lessons from Circe

Buckle up, me hearties: best YA pirate stories

You can enter to win a copy of Empire of the Vampire by Jay Kristoff

This month you can enter to win a QWERKY keyboard.


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 Kids Are All Right

New Children’s Book Releases for September 28, 2021

Hey readers! I’m back with another week of new kids’s books!

Nina: A Story of Nina Simone by Traci N. Todd and Christian Robinson

This biographical picture book retells the story of musical legend Nina Simone, born Eunice Kathleen Waymond. It traces her musical childhood and her rise to performing as Nina Simone and how she used her incredible voice to speak out during the Civil Rights Movement.

The People Remember by Ibi Zoboi and Loveis Wise

This lyrical picture book uses the principles of Kwanzaa to retell the history of African descendants in America. It begins in Africa, where people were taken from their homes and forced onto ships that crossed the sea, and ends in the modern world where they combine old traditions with new to thrive in a new place.

Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls: 100 Real-Life Tales of Black Girl Magic edited by Lilly Workneh

The popular Rebel Girls franchise expands yet again in this collection of biographies that feature the work of female and nonbinary writers and artists to retell the stories of Black women like Kamala Harris, Naomi Osaka, Toni Morrison and Meghan Markle.

Other Boys by Damian Alexander

In this touching graphic novel/memoir, Damian is new in school and determined to avoid the bullying that he endured at his last school. But it’s like his new classmate can tell something’s different about him. He plays with Barbies and is being raised by his grandparents after his mom’s murder, and as Damian begins to develop a crush on another boy, seventh grade only gets harder.

The Hungry Ghosts by Miguel Flores

With witches banned for years, Milly just ignores the tingle of magic she feels in her palms sometimes, focusing instead on the many responsibilities she has at the orphanage where she lives. But when Milly’s friend Cilla is thought to have magic and is kidnapped by an exiled witch, Milly has to embrace her magic and bring her back.


Until next week!

Chelsea

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book…

Welcome to Read This Book, a newsletter where I recommend one book that should absolutely be put at the top of your TBR pile. Recommended books will vary across genre and age category and include shiny new books, older books you may have missed, and some classics I suggest finally getting around to. Make space for another pile of books on your floor because here we go!

Today’s pick is a book of poetry that made me feel all kinds of feelings in a way that few books ever have.

Black Girl, Call Home: Poems by Jasmine Mans

Black Girl, Call Home: Poems by Jasmine Mans

Jasmine Mans is a spoken word poet and the book is described as “an unforgettable poetry collection about race, feminism, and queer identity,” but in my opinion that’s a huge over-simplification. The poems in this book are just so much. So much what? So much everything. So much pain, so much joy, so much passion, so much memory, so much generational trauma, so much community. It’s just so much. I’m amazed I read it as quickly as I did because every few poems I would come across a line or a stanza and I would have to put the book down and stare into space. Or take a walk around our apartment. As if her words made my brain bluescreen and I had to wait for my mind to get back on line.

Some of these poems were very hard to read, not due to complexity but due to the raw emotion. For example, one of the poems is from the point of view of one of the little girls that died in the 1963 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama. The poet also offers many poems as memorials. In honor of Sandra Bland. In honor of Whitney Houston. In honor of the countless Black women mutilated and terrorized by American doctors in the name of science.

There are poems of love and loss and love that lead to loss. And not only romantic love, but love between a mother and daughter, or the love of grandmothers and aunties. There’s a poem titled “Footnotes for Kanye” which I happened to read right after his divorce from Kim Kardashian was announced and though I do not care about Kanye West, this poem hit extra hard when I read it.

I am both changed and seen by this poetry collection and I highly recommend it.


That’s it for now, book-lovers!

Patricia

Find me on Book Riot, the All the Books podcast, and Twitter.

Find more books by subscribing to Book Riot Newsletters.

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Riot Rundown

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What's Up in YA

🔱 Geek Out Over Greek YA Retellings

Hey YA Readers!

Greek mythology is having a moment. Certainly, it’s been popular for a long time, but with the rise of dark academia as an aesthetic and interest among teens especially, Greek mythology falls in line with the ideas of private schools, classic stories, and slightly foreboding possibilities.

It’s also true that the youngest readers who grew up on Rick Riordan and his mythology are seeking out YA titles as they enter their late teens and early adulthood. That Riordan has his own imprint now, too, has only increased interest in these titles.

YA retellings have used Greek myths for decades, but inspired by the increased desire for these stories, let’s look at both some new books, as well as some from the back list.

For readers who haven’t had interest in Greek mythology, these titles can be a great introduction. And in YA, we’re lucky — more and more of these retellings are being done by authors of color, adding something entirely new, fresh, and far more inclusive to mythology (which, of course, is what makes mythology exciting).

antigoddess book cover

Antigoddess by Kendare Blake

The first in a trilogy, this book follows Cassandra, a modern-day high school student and it turns out she — despite being completely unaware of the gods around her — might be a key piece in a war that’s just about to begin among those same gods and goddesses.

This is fresh, clever take on Athena and Hermes’s story.

beauty's daughter book cover

Beauty’s Daughter by Carolyn Meyer

It cannot be fun to be the daughter of the most beautiful women in the world. Meyer’s book follows Hermione, daughter of Helen of Troy, who stows away on a Greek army ship at the start of the Trojan War. It’s not safe or easy for her in the way it is for her mother, inside the encampment, and Hermione begs for the gods and goddesses to intervene and make amends for her mother’s reckless behavior.

daughter of sparta book cover

Daughter of Sparta by Claire M. Andrews

A gender-twisted remake of Daphne and Apollo, Andrews’s debut — first in a duology — Daphne, who has been training her mind and body to that of a warrior, has her life completely changed when she’s forced to find the nine items stolen from Mount Olympus. If she’s unsuccessful, not only will the power of the gods dissipate, but so will that of mortals . . . and more importantly to Daphne, her brother’s life may come to an end.

lifestyles of gods and monsters book cover

Lifestyles of Gods and Monsters by Emily Roberson

Take the Minotaur legend and combine it with a teen whose family are social media stars and you get this dark, bloody, and fun take on a classic story.

never look back book cover

Never Look Back by Lilliam Rivera

After Hurricane Maria devastated her home in Puerto Rico, Eury is haunted by the tragedy and the evil spirit following her when she moves with her family to the Bronx. But then she meets Pheus, a guitar-playing cool guy who wants to do nothing but love and protect Eury.

But the world threatens to keep them apart.

This is a Latinx take on Orpheus and Eurydice, and if this one really works for you as a reader, another clever take on this myth is All Our Pretty Songs by Sarah McCarry.

the siren book cover

The Siren by Kiera Cass

Cass’s name is likely familiar because of her bestselling “The Selection” series, but before that shot her into book-land stardom, she published The Siren, which was rereleased after she’d made a name for herself.

Kahlen was rescued from the Ocean, but now she has to serve the sentence as a Siren — a single word from her lips could kill. She’s resigned to stay alone, despite how much she wants to spend time around other people, laughing, having fun, and living like the humans around her. But then she meets Akinli and starts to fall. Their connection is undeniable, but because falling in love with a human goes against the rules of the Ocean, things will not be easy.

the vicious deep book cover

The Vicious Deep by Zoraida Córdova 

Córdova’s trilogy follows Tristan, who is sucked into the sea by a tidal wave. It’s here that he learns his family legacy is not what he thought.

This is a funny, clever take on mermaids, and it plays with the Poseidon myth.  

we can be heroes book cover

We Can Be Heroes by Kyrie McCauley

This book just hit shelves and it sounds like such an interesting twist on mythology in a modern, contemporary story. Beck and Vivian aren’t friends, not really, but they are friendly because of their mutual best friend Cassie. When Cassie’s murdered and the town moves on too quickly, Beck and Vivian seek vengeance . . . with the help of Cassie’s ghost AND a true crime podcast.

Greek myths are part of the story both in obvious ways — this is a twist on the Cassandra myth — but also in the ways Beck and Vivian bring attention to Cassie’s story via murals around town.


Thanks for hanging out, and I hope you’ve found your next favorite read. I’m taking the rest of the week off to celebrate my birthday with a pile of YA novels and perfect fall weather. Your regular Thursday news and Saturday deals will hit your inbox from one of my colleagues, and I’ll be back on Monday with a fascinating slice of YA history.

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram

Categories
Today In Books

Watch a Snippet of BRIDGERTON Season 2: Today in Books

Watch A Snippet Of Bridgerton Season 2

Netflix revealed a short snippet of the upcoming season of Bridgerton on the show’s official Twitter account. This clip features Anthony Bridgerton clashing with one Miss Kate Sharma at an evening party, and the pair’s banter is enough to make you swoon. Watch the clip, and get ready for season two, which will air sometime in 2022.

Plum Creek Literacy Festival Cancels Events After Authors Pull Out Over ‘Discriminatory’ Concordia Policy

The Plum Creek Literacy Festival is an annual event held on the campus of Concordia University-Nebraska that brings togethers authors and young readers for a celebration of books and literacy. This year, the festival has been canceled because many of the authors slated to attend have pulled out in protest over Concordia’s discriminatory policy towards LGBTQ+ students. Eliot Schrefer uncovered this policy after his newest book, a queer YA novel, was not included in this festival.

Behold, The Book Blob

A trend has appeared in the literary world of book covers that features brightly colored blobs on the cover that overlap or often form other images, and almost all of these covers appear on literary novels or memoirs written by women of color. While cover trends are nothing new under the sun, what this trend signifies for the authors whose books receive this treatment has darker implications.

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Riot Rundown

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Today In Books

Chris Colfer Reveals A Character in His New Book is Openly Gay: Today in Books

Whoops! A version of Today in Books from earlier today contained yesterday’s news items. Here’s the correct version below!

Game of Thrones Prequel House of the Dragon Adds to Its Cast

House of the Dragon, the HBO fantasy drama prequel to Game of Thrones, has announced seven more of its cast members. Among the announced cast is the previously-rumored Graham McTavish (Outlander and The Hobbit) as Ser Harrold Westerling. British actor Jefferson Hall (Vikings) will be playing identical Lannister twins Jason and Tyland. Other announced cast members are: David Horovitch (Miss Marple) as Grand Maester Mellos; Matthew Needham (Chernobyl) as Larys Strong; Bill Paterson (Fleabag) as Lord Lyman Beesbury; and Gavin Spokes (Hamilton) as Lord Lyonel Strong. The series is still slated for a 2022 release.

Chris Colfer Reveals A Character in His New Book is Openly Gay

Glee alum Chris Colfer wants everyone to know that the third installment of his bestselling A Tale of Magic series will include an openly gay character. Colfer told Entertainment Weekly, “When I first started writing, many people told me that I was making a mistake because the world wasn’t ready to let their kids read a book by an openly gay man, so I really shied away from including any openly LGBT characters in my first set of books because I thought I was already fighting an uphill battle as it was… So, I dropped hints along the way. I would describe their interests and their looks and their preferences, hoping that readers would pick up on it — and a lot of them did — but this is the first time I’ve been able to explore their orientation and be very open and honest about it.” You can read an excerpt of Colfer’s new novel on Entertainment Weekly‘s website. A Tale of Sorcery publishes on September 28th and will be followed by a virtual book tour.

Meghan Markle Reads Book to Harlem Schoolchildren

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry continued their visit to New York City on Friday with a trip to Mahalia Jackson School in Harlem to promote early literacy. Meghan Markle read to the Harlem schoolchildren from her book The Bench, and Harry sat with the kids as Meghan read to them. Markle told the kids, “I wrote this when we just had our little boy, and I haven’t read it to any other kids but you!” The children made handmade gifts for the couple, and Meghan and Harry also donated two garden boxes of vegetables and herbs to support the school’s ongoing community efforts for fresh food.

US Senate Finance Committee Presses Publishers on Library Ebook Contracts

The US Senate Finance Committee is pressing the Big Five publishers for transparency on ebook licensing. Here’s everything you need to know.

Categories
Riot Rundown

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