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Today In Books

Marvel Hints at Plans for Ms. Marvel Movie: Today in Books

Sponsored by Chuck Palahniuk’s Adjustment Day, on sale now from W. W. Norton.


Ms. Marvel Movie is “Definitely, Sort Of” Happening

In a tweet over the weekend, news broke that Marvel Studios is planning to add Ms. Marvel/Kamala Khan to the MCU after the audience meets Captain Marvel. Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige says, “Ms. Marvel [the movie] is definitely sort of in the works. We have plans for that after we’ve introduced Captain Marvel to the world.” Ms. Marvel is a fan favorite, and our fingers are crossed at BR HQ that she gets her own movie.

Nancy Drew Gets a Intersectional, Queer Makeover

In more comics happenings, Dynamite Entertainment has introduced a new, modern Nancy Drew series with characters of color, an openly feminist main character, and an openly queer best friend George. “Our Nancy is all sass and brains and indomitable will. She’s ultimately the hero that saves the day. And that’s important. I think she’s absolutely a hero for young girls to look up to, as Nancy has always been,” says writer Kelly Thompson.

New Teasers for George R. R. Martin Stuff Over at SyFy

George R. R. Martin’s 1987 novella Nightflyers is being adapted over at SyFy, and the teaser trailer is now available. “The series follows eight maverick scientists and a powerful telepath who embark on an expedition to the edge of our solar system aboard The Nightflyer – a ship with a small tightknit crew and a reclusive captain — in the hope of making contact with alien life.” Of course, things go badly. Take a look.

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Today In Books

Why This Stephen King Book is So Hard to Find: Today in Books

Sponsored by Men Without Women by Haruki Murakami new in paperback from Vintage Books.


The Hard-to-Find Stephen King Novel

King’s 1977 novel Rage, published under his pen name Richard Bachman, is about a young man who murders two faculty members at his school and then takes his algebra class hostage with a gun. King “let the book fall out of publication in 1998 after real-life tragedies allegedly inspired by ‘Rage'”, but the book is still findable on Amazon…for $500-$700. I read the book in high school when it was in a second-hand copy of Bachman stories I found at Goodwill. Which I gave away after I finished reading it. Of course.

Ronan Farrow to Publish Book About Sexual Abuse Reporting

Ronan Farrow will expand on his reporting on sexual abuse in a new boo to be published by Little Brown. Called Catch and Kill, the book will “reveal the full extent of his reporting, and what he discovered about how far private investigators, former spies, high-priced lawyers, and embattled executives allegedly went to terrorize, intimidate and silence the women whose stories helped launch an international conversation on sexual misconduct and the abuse of power.” Can’t wait to rage-read this one.

Is Handmaid’s Tale Merch Going Too Far?

The popularity of the adaptation of The Handmaid’s Tale has led to the inevitable explosion of THT-themed merchandise available for purchase, and a conversation has begun about whether commodifying a show about violence against women is a capitalist bridge too far. “Looking at the Handmaid’s swag, I’m reminded of my time as a health-care marketing writer, when I interviewed women in breast-cancer support groups; these women loathed all things pink ribbon.” Something to think about.

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Insiders

I Read a Lot of Parenting Books, Apparently

Amanda Nelson here, back again with your Behind the Scenes shenanigans. As all of you know because I probably never shut up about it, I have a lot of kids. My twin boys are seven and my foster daughter is 17, and because kids are weird aliens taking over my space who I don’t know how to interact with, really, I’ve read a lot of books about it. Here are a few of my favorites:

The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson

Maggie Nelson is a brilliant poet and nonfiction writer, and this is a book about her romance with her gender-fluid partner, and her experience with pregnancy. It’s heavy on the literary theory and queer theory, and light on the “miracle of life” stuff that many (most?) nonfiction reads about motherhood are full of.

 

The Blue Jay’s Dance by Louise Erdrich

Again, this is a book about motherhood that isn’t about developmental milestones or play dates or even really about the baby at all. This is a slow-moving, introspective look at the life of a working artist who also happens to have a newborn. It’s thoughtful and lush, and affirms both the joys and difficulties of having an infant.

Another Place at the Table by Kathy Harrison

Harrison has three biological sons, two adopted daughters, and has fostered dozens and dozens (sometimes at one time, seemingly) of children in a New England foster system. I’m deeply critical of a lot of her choices as a foster parent (mostly of how she took in more children than she could handle because she felt guilty, which resulted in actual harm more than once to already traumatized kids), but it’s undeniable that she cares. I’m the only foster parent in my family or friend group, so this book satisfies both my voyeuristic need to see how other FPs do it, and also my need to know I’m not the only person out there who cares about these kids.

Instant Mom by Nia Vardalos

Nia Vardalos (of My Big Fat Greek Wedding fame) and her husband adopted their three year old daughter out of the California foster care system after 13 rounds of failed IVF treatments and several years of not being matched with a private adoption agency, domestic or international. No one even told her adopting out of foster care was an option (it is!) and that it’s free (it is!), and that there are over 100,000 kids across the country in foster care who already have had parental rights terminated and are just waiting for a home. Vardalos signed up to be a foster parent, got the call one night, and found herself suddenly the mother of a three year old daughter. Vardalos is (unsurprisingly) hilarious, and tells stories about her kid that are just charming and lovely. I recommend this audiobook-she reads it herself and you can feel her frustration, love, and happiness coming out of the speaker.

Hit me with your faves, if you’ve got them! I’m especially interested in memoirs of single parents, queer families, foster parents, parents of color, and dudes! Dudes need to write more parenting books.

-Amanda

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Today In Books

Florida’s “Marshall” Program May Arm School Librarians: Today in Books

Sponsored by In Search of Us by Ava Dellaira

Florida’s “Marshall” Program May Arm School Librarians

Florida lawmakers have been grappling with how to respond to the horrific Parkland school massacre. Arming teachers is a “solution” presented with some frequency, but Florida lawmakers have decided against it–in favor of instead arming school librarians, counselors, coaches, and other school employees. The $67 million program would “allow school superintendents to work with local sheriffs to train and arm designated personnel on campus.”

Nick Offerman Joins Amazon’s “Good Omens” Cast

A casting announcement that has me suddenly interested in watching Good Omens! Parks and Rec’s Nick Offerman “will play the U.S. Ambassador and father of the child Warlock in the six-part series, which is based on the novel by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett.” Michael Sheen, David Tennant, and Jon Hamm are also starring.

Other Previews and Things!

Why yes there is a preview for Season Two of Luke Cage. And for the adaptation of SweetbitterAaannnddd the Christopher Robin movie. And Marry Poppins Returns! Go forth and multimedia. Which is now a verb, apparently.

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Today In Books

Sherman Alexie’s Accusers Go on the Record: Today in Books

Today’s edition is sponsored by The Wicked Deep by Shea Ernshaw


Sherman Alexie’s Accusers Go on the Record

Sherman Alexie has been accused by several women of sexual misconduct in the past few weeks, but none had come forward on the record until now. The accusations have been swirling around the bookish internet but hadn’t been set fourth by any kind of paper or site of record; however, they’ve generated enough attention that Alexie released this head-scratcher of a statement last week. The NPR article isn’t easy reading.

 

Barnes and Noble Starts a Nationwide Book Club

Want to join a book club, but don’t want to start one on your own? Your local bookish big box store is here to help! Barnes and Noble is launching their own nationwide book club starting in May–Meg Wolitzer’s newest novel The Female Persuasion is the first pick. The store will be selling a special in-house edition of the book, complete with a reader’s guide.

 

Philip Pullman Calls for Higher Pay for Authors

The His Dark Materials author (and President of the Society for Authors) has a bone to pick with publishers: their profit margins are increasing while pay to authors is decreasing. Specifically, Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster report profits of 16% while authors make only 3% of those profits. It’s well known that writing isn’t generally a source of a living wage for most authors, and perhaps publishers could do something about that.

 

And don’t forget to head over to our Instagram account to enter to win $500 of Penguin Clothbound classics!

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Audiobooks

4 WWII Audiobooks for History Lovers

Hello Audiophiles!

Amanda Nelson here, Book Riot’s Managing Editor, filling in for Katie while she’s on vacation (don’t worry, she’ll be back next week). This week, I want to talk about World War II–I recently saw Darkest Hour starring Gary Oldman as Winston Churchill (who is a problematic fave of mine), and it reactivated my eternal itch for all things WWII. I’m especially interested in the generally untold stories or sides of the war. Though, don’t get me wrong, I do love watching one of the millions of black and white History Channel documentaries about the European theater. Here are a few more:


Sponsored by The Vale (Book One) Behind The Vale

A disgraced royal guard turned bounty hunter uncovers a global conspiracy in a post-apocalyptic world filled with magic, mages, monster, fantastic weapons, and an awesome mana enhanced car.


My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me: A Black Woman Discovers Her Family’s Nazi Past by Jennifer Teegee and Nikola Sellmair, translated by Carolin Sommer, narrated by Robin Miles

Jennifer is a German-Nigerian woman who was raised by her adoptive parents. In her late 30s, she discovers that her maternal grandfather was Amon Goeth, the commandant of the Plaszów concentration camp (the one portrayed in Schindler’s List). Goeth was responsible for the deaths of thousands of Jews, and was hanged for war crimes in the 1940s. In her memoir, Jennifer reckons with this new knowledge of her family background, and travels to Israel and Poland in search of answers.

Code Talker by Chester Nez and Judith Schiess Avila, narrated by David Colacci

More than 400 Navajos served in the Marines in World War II as “code talkers,” an assignment so top secret that it wasn’t declassified until the late 1960s. Using the Navajo language as code–a language the author was not allowed to speak in his government-run boarding school that tried to strip him of his culture–the Allies were able to get an essential strategic advantage over the Japanese in the Pacific theater (an advantage that led to success in the Battle of Iwo Jima, among others). Nez’s memoir of growing up on a Navajo Reservation, serving in the military, and returning home to face more racism and oppression, is a must-read. Or must-listen.

Winston’s War by Max Hastings, narrated by Robin Sachs

A laser-focused portrait of Winston Churchill during the war years, revealing a British War Lord who was both bumbling and brilliant. Hastings can be a bit fawning for my taste, glossing over (and sometimes outright making excuses for) Churchill’s racism, lack of strategic military skills, and incompetence when managing the British Army. Churchill’s real skill was in the way he managed relationships with Roosevelt and Stalin, and how he pulled up the British people’s morale through what looked like an inevitable defeat. He loved being at war, and is a fascinating figure.

Stalingrad: the Fateful Siege by Antony Beevor

Stalingrad was inarguably the turning point in the European theater of the war. Hitler’s infamous (and idiotic, ego-driven) assault on Stalin’s namesake city was a complete disaster that resulted in the death of more than a million people, the imprisonment of over 90,000 German soldiers in Soviet POW camps, and the beginning of the end for Germany. Beevor’s engrossing modern classic follows the experiences of soldiers on both sides as the city descended into winter, and of the Russian civilians trapped in the city’s ruins, desperate to survive.

I’d love to hear your recommendations for more audiobooks about the Pacific theater–send them to me on Twitter @ImAmandaNelson!

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Audiobooks

Remembering Narrator Katherine Kellgren

Hello audiobook lovers,

Amanda Nelson (Book Riot’s Managing Editor) here, filling in for Katie this week. Let’s get right to what’s happening in the audiobook world:


Sponsored by Novel Audio

Ever dream of packing your bags, heading to L.A., and finding your big break? In Novel Audio’s hottest new release, award-winning actress Jenna Fischer’s got you covered with a mix of practical advice for aspiring actors, personal anecdotes, and behind-the-scenes glimpses at some pivotal Jim & Pam moments that fans of The Office will devour. Rainn Wilson reads a special audio-only version of Steve Carell’s foreword (complete with plenty of commentary of his own). Includes interviews with Natalie Zea, Sean Gunn, Derek Waters, Reed Birney, and an excerpt from Mark Proksch, plus bonus photos. Get it here!


Katherine Kellgren, a prolific (and probably familiar to you, even if you don’t know her name) audiobooks narrator has died after a battle with cancer. Kellgren voiced almost 300 audiobooks, including The Queen of the Tearling, Austenland, and Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Rioter Aimee Miles has more about her work over on Book Riot, including her accolades: “four different Audie Awards for her narration, including Best Female Narrator in 2016 for Wild Rover No More: Being the Last Recorded Account of the Life & Times of Jacky Faber by L.A. Meyer. She was a Booklist Voice of Choice and named an Audiofile Golden Voice.”

-Over on the Book Riot YouTube channel, Rincey talks about her personal journey with audiobooks, and how she’s learned to love them once again.

-The new Denis Johnson audiobook of The Largesse of the Sea Maiden has an amazing cast of narrators: Nick Offerman, Michael Shannon, Dermot Mulroney, Will Patton and Liev Schreiber. Have a listen:

What I’m Listening To:

I’ve finished The Power of Meaning: Crafting a Life That Matters by Emily Esfahani Smith, a fascinating blend of philosophy and psychology that investigates our culture’s current obsession with “happiness” and that doesn’t lead to, well, happiness. But finding a life of meaning just might. I’ve moved on to a rather different topic: The Earth Moved: On the Remarkable Achievement of Earthworms by Amy Stewart. I have a weird fascination with places humans can’t really reach: space, the depth of the ocean, etc., and am now turning that eye to the deep underground word of the lowly (but impactful) earthworm.

 

That’s it for this week, folks! Katie will be back next week with your regularly scheduled programming. Happy listening!

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Today In Books

How Writers Spend Thanksgiving: Today in Books

How Writers Spend Thanksgiving

The New York Times asked nine writers how they spend their Thanksgivings. Russian journalist and recent National Book Award winner opens her home to LGBTQ refugees fleeing persecution in their home countries. Viet Thanh Nguyen talks about his hardworking Vietnamese parents attempts at the annual American ritual. Eliot Ackerman, author and Marine, talks about Thanksgiving, Kennedy, and divisiveness.

 

Zadie Smith Dishes on Her New Novel

Beloved UK author Zadie Smith has a new novel coming, and she’s tackling a new genre: historical fiction. The book is called The Fraud, takes place in the mid-19th century in North West London. As always, we await new offerings from Smith with much anticipation.

 

First Look at the Discovery of Witches TV Show

Deborah Harkness has released the first images from filming of the Discovery of Witches TV series (more in the link above) on Facebook.

We’re giving away $500 to spend at the bookstore of your choice! Click here to enter.

 


Sponsored by The Graphic Canon of Crime & Mystery, edited by Russ Kick from Seven Stories Press.

From James M. Cain to Stephen King, from Sophocles to the Marquis de Sade to Iceberg Slim, here are stunning and sometimes macabre visualizations of some of the greatest crime and mystery stories of all time. Rick Geary brings his crisp style to Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment; C. Frakes resurrects the forgotten novella “Talma Gordon,” the first mystery written by an African American. Crime finds new life in these graphic renditions of The Arabian Nights, the Bible, James Joyce’s Dubliners, Patricia Highsmith, and leading mystery writers of today like Jo Nesbø. Crime and mystery have never been so brilliantly reimagined.

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Audiobooks

5 Science-Fiction and Fantasy Audiobooks I’ve Loved

Hello audiophiles, it’s Amanda here (Book Riot’s Managing Editor), filling in for Katie while she’s on vacation. I’m usually a nonfiction-only audiobook listener because my brain can wander for a few minutes without missing an essential plot point, but this year I’ve discovered audiobooks are also my favorite way to ingest sci-fi and fantasy. Having the story read to me means I absorb the worldbuilding more thoroughly (I have a bad skimming habit), and don’t waste time trying to figure out how to pronounce the names of distant planets and alien races. This week, I’m recommending some SFF audiobooks I’ve really enjoyed.


Sponsored by Overdrive

Meet Libby, a new app built with love for readers to discover and enjoy eBooks and audiobooks from your library. Created by OverDrive and inspired by library users, Libby was designed to get people reading as quickly and seamlessly as possible. Libby is a one-tap reading app for your library who is a good friend always ready to go to the library with you. One-tap to borrow, one-tap to read, and one-tap to return to your library or bookshelf to begin your next great book.


Shades of Milk and Honey by Mary Robinette Kowal

Jane Austen plus magic! Jane (the main character) is a plain girl from a respectable family (the mother’s weak nerves and tendencies to ~hysterics~ will be familiar to Austen readers), who is also extremely talented at working glamour–this world’s version of magic. Her sister, the beautiful and charming Melody, has more sensibility than sense, and also lacks Jane’s magical talents. The two fall in and out of love, attend many dances, and smell many English roses. This is great light fantasy for people who don’t want the full-on Lord of the Rings/dragons/political intrigue of high fantasy.

A Planet for Rent by Yoss, translated by David Frye

For the more old-school sci-fi fans! Yoss is Cuba’s most well-known science fiction writer, and he really deftly pays homage to classic sci-fi writers while using the tropes to criticize and analyze his home country. In the near future, Earth is so poor and environmentally savaged that the population allows it to be overtaken by alien colonizers, who turn it into a tourist destination for dangerous and untrustworthy species. The humans stuck under the rule of this galactic capitalist machine must make livings however they can–often in terrible ways.

Zeroboxer by Fonda Lee

Carr Luka is a rising star in zeroboxing (weightless mixed martial arts, where matches are held in a gravity-free cube). He’s escaped a dead-end life on Earth and is on his way to being rich and famous, until a huge secret and a blackmail plot derail his plans. The narrator (Stefan Rudnicki) has this excellent gravely voice, making the book sound like it’s being narrated by someone who probably coached Rocky at one point.

Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee

Kel Cheris is a disgraced military Captain, accused (and guilty) of using unconventional methods to win a battle (in this universe, being unconventional is functionally heresy and has terrible consequences). To redeem herself, she’s given the opportunity to retake the Fortress of Scattered Needles. The catch is: she has to let the undead consciousness of a genocidal General who never lost a battle take up residence in her mind to assist her. This is heavy sci-fi, and very mathematical, so not for the faint of heart!

Labyrinth Lost by Zoraida Cordova

Brujas! In! Brooklyn! Alex is a bruja, and one of the most powerful of her generation…but she hates it. Magic probably got her father killed and does nothing but complicate her life, so on her Deathday celebration she casts a dangerous spell to rid herself of her powers. It backfires, sending her whole family into through a magical portal. With the help of her best-friend-probably-crush, and a neighborhood brujo boy she doesn’t know or trust, Alex must travel through the portal to save everyone she loves.

That’s it for this week! Don’t forget we’re giving away a $500 gift card to the bookstore of your choice over on the site. Katie will be back next week for your regularly scheduled programming!

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Today In Books

The Mansion That Inspired The Great Gatsby is For Sale: Today in Books

The Mansion That Inspired The Great Gatsby is For Sale

The Long Island mansion that was the inspiration for Gatsby’s home in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is for sale for about $17 million. When Fitzgerald lived in Great Neck, New York, he befriended Mary Harriman Rumsey (local railroad heiress), who lived in the house. It’s complete with a caretaker’s cottage–but there’s no pool. Which is probably for the best.

 

Librarian’s Multi-Million Dollar Donation to UNH Goes to…a Scoreboard?

Robert Morin was a quiet librarian who left $4 million to the University of New Hampshire upon his death. The school allocated only $100,000 of that money to its library, and instead spent the rest on a football scoreboard and its career center. The school has earned a reputation for extravagant spending under its current leadership, especially on athletics, and is now receiving extensive criticism for its use of Morin’s money.

 

Overdrive Announces New Big Library Read

Overdrive’s Big Library Read “is an opportunity for those with a valid library card to read the same digital title at the same time without any wait lists or holds. Participating in this event allows your library to offer a new simultaneous use title for community-wide access from your library at no cost. It’s a worldwide digital version of a local book club, and an opportunity for your library to generate more interest in your digital collection beyond the bestsellers.” Their new pick is The Hundred Lies of Lizzie Lovett by Chelsea Sedoti!


Sponsored by Life Detonated by Kathleen Murray Moran

The gripping true story of Kathleen Murray, a young mother whose life was changed on September 11, 1976 when her husband, a NYPD bomb disposal expert, was killed by a terrorist’s bomb. It details her journey out of poverty, and her own determination to take care of her two young sons as she starts over.