Categories
Today In Books

No Current Living Adult Will Get To Read Han Kang’s New Manuscript: Today In Books

Sponsored by Amazon Publishing

Have You Seen Luis Velez cover image


No Current Living Adult Will Get To Read Han Kang’s New Manuscript

Katie Paterson’s Future Library art project continued with Han Kang’s manuscript being locked away for 95 years. At that time 1,000 Norwegian spruces, which were planted in 2014 at the start of this project, will be cut down to print the manuscript–along with the other participating author’s works. Check out the ceremony, and other authors, here.

Public Libraries + Affordable-Housing Projects

Chicago has new affordable-housing for seniors that is co-located with a new library branch: Northtown Branch. The project was designed through a competition in 2016 and the picture is gorgeous. Read on here for more on the architecture firm and the amazing project. Here’s hoping this combination catches on.

Jessica Jones Final Season Is Almost Here

If you’ve been waiting for the third, and final season, of Jessica Jones to premiere on Netflix your wait is almost over: The entire season, 13 episodes, will be streaming on June 14th.

Categories
Today In Books

University Library Discovers 3 Poisonous Books: Today In Books

Sponsored by Wishtree by Katherine Applegate.

Wishtree cover image

 


University Library Discovers 3 Poisonous Books

While poisonous books make for a great item in a fictional plot, we don’t really want them on the shelves of libraries in real life. Which is what happened at the University of Southern Denmark library which found they had three books, from 16th and 17th centuries, with covers containing large amounts of arsenic. Read here for all the interesting details and tests.

Tilda Swinton Curates Orlando Exhibition And Magazine Issue

Talk about a role that stayed with an actor: 27 years after starring in the adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s Orlando, Swinton has chosen Orlando as the theme for an exhibit and magazine issue from Aperture. If you’ll be in New York between May 25th and July 11th you can check out the exhibition at Aperture Gallery. For now look at these gorgeous images.

Another Study Proves Books Are Amazing

A study by Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School has found that toddlers who are regularly read to “are less likely to be hyperactive or disruptive” and those doing the reading “are less likely to engage in harsh parenting.” Another win-win for books and reading! You can read all the details here.

Categories
Today In Books

Instead Of Dowry, Almost 1,000 Books Gifted: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Tor Teen, publisher of Dark Shores by USA Today bestselling author Danielle L. Jensen. High seas adventure, blackmail, and meddling gods meet in this thrilling first book in a new YA fantasy series.

Dark Shore cover image


Instead Of Dowry, Almost 1,000 Books Gifted

Suryakanta Barik made clear to his prospective in-laws that he would not accept a dowry. They obliged and instead gifted him almost 1,000 books, which were stacked at the wedding. A wedding registry of just books should really be a thing.

Time’s Best Fiction And Nonfiction Of 2019 So Far

Time put out some Best of 2019 So Far lists and I had to share the fiction and nonfiction lists because they are mighty good lists. So if you’re sliding into this U.S. holiday weekend needing some good reads or looking for what to put on your summer reading list Time has some great choices.

The Critical Role Libraries Play As “Second Responders”

Hopefully by now we all realize that libraries play a much larger role than a building full of books–and have done away with the stereotypes of being shushed etc. But did you know many libraries take on the role of “second responder?” Read on here for how the community turns to them “to fill gaps and offer help when normal channels are inaccessible” like during riots, hurricanes, power outages. They are the helpers.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

10 Must-Visit Spots for Mystery Lovers

Hi mystery fans!


Sponsored by Living Lies by Natalie Walters and Revell Books, a Division of Baker Publishing Group.

Living Lies cover imageIn the little town of Walton, Georgia, everybody knows your name—but no one knows your secret. At least that’s what Lane Kent is counting on when she returns to her hometown with her five-year-old son. Dangerously depressed after the death of her husband, Lane is looking for hope. What she finds instead is a dead body. Lane must work with Walton’s newest deputy, Charlie Lynch, to uncover the truth behind the murder. But when that truth hits too close to home, she’ll have to decide if saving the life of another is worth the cost of revealing her darkest secret.


Around The Internet

The Confessions of Frannie Langton by Sara Collins cover imageTen Questions for Sara Collins

10 Must-Visit Spots for Mystery Lovers

“Brooklyn Where You At?!” Lyric Video from Tiffany D. Jackson’s Let Me Hear A Rhyme

The Changeling Folktale Gets A Modern Reimagining In The Creepy Psychological Thriller ‘Little Darlings’

The Things She's Seen cover imageThe Things She’s Seen by Ambelin Kwaymullina and Ezekiel Kwaymullina book trailer

Crime Writers of Color has a website!

Maine bookstore dedicated to murder mysteries worth investigating

Miss Fisher’s Modern Murder Mysteries Continues a Tradition of Feminist Murder Mystery

True Crime

A serial killer at the border – and the women who stood up to him

‘Jack Reacher’ Author Lee Child to Develop True-Crime Series

Anna Sorokin, Faux Heiress And Subject Of Shonda Rhimes’ Netflix Series, Claims She’s “Not Sorry” For Her Actions

‘To Live and Die in LA’ shows how much Google knows about you

True Crime: When Killers Turn on Their Own Family

Kindle Deals

The Neighbors cover imageThe Neighbors by Hannah Mary McKinnon is $4.99 (Domestic thriller filled with secrets on my TBR)

The Suspect by Fiona Barton is $2.99 (Missing person mystery–Full review)

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

I just finished: The Smiling Man by Joseph Knox (For fans of dark British procedurals that walk the moral line.); Wherever She Goes by Kelley Armstrong (A thriller that made the “hot mess” lead not a jerk-face nor self-destructive, in a refreshing way.)

Five Midnights cover imageI plan to spend the entire weekend floating and reading: Five Midnights by Ann Dávila Cardinal (Mystery/horror set in Puerto Rico–sí, please!);  Grab a Snake by the Tail by Leonardo Padura (Detective series set in Cuba, double sí, please!); Lady in the Lake by Laura Lippman (I really enjoyed Sunburn and am going into this one knowing nothing about it–excited!)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, 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
Today In Books

Significant Carrie Fisher Appearance In Upcoming Star Wars Film: Today In Books

Sponsored by We Hunt the Flame by Hafsah Faizal and Fierce Reads.

We Hunt the Flame cover image


Significant Carrie Fisher Appearance In Upcoming Star Wars Film

Prepare the tissues and bucket of ice cream to sob into: J.J. Abrams has revealed that Carrie Fisher, who passed away in 2016, will have a significant appearance in the upcoming Star Wars film, The Rise of Skywalker. To learn more about the how click here.

Penguin Random House Acquired 45% Stake In Sourcebooks

The world’s largest trade book publisher saw the growth in Sourcebooks’ seven imprints and children’s publishing and said we want, apparently. While a new five-person management board has been created with the new acquisition it is being “emphasized that little will change in day-to-day operations at Sourcebooks.

The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl Will Say Goodbye

After 58 issues, two volumes, and an original graphic novel The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl team has decided to ride out into the sunset on a high note. Basically, they told the stories they wanted to tell and issue #45, out next month, will be its last chapter. Sad, but a much nicer alternative to being cancelled and never finishing a story. Here’s the exclusive exit interview.

Categories
Today In Books

ACLU Calls On Prison System To End Its Book Ban: Today In Books

Sponsored by Kingsbane by Claire Legrand

Kingsbane cover image


ACLU Calls On Prison System To End Its Book Ban

Paul Butler, Georgetown University criminal law professor and former federal prosecutor, found out his book Chokehold: Policing Black Men is banned in Arizona state prisons. “Sykes said the ACLU plans to sue the corrections system if their written request to reverse the banning of ‘Chokehold’ isn’t implemented or if the prison system fails to respond, and he said the ban was unconstitutional.” Read the full story here.

Napoleon Dynamite Gets Comic Book Sequel!

Vote for Pedro! Impeach Pedro–er, what?! The IDW comic book limited series finds “Pedro’s reign as student body president threatened when he’s accused of having cheated in the election, pushing Napoleon and Deb to have to uncover the truth to clear Pedro’s name before it’s too late.” You can read the four-issue series starting in September and get more info here.

Thomas Cromwell Trilogy Will Be Completed!

Hilary Mantel’s The Mirror & the Light will publish in the U.S. on March 10, 2020 completing the Thomas Cromwell trilogy. Being that the first two novels in the series, Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies, each won the Man Booker Prize expectations are hiiiiigh. And fans are super excited.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Bananapants, I Tell You!

Hello mystery fans! This week I have for you 5-star YA, bananapants nonviolent true crime, and a suspense novel. Plus, a whole bunch of recent releases.


Sponsored by Dynamite Entertainment

John Wick cover imageWhen a young John Wick embarks upon an epic vendetta, he comes up against a strange, powerful community of assassins and must learn how to master the rules that guide their lethal business. What are the Three Bills? Who is Calamity? And why is John Wick seeking vengeance?


Let Me Hear a Rhyme cover imageLet Me Hear a Rhyme by Tiffany D. Jackson: All of Jackson’s novels have been different from each other, while all still being very much written by her, which I love. This one doesn’t neatly fall into one genre (also a thing I love), but the true brilliance of this novel is how Jackson is able to transport you to a very specific music scene, time, and place in the ’90s. In Brooklyn, 1998, Steph has been murdered in the street with no known cause or assailant. His grieving sister, Jasmine, and two best friends, Quadir and Jarrell, hatch a plan to pretend Steph is still alive and get him the record contract he deserved for his musical talents. Jasmine plans to use the money to hire a P.I., since her mother won’t let her, but they’re immediately in over their heads–not to mention about to have to reckon with their actions. I loved the characters–even a side character had an amazing scene showing off Jackson’s talent for seeing the depths of people and putting it on the page–and watching their journey through grief and discovering you don’t always know everything about everyone, as they carve a spot for themselves in a difficult world. And even though they don’t spend the book Nancy Drew-ing, the mystery runs throughout and unfolds at the end. Jackson continues to be an author whose work I’ll read sight unseen.

Nonviolent True Crime

Billion Dollar Whale cover imageBillion Dollar Whale: The Man Who Fooled Wall Street, Hollywood, and the World by Tom Wright, Bradley Hope: This was another really good nonviolent true crime that was bananapants, except this one could have just been titled Obscene Amounts Of Money. The book lays out how Jho Low conned his way into a multi-BILLION dollar financial heist over years, continents, while using A-List celebrities, shell companies, and Wall Street. The dude was stealing billions and managed to fund the movie The Wolf of Wall Street, which is a true story about another dude who defrauded investors. Bananapants, I tell you! There’s a lot of behind-the-scenes Hollywood partying stuff–glares at Leonardo DiCaprio who keeps showing up in all the nonviolent true crime books I read–but there’s a very serious look at how financial institutions and wealthy people in power are willing to overlook what is every single red flag so long as they will profit directly or by standing closely to the power/money source. I switched from print to audiobook on this one and parts ended up feeling like one of those True Hollywood Story documentaries–I had literally forgotten about Paris Hilton.

Psychological Suspense (TW stalking/ animal cruelty/ infertility)

Looker cover imageLooker by Laura Sims: This is a slow-burn psychological suspense that feels like a character study of a woman unraveling. The narrator remains unnamed as we watch her grappling with a recent separation and infertility, which gets projected onto a neighbor, who we only come to know as the actress. A famous actress, with seemingly the perfect life, who lives only a few doors down from the narrator…The exploration of a woman’s grief, anger, obsession, and unraveling in this compact novel really worked for me–this is not the unlikable woman for entertainment’s sake. I think the audiobook also really helped place me in the character’s mind and world.

Recent Releases

The Confessions of Frannie Langton by Sara Collins cover imageThe Confessions of Frannie Langton by Sara Collins (Currently reading: really good, different from the rest historical mystery.)

Necessary People by Anna Pitoniak (Frenemies suspense I really liked.)

Cari Mora by Thomas Harris (New novel from the creator of Hannibal Lecter.)

The Summer of Ellen by Agnete Friis, Sinead Quirke Kongerskov (Translator) (Scandinavian mystery)

The Queen by Josh Levin cover imageThe Queen: The Forgotten Life Behind an American Myth by Josh Levin (Currently reading: True crime)

White Peak by Ronan Frost (Thriller)

The Favorite Daughter by Kaira Rouda (Thriller)

The Island (Hidden Iceland #2) by Ragnar Jónasson (Scandinavian procedural)

Sweet Little Lies (Cat Kinsella #1) by Caz Frear (Paperback) (British procedural about a police officer who thinks her father may be connected to a case.) (TW suicide)

What You Want To see cover imageWhat You Want To See (Roxane Weary #2) by Kristen Lepionka (Paperback) (Super good P.I. series–Full review)

The Clockmaker’s Daughter by Kate Morton (Paperback) (Historical mystery)

Find You in the Dark by Nathan Ripley (Paperback) (Serial killer)

Pieces of Her by Karin Slaughter (Paperback) (Edge Of Your Seat Thriller!–Full review) (TW suicide/ child abuse/ child rape / domestic violence)

Death Notice cover imageDeath Notice by Zhou Haohui, Zac Haluza (Translator) (Paperback) (Great cat and mouse thriller–Full review) (TW suicide/ rape)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, 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
Today In Books

Never-Before-Seen Look At Hagrid’s Motorbike Ride! Today In Books

Sponsored by Flatiron Books

Birthday cover image


Never-Before-Seen Look At Hagrid’s Motorbike Ride!

If you weren’t already planning a trip this summer to Universal Orlando, you may be after you see Hagrid’s Magical Creatures Motorbike Adventure. It’s a roller coaster, but it’s Universal so it’s really an experience–check it out here!

The ’90s Crushes Reawakenings Continue

And I like it! Pacey–er, Joshua Jackson has joined Reese Witherspoon and Kerry Washington in Hulu’s adaptation of Celeste Ng’s Little Fires Everywhere. This is a chef’s-kiss novel with chef’s-kiss casting that I can’t wait for.

Finally, Berkley. Finally.

Berkley, an imprint of Penguin Random House, has acquired its first queer female romance: Something To Talk About by Meryl Wilsner. For all the deets on this hopefully-releasing-in-2020 romance click here.

Categories
Today In Books

Cease & Desist Over Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Wonder Woman: Today In Books

Sponsored by Kawaii Craft Life by Sosae Caetano and Dennis Caetano

Kawaii Craft Life cover image


Cease & Desist Over Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Wonder Woman

Devil’s Due published a new comic, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez & The Freedom Force: New Party, Who Dis?, with a limited variant cover that got DC comics saying no-no. And by no-no I mean a cease and desist letter because the cover, by artist Carla Cohen, looks too much like Wonder Woman for DC’s liking. Whoever got their hands on one already is most likely going to have a valuable issue. You can check out the cover, and full story, here.

Sarah Jessica Parker Fighting Library Budget Cuts In NYC

The book-loving actress is hoping to stop a looming budget cut that would affect libraries in New York’s five boroughs. Summoning Carrie Bradshaw, and that terrible post-it breakup, Sarah Jessica Parker sent out an emailing urging “people to post sticky notes about why they love their libraries on the investinlibraries.org website.” More here.

Marie Kondo Has Been Writing

Marie Kondo found the time to write (Hopefully while ignoring all the racist backlash over *checks notes* helping people who wanted to get organize get organized.) not one, but two new books! Here’s her Instagram announcement where she is once again wearing a blouse I covet.

Categories
Today In Books

ROMEO AND JULIET Hip-Hop Movie Musical: Today In Books

Sponsored by The Unhoneymooners by Christina Lauren, from Gallery Books

The Unhoneymooners cover image


Romeo And Juliet Hip-Hop Movie Musical!

Queen Latifah and Will Smith are producing a Romeo And Juliet hip-hop movie musical for Netflix that will be set in today’s N.Y. and follow a Brooklyn waitress and wealthy heir musician–why don’t I have this RIGHT NOW!

New China Tariffs May Come For Books

If you haven’t been following closely with the Trump administrations trade war with China–no judgement, there is so much to follow!–this bit may be of interest: “books are among the $300 billion worth of Chinese imports that face a potential 25% tariff following the failure of the U.S. and China to reach a new trade agreement.” More information here.

From Vampire To Batman?

Matt Reeves is working on The Batman and sources say Robert Pattison is the top choice, and in final negotiations, to play Batman. Opine away.