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Today In Books

The Emilia Report Highlights Gender Bias: Today In Books

Sponsored by Delusions of Clarity, a novel of intrigue and perception by Vern Bryk.

Delusions of Clarity cover image


The Emilia Report Highlights Gender Bias

The producers of a play about Emilia Bassano, England’s first published female poet who was forgotten by history, commissioned a study to compare ten female and male writers publishing in the same market. It found the biases: From men receiving more coverage to women having their age almost always listed. You can read the details here along with their recommendations for challenging publishing’s biases.

Will Florida Ban 100 Books?

Florida Citizens Alliance is coming for the books it finds offensive, which include what they define as pornographic and “Religious ‘indoctrination’ boosting Islam over others in the social studies books. ‘Unbalanced propaganda’ promoting climate change in science texts.” The bills they’re proposing in order to ban books in public schools and make it easier to do so in the state–along with Gov. Ron DeSantis and many lawmakers listening–have gotten organizer to try and fight back.

Bookish Children’s Hospital 

Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus has volunteers through Reach Out and Read reading to kids in the waiting rooms and giving them a book to take home. “The hospital’s program has doled out 1.5 million books since 1998, with children ages 2 months to 5 years taking a book home after every wellness checkup.”

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Today In Books

J.K. Rowling Again Adds The Context Off The Page: Today In Books

Sponsored by our What’s Up in YA Giveaway of a $100 gift card to Amazon! Enter here.


J.K. Rowling Again Adds The Context Off The Page

In Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald’s upcoming Blu-ray Rowling and director David Yates discuss Albus Dumbledore and Gellert Grindelwald’s relationship. There seems to be discussion and implication once again of things not being shown on screen which can be problematic when dealing with a characters sexuality.

The Thing About Jellyfish

Ali Benjamin’s The Thing About Jellyfish is being adapted and the team involved already makes it sound like a winner: Reese Witherspoon’s Hello Sunshine is producing; Millie Bobby Brown is starring; Wanuri Kaihu will be directing. Happy to buy tickets now!

In Gimme Now Book News

Sarai Walker, the author of Dietland which was adapted into an AMC series, announced her second book: The Cherry Robbers. It sounds awesome and mysterious and can’t publish fast enough.

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Today In Books

Britney Spears Fairy Tale Musical Is Coming: Today In Books

Sponsored by our What’s Up in YA Giveaway of a $100 gift card to Amazon! Enter here.


Britney Spears Fairy Tale Musical

Once Upon a One More Time will start November 13th and run until December 1st in Chicago. The musical will include 23 of Spears’ records and be an alternate story of classic fairy tale princesses who are introduced to a feminist book by a fairy godmother. Please let there be awesome t-shirts!

Pachinko Gets Series Order

Apple TV has given a series order to the adaptation of Min Jin Lee’s novel Pachinko which tells the story of four generations of a Korean family that migrates to Japan. This is where I would normally grumble about all this “we bought” news when Apple still hasn’t revealed how the service will work but it is believed they’ll finally announce that information on the 25th.

National Book Critics Circle Winners

The National Book Critics Circle announced its 2018 winners and as always congrats to all the winners–those I haven’t read are all now on my TBR list! You can check out the winners here including information on authors, publishers, and NBCC.

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Today In Books

Serial Box Now Available For Android: Today In Books

Sponsored by ​The Bird King​ by G. Willow Wilson, available now from Grove Press

The Bird King cover image


Serial Box Now Available For Android

It’s been a big year so far for the fiction app company that, like a TV series, breaks down a large standalone story into 10 to 15 individual installments. First, it announced it was partnering with Marvel to create new stories about Black Panther, Black Widow, Jessica Jones, and Thor. Then, it raised mucho millions in seed funding. And now the app that was only available for iOS has an app for Androids.

I Have Your Earworm For Today

Sesame Street’s iconic song Sunny Day is getting an illustrated book treatment. The song, sure to wrap you in a hug and send you down childhood memory lane, will be interpreted by different artists each with a spread in the picture-book titled Sunny Day: A Celebration of Sesame Street. Check out some of the beautiful pages here.

New Marvel’s Avengers: Endgame Trailer

Watch the new Endgame trailer here–just prepare yourself because it’s dark and emotional. Also, *waves* at my new Captain! Also, also, spiffy new spacesuits!

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Unusual Suspects

The Future Of Indie Crime Fiction

Hi mystery fans! If you’re a fan of heist films I recommend Logan Lucky: It has a great cast, was funny, and totally scratched my itch for a heist movie. Now on to books!


Sponsored by Putnam Books

Call Me Evie cover imageFor the past two weeks, seventeen-year-old Kate Bennet has lived against her will in an isolated cabin in a remote beach town—brought there by a mysterious man named Jim. Part captor, part benefactor, Jim calls her Evie and tells her he’s hiding her to protect her. That she did something terrible one night back home in Melbourne—something so unspeakable that he had no choice but to take her away. The trouble is, Kate can’t remember the night in question.


From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Catch Me When I'm Falling cover imageThe Future of Indie Crime Fiction Belongs to Female Authors of Color

Talking about The Feather Thief with Dawn Roberts of the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum

For Your Consideration…Mystery Books on One Anthony Awards Ballot

Lady Spies And Other Favorite Mysteries And Thrillers

Liberty recommended some great mysteries on All The Backlist.

News And Adaptations

Your House Will Pay cover imageSteph Cha’s upcoming novel, Your House Will Pay, has a cover!

FX Grabs Don Winslow’s Cartel Novels to Develop for TV

Russell Hornsby To Headline ‘Lincoln’ NBC Pilot Based On ‘The Bone Collector’ Books

Kindle Deals

My Sister the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite cover imageRun to this deal: My Sister the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite is $3.99!!!! (Review) (TW child and domestic abuse/ rape)

Under the Midnight Sun by Keigo Higashino, Alexander O. Smith (Translator) was one of my favorite reads of 2016 and is $1.99! (Review) (I don’t remember TW, sorry.)

Dervla McTiernan’s The Ruin is $1.99 and it’s a super good Irish crime novel. (Review) (TW child abuse/ suicide/ rape)

Watch Now

In theaters: Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase has a new adaptation and she’s investigating a haunted house. Check out the trailer here.

On TV: Prosecutor and author Marcia Clark executive produces and co-writes a new legal drama show on ABC starting March 18th titled The Fix. It stars Robin Tunney, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Breckin Meyer and you can see the trailer here.

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

Sex Murder and a Double Latte cover imageSo that thing where ALL your library holds come in at once happened to me and now I’m playing beat-the-clock reading edition with: Sex, Murder and a Double Latte by Kyra Davis; The Night Tiger by Yangsze Choo; City of the Lost by Kelley Armstrong; The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson; Code Name: Lise by Larry Loftis; Beautiful Bad by Annie Ward. Wish me luck!

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.

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Today In Books

Amazon Removes Pseudoscience Books: Today In Books

Sponsored by CHENDELL: A Natural Warrior. Read it Today!

Chendell cover image


Amazon Removes Pseudoscience Books

Books unscientifically claiming that autism can be cured with potentially toxic forms of bleach and other pseudoscientific methods have been removed from Amazon. While Amazon confirmed the books are no longer available they did not comment on why, but the move occurred after an article in Wired pointed out the dangers of Amazon stocking these books.

2019 Man Booker International Prize Long List Announced

Highlighting translated fiction from around the world the 2019 Man Booker Dozen has been announced, and congrats to all the authors, translators, and publishers! Check out the thirteen works here and standby for the short list announcement on April 9th–in the meantime you can get your translated work read on!

“What If” Marvel Series In The Works

Disney+ streaming platform and Marvel are working on an adaptation of the “What If” comics which explored alternate histories from what was comic lore and established stories. “One of the confirmed episodes will be an adaptation of What If? Vol. 1 #47 titled What If Loki Had Found the Hammer of Thor?” This sounds fuuuuun!

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Unusual Suspects

A Real Life Double Agent!

Hello mystery fans! This week I have for you a small-town mystery where the buried secrets will rise, a real life double agent, and a dark serial killer novel!


The Huntress, new from Kate Quinn, the New York Times bestselling author of The Alice Network.

The Huntress cover imageOne of Marie Claire’s Best Women’s Fiction of the year! One of Bookbub’s biggest books of the year! “If you enjoyed The Tattooist of Auschwitz, read The Huntress.” – The Washington Post From the author of the New York Times and USA Today bestselling novel, The Alice Network, comes a fascinating historical novel about a battle-haunted English journalist and a Russian female bomber pilot who join forces to track the Huntress, a Nazi war criminal gone to ground in America.


Small-Town Missing Person (TW domestic violence/ addiction/ suicide)

Fallen Mountains cover imageFallen Mountains by Kimi Cunningham Grant: I’m a sucker for small-town mysteries where the buried secrets are gonna rise and this novel did all of that really well. It’s told in past and present while following a group of people in Fallen Mountains, Pennsylvania: Red, a widowed sheriff set to retire; Transom, Chase, and Laney, friends who grew up together; Possum, a once bullied kid now out of prison. Transom is missing and while most think this is just his usual M.O. of leaving without saying anything his girlfriend is certain something is wrong and convinces Red to investigate. This set’s off Transom’s father to hire an investigator sent to work with Red–and a thing I really liked about this novel was that instead of them fighting and trying to stop the other they actually work together in trying to figure out where Transom is. The thing is Transom was the type of person who even those who loved him knew to watch out for his possible bite. So soon you realize, if he didn’t pull a Transom and take off, lots of people had a reason to harm him. While Red is a good sheriff he has a secret that Transom’s disappearance may drag out into the light and, well, it’s a small-town filled with secrets and it seems this missing person case may be a reckoning for many…

Real Life Double Agent! (TW suicide mention)

Agent ZigZag cover imageAgent Zigzag: A True Story of Nazi Espionage, Love, and Betrayal by Ben Macintyre: For fans of spy novels this is a must-read nonfiction that details the life of a conman turned double agent during WWII. I knew this was going to be a ride when just at the beginning of getting to know Eddie Chapman–prior to his double agent days–there was safe heists, blackmailing women he’d given STDs too, and a prison escape. He was a criminal and conman who managed to always slip by and ended up being sent into Britain on a mission as a German spy but ended up working for MI5 for years! The thing with Chapman was no one ever really knew who he was really working for and while MI5 believed he could be trusted to always complete any mission they gave him they knew he couldn’t be trusted with anything else. Literally nothing else. This is one of those nonfiction reads that has the pacing and feel of a thriller with moments where you do a double take and have to remind yourself this is a true story. I really recommend the audiobook if you’re a listener, and if you’re a fan of John le Carré type novels get thee this book now!

Dark-ish And Intense Serial Killer Novel (TW rape/ pedophile)

The Last Woman in the Forest cover imageThe Last Woman in the Forest by Diane Les Becquets: This was another one of those reads that rang a lot of my bells: serial killer; character with unique/interesting job; strangers pair up to solve a mystery; did he or didn’t he? Told in past and present we get to know Marian Engström who works with training dogs in remote areas where conservation studies are being performed. This is how she meets the love of her life Tate Mathias, her mentor. But after his death things start to not add up for her and she begins to question if he could have been the still unidentified serial killer. He couldn’t have been really, she would have known, right? But he did tell her the story of having found one of the serial killer’s victims and she can’t let this go, so she contacts the psychologist/forensic profiler from the case who is now retired and dying of brain cancer. I inhaled the audiobook (great multiple narrators) of this dark, atmospheric mystery that had me both fascinated with the conservation studies and the exploration of grief and being a victim. The audiobook ends with the author explaining her own story of rape and why she wrote this novel.

Recent Releases

A Dangerous Collaboration cover imageA Dangerous Collaboration (Veronica Speedwell #4) by Deanna Raybourn (Currently reading and loving–this is one of my favorite historical mystery series!)

The Trial of Lizzie Borden by Cara Robertson (True crime)

Article 353 by Tanguy Viel,William Rodarmor (Translation) (French noir)

The Hunger by Alma Katsu (Paperback) (An eerie, suspenseful reimagining of the already horrifying historical event of the Donner-Reed Party–Full review) (TW child death/ suicide/ rape–including incestual)

Barbed Wire Heart by Tess SharpeBarbed Wire Heart by Tess Sharpe (Paperback) (Super good crime novel–Full review) (TW rape/ domestic abuse/ addiction/ pedophile)

The Italian Party by Christina Lynch (Paperback) (Historical fiction about newlyweds where one doesn’t know the other is a spy.)

Let Me Lie by Clare Mackintosh (Paperback) (Twisty thriller.) (TW: suicide/ domestic abuse)

Too Close to Breathe by Olivia Kiernan (Paperback) (Dark Dublin Procedural–Full review) (Trigger Warnings: cutting/ domestic abuse/ suicide)

The French Girl by Lexie Elliott (Paperback) (Group of friends, decade old mystery.) (TW suicide)

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.

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Today In Books

Harper Lee Was Also An Artist: Today In Books

Sponsored by Putnam Books

Call Me Evie cover image


Harper Lee Was Also An Artist

While Harper Lee became known for her novel To Kill A Mockingbird she also loved to draw. And was quite good. For the first time 15 of her works, mostly ink drawings, will be going to auction by Bonhams. You can check out the images of some of her caricatures here.

Cookbook Sales Rise

NPD Bookscan data shows that cookbook sales rose 21% from 2017 to 2018 even though the internet and social media offers tons of free recipes. I’m guessing the recent popularity of food shows and docs are driving people to want the physical books in their kitchen but whatever the reason bookstores that specialize in selling cookbooks are certainly thrilled. I for one would like more food memoirs, please.

Let’s Forget The Teaser And Watch The Trailer

While there was lots of jokes and head-shaking at the recent live-action Aladdin teaser the trailer is finally here and it looks really good. I for one want that pink outfit, feel Will Smith was a great choice (he isn’t always blue!), could have done without the earworm, and may have pulled a “how you doin'” at Jafar. Check it out yourself here.

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Today In Books

The Library Robots Have Arrived: Today In Books

Sponsored by HMHteen’s Bloodleaf by Crystal Smith.

Blood Leaf cover image


The Library Robots Have Arrived

BookBot is here to return your library books because the future is apparently library robots, not flying skateboards. Google’s Area 120 created the personal delivery robot, now let loose in downtown Mountain View for testing purposes. Click here for more information on the robot testing program, for pictures, and a video–it’s rather adorable.

College Textbooks Still Ridiculously Priced

If you, or someone you know, has attended college in at least the last 20 years, you’re aware that college text books are a challenge for many students to afford. The problem has only gotten worse with time. Publishers are finally recognizing that the prices have left many students unable to purchase the required books, and say new technologies are helping. Advocates say the 1,000% rise in textbook prices since the ’70s is the publishers’ fault, and the new technologies are further limiting. Vox has the breakdown on the issue.

New Harry Potter Game

The follow-up to Niantic’s Pokémon Go phenom is Harry Potter: Wizards Unite. “A co-production with Harry Potter-centric publisher Portkey Games, the mobile game will allow players to venture the real world as wizards and witches, casting spells and entering special challenges to protect the world from Muggle eyes.” While no release date has been announced yet pre-registration is open–you can find this plus more information on the game here.

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Today In Books

The Real Life Of Emily Dickinson: Today In Books

Sponsored by our What’s Up in YA Giveaway of a $100 gift card to Amazon! Enter here.


Wild Nights with Emily Trailer

An upcoming movie starring Molly Shannon hopes to shed a new light on Emily Dickinson as more than a recluse who wanted her poetry burned. The film is based on letters written between Emily Dickinson and her sister-in-law Susan Huntington Gilbert Dickinson, “the purported real muse behind her poems.” You can see the film in theaters on April 12th and watch the trailer here.

Where Are My Crime Fiction Fans At?

Agora, a new imprint of Polis Books, has revealed the covers for their first three releases. And “each book is a debut novel, each is about identity, and each tells a harrowing tale of crime and intrigue.” Gimme, gimme, gimme! You can check out the covers here and read more about the novels and authors.

Miss Marple Returning To Television

Guess this round of news got extra crime-y! Bruna Papandrea’s Made Up Stories has partnered with Agatha Christie Ltd to bring us a new Miss Marple series. Agatha Christie wrote 12 Miss Marple books along with twenty short stories so there is plenty of source material!