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Today In Books

Jimmy Carter Won A Grammy For His Audiobook: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by How Long ‘Til Black Future Month – the “Dazzling” (NYT) first collection of short stories from three-time Hugo Award winner N. K. Jemisin.


Jimmy Carter Won A Grammy

Again! This time he won the 2019 Grammy for spoken word album for his audiobook Faith: A Journey for All. And he’s the third-oldest winner in Grammy history at age 94.

Timbaland Publishing Children’s Book

Nighttime Symphony, illustrated by Christopher Myers, will be a “melodious bedtime story which uses nighttime city sounds to create a lively lullaby.” That sounds super fun and check out the cover, it’s beautiful.

Teaser For Disney’s Live Action Aladdin

In case you missed the teaser drop for the upcoming Guy Ritchie-directed Aladdin and have always fantasized about a Smurf-y Will Smith, here you go. And yes, that is all I’m going to say about it.

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Today In Books

Woman Finds $4,000 In Book! Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by How Long ‘Til Black Future Month – the “Dazzling” (NYT) first collection of short stories from three-time Hugo Award winner N. K. Jemisin.


Woman Finds $4,000 In Book!

Cathy McAllister, a book sale volunteer, found $4,000 inside a hollowed out copy of The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire. The book had the owner’s address label inside and McAllister returned the money–in case you were wondering if honest people still exist.

Jill Abramson Responds To Accusation Of Plagiarism

“The notes don’t match up with the right pages in a few cases, and this was unintentional and will be promptly corrected,” Abramson wrote to the AP. “The language is too close in some cases and should have been cited as quotations in the text. This, too, will be fixed.” For more on how the story has been unfolding, information on Merchants of Truth, and statements all around, click here.

Bookstore Designed Entirely For People With Special Needs

In April Words Bookstore will open a second location in Livingston, N.J. that has been designed for people with special needs and will feature things like wider aisles and lights adjusted for sensitivity. For more info on this awesome store click here.

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Today In Books

Free Coloring Book Pages From 113 Museums: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Bookclubbish.


Hurry, Hurry, It’s The Last Day!

Get your coloring on–for free!–thanks to 113 museums and the New York Academy of Medicine who initiated Color Our Collections. And of course there’s a hashtag so you can color up a storm and share your creations: #ColorOurCollections

Found More Helpers

SDSU Library is currently digitizing and archiving letters written by refugees seeking asylum from a letter-writing initiative some SDSU faculty members had started in 2018. More than 500 letters have so far been exchanged and “provide a detailed description of each person’s path to pursuing asylum, and the conditions inside detention centers.” Read more here, including how you can help the libraries efforts.

Leave The Drag Queens Alone!

The phobics are at it again: The GOP Politics of South Carolina and a councilman are trying to shut down an upcoming Drag Queen Story Hour at the Five Forks branch of the Greenville County Library System.

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Unusual Suspects

Was James Brown Murdered?

Hi mystery fans!


Sponsored by Never Let Go by Elizabeth Goddard and Revell Books, a Division of Baker Publishing Group

Never Let Go cover imageThe case may be cold, but things are about to heat up Forensic genealogist Willow Anderson is following in her late grandfather’s footsteps in her quest for answers about a baby abducted from a hospital more than twenty years ago. When someone makes an attempt on Willow’s life to keep her from discovering the truth, help will come from an unexpected source. Ex-FBI agent—and Willow’s ex-flame—Austin McKade readily offers to protect the woman he never should have let get away. Together they’ll follow where the clues lead them, even if it means Austin must face the past he’s spent much of his life trying to forget—and put Willow’s tender heart at risk.


From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Thieving Drag Queens and Other Favorite Mystery and Thrillers

Close to Holmes: 6 More International Sherlock Holmes Adaptations

Will ‘My Favourite Murder’ Tour The UK? You Might Be Waiting A While To See Your Podcast Faves In The Flesh

Fiona Barton turns the tables on her journalist heroine in third thriller, The Suspect

Jane Harper Started as a Business Reporter. Now She Writes Novels About Murder.

News And Adaptations

Pieces of Her by Karin Slaughter coverNetflix “has picked up “Pieces of Her,” an eight-episode adaptation of crime author Karin Slaughter’s 2018 New York Times best seller, with an all female creative team behind the show.”

Here’s what publishing couldn’t stop talking about this week: A Suspense Novelist’s Trail of Deceptions . It’s completely banana pants but more than that it shows a huge problem in publishing–and *gestures wildly around *–where white men are able to behave appallingly while somehow continuing to move up in an industry–and in this case get all the advertising dollars. If you just don’t have the time for a long-form article Vox did a response piece that sums it up pretty well: This profile of publishing’s biggest scam artist reveals the industry’s deep dysfunction

True Crime

Was James Brown murdered? More than a dozen people want his death investigated

Sexualizing Serial Killers Like Ted Bundy Has Its Consequences

Grundy County cold case to be focus of true crime podcast

Halfway Across: The Delphi Murders

Kindle Deals

Death By Dumpling cover imageDeath By Dumpling by Vivien Chien is $2.99 if you’re a fan of cozy mysteries! (Review)

A Map in the Dark by Karen Ellis is .99 cents if you’re a fan of FBI procedural thrillers! (Review) (TW cutting/ child abuse)

 

 

Now On Hoopla Audio (If you don’t know about Hoopla)

Spin by Lamar Giles is a great new YA mystery and the audiobook is on Hoopla so you should run to that. (Review)

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

Beijing Payback cover imageSuper excited to have gotten an ARC for the revenge thriller Beijing Payback by Daniel Nieh (Ecco, July 23.)

I currently can’t put down Watcher in the Woods by Kelley Armstrong which is a crime novel in a remote area in the Canadian Yukon that basically is a safe haven for victims and also criminals–I know!

My nonviolent true crime obsession continues with Black Edge by Sheelah Kohatkar. And my everyone-stranded-in-one-place-and-uh-oh-someone-is-a-killer obsession is being fed with No Exit by Taylor Adams and The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley.

Meaty cover imageMy break from mystery is Meaty by Samantha Irby, on audio, and I just adore her, her humor, and her no-fcks-given-says-what-she’s-thinking essays.

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

MERCHANTS OF TRUTH Author Accused Of Plagiarism: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides (Celadon Books).

The Silent Patient cover image


Merchant Of Truth Author Accused Of Plagiarism

Former New York Times executive editor, Jill Abramson, wrote a nonfiction book meant to be the “definitive report on the disruption of the news media over the last decade”–at least according to the publisher, Simon & Schuster. Michael C. Moynihan, Vice News Tonight correspondent, claims he has multiple examples of plagiarism in the book, which published on the 5th of February.

New True Crime Book Reveals Stieg Larsson’s Investigation Of Swedish PM’s Assassination

The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo’s author, a journalist for most of his life, had been researching the unsolved 1986 assassination of Swedish prime minister Olof Palme up until his sudden death. Amazon’s literature in translation imprint Amazon Crossing, announced it had acquired The Man Who Played With Fire by Jan Stocklassa, translated by Tara F Chace, which has “new facts about the case and reveals the hitherto unknown research … in a fascinating true crime story.” For more on the upcoming book and Larsson click here.

More Michael B. Jordan Is Awesome News

His production company, Outlier Society, and Warner Bros have acquired the film rights to Marlon James Black Leopard, Red Wolf and OMG OMG OMG this is going to be amazing!

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Today In Books

Free Black Panther Digital Comics! Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Polaris Rising by Jessie Mihalik.

a young woman in leather body armor faces away from the viewer holding up a ray gun. she's facing a blue-tinted scene with a firing space ship and a Saturn-like planet in the sky


Free Black Panther Digital Comics!

Now through 11:59 p.m. ET on Sunday, you can download for free 2005’s Black Panther No. 1 by Reginald Hudlin and John Romita Jr.; 2016’s Black Panther: World of Wakanda No. 1 by Ta-Nehisi Coates, Roxane Gay, Yona Harvey, Alitha E. Martinez and Afua Richardson; 2017’s Marvel’s Black Panther Prelude No. 1 by Will Corona Pilgrim and Annapaola Martello; 2018’s Black Panther No. 1 by Coates and Daniel Acuna; and the same year’s Shuri No. 1 by Nnedi Okorafor and Leonardo Romero. All the info here.

Author/Publisher Accused Of Serious Ethical Transgressions

Twenty-two transgender men featured in Invisible Men: Inside India’s Transmasculine Network by Nandini Krishnan, published by Penguin Random House India, are accusing the author and publisher of using off the record conversations, being misgendered, not being given translated versions of the interviews in their language, and using their dead names. “Both Krishnan and Penguin Random House India have denied all wrongdoing.”

A Trailer Of Beautiful People

Ahhhhh the trailer for the adaptation of Nicola Yoon’s The Sun Is Also a Star is finally here! It stars Yara Shahidi and Charles Melton, and my heart already melted and yours can too–just watch the trailer here.

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Unusual Suspects

Unlike Every Other Spy Novel

Hello mystery fans! I have a spy novel, a super creepy procedural, and the new Jane Harper this week! I’m excited, are you excited? Let’s all be excited because yay books! (I may have had too much sugar–but also, yay books!)


Sponsored by The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides (Celadon Books).

The Silent Patient cover imageAlicia Berenson’s life is seemingly perfect. She is a famous painter and her husband, Gabriel, is an in-demand fashion photographer. One evening, Gabriel returns home late from work, and Alicia shoots him five times in the face and never speaks another word. Alicia’s refusal to talk turns a domestic tragedy into something far grander, and she is hidden away at the Grove, a secure psychiatric unit. Enter Theo Faber, a psychotherapist obsessed with unravelling Alicia’s mystery. Shocking, thought-provoking, and deeply twisted, The Silent Patient is a spellbinding psychological thriller about violence, obsession, and the dark side of passion.


Character Driven Spy Novel!

American Spy cover imageAmerican Spy by Lauren Wilkinson (February 12): This is an excellent spy novel that is unlike every other spy novel I’ve read. For starters it isn’t a thriller, it’s character driven, like Who Is Vera Kelly?, and follows a Black woman FBI intelligence officer. Set in the mid-’80s the novel is a slow burn suspense–with a kick you won’t see coming–where Marie Mitchell is writing her young sons a letter in order to explain recent events. We not only get to see her upbringing and time with the FBI but also her recruitment into a task force that is the U.S. meddling in Burkina Faso’s politics. Mitchell is a fantastic lead who is smart, determined, and doing her best to do right, while working for an organization that tells you what to do–and is an all white boys-club. This is a great read for fans of literary mystery, character driven novels, and historical fiction–especially focusing on history that never gets taught. The audiobook is narrated by Bahni Turpin, who is hands down one of the best narrators–I will listen to any book she narrates.

Super Creepy Procedural (TW claustrophobia / rape)

The Craftsman cover imageThe Craftsman by Sharon Bolton: This book is a white-knuckle read to the point that even though it starts in the present, so you know how it ends, you are still freaking out during the entire novel, set in the past. It’s so good. It’s so creepy. And there’s witchcraft! Florence Lovelady was in her early twenties and was a constable when she helped catch a creepy af child killer in Lancashire, in the 1960s. She was the only woman officer at the time and she was treated exactly as you’d imagine. The novel starts with her and her teenage son, in the present, visiting to attend the serial killer’s funeral 30 years after his arrest, but a message is left for her, and of course the past is coming back! I love a thriller where you think you know everything and you really don’t know anything! I was so sucked in that I got so many chores done, which I’d been avoiding, because I needed an excuse to keep listening to the audiobook. But please be smarter than me and don’t start the book before bedtime–trust me!

Excellent Atmospheric Mystery That Will Have You Sweating (TW domestic abuse/ child abuse/ date rape/ suicide)

The Lost Man cover imageThe Lost Man by Jane Harper: Jane Harper is at the top of the crime writing genre along with Attica Locke, Megan Abbott, and Tana French. She steps away from her recent series for this standalone that is just as atmospheric. I honestly would have read this in one sitting if it weren’t for the setting giving me anxiety–it’s literally so remote and so hot that you’ll die if your car breaks down and you don’t have supplies with you. So when Cameron is found dead in the heat near his abandoned car, lots of questions are asked and speculated, including did he intentionally go out into the heat? His brothers Nathan and Bub, sharing property but still hours away from each other, reunite with Cameron’s wife and children and their mother in order to figure out what happened. Did the elements get someone who knew better or is there something they’re all missing? This takes you into the family members’ lives, while dropping you into this very harsh setting, as it slowly builds into one hell of a mystery! I will drop whatever I am doing to read a Jane Harper crime novel.

Recent Releases

Watcher in the Woods by Kelley Armstrong cover imageWatcher in the Woods (Rockton #4) by Kelley Armstrong (Currently reading: I just started this and can’t put it down. A couple comes to beg a relative to assist in a bullet wound surgery at a remote location where no one can ask questions or know anything.)

The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides ( A good psychological thriller about obsession.) (TW suicide)

The Dead Ex by Jane Corry (Currently reading: One of those mysteries where you’re following different, unrelated characters and are waiting to see how it all comes together.) (TW child abuse/ pedophile/ suicide)

Don’t Wake Up by Liz Lawler (Psychological thriller.)

Hong Kong Noir cover imageHong Kong Noir (Akashic noir) by Jason Y. Ng (editor)

Evil Things by Katja Ivar (Historical mystery procedural.)

The Coronation (Erast Fandorin Mysteries #7) by Boris Akunin (Russian historical mystery.)

One Fatal Mistake by Tom Hunt (Thriller)

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

100 French Writers Angry About Globish: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Flatiron Books.


French Writers Not Happy

Ahead of next month’s Scène Young Adult at the Salon du Livre in Paris, about 100 French writers have joined together and “issued a scalding rebuke to organisers over their use of ‘sub-English known as globish.‘” Ah, sub-English globish. What is that you may ask? It’s simplified English words used globally. They’re angry the French book festival is using words like “bookroom,” “photobooth,” and “bookquizz.”

The Annual PEN/Nabokov Award Goes To…

Sandra Cisneros! The author of The House on Mango StreetWoman Hollering Creek, Caramelo, and A House Of My Own, won the award created to honor “a living author whose body of work, either written in or translated into English, represents the highest level of achievement in fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and/or drama, and is of enduring originality and consummate craftsmanship.” Huge congrats!

Angie Thomas Is On Fire!

The author of The Hate U Give will also have her second novel, On The Come Up, adapted to film. The novel follows a sixteen-year-old girl, Bri, who wants nothing more than to become a rapper, but ends up going viral for the wrong reasons. George Tillman Jr., the director of The Hate U Give will also be directing On The Come Up.

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Today In Books

Science Fiction Genre Cut Women Writers Out Of History: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Doubleday, publishers of The Plotters.

The Plotters cover image


The Real History Of Women In Science Fiction

Lisa Yaszek, a professor at Georgia Tech, is challenging the long held thought that women weren’t writing science fiction until the ’70s. Her look through old magazines not only shows that women were common sci-fi writers in the pulp era, but that “reading polls suggest that 40 to 50 percent of the readers were women.” Yaszek explains that women were cut out of history–raise your hand if you’ve heard this story before!– because the “first science fiction anthologies were published during a backlash against first-wave feminism.”

Gringotts Wizarding Bank Will Soon Be Open To The Public

If you’ve always wanted to bank at Gringotts Wizarding Bank your dreams are about to come true if you can make it to Warner Bros. Studio Tour London starting this April. Check out pics and info here.

Here’s What Publishing Is Reading This Morning

The New Yorker came out with a piece about Dan Mallory, the author who writes under the pseudonym A.J. Finn and, well, I can’t help but think that, more than it being a reveal of deception, the article shows a huge problem in publishing–and our society–of white men behaving appallingly and still getting promoted, praised, and all the advertising dollars.

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Today In Books

Frankenstein Coming To CBS: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Amazon Publishing, publisher of Smoke and Summons by Charlie N. Holmberg.


CBS Has Ordered The Drama Pilot Frankenstein

And I promise it’s not what you think: A homicide detective in San Francisco “is mysteriously brought back to life after being killed in the line of duty. But as he resumes his old life and he and his wife realize he isn’t the same person he used to be, they zero in on the strange man behind his resurrection – Dr. Victor Frankenstein.” I’d make a joke but it’s from the writer of Elementary so I’m willing to give it a try.

With 86% Of The Publishing Workforce Being White

What is it like to be one of the few women of color working in the industry? Here’s a great article where 10 women of color speak out about their experiences.

Detained Asylum Seeker Wins Australia’s Most Valuable Literary Prize

Mr. Behrouz Boochani, Iranian asylum seeker, has been held in Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island since 2013. Omid Tofighian, the book’s translator, worked with Boochani for over five years as Boochani sent him the book in pieces over the messaging app WhatsApp. No Friend But The Mountains: Writing From Manus Prison was awarded the A$100,000 prize and the A$25,000 prize for non-fiction.