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Today In Books

Harry Potter-Themed Beer Festivals Are Here: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by 99 Percent Mine by Sally Thorne, published by William Morrow.

cover of 99 percent mine by sally thorne


Get Your Potter And Beer On

Rock Star Beer Festivals is making your boozy Harry Potter dreams come true by decorating like the Leaky Cauldron, Diagon Alley, Hogwarts’ Great Hall and serving alcoholic butterbeer–plus 20 different ales. Click here if you want to see if one of the 11 events will be near you.

Only One Thing Here Is A Threat

The phobic white guy with a weapon: James “Doc” Greene Sr. Police were called when he refused to leave the Freed-Montrose Library, after previously being banned for filming children at the library. Greene was trying to disrupt the Drag Queen Storytime and was handcuffed, his concealed weapon taken by police, when he said his chest hurt and an ambulance was called for him.

Shrill Is Almost Here And We Can’t Wait

Hulu has released the trailer for their upcoming six-episode Hulu comedy series based on Lindy West’s memoir Shrill. Get the popcorn ready for March 15th.

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Today In Books

Medieval Merlin Manuscript Found: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Bookclubbish.


Medieval Merlin Manuscript Found

The University of Bristol’s special collections librarian has discovered seven hand-written manuscript fragments from the middle ages about Merlin the magician. “The newly-discovered text has longer, more detailed descriptions of various characters particularly during battles.” Cool–anyone else suddenly want to go watch The Sword in the Stone?

The Ghost Bride Gets Adaptation Series!

Choo Yangsze’s The Ghost Bride is being adapted into a six-episode drama for Netflix. The story centers an ancient custom of a living woman marrying a dead man and is set in 1890s Colonial Malacca. If you’re going nope-nope, don’t worry she is too. Here’s a behind-the-scenes look at the production underway.

The Handmaid’s Tale Sequel Has A Cover

You can’t read Margaret Atwood’s The Testaments, which picks up 15 years after Offred’s final scene, until September but you can judge the book by the cover reveal now.

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Unusual Suspects

New Psychological Suspense Imprint

Hello mystery fans!


Sponsored by Doubleday, publishers of The Plotters

The Plotters cover imageTHE PLOTTERS is like if Wes Anderson wrote a thriller: an ensemble cast of eccentric characters come together to form a truly unique crime novel. Set in an alternate Seoul where assassins gather in a headquarters known as “The Library,” the story follows Reseng, a lifelong hitman whose every move is dictated by the anonymous Plotters. Then, one day, Reseng steps out of line on a job and finds himself embroiled in a deadly scheme that’s totally off-book. From the writer the Guardian calls “The Korean Henning Mankell”, THE PLOTTERS is a stylish and sarcastic thriller that will also appeal to literary readers.


From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Annotated Agatha Christie Bingo

20 Murder Mystery Book Series to Intrigue and Delight

Crime-Solving Cats And Cozy Mysteries Are A Publishing Juggernaut

Read the First 3 Chapters of Monday’s Not Coming

Read an excerpt of The Silent Patient, an unforgettable — and Hollywood-bound — new thriller

News And Adaptations

cover image: zoomed in image of mouth with red lipstick bitting bottom lipMuppets arms up: We’re even closer to getting to watch Meg Abbott’s Dare Me adaptation series now that Netflix and USA Network will be co-licensing. I am very much Veruca Salt, “I want it now.”

We’re getting a new crime imprint: Otto Penzler and Pegasus Books joined together to create Scarlet. The new imprint will focus on “Psychological suspense that features complex women.” I do wish this idea that by and about women can only be marketed to women would stop, and Steph Cha has a point.

True Crime

A brief history of every Black Dahlia adaptation (and some conspiracy theories)

A new generation of kids get to grow up with nightmares: Netflix Reboots True Crime & Paranormal Series ‘Unsolved Mysteries’

Amazon Closing $14M Deal For Scott Burns-Helmed Drama ‘The Report’

Netflix’s Ted Bundy documentary is almost everything that’s wrong with the true crime genre

Kindle Deals

Allegedly by Tiffany D. Jackson is $1.99 and that is the most ridiculous price for this fantastic book so run to it! (Review) (TW domestic abuse/ child death/ pedophile/ rape/ suicidal thought mentioned)

And from my TBR here’s a nonfiction that sounds really good and is also only $1.99: American Radical: Inside the World of an Undercover Muslim FBI Agent by Tamer Elnoury, Kevin Maurer

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

A Deadly Divide cover imageI started A Deadly Divide (Rachel Getty & Esa Khattak #5) by Ausma Zehanat Khan, which is one of my favorite series; it has an intense beginning and I can’t put it down!

My audiobooks right now are The Dead Ex by Jane Corry (A missing ex-husband and alternating stories between his ex-wife and a woman raising a young daughter to help her con and steal) and Find Me Gone by Sarah Meuleman (a past and present mystery with a young woman who has just upended her life and her childhood in Belgium when there was a serial killer).

the bride testAnd my mystery break is Helen Hoang’s The Bride Test. I have already hugged it and laughed a bunch, so clearly it’s going to be another perfect book from her.

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

Gillian Flynn Has A New Show: Today In Books

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

At the Wolf's Table cover image


More Gillian Flynn

Well in the form of on your TV not in a book. Based on the British series Utopia Flynn will be show runner and executive producer of the nine-episode series on Amazon, keeping the same title. Read about casting and plot here.

2019 Rainbow Book List Is Here!

It’s a list of “books with significant gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, or queer/questioning content, aimed at children and youth from birth to age 18” and my TBR could not be happier. If you want to get to what the committee considered exceptional, those titles are the ones starred. Happy reading!

Dr. Seuss Almost Destroyed His First Children’s Book

But thanks to a college classmate he was stopped from burning the manuscript for And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street after dozens of rejections. He wrote a thank you letter to his friend Mike McClintock, and that letter will be up for auction tomorrow. For more on the story, letters, auction–and cute doodles–read here.

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Unusual Suspects

OCEAN’S 11 Dated RUPAUL’S DRAG RACE

Hi mystery fans! I had the best reading weekend and can’t wait to share with you a mystery with characters I loved, a heist thriller with drag queens (!!), and a great dark procedural!


Sponsored by Gallery Books

Silhouette Girl cover imageFrom New York Times bestselling author V.C. Andrews (Flowers in the Attic) comes a gripping psychological thriller about a stalker hell-bent on destroying a young woman’s life. Pru Dunning has everything she ever wanted: a successful boyfriend, a thriving career, and a truly comfortable life. But then the strange voicemails start. Scarletta, the woman calls herself. She seems to know Pru, although Pru doesn’t know that name or recognize the voice leaving her poisonous messages. When Pru suddenly becomes a person of interest in a murder case, it feels like Scarletta’s toxic voice will silence all beauty in Pru’s life, once and for all.


Great Characters, Great Mystery, And Heart-Emoji The Cover!

Spin by Lamar Giles coverSpin by Lamar Giles: I love Giles’ characters and this time he gave me three great ones! DJ ParSec, real name Paris Secord, is a sixteen-year-old up-and-coming DJ ready for fame and most importantly fortune–or was before she was murdered. Being questioned in the police station are Fuse, basically her social media hype girl, and Kya, her childhood best friend. But the questioning doesn’t last long because the girls’ parents refuse to let the police keep questioning them, plus they swear they just found Paris dead and don’t know what could have happened. This alternates between the present where Kya and Fuse, who don’t like each other, try to figure out what happened to Paris while reconciling how their relationships had deteriorated prior to Paris’ death. We get to know Paris in flashback chapters that show her rise and struggle with leaving it all behind in order to “make it.” Giles gives us three different girls, with different families and struggles who are all trying to find their way, while shining a light on the inequalities of social justice, obsession, and the dark side of social media and fame. If you haven’t read Giles’ novels yet you really should–he’s writing some fantastic teen characters in the crime genre.

If Robin Hood Were A Rich Teen Girl With A Crew Of Drag Queens! (TW addiction)

Death Prefers Blondes by Caleb Roehrig cover imageDeath Prefers Blondes by Caleb Roehrig: This novel is a heist thriller with a murder mystery starring Robin Hood–if Robin Hood were a rich teenage girl with a crew of drag queens. I adored it! Margo Manning is a socialite whose father has more money then a person can spend in a lifetime so naturally she steals from the rich. And I mean she has a full-on operation with a fence, and help with gadgets, and a crew of teenage drag queens. The heist scenes are kick-ass, and read like scenes from awesome thriller movies–but this novel is far from just flashy fun scenes. Rather than stereotypical drag queen characters used just for fun quips we get to know the entire crew, including their personal lives and the how and why they ended up as thieves. The novel is about birth families, found families, trying to make the best out of terrible situations, social justice, and the wrong path for the believed right reasons. I absolutely loved every second of this ride Roehrig took me on. And if that isn’t enough of a sell, think of this book like Ocean’s 11 dated RuPaul’s Drag Race and the wedding reception got crashed by Hamlet.

*Dark Procedural–SO GOOD! (TW kidnapping/ domestic violence/ child rape/ alcoholism)

The Vanishing Season (Ellery Hathaway, #1) by Joanna Schaffhausen: If you like fictional serial killers and need a great procedural have I got the read for you! This is dark, but without doing it for shock value and it’s mostly blips throughout. Ellery Hathaway is a police officer in a small town where three people have gone missing, and no one is listening to her that there is a connection and there will be more. The problem is, she can’t divulge the reason she thinks there is a connection because then she’d have to share her secret: as a child she was abducted by a notorious serial killer and was the rescued victim who landed him on death row. Since she can’t come out with any of that, she instead calls an FBI agent, the one who saved her, to come help. Of course there’s a problem with that too–he’s kind of on leave and the sheriff loses it when he finds out she went behind his back. This is one of those page-turners where you start suspecting everybody that turns into a thriller by the end. And if you hate waiting between books you’ll be thrilled to know the sequel just published, so happy reading! (*If you regularly read dark serial killer fiction, this is dark-ish.)

Recent Releases

The Plotters cover imageThe Plotters by Un-Su Kim (Currently Reading: So far this makes me think of Han Kang, but with assassins and I am very into this dark weird novel–more literary at the moment.) (TW animal cruelty)

Come Find Me by Meg Miranda (Two teens become friends after separate tragedies looking for answers to a murder and a missing persons case–really enjoyed the audiobook.) (TW domestic abuse)

Dead as a Door Knocker (House-Flipper Mystery #1) by Diane Kelly (Cozy mystery)

The Dime by Kathleen KentThe Dime by Kathleen Kent (Paperback) (This is one of my favorite procedural novels and if you haven’t gotten to it yet ruuuun to it: Review) (I’m sorry I don’t remember trigger warnings.)

Crimson Lake by Candice Fox (Paperback) (Another great Australian crime novel–Review) (TW child rape/ pedophilia)

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

Free Screenings Of BLACK PANTHER At AMC Theaters: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by by Simon & Schuster Childrens Publishing.


No Trick, Free Means Free

In honor of Black History Month, and the film’s best picture Oscar nomination, 250 AMC Theatres will have free screenings of Black Panther between Feb. 1-7. You’ll find the link to ticket information at the end of this article.

Grow With Google Heads To Libraries In 50 States

Libraries offer many services beyond just helping patrons find a good book, and Google is helping them with digital resources. The idea is basically to help libraries help patrons to learn things like online marketing, and how to use programs like spreadsheets to better prepare them for the job market and starting/running small businesses. For more on the plan read here.

This Tiny Mobile Library Is Adorable

And also important as it travels to remote villages in Italy to deliver books to children. The three-wheeled van is named Bibliomotocarro and Antonio La Cava uses it to deliver books because “I was strongly worried about growing old in a country of non-readers.” Watch the video here.

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Today In Books

Awesome Book Vending Machine At FL School: Today In Books

Sponsored by our Unusual Suspects giveaway of $100 to the bookstore of your choice!


I Want One!

Also, put one in every school. Umatilla Elementary School in Florida has a book vending machine that works exactly as you’d think: drop in 50 cents and a book drops down.

Shakeup At The Man Booker Prize

The hedge fund, Man Group, which has been sponsoring Britain’s prestigious literary award the Man Book Prize, announced it will no longer sponsor the prize. While this won’t affect this year’s award it is unclear how this will affect the prize moving forward–they are currently looking for new commercial sponsorship. The gloves have been coming off recently showing strains in the relationship, including authors claiming the hedge fund was not who their sponsor should be, and that the hedge fund deserves criticism.

Now Here’s Another Great List Of Books

The American Library Association announced the 2019 youth media award winners and so many great books on this list! Personal favorites: Monday’s Not Coming by Tiffany D. Jackson, The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo, love Meg Medina, and congratulations are in order for some of our very own Rioters for (Don’t) Call Me Crazy: 33 Voices Start the Conversation about Mental Health edited by Kelly Jensen. All the warm book fuzzy feelings today!

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Today In Books

PEN America 2019 Literary Award Finalists: Today In Books

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


Here’s A Good List To Pick Your Next Read From

The finalist for PEN America’s 2019 Literary Awards were announced, and whether you’re looking for fiction, nonfiction, poetry, or drama you’re bound to find an excellent read from this list. There are a lot of small press books and books you may not have heard of, but that you might enjoy.

Waiting For Something New From E.L. James?

Good news: The Fifty Shades author has announced a new book releasing in April: The Mister. On the Today Show, James said, “It’s a 21st century Cinderella.” For more on the new characters click here.

A Little Roundup Of Recent Memoir News

CNN’s chief White House correspondent, Jim Acosta, will be publishing The Enemy of the People, “…to share what I’ve experienced covering President Trump during his first two years in office.” Representative Ilhan Omar of Minnesota sold This Is What America Looks Like, which “chronicles her journey fleeing war in Somalia as a little girl, becoming a refugee in her early teens, and making her way against unspeakable odds to become the congresswoman-elect from Minnesota as a collection of remarkable firsts: first Muslim refugee in Congress, first woman of color to represent Minnesota, and the first person to wear a hijab in Congress.” And it’s been reported that Former President Bill Clinton is writing a book about his post-White House life.

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Today In Books

Excelsior! Stan Lee Tribute Announced: Today In Books

Sponsored by our Unusual Suspects giveaway of $100 to the bookstore of your choice!


Excelsior! A Celebration of the Amazing, Fantastic, Incredible & Uncanny Life of Stan Lee

The tribute will take place January 30th at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood. It’s of course going to be celebrity-filled and will have Kevin Smith moderating conversations throughout the event. “All net proceeds from the event’s ticket sales will go to nonprofit organization The Hero Initiative, a charity that supports comic book creators, artists and writers in need.”

She-Ra Season Two A Go!

I know wrong cartoon, but I’m old and my heart stayed in the ’80s and I can do what I want. Anyhoo, She-Ra season 2 will be on Netflix April 26th and is it April yet?! If you haven’t watched this utterly delightful and fun reboot, do yourself a solid and get to that sooner rather than later.

Shropshire, England Is Getting A Poetry Pharmacy

Deborah Alma, self-proclaimed Emergency Poet, has been dispensing poetry from the back of an ambulance for six years. And she’s now setting up a shop in Bishop’s Castle in Shropshire Alma is buzzing with plans for how the shop will be divided like a pharmacy “into areas for particular ailments, so you walk around and find wherever your mood might be addressed by literature.”

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Today In Books

Harry Potter On Antiques Roadshow: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by our Unusual Suspects giveaway of $100 to the bookstore of your choice!


Wondering What Two First-Edition Harry Potter Books Are Worth?

So did a schoolteacher who took her two signed first-edition Harry Potter books on the Antiques Roadshow. Making these especially valuable is that they were signed before Rowling had gotten famous so she’d actually included a personalized note in the books. Justin Croft evaluated the books and placed their combined value between $2,600 to $3,900.

Wattpad Is Creating A Publishing Division

Wattpad is known as a storytelling application where writers upload original stories and fan fiction, which recently adapted a story into a Netflix film: The Kissing Booth. Rather than continuing to work with publishers to adapt its stories Wattpad has created a publishing division–but it’s not going to work exactly like publishing. Rather than editors choosing what stories to publish as books, they’ll be using technology to scan/analyze the content and pick what it believes will be a commercial success.

We’re Getting a YA Anna Karenina Series

I love hearing “in a competitive situation” for book adaptations. This time it was over Anna K, an upcoming YA novel by Jenny Lee that’s a multicultural retelling of Anna Karenina. Lee will also be writing the TV adaptation. We’re gonna make all the popcorn–now if you’ll excuse me I need to go see who I have to beg for a galley.