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Today In Books

National Book Foundation’s 5 Under 35 Honorees: Today In Books

National Book Foundation’s 5 Under 35 Honorees

Five fiction writers under the age of 35, and their debut books, have been named the 5 Under 35 honorees by the National Book Foundation. K-Ming Chang for Bestiary, Naima Coster for Halsey Street, Raven Leilani for Luster, Fatima Farheen Mirza for A Place for Us, and C Pam Zhang for How Much of These Hills Is Gold will each receive a $1,000 prize and were selected by authors Susan Choi, Marlon James, Tayari Jones, Tommy Orange, and Justin Torres.

Poet Nikky Finney Awarded $100,000 Lifetime Achievement Prize

Another huge congratulations: the Academy of American Poets has awarded its Wallace Stevens Award, $100,000 lifetime achievement honor, to poet Nikky Finney. It was just one of dozens of prizes awarded by the Academy, which also included the $25,000 Lenore Marshall prize being awarded to Hanif Abdurraqib for A Fortune for Your Disaster. Check out more awardees!

WandaVision Trailer

And now for trailer news! WandaVision is an upcoming Disney+ series that focuses on the Marvel Comics characters Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch and Vision, played by Elizabeth Olsen and Paul Bettany. The show blends classic sitcom television with the Marvel Universe and you can watch the trailer, which gave me Pleasantville vibes.

#WorldKidLit Month: Why We Need Translated Lit for Kids!

First launched in September 2016, World Kid Lit Month is a month to celebrate and promote world literature for children and teens. The month focuses particularly on fiction, poetry, and nonfiction translated to English from other languages. How can you participate? Find out!

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Unusual Suspects

A Puzzle Mystery Focused On Family Drama

Hello mystery fans! Two of my favorite reads of the year, that I’d earlier shouted about, are officially out in the world, so definitely pick up Grown by Tiffany D. Jackson (Review) and And Now She’s Gone by Rachel Howzell Hall (Review). Plus, they both have great backlists for plenty of reading. And now for what I have for you this week: my yearly reminder that I absolutely adore Charlotte Holmes with my entire being, and a puzzle mystery with a focus on family drama.

Murder on Cold Street cover imageMurder on Cold Street (Lady Sherlock #5) by Sherry Thomas: A yearly highlight for me is the new release of Lady Sherlock–it’s always a treat and this year was no exception, but felt even more needed in this absolute garbage year. The series premise is that, after Charlotte Holmes blew up her social standing and was cast out, she ended up pairing with Mrs. Watson, taking on cases where she pretends her brother Sherlock is in the next room listening to whoever needs his help for a case while Charlotte helps him as the front of the business. But it is all a charade, Charlotte is the only detective Holmes, a secret very few know.

After their big, world trotting case in the last book, we’re treated to a quiet and tight mystery with a small circle of characters that will delight mystery readers. Inspector Treadles, who Holmes has of course assisted, has been arrested on murder charges and his wife has come to Sherlock Holmes for help. So of course Charlotte is on the case! Only slightly distracted by every dessert she sees, Charlotte must figure out why Inspector Treadles won’t help his case, and why two men who worked at Mrs. Treadles’ inherited business were shot and killed. Oh, did I mention it’s a locked-room mystery?!

There’s always so much to love with a Charlotte Holmes book: her obsession with sweets; friendships; step-by-step deducing; great mysteries; an equal treat for fans of Conan Doyle’s work and those who’ve never read him; the banter; a will-they-won’t-they *eyebrow dance running plot; an equally smart and fun historical mystery series. And bonus: it’s equally wonderful in audiobook and print. (TW past attempted assaults)

The Last Equation of Isaac Severy by Nova Jacobs: This was a unique puzzle mystery that focuses on family drama. If you’d told me I’d be glued to any book that focused on anything dealing with math I would have laughed and laughed and laughed–but here we are. First, a heads up that this entire book deals with basically everything that would get a suicide warning from beginning to end.

At the top of the Severy family is Isaac Severy who has died by suicide, though some believe there must be something else going on. He was a famed mathematician with children who never lived up to his brilliance and two grandchildren he adopted and raised: Hazel, a bookstore owner flailing in life, and Greg, an LA police detective. Isaac left Hazel a letter, which basically puts her on the hunt to figure out his secret work, while others are already hunting for what they believe to be his work. What none of them knows is what exactly this equation was, but they all believe it to be something grand that could change the world.

Enter a secret organization that’s really pushy about finding out the information, a long lost cousin, and a family full of drama and secrets. While Hazel grieves and tries to figure out what is happening, her brother Greg is secretly following their father who has just been released from prison, and Isaac’s son is having a mid-life crisis and being pursued by the secret organization for whatever information he can give them about his father. The family’s secrets are going to spill, there’s affairs, murder, and (in what was most shocking to me) interesting math explained in layman’s terms. If family drama is your catnip and you want one with a mystery for a unique-ish read, this is your book. (TW suicide throughout/ grandparent with dementia/ past child abuse recounted, mostly emotional and neglect)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming releases for 2020 and 2021. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and get Tailored Book Recommendations!

Until next time, keep investigating! 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

Virtual 20th Annual National Book Festival Starts This Week: Today In Books

Virtual 20th Annual National Book Festival Starts This Week

Prepare your favorite seat in your home because the Library of Congress’ National Book Festival is on its 20th year and will be virtual starting September 25th. One of many virtual bonuses is that, since there will be live and view-on-demand options, you probably won’t have to make the tough decision of picking one thing you really want to watch over another thing you really want to watch even if both are at the same time. And there will be a 2-hour PBS special to close the event on the 27th at 6 p.m. EDT.

Affected By Family Deaths, Siblings Wrote COVID Book For Children

Impacted by several relatives dying from COVID-19 in India, siblings Sophia and Sean Nesamoney wanted to do something to help. And they have by co-authoring the children’s book ABC’s of Coronavirus, helping to explain the virus and how to stay safe with the letters of the alphabet. It’s even been translated into three languages spoken in India, as well as Spanish, Dutch, Korean, and French. It’s gotten approval by The American India Foundation and the San Mateo County health department lists it as a resource for kids.

Outcries Over PEN America Not Renewing Fellowship

PEN America recently announced that it would not be renewing the PEN America Emerging Voices Fellowship in 2021. The Fellowship, which began in 1996, is a literary mentorship that helps marginalized writers start their career. PEN Center USA staffers, fellows, former members, and writers wrote an open letter protesting the decision, which was then followed by an email by PEN America leadership updating that the fellowship wasn’t entirely cancelled, but would take a different form.

Why There Aren’t More Jointly Authored Novels

A look at the history of jointly authored novels, including authors’ approaches, the benefits, and the pitfalls of coauthorship.

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Today In Books

Libraries Turn To Outdoor Services: Today In Books

Libraries Turn To Outdoor Services

With the pandemic feeling like there is no end in sight and libraries needing to continue to service their community, they’ve turned to creative outdoor services: La Grande, Oregon has started setting up tables outside for patrons to be able to browse books for checkout; Montgomery County Public Schools in Christiansburg, Virginia are using drone delivery for book drop off; Lorain (Ohio) Public Library System placed a shipping container by the beach so patrons could check out items for outdoor activities like soccer balls and bikes.

A Collection Of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Lectures And Interviews

You can watch Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in a handful of interviews and lectures recorded from the ’80s through last year rounded up here. There’s also a link for 392 C-SPAN videos that she appears in.

Guess How Much I Love You Author Has Passed Away

Sam McBratney, author of the children’s classic Guess How Much I Love You, has passed away at age 77. While he wrote 50+ books he’s most known for Guess How Much I Love You, illustrated by Anita Jeram, and its iconic saying, “I love you to the moon and back”. You can check out the soon-to-be released companion to Guess How Much I Love You, Will You Be My Friend?

Introducing the 2020 National Book Award Longlists!

The 2020 National Book Award longlists have been announced!

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Today In Books

ORPHAN BLACK Star Tatiana Maslany To Be She-Hulk: Today In Books

Orphan Black Star Tatiana Maslany To Be She-Hulk

Reducing her workload from playing every-single-character to just two, Tatiana Maslany is the top choice for casting as Bruce Banner’s cousin, Jennifer Walters, who will inherit his Hulk powers via a blood transfusion in the upcoming Disney Plus She-Hulk series. Kat Coiro will direct.

Burbank, CA District Considering Banning Classics Including TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD

Mark Twain’s Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn, Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird, Theodore Taylor’s The Cay, and Mildred Taylor’s Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry have been challenged in the Burbank Unified School District in California. Further, the district has stopped using the books while they review the challenge which is in violation of the Burbank USD policy, which says the book is to remain in use during the pending challenge. “It’s important to remember that, while parents can opt their students out of reading these books, students who are prevented from reading classic texts with the benefit of guided analysis by professional educators can never opt in.”

George Orwell Covers Revamp

In August, George Orwell’s Animal Farm turned 75. In celebration, Berkley Books and Signet Classics have given two formats (mass market and trade paperback editions) a cover makeover for Animal Farm and 1984. Check out the new and the old covers.

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Today In Books

FORREST GUMP Author Has Passed Away: Today In Books

Forrest Gump Author Has Passed Away

Alabama governor Kay Ivey has confirmed that journalist and author Winston Groom has passed away at age 77: “While he will be remembered for creating Forrest Gump, Winston Groom was a talented journalist and noted author of American history. Our hearts and prayers are extended to his family.”

Chris Pine & Thandie Newton In Spy Novel Adaptation

Hello, to this casting news and only this casting news: Chris Pine and Thandie Newton will star in an adaptation of Olen Steinhauer’s All The Old Knives, about two spies, ex-lovers, who reunite for dinner and realize only one will live through the night… Amazon Studios has now boarded as a producer.

If Special Referendum Succeeds Most Nashville Libraries Could Close

While the election has yet to be scheduled, many local leaders have taken to publicly opposing a special referendum proposed for December, which, if it succeeds, would roll back a 34% property tax increase. Among those opposed is Nashville Public Library Director Kent Oliver who claims it will take away $332 million from the city and close almost all of Nashville’s 21 public libraries. “Oliver says the library system would be vulnerable to widespread librarian layoffs, since a large share of its funding goes toward staff.”

Banned Books To Read During Banned Books Week

Here are some books you’ll want on your TBR for Banned Books Week, including The Complete Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi.

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Today In Books

The Beatles First Official Book In 20 Years: Today In Books

The Beatles First Official Book In 20 Years

The Beatles haven’t put out an official book since 2000, but that’s changing now with the release of The Beatles: Get Back in 2021. The book will be about the last album they made, Let It Be, and is based on over 100 hours of studio sessions’ conversations that were transcribed. “The book documents January 1969, with friction building in the band as they recorded music for an intended TV special – George Harrison walked out of the sessions at one point and John Lennon described them as ‘hell’.”

The DOJ Opens Criminal Investigation Over Bolton’s Memoir

After the Trump administration was unsuccessful in blocking from publication former national security adviser John Bolton’s memoir, The Room Where It Happened, they have opened a criminal investigation. According to three sources the Department of Justice has issued a subpoena for the publisher, Simon & Schuster, in relation to communications related to the memoir.

You Can Search 1.5 Million Newspapers With This AI

The US Library of Congress continues being awesome. They have released an AI, Newspaper Navigator, that allows you to search for images through 1.5 million historical newspapers. You can easily search starting with a keyword, narrow your results with a time period and state, and download the image you want while also having the option of reading the article it came from and the newspaper issue.

Obama’s Presidential Memoir (Volume 1) Is Coming!

Former President Barack Obama’s memoir A PROMISED LAND will be published on November 17, 2020.

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Unusual Suspects

Female Spies, True Crime Adaptations, And Tons of News 🔪

Hello mystery fans! This week actually brought a good amount of news, we have some roundups, and great Kindle deals to escape into.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

American Spy cover imageTirzah chats about two great backlist books about female spies on All The Backlist!

Alice and Kim chat adaptations, including Just Mercy and The Orchid Thief, on the latest For Real.

Rincey and Katie talk about mysteries featuring technology and social media, along with some mixed feelings about adaptation news recently announced on the latest Read or Dead.

The most famous fictional detectives

A Necessary Evil cover image: silhouette of man in coat and hat standing in a lush forest8 Books That Explore Family and Crime

Author Toni Jensen Reminds Us the Face of Gun Violence Is Not What We Think

Reese Witherspoon explains why this female-authored mystery-thriller is her September book club pick

Alyssa Cole recommended great crime novels on Instagram

Enter to Win $50 to Your Favorite Independent Bookstore!

News  And Adaptations

Trouble Is What I Do cover imageNational Book Foundation to present Lifetime Achievement Award to Walter Mosley

International Thriller Writers Regroup After Resignations

Author Ann Cleeves funds ‘bibliotherapy’ service to help people heal with books

Ex-Theranos CEO Holmes puts mental state at issue, to be examined by U.S. experts (For fans of Bad Blood)

Grown cover imageTiffany D Jackson and the conversation tied to her recent book Grown: #HeKnewBetter and Laurie Halse Anderson and Tiffany Jackson discuss YA and the Me Too movement

The Royal Mint Release an Agatha Christie £2 Coin

HBG Releases Diversity and Inclusion Progress Report

PRH Releases Workforce Report on Diversity

Kindle Deals

Iced in Paradise cover imageNeed to armchair travel to Hawaii and want a cozy? Iced in Paradise by Naomi Hirahara is $6.15 (Review) (TW addiction/ sick parent/ past stalking incident mentioned)

Need a fun ridiculous read? Hope Never Dies (Obama Biden Mysteries #1) by Andrew Shaffer is $2.99!

For a quirky YA mystery: Bellweather Rhapsody by Kate Racculia is $2.99! (Author of Tuesday Mooney Talks to Ghosts)

The Sun Down Motel cover imageFor a ghostly past and present mystery: The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James is $1.99! (Review) (TW mentions past rape, not graphic)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming releases for 2020 and 2021. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and get Tailored Book Recommendations!

Until next time, keep investigating! 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

Lil Nas X Has A Children’s Book: Today In Books

Lil Nas X Has A Children’s Book

Rapper Lil Nas X (Old Town Road) will publish a picture book under Random House Kids. C Is For Country, illustrated by Theodore Taylor III, will release January 5th and will teach kids the alphabet using a country theme as it follows a Lil Nas X character and his horse Panini.

Reese Witherspoon Picked Another YA Book

In August Reese Witherspoon announced her book club would now have a second monthly YA option, starting with You Should See Me in a Crown by Leah Johnson. Now, for September, she has announced her new Reese’s Book Club YA pick: Furia by Yamile Saied Méndez, about a rising fútbol star in Argentina keeping her passion a secret from her family.

Hachette Book Group Releases Diversity Report

We recently saw the release of Penguin Random House’s workforce diversity report and now Hachette Book Group has released their diversity report. Along with their statement about needing to do better, the numbers show that in the U.S. HBG’s workforce is 69% white, 4% Black, 18% Hispanic, and 7% Asian–senior management is 80% white. Also notable: in 2019 only 22% of its new illustrators and authors were people of color. “Throughout the report, HBG made it clear that all its initiatives were created with input from current company staffers through focus groups and anonymous suggestions. HBG will also add unconscious bias and micro-aggression awareness training to its diversity and inclusion training.”

A Crash Course on the Detainment of Uyghurs and Uyghur Writers

Find a quick overview of one of China’s ethnic minorities in this crash course on the detainment of Uyghurs and Uyghur writers.

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Unusual Suspects

A Cozy And A Dread-Inducing Crime Novel

Hi mystery fans! I’ve got an entertaining cozy, with a core ghostly friendship I adore, and a thoughtful crime novel with all the dread. What a combo!

Execution in E (Gethsemane Brown Mysteries #5) by Alexia Gordon: This is one of the few series that I actually stay up to date with and this is now my favorite book in the series. We get an awful influencer and her also awful wedding party, a suspicious death, and a music teacher and her ghost friend on the case. It’s fun!

(Heads up the entire case revolves around whether it was a suicide or murder.) Think of Gethsemane like Jessica Fletcher–if Fletcher were Black, and younger, and assisted by a ghost–because people just keep dropping like flies ever since Gethsemane, an American musician, moved to the Irish countryside. Luckily for the town, she’s nosy, capable, and has a ghost–whose name she helped clear in a past case–to help her snoop for evidence. This time we have a destination wedding with an awful couple who are only marrying each other for what they can do for the other: a social media wedding for the influencer bride; marrying into money and status for the groom. But then the groom ends up dead and those who know him are certain it wasn’t suicide.

So Gethsemane and her ghostly friend Eamon decide to find out what really happened, because if it was murder then the number one suspect will be local friends, since the groom actually dated a local and it ended badly! Basically, anyone who knew the groom is also a suspect because, as I mentioned, these people are awful. Enter the occult, a priest, the Garda who wants nothing more than for Gethsemane to stick to teaching music and not crime solving, the entertaining banter between Gethsemane and Eamon, and town gossip for a fun, everyone-is-a-suspect mystery! (TW main case is a possible suicide, details/ suicide on page/ briefly recounts drowning)

Three by D.A. Mishani, Jessica Cohen (Translation): Mishani has an Israeli procedural series (The Missing File) I really like, so when I saw that he had a new standalone crime novel, I was excited. And wow did it deliver. Seriously, I won’t say how or why but [redacted] is chef’s kiss. The title is in reference to three women in Tel Aviv–all incredibly different from each other and who don’t know each other–that are separated into three sections.

We start with Orla, a recently divorced single mother who is struggling financially and emotionally. She ends up dating Gil, slowly at first, after meeting through online dating and the charming, wealthy, devoted father unravels into a trigger warning for men. The brilliance in Mishani’s story and writing is how a seemingly mundane start to dating takes a slow and dark path you don’t realize is danger until too late. And then we meet the next woman and by then my knuckles were already white and I was shouting like Bastian in The Neverending Story for them to hear me!

This is a dark in content crime novel, that feels like having the rug taken out from under you, but, rather than being written as detailed violence or gore, the dread comes from the realization that this is every day–there is nothing over the top here for thrills.

If you’ve yet to discover Mishani’s writing I highly recommend him: his characters feel like studies on human behavior, his writing is thoughtful, and twisty without the twists feeling gimmicky, and at this point I get to pick up his work without worrying I may end up with something problematic I wasted my time reading. I’ll just be over here still shouting how we need more translated crime books!

Oh, and if you’re an audiobook reader, the narrator Lucy Paterson does a great job of really bringing the three women to life–you may already know her from the Killing Eve books and Yrsa Sigurdardottir’s thrillers. (TW talk of suicide as a cover for murder/ briefly mentions past loss of pregnancy)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming releases for 2020 and 2021. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and get Tailored Book Recommendations!

Until next time, keep investigating! 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.