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Today In Books

Batman Got COVID-19: Today In Books

Batman Got COVID-19

Vanity Fair is reporting that a “a well-placed source” has said Robert Pattinson has tested positive for COVID-19, halting production of The Batman outside of London. Privacy rules and laws exist so Warner Bros statement doesn’t identify anyone: “A member of The Batman production has tested positive for Covid-19, and is isolating in accordance with established protocols. Filming is temporarily paused.”

Best American Mystery Series’ New Editor

Beginning with the fall 2021 edition, Steph Cha will be taking over as editor of The Best American Mystery Stories. The series will get a little title change at that time to The Best American Mystery & Suspense, and will henceforth be a part of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt’s Best American collections. If you’ve yet to discover Steph Cha’s work, check out her modern noir trilogy, Follow Her Home, and her most recent award winning standalone crime novel, Your House Will Pay.

The Big Library Read Selection

Want to be a part of a world wide book club? The Big Library, the first global virtual book club, has selected their next read: Reverie by Ryan La Sala. The selected ebook is available without holds or wait list at the same time through your library and OverDrive.

So What’s The Difference Between A Myth, A Fairytale, and A Legend?

In case you were ever wondering what the difference between a myth, a legend, and a fairy tale is, well, here’s your Folklore 101 guide.

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Today In Books

SCARY STORIES Documentary Watch Party For Banned Books Weeks: Today In Books

SCARY STORIES Documentary Watch Party For Banned Books Weeks

The American Library Association invites everyone to watch a free stream of the Scary Stories Documentary–about Alvin Schwartz’s popular Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark book series–on Friday, October 2, at 6 p.m. CST for Banned Books Week. There will be a Facebook Event, there’s a Twitter hashtag (#CensorshipisScary), and there will be a Q&A with Director Cody Meirick on the Banned Books Week YouTube channel.

Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize Winner

Lars Horn’s Voice of the Fish has won the Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize and “depicts the experiences of traveling through Georgia and living in Russia as queer and transmasculine, modeling in baths of dead squid for their mother’s photography projects, and much more.” Previous winners of the prize, which celebrates literary nonfiction and emerging writers, include The Collected Schizophrenias by Esmé Weijun Wang and The Empathy Exams by Leslie Jamison.

NO TIME TO DIE New Trailer & Nov Release Date

The latest Bond film, No Time to Die, had a slew of setbacks, including the pandemic, which moved the theatrical release date from April to fall. Now, the last film where Daniel Craig will play Bond, has a new trailer and gives us more Lashana Lynch, Rami Malek, and Ana De Armas. Currently the release date is November 12th for the UK and US.

6 Organizations Or Groups Promoting Latinx Literature

Hispanic Heritage Month starts September 15th! To celebrate now and all year round, here’s a list of organizations and groups that promote Latinx literature.

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Unusual Suspects

The Big Books of Fall

Hello mystery fans! It’s the weekend and this crime train always stops for round-ups, news, trailers, links to share, and Kindle deals. Here we go:

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Rincey and Katie talk adaptation news, including the Dan Mallory movie, and take a walk down memory lane with middle grade mystery books on the latest Read Or Dead.

Get to Know Nordic Noir With These 10 Novels

Alyssa Cole is on the Smart Bitches podcast: When No One Is Watching, with Alyssa Cole

On the Crime Writers of Color podcast: Faye Snowden, author A Killing Fire, is interviewed by Robert Justice.

Audiobooks Are — And I Can’t Stress This Enough — Saving My Sanity During COVID-19

Grown cover image(There are crime novels mixed in) The 23 Most Anticipated YA Books to Read in September

How Are Crime Authors Going to Address the Pandemic in Their New Books?

The Big Books of Fall

(The Bright Lands is one) Win 5 Books by Authors You Should Get to Know

Win a Copy of THICK AS THIEVES by Sandra Brown!

Win a year subscription to Audible

News And Adaptations

The Dry by Jane Harper cover imageJane Harper updated fans on Instagram regarding The Dry adaptation: “In an alternate universe, today was the day the The Dry movie was due to hit screens. The pandemic means the release has been postponed with a new date still to be confirmed, but trust me, it is absolutely worth the wait.”

‘No Time to Die’ Gets New Trailer as 007 Marketing Engine Roars Back to Life

The Inside Story of the $8 Million Heist From the Carnegie Library

Literary Scammer Dan Mallory to Be Rewarded by Having Jake Gyllenhaal Play Him on TV

Catherine Steadman To Pen Series Adaptation Of Jess Ryder’s ‘The Ex-Wife’ For BlackBox Multimedia & Night Train Media

Kindle Deals

Legal mystery fan? Here’s a series starter not to miss that is a revised edition of The Little Death: Lay Your Sleeping Head by Michael Nava is $3.99–and I sure did add the audiobook for $1.99!

Historical mystery fan? Don’t miss this series starter based on one of the first female Indian lawyers: The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey is $1.99! (Review) (TW domestic violence)

 

lying in waitLike your thrillers to be cruel AF? I got you: Lying in Wait by Liz Nugent  is $1.99! (Review) (TW: cyber-exploitation/ Heads-up a character deals with fat shaming throughout the entire novel.)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases and 2021. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. 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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Wonder Woman Leads Library Card Sign-up Month: Today In Books

Wonder Woman Leads Library Card Sign-up Month

For September’s Library Card Sign-up Month Wonder Woman has earned the ambassador role, helping to show the importance and power of having a library card. And there are stickers, bookmarks, and posters of Wonder Woman lassoing a library card.

A Dive Into Ferrante Fever

Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Novels were such a huge hit you’ve probably heard of them. Maybe you’ve seen the news that her new novel has Marisa Tomei narrating. But you probably don’t know much about the author, whose publication name is a pseudonym, or the history of how her books became so well known around the world and created Ferrante Fever. If you want a deep dive into all that info, the BBC has got ya!

Emma Roberts To Adapt Book With First-Look Hulu Deal

Actress Emma Roberts (American Horror Story; Scream Queens) has signed a first-look deal with Hulu and already selected her first project: adapting Tell Me Lies by Carola Lovering. The pilot will be written by Meaghan Oppenheimer and Carola Lovering is set as a consulting producer. Roberts’ plan is to keep her focus on adapting books.

The World’s First Novel Is Older Than You Think

What was the first novel? Why was it written? What need did it fill? Who wrote it? And most importantly, can you still read it today?

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Unusual Suspects

Holy Crime Novel, Batman!

Hi mystery fans! First, if you’re looking for a social thriller/suspense/psychological thriller, Alyssa Cole’s When No One Is Watching is finally here and it’s one of my favorite reads of the year (Review). Now for what I’m chatting about today: an impactful crime novel and an Italian procedural with a lead unlike all other procedural leads.

Three-Fifths cover imageThree-Fifths by John Vercher: Holy crime novel, Batman! This is a quick crime novel that packs a hell of a punch and leaves you thinking about it long after the last page.

Bobby Saraceno is in his early twenties, having been raised by a single white mother, doing his best to get by and excited to reunite with the only person he’d considered a friend, Aaron. Aaron had been in prison for the last three years and Bobby thought they’d pick back up, uniting over their love of comic books. But things quickly get out of hand when Aaron violently attacks a young Black man and Bobby flees the scene with him. The violent attack doesn’t just test their friendship but, rather, it unravels Bobby’s entire life, starting with the fact that he’s always passed as white and never told anyone, including Aaron, that his father is Black. After the crime we follow the fallout as we get to know Bobby, his mother who is trying to quit drinking, and the doctor struggling with a separation who sees the victim come into the hospital. And let me tell you how hard I was rooting for these three characters.

The entire novel is set in the mid-90s in Pittsburgh showing how little has changed as it illustrates the layers and depth of identity while tackling classism, racism, colorism, homophobia, loyalty, family, and the way society’s ills can break a person. (TW homophobia, racism/ slurs/ prison rape/  miscarriage, infertility recounted/ alcoholism/ suicide on page)

The Sleeping Nymph (Teresa Battaglia #2) by Ilaria Tuti, Ekin Oklap (Translator): A great sequel in this Italian procedural trilogy! First, a note on it being a sequel: the first book in the series, Flowers Over the Inferno, is where you should start because the trilogy is an evolution of the main character. However, if you’re not a reader of serial killer fiction and you want to start with this one because the mystery sounds more your speed, you won’t be lost.

Now on to The Sleeping Nymph, which had a super interesting mystery case: An art restorer realizes that a 70-year-old painting is covered in blood and calls police with the concern that maybe the woman in the painting was murdered–especially since the painter has been in a self-imposed catatonic state for almost 70 years. I know! Tasked with the case is Superintendent Teresa Battaglia who is 60 years old, has diabetes, and now uses a notebook to keep track of everything because she’s hiding the beginning stages of dementia from everyone. Yup! If a crime was committed, it took place 70 years ago, during WWII, making it highly unlikely that a missing woman would have been recorded by police. So where does the team start?

Battaglia is tough and prickly, but always looking out for those she cares for in her own way. Her partner, half her age, is struggling with a secret that is unraveling his relationship with his girlfriend and has Battaglia after the secret. And Battaglia has to deal with a contentious boss from her past, while trying to convince the team that a young dog trainer who is blind is perfect for their team.

Not only was the mystery a hook for me but this goes into an interesting place, the Resia Valley, and its people, which will probably be a first *learn for most readers. If you want a mystery to sink into, enjoy procedurals and historical mysteries, and like watching your characters evolve over a series, don’t miss this one. I know I’m going to greatly miss Battaglia at the end of this trilogy. (*Keep in mind this is fiction, and not own voices, but it certainly led me down a rabbit hole.) (TW ableism/ past memory of dead baby, not graphic or detailed/ memory of past child abuse/ past domestic abuse briefly recounted, loss of pregnancy/ past war torture mentions, details/ anti-Semitism)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases and 2021. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. 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

FELIX EVER AFTER Will Be Adapted Into TV Series: Today In Books

FELIX EVER AFTER Will Be Adapted Into TV Series

Amazon Studios and Field Trip Productions will be adapting Kacen Callender’s Felix Ever After novel into a TV series! We’ll get to see Felix Love, a Black transgender teen, navigate his identity and marginalizations while falling in love for the first time on the big screen–of your TV. Bonus: while we wait for the adaptation, Callender has a bunch of backlist titles: Hurricane Child; King and the Dragonflies; This Is Kind of an Epic Love Story; Queen of the Conquered.

Channing Tatum Wrote A Children’s Book

Actor and director Channing Tatum (Magic Mike; 21 Jump Street; Dog) has written a children’s book: The One and Only Sparkella. The book, set to publish May 4, 2021, encourages kids to embrace their individuality after a young girl is teased for her love of all things that sparkle. Tatum has already started the ad campaign, which is a delightful picture of him in fairy wings reading his book to a unicorn.

Dictionary.com Has Biggest Update Ever

2020 definitely feels like the year that would break a dictionary’s record. And it has. Between the pandemic and the Black Lives Matter protests against police violence and racism, there have been a lot of searches, new terms, and change in language. Dictionary.com is here with the resulting updates which is huge: 650 new entries; 2,100 new definitions; 1,200 new etymologies; 1,700 new pronunciations; more than 11,000 revised definitions; more than 7,000 revised etymologies.

The Wide World of JEOPARDY! Contestant Authors

We’re taking a look at the link between Jeopardy! and authorship, examining books by Jeopardy! contestants and this phenomenon.

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Today In Books

NPR Has 100 Favorite Kids’ Books For You: Today In Books

NPR Has 100 Favorite Kids’ Books For You

NPR’s summer reading poll leaned fully into keeping kids entertained and hopefully occupied in the pandemic. After asking for readers favorite kids’ books, their judges–made up of librarians, publishers, and authors–curated this list of 100 favorite books for young readers. They explain their process and then give you so many great books, including Tar Beach by Faith Ringgold, Story Boat by Kyo MacLear and Rashin Kheiriyeh, and Front Desk by Kelly Yang.

New FLETCH Adaptation With John Hamm In Chevy Chase Role

Chevy Chase portrayed Gregory Mcdonald’s character Irwin Maurice Fletcher, from his Fletch series, to the big screen in the ’80s. Now Jon Hamm will be stepping into the journalist-always-solving-a-mystery’s shoes with a new adaptation in the works: Confess, Fletch. “The character in the book’s a lot different than Chevy’s portrayal, and so when Bill Block at Miramax came to me and said, ‘You know, we own this and we think you’d be a good fit,’ I agreed, but I don’t want to imitate Chevy. I’m not interested in that and I don’t think anybody else would be. We already have that version, so maybe there’s a way to get a version that’s more true to life for the book, more intellectual and a little more live in its sensibility.”

250 Years Of African American Poetry

Kevin Young–poet, essayist, and poetry editor and director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture at NYPL–has an upcoming anthology with hundreds of poets, going as far back as 1770: African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song. “From bondage to the New Negro, from Caribbean poets to Afro-Latinx poets and those of Creole heritage, Young’s anthology is a deep dive into the lives and words that moved generations from one creative period to the next.”

How Librarians Helped Invent the YA Category of Books

A look back in history to how YA librarians and libraries helped create the young adult category of books for teens.

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Today In Books

John Green’s Next Book Will Be Nonfiction: Today In Books

John Green’s Next Book Will Be Nonfiction

John Green, the author known for YA hits Looking for Alaska and The Fault in Our Stars, will be publishing a nonfiction title for the first time. The Anthropocene Reviewed, which is also the title of his monthly podcast, will be an expansion of the essays heard on his podcast mixed with favorites. “…I’ve begun to understand these reviews as an attempt to chart the contradictions of human life as I experience it – how we can be so compassionate and so cruel, so persistent and so quick to despair, and how consciousness is at once depraved in its meaninglessness and profoundly sacred in its meaning.”

Another First By A Major Publisher

These are always bitter sweet, “yay” for the first but also shame on publishing for taking this long. According to Simran Jeet Singh, the author of the new children’s book Fauja Singh Keeps Going, it is the first kid’s book by a major publisher to center a Sikh character. The book tells the true story of a British Sikh centenarian, Fauja Singh, believed to have been the oldest person to run a marathon in 2011.

Trailer For Sherlock’s Teen Sister Adaptation

Sherlock’s teen sister has a series of books written by Nancy Springer, which Netflix has adapted into a film starring Millie Bobby Brown, with Henry Cavill playing her older brother, Sherlock. Available to stream on September 23rd, you can watch the trailer for Enola Holmes now, as Enola discovers her mother (Helena Bonham-Carter) is missing and sets out to solve the mystery.

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Today In Books

Powell’s Will No Longer Sell On Amazon: Today In Books

Powell’s Will No Longer Sell On Amazon

Powell’s Books in Portland, Oregon released a letter to customers announcing it would no longer sell books on Amazon. While it relied on the sales that came from Amazon, the independent bookstore was forced to focus on website sales during the pandemic as Amazon prioritized other items over books.

Today’s Bookish Google Doodle

Author of The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo, Alexandre Dumas is celebrated in today’s Google Doodle–technically a swashbuckling adventure slideshow. Check out the doodle and the history of Dumas’ work.

400 Years Later, Library Acquires Book It Coveted For £2.5m

Duke Augustus, who died in 1666, helped acquire hundreds of thousands of books that make up one of the world’s oldest libraries: Herzog August Bibliothek. One of the books he really wanted was the album amicorum (friendship book) but he was unsuccessful. Now, so many years later, thanks to a Sotheby’s private sale, the book has found its way (with a serious price tag) onto the Herzog August Bibliothek shelves.

Donating Books During COVID-19

In the midst of a global pandemic, we’ve all done some cleaning. Here’s a guide to donating books during COVID-19.

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Unusual Suspects

The Women of Canadian Crime Fiction

Hi mystery fans! It’s Friday, which means I’ve got roundups, trailers, something new to almost watch, and Kindle ebook deals.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Winter Counts cover imageOn this week’s All The Books! Liberty and Patricia discuss Winter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden, among other new releases.

‘We already have a Black writer’: Black Chicago crime fiction author Tracy Clark, others talk about the fight for recognition

Enola Holmes official trailer–Netflix’s adaptation of the Enola Holmes Mysteries by Nancy Springer, which follows Sherlock’s teen sister.

Who Is Enola Holmes and Why Didn’t We Know Sherlock Had a Sister? Here’s Your Answer

Death on the Nile Official Trailer–20th Century Studios’ adaptation of Agatha Christie’s murder mystery novel.

Dark Horse to Publish, Distribute Print Editions of Comixology Originals (including The Black Ghost Vol. 1 by Alex Segura, Monica Gallagher and George Kambadais!)

Broken Places cover image4 Great Mystery and Thriller Audiobooks From Black Authors

Mexican Gothic author Silvia Moreno-Garcia shares what fans can expect from Hulu series

The Making of a Fierce and Badass Black Heroine

The Women of Canadian Crime Fiction: A Roundtable Discussion

Enter to Win $50 to Your Favorite Independent Bookstore!

(Almost) Watch Now

Netflix: The Wallander series, which follows the Swedish detective Kurt Wallander and is based on Henning Mankell‘s series, will get a prequel series on Netflix streaming on September 3rd. Here’s the trailer for Young Wallander.

Kindle Deals

If you’re looking for translated work, the author of The Hole has a new crime novel: The Law of Lines by Hye-young Pyun (Author), Sora Kim-Russell (Translator) is $1.99!

If you’ve yet to read the most recent release in the Samantha Brinkman series: Final Judgment by Marcia Clark is $1.99! (The series generally has most major trigger warnings)

If you need a lovely escape here’s a Sherlock meets Fantastic Beasts series starter for a completed series: Jackaby by William Ritter is $1.99!

no exit by taylor adams cover imageAnd if you want something awesome and intense as your form of escape: No Exit by Taylor Adams is $5.49! (Review) (TW racial slurs/terminally ill parent not on page/pedophile not on page)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases and 2021. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. 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.