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Today In Books

Watch Ursula K. Le Guin Doc For Free This Week: Today In Books

Watch Ursula K. Le Guin Doc For Free This Week

The feature documentary Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin, which was produced over a decade with Le Guin’s participation and directed by Arwen Curry, is available for free streaming on PBS’s site until August 30th, 2020. Part of the PBS American Masters series, the documentary takes viewers into Ursula K. Le Guin’s groundbreaking career in her own words and with interviews of authors like Margaret Atwood and Neil Gaiman.

Beverly Jenkins Series Adaptation

Al Roker Entertainment, Inc. has partnered with Brave Road Entertainment to adapt Beverly Jenkins’s Blessings series into a TV series, Hopetown. Screenwriters Shari Simpson and Charlie Shahnaian will be writing the adaptation about a wealthy African American woman who buys a childless town with the intention of turning it into a foster-family community.

Where The National Book Critics Circle Is At

In June an internal email written by National Book Critics Circle v-p of grants Carlin Romano, regarding the board’s drafting of a diversity statement about Black Lives Matters, was leaked by poet/essayist Hope Wabuke who tweeted: “It is not possible to change these organizations from within, and the backlash will be too dangerous for me to remain.” Many board members resigned over the issue of feeling the organization did not support authors of color and marginalized voices, which eventually led to a special meeting to decide whether Romano would remain on the board: 28% of the NBCC’s membership voted and he will remain until 2022. Romano allegedly “threatened to sue the rank-and-file members” during the meeting.

Celebrate Independent Bookstore Day 2020 With These Official Online Events

Celebrate Independent Bookstore Day 2020 with a host of online events, including author panels and drawing demonstrations.

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Year Long Fellowship To Study Octavia Butler’s Work: Today In Books

Year Long Fellowship To Study Octavia Butler’s Work

A researcher with a doctoral degree (a requirement) will get access to Octavia Butler’s work, located in San Marino California’s Huntington Library, as part of a $50,000, year long fellowship, the Octavia E. Butler Fellowship. “The Butler archive is the most popular collection scholars request in the library’s reading room.”

Onus Of Fact Checking Nonfiction Left To Author

Emma Copley Eisenberg, author of The Third Rainbow Girl: The Long Life of a Double Murder in Appalachia, takes readers behind the publishing curtain of how nonfiction titles are (mostly not) fact checked. The process is in most cases left to the author, which is quite different from articles that go through a much more extensive fact-checking process when published in magazines and newspapers. Here are some of the whys.

Passages Author Gail Sheehy Has Passed Away

Pop sociologist, author, and journalist Gail Sheehy–who wrote the hit Passages: Predictable Crises of Adult Life in the ’70s–has passed away at age 83. Read more about her life, books, and psychological portraits of public figures.

16 Wonderful #OwnVoices YA Books About Disability

Find a great read among these OwnVoices YA books about disability, including Even If We Break by Marieke Nijkamp. Support these works to show publishing the need for representation.

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Unusual Suspects

Not Dark Mysteries

Hello mystery fans! First, if you’ve been waiting for the release of Winter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden, it’s finally here! (Review) Now for this week I have for you one of my favorite mystery writers that will totally scratch any reading itch you may have for a detective/procedural based on classics, and a fun mystery with all the nostalgia.

book cover image: an orange sky with a mountain and lakeA Midsummer’s Equation (Detective Galileo #6) by Keigo Higashino, Alexander O. Smith (Translator): I love Higashino’s detective mysteries and wish they’d all get translated–he’s huge in Japan! First, a note on the whole #6 in the series–you don’t have to read these in order, you actually technically can’t unless you read the untranslated original works because they have not all been translated to English, and the ones that have been were done out of order. Publishing, am I right? So pick up whichever sounds the best first, and then read them all.

Now about A Midsummer’s Equation: it has so many elements of the genre stitched nicely together it makes for a perfect curl-up-with-a-mystery-book read. The premise is: a guest dies at a family inn in Hari Cove, a now economically struggling tourist town, and the question is, “was it murder or an accident?” You follow the family inn members, mostly the visiting nephew and the daughter who works at the inn but is also fighting a company from undersea mining their ocean. We then also follow not one, not two, but three crime solvers: the small town police who rule the man falling into the water an accident; the Tokyo police who ask for an autopsy and suspect foul play, especially upon realizing it is a former detective who has died; and Manabu Yukawa, a physicist and college professor who is referred to as Detective Galileo as he assists the Tokyo detectives.

There’s a lot to love here, from the way the mystery is built and unraveled, reminding me of old school mysteries with a bit of Sherlock; the different perspectives; a nice armchair trip to Japan; and Detective Galileo bonding with the inn’s nephew and performing science experiments with him. If you’re looking to watch a complex mystery solved and don’t want dark, gritty, nor graphic, this is your book. (TW brief discussions of possibility of suicide/ mentions past cancer death, side character with brain tumor)

The Dark Deception (Daphne and Velma #2) by Morgan Baden: If you’re looking for a mystery to give you nostalgic feels (for those who grew up with the Scooby gang) but sans murder, this is an entertaining pick. The series takes you back to the beginning and gives you a look at how Daphne and Velma became friends again, after a fallout, and how together they start solving crimes in Crystal Cove. Think of it as the prequel to the Scooby-Doo series, where you really get to know the characters beyond the stereotypes, watch the friendships grow, them deal with family issues, navigate teen years, and of course, most importantly, solve some mysteries.

I recommend starting with the first for two reasons: it shows Daphne and Velma’s friendship being repaired; this one gives you the entire solve of the first book. However, if you want to skip the first because you only want a non-murder mystery, you won’t be confused reading this one. Now about The Dark Deception: it’s all about the jewels. The jewels that keep washing up on the Crystal Cove shore. Where are they coming from and why? But, like any good Scooby-Doo mystery there is more to solve than one thing–I mean the whole town is a mystery–but also the girls are spying on Shaggy because something is up with him and they want to know what.

Watch Daphne get an internship and Velma navigate who she is as they try and solidify their friendship, slowly build ties to their future gang, and solve some of these mysteries while being pesky kids.

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

Audible’s New Cheaper Subscription Plan: Today In Books

Audible’s New Cheaper Subscription Plan

Amazon’s Audible subscription plan currently has credits for downloading audiobooks plus access to their Audible Plus Catalog, which includes podcasts and Audible Originals. Now they’re offering a new cheaper plan, sans the audiobook credit, that offers access to their exclusive audio content–like their celebrity audio narratives and podcasts. The current Audible Gold and Platinum plans are also getting consolidated.

Brooklyn Book Festival Goes Virtual (Now We Can All Attend)

No lines, nor having to pick between two events running at the same time: this year’s Brooklyn Book Festival has gone virtual and free. From an entire day dedicated to YA, reading from canoes, author readings, Carousel Comics graphic night and much more the event will take place September 28th-October 5th virtually for its 15th year.

Celebrate 700 Years Of Libraries In Oxford, UK

And another free virtual event: September 16th-18th, 700 Years of Libraries in Oxford, UK will be celebrated with a conference that will look at the role libraries have played and will continue to play in our society. Speakers will include National Librarian of Ireland and University Librarian, National Library of Lesotho along with media, science, and communication specialists and academics from the world of libraries and archives.

It’s Environmental Lit Day!

We humans are just one small piece of a great big world, one that we’re fighting to save, so today we’re celebrating environmental lit across genres.

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Today In Books

WONDER WOMAN 1984 Official Trailer: Today In Books

Wonder Woman 1984 Official Trailer

Wonder Woman is in the ’80s and meeting her next enemies: The Cheetah and Max Lord. Still scheduled to hit theaters in October 2020 we have a new full trailer with all the action, a ghost(!), fantastic costumes, and an ’80s clothes montage.

Not The Booker Prize Shortlist

The 2020 Not the Booker prize shortlist is now complete with a total of six novels. Three were selected by voting from the public: Hello Friend We Missed You by Richard Owain Roberts; Underdogs: Tooth and Nail by Chris Bonnello; Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell. With three selected by judges: The Girl With the Louding Voice by Abi Daré; Hashim & Family by Shahnaz Ahsan; Akin by Emma Donoghue.

Speak Up Book Club

In Minneapolis the Speak Up Book Club was created after the death of George Floyd by police. A few things they do is donate books to BIPOC children so they can see themselves in their books, seek to support BIPOC authors, and have a subscription-based service to help educate children and parents with resources and knowledge “to help propel the next generation past centuries of systemic racism.”

11 Books About Unapologetic Queerness and Radical Justice-Seeking

Books about the surreal magic of a Queer culture that rejects respectability.

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Today In Books

Marvel’s Indigenous Voices: Today In Books

Marvel’s Indigenous Voices

Following the success of Marvel’s Voices #1 earlier this year, Marvel has announced Marvel’s Voices: Indigenous Voices #1. Created by a team of Indigenous artists, including Kyle Charles, David Cutler, and Weshoyot Alvitre, and writers, including Rebecca Roanhorse, Darcie Little Badger, and Stephen Graham Jones, the new collection will release in November. Check out the gorgeous cover and learn more about the stories.

Young Nigerian Creates Platform Of African Children’s Stories In Different Languages

Twenty-three-year-old Dominic Onyekachi learned that African representation in children’s books was very minimal when reading to his six-year-old niece. After writing her a few stories, illustrated by a friend, he set out to fix the larger problem. Along with two friends, he launched a web-based platform, Akiddie, to give children access to African storybooks. There are currently 21 books, for a monthly fee, that are available in three languages: Yoruba, Hausa, and Igbo.

LeBron James New York Times Bestseller

LeBron James and Nina Mata’s picture book, I Promise, made its way to the top of the picture books New York Times Bestsellers list. With the same name as his Akron elementary Public School the book continues his message to inspire and motivate greatness.

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Today In Books

Celebrities Pick Your Book In New Book Subscription: Today In Books

Celebrities Pick Your Book In New Book Subscription

If you’ve ever wanted Stephen Curry or Malala Yousafzai to pick your next read, there’s a new book club for you: Literati is a new book subscription service based in Austin that has celebrities, which they refer to as luminaries, pick the monthly book choice. “‘When it comes to what we read, we tend to look to people we admire to make suggestions. Books are aspirational,’ Literati founder and CEO Jessica Ewing tells OprahMag.com of the appeal of celebrity-led book clubs.” Check out the five celebrities selecting books.

Kamala Harris Picture Book

Senator Kamala Harris, current Democratic vice presidential nominee, is the subject of an upcoming picture book: Kamala Harris: Rooted in Justice by Nikki Grimes with illustrations by Laura Freeman. You don’t have to wait long since it will publish on August 25th. For an adult read on Harris, by Harris, there is her memoir The Truths We Hold.

How to Be Successful Without Hurting Men’s Feelings To Be Adapted

Comedian and author Sarah Cooper is developing a CBS series off of her 2018 book How to Be Successful Without Hurting Men’s Feelings. Showrunner and cowriter for the show Cindy Chupack said, “…she wrote books that showcased her keen eye for the absurd. I’m thrilled to be collaborating with her to adapt How to Be Successful Without Hurting Men’s Feelings into a fresh, funny, subversive comedy about modern sexual politics.”

A Century of Shakespeare and Company

A look back at the history of the 100-year-old Shakespeare and Company bookstore in Paris.

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Today In Books

Archaeologist Finds Medieval Manuscripts Under Floorboards: Today In Books

Archaeologist Finds Medieval Manuscripts Under Floorboards

During an $8 million restoration project for the now tourist attraction Oxburgh Hall (Oxborough, England), archaeologist Matthew Champion found historical items, including Tudor books and 16th-century clothing, under floorboards. Among the books is a manuscript from the 15th century believed to be a portable prayer book possibly belonging to the original builder of the home, Sir Edmund Bedingfeld.

We’ll Be Dead When This Ocean Vuong Manuscript Is Printed

A new manuscript joins the Future Library–a project where current writers submit a manuscript that will be sealed in Oslo’s Deichman public library and will remain unread until 2114. On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous‘s author Ocean Vuong is the seventh author to have his manuscript added to the project. If anyone is around in 2114, the 1,000 trees planted for this project will be cut down to print the manuscripts.

Miami Book Fair Free & Virtual This Year

For the first time in its 37-year history, the The Miami Book Fair will not pop up tents for a weeklong book nerd purr fest this fall at Miami Dade College Wolfson Campus. Instead, it will be free and virtual. “Mendez envisions it as ‘Netflix for books’ accessed through a new and upgraded website,” and it will feature live and prerecorded events in English and español.

Bringing the Lesbian Vampire Home

How Carmen Maria Machado’s version of CARMILLA reshapes and reclaims the narrative around the queer villain.

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Unusual Suspects

Pick a Fashion Statement And Find Your Next True Crime Read

Hi mystery fans! I’ve got a bunch of round-ups and articles, adaptation news, a trailer, and two great (technically 3) Kindle ebook deals to help get your mystery solving game on.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

The Majesties coverRincey and Katie talk about a new Megan Abbott book, Unsolved Mysteries, cold cases, and more on the latest Read or Dead!

Pick a Fashion Statement and Find Your Next True Crime Read

Cozy Mysteries New Releases: How to Keep Track?

Tirzah talks about two great backlist books, including mysteries that feature unsettling childhood memories on All The Backlist!

And Liberty and Tirzah talk new releases, including Denise Mina’s The Less Dead, on All The Books!

J. L. Brown, author of the Jade Harrington mystery novels, is interviewed by Robert Justice on the latest Crime Writers of Color podcast. (The first in the series, Don’t Speak, is .99cents on Kindle right now!)

Michelle Bowdler’s superb book Is Rape a Crime? questions the conventions of the ‘rape story’

What’s in a Page: Inside the Tommy Orange and Louise Erdrich-approved own voices thriller Winter Counts

Get an Exclusive First Look at the Prep School Murder Mystery ‘They Wish They Were Us’

Excellent adaptation news: Roxane Gay’s Graphic Novel The Banks to Receive Film Adaptation

Elisabeth Moss to star in Blumhouse psychological thriller Mrs. March

We have a trailer for the Netflix adaptation of Donald Ray Pollock’s The Devil All the Time

Enter to Win $50 to Your Favorite Independent Bookstore!

Win a 1-year subscription to Kindle Unlimited!

Kindle Deals

Diamond Doris cover imageFor a life-long jewel thief memoir (I love her so much!): Diamond Doris: The True Story of the World’s Most Notorious Jewel Thief by Zelda Lockhart is $2.99! (Review) (TW domestic abuse/ elder abuse)

If you’re looking for an is-her-ex-a-serial-killer mystery: The Liar’s Girl by Catherine Ryan Howard is $1.99! (Review) (TW panic attack on page/ stalking 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.

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Today In Books

Netflix’s Black Children’s Book Series: Today In Books

Netflix’s Black Children’s Book Series

Marley Dias, the teen author and founder of #1000BlackGirlBooks, will host a new Netflix video series, Bookmarks. Five minute videos will feature celebrities–including Lupita Nyong’o, Marsai Martin, Tiffany Haddish–reading children’s books by Black authors. Starting September 1st you can watch (be read to in) twelve episodes on Netflix and the Netflix Jr. YouTube channel.

NYPL Essential Feminist Reading List

For the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, the New York Public Library created a reading list for kids, teens, and adults highlighting and exploring feminism through history. “The list includes first-hand accounts and histories of the suffrage movement that chronicle both its successes and its limitations—particularly for women of color—as well as contemporary essays on how feminism intersects with race, class, education, and LGBTQ+ activism.”

Publishing Organizations Warn Over Amazon’s Market Power

President/CEO of the Association of American Publishers, Maria Pallante, executive director of the Authors Guild, Mary Rasenberger, and CEO of the American Booksellers Association, Allison Hill came together and wrote a letter to Rep. David Cicilline, the chairman of the House Antitrust Subcommittee, regarding Amazon’s dominance in bookselling. “Amazon no longer competes on a level playing field when it comes to book distribution, but, rather, owns and manipulates the playing field, leveraging practices from across its platform that appear to be well outside of fair and transparent competition.” They ask for consideration in prohibiting Amazon from doing four things.

Check Out These Adult Comps For Your Fave Children’s Books

If you loved popular middle grade books like Beezus and Ramona, Coraline, and more, try these adult fiction books with similar themes.