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Today In Books

Hunting For Treasures In Used Books: Today In Books

Hunting For Treasures In Used Books

Emma Smreker spends a lot of time in used and vintage bookstores, not in search of specific books but rather for objects tucked between their pages. While most of the time her findings are random objects that were clearly being used as a bookmark, she also finds poems, unsent letters, and photographs. The last three items, while rare, are the ones that sent her on a mission to find the owners and return their mementos to them. Read about the items she’s found and the people she’s connected with.

More Nonfiction From These Indie Presses

Love nonfiction? Love independent publishing houses? Great news: Europa Editions, Transit Books, and Deep Vellum Books are increasing their nonfiction titles. From lectures to a book-length essay by an NBA player, and even a travel guide series that is “more like a literary vacation,” there’s a lot to be excited about.

Nonprofit Delivers Diverse Books To Ohio Elementary Schools

Julia Hanna’s young daughter is biracial and will be entering a school system in Ohio’s Upper Arlington School District, whose students come from a 91 percent white suburb. The realization that her daughter was not going to see herself reflected at school, George Floyd’s death by police, and the recent focus on Black Lives Matter all prompted her to start a nonprofit with the goal of collecting diverse and inclusive children’s books to donate to the local school district. “I feel that particularly in these less-diverse communities, we need to start having a different conversation,” Hanna, 41, said. “When you’re not around diversity, you just keep going about life like there’s no problem.”

Want To Know The History Of The Beach Read?

The beach read: every summer the word reappears in conversation, but what exactly is a beach read? We’ve got some ideas and some book recs that fit.

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Today In Books

LeBron James Adapting NEW KID: Today In Books

LeBron James Adapting New Kid

LeBron James and Universal Pictures will adapt for film the coming-of-age graphic novel New Kid by Jerry Craft. The comic, which follows seventh grader Jordan Banks who dreams of becoming a cartoonist, won the Coretta Scott King Award and was the first graphic novel to ever win a Newbery Medal.

Time For A Sad Playlist

High Fidelity, the Hulu series based on Nick Hornby’s novel and starring Zoë Kravitz as Rob, will sadly not get a second season. It is reported, however, that Hulu is leaning towards renewing Love, Victor–which is set in Becky Albertalli’s Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda world. *Fingers crossed. As for High Fidelity, it is totally worth watching the first season, if you’ve yet to.

For Your TBR

Library Journal has listed 35 debut novels publishing now through January 2021. Hello and goodbye to your TBR.

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Today In Books

Brooklyn Indie Bookstores Unite: Today In Books

Brooklyn Indie Bookstores Unite

Which sounds like an opening for a comic book–someone write that please! Okay, the news bit: For Independent Bookstore Day (August 29th) Brooklyn’s indie bookstores have joined together. Their combined resources will be promoting bookish items designed by artist Ping Hatta–think tote bags/mugs for Brooklyn Bookstore Day–and will be available for sale as direct-to-home orders. Proceeds will be split among the 15 bookstores participating.

Megan Abbott’s Upcoming Novel & Adaptation

2021 will see a new Megan Abbott release! The Turnout will focus on a ballet school and the sisters running it, and it’s Abbott so it will be delicious, feminist, and have violence/crime–possibly murder? Also, the rights have already sold, so there will be a TV series.

Former President George W. Bush’s New Book

Former President George W. Bush, who signed into law the Homeland Security Act of 2002 to create ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), has an upcoming book of portraits he’s painted of immigrants, which will also have an art exhibit. The book, Out of Many, One, is set to publish in March of 2021 and will feature his paintings and the subjects story: “‘While I recognize that immigration can be an emotional issue, I reject the premise that it is a partisan issue. It is perhaps the most American of issues, and it should be one that unites us,’ he wrote, adding that ‘my hope is that this book will help focus our collective attention on the positive impacts that immigrants are making on our country.'”

How Audiobooks Benefit Your Heart & Mind

Love to listen to your books? Here’s what experts are saying about the mental, physical, and emotional benefits of audiobooks.

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Unusual Suspects

Reconsidering The Case Of The Crime Genre

Hello mystery fans! I rounded up great giveaways, AH-mazing news, interesting things to read to murder your TBR, and Kindle ebook deals for books further in the series which rarely ever get put on sale!

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

In AMAZING giveaway: We’re giving away 100 audio downloads of When No One Is Watching by Alyssa Cole to 100 lucky Riot readers! 

In AMAZING news: Megan Abbott has a new novel coming in 2021 (EEP!) and it’s already been sold to be a TV series (Double EEP!). All her books focus on some kind of obsession, or intense field, and this time we get ballet. It is an understatement to say I can’t wait to read this one.

 

In MORE amazing news: Aya de León (Uptown Thief) has a new novel releasing in December about a spy: A Spy in the Struggle! And look at that cover! This is what I’m reading this weekend, because my greedy little hands got an egalley.

Rincey and Katie get excited about adaptations of The Shining Girls and Magpie Murders, and talk about mystery books by Black authors that they’ve recently picked up on the latest Read or Dead!

QUIZ: What Dark Crime Book Should You Read Next?

a madness of sunshine cover image10 Small-Town Thrillers to Read This Summer

8 Thrillers Told From Multiple Points of View

Reconsidering The Case Of The Crime Genre: a chat with S.A. Cosby, Rachel Howzell Hall, and Walter Mosley.

Sisters in Crime announced the 2020 Crime Fiction Writers of Color Award-winner! All the congrats!

Featured Trailer: THE NOTHING MAN by Catherine Ryan Howard

Win a 1-year subscription to Kindle Unlimited!

Enter to Win $50 to Your Favorite Independent Bookstore!

Watch Now: 20 Murder Mystery Movies That Will Awaken Your Inner Sleuth

Kindle Deals

If you’re making your way through Detective Elouise Norton’s series (you should!) the fourth book is on sale: City of Saviors by Rachel Howzell Hall is $2.99!

And DITTO for Veronica Speedwell: A Dangerous Collaboration (A Veronica Speedwell Mystery Book 4) by Deanna Raybourn is $1.99! (This series is the escape you need right now!)

Every time I see this one I’m going to put it here and tell y’all again to go read it: The 57 The 57 Bus cover imageBus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives by Dashka Slater is $2.99!

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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Mulan On Disney+ For A Price: Today In Books

Mulan On Disney+ For A Price

If you’ve been anticipating getting to watch Mulan, it will be skipping a theatrical debut because of COVID-19, and heading straight to streaming in many places. On Disney+ to be exact. But not for free. Starting September 4th Disney+ customers in the U.S., Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and many Western European countries can pay $29.99. In places where Disney+ is not available, cinemas will be offered the film. “We are looking at Mulan as one-off as opposed to saying there is some new business windowing model that we are looking at.”

Captain Marvel 2 Found Its Director

The sequel film to Captain Marvel, which stars Brie Larson as Carol Danvers, has found its director: Nia DaCosta, the director for the Candyman horror film reimagining. DaCosta’s directing on the CM film, currently scheduled for a July 8, 2022 release, makes her the first Black woman to direct a Marvel Studios picture.

Authors For Black Voices Auction

Authors for Black Voices is a silent auction created by authors and publishing professionals in order to raise money for ten selected nonprofits that are working against racism in education, literacy, and publishing. There are excellent items up for auction, from hand-annotated copies of Jessica Knoll’s Luckiest Girl Alive and Jia Tolentino’s Trick Mirror, exclusive galleys, and services like Random House copy chief Benjamin Dreyer’s copyediting services.

There Are Many Reasons We Need The USPS–Here Are 8 Bookish Ones

So many elements of the bookish ecosystem depend on the USPS; here are eight reasons why booklovers should be concerned with its preservation.

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Today In Books

Oscar Wilde’s Student Questionnaire Goes To Auction: Today In Books

Oscar Wilde’s Student Questionnaire Goes To Auction

Irish poet and playwright, Oscar Wilde, filled out a questionnaire while attending Oxford in his early 20s answering 39 personal questions and signing it Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde. The two page questionnaire, which you can see here, has gone to auction at Sotheby’s for $78,390/£60,000.

Jasmine Guillory’s Exciting Announcement

Romance author Jasmine Guillory had a chat with Hoda Kotb and Jenna Bush Hager on TODAY with Hoday & Jenna and made a big announcement: Reese Witherspoon’s Hello Sunshine has optioned the first three books in the Wedding Date series! Three films? One series with a season to each book? Making popcorn either way.

Discover the UK’s Historic Books

The University of East Anglia (UEA), the National Trust’s Blickling Estate property, and Norfolk Library and Information Service have joined together to create Discover Historic Books: a website that allows visitors to explore ancient books, which have interactive hotpoints that will explain to viewers all the interesting bits about what they’re viewing. “It includes groundbreaking books that changed the way Renaissance readers understood the world around them, as well as showing how learned books of the past can be relevant to urgent modern issues around nationhood, identity, trans-nationalism, women’s history, and faith. The project will help to make these important, yet under-appreciated historic treasures available to new audiences.”

Is This Forcing Librarians To Be Teachers And Childcare?

The NYC plan to provide education to 1 million students in the fall includes creating 100,000 “learning lab” seats in libraries and other community spaces.

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Marisa Tomei to Narrate Elena Ferrante’s Audiobook: Today In Books

Marisa Tomei to Narrate Elena Ferrante’s Audiobook

The author of the Neapolitan novels, Elena Ferrante, has a new novel releasing on September 1st: The Lying Life of Adults. And the audiobook will be narrated by Marisa Tomei, which shockingly will be her first audiobook narration. But hopefully not her last!

Vanity Fair’s September Issue Will Be Guest-Edited by Ta-Nehisi Coates

Vanity Fair will put out a special edition in September that will explore power, art, and activism in America. Ta-Nehisi Coates (Between the World and Me; We Were Eight Years in Power; The Water Dancer) will be the guest editor and Eve L. Ewing, Bomani Jones, Ava DuVernay, Josie Duffy Rice, Jesmyn Ward, and more will contribute. “Equally, I’m humbled that so many of this country’s best writers and artists have agreed to participate. The moment is too big for any one of us to address alone.”

DOJ Goes After Bolton’s Book Royalties

Former U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton’s book, The Room Where it Happened, published even though the Trump administration tried to stop it. Now the Department of Justice has decided to go after the royalties from the bestseller, including the reported $2 million advance Bolton received to write the book. “Bolton is due to reply to the government’s filings by August 14.”

The Safe Feeling Of Libraries

How one reader with OCD struggled with the loss of library access during the pandemic, but ultimately benefited from some time away.

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Unusual Suspects

Is It Regular Murder Or Vampire Murder?!

Hi mystery fans! Here’s 3 great reads: a historical mystery, start to a fictional serial killer trilogy, and unsolved murder with an interesting hook.

Opium and Absinthe by Lydia Kang: Kang has quickly become my go-to for great historical mysteries. And bonus points for this feeling she inserts that maybe this will be fantasy without being fantasy. In this case: is it regular murder or vampire murder?! Tillie Pembroke is a young woman in 1899, NY, trying to figure out how to get around the societal pressures and mandates that will keep her from being herself–a delightfully curious woman always seeking to learn more and be independent. Injured from a riding accident, she finds out that her sister has been murdered in the most peculiar way–punctures on her neck and drained of blood.

Now she’s not only devastated by the loss, taking pain killers for her injury, which she is unaware she is addicted to, but her mother and grandmother want to move on from the ugly situation and marry Tillie off. To her murdered sister’s fiance–and this is why I don’t romanticize these times! Anyhoo, Tillie isn’t having any of it and she wants to know who murdered her sister and why–and seeing as she’s just read Dracula, she isn’t ruling out a vampire just yet. Soon, she’s devised ways of sneaking out to meet a newsie for investigating adventures. Which quickly lands her labeled a hysterical woman and with doctor’s orders for more drugs–we don’t want those hysterical women folk anything but placid, basically.

It’ll take all of Tillie’s strength to overcome addiction, her family and doctor’s restrictions, and her grief in order to figure out who is behind her sister’s murder… I love that Kang writes intelligent and spunky women, while plunging me into 1800s/1900s NY, and giving me great mysteries with medical history. If you’ve yet to read her historical mysteries, I also highly recommend A Beautiful Poison (Review) and The Impossible Girl (Review). (TW brief mention of past child abuse, detail/ brief mention of past partner abuse, familial abuse on page/ addiction/ brief mention past suicide; attempted suicide, detail/ attempted rape, on page; alludes to past rape)

the silence of the white cityThe Silence of the White City (Trilogía de la Ciudad Blanca #1) by Eva García Sáenz, Nick Caistor (Translator): If you are looking for an engrossing start to a fictional serial killer trilogy translated from Spain, have I got a great read for you! This, for me, was one of those mystery reads that didn’t break any molds but gave me what I look for in these kinds of mysteries, and added the element of a new setting.

Twenty years ago, Vitoria, the capital city of Basque in Northern Spain, was terrified of a serial killer and his ritualistic killings. Now it seems the murders have started again–which is equally terrifying and baffling seeing as the serial killer is in prison. He was an archaeologist brought forward by his twin brother who had been a police officer at the time of the killings. Dun dun dun! Now Inspector Unai López de Ayala “Kraken” has to figure out if the imprisoned serial killer has a new partner on the outside, or if they got it wrong all those years before…

Come for the twisty serial killer mystery, stay for the tour of Vitoria, Spain. Bonus: García Sáenz has managed to write a sweet spot that I think will appeal to both fans of dark mysteries and not too dark mysteries by writing the content on the dark side, but leaving out the overtly, unnecessary graphic details. Think Dan Brown’s Angels & Demons, and The Da Vinci Code. If you’re wondering how much I enjoyed this, I immediately checked to see if my library had the following two installments in Spanish rather than waiting for the English US releases. (TW child murders, not graphic/ attempted suicide and suicide/ partner, child abuse/ nonviable pregnancy/ date rape/ past statutory not on page)

The Less Dead by Denise Mina: My go to rec for overall Tana French comp is Denise Mina. While French is an American-Irish writer and Mina is a Scottish writer, they both have extensive back catalogs of police procedurals and standalones, and write mysteries with a darkish pen that are really explorations of human behavior with layered characters that are different levels of flawed.

And both of Mina’s last standalones have opening hooks I couldn’t resist. In this case, a woman who reaches out to an agency to set up a meeting between her and her birth mother’s sister for the first time, and discovers said aunt is only meeting with her because she found out she’s a doctor and wants access to the database to prove a cop killed her sister all those years ago. Not the family reunion Margot was hoping for.

Margot was already having a rough go. She’s pregnant, but she hasn’t told her boyfriend as they’re in a separation period because he called the police on his brother for a domestic abuse incident. His brother happens to be partnered with Margot’s best friend, and she felt betrayed that he broke her confidence. Her adoptive mother has also just passed and she’s clearing out the house and struggling with grief and questions of why her birth mother placed her up for adoption, months before she was murdered.

Readers are plunged into Margot’s chaotic life. Margot is a character who never did what I wanted her to do, but part of why Mina writes crime novels I enjoy so much is that while the characters don’t behave how I want, they do make sense and force me to understand other people’s struggles and lives. And her aunt Nikki’s, a recent-ish sober woman who takes Margot into her past of teen prostitution and drug use and what it’s like to be the women society doesn’t care about, as Margot’s birth mother’s murder remains unsolved all these years later with Nikki still receiving threatening letters from the killer…

Mina delivers an absorbing mystery, crime novel, and exploration of a grieving woman at an impasse in her life while showing us Glasglow’s drug history. (TW stalking/ suicide mentioned as threat, no detail/ past disordered eating/ domestic abuse/ rape cases, including teen prostitution/ addiction)

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

Christopher Columbus’s Letters Stolen From World Libraries: Today In Books

Christopher Columbus’ Letters Stolen From World Libraries

After Christopher Columbus’s 1942 journey, he wrote a letter to King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain asking for more money (colonizing is expensive) and describing his findings. While the original letter no longer exists, copies of the letter, printed and distributed upon his return, do. And they’ve been stolen, and replaced with forgeries, from prestigious libraries around the world.

Lady Macbeth YA Musical

Channing Tatum (Magic Mike, 21 Jump Street) is producing a YA musical film about Lady Macbeth for Amazon Studios. S.J. Inwards will write and John McPhail (Anna and the Apocalypse) will direct. While the story details are being kept secret for now “the story is said to center on a teenage girl who grapples with her own morality as she contends with the dreadful consequences of her ambition.”

Jenna Bush Hager Picks Two Books

Jenna Bush Hager’s Read With Jenna book club was so excited about what we could read during August that she chose two books, a novel and memoir essays, instead of the usual one: Here for It by R. Eric Thomas and The Comeback by Ella Berman.

History And Book Recs

Join us in celebrating the anniversary of women’s suffrage in the US!

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Today In Books

#BlackArtMatters Coloring Book: Today In Books

#BlackArtMatters Coloring Book

Two Whitney Young students, Mya Cavner and Ethan Switall, reached out to nine Black local artists to create a 44-page coloring book. You can purchase a paperback or hardcover edition and 50% of the proceeds go to the artists and the other 50% goes “to the Brave Space Alliance, the city’s first Black-led, trans-led LGBTQ resource center, located in Hyde Park.”

YUM!

Due to the pandemic, the University of Texas at San Antonio has had to halt their project of digitizing the U.S.’s largest collection of historic Mexican cookbooks. In the meantime they’ve decided to release free ebook mini-cookbooks. The first, Postres: Guardando Lo Mejor Para el Principio/Desserts: Saving the Best for First, contains Spanish/English historic sweet Mexican recipes. Sí, please!

New Award

Gotham Book Prize has just been created and will award $50,000 to one author for a book of fiction or nonfiction that is published in 2020 and set in or about New York City. The prize, which will become an annual award, will be awarded in the spring of 2021, and will be selected by 10 New Yorkers and authors who will vote on a created short list.