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Today In Books

Trump Admin Sues To Block Book: Today In Books

Trump Admin Sues To Block Book

Remember yesterday when I told you how the Trump administration was being fact checked over false statements made about former national security advisor John Bolton’s upcoming book? Well, they decided that wasn’t working and are now suing to stop the book, The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir, from publishing on June 23rd. “In a statement, Simon & Schuster said the lawsuit ‘is nothing more than the latest in a long-running series of efforts by the Administration to quash publication of a book it deems unflattering to the president'”.

Great Organization!

In 2018, Joe English started a nonprofit organization, Hope In A Box, which ships LGBTQ+ themed boxes of books to schools around the U.S. “After consulting with university professors and poring over awards lists and college syllabi, the Hope in a Box team devised a 50-book definitive primer of LGBTQ+ literature.”

Libraries Stepping Up To New Demands

This is a great article at NPR that really looks at what libraries have been doing, how users needs have changed, and current reading STATs, during the pandemic. For example: “Across the country, while physical lending remains closed, five of Seattle’s library buildings have been opened for restroom-only access since late April, in part hoping to slow the spread of COVID-19 by making handwashing easier for the homeless.” We can never stress enough the importance of public libraries.

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Today In Books

Padma Lakshmi Announces Picture Book: Today In Books

Padma Lakshmi Announces Picture Book

Padma Lakshmi, best-selling author and host of Top Chef, has announced her next book will be a picture book for kids. And of course it centers food! Tomatoes for Neela, which will release fall of 2021, “is an intergenerational story about a little girl who likes to cook and helps prepare her family’s savory tomato sauce.” My mouth is already watering.

Juneteenth Book Festival

Author L.L. McKinney (A Blade So Black), who most recently started the #PublishingPaidMe on Twitter, is now co-organizing the Juneteenth Book Festival with Saraciea Fennell, founder of The Bronx is Reading – Bronx Book Festival. The Juneteenth Book Festival will take place–as you’ve guessed–Friday, June 19th to celebrate Black American stories and creators. Thirty fantastic authors are already scheduled to participate, including Tiffany D. Jackson, Angie Thomas, Mikki Kendall, Lamar Giles, and Beverly Jenkins. Bookmark the Youtube channel here.

John Bolton Pushes Forward With Book

Former Trump national security adviser John Bolton has written a book about his time working at the White House, which the Trump administration has tried to curtail. Both Attorney General William Barr and Donald Trump have made statements about the book that are not true, which CNN has posted in a fact-checking article. The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir is scheduled to publish June 23rd from Simon & Schuster.

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Unusual Suspects

A Delicious Cozy Mystery 🍦🔪

Hello mystery fans! I have three mystery books perfect for escape-reading, depending on your mood: cozy, historical, fun thriller. Also, for fellow horror/Gothic/suspense fans, I just finished the audiobook for Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia and you should definitely pick that one up to hit your creepy-house-vibes craving (TW suicide/rape).

A Deadly Inside Scoop (An Ice Cream Parlor Mystery #1) by Abby Collette: This was exactly what I needed to read to destress. Bronwyn Crewse is a great-at-marketing MBA grad who moves back to her hometown to take over the family ice cream shop. It was originally started by her grandparents and her plan is to bring it back to its old glory, but she’s going to have a lot of challenges, including opening up during a snowstorm and other pesky things, like finding a dead guy. And her father is a suspect.

Clearly she isn’t going to have any of that, so she’s going to have to figure out who the murdered man was, who murdered him, and why. But first, she’s gotta keep thinking up the most delicious ice cream flavors to entice customers, and you may need to use the book’s pages to wipe the drool while reading the descriptions. Seriously, keep a pint of ice cream handy; you’re going to have a craving. This is perfect if you need a gentle read, following a woman with a great support system and family. And bonus for being a really good audio listen.

Vera Kelly Is Not A Mystery (Vera Kelly #2) by Rosalie Knecht: Here’s a super good character driven series that goes from 1960s CIA spy novel to PI novel. Vera Kelly is having a rough time: she’s left the CIA; her girlfriend has dumped her, which Kelly didn’t even see  coming; her job has fired her for being a lesbian. What’s a woman to do? Apparently, put an ad in the paper about your services as a PI.

Kelly’s first case is finding the son of Dominican exiles who ended up in the New York foster care system and has since disappeared. Between her favorite local bar, and a bartender she likes, to the Dominican in search of answers, we get to know more of Kelly as she struggles to make sense of the past and find balance between her reserved demeanor and search for found family. If you’re looking for a cold war spy series not like the others and enjoy dry witted, clever women trying their best to find their way, this is your next great read! (TW alludes to teen predator/ homophobia/ mentions past suicide, no detail)

You Can’t Catch Me by Catherine McKenzie: This was the perfect balance of not too ridiculous so I can stay focused and care, and not too realistic where it’s dark and not fun. Which is why I always pick up McKenzie’s books; I’m always guaranteed a hook I can’t look away from, and then a fun ride. Basically, exactly what I was looking to read right now. It also managed to hit upon so many things that I am just naturally drawn to, starting with a cult.

Which is Jessica Williams’ past, having escaped a doomsday cult she was born into. That was 12 years ago, when she was eighteen and escaped with the help of a man who became a mentor, and a crush in the process. Now, she’s the woman known all over the internet for having copy/pasted someone else’s story as her own. So she’s been fired and publicly dragged. She decides to go to Mexico and disconnect from the world for a while, which only makes things worse because she very naively plays a game in the airport with a woman who has her same name. That game was a setup for that other “Jessica Williams” to steal her identity and empty out her bank accounts.

It’s only a matter of time before it occurs to Jessica Williams 1 to find out if this little game had been played before and if there were other victims, then leading her to those women who, all together, devise a trap… You get the current plot line as the Jessica Williamses team up to catch the fake one and get justice–or at least their money back; the past life of Jessica Williams 1 growing up in the cult, her support group with other cult members, and her relationship with the man who saved her. (TW child predator, past not graphic/ suicide past, detail, note/ child abuse/ alludes to past rape, no detail)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. 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

Librarians Step Up As Contact Tracers: Today In Books

Librarians Step Up As Contact Tracers

With the libraries closed in San Francisco, dozens of librarians have turned their skills and desire to be helpers to virtually training, through the University of California, as contact tracers for COVID-19. “Librarians are an obvious choice for the job, says Fagundes, who normally works at the information desk of the San Francisco Main Library. They’re curious, they’re tech savvy, and they’re really good at getting people they barely know to open up.”

Book On Trump To Reveal Tax Document Leak

The Daily Beast has reported that Mary Trump, Donald Trump’s niece, will be publishing a tell-all this summer in which she reveals, among other things, herself as the person who had leaked Donald Trump’s taxes to The New York Times. “Details of the book are being closely guarded by its publisher, Simon & Schuster, but The Daily Beast has learned that Mary plans to include conversations with Trump’s sister, retired federal judge Maryanne Trump Barry, that contain intimate and damning thoughts about her brother, according to people with knowledge of the matter.” Too Much And Never Enough will release on August 11th.

Working Together

Forty Iowa colleges and universities came together for a joint membership with Open Textbook Network in the ongoing effort to make higher education more affordable. “Working with the Open Textbook Network and our postsecondary partners across Iowa ensures faculty have access to resources needed to maximize learning and minimize financial burden on students.”

Great Initiative!

The #BlackoutBestsellerList and #BlackPublishingPower initiatives urge readers to buy two books by Black authors from June 14-June 21st in an effort to amplify Black voices.

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Today In Books

Author Resigns From Co-Founded Brand After Racism Accusations: Today In Books

Author Resigns From Co-Founded Brand After Racism Accusations

The Black Lives Matter movement has only continued to grow as people not only protest against police brutality and racial inequality, but also call out long-established toxic, discriminatory, and racist work environments. The call-outs have been in response to these same businesses using social media to stand with the movement while doing nothing to address their internal issues. Author and co-founder/(former) chief creative officer of the lifestyle brand Ban.do, Jen Gotch, has resigned after almost 20 former employees publicly spoke out on the toxic work environment.

From A Certain Point Of View

Great news for fans of the short-story collection Star Wars: From a Certain Point of View! A new anthology is coming, on the heels of the Episode V’s 40th anniversary, with the same concept of stories being told from the perspective of the film’s background characters: The Empire Strikes Back: From a Certain Point of View.

We Have A Trailer

Daniel Kehlmann’s German novella, You Should Have Left, has been adapted to film, starring Kevin Bacon and Amanda Seyfried and written and directed by David Koepp (Jurassic Park, Spider-Man, Mission: Impossible). You can check out the spooky trailer here and watch it on demand beginning June 19th.

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Today In Books

Jim Carrey’s Friend Narrates His Book: Today In Books

Jim Carrey’s Friend Narrates His Book

Jim Carrey’s request for who he wanted to narrate his book, co-authored with Dana Vachon, has been granted. His former co-star and friend Jeff Daniels will narrate the audiobook for Memoirs And Misinformation–which sounds like a modern day satire and semi-autobiographical novel mashup.

Bedtime Stories

Initiated by the artist Maurizio Cattelan the New Museum has a new digital initiative in June: Bedtime Stories. Cattelan has asked friends and fellow artists to read a selection from their favorite book and you can see a new Bedtime Story added each day through the end of June. Already up are Iggy Pop, Ibrahim Mahama, Minerva Cuevas, and many more.

UK’s Fiction And Nonfiction Paperback Charts

This is the kind of news that is “Well good for them!” but also super “It is 2020 and this is the first?!”: UK’s fiction and nonfiction paperback charts have, for the first time ever, Black British women in the top spots. Girl, Woman, Other by Bernardine Evaristo was the top seller for fiction paperback and Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race by Reni Eddo-Lodge was the top seller for nonfiction paperback. With sudden soaring sales for Black authors, Waterstones is being urged to donate money to the Black Lives Matter movement.

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Today In Books

Drone Delivering Library Books: Today In Books

Drone Delivering Library Books

It’s a Bird… It’s a Plane… It’s a drone with your library books! Google’s drone delivery service, Wing, will be delivering books to kids in Christiansburg, Va. “Libraries are the only way for some students to have access to books—e-readers might be too expensive for some families, and buying books online isn’t cheap, either. Having some sort of library book delivery service is essential to make sure children continue to have access to books.”

Gabrielle Union Options All Boys Aren’t Blue

I’ll Have Another Productions, Gabrielle Union’s production company, has optioned the fantastic new memoir All Boys Aren’t Blue by George M. Johnson–I mean just look at that cover! “’Queer black existence has been here forever yet rarely has that experience been shown in literature or film and television,’ Union said.”

More Digitizing!

I will stop and read every headline about a library’s plans for digitizing: The National Library of Israel Will Digitize 2,500 Rare Islamic Manuscripts. “’We are privileged to open digital access to these treasures and hope that this project will contribute to greater understanding and shared inquiry related to Islamic civilization,’ says curator Raquel Ukeles in the statement.” The project, supported by the Arcadia Fund, is believed to take three years and will span ninth through 20th century texts.

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Unusual Suspects

9 Great British Mystery Series You Won’t Want to Put Down

Hi mystery fans! It’s time to click all the mystery things. I found a bunch of posts, podcasts, and news, and I have a handful of really good books in Kindle deals that are all really different from each other for whatever reading mood you may be in.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Silent City cover imageGetting Gritty: 11 Authors like David Baldacci

9 Great British Mystery Series You Won’t Want to Put Down

Rincey and Katie talk about the new James Patterson and Bill Clinton book, a new Lisbeth Salander adaptation and mystery short story collections on the latest Read or Dead.

How Publishers Determine When to Release Hardcover Books in Paperback

cover of an extraordinary union by alyssa cole10 Thrilling Spy Book Series for Espionage Lovers

New Unlikable Female Character episode: Kristen, Layne, and Wendy kick off Pride month by talking about the hot gay ladies you should watch out for, from Orange is the New Black to Killing Eve to the heroines of their own novels.

Crime Writers of Color podcast: Walter Mosley–Writing, Rejection and Trouble is What I Do

Over 1,000 Publishing Workers Strike to Protest Industry Racism

We’re giving away five copies of The Last Flight by Julie Clark

Enter to Win $250 to Spend at Barnes and Noble

Win a 1-year subscription to Audible!

News And Adaptations

Grace Edwards, Harlem mystery writer, dead at 87

Here’s the trailer for the adaptation of Daniel Kehlmann’s psychological thriller You Should Have Left, starring Kevin Bacon and Amanda Seyfried. It will be available on demand on June 19th.

We’re getting a sequel to Danny Gardner’s A Negro and an Ofay (Review) in fall and here’s an excerpt!

 

I'll Be Gone In The Dark cover imageWe have a trailer for the HBO docuseries based on the true crime memoir I’ll Be Gone in the Dark by Michelle McNamara.

J. K. Rowling, who also uses the pen name Robert Galbraith for her mystery series, once again made transphobic statements on Twitter. Daniel Radcliffe wrote a response essay on the Trevor Project’s website. It has also been questioned whether it’s a coincidence, after all of Rowling’s harmful statements, that she chose Robert Galbraith as her pen name being that Robert Galbraith Heath was an American psychologist who experimented with the cruel practice of conversion therapy. As of me writing this, Rowling has posted a super long anti-trans manifesto that I won’t be linking to because it puts marginalized people in danger. This thread, however, is a point-by-point response to her inaccuracies, fear mongering, and transphobic dogwhistles, amongst many other things.

Watch Now

Netflix: The Woods, a Polish crime drama series adapted from the Harlan Coben novel of the same name, about a twenty-year mystery set at a summer camp where a girl was murdered by a serial killer is now streaming. Watch the trailer.

Kindle Deals

allegedlyIf you’ve yet to read Jackson you need to remedy that–all her books are different from each other while fantastic: Allegedly by Tiffany D. Jackson is $1.99! (Review) (TW: domestic abuse/ child death/ pedophilia/ rape/ suicidal thought mentioned)

For a coming of age + mystery: Patron Saints of Nothing by Randy Ribay is $2.99! (Review) (TW addiction/ discussions of sex trafficking/ past rape, not detailed)

If you need cozy feels and laughs: A Lady’s Guide to Etiquette and Murder (A Countess of Harleigh Mystery Book 1) by Dianne Freeman is $1.99! (Review)

White Rabbit cover imageIf you want a whodunnit with a horror movie body count: White Rabbit by Caleb Roehrig is $2.99! (Review) (TW: rape)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases. 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

Publishing Employees Day Of Action: Today In Books

Publishing Employees Day Of Action

Five Farrar, Straus & Giroux staffers wanting to support the BLM protests against police brutality and racial injustice called for a day of action “in solidarity with the uprisings across the United States in response to the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, Tony McDade, and others.” The initiative, on Monday, suggested that employees join the marches, donate a day of pay to anti-racism organizations, and promote works by Black authors. FS&G said 1,300+ workers had expressed support in the initiative.

NY Publishers Will Wait Until At Least September To Reopen

While major NY publishers didn’t give exact reopening dates no one was planning on bringing the majority of staff back before September 1st. And a key factor they will be looking at before making the final decision: “There was widespread agreement that the top consideration before publishers will fully reopen will be the condition of New York City’s mass transit and how comfortable workers will be using subways, buses, and trains.”

Anti-Hate Children’s Book

On June 17, 2015, nine African American church members attending a Bible study at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church were murdered by a white supremacist in a mass shooting ruled a federal hate crime. Chris Singleton’s mother, Sharonda Singleton, was one of the victims. After years of public speaking against hate, he’s channeled his thoughts and feelings into a picture book: Different. The book–which has a gorgeous cover–follows a young Nigerian boy, Obinna, who moves to Charleston and is singled out as different.

Watch Now

The film THE HATE U GIVE, based on the novel by Angie Thomas, is now available to watch for free on all digital platforms.

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Today In Books

Poem Leads To Real Buried Treasure: Today In Books

Poem Leads To Real Buried Treasure

This reads like a novel! Somewhere between Santa Fe and the Canadian border (the Rocky Mountains), a box with gold and precious gems was hidden over ten years ago by Forrest Fenn, a millionaire art dealer. The clue to finding it was in his self-published book, on a page with a map and a poem. Over the years, four people died trying to find it and Fenn estimates 250,000 people have looked. Finally, the treasure box has been found!

Daniel Radcliffe Responds To J.K. Rowling In Essay

After J.K. Rowling once again took to Twitter saying transphobic things, Daniel Radcliffe responded to her and spoke to Harry Potter fans in an essay on the Trevor Project’s website, a national organization providing crisis intervention and suicide prevention services to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer & questioning (LGBTQ) young people under 25.

Harlem Mystery Writer Grace Edwards Has Passed Away

Grace Edwards published her first novel at the age of 55, In the Shadow of the Peacock, a historical coming-of-age set in Harlem in World War II. At 64 came the start of her mystery series following Mali Anderson–an ex-cop turned sociology student who can’t help but track down perps–with If I Should Die. She passed away in February at the age of 87.