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Today In Books

Book Scandal Leads To Jail Time: Today In Books

Book Scandal Leads To Jail Time

Last year, The Baltimore Sun published an article accusing then Mayor Catherine Pugh of having the medical system pay her for her self-published kids’ health book, Healthy Holly, when she was on the board of the University of Maryland Medical System. She has since resigned as mayor and yesterday was sentenced to three years in prison, three years probation, and ordered to pay around $412,000 in restitution while also forfeiting almost $670,000 worth of property.

The Reading Machine

Here’s an interesting article looking at the future of reading and books by looking at a machine designed to read and then create its own book of poetry. “Once every page in the book has been read, interpreted, and illustrated, the system publishes the results using an online printing service. The resulting volume is then added to a growing archive we call The Library of Nonhuman Books.” More like the no-humans-needed machine, am I right?

Merger Time

The 150+ year-old Brooklyn Historical Society is planning to merge with the Brooklyn Public Library, which will combine their impressive collections at BHS’ 1881 Brooklyn Heights headquarters. Bonus: “Admission to Brooklyn Historical’s exhibitions and collections will be free to the public.”

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Today In Books

International Booker Dozen: Today In Books

International Booker Dozen

The 2020 International Booker Prize Longlist (the Booker Dozen) has been announced, celebrating translated fiction from around the world. Looking to read more translated work? You can’t go wrong picking any of these books–I for one am currently reading, and loving, The Memory Police.

Ava DuVernay And Victoria Mahoney To The Rescue

After previous attempts to adapt Octavia Butler’s Dawn fell through, Ava DuVernay and Victoria Mahoney have stepped in to get the job done! Mahoney (first woman to direct a Star Wars movie) will write and direct the first episode, and DuVernay (A Wrinkle In Time; When They See Us) will be executive producer for the Amazon Studios ordered series.

Talmud Accepted Into US’s National Library of Congress

For the first time ever, the book of Talmud will be in the National Library of Congress. The work took Rabbi Adin Even Israel Steinsaltz 8 years to translate from Hebrew to English and will be celebrated tonight with an event. “‘It’s a great honor for the both Diaspora and Israeli Jews to receive such honor from a great institution as important as the US National Library of Congress. For all the Talmud’s thousands of years of existence, it is very exciting and meaningful for us, especially during times like these, when Judaism suffers from antisemitism,’ announced Mani Even Israel, the head of the Steinsaltz center.”

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Unusual Suspects

7 Mysteries from the Past 🔪

Hello mystery fans! You’re here for the mystery links, Kindle deals, and something crime-y to watch (hopefully) so here we go:

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Midnight In Mexico cover image15 Best True Crime Authors Who Are Must-Reads For Genre Fans

Patricia and Liberty talk about Walter Mosley’s latest Trouble Is What I Do on All The Books!

11 Mystery and Suspense Authors Like Gillian Flynn

THE HAPPY HOLLISTERS: A Retrospective

The Best Small Presses Publishing Crime Fiction Today

Exclusive preview: This sizzling debut unfolds a murder-mystery at a Long Island prep school

Watch Out Behind You: 7 Mysteries from the Past

Agatha Christie: Her 10 best novels, from Death on the Nile to The ABC Murders

The Secret of the 25 Chapters in Nancy Drew Books

The best-selling author of Before I Let Go is headed to a haunting cabin-set thriller for her next book. Get a first look.

News And Adaptations

Deanna Raybourn, author of the great Veronica Speedwell series, has sold an upcoming book about elite female assassins being forced to retire and it sounds amazing give it to me RIGHT now!

The Mystery Surrounding Rami Malek’s James Bond Villain Is Deepening With A ‘No Time To Die’ Featurette

If a murder mystery meets Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is a gimme-hands for you (me!) than Karen M. McManus has got you with her upcoming book!

“Michael Rooker (Guardians of the Galaxy) set as a series regular opposite David Oyelowo in The President Is Missing, Showtime’s drama pilot based on the novel by President Bill Clinton and James Patterson.”

Watch Now

The film adaptation of Joan Didion’s The Last Thing He Wanted, starring Anne Hathaway, Ben Affleck, Willem Dafoe, Rosie Perez and directed by Dee Rees, is streaming on Netflix. It’s one of those journalist won’t let the story go stories and it hasn’t gotten great reviews, but that literally never stops me from watching something I’m interested in. Here’s the trailer.

Kindle Deals

The Good Son by You-jeong jeong cover imageThe Good Son by You-Jeong Jeong is $1.99 if you’re looking for a wakes-up-covered-in-blood-what-happened slow-burn psychological suspense! (Review) (TW: stalking/ suicide)

If you’re looking to start a long running procedural series that started in the ’80s Indemnity Only (V.I. Warshawski #1) by Sara Paretsky is $2.99!

The sequel to Stillhouse Lake (Review) by Rachel Caine, Killman Creek is $1.99!

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

Adorable Bike Libraries In Afghanistan: Today In Books

Adorable Bike Libraries In Afghanistan

Afghanistan has low adult literacy rates–“about 45% for men, and about 17% for women”–due to years of war, so University student Idress Siyawash has created Read Books to help. On a weekly basis Siyawash and fellow University students travel on bikes with adorable libraries to rural areas: “Our idea is to show that reading can be fun, and explain why education is so important.”

This Is Huge

Right now you can use the Smithsonian Open Access, which has 3 million digital items collected from the “Smithsonian’s 19 museums, nine research centers, libraries, archives, and the National Zoo.”

Posthumous Book From U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings

We’re Better Than This by Baltimore Rep. Elijah Cummings, which was 95% completed when he passed away, will publish in June. The book, “part memoir, part call to action”, was completed by his wife Rockeymoore Cummings who worked with Cummings’ ghostwriter James Dale. I’m going to need tissues, my face is wet.

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Unusual Suspects

Murder, Blackmail, & Unsolved Mystery

Hello mystery fans! What do I have for you this week? A slow-burn suspense, a NY procedural, and a modern Nancy Drew. Something for everyone!

Untamed Shore cover imageUntamed Shore by Silvia Moreno-Garcia: This is a great slow-burn suspense novel that, depending on your relationship with Jaws, may have an eerie setting. And by that I mean it’s set in 1979 Baja California, and there are a lot of dead sharks, guts included.

Eighteen-year-old Viridiana wants out of the town because her mom expects her to work in her shop and marry a man Viridiana has broken up with and has zero interest in getting back with. She also grew up aware that she’s the reason her mom got anchored to her father and stuck with a life she didn’t want, something Viridiana refuses to let happen to her. And so when wealthy tourists show up with a writer looking for an assistant Viridiana takes the job, including moving into a room in their rented home. You know this tale, and you know someone is going to die in an accident, or maybe not an accident… As the cracks widen and the secrets begin to spill who will protect themselves and who will come out on top?

If you like character driven suspense, and are looking for an interesting setting you’ve probably never read before, definitely pick this one up! (TW domestic abuse/ past suicide mentioned, detail)

Don't Look Down cover imageDon’t Look Down (Shadows of New York #2) by Hilary Davidson: This is the sequel procedural to One Small Sacrifice (Review) which I enjoyed so much last year I grabbed this one ASAP. It’s a great new series for fans of procedurals, detective partners, multiple point of view, and books that focus on the case at hand.

We open with Jo Greaver, a victim of blackmail, going to drop off the money at an apartment, but nothing goes as planned–does it ever?–and she ends up shot and shooting her blackmailer. She doesn’t stick around to find out what happens next, and goes back to work, and her life, as if a bullet in the arm won’t stop her. When NYPD detectives, Sheryn Sterling and Rafael Mendoza, show up on the scene, the evidence and witness accounts don’t make sense. And it also doesn’t add up with what we saw happen with Jo, which leads the detectives and readers to have to piece together not only who the blackmailer is, but what they’re blackmailing Jo with, and what really happened in that apartment?!

If you like page-turning, twisty procedurals that give you character depth but stay focused on the case and mystery at hand you’ll love escaping into this series. (TW sex trafficking/ past domestic abuse mentioned/ past drug overdose/ suicide, detail)

A Good Girl's Guide to Murder cover imageA Good Girl’s Guide to Murder (A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder #1) by Holly Jackson: Pip, a high school girl, decides to do a research paper on finding out what really happened to Andie Bell five years ago. The problem is that Andie Bell has already been declared dead, even if her body was never found, and her boyfriend, even though he died by suicide, has already been proven guilty of murdering her in the court of public opinion. Pip thinks there are too many what-ifs, questions, lack of evidence, and that there was racist reporting that never actually closed this case for her. So she’s asking questions–barred from speaking to the Bell family and told the project will immediately be cancelled if she doesn’t do this delicately–and trying to figure out what really happened to Andie Bell. Pip is naive in a lot of ways, not having been one to attend parties, date, rebel in any way and she’s going to find herself wading into school secrets, family secrets, friend secrets, and the age-old question: do you ever really know anyone?

This is a great, twisty read for fans of YA and I’m definitely picking up the sequel–this reads like a standalone so don’t worry if you don’t like series. And bonus: the audiobook has an awesome multicast which bravo to the publishers for doing. (TW past suicide, with detail/ mentions self harming/ cyber exploitation/ talk of statutory, date rapes discussed/ dog dies)

Recent Releases

Egg Drop Dead cover imageEgg Drop Dead (A Noodle Shop Mystery #5) by Vivien Chien (A really good cozy series following a young woman working at her family’s restaurant in an Asian mall who constantly finds herself solving crime.)

Watching from the Dark (DCI Jonah Sheens #2) by Gytha Lodge (If you’re looking for another good recent procedural series here’s the sequel to She Lies In Wait.)

Firewatching (Detective Sergeant Adam Tyler #1) by Russ Thomas (A procedural following the only detective in the South Yorkshire Cold Case Unit!)

Trouble Is What I Do cover imageTrouble Is What I Do (Leonid McGill #06) by Walter Mosley (The PI who is always walking the line of staying clean and falling into the dark underbelly of NY is back! The audiobook has a fantastic narrator: Dion Graham, whose voice you know from The Wire, The First 48, Dear Martin and Black Leopard, Red Wolf.)

Pretty as a Picture by Elizabeth Little (A remote island with a film editor working on a project gets drawn into the sets rumors and accidents and the film’s previous editor’s disappearance. Oh, and the real-life murder mystery the movie is based on!)

On the Lamb (Kebab Kitchen Mystery #4) by Tina Kashian (A cozy mystery series set in a Mediterranean restaurant on the Jersey Shore!)

Follow Me by Kathleen Barber (The author of Are You Sleeping is back with a stalker book.)

Say Nothing by Patrick Radden Keefe cover imageSay Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland by Patrick Radden Keefe (Fantastic true crime history now in paperback.)

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

Not A Good Look For Disney: Today In Books

Not A Good Look For Disney

We cheered when Disney+ announced they were adapting Becky Albertalli’s novel into a series, Love, Simon. But now we’re booing as the streaming company no longer wants to air the show: “Disney felt many issues explored on the show, including alcohol use and sexual exploration, would not fit in with the family-friendly content on Disney Plus.” Hulu, owned by Disney and Comcast in a joint venture, will air the 10-episode season in June.

Library of Congress Acquires 100,000 New Pictures

For the first time, a Washington, D.C. institution has acquired a comprehensive archive of work by an African American photographer: Shawn Walker. His photographs, negatives, and transparencies show life in Harlem from 1963 to the present. “I am so satisfied that this work has found a home in such a prestigious institution and can finally be shared with the world.”

Project Luminous Revealed

More Star Wars books! Spanning across genres and age categories, Project Luminous will release a series of books, in phases, set in the High Republic Era, 200 years before The Skywalker Saga. The first five books have been announced individually written by Justina Ireland, Daniel José Older, Charles Soule, Cavan Scott, Claudia Gray.

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Today In Books

Who Should Decide Which Books Are Allowed In Prison? Today In Books

Who Should Decide Which Books Are Allowed In Prison?

It’s not just schools where books are being banned, prisons in the U.S. routinely ban books to the detriment of inmates. Books that teach languages like Arabic and American Sign Language are banned along with books about justice and showing POC/marginalized voices humanity. Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf however is not banned in Kansas state prisons. The policies behind the bans are not transparent and totally inconsistent.

Jane Goodall’s New Book

Jane Goodall, the primatologist known for her research work with chimpanzees in Africa, has teamed up with The Book Of Joy author Doug Abrams for an upcoming book: The Book Of Hope. “Through both Jane’s observation and the latest scientific research, readers will experience the resilience of nature to recover from the harm we have inflicted and the resilience of the human spirit in the face of loss and devastation.”

R.L. Stine + Garbage Pail Kids!

No, I didn’t just randomly throw darts at a board filled with pop culture things and come away with those two. The Goosebumps author R.L. Stine will be writing a middle grade series based on Garbage Pail Kids! The first book, Welcome to Smellville, will be out this fall. Yes, there are stickers and the cover looks exactly as you’d imagine!

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Today In Books

Typewriters Make Comeback With Kids: Today In Books

Typewriters Make Comeback With Kids

Time to feel old! A shop in Philadelphia teaches a typewriting class and kids are showing up and enjoying learning to type like they did in the olden days. “As one girl in the video explains, she likes how typewriting forces you to focus on what you’re writing because you won’t be able to easily fix your mistakes.” The grass is always greener… I guess.

Fiction Matters

The HBO series adaptation of the Watchmen comic taught a moment in history that many were unaware of: the Tulsa Race Massacre in 1921, when a white mob descended on a predominantly Black neighborhood killing hundreds of Black people and leaving thousands homeless. Now it seems the show’s opening scenes may have spotlighted one of the country’s worst moments, moving schools to finally officially teach it. “Oklahoma’s education department will provide the framework of a curriculum in April that’s designed to provide ‘extra support and resources’ when teaching students about the massacre. It will be officially incorporated into lesson plans beginning in the fall.

Manners For Kids

A medieval conduct book for kids, The Lytille Childrenes Lytil Boke, meant to teach children table manners (Don’t burp or pick your nose!) has now been digitized as part of the British Library’s new children’s literature website, Discovering Children’s Books. The site also has “original manuscripts, interviews and drafts by authors from Lewis Carroll to Jacqueline Wilson.” What a time to be alive.

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Today In Books

Dan Brown’s First Picture Book: Today In Books

Dan Brown’s First Picture Book

You may know Dan Brown for The Da Vinci Code and his thriller series starring Robert Langdon–Tom Hanks in the films–but he’s now venturing into children’s book author territory with his first picture book Wild Symphony, illustrated by Susan Batori. And there’s more: the book will be accompanied by a classical music album also by Dan Brown who is a musician.

Rage Baking

Simon & Schuster just published Rage Baking: The Transformative Power of Flour, Fury, and Women’s Voices as a collection of essays and recipes by many women giving voice to the political act of “rage baking.” Problem is that Tangerine Jones’s voice isn’t in the book, or even acknowledged, even though her social media handles and website are all “ragebaking.” Jones started using the phrase, hashtag included, in 2015 when she began using baking as self care because “Being black in America means you’re solid in the knowledge that folks don’t give a true flying fuck about you or anyone who looks like you.”

2019 Bram Stoker Awards

Looking for your next horror or dark fiction read? Perfect timing, the 2019 Bram Stoker Awards finalists have just been announced! Go forth and read with your dark little hearts. Ps: Five Midnights is getting a sequel!!

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Unusual Suspects

5 New Thrillers and Mysteries To Help Escape Reality

Hello mystery fans! I have a ton of clickable things, some Kindle deals, and I went old school with this week’s “watch now.”

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

The Onlly Child cover imageRincey and Katie talk mystery news, recent releases, what they’re reading, and a couple mystery books with a romantic element in the latest Read or Dead.

Liberty and Tirzah talk about The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James, The Holdout by Graham Moore, and Death in the Family by Tessa Wegert on the latest All The Books.

‘The most boring part’: why the killer didn’t matter to Georges Simenon

Silent City cover imageTwo authors—working from opposite ends of Florida—bring epic noir series to a close, and live to tell the tale.

The Summer Scares Reading List is Here, The Other Mrs. Leads Holds, My Dark Vanessa Tops the Indie Next List | Book Pulse

6 books Erik Larson keeps returning to

Five new thrillers and mysteries to help escape reality — or see it in another light

My Dark Vanessa cover imageThis is not an Onion article: Weinstein Juror Almost Kicked Off Trial for Reading My Dark Vanessa

Christopher Bollen’s A Beautiful Crime Is a Cold-Blooded Yet Seductive Novel

Discover the Swatch X 007 Tribute Collection and gear up for some 007-action with six exclusive models.

Congrats to the L.A. Times Book Prize finalists!

News And Adaptations

the ghost bride cover imageA distant, equally talented yet more playful cousin of Agatha Christie surely haunted the creation of six-part Taiwanese-Malaysian thriller The Ghost Bride, now streaming on Netflix.

Why Cozy Mysteries Are The Hottest TV Genre Of 2020

The 1920s book series by Leslie Charteris was adapted into the film 1997 The Saint starring Val Kilmer and will now get another adaptation by Rocketman director Dexter Fletcher.

Remember when I said Graham Moore’s The Holdout was “A legal thriller for fans of procedural shows and films“? I wasn’t the only one who thought so, Hulu is turning it into a series!

Watch Now

Going old-school this week with the 1986 adaptation The Great Mouse Detective, which is on Disney+ and based on Eve Titus’ the Basil of Baker Street series which reimagines Sherlock and Watson as mice. Adorable, funny, and entertaining. I love mice!

Kindle Deals

invisible by stephen l carterFor my nonfiction fans: Invisible: The Forgotten Story of the Black Woman Lawyer Who Took Down America’s Most Powerful Mobster by Stephen L. Carter is $3.99!!!

If you’re looking to start a series with a forensic archeologist: The Crossing Places by Elly Griffiths is $4.99!

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.