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What's Up in YA

Hug Your ❤️ With This Book!

Hi YA fans! I’m filling in for Kelly today which I’m very excited about. I write the Unusual Suspects mystery newsletter so my YA reading is generally in the criminal world and it’s nice to take a break and shout about other genres in YA. Here are some recent books I’ve loved, with the added bonus that they’re all also excellent audiobooks. —Jamie Canavés

Don't Date Rosa Santos cover imageDon’t Date Rosa Santos by Nina Moreno: Caught between “mothers” and countries Rosa Santos has a lot to figure out. For starters she’s made a big decision on where to go to college, but she’s been keeping it to herself because she’s certain her abuela isn’t going to like it. And her abuela raised her, as her mom is more of the traveling free-spirited type. Why won’t her abuela like the decision? Because it hinges on Rosa traveling to Cuba and her abuela is from el exilio (Cuban exile) and doesn’t believe in setting foot back in Cuba until everyone is free. Now, with Rosa’s mom returning, the town she lives in needing saving, her having to face her family curse, fear of water, and her abuela, Rosa is going to have to make a lot of difficult decisions. Add in Spanglish, a dash of Santeria, a budding romance subplot and there’s a lot to love in this book, starting with the great characters.

Calvin cover imageCalvin by Martine Leavitt: This book had my heart feeling every emotion through this clever and heartfelt journey. Thanks to a series of coincidences–beginning with the date of his birth–Calvin has always felt connected to the comic Calvin & Hobbes. Now, struggling with a school incident that led to a diagnoses of schizophrenia, he turns all his focus on the comic’s creator Bill Watterson, a man who has gone to lengths to avoid public attention. Calvin decides to write him a letter asking him to come out of retirement for one more comic, hoping it will be the key to saving him–and making the Hobbes he is hallucinating go away. All of this requires a trip across a very frozen Lake Erie joined by his childhood friend Susie. I inhaled this book which takes you through the roller coaster of diagnosis, adolescences, friendship, acceptance, and love. Hug your heart with this book! (TW suicidal thoughts, talk of suicide)

Birthday cover imageBirthday by Meredith Russo: As a huge fan of Russo’s first novel, If I Was Your Girl, I had high hopes for this one and it certainly delivered. Not only did it squeeze the daylights out of my heart, but I loved the format of how it was written. Morgan and Eric were born on the same day so their parents bonded and made it a point for the two to always celebrate their birthdays together, something the two have continued as teenagers. But as they each try to navigate hard life moments–death, divorce, family, gender, sexual orientation–their friendship is also put to the test. We get to watch Morgan and Eric through their high school birthdays and let me tell you how hard I rooted for these two. This is ultimately a beautiful story about friendship, love, and acceptance. (TW suicidal thoughts, attempted suicide on page/ homophobia, transphobia/ terminally ill parent)

Patron Saints Of Nothing cover imagePatron Saints of Nothing by Randy Ribay: Okay, it wouldn’t be me if I didn’t give you at least one crime book so here is one of the year’s best, which is also a coming-of-age story about identity, culture, diaspora, and family. When Jay Reguero learns that his cousin Jun was murdered in the Philippines, related to the war on drugs, he decides to spend his spring break visiting his Filipino relatives in hopes of learning who killed Jun and why. This book tackles a lot–from addiction to finding your place when you feel torn between cultures–with thoughtfulness, great writing, and excellent characters. I highly anticipate more from Ribay! And if you went with the audiobook for Red, White & Royal Blue (not YA) and loved the narrator, Ramón de Ocampo, he also narrates this one! (TW addiction/ discussions of sex trafficking/ past rape, not detailed)

Hope you find your next favorite read!

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Unusual Suspects

So Many Criminals!

Hi mystery fans! I’m back with all the links for you to click. But first, if you’re a fan of procedurals and character studies, Netflix has a new crime show with four different versions: Criminal UK (TW pedophile–so far), Criminal Spain, Criminal France, and Criminal Germany–so many criminals! I’ve been watching, and enjoying, Spain and UK which are 40-minute episodes that take place entirely in an interrogation room and the hallway/room looking in as the clock is ticking for the police to get a confession. Did they or didn’t they?! And now back to the previously scheduled book talk!

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Win the Best Mystery/Thrillers of the Year So Far!

Contest challenges readers to solve a murder mystery by putting 100 jumbled pages of a vintage crime book in the right order – and only two people have done it correctly since 1934

Heaven My Home cover imageWhat’s in a Page: What Attica Locke’s Heaven, My Home has in common with ‘Old Town Road’

10 Essential Literary Thrillers

50+ New Thrillers That Should Be on Your Radar This Year

15 Of The Best Books Like SHARP OBJECTS

News And Adaptations

Andrew Scott to Play ‘Talented Mr. Ripley’ in Showtime Series

Katrine Engberg Brings Danish Noir to Scout Press

Alyssa Cole tweeted she has an upcoming thriller!

Megan Abbott & Sarah St. Vincent are the recipients of the 2019 Pinckley Prizes for Crime Fiction

Jennifer Morrison to Direct ‘One of Us Is Lying’ Pilot for Peacock

True Crime

Know My Name cover imageChanel Miller Says ‘Know My Name’ As She Reflects On Her Assault By Brock Turner

Here’s How to Find the Creepy True-Crime Thing That Happened on Your Birthday

The girl in the box: the mysterious crime that shocked Germany

Has the Mystery of Skyjacker D.B. Cooper Finally Been Solved? A TV Newsman’s Obsessive Quest

How Dateline correspondent Keith Morrison became—and stayed—the granddaddy of true crime.

Kindle Deals

The Borrowed cover imageIf you’re looking for a procedural told backwards that has a great puzzle mystery: The Borrowed by Chan Ho-Kei, Jeremy Tiang (Translator) is $1.99! (Review) (TW rape/ suicide) And if you enjoy it as much as I did, you can look forward to a new translated novel in February 2020: Second Sister.

If you want a genre-bending procedural great for October reading: Lauren Beukes’ Broken Monsters is $7.99! (I don’t remember TW)

The Liar’s Girl by Catherine Ryan Howard is a 2019 Edgar Award nominee and $0.99 so I snagged it real quick!

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

Foul Is Fair cover imageGot my hands on: The second issue of Black Ghost by Monica Gallagher, Alex Segura, George Kambadais, which I’m saving as a treat read. And I got a galley of Foul Is Fair by Hannah Capin which is a “bloody revenge fantasy” novel so all the yes!

Read: Marilou is Everywhere by Sarah Elaine Smith, which is the kind of book that gets labeled “literary mystery” because it’s character driven, follows a crime, has a mystery, and is A+ writing. It’s one of my favorite books this year, and if you love Lauren Groff and novels like The Life and Death of Sophie Stark I highly recommend it.

Win the Best Mystery/Thrillers of the Year So Far!

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And 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

Libraries Working To Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Today In Books

Libraries Working To Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Not only have the 59 branches in Brooklyn Public Library’s system reduced their greenhouse gas emissions by 40% since 2006, their goal is to become a “net zero agency.” You can read about this, including the climate-friendly policies they put in place, here.

Banned Books Week And Prisons

This year we’ve seen many headlines spotlighting the problem with prisons’ book censorship–and those are just the ones that got attention. Now, during Banned Books Week, PEN America has released a detailed report looking at the issue of book banning in prisons.

Tom Ripley Cast

Showtime’s adaptation of The Talented Mr. Ripley has found its Tom with Fleabag’s hot priest. I will never again refer to him by anything but hot priest, but for the sake of highlighting news for you it’s Andrew Scott who will be playing the role Matt Damon played in the 1999 adaptation. You can get all the details here.

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Today In Books

Read A Novel On Instagram Stories: Today In Books

Read A Novel On Instagram Stories

A year ago the New York Public Library started Insta Novels: placing the full text of novels with small animations on Instagram Stories. And people are clearly enjoying it seeing as 300,000+ people have read the Insta Novels on NYPL’s account. Check it out here.

MacArthur Fellowships “Genius” Grants Winners

The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation announced the winners of the 2019 MacArthur fellowships and congratulations to all, especially authors Lynda Barry, Valeria Luiselli, and Ocean Vuong. Click here to see all the winners, including literary scholars and a classic literature translator.

Short Story Collection By Guillermo del Toro

Guillermo del Toro–The Strain co-author and writer/director of Pan’s Labyrinth and The Shape of Water–is working on a collection of short stories for Amazon Original Stories. The 2021 releasing collection “will introduce a world of strange happenings, otherworldly horror, and dark fantasy.” So basically very much a del Toro work!

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Unusual Suspects

Hello, Awesome Heist Book! 💎

Hi mystery fans! This week I have for you a great mystery + coming-of-age, an awesome heist thriller, and an Irish procedural series because I know mystery readers are always looking for a new procedural.

Mystery + Coming-Of-Age (TW addiction/ discussions of sex trafficking/ past rape, not detailed)

Patron Saints of Nothing cover imagePatron Saints of Nothing by Randy Ribay: I loved this book. It’s equally about a teen boy trying to solve the mystery of how his cousin died but also a book about identity, culture, and finding your way and place when your roots can feel conflicting to your current life. During his senior year of high school Jay Reguero finds out that his cousin Jun, who lives in the Philippines, died. Not only does he feel guilty that he recently stopped responding to his cousin’s letters but he doesn’t understand how he was killed due to the country’s current war on drugs. So he convinces his parents to let him spend his spring break visiting his family in the Philippines while really planning on using the trip to find out exactly what his cousin was doing before his death, who really killed him, and why. This book is equally heartbreaking and uplifting as it explores current political issues, diaspora, Eastern world vs Western world, racism, addiction, family…all while keeping the mystery thread taut throughout. It felt really well rounded, carefully written, and I absolutely adored the characters. This has been an exceptional year for crime books with new voices exploring really important topics and you can add this one to the collection. Bonus, I really enjoyed the audiobook which was narrated by Ramón de Ocampo, the same narrator for Red, White & Royal Blue and This Is Where I Leave You–wildly different books but if you pick up audiobooks based on narrators you like those are also great listens.

Hello, Awesome Heist Book! (TW torture/ child murder/ assisted suicide/ addiction)

Ghostman cover imageGhostman (Jack White #1) by Roger Hobbs: Fellow Rioter Liberty put this book in my hands and I’m super glad since it ended up being one of those books I read way past my bedtime because just-one-more-chapter! You have the Ghostman, literally a dude that just disappears, who is called in to find one of the men from a botched heist and retrieve the money bag before the dye packets go boom. Except he’s only taking on this job to pay off a debt for a past job that went very wrong. So you get two heists in one as you follow the Ghostman in present time–48-hour clock ticking down!–trying to find the money bag, and past chapters where you learn how he was trained and how his last heist changed everything. You get the ins-and-outs of everything in this book in a way that may make you feel ready to go pull off a huge heist, and I loved that the two storylines were equally intense so the pacing of the book remained consistent throughout.

Irish Procedural! (TW attempted murder suicide off page, suicide discussions/ domestic abuse)

The Scholar cover imageThe Scholar (Cormac Reilly #2) by Dervla McTiernan: This is one of those solidly good from beginning to end procedurals. While it stars Detective Cormac Reilly, who was on desk duty cold cases for a while, it also takes you into the lives of other characters in a way that feels like a great addition rather than a distraction. This case also hits close to home for Reilly as his girlfriend is the one who finds the body of the case he ends up on. A case about a murdered woman on a university campus and mistaken identity that will test loyalty, relationships, and job security. If you’ve been looking for a new series you can sink into that does a good balance of focusing on the cases and the characters, procedural fans will be satisfied with both entries so far in the series. And bonus for good audiobook narration!

Recent Releases

The Last Seance cover imageThe Last Séance: Tales of the Supernatural by Agatha Christie (Currently Reading: I’ve been dipping in and out of these Christie short stories that make a good October read since some are spooky-ish and a bit supernatural. Also, a good gift for Christie fans who like short story collections!)

A Bitter Feast (Duncan Kincaid & Gemma James #18) by Deborah Crombie (TBR: Scotland Yard procedural.)

 

You Beneath Your Skin cover imageYou Beneath Your Skin by Damyanti Biswas (TBR: This is a crime thriller set in New Delhi that I’m hoping to get my hands on soon.)

The Shape of the Ruins by Juan Gabriel Vásquez, Anne McLean (Translator) (Paperback)

Win the Best Mystery/Thrillers of the Year So Far!

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And 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

New $40 Million Public Library 😍: Today In Books

New $40 Million Public Library

50,000+ books. Chinese and Spanish sections. Art installations. Cyber center. Rooftop seating. A floor for teens. An education center for the environment. Those are just some of the attractions of Hunters Point library, a $40 million development, in Queens, N.Y. Check out this incredibly gorgeous library and all its amenities here.

Smart Bitches Book Search

Smart Bitches, an awesome site dedicated to romance, has a new book search feature. Select a genre, theme, and archetype and you’ll be rewarded with a suggested book. Play around with it here, and they’re taking feedback if you like to opine.

UNpregnant Adaptation

HBO Max–not to be confused with HBO Go–has lined up one of its first features for the upcoming streaming service: an adaptation of Jenni Hendriks and Ted Caplan’s YA novel UNpregnant. The funny road trip novel, about a girl in need of a legal abortion after her boyfriend tampered with the condom, is set to start filming in New Mexico. You can check out the team working on the adaptation and the actresses who have signed on here.

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Today In Books

Oprah Has A New Book Club! Today In Books

Oprah Has A New Book Club!

And Oprah Winfrey’s first book selected for this global book club with Apple is–drum roll, please!–The Water Dancer by Ta-Nehisi Coates. Coates will be interviewed by Winfrey on Oprah’s Book Club, a new Apple TV+ series that will premiere November 1st. And if you buy Oprah’s Book Club selections through Apple Books, a contribution will be made to the American Library Association. Really looking forward to see all the books that will be chosen!

Banned Books Week Is Upon Us

The 11 most challenged books of 2018–absolutely no drum roll for this BS–have been released by the ALA: “at least 347 challenges were filed seeking to remove 483 books from libraries or schools.” And the phobics have been busy as more than half of the challenged books were targeted because of LGBTQIA+ content. You can check out the list here.

Know Her Name

Chanel Miller has written a memoir, Know My Name, publicly coming forward as the woman sexually assaulted by Brock Turner: “‘I am a victim, I have no qualms with this word, only with the idea that it is all that I am,’ she writes. ‘However, I am not Brock Turner’s victim. I am not his anything.'” Learn about Miller, as a full person, and her memoir here.

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Today In Books

Fall Book Events Not To Miss: Today In Books

Fall Book Events Not To Miss

ELLE has rounded up 9 book events this fall to certainly put on your calendar if you’re near. There’s a book club for The Testatments, a Patti Smith performance, Zadie Smith events and more! Check them out here.

Looking For Alaska Gets New Narrator

John Green’s Looking For Alaska is not only getting a Hulu adaptation (Oct. 18), but also a new audiobook edition (Sept. 24). And the narrator is Wil Wheaton who you probably already know from film and television–or maybe from prior audiobook narrations like Ready Player One.

Nelly Sachs Prize Awarded Then Withdrawn

A German jury awarded the Nelly Sachs prize to Kamila Shamsie but later rescinded their votes and withdrew the award citing Shamsie’s support for the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel. “In May, the German parliament passed a motion labelling the BDS movement as antisemitic, calling it ‘reminiscent of the most terrible chapter in German history.’ The motion was criticised by 60 Jewish and Israeli academics, who said in an open letter that it was part of a trend ‘labelling supporters of Palestinian human rights as antisemitic.'”

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Today In Books

Bonnie and Clyde Auction Includes Poems: Today In Books

Bonnie & Clyde Auction Includes Poems

Bonnie Parker–of the infamous Bonnie & Clyde–wrote poems while in jail inside a bank book. Now that book of poems, along with other items, are being auctioned off at RR Auction in Boston on Saturday. More here.

New Day, New Longlist!

Once again we have another excellent award longlist that your TBR is ready to hug: 2019 National Book Awards Fiction Longlist! I’d highlight our favorites, but Rioters have been loving and shouting about all the books on this list so the whole list is a highlight. It’s an excellent year for book lovers.

More Great Adaptation News!

Rena Barron’s Kingdom of Souls, first in a trilogy, has been acquired by Michael B. Jordan’s Outlier Society at Warner Bros. Outlier Society has been killing it with adaptations as they also have Just Mercy and Raising Dion under their belt.

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Unusual Suspects

88-Year-Old Grandmother Was an International Jewel Thief

Hello mystery fans! Time to play here’s-what-I’ve-collected-for-you-this-week, plus Kindle deals and my week in reading. And if you’ve been meaning to watch the Shirley Jackson adaption of We Have Always Lived in the Castle it’s now on Netflix.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Dear Gillian Flynn: I Will Beta Read the Sh*t Out of Your New Book for You

Whodunnit On The Tour De France and More Favorite Mystery and Thrillers!

Liberty talked about Elevator Pitch on this week’s All The Books.

A Front Page Affair cover imageSpeaking of Liberty, she joined Rincey for this week’s Read or Dead where they talked adaptations, news, WWI mysteries, and books they’re reading.

Blind, Andrea Camilleri dictated this delightful mystery novel before his death at 93

Walt Longmire back in Wyoming for new mystery novel

Attica Locke’s New Mystery Novel Unearths East Texas Secrets

Win the Best Mystery/Thrillers of the Year So Far!

Adaptations And News

Diamond Doris cover imageThis 88-Year-Old Grandmother Was an International Jewel Thief: Her life is now the subject of an upcoming film starring Tessa Thompson, and a new book

Toni Collette Joins Bradley Cooper in Guillermo del Toro’s ‘Nightmare Alley’

The Nancy Drew TV Show Is Going To Be Way More Paranormal Than The Book Series

‘Psych: The Movie 2’ Pushed To 2020, Moves To NBCU Streamer, Gets Title

Kindle Deals

Bad Day at the Vulture Club cover imageFor $0.99 you can read about an Indian PI–and his baby elephant!!–as he solves crimes: Bad Day at the Vulture Club (Baby Ganesh Agency #5) by Vaseem Khan

If you’re looking for an October read that’s a thriller with horror vibes: Perfect Days by Raphael Montes is $6.99 and I still shudder thinking about one scene. (Review) (I don’t remember the trigger warnings but dude kidnaps woman he likes to force her to like him.)

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

The Furies cover imageCurrently reading: The Furies by Katie Lowe which feels like a perfect choice with October a blink away since witchcraft and vengeance seem to be a main focus. Now Entering Addamsville by Francesca Zappia is one I’m pretty sure I’ll be inhaling this weekend since the voice is amazing from the first page. And Chilling Effect by Valerie Valdes is my mystery break and it’s a fantastic novel about a space crew whose captain’s sister gets kidnapped. There’s naughty psychic kittens, Spanglish, and the main character swears like a sailor–I love it so much.

Remember cover imageFinished reading: Remember by Patricia Shane Smith starts with a mystery of a character that doesn’t remember nor know where she is and takes you back to the lead up and into her life as a woman living with panic disorder and agoraphobia, grieving the death of her mother and sister. This was a page-turner for me that did not make mental illness the boogieman the way the crime genre unfortunately does a lot. (TW alcoholism/ social anxiety and panic attacks on page, agoraphobia/ PTSD/ past suicide mentioned)

The Ninja Daughter cover imageAcquired and excited: The Ninja Daughter by Tori Eldridge and all I needed to be excited for this is the title and knowing that it’s the third to be published by Agora Books. And Darling Rose Gold by Stephanie Wrobel landed on my doorstep with the blurb “Sharp Objects meets Misery” and yes, please, thank you, more.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And 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.