Categories
Check Your Shelf

Weird Facts and Readalikes For RENAISSANCE

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Since I’ve been keeping everyone updated on the toilet saga at work up to this point, I am happy to report that two brand new toilets were installed as of last Friday. I’m not naive enough to think that this will fix the inherent plumbing problems with this building, but it’s an improvement.

Here’s to more book updates in this newsletter, and fewer toilet updates.

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

The big indie books published this fall.

8 best romance novels of the summer.

250+ new books published in 2022.

Weekly picks from Bustle, Crime Reads, LitHub, The Millions, and USA Today.

Entertainment Weekly’s best books of August.

September picks from Barnes & Noble, Brightly (childrens/YA), Epic Reads, Kirkus, New York Times, Vanity Fair, and Washington Post.

Fall picks from Brightly (picture books, middle grade, YA), LA Times, USA Today, and Vulture.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Marriage Portrait – Maggie O’Farrell (Guardian, New York Times, Washington Post)

Fairy Tale – Stephen King (New York Times, Slate)

Carrie Soto is Back – Taylor Jenkins Reid (Entertainment Weekly, USA Today)

On the Rooftop – Margaret Wilkerson (New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle)

RA/Genre Resources

What to read based on the fall TV shows you love.

M.T. Anderson’s Feed remains frustratingly prescient, even 20 years later.

The queer horror of Bram Stoker’s Dracula.

On the Riot

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Goodreads announces the most popular horror books of 2022, so far.

This is fun: recommending books based on their weirdest facts.

A history of the beach read.

How to find good self-published books.

Why this reader only reads romance novels on their phone.

All Things Comics

The Harley Quinn animated series has been renewed for a fourth season at HBO Max.

Megan Thee Stallion makes a cameo appearance on She-Hulk.

Netflix greenlights a Parasyte: The Grey series, based on the manga series Parasyte.

On the Riot

Speaking truth to power: a history of political cartoons.

Why are DC’s Hispanic Heritage Month covers so awful?

The best Daredevil comics.

9 slice-of-life webcomics you can read right now.

Audiophilia

16 of the best audiobooks for September.

5 YA audiobooks with nonbinary main characters.

On the Riot

8 audiobooks for Agatha Christie lovers.

8 must-listen audiobooks about food.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

11 picture book biographies about prominent change makers.

Middle grade books for young inventors.

100 of the most popular YA books of the past 5 years.

YA books to read while listening to Beyonce’s Renaissance on repeat.

Adults

Fiona Davis recommends 10 works of historical fiction.

Gothic novels featuring non-human love interests.

Historical fiction that lives in the space between history and myth.

5 SFF books about deadly magical games.

23 wonderful short books under 200 pages.

Alice Feeney’s favorite locked room mysteries.

6 books about Princess Diana.

13 witchy books to read this fall.

5 translated books from Japan.

12 self-published LGBTQ books to bring to the beach this summer.

On the Riot

10 inspiring stories of young rebels.

Sweet YA friends-to-lovers romance novels.

11 thrilling YA survival stories.

YA thrillers about fame and influencers.

8 high-stakes YA novels set in the ballet world.

Stay right where (and when) you are: books about timeline managers.

10 of the best sleuths in cozy mysteries.

10 romance recs for Barack Obama.

12 culinary romances to leave you hungry for more.

12 novels with recipes in them.

Escapist SFF to help you avoid the dumpster fires of reality.

Best books set in Australia.

Books about the Appalachian Trail.

Demonic horror books to steal your heart.

The best historical fiction books you’ve never heard of.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black cat resting its head on a person's thigh

Gilbert is very tired and very happy to use his hoomans as a makeshift pillow. It takes a lot of work holding his head up by himself!

That’s all I’ve got for today folks. I’ll check in again on Friday. And remember, it’s a short week this week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

“They Can Choose Not to Come”

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m sad to say that the toilet situation at my library has not improved, and in fact has gotten worse. An excellent way to knock me down a couple pegs and remind me I still have a LOT to learn about this director business.

Also, brace yourselves, because this is one of the longest banned books sections I’ve ever had to compile.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Baker & Taylor has been almost completely inoperable for a week and a half due to a ransomware attack.

The Biden administration announces a historic open-access policy for taxpayer-funded research.

Book Adaptations in the News

Production of Lady in the Lake has been paused after several unnamed people approached members of the crew, allegedly saying that they would shoot someone if production didn’t shut down or pay them $50,000.

Ewan McGregor is starring in the adaptation of A Gentleman in Moscow.

Elin Hilderbrand’s The Perfect Couple is being adapted into a limited series.

Neve Campbell is headlining the ABC series adaptation of Avalon by Michael Connelly.

Casting update for Dark Matter.

Take a peek at the trailer for My Best Friend’s Exorcism!

Trailer for White Noise, based on the book by Don DeLillo. Or as I’m now referring to it, “What the hell did they do to Adam Driver’s hair?!”

A guide to all of the Taylor Jenkins Reid film and TV adaptations.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

Banned & Challenged Books

Fox News is providing a primer for parents on how to fight their school and library boards and have books removed.

Here’s a look at the states that have enacted book ban laws.

Listen to Kelly Jensen speak to PBS NewsHour about how the censorship wars and debates around parental rights are affecting local school board races.

The majority of efforts to ban books in Texas schools have come from one politician and GOP pressure – not parents.

“I won’t be silenced:” North Texans testify in Congress about censorship in education.

The National Coalition Against Censorship has written to the Conroe ISD (TX) regarding recent policies that remove “obscene” materials from libraries.

Dawson Middle School (TX), which is named after George Dawson, the grandson of an enslaved person, has deemed Dawson’s autobiography inappropriate for 7th grade students.

Belton Middle School (TX) students explain their support for their school librarian, who is being pressured to remove her banned book display. You can see the librarian’s viral TikTok video here.

A Pearland ISD (TX) trustee expressed concerns about specific library materials, stating “There are books that I would like to see removed, and I’d like to see a policy in which we don’t have a road that we go down where we have to have this conversation again.”

Fort Bend ISD (TX) has removed Gender Queer from school libraries and is reviewing several others after receiving complaints from parents.

Keller ISD (TX) backtracks its initial decision to remove the graphic novel adaptation of Anne Frank’s Diary from school libraries, as well as the Bible. However, there are still around 40 books that need to be reviewed, and the school board president says that 10-15 of those titles will probably never be put back on library shelves.

Humble ISD (TX) parents form a group to remove “dirty books” from school libraries.

A Katy ISD (TX) police officer temporarily removed the book Flamer from a high school library after a woman filed a criminal complaint against the school. Meanwhile, some Katy ISD parents think that more should be done to restrict which books are available to students.

The punishment given to Tulsa (OK) Public Schools for allegedly violating a critical race theory restriction is being used to challenge the law.

This Oklahoma teacher provided her students with a QR code to the Brooklyn Public Library’s “Books Unbanned” site, and was then almost immediately put on administrative leave.

Stillwater, Oklahoma parents are demanding that the district remove specific books with sexual material, including The Truth About Alice, and Me and Earl and the Dying Girl.

A judge blocks DeSantis’ “Stop WOKE Act,” saying Florida feels like a “First Amendment Upside Down.” Yes, the Upside Down. Like in Stranger Things.

Duval County Public Schools (FL) bought dozens of new books that are now sitting indefinitely in storage.

For all the hoopla in Polk County (FL) around letting parents opt out of letting their children have access to controversial materials, less than 1% of parents have used this option.

A Pensacola (FL) teacher resigned after pictures of Black leaders were allegedly removed from his bulletin board by a school employee.

Collier County Public Schools (FL) have placed warning labels on books that discuss race and LGBTQ issues. Meanwhile, the superintendent has halted book purchases to keep media specialists “safe.”

A judge has dismissed the lawsuit against the Sarasota School Board (FL) over alleged sexual content in libraries.

Livingston Parish Council (LA) passes a resolution to ask libraries to restrict access to some books.

Paywall: A virtual LGBTQ+ lecture has been rescheduled at the University of Louisiana after a cyber attack of racial and homophobic slurs.

A Louisiana librarian is being threatened for creating LGBTQ book displays.

Book disputes land a suburban Atlanta school district in court. I’m paywalled from this article but I have some MAJOR problems with the lead photo for this article – it positions the people who are pushing to remove books as some kind of educational superheroes.

Mothers behind a Georgia book-banning campaign claim their First Amendment rights are being violated. The cognitive dissonance and mental gymnastics here…I just can’t.

Seven of the eight books initially removed from Forsyth County (GA) school libraries have been approved for return. The seven books include Looking for Alaska, L8r, g8r, Me Earl and the Dying Girl, Nineteen Minutes, Out of Darkness, The Bluest Eye, and The Infinite Moment of Us. All Boys Aren’t Blue will stay off library shelves.

A Maryland judge has thrown out a lawsuit against the Montgomery County Board of Education’s policy to not out trans children to their families.

Newly elected Tennessee attorney general suggests prosecuting librarians for “inappropriate” books.

Collierville Schools (TN) is under scrutiny for pulling over 300 books from school libraries. Here is a list of the books pulled and ranked based on their LGBTQ+ content.

An LGBTQ+ back-to-school festival at the Fayetteville Public Library (AR) has been canceled due to safety concerns.

Missouri schools are pulling books from libraries after a new law criminalizing “sexually explicit” material goes into effect.

Kearney Public Schools (NE) issued a public statement in response to comments made by former Senate candidate Matt Innis, saying that the school has a responsibility to serve its LGBTQ students.

A new policy would give the North Platte (NE) school superintendent the last word on pulling library items.

A letter addressed to the Logan, Iowa library board asked them not to put any books on display in the children’s section that “portray homosexuality and LGBTQ in a positive manner.”

The Iowa State Board of Education has rejected a request to remove Gender Queer from Southwoods Freshman High School in West Des Moines.

The books that the Rapid City (SD) School Board had originally slated for destruction are now sitting in limbo, and two of the titles are now missing.

Hancock (MI) Public Schools is still discussing the removal of a Pride Month book display in June.

The Davison (MI) school board unanimously elects to remove eight books from the middle and high school media centers.

Nora Roberts donates $50K to the Patmos Library (MI) which was defunded for its refusal to remove LGBTQ books.

LGBTQ+ books at the center of library controversies in Michigan and Iowa.

“They can choose not to come:” Downer’s Grove Library (IL) responds to criticism of drag-themed bingo night. Another choice quote from the article: “We have spent significantly more taxpayer money in staff time responding to feedback about the event than we will be spending on the event itself.”

The Cadott (WI) School District elected to return several previously banned books to library shelves.

This Ohio librarian is seeking to defeat a book banner where it counts – at the ballot box.

Dayton (OH) library director shares information about how the library selects books for the collection.

Buxton-based School Board (ME) is considering whether or not to remove books about sexuality and gender identity from the school libraries.

School board elects to remove Gender Queer from the Dirigo High School library (ME).

Several members of Congress have written a letter to Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf and Acting Secretary of Education Eric Hagarty about their concerns over school library materials.

The Pennridge (PA) school board could limit student expression, employee “advocacy,” and books.

Central Bucks School District (PA) passes another policy targeting inappropriate content in textbooks and supplemental instructional materials.

A Neo-Nazi gathering causes Boston drag queen Patty Bourrée to cancel a planned story hour in Seaport.

An op-ed about how the culture wars will affect the coming school year in Connecticut.

“My brain, my books, my choice:” Advocates in Catawba County (NC) say the campaign to ban books from the school district is a campaign of exclusion.

One couple describes their process to have LGBTQ books removed from the Alamance-Burlington School System (NC), saying it’s part of a larger goal to have LGBTQ books removed from schools in the entire state.

South Carolina State Senator Josh Kimbrell called on Spartanburg County Public Libraries to move books about sexual identity from the children’s section to the adult section, saying that the books are inappropriate for children. He has also threatened to defund the libraries that do not remove these books.

Horry County (SC) School Board bans CRT despite it not being taught in classrooms.

A judge has tossed both Virginia obscenity cases and struck down the existing state law that made the cases possible, calling the law “unconstitutional.”

Policies that notify Virginia parents of sexually explicit content in school materials are on the way.

Virginia Beach School Board fielded comments on “pornographic” materials being made available in school libraries and classrooms.

Chesterfield County Public Schools (VA) elect to keep Beyond Magenta on school shelves.

Madison County Schools (MS) remove 10 books from general library circulation.

A member of the St. Mary’s (KS) city council has proposed that the city prevent the library from providing “explicit sexual, racially or socially divisive material,” and supporting anything that promotes “the LGBTQ+ ideology or practice” or critical race theory in any form.”

With book bans surging nationwide, Eagle County (CO) is not untouched.

The ACLU of Idaho is demanding documents that were excluded from their initial public records request.

Meridian (ID) residents overwhelmingly testify in support of their library.

Conservative activists want to remove 400 books from the Boundary County Library in Idaho, but the library doesn’t even own the books.

Mead School Board (WA) Director Michael Cannon says that he was surprised that his proposals to limit the discussion of critical race theory and gender identity in schools generated so much controversy. Seriously?

British Columbia trustees call for police reports against their fellow trustees who support LGBTQ+ books.

The backlash against Drag Queen Story Hour in the UK.

Researchers did a deep dive into efforts to restrict critical race theory in schools. Here’s what they found.

A public school librarian on book bans.

How to stand up against book challenges.

Here are the most banned and challenged comics since 2000.

Books & Authors in the News

Val McDermid has received a legal threat for using the phrase “Queen of Crime,” which has been trademarked by Agatha Christie’s estate.

Taylor Swift is being sued by poet and author Teresa La Dart, who claims that Swift stole the design of La Dart’s 2010 book Lover for the book accompanying Swift’s 2019 album of the same name.

Dinesh D’Souza’s upcoming book 2000 Mules, has been abruptly postponed due to an undisclosed “publishing error.” The book is based on a film that makes widely debunked claims regarding 2020 election fraud.

—————-

(phew) Need something funny? This Twitter thread of suggested Jeopardy topics for librarians is hilarious.

Numbers & Trends

Gen Z is driving romance sales to the top of the bestseller lists.

Award News

Tess Gunty’s The Rabbit Hutch is the winner of Waterstone’s inaugural debut fiction prize.

The Children’s Book Council of Australia has created a new set of awards judged by 2,000 children around the country.

The Brooklyn Public Library Book Prize longlist has been announced.

Pop Cultured

A first look at Glass Onion, the sequel to Knives Out.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Pass this along to your Louise Penny fans…there’s an upcoming fan e-newsletter called Notes From Three Pines that will examine all things Louise Penny and Inspector Gamache!

On the Riot

Star Wars books and series that deserve their own adaptations.

Some of the most controversial book opinions.

black and white cat laying on its back getting its stomach brushed

Please enjoy this photo of a Very Good Boi getting his tummy brushed. Dini doesn’t always sit still when we brush him, but when he does, it’s cuteness overload!

Please enjoy the long weekend, and again, don’t take your functioning toilets for granted. I’ll see you next week.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Motorcycle Noir and the Meaning of Zombies

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Friends, if you’re in the mood for something light and uplifting similar to Great British Baking Show, do yourself a favor and watch Glow Up on Netflix. It’s a British makeup artist reality show, with a very similar uplifting tone, and the artistry is absolutely amazing! Plus amazing representation on many different levels, and it’s just a delightful, escapist treat. (I have an episode on in the background right now!)

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

A look at the dramatic drop in Amazon book orders over the last several weeks.

The Washington Post’s book section is back!

New & Upcoming Titles

Indie booksellers select their Fall children’s picks.

Ava Reid is writing a reimagined version of Macbeth that’s pitched as Circe meets Wolf Hall.

Gabrielle Union-Wade and Dwayne Wade are publishing their second picture book, Shady Baby Feels.

Meg Cabot’s next Princess Diaries novel will take place during the pandemic and feature a suspected royal affair.

Here’s the cover reveal for Charlie Jane Anders’ upcoming book, Promises Stronger Than Darkness.

And here’s the cover reveal for Abby Jimenez’ upcoming book, Yours Truly.

Fall picks from Electric Lit (LGBTQ+) and The Guardian.

Weekly picks from Bustle, Crime Reads, The Millions, New York Times, USA Today.

Best international crime fiction for August.

September picks from AV Club, Barnes & Noble (adult, teens, kids), The Root.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

My Government Means to Kill Me – Rasheed Newson (Bustle, Entertainment Weekly, LA Times, New York Times)

Raising Lazarus: Hope, Justice, and the Future of America’s Overdose Crisis – Beth Macy (Electric Literature, Washington Post)

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

RA/Genre Resources

The Game of Thrones effect prompts reissues of other fantasy fiction classics.

How today’s romances are revising interracial romance tropes.

On the Riot

Culturally diverse children’s book publishers and imprints.

Bust out the brooms for these new witchy YA books.

New weekly releases to TBR.

From braaaains to hordes: what are zombies a metaphor for?

All Things Comics

Stephen Graham Jones’s graphic novel Earthdivers is being adapted as a TV series.

On the Riot

What in the world is Elseworlds?

Some of the best fantasy light novels you can read.

Audiophilia

Hoda Kotb is the new narrator for the Goodnight Moon audiobook.

Best audiobooks with celebrity narrators.

Audiobooks to thrill, delight, and spread hope.

7 great audiobooks to listen to this month.

On the Riot

Falling ears over heels for audiobooks.

The best fantasy audiobooks available on Libby.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

20 back-to-school picture books.

YA books for Stephen King fans.

Adults

6 historical noir reads with pulse-pounding mysteries.

A mathematical reading list.

5 key works of motorcycle noir.

7 books featuring a chorus of voices of color.

8 books that will lead you down a rabbit hole.

16 great books about mental health for empathy, insight, and so much more.

5 mystery books to cozy up with on vacation.

On the Riot

Learning to say goodbye: 8 children’s books about death.

YA books with reality TV elements sure to capture your attention.

8 mystery novels revolving around food.

Queer SFF for the genre-shy.

Books set in South America to inspire wanderlust.

Short books by South Asian writers.

15 compelling Chilean books in translation.

20 wonderful wellness books to read in 2022.

8 books to read after watching Prehistoric Planet.

The best Kindle Unlimited mysteries to read.

13 gentle low-drama romances.

10 great romance novels set in London.

5 SFF books about the multiverse.

8 witchy books full of trans & nonbinary magic.

The best slasher books that will leave you screaming for more.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black cat sitting in a gray cat bed on top of a light blue blanket

Gilbert took a pause from his regular napping schedule to give us full-on kitty glamor. And then promptly went back to napping.

Okay friends, I’ll check in again on Friday. We got this!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading Kingdoms of Savannah by George Dawes Green.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

What Is “Soft Censorship?”

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. All through my library career, I’ve used the phrase “director dollars” to indicate something that was way outside of my pay grade. Well, now I have to eat my words, as I am now the interim director being paid interim director dollars, and I had to do battle with a clogged toilet today. However, I do get to set my own boundaries, and I gave it one good college try before deciding to call the plumber. I dare anyone to tell me that being a librarian isn’t a glamorous job!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

PLA releases its first Staff and Diversity Report.

ALA announces a new travel grant for Black youth librarians.

Eastern Kentucky schools ask for book donations for flooded libraries.

Cool Library Updates

Meet Araba Maze, the Radical Street Librarian bringing books to Baltimore neighborhoods.

Worth Reading

Hoopla has a content problem. Here’s how to fix it.

Creating a culture of healing.

School and public librarian partnerships are a beautiful thing.

Book Adaptations in the News

Elin Hilderbrand’s The Hotel Nantucket is set for a TV adaptation.

Jesse Q. Sutanto has a vague, yet exciting announcement regarding TV adaptations!

Rick Riordan provides updates on Percy Jackson.

Young-Ha Kim’s Diary of a Murderer is set for a film adaptation.

The House of the Dragon premiere crashed HBO Max.

Check out the trailer for Vampire Academy.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Banned & Challenged Books

A look at new and ongoing book challenges in Lake and McHenry Counties in Illinois, which geographically is very close to home for me.

A PEN America report finds that educational gag orders have increased 250% in the last year.

Texas State Representative Jared Patterson challenges an additional 23 books in Frisco ISD.

Keller ISD (TX) has removed dozens of books, including the Bible.

The Grapevine-Colleyville ISD (TX) starts a “Don’t Say Trans” policy.

In a rare move, Louisiana school librarian Amanda Jones fights back in court against conservative rhetoric. “‘I’ve had enough for everybody,’ Jones said in an interview. ‘Nobody stands up to these people. They just say what they want and there are no repercussions and they ruin people’s reputations and there’s no consequences.’”

The Enid (OK) Public Schools situation has turned into a hot mess, as teachers were initially instructed to remove 44 titles from their classroom libraries, and then told to disregard those instructions.

Sarasota County (FL) schools block donated dictionaries amid DeSantis’ book crackdown. The new law requires that new books be approved by state-certified media specialists, and there are no certified media specialists in Sarasota County. So…no new books.

The public library in Logan, Iowa fields complaints about a children’s book about Harvey Milk.

Calls for book bans accelerate in Ohio. In this article, a “conservative organizer” says about The Bluest Eye: “I’m not sure what [the book is] supposed to tell us. I mean, there’s no positive.”

The Hempfield (PA) Area School Board is increasing parental involvement in the review process for challenged books. Parental opinion is NOT on the same level as the recommendation of a trained educator, and it shouldn’t be treated as equivalent!!

Prince William County Schools (VA) have elected not to remove 6 challenged titles.

The Davison (MI) Board of Education voted 5-0 to remove 8 books from the middle school and high school media centers, including Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, and Push.

Wayzata School Board (MN) member’s discomfort over the book Bi-Normal is troubling.

School librarians in Missouri pull books as a new law allows charges for “explicit” materials. Specifically, the law defines explicit sexual material as any visual depiction of sex acts or genitalia, with exceptions for artistic or scientific significance, and can apply to any images in books, magazines, or Internet sites, and carries a maximum penalty of $2000 fine and 1 year in jail.

The Boone County (KY) Fiscal Court approves new oversight on library boards. This is all thanks to a recent state law that moves library board control from the State Department of Libraries and Archives to county judges.

Once again, people don’t understand what constitutes a book ban…in Wellington, Colorado, citizens are asking for 19 books to be removed from school libraries and placed in a restricted area requiring students to obtain adult permission.

The Idaho Commission for Libraries has made changes to its digital materials policy, including removing a section that states that the commission “recognizes the responsibility of individuals to choose their own reading materials,” as well as removing a section denying the ability for one person to restrict material access for others. This is troubling.

An op-ed from the Director of the Boundary County Library (ID): “This is about control of what information our community is allowed access to.”

Alpine School District in Utah reverses its decision to remove 52 books from school libraries, although they have still imposed temporary restrictions on these titles.

The Mead School District (WA) is considering a ban on critical race theory and gender identity books.

What is “soft censorship?”

40 years of Banned Books Week.

Books & Authors in the News

Writers gather in New York to read from Salman Rushdie’s works in solidarity. In related news, sales for Rushdie’s books are surging.

Salman Rushdie and the power of stories.

Brit Bennett ventures into the world of children’s lit with a brand new historical character for American Girl!

A brief history of TrumpWorld tell-alls.

Award News

Wil Haygood, author of The Butler, wins the Ambassador Richard C. Holbrooke Distinguished Achievement Award.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A history of the blurb.

On the Riot

Back to school inspiration for librarians.

How are annotated editions made?

Can you recycle books?

A history of the midnight release party.

The 15 most Instagrammed bookstores in the world.

black and white cat laying on its side smiling at the camera

Dini’s happy, and he hopes that you’re all happy too.

That’s all I’ve got for this week. May all your toilets function properly over the weekend.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

What the Heck is Happening at Barnes & Noble?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am home after 2 weeks of traveling, and I can’t believe how much we managed to do in those two weeks. Among other things, I visited the Biltmore Estate, hiked to a waterfall, kayaked with pelicans and dolphins, consumed my weight in cornbread, biscuits, and barbecue, went on four haunted walking tours, saw baby alligators and a bear (95% certain), climbed to the top of a lighthouse, and visited the Mercer-Williams House, made famous by Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. But now I’m home with my boys, and grateful to settle back in to regular life.

So, let’s talk books.

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

Joanna Gaines announces her first solo memoir: The Stories We Tell. (Prep your holds lists now.)

Kirkus has 150 anticipated titles for Fall 2022.

The best horror novels of 2022 so far.

Summer’s best debut crime novels.

Weekly book picks from Bustle, Crime Reads, The Millions, New York Times, and USA Today.

August picks from Tor.com (YA SFF) and Washington Post.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

As It Turns Out: Thinking About Edie and Andy – Alice Sedgwick (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

This Story Will Change: After the Happily Ever After – Elizabeth Crane (New York Times, Shondaland)

Haven – Emma Donoghue (Guardian, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

Washington Post predicts that as TV shows based on video games increase in popularity, novelizations based on video games will fade away.

On the Riot

What the heck is going on at Barnes & Noble?

New releases by women in translation.

The best weekly new releases to TBR.

How many times do you hear about a book before you read or buy it?

What are your thoughts re: age gaps in fantasy?

All Things Comics

The best comics to read if you love The Sandman.

On the Riot

20 genre-blending graphic novels.

Standalone graphic novels.

12 of the best shojo manga.

Audiophilia

On the Riot

New and upcoming celebrity audiobooks narrated by the author.

Black holes for your ear holes: 10 sci-fi series by women on audio.

10 of Libro.fm’s most preordered audiobooks for Fall 2022.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Books to help you talk to your children about puberty, regardless of their age.

27 YA love stories with two or more BIPOC leads.

Adults

Books for Financial Awareness Day.

15 charming foodie romances.

50 books to read with your book club.

Long-running mystery series set in the world of antiques and collectibles.

5 brilliant examples of Australian speculative fiction.

9 novels that don’t fear the reaper.

7 books about multiracial experiences by biracial Asian writers.

On the Riot

10 books you read as a kid that are worth rereading as an adult.

13 Australian children’s books.

12 books for the transition to middle school.

10 YA workplace romances that will have you swooning.

8 YA books about pirates.

Escape reality with 20+ books you won’t be able to put down.

11 books with sad endings to emotionally destroy you.

15 of the best celebrity romance books.

8 essential books about the female body that dispel misconceptions.

Thrillers about cults.

9 books like The Bear.

10 magical spell books for witches old and new.

Amazing queer nonfiction you’ve never heard of.

9 thrillers that will take you to the beach.

10 of the best philosophy books of the last 10 years.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black and white cat rolling on the floor with two fish taco cat toys

Today’s cat photo is courtesy of my mother, who stopped in to visit the cats while Blaine and I were gone. And like all cat grandmas, my mom loves to spoil our babies with new toys — in this case, she gifted them with two catnip-stuffed fish tacos, which very quickly got the official Dini stamp of approval.


Okay cats and kittens — that’s all I’ve got for this issue. I’ll check in again on Friday — hopefully my to-do list at work won’t have swallowed me whole by that point.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Our Profession is Under Attack

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Y’all, I am very much enjoying the tail end of this vacation, but I’m also dreading the state of my to-do list when I get back. Also, this is the second time I’m typing out this newsletter, since my computer decided it wanted to be tricksy and false, so let’s jump in and get to the end in one piece.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

“I’ll do what I can for damage control:” Abortion information misinformation within Oklahoma City’s Metro Library.

How to help libraries affected by the Kentucky and Missouri floodings.

Our profession is under attack. What happens now?

Worth Reading

An interview with Hal Patnott, Rainbow Services Librarian at the Oak Park Public Library (IL).

Book Adaptations in the News

Kenya Barris is writing and directing a “reimagining” of The Wizard of Oz.

Jenna Bush’s production company is adapting The Many Daughters of Afong Moy by Jamie Ford for TV.

Constance Wu’s production company has snagged adaptation rights to concert violinist and debut author Ling Ling Huang’s upcoming novel, Natural Beauty.

Stephen King’s novel The Regulators will be adapted for film.

Viola Davis joins The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes cast.

The cast list for Lessons in Chemistry is officially set.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Banned & Challenged Books

How to find and develop a local anti-censorship group.

A Florida school district puts warnings on 100 books, including Everywhere Babies.

Books & Authors in the News

Salman Rushdie has been taken off a ventilator and is slowly recovering following last week’s horrific attack.

The Horse Whisperer author Nicholas Evans has died at 72.

George R.R. Martin would like you to stop speculating about his death, please.

Numbers & Trends

Are literary festivals doomed?

Award News

The 2022 Splatterpunk Award winners have been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Aardvark Book Club is a new subscription service, complete with its own social media app so readers can connect with each other and discuss that month’s book.

In other book subscription news, The Bookish Box is threatening legal action against a BookTok creator for his critical review videos about the company.

On the Riot

Nonfiction BookTube accounts to follow.

Why this Rioter reads out loud to their dog.

black and white cat sitting on top of a scratching post tortie cat sleeping in a cat bed with its front paw outstretched

Okay, for this week’s cat photo, I have a couple photos from the cat cafe that Blaine and I visited last weekend. (It’s Pounce Cat Cafe and Wine Bar in Charleston if you’re interested! They also have a location in Savannah.) Anyway, we spent an hour with some adorable kitties and walked away with a couple t-shirts and a wine glass, and it was very enjoyable. We didn’t adopt any of them, because that would have been REALLY difficult to explain to the hotel staff, but we were very tempted. Cat cafes are a fantastic way to spend some time on a lazy weekend.

Okay, that’s it for me. The next time you hear from me, I’ll be back in Illinois and adjusting to the post-vacation life. But we’ll also be back with our own kitties, and we’re very much looking forward to some snuggles with our boys! Take care of yourselves, friends.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Speaking of Spoilers

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m starting to reel slightly from how much stuff we’ve packed into our vacation and how much more we won’t get to see. I could easily spend a week in each city, but I think my body might rebel, based on the amount of food I’ve ingested over the last week and a half. (Biscuits! Cornbread! Pulled pork! Fried chicken!) And SO much walking. I do okay during the day, but when I get back to the hotel/Airbnb, my feet start screaming at me. Probably a sign I should try to be more active during my day to day life.

Anyway, the book world keeps rolling on. Let’s see what’s what.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Coverage update of the DoJ / PRH trial.

Ayesha Curry has signed a publishing deal with Zando.

What’s the future for mass market paperbacks?

New & Upcoming Titles

So I’m sure you’ve all ordered copies of Jennette McCurdy’s memoir, I’m Glad My Mom Died, but did you know it sold out on Amazon one day after its release?

Elizabeth Hand has been selected to write a novel based on Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House, and HOLY CRAP I can’t wait for this!

Ann Napolitano, author of Dear Edward, previews her upcoming book, Hello Beautiful.

Elizabeth Taylor gets her first-ever authorized biography — here’s the cover reveal.

Melville House will publish a new book by Michael Cohen in October.

Here’s the cover reveal for Emily Henry’s next novel, Happy Place.

And here’s the cover reveal for Han Kang’s upcoming novel Greek Lessons.

The viral Little Miss franchise is focusing on mental health with 10 new titles.

30 must-read YA books for the rest of 2022.

8 best comedy books of 2022.

Weekly picks from Bustle, Crime Reads, The Millions, New York Times, and USA Today.

August picks from Crime Reads (psychological thrillers), Tor.com (fantasy, horror/genre-benders)

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

I’m Glad My Mom Died – Jennette McCurdy (Entertainment Weekly, People, PopSugar, Shondaland, Time, Vanity Fair, Variety)

Heat 2 – Michael Mann & Meg Gardiner (Entertainment Weekly, L.A. Times, Vulture, Washington Post, USA Today)

The Women Could Fly – Megan Giddings (L.A. Times, New York Times)

Raising Lazarus: Hope, Justice, and the Future of America’s Overdose Crisis – Beth Macy (Datebook, New York Times)

Path Lit By Lightning: The Life of Jim Thorpe – David Maraniss (New York Times, Washington Post)

On the Riot

PRH WTF: the weirdest quotes from the PRH trial.

New middle grade and YA SFF.

New weekly releases to TBR.

Reading pathways for Jane Ann Krentz.

Standalone fantasy books for newbies to the genre.

10 types of crime plots.

The worst tropes in mysteries and thrillers.

Do spoilers REALLY ruin stories?

Speaking of spoilers…the 20 best and worst Stephen King endings.

All Things Comics

On the Riot

So what the heck is going on with DC and Warner Bros?

The 12 best Thor comics.

Audiophilia

12 kids audiobooks perfect for the whole family.

On the Riot

10 audiobooks for Women in Translation Month.

8 fantastic classics audiobooks.

The sexiest romance and erotica audiobooks.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

Top 10 books about women written out of history.

Lighthearted cozy mysteries set in cities.

8 books about fraught mother-daughter relationships.

Good books for bad moods.

Thrillers set at weddings.

9 of the best books about Kate Middleton.

The 24 best books written by U.S. Presidents.

12 books to help you love reading again.

13 books to help you reconnect with nature.

Great books for and about travel.

On the Riot

30 of the most influential children’s books of all time.

10 of the best picture books to read on the first day of school.

YA authors with deep backlists.

YA celebrity romances.

10 of the best outdoor thrillers.

10 books set in Paris.

Nonfiction books about the therapy experience.

10 more books for Women in Translation Month.

8 novels where pets play a significant role.

8 notable nonbinary SFF books.

10 of the best books set in Hawai’i.

The best mindful eating books for beginners.

8 great teacher books to ease educators back to school.

8 books about existential dread by Asian authors.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black and white cat laying upside down on a dining room chair

A cat photo from right before we left for vacation. I think Dini’s at his cutest when he’s upside down…and he is frequently upside down.

As a side note, our cat sitter has been sending us updates while we’ve been gone, and I think the cats are actually going to be mad when we come back because they’ve REALLY been turning on the cute for her while she’s over. She told us about how both of the cats sat with her in the office, and we were like, “Wait…BOTH of them? In the OFFICE?” They rarely simultaneously snuggle someone, especially a stranger, and Gilbert only does snuggle time with us on the couch or in the bedroom — never in the office. I can’t figure it out, but something tells me they’re going to be miffed when our cat sitter stops feeding them in a week.

Well that’s all I’ve got for today. Catch you on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Too Many Goodbyes This Week

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Our time in Asheville is coming to an end, but by the time you read this, we’ll be settled in Charleston for a few days. Asheville has been quirky and delightful, and the scenery has been gorgeous. Plus, I’m 95% sure I saw a bear in the Smoky Mountains, which has been a lifelong dream of mine. I’m not 100% certain of what I saw, as I was in a moving train and the possible bear was at a bit of a distance, but it was black, bear-shaped, and moving, and my brain definitely responded on a subconscious level, because I instantly gasped and told my husband, “I THINK I JUST SAW A BEAR” before I could fully process what I saw. So, I’m still going to be on the lookout for a 100% certain bear sighting, but I’m pretty sure of what I saw.

This is still a library newsletter, right? Not a bear newsletter?

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

ALA supports full information access on reproductive health.

Cool Library Updates

The Driftwood Public Library in Lincoln City, Oregon is launching a donation drive to create a “gender-affirming closet,” which will offer clothes, makeup, and accessories to transgender high school students.

Worth Reading

Growing services: libraries creating access for incarcerated people.

A look at the history and evolution of Libraries of Things.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Book Adaptations in the News

Hulu will adapt Zakiya Dalila Harris’ best-seller, The Other Black Girl, into a TV series.

The adaptation of Grady Hendrix’s My Best Friend’s Exorcism will be available to stream on Amazon Prime beginning September 30th.

Keanu Reeves is set to star as Daniel Burnham in the upcoming adaptation of Devil in the White City.

Banned & Challenged Books

A template for talking with school and library boards about book bans. (Click the link to see more individual news links about book banning and censorship news.)

What does the law say about materials challenges in the library? ​​

A Michigan town voted to defund the public library over LGBTQ books. The library will pursue another millage, but a GoFundMe created by a local resident has already raised over $50,000 in donations.

South Carolina Senator Josh Kimbrell is demanding the removal of multiple books from public libraries, as well as threatening library jobs and funding if the books are not removed.

Books & Authors in the News

David McCullough, esteemed American historian and best-selling author, has died at 89.

British author and illustrator Raymond Briggs has died at 88.

A look at Colleen Hoover’s recent domination over the best-seller lists (and it’s not just because of TikTok).

These are the big book club picks for August.

Pop Cultured

Actress and Star Trek legend Nichelle Nichols has died at 89.

And beloved actress Olivia Newton-John has died at 73.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

The Bennet house from the 1995 adaptation of Pride and Prejudice is on the market for £6,000,000.

On the Riot

How does working in a library help a writing career?

90’s YA books that should be adapted.

How to fake having read a book club book.

Why publishers REALLY need to start numbering their series.

brown and white cat curled into a ball

Another sad kitty photo/update for this newsletter. My parents had to put their cat, Louie, to sleep earlier this week. My grandpa took in Louie, his sister, and his mother as strays over a decade ago, and when my grandpa passed away, my parents took in Louie and Co. At first, Louie used to hide every time he saw me, but then he warmed up and became the epitome of a gentle giant; he weighed over 16 pounds and had a melon-sized head, but he had the tiniest meow and he loved back scritches and tummy rubs. He was SUCH a sweet boy, and I’m very sad that he’s the third cat my parents have lost in the last two years.

Give all your pets hugs this weekend, and I’ll check in again on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

More Dragons in Literary Fiction

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, with this issue brought to you from Asheville, North Carolina! We’ve been here less than 24 hours, and I’m already sunburned from sitting outside waiting to be called into the restaurant for brunch. (That being said, I had biscuit French toast and it was totally #WorthIt.)

Okay, let’s talk about books.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

A federal judge has backed the dismissal of the Amazon/Big 5 price-fixing lawsuit.

There’s been a ton of updates on the PRH/S&S trial, but here’s a recap of Day 2, when Stephen King took the stand.

Will the biggest publisher in the United States get even bigger?

Penguin Random House released an updated diversity report on the makeup of their staff and contributors.

New & Upcoming Titles

Britney Spears’ memoir is complete, but supply chain shortages are causing issues.

Pardis Mahdavi’s debut memoir, This Goes Out to the Underground, has been canceled for publication.

Thomas Nelson, a HarperCollins Christian Publishing imprint, has taken responsibility for an error in U.S. Senator Tim Scott’s forthcoming political memoir, which claims that the senator is making a 2024 presidential bid.

BTS is getting into the cookbook business.

Here’s the cover reveal for Nic Stone’s upcoming YA novel, Chaos Theory.

The best books of 2022 so far.

Weekly book picks from Bustle, Crime Reads, LitHub, The Millions, New York Times, and USA Today.

August picks from Barnes & Noble, Brightly (kids/teens), CBC, Crime Reads, Gizmodo (SFF/horror), LitHub (SFF), Town & Country.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Mercury Pictures Presents – Anthony Marra (LA Times, New York Times)

I’m Glad My Mom Died – Jennette McCurdy (Entertainment Weekly, New York Times)

Acceptance: A Memoir – Emi Nietfield (New York Times, NPR)

Properties of Thirst – Marianne Wiggins (LitHub, USA Today)

The Last White Man – Mohsin Hamid (Washington Post)

The Devil Takes You Home – Gabino Iglesias (New York Times)

Delphi – Clare Pollard (New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

The Atlantic looks at the subversive power of romance novels.

How to read all of Kristin Hannah’s books in order.

On the Riot

New and forthcoming YA anthologies to TBR.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

August picks for mysteries/thrillers/true crime, romance, SFF, and kids books.

An introduction to Irish crime fiction that isn’t just Tana French. (But seriously, go read Tana French. Or reread. Or whatever. Just do it.)

Why do we love portal fantasies?

The rise of the speculative novella.

The weird optimism of novels about doomsday cults.

5 fun and unusual backlists to dive into.

What road trips represent in American literature.

Literary fiction needs more dragons.

All Things Comics

Warner Brothers’ $90 million Batgirl movie has been canceled.

The Flash will end with an abbreviated 9th season on the CW.

Oscar Isaac implies on TikTok that Moon Knight will be returning for a second season.

Drag Race superstar Shea Couleé has reportedly been cast in the Ironheart series.

Frank Miller’s new comics imprint will make a surprise debut in comic shops on August 17th.

On the Riot

How graphic novels are made.

12 essential YA historical comics and graphic novels.

9 graphic novels and memoirs that meet this moment.

Using nonfiction comics for learning.

Audiophilia

Lucy Liu will be narrating the audio version of Celeste Ng’s upcoming novel, Our Missing Hearts.

Here are the August 2022 Earphone Award winners.

6 audiobooks to listen to now.

18 popular science audiobooks.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

9 children’s picture books that spark conversations about homelessness.

Adults

8 queer fantasy books.

8 zombie stories without the zombies.

Top 10 books about cybercrime.

Books with the best uses of first person plural.

50 books about (and inspired by) Greek mythology.

10 long books that fly by.

The best books about unforgettable friendships.

On the Riot

10 magical witch books for middle grader readers.

11 books every edgy millennial read as a teen.

8 delightful return to hometown romances.

What to read if you loved It Ends With Us.

8 modern retellings of Jewish stories and folk tales.

8 of the best books about ethics to expand your mind. (Chidi would approve.)

8 touching novels about ailing parents.

11 books about time travel.

Reading recommendations if you loved Beyoncé’s Renaissance.

9 must-read books translated from Indian regional languages.

8 must-read fantasy duologies.

20 of the best book series of all time.

25 of the best Kindle Unlimited romances of 2022.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

a black and white cat sitting above a black cat, tapping the black cat on the head with its paw

This is a photo from before we left, obviously, but if you ever wanted proof that Dini is just the annoying little brother that Gilbert never asked for, well, here it is. Dini started doing this a couple minutes before I got to my phone, but then thoughtfully started bopping Gilbert on the head again so that I could snap a series of photos. Poor Gilbert never jumped down from the couch; he just accepted his fate with grim resignation.

Okie dokie, that’s all I’ve got for today, folks. I’ll check in again on Friday. Be nice to yourselves and others.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Book Banners Don’t Understand Book Bans

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. For the next couple of weeks, CYS will be brought to you as Blaine and I vacation through Asheville, Charleston, and Savannah. What does this mean for you? Well, fewer cat photos, for one, but also, slightly shorter newsletters. Specifically, I’m going to take a breather on compiling book ban news each week, mainly because that’s by the far the most time-consuming (and emotionally draining) section to put together, and I just need a bit of a break. I’ll make sure to link to Kelly Jensen’s weekly news roundup so you won’t all be left completely in the dark, but I think a break will be healthy. I’ll fill the space with photos of all the barbecue and biscuits and gravy that I’ll be eating.

Don’t forget to apply by August 8th to work at Book Riot as an Editorial Operations Associate!


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The White House and ALA are holding a COVID pediatric vaccination public education event at the Prince George’s County Memorial Library System in Maryland.

Cool Library Updates

The popular Chicago Tool Library is expanding.

This librarian is collecting all the things she’s found left behind in library books.

Worth Reading

Libraries must stop pretending they can be neutral about human rights.

The restorative library.

Genrefying the high school library.

Book Adaptations in the News

Leonardo DiCaprio and Martin Scorsese are working to adapt David Grann’s nonfiction book, The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny, and Murder.

Jenna Bush Hager is developing a series adaptation of Kirk Wallace Johnson’s nonfiction book The Feather Thief.

Amazon has greenlit a series based on the YA novel My Lady Jane.

The new Percy Jackson series will likely air in early 2024.

On the Come Up gets a release date.

Peacock is reviving the Vampire Academy storyline with a series set to air in September.

Disney+ is developing a live-action series adaptation of Eragon.

Netflix cancels First Kill, based on the short story by V.E. Schwab, after only one season.

All of the trailers released at this year’s Comic-Con.

New trailer for The Sandman.

Trailer for the upcoming film, Blonde.

Everything to know about the upcoming film adaptation of Red, White, and Royal Blue.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Banned & Challenged Books

Book banners don’t seem to know what a book ban is.

The School Board Project, round 2.

Louisiana School Librarian of the Year Amanda Jones is seeking legal action after being subjected to a coordinated slander campaign.

Pride Month displays at the St. Tammany Parish Libraries (LA) drew a large crowd of supporters at a recent board meeting.

A Livingston (LA) library board member’s “inappropriate” book list draws vocal opposition from community members opposed to book bans.

An angry Sarasota County (FL) resident has filed a civil lawsuit against the county school district in an effort to to remove a specific list of books. The lawsuit also includes multiple criminal allegations against the superintendent and other school board members.

Polk County (FL) Public Schools announce an opt-in policy for controversial books, meaning that the default for this policy to restrict access across the board.

New York prisons lift a ban on Heather Ann Thompson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book about the Attica Uprising.

The Hanover (VA) chapter of the NAACP is asking the county board of supervisors to reconsider the appointment of specific school board members, as well as for the supervisors and school board to undergo DEI training.

Catawba County (NC) community members continue to debate the appropriateness of several books in the school libraries, while the Board discussed changes to its challenge policy, as well as its new book flagging system, which will limit the books that students can check out.

Antioch (IL) village officials reject calls to ban sales of Gender Queer from a downtown bookstore, saying “It’s important to carry titles that widen our worldview.” Bookstore. Not a school, not a library.

Parents in Madison County (MS) are pushing for answers about 22 books that have been pulled from the school system, as well as a way for parents to weigh in and evaluate the books available in school libraries.

Gulfport (MS) pastor clarifies his thoughts on LGBTQ books in Harrison County public libraries, saying that he doesn’t want to ban books — he just doesn’t want these books promoted or made available to children. (Guess what? That’s still a ban.)

A Tennessee parent group is suing local and state education leaders over curriculum that allegedly discusses race and gender.

Oklahoma State Superintendent of Public Instruction Joy Hofmeister demands the removal of “pornographic” materials from a Tulsa Public School library. (Gender Queer appears to be the primary targeted title.)

Laramie County (WY) school district continues to face opposition from parents who want the district to use an “opt in” system for specific books. Again, they want the district to default to restricting access for students.

The Utah State Board of Education’s new policy opens the door to additional book bans.

Related: 52 books by 41 authors will be removed from the Alpine School District in Utah, which PEN America calls a worrisome escalation of censorship.

Librarians prepare for continued efforts to ban books. The article focuses on Idaho librarians, but the same could be said for virtually every librarian right now.

In the wake of the ImagineIF Library (MT) board shakeup, book removal advocates appear emboldened.

The Curry County (OR) Board of Commissioners voted to write a letter to the county’s five public libraries, asking that certain books be placed in restricted areas away from unsupervised children.

The San Lorenzo Library (CA) has started a year-long programming series called “Every Month is Pride Month.” This is in direct response to the Proud Boys storming a Drag Queen Story Hour event in June.

A Drag Queen Story Time event was disrupted by protestors in Bristol.

The right in the US has a new boogeyman: libraries.

Books & Authors in the News

Prolific thriller author Stuart Woods has died at 84.

George R.R. Martin tested positive for COVID after Comic-Con and missed the premiere of House of the Dragon.

A new mini-podcast. Book Exploder, is being released on August 3rd, which will feature Susan Orlean in conversation with authors Celeste Ng, George Saunders, Carmen Maria Machado, and more.

Numbers & Trends

How the crypto revolution may influence the book ecosystem.

How Americans’ reading habits have changed from childhood.

Are eBooks on the decline again?

A new survey indicates that Americans are already cutting entertainment spending amidst economy concerns.

Award News

The Center For Fiction announces the longlist for its 2022 First Novel Prize.

The Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction shortlist is out.

The 2022 British Fantasy Awards shortlist has been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A man has been sentenced to 16 years in prison for an Amazon scam that netted him $3 million.

9 authors talk about book arranging methods.

On the Riot

Growing as a school librarian in a post-school shutdown world.

Should we still study Shakespeare?


black cat laying underneath a gray shirt that looks like it's wearing a Star Wars sith hood

May I present…Sith Lord Darth Gilbertine.

Welp, that’s it for me folks. By the time you read this, I will have reached the end of my first week as interim director. It’s been…a lot. Successful so far, but a lot. Despite the bad timing with work, I’m very much looking forward to this vacation. Catch you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.