Categories
Check Your Shelf

Book Bans Up 33% in Public Schools

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am sad to say that we did not encounter any spirits at the Stanley Hotel, so I am on to my next vacation/life quest, which is to see a wild bear. I am literally planning early morning drives around Breckenridge in search of one, and I am NOT an early riser! And before anyone panics, I’m not one of those people to jump out of the car and run toward wildlife. I just want to see the damn thing!

Don’t forget…today is the last chance for new free Deep Dive subscribers to enter to win a copy of Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler, plus five mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription — no payment method required!

Libraries & Librarians

Cool Library Updates

The New York Times profiled the library boat that brings books to isolated villages along the coast of Norway.

Book Adaptations in the News

Lily Gladstone will campaign for Lead Actress for Killers of the Flower Moon, which could make her the first-ever Native American nominee.

Millie Bobby Brown is planning an adaptation of her new novel, Nineteen Steps.

Here is the latest Percy Jackson trailer.

Censorship News

Book Riot and the EveryLibrary Institute have released the results from their survey of parental perceptions of public libraries and book banning.

The overwhelming cost of book banning.

Student groups against book bans.

Everything you need to know about the right-wing war on books.

Simon & Schuster announced a new program to combat book bans.

How the government is removing our right to read in private.

A new PEN America report says that book bans in public schools are up 33% from last year.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has issued a temporary hold on Judge Albright’s ruling that blocked Texas’ controversial book rating law.

Disney CEO Bob Iger has said that the company will “quiet the noise” in the ongoing “culture wars,” which are happening primarily in Florida against Ron DeSantis.

Paywalled: Teachers and students call on Pennsylvania lawmakers to enact a ban on book bans.

Virginia book challenges take a toll on authors and librarians.

Nancy Pack, Director of the Alabama Public Library Service, explains why severing ties with ALA would have negative repercussions for the state.

Ozark Library (AL) increases parental supervision (and unnecessarily increases work for library staff) but doesn’t remove any books.

A Republican candidate for Missouri governor has vowed to burn books after his flamethrower video went viral.

Four members of the library board in Iron River (WI) have been removed amidst a push to remove LGBTQ+ books. However, Town Board Chair David Ciembronowicz says that the decision to remove the board members had nothing to do with the book controversy and everything to do with the fact that the library board had eight members (state law only allows up to seven members), and only two members can be residents from another community. All four of the ousted members were from other communities. How on earth does this even happen??

Illinois State Library was evacuated last week after another bomb threat.

Yorkville Board of Education (IL) voted to remove Just Mercy from the high school English 2 curriculum, saying that it was “too controversial.”

Kootenai County (ID) Sheriff Bob Norris has gotten far too involved in the book banning push and has determined that several books are considered inappropriate by his standards. Please note that Sheriff Norris is, in fact, a member of law enforcement and not a trained librarian with an appropriate master’s degree.

Gavin Newsome has signed a bill blocking California school boards from banning inclusive books.

A Columbia County (WA) court barred an initiative to close the Dayton Library from appearing on the November ballot. “The initiative…was unconstitutional, procedurally invalid and the signature gathering was marred by ‘potential criminal acts.’”

Books & Authors in the News

Hollywood studios and the WGA have reached a deal that has officially ended the writers’ strike. Here’s an explanation of the new contract.

These 183,000 books are fueling the biggest fight in publishing and tech.

A previously unknown Truman Capote story has been published for the first time.

Numbers & Trends

Booksellers stock up on genre fiction.

The best-selling books of the week.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Award News

The 2023 Booker Prize shortlist has been announced.

On the Riot

In praise of Bookstagram scholarship.

The absolute worst advice this Rioter found in dating books.


a mountain lake with yellow fall leaves in the foreground

No cat picture this week, but I do want to share one of the most glorious views we’ve experienced on this trip so far. This is at Bear Lake in Rocky Mountain National Park, where the aspens have turned the most beautiful shade of gold I’ve ever seen (#nofilter). Starting now, I’m pledging to make yearly mountain vacations a part of my self-care routine.

All right, friends. This is your reminder (and my reminder!) to stay hydrated this weekend! (High altitude exercise + allergies means I need to be drinking ALL THE WATER to keep functioning.) I’ll see you on Tuesday, at which point I will be back home and very grumbly about it.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Is the Bestseller List Broken?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am publishing this newsletter from Room 401 at the Stanley Hotel, aka one of the hotel’s most haunted rooms! We’ve only been here for about seven hours, and so far, nothing spooky has happened, but maybe that will change by the time the next newsletter comes out…

Don’t forget — there’s still time in September for new free Deep Dive subscribers to enter to win a copy of Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler, plus five mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription — no payment method required!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

After 70 years, Rupert Murdoch is stepping down as the chair of News Corp and Fox.

Another in-depth look at what KKR’s acquisition of Simon & Schuster really means.

John Grisham, Jonathan Franzen, and Elin Hilderbrand are among the authors who have joined in a class action lawsuit against OpenAI.

Amazon is restricting authors from self-publishing more than three books per day in an effort to further curb AI-written submissions.

Why Silicon Valley’s biggest AI developers are hiring poets.

How TikTok is helping booksellers bring in business, and how it’s reshaping the American cookbook. (These two items are not related.)

Confessions of a viral AI writer.

New & Upcoming Titles

WNBA star A’ja Wilson is publishing a self-help book in 2024.

Historian Doris Kearns Goodwin is publishing a new book: An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s. The book will be out on April 16, 2024.

David Levithan talks about his new queer YA romance, Ryan and Avery, which revisits the characters from Two Boys Kissing.

Here’s a preview of Rebecca Roanhorse’s upcoming Mirrored Heavens, the final book in the Between Earth and Sky trilogy

Cover reveal for Steven Rowley’s The Guncle Abroad (out May 2024).

Cover reveal for R.O. Kwon’s Exhibit (out May 2024).

Cover reveal for Leigh Bardugo’s The Familiar (out April 2024).

54 new books to discover for Hispanic Heritage Month.

Queer crime fiction coming out this fall.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, New York Times.

September picks from NYPL.

October picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, teens, kids), The Root.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Wellness – Nathan Hill (LA Times, New York Times, NPR, Washington Post)

Leslie F*cking Jones – Leslie Jones (Entertainment Weekly, People, Shondaland, USA Today)

The Fall: The End of Fox News and the Murdoch Dynasty – Michael Wolff (New York Times, Vanity Fair, Variety)

The Vaster Wilds – Lauren Groff (The Guardian, NPR)

Bright Young Women – Jessica Knoll (New York Times, Washington Post)

North Woods – Daniel Mason (New York Times, NPR)

Father and Son: A Memoir – Jonathan Raban (LA Times, New York Times)

Bartleby and Me: Reflections of an Old Scrivener – Gay Talese (New York Times, Washington Post)

Land of Milk and Honey – C Pam Zhang (Datebook, New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

Why mystery icon Kate Atkinson went apocalyptic.

On the Riot

Is the bestseller list broken?

The best new biographies of 2023.

Analyzing the most anticipated fall releases of 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

8 2023 releases by trans women and transfeminine authors.

Reading pathways for Kekla Magoon.

All Things Comics

Why it matters that Marvel comics are becoming Penguin Classics.

After fighting with DC Comics, Bill Willingham has said that he will make Fables part of the public domain.

Alan Moore says that he’s asked DC to send all future adaptation royalties to Black Lives Matter.

On the Riot

Historical graphic memoirs to educate and enlighten.

A brief history of gender in manga.

New mystery manga.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Audiophilia

Project Gutenberg has added 5,000 new online audiobooks that were recorded using AI narration.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Uplifting children’s books about Black hair.

8 YA books that adults can enjoy, too.

25 queer YA horror books to sink your teeth into.

13 frightfully good YA horror novels.

22 Latine YA romance novels to fall in love with.

Adults

10 dystopian novels in translation.

5 books to read if you’re thinking about changing careers.

7 novels about abortion and the fight for reproductive justice.

10 books that can act as replacement therapy while your favorite TV shows are on strike.

13 books about gay mayhem and “bad queers” to read after watching Bottoms.

8 works of translated fiction to read right now.

10 books with surprising twists.

The best aunties in mystery fiction.

8 authors who have written themselves into stories.

6 books featuring ghosts with unfinished business.

A reading list of historical trauma in fiction.

The best cozy food memoirs.

The 101 best mystery books of all time.

On the Riot

8 horror novels that question our obsession with beauty.

10 of the best asexual and aromantic fantasy books.

14 novels that read like true crime.

9 nonfiction books to help you rethink the world.

10 Halloween romance novels to read this spooky season.

12 college romance novels you can’t stop reading.

Thrillers about cursed movie sets.

On the menu: cannibalistic horror.

10 books from 2013 that aged badly, and 10 that are still worth reading.

10 lighthearted classic books.

8 of the best poetry anthologies.

20 must-read stories of creepy cabins and haunted homes.

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 that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

Katie points excitedly at the sign outside Room 217 at the Stanley Hotel Katie points excitedly at the plaque outside the Stephen King Suite at the Stanley Hotel

Seven years have passed since the last time I was here, and seeing Stephen King’s room is just as cool as it was in 2016!

All right, friends. I’ll be back on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Book Challenges Rise 20%

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m writing this newsletter on the eve of our second vacation to Colorado this year, and the weather forecast looks absolutely divine! I’m talking abundant sunshine, temperatures in the 60s and 70s, and, hopefully, lots of fall colors! As usual, when I’m on vacation, I’ll be taking a break from the super-intensive book banning news, but I will still link to Kelly Jensen’s weekly roundups so that everyone can stay informed.

Don’t forget, during the month of September, all new free subscribers to The Deep Dive will be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler plus five mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive!

Libraries & Librarians

Cool Library Updates

Spartanburg County Public Libraries (SC) have started a “Bags of Hope” initiative to connect people to food and other essential items.

A digital librarian goes viral for documenting (and testing!) recipes etched on gravestones.

Worth Reading

How to curate a democratic school library.

Tips for being a guest reader in your child’s classroom.

Book Adaptations in the News

Why Martin Scorsese rewrote his initial script for Killers of the Flower Moon.

A comparison of the TV and book versions of The Other Black Girl. (Spoilers!)

Trailers for Fall of the House of Usher, Lessons in Chemistry, The Balland of Songbirds and Snakes, and Dark Harvest.

38 literary movies and TV shows to watch this year.

Censorship News

ALA announces that book challenges have risen 20% compared to last year and are on pace to set a record high for the third straight year in a row.

Book fairs will see an increase in censorship attempts this year.

Library workers and advocates are turning to new policies, lawsuits, and legislation to stem the tide of book bans.

LeVar Burton leads dozens of celebrities in an open letter against book bans.

An editorial cartoon criticizing Moms for Liberty has been manipulated by the group for political and social gain.

The Washington Post talks about the wave of red states that are cutting ties with ALA.

Librarians didn’t sign up to be queer activists, but this year, they are.

What the Jewish author behind one of America’s most banned books has to say about censorship today.

The audiobook no one asked for: Senator John Kennedy reading from All Boys Aren’t Blue during Congress’ recent hearing on book bans and censorship will haunt you forever.

In a blistering opinion, federal judge Alan D. Albright officially blocks HB 900, Texas’ book rating law.

Middle schoolers at Dripping Springs ISD (TX) will need their parents to opt-in for them to access any YA materials, which includes classics such as Fahrenheit 451, Oliver Twist, and Watership Down.

Harris County (TX) libraries are now official book sanctuaries amidst the statewide push to ban books.

A Texas teacher has been fired for assigning the graphic novel adaptation of Anne Frank’s diary to their 8th-grade class.

Citrus County (FL) has cut the library’s ALA annual membership fee and has refused to let residents donate the cost of the fee.

The Carroll County (MD) school board is stepping in to review a list of over 50 books that Moms for Liberty wants removed from school libraries.

The Alabama Public Library Service voted to post a list of books considered inappropriate for children on their website at Wednesday’s meeting.

All branches of the Chicago Public Library were closed last Thursday in response to yet another unfounded bomb threat. And librarians in northeastern Illinois say that these bomb threats are representative of a deeper political and cultural divide. Meanwhile, Governor JB Pritzker says that authorities are working to combat the “abhorrent” threats against library employees.

Books & Authors in the News

Oprah selected Wellness by Nathan Hill as her 102nd book club pick.

Bluebird Publishing has said they will pause all future publishing with Russell Brand in light of the recent sexual assault allegations lodged against him.

Amanda Gorman has been named the 2023-2024 Indie Bookstore Ambassador.

Honoring Stephen King’s Christine on its 40th anniversary.

Numbers & Trends

The highest-rated books from every country.

Do Goodreads and Storygraph users rate books differently?

The best-selling books of the week.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Award News

The Pulitzer Prizes have officially expanded eligibility to authors, playwrights, and composers who are not U.S. citizens.

The 2023 National Book Awards longlists have been announced.

The Publishing Triangle has introduced the Jacqueline Woodson Award for LGBTQ+ Children’s/YA Literature, “which will honor outstanding works of literature geared toward children and young adults that explore themes related to LGBTQ+ experiences, identities, and issues.”

The Whippoorwill Award aims to elevate rural representation in middle grade and YA books.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Jenna Bush Hager is launching an author interview podcast under the name “Read With Jenna,” to tie in with her book club of the same name.

Author Katherine May talks about losing the ability to read during the pandemic.

Agatha Christie is getting a statue in Wallingford, where she lived for over 40 years.

On the Riot

10 awesome (and awful) librarians in literature.

12 of the most unexpected book-to-stage adaptations.

The bookish life of Daniel Dae Kim.

How to find first edition books.

Critical thinking and books.

10 of the best bookish coasters. (This link goes out in honor of my mother-in-law, whose insistence upon coasters has become part of Horner family lore!)

a black cat with its paw resting on a person's arm

Gilbert says, “I’m not sure what you were thinking of doing, but you’re staying right here.”

All right friends, I’ll check in again on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Powerful Aliens and Puny Humans

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I saw the Foo Fighters in concert last Friday, so naturally, my back and my knees are still in significant pain. But it was #WorthIt — Dave Grohl tore through two hours of greatest hits, and brought down the house at the end with “Everlong.” So if you need me, I’ll be rotating through all of their albums on repeat for the next few weeks.

Don’t forget — there’s still time in September for all new free Deep Dive subscribers to be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler, plus 5 mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive. No payment method required!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Book publishing has a Toys ‘R’ Us problem: or, what the private equity acquisition of Simon & Schuster could mean for publishing.

The Internet Archive has filed an appeal in the Hachette v. Internet Archive case.

Millie Bobby Brown’s debut novel reignites the debate over ghostwritten celebrity books.

How teens have been priced out of the YA market.

New & Upcoming Titles

Kazuo Ishiguro is publishing a collection of his song lyrics.

Deesha Philyaw, author of The Secret Lives of Church Ladies, has just signed a seven-figure deal for her next two books.

Michael Cunningham has a new book coming out for the first time in over a decade. Day will be released on November 14th.

Christine Blasey Ford, who testified during Brett Kavanaugh’s Senate confirmation hearing, is releasing a memoir.

Cedric the Entertainer pays tribute to his grandfather in his first fictional crime novel, Flipping Boxcars.

Bachelorette star Hannah Brown has signed a two-book deal for a pair of romance novels.

Here are all of the big September book club picks.

Cover reveal for Baby X by Kira Peikoff, a thriller for fans of Gattaca and Black Mirror.

Cover reveal for Emma Lord’s first adult rom-com, The Break-Up Pact.

And here’s the cover reveal for Olivia Dade’s At First Spite.

Here’s an excerpt from Omar Epps’ dystopian novel Nubia: The Reckoning.

Here’s an excerpt from Iron Flame, the sequel to Rebecca Yarros’ Fourth Wing.

And here’s an excerpt from Ross Gay’s upcoming The Book of (More) Delights.

8 new crime novels to keep you up at night.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, New York Times, Wall Street Journal.

September YA SFF releases.

Fall books from Chicago Tribune, EW.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Elon Musk – Walter Isaacson (AARP, Atlantic, CBS, Datebook, Guardian, LA Times, New York Times, People, USA Today, Vanity Fair, Vox. Washington Post)

Build the Life You Want: The Art and Science of Getting Happier – Arthur C. Brooks & Oprah Winfrey (AARP, Atlantic, People)

The Vaster Wilds – Lauren Groff (New York Times, Slate, Vox)

Exit Interview: The Life and Death of My Ambitious Career – Kristi Coulter (New York Times, Slate)

A House for Alice – Diana Evans (New York Times, Washington Post)

Glossy: Ambition, Beauty, and the Inside Story of Emily Weiss’s Glossier – Marisa Meltzer (LA Times, Vogue)

Nineteen Steps – Millie Bobby Brown (New York Times)

The Death of Public School: How Conservatives Won the War Over Education in America – Cara Fitzpatrick (New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

Stephen King reveals his approach to writing a mystery novel, and it’s way more Alfred Hitchcock than Agatha Christie.

Black final girls are (literally) killing it.

A reading list of reimagined fantasy tropes.

The dark humor of millennial crime capers.

It’s time to bring back the ’90s legal thriller.

The iconic suspense of Lois Duncan.

The influence of Golden Age detective fiction on YA mysteries.

On the Riot

13 book clubs’ September 2023 picks.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

8 unputdownable authors like Ali Hazelwood.

What is mythpunk?

Now here’s an interesting display idea: book recommendations for every toxic trait (sort of).

All Things Comics

The post-apocalyptic graphic novel Heart Attack by Shawn Kittelsen and Eric Zawadzki is being adapted as a TV series.

On the Riot

13 manga and graphic novels for fans of Hayao Miyazaki.

9 great graphic novels for preteens.

8 graphic novels about undocumented immigrants.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Audiophilia

Liev Schrieber will narrate the audio version of Marty Baron’s new book, Collision of Power: Trump, Bezos, and the Washington Post. Schrieber portrayed Baron in the 2015 film Spotlight.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

22 YA books that inspire main character energy.

Adults

The 20 best fantasy books to read for ultimate escapism.

20 books to read after finishing Fourth Wing.

10 books about climate change to read right now.

9 books with fabulist worlds that push boundaries.

5 of the best books to read to get smart about AI.

Cozy mysteries with furry sidekicks.

5 SF classics about powerful aliens and puny humans.

7 crime novels set in Las Vegas.

Celebrating Latin & Hispanic culture through food.

New and classic works by authors of Mexican descent.

Books about working while Black, if you liked The Other Black Girl.

4 great indie books about the Jewish experience.

5 international thrillers from Afghanistan to Shanghai.

Thrillers set in remote island locations.

11 essential hip-hop books.

10 awe-inspiring memoirs for book club.

12 modern classics of the thriller genre.

Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month with these award-winning authors.

On the Riot

15 delightful interactive books for toddlers.

8 picture books featuring multicultural and mixed-race families.

Spooky YA reads to set the proper fall vibe.

8 magical libraries in fiction.

8 inclusive romance novels to light your fire.

8 parody horror novels to scare you silly.

The room(s) where it happened: the best political memoirs.

20 of the most thought-provoking philosophical science fiction books of all time.

A room of one’s pwn: 10 fun books like World of Warcraft.

10 mysteries and thrillers based around games.

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 that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

a brown haired woman making faces behind two cats sitting next to each other

When my boys start snuggling like symmetrical loaves of bread, I have to jump in. They’re so damn cute!

All right friends, that’s it for me. I’ll check in again on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Stephen King and “MAMBO NO. 5”

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’ve been in desperate need of some heartwarming escapism, and Netflix has delivered with a new season of Glow Up! In the words of Val Garland, “Ding dong, darling!”

Don’t forget, during the month of September, all new free subscribers to The Deep Dive will be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler plus 5 mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive. No payment method required!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The entities that support 13 presidential libraries have issued a statement calling for “a recommitment to the country’s bedrock principles, including the rule of law and respecting a diversity of beliefs.”

EBSCO has unveiled a new tool to help libraries build Spanish collections.

Book Adaptations in the News

Murder, She Wrote is getting a film adaptation.

Here is the trailer for Origin, based on Isabel Wilkerson’s Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents.

Teaser trailer for the new Goosebumps series premiering on Disney+.

Censorship News

The US Senate held a recent committee hearing on book bans, and included Illinois’s new Secretary of State and State Librarian Alexi Giannoulias, who spoke about the unprecedented levels of violence and harassment that library employees are facing. Giannoulias also appeared on Good Morning America to talk about book bans.

Harper’s Bazaar has a list of every book currently banned in the US.

Maia Kobabe created a webcomic titled “I Made the Most Banned Book in America.”

Championing inclusivity in library collection policies.

Florida, Texas, and Oklahoma have all integrated PragerU’s right-wing misinformation into classroom lessons.

Ron DeSantis just appointed one of the founders of Moms for Liberty to Florida’s state ethics commission.

A Florida Jewish community center canceled a slavery-focused talk with Jewish author Rachel Beanland, citing “the current political climate.”

Flamer, Blankets, Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, and Gender Queer have been removed from Fulton County Schools (GA).

A Darien (CT) school board member took it upon himself to craft policies for curriculum and book challenges, which would have removed challenged books for up to six months, and then tried to submit them for legal review. The board chair was NOT happy.

This sums it up: “A PAC vilifying Central Bucks [PA] Dems is warning voters about sexually explicit images by mailing out explicit images.” In the article: “The illustrations are meant for ‘our oldest students,’ said Smith, a Democrat on the board seeking reelection. But the PAC ‘has done more to expose younger students to age-inappropriate material with this mailing than hundreds of library books could ever have done.’” IT HAS NEVER BEEN ABOUT PROTECTING CHILDREN.

“​​More than 46,000 books in the Elizabethtown Area School District’s [PA] four libraries are being reviewed and rated following an update to the district’s policy on library materials.” This is ri-goddamn-diculous.

A look at the state of book banning in New Jersey.

Hoboken, New Jersey, is declaring itself a book sanctuary city.

New Hanover County Schools (NC) have removed Stamped from the curriculum, although it will remain in the school library.

Davie County Public Library (NC) says that Flamer has gone missing after a patron complained to county officials about the book.

Berkeley County Schools (SC) denies the existence of a banned book list, although SOMEONE sent a list of 93 books that are listed for “objections center on graphic sexual content and profanity” as part of a FOIA request from the ACLU. So does this book list exist or not?

Alabama governor Kay Ivey lodged threats against the Foley Public Library in a letter to the Alabama Public Library Service director because the Foley Library refused to get rid of certain “inappropriate” books.

Meanwhile: “A week after Gov. Kay Ivey sent a letter to the state’s library agency raising concerns about whether certain books are appropriate for children, the executive director of the Alabama Public Library Service said decisions about content must be made at the local level…Pack said it’s important for libraries to strike a balance and allow children from all backgrounds to see their families and experiences represented in books too.”

“After expiring all youth library cards at the end of July, Washington Public Library [MO] Director Nelson Appell reported most parents have been ‘very understanding,’ but others are not happy.”

Parents in the Little Miami School District (OH) are in a tizzy because the Scholastic Book Fair had copies of Heartstoppers for purchase. But I thought everything was okay if books were still available to purchase, even if they were removed from schools and libraries! You mean to say these people want to remove ALL access to these books? Can we call it a book ban at that point?

“‘Books are not banned and remain available for purchase if excluded from the curriculum due to inappropriate content. Those who use the word ‘banning’ to describe exclusion from curriculum should be ashamed for perpetuating propagandistic lies.’” Sure, Jan. (IN)

More bomb threats in Chicago and the nearby suburbs, including Aurora, Schaumburg, Libertyville, Addison, and Evanston. One of my friends works at one of the targeted libraries.

An update on book-banning efforts in Wisconsin.

Carver County Library Board (MN) voted unanimously to retain Gender Queer.

Marshalltown School District (IA) presents 20 books to ban from school libraries, thanks to the new state legislation.

Two librarians were fired from the Sterling Free Public Library (KS) over images used for a display, specifically a rainbow infinity symbol that represents neurodiversity and autism awareness, but was mistaken for a Pride symbol. The librarians and two patrons are now suing the town of Sterling. “The lawsuit argues that Sterling library patrons ‘are entitled to a library that embraces a range of viewpoints, not just the viewpoints of those with an aversion to rainbow colors and a disdain for LGBTQ citizens.” Obviously, this is a ridiculous situation, but I’m cackling at the phrase “not just the viewpoints of those with an aversion to rainbow colors.” Call it like it is!

After firing the director of the Campbell County Public Library (WY) for refusing to remove books, the board is now trying to figure out how to handle book challenges.

A letter to the editor in Garfield County (CO) that uses the same tiresome “grooming” language, and also tries to draw a line connecting schools and libraries to child trafficking. Meanwhile, a small group of book crisis actors want to restrict the manga collections in the county libraries.

California is on the verge of passing new legislation that would prohibit school boards from censoring or banning books, curriculum, or instructional materials.

Oakland (CA) librarians say that they feel “more unsafe than ever,” according to an internal report.

Parents are pushing for new children’s department policies after the Coronado Library (CA) used The Rainbow Parade for a Pride-themed storytime.

The Clovis City Council (CA) unanimously voted to not take any action in response to a letter complaining about LGBTQ books in the library.

The California megachurch pushing public schools to the far right.

A new lawsuit aims to block a proposed ballot measure to dissolve the Columbia County Library in Dayton, Washington.

“While libraries tend to remove books if they are damaged or outdated, Peel [ON] district schools have reportedly removed all titles published before 2008.” I’m sorry…what??

Books & Authors in the News

I should have posted this last week, but beloved musician and author Jimmy Buffett died over Labor Day weekend at 76. Florida author Carl Hiassen also wrote about the life of his friend. I grew up listening to Jimmy Buffett’s greatest hits, and his CD always made it into the music rotation for our summer road trips.

Walter Isaacson has walked back a major claim from his new biography of Elon Musk.

Reese Witherspoon chooses Nina Simon’s Mother-Daughter Murder Night as her next book club pick.

Stephen King says he once played “Mambo No. 5” so much his wife threatened to divorce him. More headlines like this, please!

Revisiting Julia Cameron’s book, The Artist’s Way.

Numbers & Trends

A letter from Ernest Hemingway about a plane crash he survived just sold at auction for $237,055.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

Drew Barrymore has been dropped as the host for the National Book Awards after she announced her decision to bring her talk show back during the ongoing WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes.

The US National Book Foundation will be honoring Rita Dove as the 2023 Distinguished Contribution medal winner.

The 2023 Ned Kelly Awards for Australian crime fiction have been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Is BookTok sucking the joy out of reading?

Dictionary.com has added 566 new words this fall.

On the Riot

How to introduce Dungeons & Dragons in your library.

Authors who work as booksellers.

The best online book clubs, 2023 edition.

True crime: rare book theft edition.

The conflicting ideas that readers must be able to hold.

How to build a book collection.

A history of book curses.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

a multi-colored tabby cat laying on a marble counter

Another guest kitty photo from my parents’ house! Penny is apparently very camera-shy, but my husband managed to get a great photo of this sassy girl! She loves being held, and loves pestering the other cats in the house. But how can you be mad at that face??

All right, friends. I’ll see you again on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

“Mulder, It’s Me.”

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. This is my last full work week before I go on vacation for a week and a half, and as always, I find myself astonished at how quickly that snuck up on me. Send lots of productive thoughts for me!

During the month of September, all new free subscribers to The Deep Dive will be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler plus 5 mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive. No payment method required!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Books about Biden’s presidency are not selling well, mainly because his term has not been marked by nearly the same chaos as Trump’s. (And quite frankly, I don’t think that’s a bad thing)

Amazon issues new AI guidance for its Kindle Direct Publishing platform.

Another follow-up post to the oft-debunked claim that most books sell less than 12 copies.

The New York Times writes about how Utah has become an unexpected hotbed of YA authors.

“A plague on the industry”: book publishing’s broken blurb system.

New & Upcoming Titles

Ada Limón is editing an anthology of nature poems, and working on an initiative with the National Park Service and the Poetry Society of America.

Matt Haig announces a new book: The Life Impossible. It comes out August 2024.

14 new books by Latinx authors to read for Latinx Heritage Month.

8 big new fiction titles from small presses.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, New York Times.

September picks from Amazon, The Guardian (thrillers), Shondaland, Tor.com (fantasy, science fiction, SFF crossovers).

Fall picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, New York Times (fiction & nonfiction).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Vaster Wilds – Lauren Groff (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Holly – Stephen King (NPR, USA Today)

Glossy: Ambition, Beauty, and the Inside Story of Emily Weiss’s Glossier – Marisa Meltzer (New York Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

13 mystery authors who are transforming the genre.

Why John le Carré’s The Spy Who Came In From the Cold is the ultimate spy novel.

How to read all 23 Dune books in order.

On the Riot

The best weekly releases to TBR.

September picks for mysteries/thrillers/true crime, romance, SFF, horror, nonfiction, children’s, YA.

8 upcoming nonfiction books to get you excited for fall.

Must-have new poetry for Fall 2023.

5 authors who coined their own subgenres.

Why do authors use different pen names for different genres?

What is the millennial genre?

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

All Things Comics

Celebrity chef ​​José Andrés has written a graphic novel: Feeding Dangerously: On the Ground with José Andrés and World Central Kitchen.

10 of the best detective-based anime.

On the Riot

September picks for comics/graphic novels and manga.

20 trailblazing comic strips that changed the game.

Retro comic rewind: weird horrors.

Audiophilia

The September 2023 Earphones Award winners have been announced.

Three new memorable memoirs on audio.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

23 books like the Three Dark Crowns series.

17 Mercury retrograde-worthy YA books with miscommunication tropes.

Adults

8 books about the dark history of banana plantations in Latin America.

Thrillers about mother-in-laws from hell.

5 books with devilishly dangerous fairy tales.

Books with pick-me-up power.

5 thrillers with island settings.

The 25 best cookbooks from Great British Baking Show contestants.

10 books that show the lives of school teachers.

20 mystery books to read for your inner sleuth.

8 social thrillers with hard-hitting themes.

6 jaw-dropping thrillers recommended by Gillian Flynn.

Mysteries and thrillers set in the wellness industry.

Thrillers where best friends are the biggest threat.

We have great expectations for these books inspired by Charles Dickens.

On the Riot

Books for Bluey fans of all ages.

Recent YA releases set in the 1990’s.

8 YA book club books to spark great discussions.

9 thought-provoking books like Yellowface.

Quirky new takes on the multiverse.

Mulder, it’s 30: 8 great books for the 30th anniversary of The X-Files.

20 marvelous modern poets.

Short, snacky fantasy for busy readers.

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 that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

a black and white cat laying on a hardwood floor

A guest appearance by my parents’ cat, Groucho! You may remember Groucho from about 6 months ago, when he was a shy kitten hiding under the bed. Well, I visited my parents’ house over the weekend for the first time in a while, and not only has Groucho tripled in size, but he was out the entire time! He loved being in the middle of everything, and LOVED getting pets from everyone! What a sweet, brave boy!

All right friends, that’s it for me. I’ll check in again on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Horse Girls in Fiction

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m writing this newsletter on a Wednesday, but I’m already looking forward to the weekend when we’ll be going out for my sister’s birthday…can you say tacos and margaritas??

Don’t forget, during the month of September, all new free subscribers to The Deep Dive will be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler plus 5 mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive. No payment method required!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Under a new initiative, free Narcan will be available at all St. Louis County (MO) libraries – “no questions asked.”

Cool Library Updates

A year after the Vancouver Public Library eliminated fines, here’s how many books are overdue.

The Biblioteca Gabriel García Márquez in Barcelona has been named the best new public library in the world.

16 libraries that managed to be cooler, smarter, and more interesting than any library this writer had ever been to.

Worth Reading

A book is a book is a book, except when it’s an eBook.

Book Adaptations in the News

Denis Villeneuve teases a possible Dune: Part Three.

Amazon and Netflix are competing for the rights to Crime 101, based on a Don Winslow novella.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Censorship News

How to alert your school board to right-wing bad actors.

The far-right book ban push has fueled a library exodus from ALA — the Montana, Missouri, and Texas state libraries have already withdrawn, and right-wing legislators in Arizona, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, and Wyoming are pushing for similar action.

The new, uneven landscape of public schools.

School Library Journal posts the results from their recent Controversial Books Survey, showing how book challenges have had a marked chilling effect on school librarians nationwide.

A federal judge has blocked HB 900 from taking effect in Texas. This is the bill that would have required book vendors to provide ratings for all of their materials.

Amarillo ISD (TX) is withdrawing from the Harrington Library Consortium: “Because of increasing state requirements to report and track library books, AISD’s Electronic catalogue system through the Harrington Library Consortium is no longer able to service the needs of the district.”

“A group of 10 women volunteers perused the children’s section of the Midland County Public Library’s Centennial branch [TX] on Wednesday morning, taking note of titles they deemed inappropriate for youths.” Yeah, that’s not how library volunteering works.

The authors of And Tango Makes Three have added Escambia County Schools (FL) to their ongoing censorship lawsuit.

The Indian River County School Board (FL) decided to ignore their own policies and removed at least two dozen books based solely on complaints made by Moms for Liberty members at a recent meeting.

The St. Tammany Parish sheriff’s office is investigating an incident where a woman claims she was assaulted at a recent board meeting.

Cumberland (ME) police have concluded that having Gender Queer in the high school library does not violate state obscenity laws. It’s been a little while since I posted an article about the police getting involved with library book matters…apparently this is still a primary strategy used by book crisis actors. (This is sarcastic, of course — I know these strategies will continue, and will likely increase.)

(Paywalled) Exeter Public Library (PA) will not be restricting books from young readers, despite the efforts of township officials.

A Maryland judge has ruled against religious parents who want to pull their children from lessons where books about LGBTQ+ characters are read aloud.

The Worcester County School Board heard from a book crisis actor at a recent meeting, who was upset that she had submitted a challenge for three books, but her request was denied because she didn’t have a student in the district. Quelle surprise.

Members of the “Clean Up Samuels” book-banning campaign may force the closure of the Samuels Public Library (VA) on October 1st.

The teachers union for Prince William County Schools (VA) talks about the list of “sexually explicit” books that the district recently released, and how it’s left staff feeling “overwhelmed and underappreciated.”

Students at Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools (NC) have been temporarily denied school library access while a parental rights bill is being evaluated.

Alamance County’s [NC] commissioners have bumped an incumbent member of the county’s library committee to make room for a new appointee, who rose to prominence about a year ago when she publicly criticized an LGBTQ-themed book display at the flagship branch of the county’s library system.

The South Carolina Department of Education said it is ending a 50-year partnership with the South Carolina Association of School Librarians over concerns about materials in school libraries.

Hardline conservatives in Lexington County (SC) have suggested creating a morality police force school district commission to screen classroom materials.

One parent was responsible for the removal of 12 books from Horry County Schools (SC). Or another way to report it, one parent was allowed to make parenting and educational decisions for every student in the district.

“On Monday morning, WDHN got an e-mail from the chairman of the Houston County [AL] Commission, Brandon Shoupe, saying public institutions like our libraries are being “infiltrated by political extremists,” something he calls a deeply disturbing trend.” Political extremists, huh? YOU DON’T SAY.

Missouri prisons have banned friends and family members from sending ANY books to incarcerated people.

Book banners in Kentucky get to work distracting librarians and hurting democracy.

(Paywalled) St. Joseph County Public Library (IN) will not be removing two LGBTQ+ books from the teen section.

Hamilton East Library Board (IN) suspends its book reviewing policy following community pushback.

At a recent Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp (IN) board meeting, 14 BCSC librarians and library assistants submitted a letter to the board about how their recent decisions have undermined their professionalism and shown a sincere lack of trust in their abilities to perform their jobs. Also, parents continue to hammer the “groomer” and “pedophile” narrative being pushed against educators and librarians…one parent spoke against “teachers forming close, personal relationships with students,” and discussed statistics on the prevalence of pedophiles working in public schools. Thankfully, the superintendent said that he “cannot tolerate the continued statement about pedophiles.”

For John Green, the battle over access to books has gotten personal.

Bridgette Exmanthe, assistant superintendent of curriculum and instruction for public schools in Mason City, Iowa, wrote an op-ed for the New York Times about how she became the “book-banning monster of Iowa” for using AI to identify and remove books containing sexual content. I don’t deny that school leaders are in a very difficult place here, but I’d really like to see more genuine pushback in the face of censorship and fewer op-eds about why AI was the best tool to remove hundreds of books.

I wish I could highlight all of the excellent points made in this op-ed from an Iowa teacher on the nonsensical new state laws, but here are a couple: “Yet here we are, sitting through a district meeting in which our superintendent reads out what SF 496 states is a sex act in incredibly graphic detail. Ironically, it is a thousand times more graphic than any of the material students have available in school libraries and assigned coursework.” And, “Yet, this law and its proponents boil down entire narratives — real or fictional — into two categories: sex or no sex. It’s honestly perverted to think in such a way.”

The Papillion La Vista (NE) school board affirms the decision to keep All Boys Aren’t Blue in the school libraries.

Natrona County School District (WY) is implementing an “opt-in” system for specific books. “Instead of requiring disapproving parents to block books for their children, the [book-banning] parents wanted certain books to be off limits to all students, allowing them access only if their parents approved.”

Pima County Library (AZ) faces a surge of recent book complaints. “‘We’ve been receiving more complaints than usual about LGBTQ material and BIPOC experiences. These are the lived experiences of Black, Indigenous people of color,’ said librarian Kate Demeester-Lane.”

Oregon libraries received the most content challenges since 1992 this year.

“A new proposal from the Matanuska-Susitna [AK] school board would significantly weaken the role of the board’s student representative…Student representative Ben Kolendo asked several pointed questions about the selection process for members of the committee and about the ongoing contract negotiations with the teachers’ union. Two months later, a three-member board policy committee proposed weakening the student member’s role.” WOW. Student exhibits critical thinking skills and asks questions directly related to his student rights, and the district’s response is to punish him.

A Brandon School Division (Manitoba) trustee put forward two motions at a recent meeting: 1) to create a review committee for materials in school libraries and classrooms, and to remove books that contain “adult content,” and 2) make sure that parents are informed “about all activities involving their kids, and about what kids are learning, seeing, and hearing at school.” Neither motion passed.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

How much have book prices increased since 2019?

Award News

The 2023 Anthony Awards have been announced.

The longlist for the Baillie Gifford Prize for Nonfiction has been announced.

Here’s a Twitter thread about what it’s like to serve on the Pulitzer jury for fiction.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Is that unread book making you feel guilty? You’re not alone.

On the Riot

How to get students back into reading after summer break.

Who was Cormac McCarthy?

Who gets to be a horse girl in fiction?

a black cat wrapped in an orange blanket, with a stuffed cat toy resting by its head

Gilbert has been dealing with a bad case of suspected allergies, so Blaine tucked him in for a nice little nap and gave him a stuffed animal to snuggle with. Hopefully his sneezes wind down soon!

All right, friends. I’ll see you again on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Adam Driver, Romance Hero Inspiration

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m writing this newsletter before the long weekend, so I am eagerly anticipating a chill weekend of doing nothing. Except maybe some reading! I just discovered that digital scrapbooking is an excellent activity to pair with audiobooks, and my free time productivity has increased exponentially.

Attention librarians, booksellers, and book nerds! You can apply to become a Bibliologist for Tailored Book Recommendations and get paid for your bookish knowledge! TBR is a subscription-based book recommendation service where customers receive three hand-picked recommendations per quarter that are tailored to their specific reading likes and dislikes. Of special interest: bibliologists who can recommend across several genres, and mystery expertise is a plus. Click here to read more and fill out an application.

And don’t forget during the month of September, all new free subscribers to The Deep Dive will be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler plus 5 mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive. No payment method required!

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Weekly has a bunch of big indie titles for Fall 2023.

20 indie books to read this fall.

New indie books recommended by booksellers.

Melissa de la Cruz has a cover reveal for Beyond the Isle of the Lost, a prequel adventure to the Descendants series.

The best and most anticipated books of 2023 (so far).

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub.

September picks from Kirkus, The Millions, New York Times.

Fall picks from AARP, Associated Press, CBC (nonfiction), Kirkus (nonfiction), LA Times, Parade (celebrity titles), Tor.com (indie speculative fiction), The Week.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Fraud – Zadie Smith (Guardian, LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Happiness Falls – Angie Kim (Good Morning America, LA Times)

Terrace Story – Hilary Leichter (New York Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

The fanfic-to-romance pipeline goes mainstream.

Related: How Adam Driver ended up as the inspiration for many new romance novel heroes. I will happily jump on this bandwagon!

The strange, secretive world of North Korean science fiction.

In praise of the short novel.

On the Riot

If you want to work in publishing, consider an indie press.

8 upcoming nonfiction books to get you excited about fall.

New weekly releases to TBR.

How this reader became a horror convert.

All Things Comics

On the Riot

9 magic school graphic novels for kids and teens.

The most unique comic book stores across the US.

Audiophilia

The best audiobooks for August.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Children’s books that promote a growth mindset.

Adults

9 books about women’s loneliness.

10 books for Taylor Swift’s ten eras.

11 books about misunderstood women in history and mythology.

10 books about solitary living.

Legal thrillers for fans of Suits.

On the Riot

The best picture books for building classroom community.

The best YA books for back-to-school.

Must-read historical romance set in the 20th century.

9 historical romance novels for newbies.

10 of the best horror and mystery novels set in the woods.

8 fantasy novels with “no rules, just vibes” magic systems.

Compulsively consumable short story and essay collections.

The 20 most influential fantasy books of the last 10 years.

8 of the best fantasy royalty.

9 great Dutch books in translation.

20 must-read paranormal romances.

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 that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

a black cat wrapped in a gray sweatshirt with just its head sticking out of th top

This is Gilbert in his happiest environment – wrapped in a blanket so that only his head is visible. He looks rather nonchalant here, but I assure you he was purring up a storm. A happier kitty I’ve never seen!

Hope everyone had a great weekend. See you on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter

Categories
Check Your Shelf

“A Small Number of People Who Are Very Loud”

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. This last week, my husband and I went to see Jurassic Park for its 30th anniversary, with the score performed live by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. HOLY CATS, it was incredible! I’ve seen that movie over 50 times, and yet I was so engrossed that I forgot at times there was an entire symphony playing.

Attention librarians, booksellers, and book nerds! You can apply to become a Bibliologist for Tailored Book Recommendations and get paid for your bookish knowledge! TBR is a subscription-based book recommendation service where customers receive three hand-picked recommendations per quarter that are tailored to their specific reading likes and dislikes. Of special interest: bibliologists who can recommend across several genres, and mystery expertise is a plus. Click here to read more and fill out an application.

Plus, a Deep Dive update! During the month of September, all new free subscribers to The Deep Dive will be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler plus 5 mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive. No payment method required!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

ALA is encouraging libraries to participate in National Voter Registration Day on September 19, 2023.

The Allen County Public Library (IN) reported an unprecedented (positive!) response to their recent community-wide strategic planning survey.

Cool Library Updates

Sal McCloskey, daughter of beloved children’s author Robert McCloskey, drew a crowd of 225 people at the Curtis Memorial Library in Maine as she read her father’s book, Blueberries for Sal.

Worth Reading

A buying guide to current eReaders.

Book Adaptations in the News

Jana Monroe, a former FBI agent and author of the upcoming memoir Hearts of Darkness: Serial Killers, The Behavioral Science Unit and My Life as a Woman in the FBI, will have her latest book packaged for TV.

Dune: Part 2 has been delayed until 2024 amidst the ongoing strikes.

Trailer for The Marsh King’s Daughter.

Trailer for Love at First Sight, which is based on the book The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E. Smith.

Censorship News

Library bomb threats continue to increase.

More about the string of bomb threats that have happened to libraries across the country in the last couple of weeks.

The first app to “help” libraries and schools with book bans has arrived, but it’s not what it seems.

“Don’t stand by as books are banned; stand up for libraries.”

In the age of book bans, how independent bookstores can change the world for the better.

ShopQueer.co has launched a fundraiser to purchase a Rainbow Book Bus, “a loud, proud, and very queer bookmobile, bringing queer joy, stories, and community to the towns that need it the most.” They’re almost at 90% of their $150,000 goal!

A banned books bingo card for book clubs.

Texas is leaving the American Library Association.

Book debate gets heated at a Fort Worth ISD (TX) board meeting. Plus, what are the 100+ books that have been removed from Fort Worth ISD? (Paywalled)

“The national debate over books has come to West Texas. And librarians are stuck in the middle.”

Starting this year, Katy ISD (TX) parents will be notified whenever their child checks out a library book.

“It’s an irony of the book banning movement that the people who want to remove books from school libraries can’t stop themselves from reading aloud what they describe as “pornography” in crowded school board meetings, often with children present.” This is in Round Rock ISD (TX).

Paywalled: The Granbury ISD (TX) board has censured the trustee accused of sneaking into the school library to review books.

“In images taken from school district videos, parent Bruce Friedman, left, addresses the Clay County School Board on Aug. 4, 2022, and teacher Vicki Baggett, right, speaks to the Escambia County School Board on May 16, 2023. Together, the two advocates submitted more than 600 book complaints over the last year, accounting for more than half the statewide total.” TWO PEOPLE. TWO.

“The Escambia County School Board on Monday urged a federal judge to toss out a lawsuit filed by authors, a publishing company, parents and a non-profit organization challenging the removal or restriction of books in school libraries.” I bet they have.

How Florida’s Clay County became the book ban heartland of the US.

Paywalled: Some of the next titles Moms for Liberty will be targeting next. (A really bad article to be paywalled, honestly.)

These are the 43 books that have been removed from Manatee County (FL) schools this year.

Cobb County Schools (GA) have removed Flamer and Me and Earl and the Dying Girl.

Paywalled: “Book ban hits Louisiana libraries with This Book is Gay.”

“Frustrated with the slow pace that has kept dozens of books — mostly those with LGBTQ+ themes — sequestered from the rest of the collection, one patron submitted three more book challenges to titles she described as anti-transgender.” This is at the St. Tammany Parish Library (LA), where the board is also discussing policy changes that would allow them to toss challenges submitted under false names, or challenges from patrons who had not read the material in question.

22 challenges to Maine school library books have been filed since 2022. Some of the noteworthy points in the article: about a third of the people who filed challenges admitted to not reading the book in its entirety, at least two people reported using the M4L website BookLooks to support their challenge, and only the RSU 56 district has actually removed a challenged book. (It was Gender Queer.)

Galway (NY) school board overwhelmingly voted against banning The 57 Bus and Ink Knows No Borders: Poems of the Immigrant and Refugee Experience.

Two teenagers in Orchard Park (NY) have created a group known as Students Protecting Education, which will help teach other students how to speak out on educational issues, such as book banning.

Librarian Sharon Coronado, who works at the Ligonier Valley Library (PA), says that when it comes to book bans, “It’s a small number of people who are very loud.”

Hempfield Area School Board (PA) is establishing new guidelines that require schools to post lists of books to be purchased, and then parents have up to 30 days to submit a form and potentially challenge any of the books from being purchased.

The Oxford Area High School board (PA) voted to override a committee’s recommendation to keep four challenged books in the high school library. The Hate U Give will stay, but the other three books (The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Lucky, and The Bluest Eye) will either be entirely removed, or relocated to a restricted area. Why have an advisory committee if you’re going to ignore their recommendations??

The Erie County Council (PA) unanimously passed a resolution against library censorship.

“More than 110 novels and plays – a mix of classic and contemporary literature including several best-sellers and award-winners – are included in Prince William County Schools’ [VA] division-wide “sexually explicit” list of library books and instructional materials.”

An update on the situation at the Samuels Public Library (VA), where the Clean Up Samuels group asked county supervisors to cut funding to the library until it removed books that they found objectionable.

Paywalled: How North Carolina’s new Parents’ Bill of Rights will lead to more book bans across the state.

“‘We already have a district policy to vet books,’ Jean Foster, one of the 28 people who spoke out Monday, said. ‘Trust our educators and administrators to do their jobs. Stop wasting the limited time and resources we have, and get on with the business that our district needs from this board instead of pandering to the agenda of a small minority comprised mostly of the members of a known hate group.’” MORE. OF. THIS.

After a five-hour board meeting, the Catawba County School Board (NC) has removed Out of Darkness from high school libraries. This happened after a sitting board member challenged Out of Darkness and Beyond Magenta, a review committee recommended that the board retain both books, the board member appealed that decision, and the board ultimately decided to remove Out of Darkness. (Beyond Magenta was allowed to stay.)

Inside the 44 books challenged at the Prattville Public Library (AL).

Children under 15 need parental permission to check out anything from the Foley Public Library (AL), and there are 24 books currently under review. Also, this is yet another article that centers its reporting around the book banners – can we stop pretending that their platforms are valid?

Dothan Houston County Library (AL) confirms that there is no “sexually explicit” content in the children’s section. Now what I really want to see is a second part to that statement, saying that libraries have NEVER put sexually explicit content in the children’s collections, and that this entire argument is nonsense and not worth engaging with.

“The Ozark Dale County Library [AL] pulled all young adult LGBTQ+ books from the shelves to review them after a complaint from Ozark Mayor Mark Blankenship. The books have been returned to the shelves, but the library is now planning a community meeting to hear from the public and discuss what actions will be taken in the future.”

A group of people who filed book challenges at the Mobile Public Library [AL] have withdrawn the challenges after admitting they had not actually read the books in question.

Columbia-Marion County Public Library (MS) have removed the Heartstopper series for review, with all available copies currently being stored in the director’s office. The article also includes this line about a board meeting on August 9th, which we need to see more of. “During the Aug. 9 hearing, the residents who showed up to speak against the books described them as “pornography”—a claim the Columbian-Progress report did not correct.”

Paywalled: Wilson County Schools (TN) have removed six books since April 2022. Almost two dozen books have been selected for review.

The Rutherford County Board (TN), which oversees all public libraries in the county, voted to remove four books from shelves.

The Anderson County Library Board (TN) approved a tiered library card system to restrict checkouts for minors.

The Knox County Schools Policy Committee (TN) is considering revisions to their book challenge policy.

The Williamson County School Board (TN) is being sued by a group of parents over the decision to keep “obscene” materials on school library shelves.

“Daviess County Public Library Director Erin Waller has reviewed nearly 70 of the 248 titles deemed “inappropriate for developing minds” by the Daviess County Citizens for Decency (DCC4D) group. Waller said she recommends the ones she’s reviewed so far remain in their respective sections” This is in response to the Daviess County Citizens for Decency conducting and releasing an audit of the library’s teen and children’s collections. Waller has also altered the status of all 248 titles to “In repair” or “Being reviewed” so they can’t be checked out during the review process. But WHY is the library engaging with this group?? Have the Citizens for Decency filed official challenges on these books, or is it standard procedure to just let anyone demand on a whim that the library review hundreds of books?

Troy (OH) school board members remove Beyond Magenta from all school libraries, and move Magical Boy from the middle school to the high school.

“Until the full school board votes on this specific topic, there will continue to be a hold on adding any sexually explicit material, but many asked for the definition of what is sexually explicit.” This is at the Brandywine School District (MI), where the board has not yet figured out how to handle books that may be considered “inappropriate.”

“A group of anonymous Iron River [WI] residents is trying to build support in the community to ban what it calls books “promoting gender ideology” from the local library.” Look, if you’re going to ban books, you should have the guts to identify yourself.

Paywalled: Book banners in Marathon County, Wisconsin want the public library to rate the books available to minors.

The Vernon Area Library (IL) received a bomb threat. This is the latest in a string of bomb threats sent to public libraries in northeastern Illinois. I live about 15 minutes from this library.

Paywalled: Empire of Storms is being reviewed by the board at Brainerd Public Schools (MN).

Friday Night Lights has been returned to school libraries in Mason City, Iowa, where the school district had used AI to remove books that may have violated the new state law.

It cost the Grand Forks School Board (ND) almost $11,000 to review six books that were challenged in the district.

Keene Memorial Library (NE) has approved a tiered library card system “of age-specific library cards that allow parents to control what their children can check out.”

A Tulsa elementary school has been targeted by bomb threats twice because of a librarian’s social media post, and the state superintendent has made the situation worse by labeling the video “an example of a ‘woke agenda,’” except he used a modified version of the video created by Libs of TikTok. A state superintendent who doesn’t care that an elementary school has been targeted by bomb threats, and actively spreads the message of a social media account known for targeting teachers and librarians with violence.

Douglas County Libraries (CO) elects to keep all four challenged books on the shelf.

“Library books explained to county commission after complaints by a small group of far-right activists.” This is in Washoe County (NV) and I feel like the headline, intentionally or unintentionally, conveys the ridiculousness of these discussions.

“Pahrump [NV] library trustees declined to make any changes to the public’s book collection on Monday after its director reported that none of the libraries she had surveyed over the past month had censored or banned any youth books about race, gender or sexuality.” Yay?

The FBI is investigating a series of bomb threats made against the Yolo County Library (CA). “Investigators believe there is a connection between the bomb threats and a controversial meeting held at the Mary L. Stephens Library, the Davis branch, days before the first threat.”

After canceling their Social Justice Book Club, the Klamath County Library (OR) has replaced the program with a book club called Real Reads, which will cover similar topics. The primary difference is that a library staff member will not lead the discussion, as commissioners “have expressed concern about taxpayer-funded staff being involved in political discussions in the role of moderators.”

“Did you read the editorial and think that could never happen here? Think again.” A resident of Fort Vancouver (WA) wrote a letter to the editor reporting on what’s happening at the local board meetings. We need more people (and letters) like this.

The Anchorage Assembly (AK) has rejected the mayor’s latest library board picks. One of the assembly members said, “‘They’re essentially pushing the same agenda: to attack our public libraries and schools, and to further a hateful and discriminatory agenda, specifically against LGBTQ youth and adults…But also more broadly against freedom of speech … such as book banning, banning programming such as the drag queen story hour from the public library.’”

Books & Authors in the News

Stephen King, Zadie Smith, and Michael Pollan are among thousands of writers whose copyrighted works are being used to train large language models.

Michael Oher talks about his new book and the controversy surrounding The Blind Side.

The author of the American Girl book The Care and Keeping of You looks back at the book on its 25th anniversary. “I wrote [this book] for girls. This wasn’t the future I imagined for them.”

Numbers & Trends

“Girl” trends and the repackaging of womanhood.

The bestselling books of the week.

Plus, which authors have tried to buy their way onto the New York Times Bestsellers list?

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

Award News

The Pulitzers look to open books and arts prizes to noncitizens.

In Memoriam by Alice Winn wins the 2023 Waterstones Debut Fiction Prize.

The winners of the inaugural TikTok Book Awards have been announced.

The 2023 Kirkus Prize finalists have been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

This literature clock publishes a quote every minute, but each quote directly references that specific time.

On the Riot

The 10 best librarian characters in TV and film.

A brief history of book dedications.

What this Rioter wishes they could tell their younger reading self.

How reading books about books helped this Rioter bust out of their reading slump.

Why Shakespeare isn’t fancy.

a black, brown, and white dog with a red bandanna laying on the floor

Is that…a dog picture?? Yep. In recognition of all the stress our staff have been dealing with, from nearby bomb threats to massive changes at work, our director brought in a couple therapy dogs as a surprise for staff. Sadie (pictured here) was just the most chill dog I’ve ever met, and she LOVED being able to nap on the floor and get belly rubs for an hour!

All right, friends. I’m done for the week. Enjoy the holiday weekend if you’re in the US, and I’ll check in again on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

What’s Happening With Books and AI?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’ve realized over the last week or so that we’ve received a lot of positive comments from our patrons – not just casual “I love the library!” statements, but patrons seeking us out to tell us how much they’ve enjoyed a particular initiative or program. Our fall newsletter has a Banned Books Week theme, and a patron called to tell us how much they appreciated it, and how much the right to read means to them. Another patron came to the desk to tell us that our summer story times at the local farmer’s market were fantastic. I know not every library is in a supportive community, but I hope all of you are on the receiving end of a nice compliment from a parent or a patron this week.

Make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index, which has been keeping velocireaders in the know about all the latest books since 2017! Subscribe today!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

How some marketing execs use well-placed ellipses to turn critical rants into apparently rave reviews.

Related: book publicity – what works and what doesn’t.

Understanding AI and how it works.

How AI’s carbon emissions are about to become a problem.

New & Upcoming Titles

Stacey Abrams is re-releasing her espionage romantic thriller, The Art of Desire, which was originally written under her Selena Montgomery pseudonym.

Michael Wolff, author of Fire and Fury, is publishing a book about Fox News this fall, called The Fall: The End of Fox News and the Murdoch Dynasty.

Cover reveal for Noah Medlock’s debut horror novel, A Botanical Daughter, described as “Mexican Gothic meets The Lie Tree by way of Oscar Wilde and Mary Shelley.”

Here’s a first look at the upcoming book Amy Winehouse: In Her Own Words.

The 6 best romance novels of the summer.

Weekly picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, New York Times.

The best debut crime novels of August.

September picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, teens, kids), The Root.

Fall picks from AARP (celebrity memoirs), CBC (poetry), Kirkus (fiction), Vulture.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Happiness Falls – Angie Kim (New York Times, Washington Post)

The Bee Sting – Paul Murray (New Yorker, Washington Post)

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

RA/Genre Resources

Why queer adults love (and need) queer YA media.

Plus: “Heartstopper, Red, White & Royal Blue, and Bottoms lead a new surge of LGBTQ content.”

Why readers are hungry for Colleen Hoover.

Understanding Elon Musk through romance novel tropes. (I’m not kidding. That’s what the headline says.)

A crime thriller author talks about the big serial killer myth they’d like to debunk.

On the Riot

What is happening with books and AI?

“AI will never be good enough to replace real authors” is the wrong conversation.

Why the hockey BookTok controversy screams toxicity.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

What is a “dad book?”

What does it mean if a character is “morally gray?”

What murder mysteries get wrong about bail.

Attention librarians, book sellers, and book nerds! Apply to become a Bibliologist for Tailored Book Recommendations and get paid for your bookish knowledge! TBR is a subscription based book recommendation service where customers receive three hand-picked recommendations per quarter that are tailored to their specific reading likes and dislikes. Our bibliologists pull on collected decades of experience to find the right books to surprise and delight our customers.

Think you have what it takes to recommend books with the best of them? We’re especially interested in those good at recommending across several genres; mystery expertise is a plus. Click here to read more and fill out an application.

All Things Comics

Jeff Smith, creator of the Bone series, cancels his book tour following a cardiac event.

10 page-to-screen graphic novels & comics to enjoy.

On the Riot

What we (don’t) talk about when we talk about adult graphic nonfiction books.

Reading pathways for Gabriel Bá and Fábio Moon.

Audiophilia

Hear actor Adam Scott read a short story from the anthology, From a Certain Point of View: Return of the Jedi.

Disney’s Frozen podcast marks the company’s first foray into audio-first storytelling.

10 must-listen audiobooks for September.

Where do audiobooks come from?

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Evocative books by Afro-Latine authors to read with your child.

15 book recs for fans of We Were Liars.

Adults

A climate change reading list.

5 SFF books with superpowered characters.

7 books about reckoning with intergenerational trauma.

The top 10 female spies in fiction.

Tor.com and USA Today have reading recommendations for fans of Heartstopper.

5 fast-paced African urban fantasy books.

Powerful female characters in crime fiction.

A reading list of comeback stories.

5 book recommendations from Harlan Coben.

6 book club reads with themes tied to current events.

On the Riot

12 books to encourage kids to go outside.

Young adult authors who made their adult fiction debuts.

The best quietly sad, contemplative books for when you’re trying to feel something.

11 romance novels featuring romances between celebrities and regular people.

10 terrific transhumanist sci-fi books.

12 of the best opposites attract romance novels.

9 terrifying road trip horror novels

23 must-read military historical fiction novels.

20 award-winning historical fiction books.

10 fever dream books that will have you checking your temperature.

10 books on healthcare inequity and misogyny in medicine.

A back-to-school-inspired reading list for adults.

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 that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

a black and white cat sitting in front of an open window with its tail curled over a stack of books

Dini keeps watch on the outside and stands guard over our books.

Well, that’s all I have for today. By the time I check in again, it will be September! *insert shocked emoji here* Have a great week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.