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Today In Books

Free Comic Book Day is Postponed: Today in Books

Frankie Shaw To Direct T Kira Madden’s ‘Long Live’ Memoir

Good news for fans of Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls by T Kira Madden! Frankie Shaw will be directing the movie, and producers are attached. “T Kira’s story is a lesson in radical self-acceptance, an open-hearted love letter to our pain and our mistakes, and proof that while we are fundamentally shaped by our trauma, it does not have to define us,” Shaw says. Madden will write the screenplay.

Free Comic Book Day Has Been Postponed Amid Coronavirus Outbreak

It’s a bummer, but Diamond Comic Distributors have decided to postpone Free Comic Book Day, a nationwide event that traditionally occurs the first Saturday in May. “The severity and timing of the impact of the COVID-19 virus can’t be predicted with any certainty, but the safety of our retailer partners and comic book fans is too important to risk,” says Diamond. No new date has been set yet, but consider this a reminder to support your local comic shop online and from a safe distance during these tough times.

How Hilary Mantel Became A Publishing Phenomenon

This article’s title may be a little misleading as it doesn’t really dive deep into explaining how Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall trilogy got as famous as it is, but it does reveal some interesting details about sales numbers for her latest release, The Mirror & the Light, and compares them with other big literary releases. Spoiler: Female-written literary bestsellers have sold more than some literary bestsellers written by men!

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Read This Book

Read This Book: THE BOOKISH LIFE OF NINA HILL

Welcome to Read This Book, a weekly newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!

Cover of The Bookish Life of Nina Hill by Abbi WaxmanSince this week has been a bit wild with so many closures, disruptions, and uncertainty due to the spread of COVID-19, I think what we need is a happy recommendation. This week’s pick is The Bookish Life of Nina Hill by Abbi Waxman.

“Nina had looked around and realized she would never run out of things to read, and that certainty filled her with peace and satisfaction. It didn’t matter what hit the fan; as long as there were unread books in the world, she would be fine.”

Nina Hill has a very routine, orderly life. She schedules everything–her job at her local independent bookstore, meals, working out, trivia team nights, and even her reading time. She likes books better than most people, and is completely content…until she learns the father she never knew has died, and she has scads of siblings, nieces, and nephews, some clamoring to meet her, some suspicious of her very existence. And if that wasn’t shock enough, her trivia rival is super cute and seems to actually like her?

This is a really gentle book about comforting and happy things, with enough drama and conflict to keep the book moving, but not enough to upset the reader. While not many of us may be able to relate to discovering your deceased father is actually pretty stinking rich and might have left you a lot of money, or meeting family you never knew you had, the challenges that Nina deals with are pretty common. She struggles with the desire to eat healthier and exercise more, but she also doesn’t know how to deal with her emotions or what to do when her anxiety gets out of control. But Nina’s desire for peace and fictional worlds is definitely relatable to book nerds, and her snappy humor and trivia prestige will make book nerds feel as though they’ve discovered a kindred spirit. The romance is very sweet and not too sexy (no on-the-page sex), and the plot is full of cute twists and charming coincidences that will make you smile.

Definitely pick up this book if you want something funny and reassuring, with a touch of family drama and escapism all rolled in one! Bonus: I listened to the audiobook, which is narrated by Emily Rankin, and it was lovely!

And if you want to keep up with how COVID-19 is impacting the book world, including resources to support authors and indie bookstores during this difficult time, check out Book Riot’s story stream of COVID-19 updates.

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, All the Books, and Twitter.

If someone forwarded this newsletter to you, click here to subscribe.

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Read This Book

Read This Book: The Best We Could Do by Thi Bui

Welcome to Read This Book, a weekly newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!

This week’s pick is The Best We Could Do: An Illustrated Memoir by Thi Bui.

Content warning: Mention of rape, war violence

Thi Bui has grown up with the effects of the Vietnam War looming over her life like a shadow. Born in Vietnam, she and her family fled to the U.S. in the late 1970s as South Vietnam fell. Her mother was eight months pregnant when they left, and she gave birth to Thi’s younger brother in a refugee camp. The family landed in the U.S. shortly after, staying with relatives in the Midwest before making their way to a more temperate climate and an independent life in California. But their struggles don’t end there.

“How much of me is my own, and how much is stamped into my blood and bone, predestined?”

This is the question that haunts Bui, and her memoir. She starts her account in New York City in 2005, as she is in labor with her son. It’s a moment that should connect her to her own mother, and Bui is full of hope that it will mark a new phase in their relationship. But her mother is not present in the way Bui hopes, and she is once again reminded of the vast disconnect between herself and her parents. With beautiful artwork in black, cream, and a shade that intensifies from peach to burnt orange, Bui moves back and forth through time, showing readers glimpses of her parents’ pasts: her father’s harrowing childhood in a village marred by violence, and her mother’s more privileged upbringing that is nonetheless affected by colonialism and unrest.

She reconstructs her family’s history, their small and large tragedies, and analyzes how her family influenced the person she has become. Bui wrestles with some pretty big themes and issues–trauma, the immigrant experience, the complicated legacies our families pass down, and the difficulties of excavating a history that you didn’t live or were too young to remember in order to understand your present. Most pressing of all? The fear that she will somehow permanently affect her own son. This journey is not easy, but the result is a beautiful, moving memoir about strength, resilience, and the courage to start anew. Even if you don’t think graphic novels are your jam, I highly recommend giving this book a shot because the story and the artwork are both very powerful.

Happy reading,

Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, All the Books, and Twitter.

If someone forwarded this newsletter to you, click here to subscribe.

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Today In Books

Libraries Boycotting Macmillan See Results: Today in Books

Is Macmillan Reconsidering Its Library E-book Embargo?

Macmillan, one of the Big Five U.S. publishers, incited protest and boycotts when they introduced a new embargo on how many digital copies of a new books libraries are allowed to purchase. Now it seems that they may be reconsidering this controversial embargo. While this is good news for libraries and their patrons, some librarians are concerned with how Macmillan is soliciting feedback, calling for transparency and emphasizing fair access.

Libraries And Pandemic Preparedness: Addressing COVID-19 With Facts And Outreach

Librarians to the rescue with facts regarding the COVID-19 (coronavirus) outbreak! Libraries in some of the hardest-hit areas of the country speak about all they’re doing to keep their libraries clean and germ-free, and to educate their patrons. That education goes beyond simply providing accurate information about the spread of the disease, and includes addressing inaccuracies about the origin of the disease and racial stigmas.

SXSW Festival In Austin Is Canceled Due To Coronavirus Fears

The annual South by Southwest Festival, which brings in entertainers, authors, and performers and draws in thousands of guests, has been cancelled due to the spread of coronavirus. This is only the latest in events that have been cancelled or rescheduled over fear of illness, and it’s likely not the last event to be impacted. It will be very interesting to watch how authors, publishers, and event venues deal with the disruptions caused by coronavirus in the coming weeks.

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Read This Book

Read This Book: Nothing to See Here by Kevin Wilson

Welcome to Read This Book, a weekly newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!

Nothing to See Here cover imageThis week’s pick is Nothing to See Here by Kevin Wilson!

“They didn’t want to set the world on fire. They just wanted to be less alone in it.”

Lillian is a twenty-something in 1995, living in her mom’s attic, working two jobs, and completely adrift. The one bright spot in her life is her regular but casual correspondence with her high school friend Madison, who has gone on to marry a senator and have a child. When Madison writes Lillian one day and asks her to please come visit her and help take care of Madison’s new step-kids, it’s a weird request–but Lillian agrees. The only catch? The kids catch on fire when they become upset. Strangely, this does little to deter Lillian and she goes on to forge a tentative bond with the kids, Bessie and Roland.

Reading this book was such a wonderfully odd and surreal experience. It’s full of pitch-perfect humor and deep thoughts about responsibility and caretaking, but it’s not a heavy book at all. Lillian is our narrator, and she often tries to come across more hardened than she really is, but her honesty and wit made me love her from the very beginning. She’s appropriately awed by her new privileged surroundings, but her status as an outsider is what allows her to really connect with Bessie and Roland. Although only secondary characters, they’re fully rounded and extremely lovable, if not jaded by the death of their mom and rejection by their father. They don’t believe in good things very easily, and Lillian has her work cut out for her. But when she does finally win them over, it’s a beautiful connection to behold–and when that connection is threatened, the stakes ramp up brilliantly.

Wilson has crafted a witty novel about finding connection, finding purpose, and finding the bravery to take responsibility, even when you’re not sure if you’re cut out for it. I highly recommend this novel if you love found family stories and humor. Bonus: I listened to the audiobook, brilliantly narrated by Marin Ireland, who just won the 2020 Audie Award for the best female performance of an audiobook for her work on Nothing to See Here. I am not kidding when I say I listened to it in one sitting, and when I finished I was shocked that so much time had gone by!

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, All the Books, and Twitter.

If someone forwarded this newsletter to you, click here to subscribe.

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Today In Books

MY LOVELY WIFE in Development with Amazon Studios: Today in Books

Amazon Studios Acquires For Nicole Kidman’s Blossom Films Samantha Downing’s Bestseller My Lovely Wife

Good news for fans of My Lovely Wife by Samantha Downing–Amazon Studios is developing the project, in partnership with Nicole Kidman’s production company! The book is about a married couple who seem perfectly average–except that they are secret serial killers by night. No word yet on whether or not Kidman plans on playing the suburban mom/secret serial killer, but the adaptation is sure to be winner with fans of Big Little Lies.

Three New Ojibwe-Language Books Will Tell The Stories Of Tribal Elders In Their Own Words

Fewer than 500 people speak Ojibwe, but a new project from the Mille Lacs Band and Minnesota Historical Society Press is hoping to preserve the language and stories. By speaking extensively with elders, transcribers were able to record stories, wisdom, and fiction, which will be illustrated and published this fall. No English translation will be made available (which is the point of the project), which “affirms the validity of the Ojibwe language apart from its relationship to colonial languages.”

Podcast Playlist: Hillary Clinton To Launch New Show, Audible Casts Dakota Fanning

Buried beneath the news that Hillary Clinton is launching a new podcast–Dakota Fanning is going to be narrating the audiobook of Chosen Ones, Veronica Roth’s new novel and her first book for adults. The book is about a group of five teens who defeated a great evil, and are still dealing with the fallout ten years later. It’s the first time Dakota Fanning has narrated an audiobook, although her younger sister Elle narrated the first five The Babysitter’s Club audiobooks, which released last year. The audiobook will be available exclusively on Audible.

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Read This Book

Read This Book: THE FOUNTAINS OF SILENCE

Welcome to Read This Book, a weekly newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!

The Fountains of Silence cover imageThis week’s book is The Fountains of Silence by Ruta Sepetys.

Content warning: child death, some violence

I’ve been a big fan of Ruta Sepetys since I read her debut, Between Shades of Gray, which is about Stalin’s deportation and imprisonment of thousands of people from the Baltics during WWII. Sepetys writes wonderfully detailed historical fiction that is marketed as YA, but has lots of crossover appeal for adult readers. Her latest book, set in 1957 Madrid, did not disappoint!

Daniel Matheson is the son of a Dallas oil baron and a Spanish mother. When he graduates from high school, his parents take him to Spain, where’s he’s eager to spend his summer photographing the “real” Spain. That is not a simple task, as he learns when he tangles with the Guardia Civil on his first day. But it’s not until Daniel befriends Ana, a maid working at his hotel, that he begins to understand all that the country suffered the Civil War, and the deep wounds that have not been healed under Francisco Franco’s rule.

“When you discover the truth, you must speak it aloud and help others to do the same…Truth breaks the chains of silence. It sets us all free.”

This is a marvelous book with so many fascinating political and personal layers. Although most of the book is from Daniel’s outsider perspective, Sepetys uses multiple points of view to show the wide-ranging effect of war, violence, censorship, loss of freedom, and poverty on the people of Spain. This is a complicated history, and Sepetys doesn’t shy away from demonstrating how American influence enabled Franco’s hold on Spain, including snippets of primary resources in between chapters. Among the many injustices of the period, she anchors this story around the scandal of Catholic charities stealing infants from families with Republican ties and adopting them out to more suitable (and wealthier) families at home and abroad. This is a book with fascinating, varied characters who are struggling to survive the best they can under a tremendous burden of silence–and the possibilities that open up to them when they finally are allowed to speak the truth. I particularly enjoyed how Sepetys takes this book from 1957 to 1975, giving readers a unique perspective on the lasting impact of Franco on Spain. It’s a must-read for historical fiction fans!

Happy reading!

–Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, All the Books, and Twitter.

If someone forwarded this newsletter to you, click here to subscribe.

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Today In Books

Here’s the Sci-Fi Series That Inspired Elon Musk: Today in Books

She Used Library Books To Learn How To Run. Next, She’s Racing At The Olympic Trials.

In the realm of “wow, libraries can teach you how to do anything,” check out this story about Paula Pridgen, who is set to run in the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials. What makes her story so incredible is that she came to running in her early twenties, and taught herself how to run by checking out books from the library. Even though she’s grateful to just be running in the trials and doesn’t expect to win, we wish this library power user all the luck!

Asian American Content Banner Launches With Valence Media Investment

A new production company with a special focus on developing Asian American stories for film and TV has just launched, and here’s the most exciting bit–one of their first options is Maurene Goo’s YA novel, I Believe in a Thing Called Love! We really hope it makes it into production!

Elon Musk Shares The Science Fiction Book Series That Inspired Him To Start SpaceX

Any guesses as to which foundational sci-fi series inspired Elon Musk, the founder of SpaceX, to reach for the stars? (Hint, hint.) Unsurprisingly, it’s Isaac Asimov’s Foundation series, which Musk recommended on Twitter last week. He’s spoken before about his desire to help humanity keep moving forward, and he sees space exploration as an integral part of that step. Here’s hoping he helps bring sci-fi possibilities to life!

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Read This Book

Read This Book: A MADNESS OF SUNSHINE by Nalini Singh

Welcome to Read This Book, a weekly newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!

a madness of sunshine cover imageThis week’s recommendation is A Madness of Sunshine by Nalini Singh. You may recognize Singh’s name from her romance novels, particularly her Psy Changeling series! However, this is a standalone mystery novel set in New Zealand, and while it sits firmly in the mystery/crime genre, it’s got a good romantic subplot that confirms Singh knows how to craft a sizzling romantic connection no matter the genre!

“Will wasn’t exactly hankering to belong anywhere. Which made him the perfect cop to send to Golden Cove.”

Golden Cove is a remote community that sits on New Zealand’s west coast. They have one police officer, Will, and he’s only been sent to Golden Cove to manage the tourists. But when Miriama, the community’s golden girl, goes missing on the eve of her departure for the big city, the town is shaken and Will has his first serious case to solve. Did she run away early? Did she get lost jogging in the woods or fall off a cliff? Or did something more sinister happen to her?

This book is told from two points of view: those of Will and Anahera, a woman who grew up in Golden Cove but left as soon as she could, haunted by her mother’s premature death. Anahera is recently returned, shell-shocked by a recent betrayal, and disconcerted to find that Golden Cove is both exactly the same and subtly different. But her status as an outsider with an in makes her perspective appealing to Will, and it’s not long before they’ve teamed up to investigate the darker suspicions they both harbor about Miriama’s disappearance.

Singh is an elegant writer, and she makes the rugged, beautiful, dangerous landscape of Golden Cove come to life. The setting pulls double duty as a foreboding presence and foil for the investigation, and the suspense and tension build at a steady pace as it becomes clear that Miriama won’t be found easily. This book is about how a tragedy can bring a community together–but also about how easily that sense of camaraderie can turn, exposing dark secrets and cracks in the polite facade. If you’re a fan of Tana French or Jane Harper, you need this book on your TBR! I’m hoping that Singh plans on writing more mystery and suspense books, because I’ll gladly read whatever she writes next.

Bonus: I listened to the audiobook, narrated by the talented Sakia Maarleveld! It’s an excellent read in both print and audio.

Happy reading!

Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, All the Books, and Twitter.

If someone forwarded this newsletter to you, click here to subscribe.

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Today In Books

Can You Guess This Major City Library’s Most Stolen Book(s)?: Today in Books

NYPL Lions Are Reading Large, Lion-Sized Books!

Patience and Fortitude, the iconic lions sitting outside of the New York Public Library, are showing off new reading material! The lions have been given giant, lion-sized copies of The Great Gatsby and Beloved to celebrate 125 Books We Love, the library’s list of 125 favorite books to celebrate their 125th birthday.

The Most Commonly Stolen Book At The San Francisco Public Library May Surprise You

Speaking of libraries, can you guess which book is most commonly stolen at the San Francisco Public Library? It’s in fact a selection of books all by the same author–Michael Savage. Savage is local to the area and was surprised to hear the news, although the conservative talk host hopes that people are then reading the books. Librarians are equally surprised and baffled as to why his books go missing.

Bookworms, Get Booking: This Denmark Hostel Is A Former Public Library

If you’re prone to wanderlust, you may want to look away! A new hostel in Aarhus, Denmark has opened at the site of a former library, and the design is sleek, elegant, and it honors the building’s bookish origins. You can rent a sleeping pod for as little as $33 per night!