Categories
Check Your Shelf

When to Give Up That Book

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. We had our first winter storm this week, but instead of the predicted 3-6 inches of snow, we got 2-3 inches of semi-frozen slush. It’s all very typical for the Midwest, but there’s really nothing like having to bring groceries into the house while trudging through a parking lot of slush puddles. Is it spring yet?

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

OverDrive reports another record year for digital library circulation. ​​

Nichelle Hayes, former interim CEO of the Indianapolis Public Library, has resigned from the library as of last week.

The L.A. Public Library is getting into publishing — why it makes total sense.

Book Adaptations in the News

Page-to-screen adaptations coming in 2024.

Trailer for The Three Body Problem.

Censorship News

Data overwhelmingly supports libraries and library workers.

Librarian and anti-censorship activist Amanda Jones tells her story.

How a conservative group’s videos gained a foothold in classrooms with help from Republican officials. This is in regards to PragerU.

Florida Republicans have introduced a new bill that would make it defamation to accuse someone of racism, sexism, homophobia, or transphobia.

“A federal judge this week said Attorney General Ashley Moody’s office can argue in support of the Escambia County School Board [FL] during a Jan. 10 hearing in a battle about removing or restricting school library books.” The AG’s position is that removing books from a public school is a form of government speech and not subject to the First Amendment. Some of the restricted books include the Guinness Book of World Records and the dictionary.

Many of the books targeted for banning at the Pine-Richland school district (PA) show low circulation numbers, but a) that’s not a reason to justify their removal, and b) students are probably reading the books in the library as opposed to checking them out. Traditional circulation numbers don’t tell the whole story.

Not surprisingly, the vast majority of tips submitted to the new Alabama Book Ban snitch line have been from people trolling the system and advocating to keep books on library shelves.

How queer Louisianians are fighting book bans — and winning.

Cape Girardeau Public Library (MO) says there are no pornographic or obscene materials in the collection. The fact that libraries have to make this announcement is incredibly sad.

A proposed bill in Tennessee would allow parents to sue school districts if they disagree with the district’s decision to retain a book. Senator Mark Pody said this in favor of the bill: “‘This is something where we are trying to hold the line right here to some of the values that we have that are biblical values that are constitutionally sound,’ Pody said. ‘Parents are going to be in charge, not public schools.’” (Emphasis mine.)

The New Prairie United School Corp (IN) is dealing with challenges to six books.

The new Illinois law banning book bans has officially gone into effect.

The Hutchinson School Board (MN) is considering a new policy that will make it easier to remove books, and there’s at least one person in the community who has absolutely no idea what school librarians and media specialists do. “‘The decision of appropriateness is left entirely to the viewpoint of that media specialist,’ she said. ‘There’s no objective guidance for specialists to decide what materials to include.’” Insert a head-exploding GIF here because I just cannot.

Oregon libraries are facing budget cuts on top of safety issues and a record number of book challenges.

Seaside Public Library (OR) will retain And Tango Makes Three and When Aiden Became a Brother.

A planned drag queen story hour at the Soldotna Public Library (AK) was postponed due to online backlash.

The Northern Justice Project and the ACLU of Alaska have filed a preliminary injunction to return 56 books to Mat-Su school library shelves.

Books & Authors in the News

The man who stabbed Salman Rushdie in 2022 has had his trial postponed due to the release of Rushdie’s memoir later this year.

Taylor Swift fans have a conspiracy theory that T. Swift is the mystery author behind the mega-buzzy spy thriller Argylle.

Numbers & Trends

The Washington Post has a recent breakdown of Americans’ reading habits in 2023.

The best-selling books of the week according to all the lists.

Pop Cultured

The Mandalorian & Grogu is the next Star Wars movie to hit the big screen.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Vignette Books is a bookstore that offers titles exclusively through the “blind date with a book” format!

When should you give up on a book?

On the Riot

The best bookstores and libraries to follow on TikTok.

How to create achievable reading goals.

Plus, you don’t have to treat reading like going to the gym.

7 types of BookToks that skyrocketed this Rioter’s reading by 1000%.

How to diversify your BookTok FYP.

a black and white cat stretched out on a person's stomach

Well, Dini’s been getting most of the newsletter space the last few issues because Gilbert has been hanging out a lot in the closet, where he’s hard to see. Why? I have no idea. He’s eating fine and enjoys being petted in the closet, but he’s just suddenly decided that’s where he wants to spend 95% of his time. So here’s another photo of Dini being a very snuggly and needy boy!

Catch you all next week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Best Bookstores and Libraries to Follow on TikTok

This post is written by Leah Rachel von Essen.

By now, most bookworms have at least heard of BookTok. Many of us follow amazing creators, authors, and reviewers who give us ideas for which book we should pick up next from our local indie or library.

But what about the providers of those books? Across the United States, and truly, around the world, the co-owners and booksellers of independent bookshops, and the hard-working librarians who apparently don’t have enough to deal with, are taking the time to make their own original, fun, entertaining content.

Learn more about how libraries operate and what resources they have up their sleeves, follow a Black-owned bookstore as it makes its way towards opening its doors, laugh at how hard you relate to the familiar troubles and tribulations of your friendly indie bookworms, and connect with book lovers from all over the world by following these 17 amazing bookstores and libraries on our favorite app.

Bookstores

@bookpeople_atx

Catch updates from the biggest indie in Texas: Book People, a gigantic, beautiful bookstore in Austin, Texas, that posts everything from bookstore maintenance to their takes on trending memes.

@bookpeople_atx

press f to pay your respects to the years of life zareefs lost changing the marquee in 100+ weather this summer

♬ Wii Sports Main Theme (From “Wii Sports Video Game”) – Geek Music

@wordafterwordbooks

This book and record store in Truckee, California, has a great TikTok full of diverse book recommendations and exciting book stacks!

@wordafterwordbooks

Kick off Native American Heritage Month with some of our favorite books written by Indigenous authors! What are your reading this month? #wordafterwordbooks #nativeamericanheritagemonth #indigenousauthors #booktok #bookrecommendations #indiebookstore

♬ Ooh La La – Josie Dunne

@volumesbooks

One of my favorite bookstores in Chicago also happens to have a great, growing TikTok run by its indie owners. This bookstore has had some struggles in the past, and I love watching as it blossoms in its newest (and hopefully permanent) location.

@volumesbooks

We loce surprises. And engagements! And helping to pull it all off. Congrats to the beautiful couple, and thankyou to #sarahjmaas for being a part of it all! #engagement #bookstore #volumes #bookstoreengagement #booktok #courtofthornsandroses

♬ love song (hesitations) (sped up) – Lofuu & Shiloh Dynasty & dprk

@resist_bks

This Black-owned indie (located in Petersburg, Virginia) has lists on lists of amazing book recommendations provided by the incredible Sera (and her amazing glasses).

@bluestocking.bookshop

This used bookshop in Holland, Michigan, shares updates about Michigan’s banned books fight, beautiful stacks of old books, and the struggles of running inventory and management, all with a sense of humor and a clear love of books. Their TikTok features owner Aimee!

@fictionandfriction

This bookstore (located in Murray Bridge, South Australia) focuses exclusively on indie romance and is run by a single mother and chronic pain warrior.

@fictionandfriction

I love when people come into the shop when its empty and assume I never get customers 😅 Or when they just assume i wont last long as if Fiction & Friction isn’t going into its fourth year in business ❤️ #fictionandfriction #fictionandfrictionindiebookseller #fictionandfrictionbookstore #bookstore #bookshop #romancebookseller #romancebookstore #romancebooks #spicybooks #spicybookstore #spicybooktok #ausbooktok #booktokaustralia

♬ Thirst trap alert – TheWritingViking

@booksaremagicbk

Which books are a red flag? Which books are best for summer reading? And what is one bookseller’s Roman Empire? Find out by following Books Are Magic, a Brooklyn-based bookstore known for its YA selection (it’s also co-owned by novelist Emma Straub!).

@booksaremagicbk

This is Julia’s Roman Empire, wait till the end for nothing but excitement #romanempire

♬ original sound – books are magic

@peachstreetbooks

Peach Street Books is a precious blue-and-white little building in Cape Charles, Virginia, and their TikToks are always darling, lovely, and aesthetic.

@dogwoodcitybooks

Want to see a bookstore getting started right from the beginning? Dogwood City Books is a Black-owned bookstore hoping to open in 2024 in Sylvania, Georgia —accompany its owners on their journey to opening the doors!

@dogwoodcitybooks

this month’s goals include finishing renovations, & beginning the cleaning & decorating process! 🕺🥳 #bookstore #indiebookstore #renovation

♬ original sound – the summer i turned pretty

@wcfbooks

Women and Children First in Chicago (“your local gay feminist bookstore”) has some of the best booksellers in the game — and on their TikTok, you can catch their book recs, including the books they wish they could read again for the first time.

@wcfbooks

Something we find ourselves saying to customers often : “I’m so jealous you’re reading that for the first time, it’s SO GOOD” 🥹 Tell us what you wish you could read again for the first time! #bookrecommendation #bookrecs📚 #booksellersoftiktok #whatiread #firstreadof2023 #januarywrapup

♬ original sound – Women & Children First

@therippedbodice

The Ripped Bodice is an iconic woman-owned all-romance bookstore with locations in Los Angeles and (recently) Brooklyn. Their TikTok is regularly updated with relatable, funny videos about loving books so much it hurts!

@therippedbodice

The books in question are Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Sáenz (L) and Divine Rivals by Rebecca Ross (R) and you will love how they make cry!! #divinerivals #rebeccaross #queerromance #romancebooktok #booktok #bookish #emotionaldamage

♬ Hi I batwiccan did the meme – Lito

Libraries

@westonpubliclibrary

Weston Public Library (located in Weston, Massachusetts) is one of my favorite accounts because they have these ultra-satisfying videos of them laminating or re-laminating the books in their collection!

@cbrlibrary

Cape Breton Regional Library (located in Nova Scotia, Canada) is fun, silly, and has videos about all the things your local library offers, the funniest jokes about being a librarian, and all kinds of timely, fun TikTok content.

@cbrlibrary

Tried to break the library staff and librarian stereotype by not wearing a cardigan… but it’s just too cozy (and pretty!) #LibraryTok #LibraryTikTok #PublicLibrary #PublicLibraryLove #librarianlife

♬ original sound – Micah Nicole

@grndpubliclibrary

Greendale Public Library in Wisconsin has a TikTok run by the amazing Megan, a teen librarian, and is full of fun, bookish content and questions about using the library — as well as some fun do’s and don’ts!

@pleasantgrovelibrary

This fun, vibrantly-colored library (located in Pleasant Grove, Utah) has a whole great series of funny, relatable TikToks about the truths of working in a library. Some have gone viral!

@pimacountylibrary

This library (located in Arizona) has a lot of things going for it, from book recommendations to hilariously edited videos, but honestly, my favorite series is the “Things You Didn’t Know the Library Had” one — which includes everything from a blood pressure cuff to mobile hotspots!

@cincylibrary

The Cincinnati Public Library went viral a couple of times over the past few years for their hilarious videos in which their staff are 110% committed to the bit!


Want more BookTok content? Check out our other recommendations — from 20 of TikTok’s favorite nonfiction reads to a look at whether BookTok’s reign is easing up.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Art of the Paperback Makeover

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Some of my go-to resources are still coming back online after the new year, so enjoy this shorter-than-usual newsletter. I anticipate we’ll be back to our regular programming by next week!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The fine art of the paperback makeover.

New & Upcoming Titles

Here’s a first look at Rebel Wilson’s upcoming memoir.

75 books by women of color to read in 2024.

Most anticipated 2024 picks from BookBub, The Millions, Paste (fantasy), Vulture.

January picks from Barnes & Noble, Kirkus.

RA/Genre Resources

Required reading: dark academia edition.

On the Riot

The most anticipated SFF for 2024, according to Goodreads.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Winter 2024 YA releases to enjoy this season and beyond.

January picks for mystery/thrillers, romance, SFF, horror, nonfiction, YA, children’s.

How to start reading nonfiction.

All Things Comics

On the Riot

Start the new year right with these graphic novels.

8 fantasy graphic novels for adults to lose themselves in.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

On the Riot

7 cozy fantasy books to start off 2024 on the right note.

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

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 stretched out between a person's leg and the back of a couch

When I say that Dini and I have been glued at the hip recently, I’m not exaggerating.

All right, friends. I’ll be back in on Friday! Have a good week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Let’s Rescue Book Lovers From Goodreads

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. My work schedule has changed so that I’m no longer scheduled to work Wednesday evenings. Except I’ve worked Wednesday evenings for years (since I worked at my last job!), and now I don’t know how I’m supposed to know what day it is! Truly a struggle…

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Denver’s Center on Colfax reopens its free LGBTQ+ library.

Cool Library Updates

Libraries are planning mocktail programs in response to a growing number of adult patrons pursuing alcohol-free lifestyles.

Meet Mychal Threets, the 33-year-old California librarian who’s become very popular on TikTok and Instagram with his upbeat library videos.

Censorship News

A partial victory in the Iowa book ban lawsuit — more information here.

The Massachusetts police chief that raided a middle school classroom looking for Gender Queer has issued an apology.

After initially returning A Court of Mist and Fury to school library shelves, the Lexington-Richland School District 5 school board (SC) voted 5-2 to remove the entire series against the recommendation of the review committee.

From Alabama: a few key people are responsible for the majority of book bans.

Etowah County (AL) GOP member Amy Minton is challenging library funding for the Gadsden Public Library and has already challenged 30 books, with an additional 40 challenges thought to be on the way. Because this is clearly the biggest problem her community is facing…

“The leader of a far-right organization in St. Tammany [LA] has withdrawn the more than 150 book challenges her organization has submitted [to] the parish’s library review board.” But before you automatically think this is good news, this person is pursuing legislative action and believes that the new governor, legislature, and parish council will be “more sympathetic to her cause.”

Public libraries vs. quorum courts: an ongoing local conflict throughout Arkansas.

New laws on book challenges and “indoctrination” have created a culture of fear for Arkansas school librarians, and some have become very wary of selecting books, lest their choices attract accusations or legal trouble.

The Murfreesboro City Council (TN) quietly and unanimously voted to repeal the city’s decency ordinance, which the same city council put into effect six months ago. The ordinance had a lasting impact on the county library system, which is set to implement a new library card policy that will make it more difficult for kids to check out books not meant for their age group.

The Big Walnut school board (OH) voted in their December meeting to restrict Pride flags and any displays of materials not directly related to the current unit of study in classrooms.

(Paywalled) Eight challenged books will remain in Northview Public Schools (MI).

The Las Cruces school district (NM) has denied an appeal on the decision to retain Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts), so it will stay in the school library.

I’m just leaving this headline as-is: “Washoe [NV] library board meeting results in hours-long public comment. Again.”

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

The New York Times says this about Goodreads: “Let’s rescue book lovers from this online hellscape.”

On the Riot

19 of the coolest bookstores in the world.

a black and white cat sitting on a colorful blanket

Here’s Dini enjoying the gift I got for Blaine for Christmas. I ordered a gorgeous blanket from Shutterfly with vacation photos from all of the places Blaine and I have visited over the last five years, and when we brought it home, Dini said, “Well, thank you very much!”

Hope everyone had a good first week of 2024! I’ll see you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Hello, 2024!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. This newsletter is the first of 2024, but I’m writing it in 2023, so is anyone else ready to ring in a new year? Not going to lie, I’m moderately terrified to be entering another presidential election year, but 2023 threw me some challenges, and I won’t be sad to see it in the rearview mirror.

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

Did you know that Al Roker has a series of mystery novels? (I didn’t.) But the fourth book in the Morning Show Murders series comes out in April.

Cover reveal for Ava Reid’s feminist retelling of Macbeth.

Most anticipated books of 2024 from Brightly (picture books), Entertainment Weekly, Epic Reads (BIPOC authors, LGBTQ+), Kirkus, Oprah Daily, USA Today.

January picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, teens, children).

All Things Comics

On the Riot

The most underrated comics, according to Goodreads.

Audiophilia

Kirkus’ best audiobooks of 2023.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Children’s books that celebrate diverse holidays and traditions.

Adults

15 of the best BookTok recommendations from 2023, and no, Colleen Hoover is not on this list.

On the Riot

8 books that the authors regretted writing.

Adult versions of your favorite childhood fantasy novels.

20 must-read cozy fantasy novels.

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 stretched out next to a person's leg

Dini’s making sure I get everything formatted properly for this newsletter. As always, he’s a big helper.

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

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Pledge to Read Less?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I hope everyone had a healthier holiday than my husband’s side of the family this year…we had six or seven people sick or injured leading up to Christmas, including a couple hospital visits. Thankfully, everyone seems to be okay, but I’m just hoping no one else comes down with anything!

It’s happening, readers — we’re bringing paperbacks! Whether you (or a reader you know and love) hate carrying around bulky hardcovers, you’re on a budget, you want a wider range of recommendations, or all of the above, you can now get a paperback subscription from TBR, curated just for you by one of our Bibliologists. The holidays are here, and we’ve got three different levels for gifting (to yourself or others) to suit every budget. Get all the details at mytbr.co.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The New York Times has sued OpenAI and Microsoft for copyright infringement.

OverDrive releases their most-borrowed books of 2023.

Library Journal has rounded up a bunch of “Top 2023 Checkout” lists from public libraries.

Book Adaptations in the News

Read Erasure before you watch American Fiction.

Censorship News

The highlights and lowlights from 2023 in censorship news.

“Keller ISD [TX] trustee Ruthie Keyes stepped down from the school board during a discussion on whether to allow chaplains to volunteer in classrooms.” It’s all part of the same agenda, folks.

(Paywalled): Orange County School District (FL) pulls 673 books from library shelves.

Escambia County Public Schools (FL) have made over 1000 books off-limits to students. Meanwhile, a federal judge will begin hearing arguments pertaining to the book banning lawsuit filed against ECPS in January.

Hernando County Public Schools (FL) have banned six books as of their December board meeting, including The Hate U Give, which board member Mark Johnson described as “‘nasty, nasty, vulgar, filthy.’” Yes, that is an actual quote from an adult person.

SAD 51 (ME) board votes to keep Gender Queer at Greely High School library. “‘I feel like I’m a better person for having read this book,’ board member Kim Vine said. ‘I took this process very, very seriously.’”

Nearly 200 people attended the December board meeting for the Cuba Circulating Library (NY), many in favor of retaining This Book is Gay in the teen section. One speaker said that it wasn’t censorship to move the book from the teen collection to the adult collection because teens still had access to the adult collection…so why move it, then? On the other end of the spectrum, this person gave a very powerful statement: “Suzanne Flierl, a member of the leadership team for the Cattaraugus-Allegany Liberation Collective and a mother to members of the LGBTQ+ community, spoke about how she had raised her children in a household that was ‘religiously and politically conservative’ and added that she later realized that ‘putting that much restriction on her children traumatized’ them. ‘I wish that this and other books were available to my children at the time,’ Flierl said. ‘It was much needed but unattainable at home.’”

Three new board members have joined the Rockwell Falls Public Library board (NY). The library has been closed for three months after two of its three staff members resigned due to public harassment over a drag queen story hour, and three previous trustees left as well.

The Quarryville Public Library (PA) continues to lose funding from conservative townships because they have LGBTQ books in their collections.

Many of the books targeted by members of the Pine-Richland School Board (PA) have very low circulation numbers.

(Paywalled): The Carroll County School Board (MD) has asked for public input on defining “sexually explicit content.” Yeah, this is going to go well.

Some of the new Fairfax County (VA) school board members were sworn in on a stack of banned books.

This Arlington County (VA) librarian is pushing back against book bans.

“The Alabama Public Library Service has launched its new online portal that allows for parents, concerned citizens and organizations to flag specific books they deem inappropriate for children.” We’ve seen this type of behavior from other ultra-conservative states/government agencies, but to see a state’s library association set up a snitch hotline like this really hits hard.

“Local pastor Paul Thompson asked the board to reconsider its decision on Gender Queer, although library policy states the results of reconsideration decisions stand for five years.” This is in Dothan, Alabama.

(Paywalled): The Lafayette Parish Public Library (LA) has canceled its ALA membership.

After withdrawing from the Central Arkansas Library System’s “tech card program” at the beginning of the 2023 school year, the Pulaski County Special School District is reinstating access, albeit with a new parental approval form.

Two years of efforts to ban books are taking a toll on school librarians. The article focuses on librarians in the Wentzville School District (MO), but this story could apply to school librarians anywhere in the country.

The St. Charles County Library (MO) will remove books that contain sexually explicit photos.

The Pickaway County Library Board (OH) will keep the book Making a Baby in the children’s section.

(Possibly paywalled): The Brainerd School Board (MN) upheld the decision to retain Empire of Storms, and days later, they voted to keep Queen of Shadows as well.

(Paywalled): The Grand Forks Public Library (ND) has fielded its first book challenges in years thanks to a recent library obscenity law passed in April.

“Leavenworth School District Board of Education [KS] voted 4-3 this week to pass revisions to an education policy that bans ‘gender identity’ and ‘sexual orientation’ references in the district’s elementary library books.” So, if a book specifies that a character is male or female, that will automatically be banned, right? Or any mention of heterosexual marriage? Do we want our school children indoctrinated with discussion of sexual orientation like this?? (I’m being facetious, but really, I’m not. If they’re going to make ridiculous policies like this, they need to be upfront with their bigotry and say the quiet parts out loud.)

The Davis School District (UT) is reviewing the Quran under the school’s “sensitive materials” policy.

West Ada School District (ID) quietly pulled 10 titles from library shelves and is considering 44 other titles for removal, thanks to the ratings posted on BookLooks.

Books & Authors in the News

Here’s what’s entering the public domain in 2024.

Numbers & Trends

These are the highest-rated books from every country.

Pop Cultured

32 detective shows you may have forgotten about.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

When the world is dark, how do you rekindle your light?

On the Riot

The most popular books in US public libraries in 2023.

Why this Rioter is pledging to read less in 2024.

two black cats asleep with their butts touching

Dini has made it his personal mission to annoy the living daylights out of Gilbert this week, but I did manage to get a snuggly photo of them the other day.

All right, friends. I’ll see you in 2024! Stay healthy!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Best Backlist of 2023

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. The next few newsletters are going to be shorter than usual thanks to the holiday season!

Before we get to it, if you find yourself in need of a belated, last-minute, or “just for fun” gift for the book nerd in your life, TBR can help! We pair our customers with a professional book nerd (aka bibliologist) who just gets them. They fill out a survey and then sit back and relax as we pick books just for them. We’ve got three levels — recs-only, paperback, and hardcover — and you can gift a full year or one time, so there are options for every budget! Get all the details at mybtro.com/gift.

Let’s jump in!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The most scathing book reviews of 2023.

New & Upcoming Titles

Alexander Chee has a new novel coming in 2025.

Alice Feeney announces her seventh novel, publication date TBD.

Cover reveal for Nicola Yoon’s first adult novel, One of Our Kind.

Obama’s favorite books of 2023.

Gillian Anderson’s favorite books of 2023.

Kirkus’s best indie books of 2023.

RA/Genre Resources

How Christmas murder mysteries became a UK holiday tradition.

On the Riot

Goodreads needs to do better by marginalized authors.

Book Riot’s 2024 reading log is here!

The best backlist books that Rioters read in 2023. (My favorite backlist title this year was Notes on an Execution by Danya Kukafka, and if you haven’t read it yet, OMG you must read it now.)

12 of the best poetry collections from 2023.

The best new weekly book releases to TBR.

What are the mental health benefits and drawbacks of reading goals and challenges?

Audiophilia

Barnes & Noble names their best audiobooks of 2023.

AudioFile’s best mystery audiobooks of 2023.

On the Riot

10 of Libro.fm’s most pre-ordered books of Winter 2024.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

13 YA romance novels with major You’ve Got Mail vibes.

YA books to catch up on before their 2024 sequel releases.

Adults

10 romantic stories set over the course of a single day.

10 heartstring-tugging novels for fans of Christina Lauren.

8 literary novels with phenomenal worldbuilding.

On the Riot

7 short books you can squeeze in before the end of the year.

8 thought provoking fantasy books you won’t be able to put down.

Books to ease you into the new year.

Historical fiction books for people who don’t like historical fiction.

9 of the best pirate romance novels.

8 queer wintry books.

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.

All right, friends. I’ll see you on Friday for the last newsletter of 2023!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Top Stories and Checkouts of 2023

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Y’all, the week leading up to the holidays this year has been LONG and tiring. I am ready for a few days off and some holiday food.

Are you looking for the perfect gift for that bookish special someone in your life this holiday season? Tailored Book Recommendations is here to help! Here at TBR, we pair our customers with a professional book nerd (aka bibliologist) who just gets them. They fill out a survey and then sit back and relax as we pick books just for them. We’ve got three levels — recs-only, paperback, and hardcover — and you can gift a full year or one time, so there are options for every budget! Get all the details at mybtro.com/gift

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The Internet Archive seeks a reversal in its book scanning lawsuit.

The Top 10 library stories of 2023.

“Due to a contract dispute between SirsiDynix, a provider Montana libraries have used for over 20 years, and a third party vendor — libraries nationwide are left without an app that provides access to online catalogues.”

Cool Library Updates

These are the top checkouts from the New York Public Library, Timberland Regional Library, Charleston County Public Library, Free Library of Philadelphia, Boston Public Library, San Francisco Public Library, L.A. Public Library.

Worth Reading

When libraries like Gaza’s are destroyed, what’s lost is far more than books.

New Yorkers love their libraries. So why are they always on the chopping block?

Book Adaptations in the News

Author Wiliam Collier has accused director Adam McKay of plagiarizing Collier’s novel Stanley’s Comet in the script for Don’t Look Up.

Amy Adams is starring in and executive producing the series adaptation of Graham Moore’s The Holdout.

Alexander Skarsgård is starring in the Murderbot miniseries on Apple+.

Children of Blood and Bone has a director.

Good Omens has been renewed for a third and final season.

The first trailer for Fool Me Once by Harlan Coben has dropped.

Censorship News

PEN America released a new study showing that book bans lead to more book bans.

When do parents trust their children with materials at the library? Also, most parents want school libraries for their children — but with restrictions.

Banned booktables are a frequent sight at many bookstores. But are they helping the authors who need it most?

Computer book bans and other insights from a year investigating prison censorship.

Publishers Weekly’s People of the Year are Texas booksellers Valerie Koehler and Charley Rejsek, who joined in a federal lawsuit against HB 900.

Rep. Ayanna Pressley has introduced a federal book banning bill.

The State Board of Education in Texas approved guidelines for school library rules, particularly that school libraries “must have policies to prohibit the possession or purchase of books determined to be ‘sexually explicit.’”

A new parent group pushes back on Texas book bans.

The new library board in Corpus Christi (TX) fielded comments from the public about restricting kids’ access to certain books.

The Lake Travis ISD (TX) is considering a new policy that would make it easier to ban books.

A Florida sex scandal shakes Moms for Liberty’s influence.

Lauren Groff is opening a new bookstore in Florida that will focus on Florida literary history and books currently banned in the state.

A new group in Massachusetts is shipping banned books to Florida.

Someone complained about Gender Queer being in a Great Barrington classroom (MA). Then the police showed up.

Almond Public Library (NY) will vote later this month on whether to keep Grandpa’s Pride on the shelf.

Clyde-Savannah Board of Education (NY) may have to wait months for the five challenged books they elected to retain to actually be put back on shelves.

The director of the Northern Cambria Public Library (PA) resigned after several members of the board took it upon themselves to remove issues of Out magazine without following any sort of library policy.

Frederick County Public Schools (MD) reviewed 31 challenged booksTriangles will be banned, two more books will be restricted to high school libraries, and the other titles will remain in the district libraries as-is.

Franklin County Public Schools (VA) have implemented a new policy that informs parents/guardians by email every time their child checks out a book from the library. It’s an opt-out policy as well, not opt-in.

The New Hanover (NC) school board ends its Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee.

“The board, and others across the region, have been hearing complaints about books from speakers during public comments for several months. Since those complaints have come in, Burke County Public Schools [NC] has placed all books already categorized as 14+ content on a checkout suspension until the books can be reviewed for age appropriateness.” Yeah. This is a great policy. /s

Marietta City Schools (GA) have voted to remove 23 books with “sexual, inappropriate content.”

“The Autauga County Commission [AL] has appointed four members to the Prattville library board in the last two weeks, leaving some residents critical that the commission has ‘stacked the board.’ “Stacked the board” in this case means that three of the new board members are affiliated with Moms for Liberty and/or Clean Up Alabama.

The Etowah County (AL) Republican Party passed a resolution urging the Alabama Public Library Service to withdraw from ALA.

“A former Arkansas lawmaker who has proposed suspending funding to libraries suing the state over restrictions on materials was confirmed by the Senate Monday to a spot on the state library board.”

Tennessee has launched a new banned books hotline, but this time, it’s a hotline that students can call and request copies of banned books.

​​The Wilson County Board of Education (TN) is looking at who can and cannot challenge books in the school system.

Fighting book bans in Kentucky schools and beyond.

The De Pere School Board (WI) updated their book policy so that books can be challenged/reviewed on an annual basis. The policy was previously at three years, and the recommendation was to increase it to five years.

One parent got 444 books (!!!) removed from Elkhorn Area School District (WI).

“A letter sent on behalf of Muslim families in St. Louis Park [MN] threatens legal action unless parents are notified and allow their children to opt out of classroom discussions about sexuality and LGBTQ+ topics.”

The largest teacher’s union in Iowa is teaming up with Penguin Random House to challenge the new state censorship law.

Ottumwa Community School District (IA) has removed 30 books that it believes are in violation of state legislation, but it won’t disclose the book titles.

Saydel Community School District (IA) has removed 21 books for review under the new state censorship law.

The Williston High School library (ND) will not be banning any of the 25 challenged books, although some of them will come with parental alerts if a student checks them out.

A letter to the editor about supposedly “inappropriate” children’s books at the Tillamook County Library district (OR).

The Seaside Public Library (OR) has received its first book challenges in over a decade. The two challenged books are And Tango Makes Three and When Aiden Became A Brother. And the kicker is that the person who submitted the challenges is a city councilor.

Books & Authors in the News

Notable literary deaths in 2023.

A Lord of the Rings fanfiction or fanfic writer has been sued by the Tolkien estate for publishing their own sequel.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

Book trends to watch for in 2024.

The best-selling romance books of all time.

The highest-rated celebrity memoirs, according to readers.

Award News

The Golden Globe nominees have been announced.

The award-winning books of 2023.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Dictionary.com’s Word of the Year is…

How does the reality of bookselling match up to how bookselling is depicted in fiction?

Is the book world turning against Goodreads?

Reading print improves comprehension more than reading digital text according to a recent study.

On the Riot

2024 YA book adaptations to get excited for.

black and white cat snuggled up on its side next to a person's leg

Is that a sleepy snuggly Doodles sitting next to me? I think it is!

Have a great holiday if you celebrate, or a great December weekend if you don’t celebrate! Peace out!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Read Harder 2024!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I did an early Christmas with my immediate family, and I ended up dropping an accidental book recommendation (The Hunger by Alma Katsu) to my mom and my sister, neither of whom read horror. But when I casually mentioned a book “about something supernatural stalking the Donner Party,” both of them went, “Wait, what??” So that was a fun little gift I got to give! And maybe a gift I can give to some of you too…read the book, it’s awesome!

Are you looking for the perfect gift for that bookish special someone in your life this holiday season? Tailored Book Recommendations is here to help! Here at TBR, we pair our customers with a professional book nerd (aka bibliologist) who just gets them. They fill out a survey and then sit back and relax as we pick books just for them. We’ve got three levels — recs-only, paperback, and hardcover — and you can gift a full year or one time, so there are options for every budget! Get all the details at mybtro.com/gift

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

A roundup of the biggest book and publishing news stories from 2023.

A new group of authors allege that Meta used copyrighted books for AI training, despite its own lawyers’ warnings.

James Patterson has awarded $500 holiday bonuses to 600 indie bookstore employees across the country.

New & Upcoming Titles

Tiffany Haddish has a new “tell-all” book coming in 2024.

Jeffrey Deaver is coming out with a new series in 2024.

Olivia Dade has a new paranormal rom-com coming out in 2024, ZomRomCom, which is described as The Last of Us meets My Roommate is a Vampire.

Sophie Hannah has been tapped to write the next Hercule Poirot novel. ​​

Best books of 2023 from Autostraddle, CBC (fiction, nonfiction), Crime Reads (debut novels, espionage), Esquire (horror), Kirkus (YA), New York Times (cookbooks), Time (fiction, nonfiction), Tor.com, Vanity Fair, Washington Post (staff picks).

The best book covers of 2023.

Weekly picks from LitHub, New York Times.

December picks from People.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Alice Sadie Celine – Sarah Blakely-Cartwright (Star Tribune)

How to Be a Renaissance Woman: The Untold History of Beauty and Female Creativity – Jill Burke (Washington Post)

Oath and Honor: A Memoir and a Warning – Liz Cheney (Washington Post)

Airplane Mode: An Irreverent History of Travel – Shahnaz Habib (New York Times)

Prophet Song – Paul Lynch (NPR)

Let Us Descend – Jesmyn Ward (Guardian)

RA/Genre Resources

Amazon is rolling out a new feature that puts every book you’ve ever purchased on the site — whether it’s digital, physical, or audiobook — into a single searchable hub, which will also provide you with personalized recommendations.

Where to start with David Drake.

What makes a novel unique: on retellings and plagiarism.

A renaissance of gay literature marks a turning point for publishing.

On the Riot

It’s Book Riot’s Read Harder 2024 challenge!

36 exciting new book releases for 2024.

The best self-help books of 2024.

The best microhistories of 2023.

The best cute romances of 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Where to start with Tracey Livesay.

A case for all points of view.

Tips and tricks for doing a reading year-in-review.

What murder mysteries get wrong about gardens and poisonous plants.

All Things Comics

Twenty years after its publication, Joe Sacco’s graphic nonfiction book Palestine, has been rushed back into print due to demand.

Audiophilia

The final report for the 2023 Audiobook Survey from Library Journal, School Library Journal, and the Audio Publishers Association.

Remember what Spotify did to the music industry? Books are next.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

The most anticipated 2024 releases for picture books, middle grade/chapter books, and YA books.

16 YA books with Black male protagonists.

Adults

27 of the best etiquette books to read.

16 cozy fantasy novels.

15 high-flying fantasy novels with dragons.

15 books about pirates.

7 books that will make you rethink your relationship to nature.

10 novels by BIPOC Norwegian writers.

A NYC reading list that captures the city’s many sides.

5 SFF books set in the American South.

6 novels to read if you love Hallmark holiday movies.

Cozy holiday rom-coms to warm your heart.

6 mystery novels where everyone’s a suspect.

What to read next: Japanese literature edition.

On the Riot

8 of the best winter romances.

20 must-read historical fiction books set in Korea.

8 awesome book recs for Totally Killer ’80s slasher film fans.

10 cozy sci-fi books to give you hope for the future.

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 pawing at a lit Christmas tree

Guest photo from my parents’ house, where Groucho is having fun with his first Christmas tree. We’ll see how long it stays standing…

All right, friends, I’ll see you on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Never Call It A Book Ban

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I was in quarantine all last weekend, but I did get to come out of the bedroom (masked) to watch Adam Driver’s fourth hosting stint on SNL, and what a highlight it was! The Internet has been losing it over his skit as a baby on an airplane, but my personal favorite was the Midwestern dad in a passive-aggressive standoff at Christmas dinner. You’ll never hear (or say) “Beep beep” the same way again.

The holidays have arrived, and so has our new paperback level at TBR! If you (or a reader you know) are just over-carrying around bulky hardcovers or are looking for a more budget-friendly option, we’ve got you. Check out all the offerings at mybtro.com/gift, and give personalized reading recommendations customized for any and every reader.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Connecticut officials aim for first-in-the-nation action to address eBook costs.

An audit of the Multnomah County Library system (OR) showed that nearly 75% of frontline library staff feel unsafe at work.

Book Adaptations in the News

Killers of the Flower Moon isn’t for an Indigenous audience. It’s for the wolves.

The new trailer for Dune, Part 2 has just dropped.

Censorship News

Manufacturing problems with school and library books to cash in on solutions.

(Paywalled): The two new members of the Corpus Christi (TX) library board are affiliated with right-wing book banning groups.

The Graham City Council (TX) is considering whether or not to overturn the library board’s decision to retain We Need to Talk About Vaginas: An IMPORTANT Book About Vulvas, Periods, Puberty and Sex!, because a group of pastors complained to the city council.

Alachua County Schools (FL) have 13 active book challenges that were submitted by three parents in the district.

The review committee in Brevard County schools (FL) has recommended that Sold be restricted to high schoolers only.

Broward County Schools (FL) will retain the Bible.

“The New Hampshire Department of Education is heightening its scrutiny of books in libraries and classrooms, as schools continue to face pressure to remove titles that have LGBTQ+ characters or deal with mature or difficult sexual themes.” Yeah, not a good look, New Hampshire.

The newly appointed Central Bucks Board of School Directors, Karen Smith, was sworn into office Monday using a stack of banned books. [PA]

Residents in Worcester County (MD) are up in arms about the book All Boys Aren’t Blue.

A month after Hanover Public Schools (VA) removed 75 books from school libraries, the district is now reviewing two new titles: Valiant Ladies and the Bible.

Moore County Schools and Catawba County Schools (NC) will decide on the fate of their currently challenged books in 2024.

Berkeley County Schools (SC) spent thousands of dollars to purchase copies of several challenged books for a committee to review, and now the committee has been disbanded.

Beaufort County (SC) has finished reviewing all 97 challenged books and has removed five: Beautiful, The Haters, Nineteen Minutes, It Ends With Us, and Forever For a Year.

“Effingham County Commissioners [GA] and Live Oak Public Libraries officials met Monday night to discuss the content of certain books available in the libraries that, said one commissioner, could be ‘damaging to our children.’” Because the county commissioners are more knowledgeable than library employees.

Alabama governor Kay Ivey has proposed new rules that would restrict where libraries can shelve certain books, along with requiring advance approval to recommend, display, or promote material to children. Holy crap.

Last week, I shared a news item that the Foley Public Library (AL) relocated 11 books from the YA section to the adult section. Turns out that all 11 of those books were challenged by just one parent.

1819 News, a right-wing media group in Alabama, has taken it upon themselves to review books in the Orange Beach City school district that they think need to be removed. And the superintendent seems to be just fine with this.

“‘We are not book banners. We just want to have some kind of policy that can either label these books, segregate these books, have parental opt-out options, or in the event that some of them are too graphic—be removed from the schools.’” This is an actual quote from the Chair of the Knox County (TN) chapter of Moms for Liberty.

Wilson County Schools (TN) decided to keep Water for Elephants and The Lovely Bones on high school library shelves.

Sumner County Schools (TN) will retain the graphic novel Hey Kiddo. The parent who challenged the book said that it contained inappropriate language and premarital sex, but the review committee found no depictions of sex in the book.

A group of Iron River (WI) library patrons voiced their support for library employees and urged the board to respect the Constitution. There’s one current board member who has spoken out publicly against LGBTQ+ books available at the library.

The Brown County Library (WI) moved Let’s Talk About It from the teen section (where it belongs) to the adult section.

The Brainerd School Board (MN) will hear an appeal to their decision to retain Empire of Storms.

Superintendent Ryan Walters introduces new non-woke guidelines for Oklahoma libraries, and removes information literacy guidelines put out by ALA.

“‘In a state with the highest rate of domestic violence in the nation and a sexual assault rate that’s 45% higher than the national average, there are going to be students that live this experience and could benefit from seeing themselves represented in literature,’ said a parent.” This was at a recent Union school board meeting in Oklahoma in response to the book Lucky.

A conservative LGBTQ+ group in El Paso County (CO) supports the removal of “obscene” books from school libraries.

Laramie County School District 1 (WY) passed a controversial book policy despite public opposition.

“Dismissing words of caution from Community Library Network directors, a fellow trustee and without advice from library network legal counsel, the board majority unanimously approved drafts of its updated Materials Selection Policy and a new Materials Withdrawal and Reconsideration Policy during a special meeting Thursday at the Post Falls Library.” [ID]

After a failed first attempt to take control of the public library earlier in the year, the Liberty Lake City Council passed an ordinance that would give them some control over the library board’s policies.

“A conservative activist who teaches parents how to get books removed from school libraries has won her first major victory at a right-leaning Southern California school board, setting the district up for a fresh legal battle with the state.” And the first part of her advice to parents is to never use the term “book ban.”

A San Diego parent is “frustrated” that his 14-year-old was assigned The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian in class, even though the district says that parents can talk to the teacher to work out an alternate assignment for the student if they so choose. It doesn’t seem like this parent so chose.

Books & Authors in the News

Renowned producer, TV writer, and author Norman Lear has died at 101.

Best-selling author Tim Dorsey died earlier this month at 62.

Debut author Cait Corrain lost a book deal after she was accused of review-bombing other authors on Goodreads.

Numbers & Trends

Jane Austen’s annotated copy of Curiosities of Literature is up for auction and is expected to fetch up to $150,000.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

The Goodreads Choice Award winners have been announced.

Tyriek White wins the Center for Fiction’s 2023 First Novel Prize for We Are a Haunting.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Books as What We Do in the Shadows quotes. This is a thing of beauty.

On the Riot

How to build seasonal rereading rituals.

black and white cat squished up against a person's leg

Here’s Dini visiting me in Spaceship Quarantine. He absolutely refused to let me close the bedroom door, and honestly, how could you not feel better with such a squishy boy next to you??

All right, friends. It’s the weekend. Let’s get some rest and stay healthy!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.