Categories
Check Your Shelf

How to Support Libraries Dealing With Book Challenges

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m starting this issue with a couple of important links that I don’t want to get lost in the general newsletter chaos. First off, the Craighead County Jonesboro Public Library in Arkansas needs your public support in opposition to the hateful comments they’ve received since refusing to remove certain books from their shelves.

Also, for any libraries who are currently facing active book challenges and wondering how on earth to address the community, you may want to take a look at the statement that the director of the Cozby Library and Community Commons in Coppell, Texas made. It’s clear, direct, and cites library policy as well as state and federal law. It’s an excellent example to reference if you’re trying to draft your own response.

And now, on to the newsletter.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The Saint Charles (IL) library has reopened for in-person visits after receiving threats towards its staff over the library’s mask policy.

Maryland lawyers say that the state’s eBook law is a defense of public libraries. Meanwhile, here’s an update on the nearly three hour hearing that took place on February 7th.

A former High Plains Library District (CO) employee says that she was fired after blowing the whistle on library policy changes that were used to cancel or modify diversity-focused programming. The district denies the claims.

Multiple books in the Bethlehem Public Library (NY) have been defaced with political stickers.

Cool Library Updates

Tulsa City-County Library (OK) has hired its first diversity officer.

Worth Reading

Libraries are more popular than ever, but library workers don’t earn livable wages. (Ain’t that the truth…)

How are libraries recognizing Black History Month?

Avoid library information overload for students with video tutorials.

How to set up a green screen on a budget.

Book Adaptations in the News

The film Drive My Car, which is based on a short story by Haruki Murakami, is officially the first Japanese film to ever score an Oscar nomination for Best Picture.

Fantasia Barrino is reprising her role as Celie in the upcoming film musical adaptation of The Color Purple.

Tracy Deonn’s Legendborn is being adapted for TV.

Sarah Vaughan’s book Reputation will be adapted for TV.

Scott Turow’s best-selling legal thriller Presumed Innocent is being reimagined as a TV series from J.J. Abrams.

J.J. Abrams is also adapting Stephen King’s Billy Summers as a limited series.

All the Secrets of the World by Steve Almond is being adapted for TV.

Raymond E. Feist’s Riftwar Cycle is being adapted for TV.

The trailer for Season 4 of Killing Eve is here!!

The first teaser trailer for Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power will air during the Super Bowl.

Buzzfeed and Vulture have lists of book-to-screen adaptations coming in 2022.

8 SFF books that deserve a screen adaptation.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Banned & Challenged Books

The network of suburban moms trying to stop book bans.

Meet the moms of color from Texas fighting book bans at their kids’ schools.

Why the fight against book bans needs more than book donations.

How to use FOIA to uncover book challenges.

We Need Diverse Books has started a grant for educators teaching diverse stories.

The Texas book ban has prompted school librarians to launch the #FReadom Fighters social media campaign.

A push to remove LGBTQ books in one Texas county could signal rising partisanship on school boards.

The Carroll ISD (TX) has officially reversed their reprimand of a fourth grade teacher for carrying the book This Book is Anti-Racist in her classroom library.

How the Granbury ISD (TX) became a focal point in the battle over Texas book censorship.

A Texas parent demanded that the Katy ISD (TX) remove a biography of Michelle Obama, saying that it unfairly depicted Donald Trump as a bully and would make white girls feel “ashamed.” The school district, however, does not plan to remove the biography.

Texas State representative Jared Patterson is single handedly targeting Prosper ISD, demanding that over 80 books be removed from the district.

“If they can ban Maus, no work is safe:” The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund blasts the recent censorship in Tennessee.

Meanwhile, the McMinn County Board of Education defended the ban, saying the work was unsuitable due to profanity and “depictions of nude mice.”

Advocates say that a new Tennessee House bill designed to remove certain “obscene” books from schools unfairly targets LGBTQ+ books.

A right-wing pastor in Tennessee held a literal book burning last week.

The Kent School District (WA) issued a statement about two challenged library books that are currently under review: Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts) and If I Was Your Girl.

Books under fire in Walla Walla, Washington: how to support the school board’s decision.

Several Ridgeland (MS) citizens filed complaints about a display of new books at the public library, including The Queer Bible by Jack Guinness and As a Woman: What I Learned About Power, Sex, and the Patriarchy After I Transitioned by Paula Stone Williams. The complaints said that the display amounted to a political statement from the library.

Furries are leading the war against a book-banning Mississippi mayor.

That same Mississippi library raised nearly $80,000 just 8 days after the mayor denied funding.

St. Louis groups launch a “banned book program” to distribute challenged books.

The Indiana State Senate passed a controversial bill regarding “harmful material for minors.”

Carmel Clay Schools (IN) have moved or removed multiple titles from their elementary and middle school libraries.

A Virginia bill mandating parental notice before sexually explicit lessons advanced out of committee.

The move to ban the 1619 Project from South Carolina classrooms will only harm future generations.

Wake County (NC) school librarians defend the LGBTQ books that some parents want removed.

Forsyth (GA) County Schools remove 8 books that they say are inappropriate for children, including The Bluest Eye, All Boys Aren’t Blue, Out of Darkness, and Juliet Takes a Breath.

16 books were removed from Polk County (FL) school libraries after facing objections from a conservative group. The books include Beloved, Two Boys Kissing, The Kite Runner, Nineteen Minutes, and Drama.

Pinellas County (FL) students are petitioning to have Gender Queer returned to two school libraries.

Florida may pass a bill that would ban discussions of all sexual orientation and gender identity in schools.

The Manheim Central (PA) school board hears concerns over book bans.

The Kutztown (PA) school board votes to keep Gender Queer in the high school library.

Some Stamford (CT) parents are protesting the book The Pants Project by Cat Clarke, saying that the book about a transgender child is inappropriate for 3rd graders.

The Auburn (NY) school district will review the book All Boys Aren’t Blue after receiving formal complaints.

Baldwinsville (NY) parents are calling for the removal of books such as The Handmaid’s Tale, All Boys Aren’t Blue, and All American Boys.

All American Boys sparked a debate at a Tiverton School Committee meeting in Rhode Island.

The York (ME) School Board voted unanimously to keep the book It’s Perfectly Normal in the middle school library.

Campbell County (WY) is still working through their list of nearly 50 challenged books, although they recently voted to keep three books in the teen section.

A former member of the Anchorage (AK) Youth Advisory Commission says that the commission is conducting a behind-the-scenes crusade to censor LGBTQ authors from the Anchorage Public Library, under the direction of the extremely conservative administration.

LGBTQ books are being banned, but their authors are fighting back.

“Dangerous and cruel:” YA authors say unprecedented book bans hurt kids the most.

What’s it like to be the target of a book banning effort?

As the right censors public libraries, families are forming banned book clubs.

Students, your school can’t stop you from knowing Black history.

Read the books that schools want to ban.

Which books belong in a school library? All of them, of course.

Efforts to ban critical race theory could restrict teaching for a third of America’s kids.

What book censorship looks like outside of the US.

Books & Authors in the News

Celebrated children’s illustrator and author Ashley Bryan has died.

HarperCollins Children’s Books will publish a newly discovered Paddington story.

Why a sudden interest in Black authors doesn’t feel like a victory.

Numbers & Trends

The most popular in-demand books in US libraries, October – December 2021.

Are diet books becoming less popular in America?

Award News

Oscar nominations are out!

The inaugural winners of the Science + Literature awards have been announced.

The 2022 Dylan Thomas Prize longlist has been announced.

On the Riot

So you want to work in a library: back of house edition.

The world of YA book covers.

Assigned books in high school didn’t discourage this student from reading.

Why you should rearrange your bookshelves.

How to make a junk journal. (I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE junk journals!)

Don’t forget to check out our new line of bookish, Wordle-inspired merch! There are mugs, t-shirts, hoodies, and more. The campaign is temporary, so order yours now!

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


black cat laying on his side with his back legs wrapped around a woman's arm

Gilbert has 0 shame. If he’s snuggling next to you, he will wrap his back legs around your arm so that you’re forced to give him tummy rubs. “Behold my lack of shame,” he says as he settles in for a long winter’s snuggle.

That’s all I’ve got for this week. I’m going to go hide under something this weekend and hopefully emerge on Monday somewhat rejuvenated.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Cover Reveals, New Carmen Maria Machado, and More!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. We’re getting to the point in the year when I start counting down the days until Daylight Savings. I think it’s a ridiculous system that should be abolished, but in the meantime, it’s going to give us more daylight in about a month, and that’s when I can start hoping that better weather will be around the corner.


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Publishers and agencies start receiving subpoenas as the DoJ/PRH case heats up.

DK is partnering with The Black Curriculum to publish a series of three books to address the lack of Black British history taught in the UK.

Barnes & Noble’s CEO commends BookTok for giving bookstores an unprecedented boost.

New & Upcoming Titles

Carmen Maria Machado is coming out with a new short story collection!!

Bernardine Evaristo is publishing a new memoir.

Andrew Cuomo’s former Press Secretary Karen Hinton previews her new memoir, Penis Politics. This officially gets my vote for Most Awkward Title Your Patrons Will Have To Ask You For this year.

Here’s the cover reveal for Tamsyn Muir’s upcoming Nona the Ninth.

Here’s a cover reveal for Sophie Gonzales’ sapphic YA rom-com, Never Ever Getting Back Together.

Alice Wong, editor of Disability Visability, has a memoir coming out in September.

PopSugar has the best romances and mysteries/thrillers of 2022.

11 early 2022 picks from Kirkus.

22 new crime releases by Black authors to keep you reading all year long.

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

February picks from Barnes & Noble, Bustle, Crime Reads, Entertainment Weekly, LA Times, LitHub (SFF), The Millions, Time, Tor.com (horror/genre benders), Town & Country, and Washington Post.

Indie speculative fiction for January 2022.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Vladimir – Julia May Jonas (LA Times, New York Times, Time, USA Today, Washington Post)

The Family Chao – Lan Samantha Chang (NPR, Washington Post)

Free Love – Tessa Hadley (LA Times, NPR)

The Nineties: A Book – Chuck Klosterman (Datebook, New York Times)

The Violin Conspiracy – Brendan Slocumb (New York Times, Washington Post)

The Books of Jacob – Olga Tokarczuk (New York Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

The 110 best thriller, crime, and suspense novels of all time.

Nerds of a Feather has a recommended reading list for the 2022 Hugo Awards. Here’s Part 1 (fiction categories), Part 2 (visual work categories), and Part 3 (individual categories).

Can science fiction wake us up to our climate reality?

On the Riot

Queer retellings coming out in 2022.

The most anticipated historical fiction titles for the first half of 2022.

12 exciting sequels coming in 2022.

All of these books with red covers are being published in the early part of 2022. Do I smell a display?

The best weekly releases to TBR.

15 must-read children’s books for February 2022.

Celebrate Black Children’s Book Week February 27th – March 5th!

Can a translation be better than the original book?

The history of consent in romance.

Is there worth in shock value?

Chaotic neutral: reading short story collections out of order.

All Things Comics

Despite its recent best-seller status, Art Spiegelman says he won’t sell the adaptation rights to Maus.

Dakota Johnson is in talks to star in the upcoming Madame Web movie.

Roxane Gay is adapting her graphic novel The Banks as a TV series.

Take a look at new Substack comics projects from Brian K. Vaughan, Grant Morrison, and more.

On the Riot

The best YA comics and graphic novels about friendship.

On slowing down with graphic memoirs.

Audiophilia

YALSA names the 2022 Amazing Audiobooks for Young Adults.

Here are the finalists for the 2022 Audie Awards.

Synthetic voices want to take over audiobooks.

AudioFile’s February 2022 audiobook picks.

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

On the Riot

10 of the best audiobooks narrated by J.D. Jackson.

Listening pathways for Richard Armitage’s audiobooks.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

20 YA books celebrating Black love.

Adults

21 of the best books by Black authors you should read in your lifetime.

6 classics that depict Black girlhood.

15 books by Afro-Latinx writers you won’t want to put down.

8 books for indulging a bad mood.

Books featuring family curses.

9 haunting post-apocalyptic novels.

5 books to read for Groundhog Day.

On the Riot

New children’s books with dance themes.

20 romantic books for teens to read this Valentine’s Day.

25 LGBTQ+ books for teens.

9 books to read if you love Pokemon.

8 of the most fascinating SFF characters.

Getting back to work (ahem) with these workplace romance titles.

Feel-good romances perfect for rereading.

The most popular romantic reads on TikTok.

15 new erotic books to spice up your life.

Wars other than WWII in historical fiction.

Fantasy tiger books to read in the Year of the Tiger.

Cozy horror reads.

20 must-read nonfiction sports stories.

The best journalistic nonfiction.

Books to help you become a better digital citizen.

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 created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


black and white cat playing with plush cat toy that looks like a pickle black and white cat playing with plush cat toy that looks like a pickle

My mom found these catnip-stuffed plush pickle toys at Pet Smart a few years ago, and they quickly became the favorite cat toys in the house. Here’s Houdini going absolutely bug-eyed over his catnip pickle. We always make sure to have more than one pickle so no one gets jealous.

That’s all I’ve got for today, folks. I’ll catch you on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading Grave Reservations by Cherie Priest.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Dog Ate My Library Book

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, where our Wordle score is one less than whatever you got. Normally I’m pretty resistant to Internet fads, mainly because I’m too lazy to investigate them for myself, but my brother-in-law showed me how to play a few weeks ago, and now I’m hooked. It’s even how my husband and I say good night to each other — we text our Wordle results to each other after midnight and then gloat over who got the better score.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Honestly, most of this week’s news is happening in the Banned & Challenged Books section.

Cool Library Updates

Take a look at the UNC University Libraries’ collection of over 1800 pop-up books!

Book Adaptations in the News

Netflix loses its motion to dismiss the $5 million lawsuit regarding The Queen’s Gambit.

Taraji P. Henson has been cast as Shug Avery in the upcoming film adaptation of The Color Purple.

Phantom of the Opera on Broadway welcomes its first Black Christine.

Charmaine Wilkerson’s debut novel, Black Cake, is in development for a series at Hulu.

Adam Brody joins the cast of Fleishman Is In Trouble.

The cast for Season 2 of Good Omens has been set.

Here’s the trailer for Season 3 of My Brilliant Friend.

First trailer for No Exit.

Banned & Challenged Books

Who are the Moms for Liberty? And here’s a closer look at their new campaign, Moms for Libraries.

If the news about the Ridgeland, Mississippi mayor withholding library funds until the public library removed “all homosexual materials” made you incredibly angry, there are a few different ways to send financial donations.

Art Spiegelman, the author of Maus, speaks out about the McMinn County School Board’s decision to remove the book from its curriculum, calling it “absurd.” That’s certainly an understatement.

This comic book store owner said that he’ll ship a free copy of Maus to anyone in a Tennessee district where the graphic novel has been banned. And sales for Maus have soared since people have learned about the district’s ban.

Williamson County (TN) school officials have removed the book Walk Two Moons by Sharon Creech from elementary school curriculums, and have restricted the use of seven other titles.

Tennessee lawmakers file a bill targeting “obscene books” in school libraries.

Nic Stone, author of Dear Martin, responds to the controversy over her book in Monett, Missouri.

The Wentzville School Board (MO) has banned The Bluest Eye from high school libraries over obscenity complaints. Meanwhile, the ACLU readies for a possible lawsuit against the book ban, and librarians and other community members speak out.

A look at why Toni Morrison’s books are so frequently banned.

Hudson (OH) parents wanted three offensive books pulled from the high school library. A Girl on the Shore will be removed, Lawn Boy will be returned, and Gender Queer will remain off the shelf while it’s being reviewed.

A look at the context and controversy happening in Iowa over All Boys Aren’t Blue.

Indiana schools and libraries could face prosecution for providing access to “harmful materials” under a proposed state bill. Not surprisingly, library professionals are protesting the bill.

A small number of Minnesota parents have pulled their children from English class over the use of Dear Martin in the curriculum.

Texas governor Greg Abbott introduces a Parental Bill of Rights amidst a wave of book banning in the state.

Books on race and sexuality are disappearing from Texas schools in record numbers, but librarians and students are pushing back.

Carroll ISD (TX) School Board appears to back down after reprimanding a teacher for having the book This Book is Anti-Racist in her school classroom, primarily because campaign finance records revealed that several school board members had received financial donations tied to the parent who made the complaint.

Granbury ISD (TX) pulls over 125 school library books for review. Meanwhile, students slam the school board over the decision.

Also in Granbury news, the district superintendent referred to “radicals” in the school board meetings (aka the students protesting book bans), so the students started a t-shirt fundraiser, with 100% of the profits going to the Freedom to Read Foundation.

So, you know how the ImagineIF Library in Montana has faced its own recent book challenges? Recently released documents and emails indicate that the library board may have manufactured the challenges themselves in an attempt to oust the interim director. Seriously.

LGBTQ+ books are quietly pulled from a middle school in Washington state.

Orange County Public Schools (FL) are reviewing three titles: Gender Queer, Lawn Boy, and Born a Crime, but school policy requires that the books remain available to students during the review process, and the district checked out the only available copies for the committee to review, thereby violating their own policy.

The Florida Senate advances Joe Gruters’ book banning bill, putting school board salaries and library books on the line.

Flagler (FL) school libraries elect to keep All Boys Aren’t Blue on library shelves, but have instituted a new policy giving parents three different levels of oversight for the books their child can check out from the library.

The County Citizens Defending Freedom are campaigning to remove 16 “pornographic” titles from Polk County Schools (FL).

A Florida lawmaker tells a concerned mom that “no book” made him gay as the state debates LGBTQ topics in schools.

Dismissing the “slippery slope of censorship,” GOP senators back the stricter scrutiny of school and library books.

Henrico County (VA) schools have pulled Out of Darkness and I Am a Gay Wizard for review after receiving complaints.

Virginia’s new governor is launching a tip line for parents to report their kids’ teachers.

The Virginia Senate killed a bill that would have required parental consent to check out sexually explicit materials.

Two North Carolina schools received a request to remove the book Melissa by Alex Gino.

The Pitt County Board of Education (NC) will continue its discussion on book challenges. They’ve also approved a new policy to inform parents of the books being used in classrooms.

The fight to ban books is once again raging in Wake County (NC) public schools and libraries.

Some parents in the Lexington-Richland District 5 (NC) are concerned about “explicit” library books.

Dear Martin has been pulled from the Tuscola High School (NC) curriculum.

Lancaster County (PA) school officials shouldn’t surrender to those seeking to ban books.

The North Hunterdon-Voorhees Regional High School District Board of Education (NJ) voted to keep 5 LGBTQ+ titles on its shelves: Lawn Boy, Gender Queer, This Book is Gay, All Boys Aren’t Blue, and Fun Home.

The Tully (NY) community rallies to support a gay high school student who spoke out at a recent board meeting.

Up to this point, Vermont has not seen a wave of censorship efforts in the state.

Maine education groups push back against challenges to books in school libraries.

Book bans are targeting the history of oppression.

US conservatives linked to rich donors wage a campaign to ban books from schools.

Book banning fever heats up in red states. (But also in blue states.)

A healthy democracy does not support library censorship.

Books & Authors in the News

Kate Clanchy’s controversial memoir, Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me, has found a new publisher after she and her original publisher parted ways.

The Dutch publisher of The Betrayal of Anne Frank has apologized after the book has been criticized for being full of errors.

Kwame Alexander and Follett kick off a new classroom book club.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Numbers & Trends

Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s library sells for nearly $2.4 million at auction.

Why is author Colleen Hoover trending on TikTok?

Award News

PEN America announces the finalists for the 2022 Literary Awards.

Hannah Lowe wins the Costa Book of the Year Award for her uplifting book of sonnets, The Kids.

The 2022 International Prize for Arabic Fiction longlist has been announced.

The 2022 Dublin Literary Award longlist has been released.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

The New York Times purchased Wordle for an amount in the low seven figures.

Win books for LIFE (yes, you read that correctly…LIFE!) from Bookshop.org.

On the Riot

5 ways to bring teachers into your school library.

The 10 best US libraries to get married in.

Why do we keep reading books we don’t like?

How does a book exchange work?

Road trip to the best children’s bookstores in the Midwest.

These online classes will help improve your reading skills.

A partial list of the books this reader’s puppy has eaten.

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


black cat sitting in windowsill, looking down a staircase at another black cat

“It’s over, Dini! I have the high ground!” – Gilbert

Well, that’s all I’ve got for this week. Stay warm this weekend, and keep your fingers crossed we don’t get any more snow. See you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Still Waiting For That Book? Have You Checked the Bottom Of the Ocean?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. This week at work, I’m feeling the extreme lack of physical space…we need to relocate our public computers, and there really aren’t any obvious places to put them, so we’ve got to rearrange the existing furniture and shoehorn the computers in…somewhere. Our building is absolutely tiny, so we’re honestly just looking for the least bad option.

So let’s talk about books so I don’t have to think about computers and furniture for a moment.


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

So, if you preordered the cookbooks Turkey and the Wolf: Flavor Trippin’ in New Orleans by Mason Hereford or Dinner in One: Exceptional & Easy One-Pan Meals by Melissa Clark, it appears that ALL copies of the book were involved in a shipping container incident and are now at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean.

Amazon is still selling a lot of Nazi books.

Publishers are increasing their accessibility to content.

Getting a read on bookstores.

New & Upcoming Titles

Terry Pratchett’s official biography will be coming out in September.

Melanie Chishom (aka Sporty Spice) will be coming out with a memoir in September.

Kellyanne Conway’s book, Here’s the Deal, will be published in May.

Here’s a first look at Stephen King’s upcoming novel, Fairy Tale.

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

February picks from Barnes & Noble (adult, kids/YA), Epic Reads, Kirkus, and New York Times.

Some of 2021’s biggest authors pick their most anticipated titles for 2022.

Most anticipated titles for 2022 from Buzzfeed (LGBTQ romances), Goodreads (romances), and Vogue (LGBTQ books).

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Devil House – John Darnielle (AV Club, Electric Lit, NPR, Slate)

Violeta – Isabel Allende (People, USA Today)

Notes on an Execution – Danya Kukafka (New York Times, USA Today)

Joan is Okay – Weike Wang (New York Times, NPR)

On the Riot

New weekly releases to TBR.

8 of the most anticipated YA contemporary reads for Winter 2022.

Exciting horror novels to read in 2022.

A case for genre-juggling: balancing fiction, nonfiction, and poetry.

The wonder of reading children’s literature as an adult.

How does familial dysfunctionality feature in South Asian fiction?

All Things Comics

Get a first look at the upcoming David Bowie graphic novel, The Man Who Fell to Earth.

On the Riot

Here are the comics nominees for the 33rd annual GLAAD Media Awards.

8 queer graphic novels and memoirs coming out in 2022 that you don’t want to miss.

8 comics if you loved Hawkeye.

9 graphic novels and comics about acceptance and belonging.

8 manga about love, just in time for Valentine’s Day.

Audiophilia

Audible has a list of Disability Awareness titles.

10 great audiobooks to listen to in January.

On the Riot

9 audiobooks for #JapanJanuary.

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

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

21 YA books about rebellion.

14 YA books about getting the gang back together.

Adults

Classic books by Black authors to read now.

9 novels that pit the haves against the have-nots.

7 novels about very bad rich people.

8 queer punk and counterculture books set in the 90’s.

Top 10 novels inspired by Greek myths.

10 international thrillers to cure your wanderlust (or ensure that you never want to travel again…)

5 snowbound thrillers.

8 surreal books that read like a dream.

150+ Black romance novels published in 2021 you should definitely check out.

15 second chance romance novels.

13 of the best science fiction/romance mashups.

On the Riot

10 of the best children’s books that promote critical thinking.

The best genre-blending YA novels.

A reading list on learning and re-learning American history.

8 essential books on environmental and climate justice.

15 incredible leadership books for women.

The best mystery novels about dark family secrets.

10 fascinating sci fi books like The Matrix.

8 of the best queer horror books.

8 of the best queer space opera novels.

8 bewitching books about magic schools.

8 books about doing nothing to help break free from hustle culture.

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 created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


a photo of a black cat stretched across a laptop in a person's lap

Time for cats! Here’s a throwback photo to Gilbert helping me while I was taking grad school classes online. He wants to take credit for my grades, but I think he was more responsible for any typos that showed up in my homework.

I’ll catch you all on Friday. Stay hydrated and remember your moisturizer.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Adults Need to Chill Out

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I came home to work on this newsletter, thinking my husband would have the TV on in the background. He’s been watching Community and Peaky Blinders lately, so I figured it would be one of those. Nope. He wants to watch The Lost Boys. So as I’m putting this newsletter together, I’m being assaulted by some of the most ridiculous 80’s footage (and hair) I’ve ever seen. Send help.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Harassment of Illinois library workers continues: the St. Charles Public Library closed its doors to in-person visits in response to threats from the community about its mask requirement, and a visitor to the Oswego Public Library District filmed himself confronting a library employee who told him to put on a mask. (Spoiler alert: she didn’t back down.)

Change is afoot: Indianapolis Public Library starts a culture overhaul after employees protested ongoing systemic racism and discrimination.

Friends of the Jacksonville Public Library is left reeling after a $132,000 theft and arrest of a past president.

Anti Semitic images and text were found inserted in a library book at the Oakmont Carnegie Library.

Amy Schneider’s historic Jeopardy! run was ended by Chicago librarian Rhone Talsma.

Cool Library Updates

Eight-year-old Dillon Helbig snuck his self-published book onto his library’s shelf, and now they’ve added it to their collection!

Finally, a desk made for working parents.

Worth Reading

The trauma of library work.

“It’s basic human dignity”: groups work to get books to incarcerated people.

Book Adaptations in the News

Marissa Meyer’s Lunar Chronicles series has been optioned for film.

Disney+ has officially picked up the Percy Jackson series.

Al Roker’s entertainment group has optioned The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray for adaptation.

Alexis Schaitkin’s novel Saint X is being adapted for Hulu.

One of Us is Lying gets renewed for a second season on Peacock.

Here’s a first look at the upcoming Netflix series Pieces of Her, based on the book by Karin Slaughter.

Here’s the first teaser trailer for Guillermo del Toro’s stop-motion musical adaptation of Pinocchio.

Amazon released a 1 minute video announcing the full title of the upcoming LOTR series.

Banned & Challenged Books

How censors are riling people up and encouraging others to join their campaigns.

Censoring the censors: how you can fight back against conservative attacks on inclusive books across the country.

The topics that lead book ban requests, according to school leaders.

If you want a really in-depth analysis of school library selection policies in the US, here’s a report from School Library Research.

Granbury ISD (TX) has created a committee to “review any books in the district’s schools ‘that include controversial topics currently under investigation by the state and legislature.’”

Llano County (TX) commissioners appointed a 13-member committee Monday to advise the county on how to run its library program, including reviewing which books it should buy.

A prayer vigil rebukes controversial books in Walla Walla (WA) schools.

The ROWVA School Board (IL) voted to indefinitely postpone taking action to either suspend or allow The Hate U Give in freshman English classes. Teachers cannot require students to read the book, but it will remain on library shelves.

Burlington (WI) school board debates the use of Born a Crime by Trevor Noah in a high school class.

Middlebury Community Schools (IN) have instituted a new policy that requires parental consent for students to check out “illicit” materials from the school library.

Iowa State Senator Mark Costello voiced support for a bill that would allow parents to review school library books.

School officials in Wayzata, Minnesota have recently removed Lawn Boy from the high school library in violation of District regulations.

The Missouri General Assembly aims to ban books and critical race theory.

Kirkwood School District (MO) will reconsider how books are selected for school libraries.

Williamson County School Board (TN) discusses the existing school library book process.

McMinn County SchooL Board (TN) voted unanimously to remove the graphic novel Maus from its 8th grade curriculum.

The Ridgeland, Mississippi mayor is withholding library funding until all LGBTQ books are removed.

Billings Public Schools (MT) vote unanimously to keep Gender Queer and Lawn Boy on high school library shelves.

Natrona County (WY) teacher on book-banning debate: “I believe that in Casper we can have conversations as neighbors.”

Canyons School District (UT) returned nine titles to library shelves after removing them in November due to parental complaints.

A York (ME) grandmother renews her bid to remove It’s Perfectly Normal from the York Middle School Library.

LGBTQ group OUT Maine sent more than 900 donated books to school libraries in response to the increasing censorship efforts happening across the state.

Parents call for the removal of All Boys Aren’t Blue from the Auburn High School library in New York.

A Shelton (CT) Board of Education member believes that The Glass Castle is not appropriate for freshmen, although the rest of the Board seems to believe that interfering with book selection is outside the Board’s scope.

Efforts to ban books at Lancaster County (PA) school districts are part of a national trend. In this article, a parent brings a complaint to the school board about Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, only for district officials to later learn that this person was neither a parent nor a resident of the school district.

Pennridge School District (PA) parents, in an attempt to resist the district’s decision to remove certain books from schools, have started filling Little Free Libraries with diverse books.

The 1619 Project and other history books should not be banned from South Carolina classrooms.

Orange County Public Schools (FL) and the censoring of middle and high school libraries.

Flagler County School District (FL) allows parents to restrict books for their own kids but not others.

Greg Howard’s middle grade book Middle School’s a Drag: You Better Werk! was featured on Laura Ingraham’s show, saying that he was pushing his “homosexual agenda” onto kids. The author writes: “They got me. I’m guilty. I do have an agenda.”

Schools face pressure to purge books about racism and gender identity as banning efforts skyrocket.

Take it from a high schooler who’s actually learned about CRT: adults need to chill out.

Conservative activists are now focusing on “curriculum transparency.”

Now even police are getting Black books banned.

Books & Authors in the News

Buddhist monk, activist, and author Thích Nhất Hạnh, has died at 95.

Marlon Bundo, the LGBTQ rabbit icon, has died.

Britney Spears issues a cease and desist letter to her sister, Jamie Lynn, for “misleading” claims Jamie Lynn has made during the promotion of her book Things I Should Have Said.

United States Artists announce the 2022 Class of Fellows, including Kiese Laymon and Grace Talusan.

Numbers & Trends

Male characters still outnumber female characters in children’s books.

Breaking down 2021’s bestsellers by publisher, and other trends.

Award News

The Mystery Writers of America announced their nominations for the 2022 Edgar Awards!

The 2022 ALA Youth Media Awards have been announced, along with the Carnegie Medals, RUSA Reading List, the Notable Books List, and the RUSA Listen List.

Related: The Newbery Medal is 100. It’s smuggled some real duds onto our library shelves.

The 2021 National Jewish Book Award winners have been announced.

The finalists for the National Book Critics Circle Awards have been announced.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Pop Cultured

Amazon buys the exclusive rights to the My Favorite Murder podcast.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

The coolest place to drink is your local bookstore. (Hell yeah!)

On the Riot

Small change, big impact: opening up digital library collections to non-residents.

Little Free Library add-ons to make your LFL a local landmark.

Short reading challenges for adults in 2022.

Related: this reader keeps failing reading challenges, but they still try.

Bookselling during a pandemic: What fresh hell is this?!

Books and reading are two different hobbies.

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


black and white cat hiding under an end table surrounded by grocery bags black and white cat looking over its shoulder next to la croix boxes

Dini thinks he is very helpful. One of his favorite activities is to “help” us put away groceries. Look at him being a helpful boy.

That’s all I’ve got for this week. See you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

A New Book From Celeste Ng!!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m back in the library after spending last week working from home and using bereavement leave (my grandpa passed away last week), and as usual, I’m feeling a little discombobulated. Like, what is a normal work schedule, and how can I get one?


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Sourcebooks and Ebony Magazine Publishing have signed a deal to create a list of Ebony-branded adult books.

Literati acquires Follett Book Fairs.

New & Upcoming Titles

Celeste Ng’s upcoming novel, Our Missing Hearts, will be released on October 4th!! This is not a drill!

Ian McEwan’s “most epic book to date” will be published in September.

Ibram X. Kendi’s children’s book, Goodnight Racism, is set for a June publication.

Steph Curry shops a $10 million memoir.

Here’s a first look at David Sedaris’ upcoming essay collection Happy-Go-Lucky, which comes out on May 31st.

Chloe Gong announces a spinoff duology for These Violent Delights. The first book, Foul Lady Fortune, will be released on September 27th.

Mia P. Manansala has sold the next three books in her Rosie’s Kitchen Mystery series.

Bill Barr’s memoir will be published on March 8th.

Writers to watch: Spring 2022.

Winter thrillers published in 2022 to put on your radar.

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

2022 picks from Bustle (LGBTQ fiction), Buzzfeed (SFF), Crime Reads (SF noir/speculative thrillers), The Millions, and Oprah Daily (romance).

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Last Resort – Andrew Lipstein (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Enough Already: Learning to Love the Way I Am Today – Valeri Bertinelli (Shondaland, USA Today)

Manifesto: On Never Giving Up – Bernardine Evaristo (New York Times, NPR)

RA/Genre Resources

Trends in Black speculative fiction.

Lois McMaster Bujold updated the recommended reading order for her books.

The new killers in climate disaster thrillers.

On the Riot

New weekly releases to TBR.

22 great new books to read in 2022.

The 15 best new mystery books of 2022.

11 of the most-anticipated new adult romance novels for Spring 2022.

Little hands love new board books for 2022.

Reading pathway for Kate Zambreno.

Mass market romance is still important.

8 types of murder mystery plots.

What does it mean to be a mood reader?

I left your favorite book off that list on purpose.

Why we can’t forget about amnesia romances.

Single All the Way and the variables of interracial romance.

All Things Comics

Here’s the trailer for Moon Knight.

On the Riot

8 of the best YA books to be adapted into comics.

10 graphic novels by Indigenous authors.

Audiophilia

This audiobook was narrated by no one: advances in text-to-speech technology may indicate a shift from analog to digital voices for audiobooks.

Libro.fm’s 2022 Listening Challenge.

Audiobooks with singular narrators.

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

On the Riot

10 of Libro.fm’s most preordered audiobooks of Winter 2022.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

7 beautiful picture books to celebrate the Lunar New Year.

10 YA historical romance novels.

21 YA books about sports and overcoming challenges.

Adults

11 inspiring books from the activists of our time.

Goodreads members’ top 45 book club picks.

YA crossover titles that crime fans will love.

12 thrillers set in paradise.

5 paranormal cozies to help you escape.

15 books you won’t regret re-reading.

On the Riot

10 sweet Valentine’s books for kids to help spread love this year.

Middle grade books about time loops.

8 fabulous middle grade novels with neurodivergent characters.

12 of the best gothic YA books.

15 wise and witty self-help books for teens.

10 books about books for serious bibliophiles.

11 excellent books about work-life balance.

6 books that’ll answer your every anti-work question.

10 anti-diet books for the new year.

12 books to help with anxiety.

10 short, fast-paced books to kickstart your yearly reading goal.

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 created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


black cat with wet food stuck on his nose

Gilbert sometimes has a hard time with basic cat activities, like eating his Fancy Feast and not getting it stuck on his nose.

Stay hydrated and moisturized, everyone. I’ll see you on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The World Is Not Censored or Protected

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m not going to link to the tweet that was making the rounds earlier this week (you know…that tweet), but I will say I hope all of you are weeding one of your library’s collection with ruthless efficiency this week.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Maryland defends its library eBook law against the Association of American Publishers.

Public libraries are the latest places to pick up a COVID test, and librarians are overwhelmed.

Cool Library Updates

In honor of Martin Luther King Jr., fifteen Little Free Libraries will pop up throughout Philadelphia this spring.

A horse is a horse, of course, of course, and no one can talk to a horse of course, that is of course unless the horse has its very own library card!

Worth Reading

The High Plains Library District’s programming policy welcomes censorship.

Freedom libraries and the fight for equity.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Book Adaptations in the News

Tomi Adeyemi will be writing and executive producing the adaptation of her YA novel Children of Blood and Bone.

Mahershala Ali is starring in the limited series adaptation of Jean Hanff Korelitz’s The Plot.

A limited series based on the novel The Christie Affair by Nina de Gramont is in the works at Miramont TV.

A stage production of The Kite Runner will make its Broadway debut.

Here’s a first look at the upcoming YA drama The Sky is Everywhere.

I Know What You Did Last Summer is being canceled by Amazon after one season.

Here’s an update on Season 2 of Shadow and Bone.

Trailer for The Girl Before.

Banned & Challenged Books

The right-wing group No Left Turn, has written a letter to US Attorney General Merrick Garland to demand an investigation across the country of school materials. And this censorship news roundup from Book Riot illustrates a lot of the key strategies that groups like this continue to use to get books banned from schools and libraries.

A Texas charter school had to remove an anti-racist quote from its website before it was allowed to open. The quote was from How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi.

Threats from Governor Abbott are among the reasons why Keller ISD (TX) keeps book challenges secret.

The National Coalition Against Censorship expresses concern about It’s Perfectly Normal and The Night Kitchen being removed from the Llano County Library (TX).

How book bans in Texas schools could be a violation of students’ First Amendment rights.

Gender Queer has been returned to Wake County Public Library (NC) shelves, although it will be re-evaluated once the library has finished revising its book review policy.

The Spotsylvania (VA) School Board appoints a new Chair, who has previously supported book burning.

Loudoun County (VA) schools pull Gender Queer from their shelves.

The school board in Siloam Springs, Arkansas, voted to remove Beyond Magenta from the high school library.

Ron DeSantis wants to let parents sue schools that teach critical race theory.

Iowa lawmakers are likely to look at the school library book selection process during their current legislative session.

Indiana school board members pushed back against a Republican-backed proposal that would make school board elections partisan.

An Alexandria (IN) librarian testifies against two state bills that would seriously impact libraries and free speech if passed.

A Northridge (IN) parent group raises concerns about the books Out of Darkness, Everybody Sees the Ants, and The Infinite Moment of Us.

Missouri legislators debate new bills surrounding Critical Race Theory and allowing parents to censor class materials given to their children.

Monett High School (MO) removes Dear Martin from its freshman required reading list and replaces it with To Kill a Mockingbird.

Pennridge School Board (PA) will vote on the inclusion of new textbooks for AP History, as well as Social Studies for grades 1 – 5.

A Kutztown (PA) 8th grade student creates a Teen Banned Book Club in conjunction with a local bookstore.

Bristow Public Schools (OK) are returning 39 of the 47 books previously removed from shelves for review.

At the most recent Natrona School District (WY) meeting, the majority of public attendees spoke out against book removal. Amid the talk of banned books, one Natrona County School District (WY) student observes, “The world is not censored or protected.”

The ImagineIF Library Board (MT) voted to retain Lawn Boy and have suspended discussion on Gender Queer in anticipation of changes to the collection development policy.

While this news item isn’t about banning books per se, the same sentiment applies…Hate group marches from Maine to New Hampshire to protest a drag queen performing in an empty theater. From the article: “The show of bravado and strength involved walking across a bridge with a stupid banner that included a big word.” The group did not return for the most recent performance.

The Streisand Effect won’t save us from censorship.

This report details how book bans are targeting work by Black writers.

Prison systems insist on banning books by Black authors. It’s time to end the censorship.

Books & Authors in the News

Steve Jenkins, the celebrated science author for children, has died at 69.

Crime author Andrew Vachss has died at 79.

Trailblazing Black journalist Ida B. Wells has been immortalized by Barbie.

Roxane Gay launches a new talk show podcast, called The Roxane Gay Agenda, which is officially the greatest name of any podcast.

Numbers & Trends

A record-breaking 121 libraries and consortia surpassed one million digital checkouts in 2021, according to OverDrive.

Why are Americans buying more books but reading fewer than ever?

Award News

The Mystery Writers of America announced the 2022 Edgar Award nominees, along with the Grand Master, Raven, and Ellery Queen Award recipients.

The Canada Reads 2022 longlist has been announced.

Pop Cultured

Shocking true crime podcasts to listen to in 2022.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Automatic 24-hour book dispensers are set to become 2022’s newest trend

On the Riot

Take a tour through Philadelphia’s libraries, archives, and special collections.

Scene stealers: 8 great books-to-films in 2022.

The Giving Tree gets its own Forever stamp.

Want to work at a bookstore? Here are some tips to keep it fun.

Are you really a reader if you have to motivate yourself to read books?

The art of ghostwriting is as human as it gets.

Should you look up words you don’t know while reading?

Why does TikTok love weird erotica?

How list-type books helped this reader through difficult times.

How cookbooks helped this reader reconnect with food.

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


two black cats snuggling with heads together

You made it! And now, a cat photo. Gilbert likes to pretend that Houdini is the most annoying little brother ever, but I have photographic proof that says otherwise.

Take care of yourselves this weekend. I’ll see you on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

What’s the Deal With Horror and Mushrooms?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. It’s been a sad pet week in my family — my parents had to say goodbye to their cat, Peepers, on Thursday. He was such an adorable little kitty who loved belly rubs and sat upright in armchairs like a Bond villain. He also had a genetic anomaly with his tail, which was bent like the letter “Z.” So much personality in such a little kitty.

So, before I make myself all verklempt, let’s library.


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Half Price Books workers unionize at four Minnesota stores.

Harlequin launches a new subscription service, Harlequin Plus.

New & Upcoming Titles

Mariah Carey is publishing her first children’s book, called The Christmas Princess.

Courtney Summers’s new book, I’m the Girl, will be released this fall!

Casey McQuiston announces a surprise hardcover special edition of Red, White, and Royal Blue.

The January 2022 GalleyChat roundup has been posted.

Writers to watch for in Spring 2022.

Highly anticipated novels from authors who waited decades to return.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads and USA Today.

December 2021 picks from The Millions.

January picks from Good Morning America, Kirkus, LA Times, and New York Times.

New YA SFF titles for January & February.

2022 picks from Crime Reads (historical mysteries), Kirkus (nonfiction), PopSugar, and Time (cookbooks).

12 books by British women of color to watch for in 2022.

62 books by women of color to read in 2022.

Hot LGBTQ+ books from the first half of 2022.

New queer college-set YA novels.

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

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

To Paradise – Hanya Yanagihara (Entertainment Weekly, The Guardian, New Yorker, NPR, USA Today, Washington Post)

Lost and Found – Kathryn Schulz (LA Times, New York Times, NPR, Washington Post)

Rise – Lindsey Vonn (NPR, People, Time)

I Came All This Way to Meet You: Writing Myself Home – Jami Attenberg (New York Times, USA Today)

Olga Dies Dreaming – Xochitl Gonzalez (The Guardian, New York Times)

Wahala – Nikki May (Entertainment Weekly, NPR)

Ain’t Burned All the Bright – Jason Reynolds (Entertainment Weekly, Washington Post)

Mouth to Mouth – Antoine Wilson (LA Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

Here’s a list of all of the big name/celebrity book club picks for January 2022.

On the Riot

It’s Book Riot’s Most Anticipated titles for 2022!

Weekly new releases to TBR.

8 contemporary middle grade novels to watch for in 2022.

13 deadly cozy mysteries for the first half of 2022.

An introduction to the “messay.”

Why are horror novels so obsessed with mushrooms?

All Things Comics

Image Comics staff votes to unionize.

The best comics of December 2021.

10 horror anime with surprisingly sad endings.

On the Riot

5 recent and upcoming comic movie and TV adaptations you need to watch.

Go big, or go home!: 14 of the best sports manga for champions.

Healthy pairings in Boys Love manga.

A brief history of vampires in comics.

Audiophilia

39 audiobooks to help you be better in 2022.

Listen more with series romance audiobooks.

On the Riot

12 queer YA audiobooks to listen to in the first half of 2022.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

5 children’s books to spark a conversation about mental health.

YA books to read based on your favorite types of horror movies.

16 YA book characters with secret lives.

22 YA books that will help start a conversation about social change.

Adults

10 books to help you understand inequality.

7 brilliant books about chaotic queer people.

10 of the best books about amnesia.

10 classic crime stories that entered the public domain this year.

On the Riot

15 new-ish Black history books for kids.

15 YA novels like Firekeeper’s Daughter.

20 must-read books about queer-found families.

15 funny romance novels to keep you laughing with each chapter.

10 bedtime stories for adults to help you get some shut eye.

Brother, where art thou? Mysteries about missing siblings.

9 horror books for foodies.

Roommate romances.

9 nail-biting books about forbidden magic.

Books to help you DIY anything.

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 created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


two photos of an orange cat. In the first he is getting belly rub with paws stretched out. In the second he is sitting up in armchair with paws crossed, Z-shaped tail visible.

Here’s Peepers in all of his shameless glory. We’re going to miss him very much. Have yourselves a good week, friends, and I’ll see you on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently listening to House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed by Sara Gay Forden.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Tilda Swinton as Libraries

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. How is it that the first two weeks of the new year have felt like such an eternity? I feel like I’m just on autopilot at the moment, and every once in a while I break out of my daze and go “HOW IS IT STILL ONLY THE FIRST HALF OF JANUARY??” Anyone else feeling like this?

However, a fun little story that I’ll share happened last week when I took a phone call from someone asking about our library’s passport services. When I got off the phone, my boss had seen the caller ID, and informed me that I had been on the phone for 10 minutes with one of the city’s biggest pro athletes, and I had absolutely no idea! (I won’t name names, but needless to say he plays for a sport that I don’t follow, so I didn’t automatically register the name. Also, who expects a famous athlete to contact their local library?)


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

A director hire could cost the ImagineIF Library in Montana state accreditation and funding, as their top candidate does not have a master’s degree.

Patience and fortitude are needed as dozens of NYC libraries close due to COVID-related staff shortages.

The South Central Correctional Facility in Tennessee rejected a donated copy of a Malcolm X biography, which had been requested by someone in the prison.

The Chicago Public Library will make Narcan available at 14 city branches in areas heavily affected by drug overdoses.

Library staff at the Baltimore County Library and the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh have voted to unionize.

Public libraries are seeing an uptick in First Amendment audits.

Cool Library Updates

The Orland Park (IL) Public Library starts a book club for adults with developmental disabilities.

The Norwalk, Connecticut library went fines free and erased over $281,000 in existing late fines.

Public libraries partner with pro sports teams and local athletes to promote youth wellness.

This Alabama family started a Little Free Antiracist Library to promote racial justice and the importance of diverse reading.

Worth Reading

Public libraries aren’t essential services. (And it’s time for people to stop insisting that they are, while refusing to adequately fund services or pay staff.)

What’s lost when we obscure labor.

Tilda Swinton as libraries.

Book Adaptations in the News

Despite her lack of formal acting training, student Aria Mia Loberti has been cast as Marie-Laure in All the Light We Cannot See. Loberti is registered blind, and disability rights advocates have applauded the casting decision. Mark Ruffalo and Hugh Laurie have also been cast.

Ottessa Moshfegh’s novel Eileen is being adapted as a film, starring Anne Hathaway and Thomasin McKenzie.

FX is adapting Octavia Butler’s Kindred as a series.

Wes Anderson is adapting Roald Dahl’s The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Six More for Netflix.

Casting updates for Manhunt and Renfield.

Banned & Challenged Books

Lamar ISD (TX) has removed seven books from library shelves following parent complaints: Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, Forever For a Year, Jack of Hearts, All Boys Aren’t Blue, The Breakaways, The Nerdy and the Dirty, and Lawn Boy.

The National Coalition Against Censorship expresses concerns over the extensive book review happening at the North East ISD in Texas.

Oklahoma lawmakers favor school board control in book complaints.

The Teton (WY) Library adopts a new anti-censorship policy.

Students speak against removing controversial books from Casper (WY) school libraries.

Community members spoke out against the Pennridge School District’s (PA) recent decision to remove the book Heather Has Two Mommies.

The book battle continues at the Pitt County School District (NC) over appropriate reading materials for middle schoolers. The books in question are Forged by Fire, Darkness Before Dawn, and All American Boys. I have to give props to District Media Specialist Meredith Hill for her responses as to why these books should remain on library shelves.

Gender Queer may return to the Wake County Public Library’s shelves.

A Mississippi State Auditor is endorsing proposed CRT legislation, calling anti-racism materials “a cancer to our society.”

Pella (IA) city leaders discuss removing Gender Queer from the public library.

The National Coalition Against Censorship offers its support to the Community High School District in Downers Grove, IL, where recent book challenges have drawn support from members of the Proud Boys.

Join the #FReadom letter writing campaign to combat censorship.

These LGBTQ and antiracist books are being review bombed by book banners.

A look at the push to remove LGBTQ books and online materials from school libraries, and the harm it will cause for marginalized students.

Books & Authors in the News

Arizona Congressman Ruben Gallego’s memoir is being corrected post-publication. The correction is for an inaccurate criticism of a journalist’s report from when Gallego was serving in the Marines.

Maya Angelou will be the first Black woman featured on the US quarter!

Numbers & Trends

Nearly 1 in 3 Americans are reading eBooks.

However, Americans read fewer books in 2021 than any of the past 30 years.

2021 book trends show the power of BookTok and the rise of audiobooks.

Award News

Joelle Taylor wins the TS Eliot poetry prize.

The 2022 Philip K. Dick Award finalists have been announced.

Pop Cultured

Elizabeth Holmes has officially been found guilty on four of 11 federal charges. If any of your patrons are obsessed with the trial, you may find some of these suggestions helpful to suggest for further reading/watching/listening.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A Jack Kerouac museum is on the road to reality in Lowell, Massachusetts.

On the Riot

New Year’s resolutions for school librarians.

Keep it old school with library due date card goods.

What to do when a teen tells you they hate reading.

Is reader’s block a real thing?

How to start an intentional book collection.

Tl;dr: potentially useful recaps of popular self-help books of the last decade.

What this reader learned from keeping a reading journal in 2021.

What surprised this reader when they joined a read-along.

22 new bookish podcasts to listen to in 2022.

So what exactly is Wordle, and how do you play?

How to be a book fairy.

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


Black cat wrapped in a blanket, meowing

Well, you made it to the end. As a reward, here is a photo of my cranky 15-year-old cat Gilbert, wrapped up like a burrito in his favorite blanket. He’s meowing to tell you how incredibly happy he is to have so much attention! (I’m dead serious…he loves being swaddled and hugged, and the grumpier he looks, the happier he actually is!)

Take care of yourselves this weekend, and remember to drink water and moisturize! I’ll see you all next week.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Pining Romances and Body Horror

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I have an obsessively labeled and organized collection of digital and scanned photos, and as I was adding some new photos taken over the last couple of years, I realized I have an obnoxiously large number of photos of my cats. I know spending the majority of the last two years at home accounts for some of this, but…let’s be real here…I think I have a problem.

Anyway, I don’t want to hoard all of these riches to myself, and a lot of the other editors have already shared photos of their pets, so all of you lovely subscribers who make it to the end of the newsletter will get to know Gilbert and Houdini very well!


Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Weekly announces its Spring 2022 adult picks. Brb, making sure all of my Baker & Taylor carts are updated.

Scholastic launches a new illustrated biography series.

Ali Hazelwood announces her next “STEMinist” romance novel, Love on the Brain.

Colson Whitehead confirmed on Twitter that Ray Carney, the main character from Harlem Shuffle, will return in 2023.

Here’s a first look at Kendare Blake’s upcoming Buffy novel.

William Shatner sold an essay collection, Boldly Go, which is set for Fall 2022.

The best books of 2021, according to book podcasters.

All of USA Today‘s 4-star reviews of 2021.

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

January picks from Barnes & Noble, Crime Reads, Entertainment Weekly, Epic Reads (YA), Good Morning America, New York Times, Shondaland, Town & Country.

Most anticipated 2022 reads from Autostraddle, AV Club, Crime Reads, Epic Reads (YA fantasy), Gizmodo (SFF), LitHub (general, SFF), OprahDaily, PopSugar (mystery/thrillers, romance), Tor Nightfire (horror), USA Today, Vulture.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The School for Good Mothers – Jessamine Chan (Entertainment Weekly, OprahDaily, Washington Post)

Anthem – Noah Hawley (Esquire, New York Times, USA Today)

Fiona & Jane – Jean Chen Ho (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Olga Dies Dreaming – Xochitl Gonzalez (LA Times, Washington Post)

On the Riot

The best weekly releases to TBR.

15 must-read January children’s book releases.

The ultimate guide to new Winter 2022 YA books: January – March.

12 YA fantasy books to anticipate in 2022.

10 of the most exciting 2022 debuts to preorder now.

24 must-read 2022 books in translation.

2022 historical fiction to add to your reading list right now.

25 of the best book club books for 2022 reading.

In defense of recommending books you haven’t read yet.

In defense of the “fast burn romance.”

The coming out narrative: we deserve more.

Why are we obsessed with cult books? (FYI, not books about cults — books that have reached “cult status”)

Contemporary poets are demystifying the poetry genre.

Genres of literature popular in languages other than English.

All Things Comics

Japanese filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda will adapt the popular comic Maiko in Kyoto: From the Maiko House for a limited Netflix series.

Betty White’s life is being celebrated in a new biographical comic book.

On the Riot

YA comics and graphic novels coming out January – March 2022.

New Year’s resolutions for comic book readers.

The best completed manga series to read from start to finish.

14 of the best travel comics to help you escape winter.

The most popular manga for high school students.

Audiophilia

The audiobook market is expected to reach $19.39 billion by 2027. That’s…a lot of audiobooks.

The January 2022 Earphone Award winners have been announced.

4 audiobooks about starting over.

On the Riot

The value of listening to poetry on audio.

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

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Word-centric picture books.

Adults

8 genre-bending books by Asian American women.

8 unique picks for a book club ready to branch out.

18 fake-dating romance novels.

Arctic Circle crime fiction.

8 ghost stories in which the dead don’t go quietly.

21 sad books to read when you need a good cry.

20 books about the past and future of cities.

30 books about (and inspired by) Greek mythology.

8 novels about surviving in the wilderness.

On the Riot

10 indestructible books for babies.

Books to boost young readers’ cultural literacy.

15 YA books like From Blood and Ash.

Queer books from 2021 you might have missed.

Books about missing and murdered people of color that deserve more attention.

The 20 most influential romance novels of the last 100 years.

12 of the best romances with mutual pining.

Reality show romances.

13 skin-crawling body horror books.

9 books that celebrate librarians.

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 created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


a photo of a black and white cat who appears to be smiling

You made it! And now, meet Houdini! He’s 4 years old, 12.5 pounds of solid cat bulk, and he loves head scritches. Head scritches make him smile and show off his toofs, like he’s doing here. He hopes you have a good rest of the week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.