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Amazon Removes Polarizing Clinton Memoir Reviews: Today in Books

Amazon Removes Hundreds Of Reviews For What Happened

Isn’t the internet exhausting sometimes? Slate reported that Amazon had to remove hundreds of reviews of What Happened, Hillary Clinton’s memoir. The listing drew over 1,500 reviews the morning after it was posted with most reviews giving the book either one or five stars. Few of those reviews (338) were posted by Verified Purchasers. Amazon removed both negative and positive reviews from unverified purchasers, which jumped the rating from 3.2 up to 4.9.

Books On Race And Politics Lead National Book Award Nonfiction Longlist

The Los Angeles Times noted that books on race and politics lead the National Book Award longlist for Nonfiction. The 10 finalists include “four books directly addressing the history of race relations between blacks and whites in America; two that consider conservative forces in American culture; and one, by Naomi Klein, that advocates for progressive action during Donald Trump’s presidency.” Check out the article for the full list.

Teacher Creates Harry Potter Wonderland For Students

A teacher in Oregon spent 70 hours creating a Harry Potter themed classroom for his students. Kyle Hubler of Evergreen Middle School in Hillsboro brought his own Harry Potter merchandise to school and set to work decorating his new classroom a month before the start of the school year. He said he did it because his students love the books and because of the impact the series had on him as a kid. “The lessons in the books about acceptance, loyalty, and integrity stayed with me and inform a lot of the philosophy I have in my approach to teaching and how I interact with my students,” said Hubler.


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The Man Booker Prize Shortlist Is Here: Today in Books

The Man Booker Prize Shortlist Announcement

Among the titles to make it on the shortlist are Exit West by Mohsin Hamid, Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders, and History of Wolves by Emily Fridlund. According to the Guardian piece announcing the winners, judges were questioned about the Americanization of the UK award. Half of the authors selected for the shortlist are from the US. I was sure we’d see Arundhati Roy listed, but there you go.

Aaand We’ve Got The National Book Awards Longlist For Poetry

As mentioned in yesterday’s newsletter, the National Book Awards is releasing their longlist in pieces. Today they released the longlist for Poetry and, what with the proliferation of Instagram poets, I wonder if a lot more readers will pay attention to the list this year, compared to recent years. You won’t find Rupi Kaur here, but Don’t Call Us Dead by Danez Smith made the list, as did three debut collections, including When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities by Chen Chen.

Solving The Mystery of My Immortal

I find this story fascinating, even though I was only recently initiated into the mysteries of My Immortal. We are talking about the tale dubbed the worst fanfic ever and its mysterious writer. Vox wrote an in-depth piece about this fanfic phenomenon and the work’s author, Rose Christo, who reemerged and revealed her true identity after about 10 years of silence. You can read all about the legend of My Immortal, Christo’s upcoming memoir, and how it’s all connected to that other what-the-what story about Lani Sarem of Handbook for Mortals and New York Times best-seller list infamy.


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National Book Awards Longlist: Today in Books

The National Book Awards Longlist Is Here…In Parts

It’s awards season and if you’re the type of reader who enjoys keeping up with the lists, you’ll have plenty of books to add to your TBR now that the National Book Awards longlist is being announced. Caveat: the National Book Foundation will be announcing one category from its longlist each day this week. First up is Young People’s Literature with titles including The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter by Erika L. Sánchez, and more. Check it out!

Kirkus’ New Diversity In Children’s Books Initiative

Kirkus announced a new initiative aimed at confronting the dearth of diversity in children’s books. Kirkus Collections will work to help librarians find books by and about marginalized people. Because standard subject headings aren’t always helpful in locating diverse books, this new tool features curated lists with headers like “Black & Disabled,” “Latinx Read-Alouds,” and “LGBTQIAP Love Stories.” Through positive reviews, the use of metadata, and filters, librarians will be able to browse and search for vetted books for their diverse patrons. Very interesting!

All The Books Hillary Clinton Name Drops In Her Memoir

What Happened, Hillary Clinton’s memoir about her presidential campaign, came out this week and the buzz is real. TIME has already published a list of all the books she mentions in the memoir. They include some classics we’ve been hearing a lot about recently, like George Orwell’s 1984 and Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, also Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan novels, and poetry by Maya Angelou. If you’re curious, you can take a look at the full list, or read the book and break up the sorrow with little moments of discovery.


Thanks to The Summer That Made Us by Robyn Carr for sponsoring today’s newsletter.

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For the Hempsteads summers were idyllic at the family house on Lake Waseka. The lake was a magical place, a haven where they were happy and carefree. Until the summer that changed everything.

After an accidental drowning turned the lake house into a site of tragedy and grief, it was closed up. But one woman is determined to draw her family together again, and the only way that can happen is to return to the lake and face the truth.

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Newly Discovered Kurt Vonnegut Stories: Today in Books

5 Previously Unreleased Kurt Vonnegut Stories Will Be Published

It seems like just yesterday we were celebrating the steamrolling of Terry Pratchett’s hard drive (at his behest), and here we are today, talking about the unearthing of five previously unpublished stories by Kurt Vonnegut. The short stories, discovered by Vonnegut’s friend Dan Wakefield and scholar Jerome Klinkowitz, will be published in a collection titled Complete Stories, out later this month. But, again, do we really need the scrapped works of deceased authors?

ABC Commits To Modern Pride And Prejudice Drama

Jane Austen fans rejoice (or gnash your teeth). ABC has committed to a put pilot for Eligible, a drama series based on the book Eligible: A Modern Retelling Of Pride And Prejudice by Curtis Sittenfeld. The series, developed by some of the people behind the CW’s Beauty & the Beast, and I, and Pretty Little Liars, revives familiar themes. You can’t have a P&P adaptation without Elizabeth Liz Bennett falling for the mysterious Darcy against her better judgment. The series will also follow the five Bennet sisters on their journeys to find love.

Book Shopping And Bowel Movements

In totally weird book stories, BuzzFeed published a piece about something called the Mariko Aoki phenomenon. This…event is described as feeling a sudden urge to defecate when you walk into a bookstore. Why? What? How? Who knows! But plenty of people have claimed to experience it. If you experience the Mariko Aoki phenomenon, please do not let us know.


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by Kij Johnson, for sponsoring today’s newsletter.

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