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Today In Books

Ryan Coogler Officially Back For BLACK PANTHER Sequel: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by In the Night Wood by Dale Bailey, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH).

In the NIght Wood cover image


Ryan Coogler Officially Back For Black Panther Sequel

He’s signed the contract so it’s official: Ryan Coogler will write and direct the sequel! And that’s really all the news we’ve got so far for the sequel, and that’s all I need–who do I give my money to?!

BBC Sherlock’s Creative Team Is Bringing Us Dracula

Fangs out, popcorn ready, we’re getting a new Dracula adaptation! Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat are adapting Dracula for the BBC into three 90-minute episodes, and Netflix will stream the show in most countries outside the UK. “There have always been stories about great evil. What’s special about Dracula is that Bram Stoker gave evil its own hero.”

Little Miss Flint Is Putting More Books In Flint Kids’ Hands

And you can help Mari Copeny, the child activist who’s always helping her community, by helping her get more copies of books like The Hate U Give and Modern HERStory into the hands of local Flint, Michigan kids. And here’s the excellent book list Amazon wishlist for Flint Kid’s Read.

Don’t forget to enter our giveaway for a custom book stamp to make your personal library books feel special.

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In The Club

In The Club – October 17

Hey there, word nerds! Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met and well-read.

Today on the agenda for book club talk, I’ll start us off with some creepy + cozy reads. I’ve also got some thoughts on Narco Lit, a lot of love for National Coming Out Day, then some fangirling & feminism to bring it on home. I may have even thought up the scariest Halloween costume to rule them all… 

Onward!


This newsletter is sponsored by Epic Reads.

a gold-hilted dagger is front and center, stabbing into water. coins fly through the air around it, and in the background is a ship sailing against a sunsetThe sequel to Sword and Verse follows Soraya as she attempts to rebuild a nation after the slave rebellion destroyed the capital city. On the new ruling council, she finally holds the political power she always wanted—but over a nation in ruins. When a slave ship arrives in the city, full of Arnathim captured before Qilara fell, the civil unrest that has been bubbling since the rebellion erupts. With the threat of attacks high, Gelti, a former guard captain, trains Soraya in self-defense. As the two grow close, tension within the city ramps up, with danger, betrayal, and deception meeting Soraya everywhere she turns.


I’ll Have the Creepy Read, Hold the Horror – I am such a weenie when it comes to straight-up cue-the-Pyscho-soundtrack horror. If you too are in that weenie tribe, fear not (ha). Tirzah Price had our kind in mind when she put together this sweet list of Atmospheric Non-Horror Novels to read in October.

  • Book Club Bonus + Shameless-but-Related Plug: I filled in for Amanda on last week’s episode of Get Booked where I recommended a non-horror novel that still packs a creepy, unsettling punch. Explore this idea: what is it about quieter, less violent stories that often make them terrifying? Is it the dark side of human nature that’s creepy AF? Do they just feel more real? 
  • Related Weenie Anecdote: The last scary movie I saw was The Ring. I was so #%@& freaked that I screamed when I saw my reflection in the mirror as I toweled off my hair after a shower. That’s right: I thought I was seeing Somara. Nope. nuh-uh. No quiero.

Murder + Machismo – On the last episode of Read or Dead, Katie and Rincey highlighted some Latinx authors writing crime/mystery/thrillers.  

  • Book Club Bonus: One of the books Rincey picked is a piece of Narco Lit, i.e. books whose plots are centered around the drug/cartel culture in Latin America. She discussed how difficult it was to ignore the gross misogyny in the physical descriptions of women. *sighs in Spanish* Let’s talk about whether we have the stomach and/or head space for this kind of talk, even if it “make sense” for the genre.  

Out, Proud, and Well Read – October 11th was National Coming Out Day and we celebrated by featuring all content by LGBTQIA+ Rioters and guests. Here are just a few of those pieces:

Interview with V.E. Schwab –  “Women are not allowed to be ambitious for the sake of ambition. They’re not allowed to want in that way for themselves.” Read Rioter Emily Wenstrom’s interview with V.E. Schwab as she talks female anger, ambition, and lessons from her early career. I am a very jealous heart-eyed emoji.

  • Book Club Bonus: Read both Vicious and Vengeful for book club. Examine the progression in Schwab’s writing of her male and female characters. Discuss women’s anger and ambition. Talk about the villains you couldn’t help but kinda root for. There is SO much to unpack here.

Worse Than What’s Happening in the Handmaid’s Tale and Other Words to Keep You Up At Night– That terrifying line is from this New York Times piece about feminist dystopian fiction channeling women’s anger and anxiety. It gave me many feelings, like anger and anxiety. The buzzkill here: there’s not enough diversity in these books and most of them lean towards the super gender normative. Let’s do better here, people. It’s 2018.

  • Book Club Bonus: I cannot wait to get my hands on The Water Cure. I mean seriously: literal toxic masculinity?! Brilliant! I’m kinda scared! Put this on your lists for it’s January U.S. release and read another of the titles mentioned in this piece in the meantime if you haven’t already. Then compare, contrast, and come with wine; you’re gonna need that shit when you talk about the ways in which this stuff feels a little too real.
  • Related: I am most surely not the first person to come up with this, but someone puh-lease dress up as toxic masculinity for Halloween. I’m envisioning a can or box with a biohazard logo and the word “masculinity” in giant writing. BOOM. Instant horror.

Thanks for hanging with me today! If you want to be friendly on the innanets, you can find me on both el Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com if you have any feedback or just to say hola.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

More Resources: 
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships Oct 16

Happy Tuesday, Balrogs and banshees! Today we’re talking about Fortnite books, The Passage trailer, a new vampire series, more witchy reads, and Future Fiction: New Dimensions in International Science Fiction.


This newsletter is sponsored by Vesuvian Books.

a young girl with long hair, wearing a tattered red cape and carrying a spear, stares up at a giant beanstalk.Sixteen-year-old Jaclyn admires her father. A man who once fought for the king, he now teaches Jaclyn how to use her wits—and her sword. But he has a secret. And his secret may have a connection to something Jaclyn is hiding. Hearing “monsters” are terrorizing the villages around Black Mountain, Jaclyn’s father goes to hunt them but doesn’t return. Armed only with her sword and magic beans—a gift from a mysterious old woman—Jaclyn will need to break a centuries old curse to save not only her father but the townspeople the “beasts” plan to lay waste to.


Let’s talk about adaptations and book announcements!

In the world of video games-turned-novels, Fortnite has a book deal! Not sure what Fortnite is? The New Yorker has a deep dive.

Where my Eragon fans at? Christopher Paolini has a new book of stories set in Alagaësia, The Fork, The Witch, and The Worm, and it will be out on December 31 2018.

I finally got around to watching the trailer for The Passage, and I’m very conflicted. On the one hand, it looks well-acted and well-cast. On the other hand, it contains explicit footage of black people being kidnapped, harmed, and experimented on against their will by white people. While I know the storyline of the books and therefore have some idea where it’s all going, that doesn’t make it less painful to watch — and very possibly triggering for some viewers, so fair warning.

We’re getting a vampire series from Renee Ahdieh!

I went to a Halloween episode screening of Buffy: TVS at a cemetery last weekend, so it seems appropriate to note that the team for BOOM! Studios new comics has been announced: Jordie Bellaire (Pretty Deadly, Hawkeye) and Dan Mora are on board, and I’m delighted that Bellaire will be involved.

Judging by how many of you clicked on The Witches of New York in last week’s newsletter (it’s a record, I do believe), I think you’ll be very interested to hear that Katherine Howe is finally giving us the sequel to The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane called The Daughters of Temperance Hobbs.

This week in new releases I’ve got my eye on:

The Black Khan by Ausma Zehanat Khan (sequel to The Bloodprint)

The Consuming Fire by John Scalzi (sequel to The Collapsing Empire)

The Year’s Best Dark Fantasy and Horror 2018 edited by Paula Guran (including Stephen Graham Jones, Aliette de Bodard, and Kai Ashante Wilson!)

And here’s your reminder that we’re doing a book stamp giveaway, because your personal library definitely needs customization.

And now, a review of a fascinating new science fiction anthology!

Future Fiction: New Dimensions in International Science Fiction, edited by Bill Campbell and Francesco Verso

an illustration in blue tones. a black woman manipulates a hologram of the earth with her hands, and has a strange piece of technology attached to the side of her head.Content warnings:
Suicide, “Grey Noise” and “Proposition 23”
Bestiality, “The International Studbook of the Giant Panda”
Animal and human experimentation, “Creative Surgery”

I love a good anthology, and I have been working on reading more international science fiction, so this collection was meant for me. And, having read it, I think it is also meant for you!

The only author I’d read previously was Ekaterina Sedia, whose collection Moscow But Dreaming I reviewed last October. She’s also the most fabulist author in the collection — the other stories are solidly hard science fiction, playing in particular with technology and the environment. Taken together, these stories span the globe and handily accomplish the collection’s goal: to introduce both writers and new ideas.

It’s a very thoughtfully arranged anthology — “Tongtong’s Summer” by Xia Jia is a gentle look at AI and healthcare, told from a child’s perspective. The next few stories flow from there, all concerned in some regard with family, and edging step by step towards darker material. Things take a hard turn with Tendai Huchu’s all-too-possible “HostBods,” which follows a “bod” for hire as he goes from one virtual possession to the next, in increasingly dire circumstances. Hernandez’s “The International Studbook of the Giant Panda” (about scientists using neurally-linked robotic pandas to teach the bears how to mate) competes with “Creative Surgery” by Clelia Farris, about two genetic scientists creating increasingly bizarre chimeras, for being the ones I found the most unnerving to read — and also the most surprising. Ending with Efe Tokunbo’s excellent novelette “Proposition 23” was exactly the right choice — a story of dys/u-topia and political upheaval, it packs a beautiful final punch.

If you like weird, brain-bending fiction; if you like short stories; if you love different perspectives; if you like to see authors stretch the bounds of science and technology; if you want to read more in-translation; or all of the above, then get yourself Future Fiction immediately.

And that’s a wrap! You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. If you’re interested in more science fiction and fantasy talk, you can catch me and my co-host Sharifah on the SFF Yeah! podcast. For many many more book recommendations you can find me on the Get Booked podcast with the inimitable Amanda.

Your fellow booknerd,
Jenn

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The Kids Are All Right

New Children’s Book Releases for October 16, 2018

Hey Kid Lit friends,

There are lots of holiday books coming out today as publishers and booksellers gear up for December! As usual, if there is a book I have read and loved, I’ll mark it with a ❤.

*Please note that all book descriptions are from Goodreads.


Sponsored by …And Then You Die of Dysentery: Lessons in Adulting from the Oregon Trail by Lauren Reeves

Pack your wagons, find your ride-or-(literally) die friends, and roll up to Matt’s General Store with a sack of cash—it’s time to hit the Oregon Trail, twenty-first-century style! …And Then You Die of Dysentery is the perfect send-up to the sometimes frustrating, always entertaining, and universally beloved Oregon Trail computer game. Featuring a four-color design in the game’s iconic 8-bit format, alongside pop culture references galore, the book offers 50 humorous, snarky life lessons gleaned from the game’s most iconic moments—it’s the ultimate trip down memory lane . . . all the way to the Willamette Valley.


Board Book New Releases

❤ Dream Big, Little One by Vashti Harrison

Among these women, you’ll find heroes, role models, and everyday women who did extraordinary things – bold women whose actions and beliefs contributed to making the world better for generations of girls and women to come. Whether they were putting pen to paper, soaring through the air or speaking up for the rights of others, the women profiled in these pages were all taking a stand against a world that didn’t always accept them.

Decked Out for Christmas! by Ethan Long

The mice at the North Pole are getting ready to deck the halls with all the essentials. They’ve got ornaments and twinkle lights, candy canes and popcorn garlands. One by one, the mice unpack all the merriest decorations, but soon the items become a bit unexpected. Hot cocoa? Fuzzy dice? A map? In a festive twist, it’s revealed that it’s not a tree the mice are decorating, but Santa’s sleigh, all decked out for Christmas Eve!

All Aboard! The Christmas Train by Nichole Mara, illustrated by Andrew Kolb

Folding out car by car, this accordion-style book takes readers on a tour of Santa’s Christmas train. Each car has lots to see—elves making toys, penguins playing, reindeer preparing for the big day—as Santa searches for his missing boot.

❤ Be Bold, Baby! Oprah! by Alison Oliver

Celebrate Oprah Winfrey’s most motivational and powerful moments, with quotes from the media mogul, and vibrant illustrations by Alison Oliver. Be encouraging. Be brilliant. Be you. Each book ends with a mirror! Look for the companion volume, Be Bold, Baby: Michelle Obama.

 

Picture Book New Releases

❤ Tomorrow I’ll Be Brave by Jessica Hische

Journey through a world filled with positive and beautifully hand-lettered words of widsom, inspiration, and motivation. As this book reminds readers, tomorrow is another day, full of endless opportunities–all you have to do is decide to make the day yours.

The Little Girl Who Wanted to Be Big by Dave Engledow

There once was a little girl who wanted to be big. Her dad told her that to be big, she had to think big. So she did—she grew taller than the tallest buildings, larger than the largest mountain, and big enough to reach the farthest plants. But being the biggest person in the universe also makes it hard to go home. What’s the biggest girl in the world to do when she’s grown up a little too fast?

Will You Help Me Fall Asleep? by Anna Kang, illustrated by Christopher Weyant

Tomorrow is the annual boat race and Monty needs as much energy as possible to make sure he crosses the finish line first. He tried closing his eyes, counting sheep, and reading a book, but nothing will help him fall asleep.

❤ The Lost Christmas by B.B. Cronin

It’s time to decorate the tree for Christmas–but Grandad can’t find any of his ornaments! The hunt for the missing decorations takes the children up and down in Grandad’s bric-a-brac-filled house and out into a winter wonderland. And when every ornament is on the tree at last, Grandad has a wonderful holiday surprise in store. This seek-and-find book from the award-winning author of The Lost House and The Lost Picnic will delight readers of any age and belongs under a Christmas tree.

❤ Construction Site on Christmas Night by Sherri Duskey Rinker, illustrated by Ethan Long

The trucks are gearing up for Christmas by building a special gift! But, there’s a surprise waiting for each of them, too! Presents await for Excavator, Bulldozer, Crane, Dump Truck, and Cement Mixer as each finishes their part of this big, important job and rolls off to a sweet and sleepy goodnight.

If You Ever Want to Bring a Pirate to Meet Santa, Don’t! by Elise Parsley

If your dad says you’re going to meet a bearded guy with a red suit and a bag full of treasures…he is not talking about meeting a pirate! But Magnolia has already invited the misbehaving swashbuckler to jump in line to meet Santa. So what if pirates are on the Naughty List? She’ll just teach this one to change his scurvy ways–no plundering or sword-fighting or plank-walking allowed! Plus, Santa is happy to hear everyone‘s wish list. Right?

Life With My Family by Renee Hooker and Karl Jones, illustrated by Kathryn Durst

When a young girl gets frustrated with her chaotic life at home, she imagines what things would be like if her family were animals instead. Would life be better as a pod of pelicans, a pride of lions, or a herd of buffalo? Or is it ultimately a family of humans that she needs?

Meet the Latkes by Alan Silberberg

Lucy Latke’s family is just like yours or mine. Except that they’re potato pancakes. And also, they are completely clueless. After lighting the menorah and gobbling the gelt, Grandpa Latke tells everyone the Hanukkah story, complete with mighty Mega Bees who use a giant dreidel to fight against the evil alien potatoes from Planet Chhh. It’s up to the Latke family dog to set the record straight. (To start with, they were Maccabees, not Mega Bees…) But he’ll have to get the rest of the Latkes to listen to him first!

 

Chapter Book New Releases

❤ The Infamous Ratsos: Project Fluffy by Kara LaReau, illustrated by Matt Myers

Chuck Wood is the most popular kid in school, and Louie Ratso can’t believe that Chuck has asked him for help! Chuck likes Louie’s friend Fluffy Rabbitski, and he wants Louie to help him get Fluffy to notice him. As for Ralphie Ratso, he can’t believe that his brother wants to spend all his time with Chuck instead of with him. Meanwhile, despite Louie and Chuck’s attempts to get Fluffy’s attention, she has eyes for only one thing: her garden. But there may be hope. As their father, Big Lou, tells his boys, the best way to get someone to like you is to show that you’re interested in what they like. After all, that’s how Big Lou won over Mama Ratso years ago.

 

Middle Grade New Releases

Ogre Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine

Evie is happiest when she is healing people, diagnosing symptoms and prescribing medications, with the help of her devoted friend (and test subject) Wormy. So when Wormy unexpectedly proposes to her, she kindly turns him down; she has far too much to do to be marrying anyone. And besides, she simply isn’t in love with him. But a certain meddling fairy named Lucinda has been listening in, and she doesn’t approve of Evie’s rejection. Suddenly, Evie finds herself transformed from a girl into a hideous, hungry ogre! Stuck in this new and confusing form, Evie now has only sixty-two days to accept another proposal—or else be stuck as an ogre forever.

Monstrous Devices by Damien Love

On a winter’s day in a British town, twelve-year old Alex receives a package in the mail: an old tin robot from his grandfather. “This one is special,” says the enclosed note, and when strange events start occurring around him, Alex suspects this small toy is more than special; it might be deadly. Right as things get out of hand, Alex’s grandfather arrives, pulling him away from an attack—and his otherwise humdrum world of friends, bullies, and homework—and into the macabre magic of an ancient family feud. Together, the duo flees across snowy Europe, unraveling the riddle of the little robot while trying to outwit relentless assassins of the human and mechanical kind.

The No-Good Nine by John Bemelmans Marciano

Pittsburgh, 1931. When Peter awakens on Christmas morning to find his stocking full of coal, he is outraged. After he finds the Naughty List, which contains the names of some other children who received no gifts, he decides they should band together and journey to Santa’s workshop to plead their case, as well as play with the toys intended for the Nice children. The ragtag band of misfits sets out on a series of wild misadventures as they travel by train, truck, dog sled, and boat, encountering thieves and bootleggers, in order to reach the renowned Toy Factory only to accidentally burn it down.

 

Nonfiction New Releases

❤ Lafayette! by Nathan Hale

A captain at eighteen and a major general by nineteen, he was eager to prove himself in battle. When he heard about the Revolution going on in America, he went overseas and fought alongside Alexander Hamilton and George Washington for America’s independence. Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales are graphic novels that tell the thrilling, shocking, gruesome, and TRUE stories of American history. Read them all—if you dare!

❤ Something Rotten by Heather Montgomery

When Heather L. Montgomery sees a rattlesnake flattened on the side of the road, her first instinct is to pick it up and dissect it–she’s always wanted to see how a snake’s fangs retract when they close their mouths, and it’s not exactly safe to poke around in a live reptile’s mouth. A wildlife researcher with a special penchant for the animals that litter the roadways, Heather isn’t satisfied with dissecting just one snake. Her fascination with roadkill sets her off on a journey from her own backyard and the roadways of the American South to scientists and kids in labs and homes across the globe.

❤ How We Got to Now by Steven Johnson

In the lively storytelling style that has made him a popular, bestselling author, Steven Johnson looks at how accidental genius, brilliant mistakes, and unintended consequences shape the way we live in the modern world. Johnson’s “long zoom” approach connects history, geography, politics, and scientific advances with the deep curiousity of inventors or quirky interests of tinkerers to show how innovation truly comes about.

 

Backlist Book Recommendations

Picture Book Recommendation: Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom by Carole Boston Weatherford, illustrated by Kadir Nelson

This poetic book is a resounding tribute to Tubman’s strength, humility, and devotion. With proper reverence, Weatherford and Nelson do justice to the woman who, long ago, earned over and over the name Moses.


Middle Grade Book Recommendation
The Candymakers by Wendy Mass

In the town of Spring Haven, four children have been selected to compete in the national candymaking contest of a lifetime. Who will make a candy more delicious than the Oozing Crunchorama or the Neon Yellow Lightning Chew?

Logan, the candymaker’s son, who can detect the color of chocolate by feel alone? Miles, the boy allergic to rowboats and the color pink? Daisy, the cheerful girl who can lift a fifty-pound lump of taffy as if it were a feather? Philip, the suit-and-tie-wearing boy who’s always scribbling in a secret notebook?

Nonfiction Recommendation: One Plastic Bag: Isatou Ceesay and the Recycling Women of the Gambia by Miranda Paul, illustrated by Elizabeth Zunon

Plastic bags are cheap and easy to use. But what happens when a bag breaks or is no longer needed? In Njau, Gambia, people simply dropped the bags and went on their way. One plastic bag became two. Then ten. Then a hundred.

 

Giveaway!

Don’t forget to enter our giveaway for a custom book stamp for your personal library! Click here to enter.

 

That’s it for me – I have to get back to reading! I would love to know what you are reading this week! Find me on Twitter at @KarinaYanGlaser, on Instagram at @KarinaIsReadingAndWriting, or email me at karina@bookriot.com.

Until next week!
Karina

Annabelle is trying to hypnotize you into reading ALL THE BOOKS.

*If this e-mail was forwarded to you, follow this link to subscribe to “The Kids Are All Right” newsletter and other fabulous Book Riot newsletters for your own customized e-mail delivery. Thank you!*

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Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

101518-LikeNeverAndAlways-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Like Never and Always by Ann Aguirre.

One summer night, Liv, Morgan, Clay, and Nathan are driving home from a party. Best friends dating brothers? It doesn’t get better than that. But the joyride ends in disaster.
Liv wakes in the hospital. At first she’s confused when they call her Morgan, but she assumes it’s a case of mistaken identity. Yet when the bandages come off, it’s not her face in the mirror. It’s Morgan’s.
Forced to confront the disturbing truths that Morgan kept hidden in life, Liv must navigate a world of long-buried murder, a dangerous love affair—and a romance that feels like a betrayal.

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Giveaways

Win a Copy of THE DEVIL’S THIEF by Lisa Maxwell!

 

We have 10 copies of The Devil’s Thief by Lisa Maxwell to give away to 10 Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

In this spellbinding sequel to the New York Times bestselling The Last Magician, Esta and Harte set off on a cross-country chase through time to steal back the elemental stones they need to save the future of magic. As past and future collide, time is running out to rewrite history—even for a time-traveling thief.

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the cover image below:

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Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

101418-Riot-Rundown-LostSoulbeatPeace

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Lost Soul Be at Peace by Maggie Thrash

A year and a half after the summer that changed her life, Maggie Thrash wishes she could change it all back. She’s trapped in a dark depression and flunking eleventh grade, befuddling her patrician mother while going unnoticed by her father, a workaholic federal judge. The only thing Maggie cares about is her cat, Tommi . . . who then disappears somewhere in the walls of her cavernous house. So her search begins — but Maggie’s not even really sure what she’s lost, and she has no idea what she’ll find. Lost Soul, Be at Peace is the continuation of Maggie’s story from her critically acclaimed memoir Honor Girl, one that brings her devastating honesty and humor to the before and after of depression.

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Giveaways

Win a Copy of ZOLA’S ELEPHANT by Randall de Sève & Pamela Zagarenski!

 

We have 10 copies of Zola’s Elephant by Randall de Save and Pamela Zagarenski to give away to 10 Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

In this stunningly illustrated book about making a new friend and moving into a new home, two-time Caldecott-honor winning illustrator Pamela Zagarenski and New York Times bestselling author Randall de Sève create a dazzling world that celebrates both the power of imagination and the bravery it can inspire.

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the cover image below:

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Today In Books

There’s A HARRY POTTER Advent Calendar: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Hearts Unbroken by Cynthia Leitich Smith.

Hearts Unbroken cover image


If You’re A Harry Potter Fan And Celebrate Christmas

You’re going to want to know that Funko will be putting out a Harry Potter Advent Calendar this year! Just look at those big-headed-wittle-bodied figures.

New Literacy Effort: All Books For All Kids

Newbery Medal-winning author Kwame Alexander and Follett are creating All Books for All Kids so children have access to a wide range of books from a broad spectrum of voices. Here’s more about the campaign, Alexander, and Follett.

The Live-Action Remake Of Aladdin Now Has A Teaser Trailer

Which you can see here. And Will Smith revealed the first poster on Instagram. You can watch the movie when it hits theaters in May 2019. Raise your hand if you now have Prince Ali stuck in your head!

And don’t forget to enter our giveaway for a custom book stamp for your personal library. Stamp all the books!

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The Goods

New Sweatshirts

The season for cozy, curled-up-in-your-favorite-spot reading is here! Get snuggly with new additions to our sweatshirt collection.