Categories
Check Your Shelf

Libraries Aren’t Neutral, a New Anthony Bourdain Biography, A Billion and One Book Lists, & More

Welcome to Check Your Shelf! This is your guide to all things book talk worth knowing to help librarians like you up your game when it comes to doing your job (& rocking it).

Check Your Shelf is sponsored by Libby, the one-tap reading app from OverDrive.

Whether you’re traveling around the world or relaxing on your couch this summer, Libby, the one-tap reading app from OverDrive will make sure you always have a good book with you. Instantly access thousands of eBooks and audiobooks for free from your library in just one-tap. Thanks to Libby and your library no matter what time it is or where you are, you’ll always have instant access to your next great reading adventure.


Libraries & Librarians

Response to ALA’s Meeting Room Policy Interpretation

Book Adaptations

Books in the News

By the Numbers

Award News

Pop Cultured

All Things Comics

Audiophilia

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in LibraryReads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? Whether or not you read and nominate titles, we’ll end every newsletter with a few upcoming titles worth reading and sharing (and nominating for LibraryReads, if you so choose!).

Last month, Kelly put together a reference guide for finding these books, along with a database of titles and publication dates to make reading and highlighting these books as easy as can be. Your only work is to read them and talk about them.

There is literally no excuse. Nominations for titles on the October list need to be submitted by August 20. Here are a couple suggestions to get you started:

  • Moon of the Crusted Snow by Waubgeshig Rice. “Moon of the Crusted Snow imagines a small community on the precipice of winter without power or communication where leaders must grapple with control, restore order, and save their people from a grave fate.”
  • The Lady Killer by Masako Togawa; translated by Simon Grove. “The Lady Killer leads a double life in the shadow world of Tokyo’s singles bars and nightclubs. By day a devoted husband and hard worker, by night he cruises nightclubs cafes and cinemas in search of lonely single women to seduce. But now the hunter is being hunted, and in his wake lies a trail of gruesome murders. Who is the culprit? The answer lies tangled in a web of clues, and to find it he must accept that nothing is what it seems.”
  • White Dancing Elephants by Chaya Bhuvaneswar. “In sixteen remarkable stories, Chaya Bhuvaneswar spotlights diverse women of color—cunning, bold, and resolute—facing sexual harassment and racial violence, and occasionally inflicting that violence on each other.”

____________________

Thanks for hanging out and we’ll see you again in two weeks!

–Katie McLain, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading Hope Never Dies by Andrew Shaffer.

Categories
Today In Books

Oldest Written Record of Homer’s ODYSSEY Uncovered: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by BookishFirst. Read excerpts, share your thoughts, earn points, and win FREE books. Get 500 points just for joining! Sign up at BookishFirst.com.


Gee, Wonder Woman and G. Willow Wilson

This fall, DC’s Wonder Woman ongoing series gets a new creative team in writer G. Willow Wilson and artist Cary Nord. We know and love Wilson forever for creating teen superhero Ms. Marvel, and we’re looking forward to seeing what she does with Diana.

Oldest Odyssey Excerpt Discovered

This one’s for the archaeology, classics, and history nerds out there: researchers have found a clay tablet from the third century A.D. containing thirteen verses from Homer’s Odyssey. The epic oral poem is way older than that, but this is now the oldest known written form of it.

The Handmaid’s Tale Wine Comes and Goes

We got all worked up over this really, really, really, REALLY bad marketing tie-in that compared the women of Gilead to wines available for purchase (Ofglen’s Cabernet Sauvignon had a “warm, spicy finish”). And less than twenty-four hours later, the collection has been cancelled. If only our outcries over more egregious offenses were addressed as quickly and satisfactorily.

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Giveaways

Win a Copy of GARRISON GIRL by Rachel Aaron!

 

We have 10 copies of Garrison Girl by Rachel Aaron to give away to 10 Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

Just in time for a new season of the hit anime, Quirk Books presents Garrison Girl, a new YA novel set in the universe of Attack on Titan. In a world where carnivorous giants threaten humanity’s survival, noble-born Rosalie Dumarque isn’t content to sit back and let others fight. After joining the ranks of the Wall Rose Garrison, she is thrust into a dangerous new world, where she must earn the respect of her fellow soldiers, tangle with corrupt officers, navigate a forbidden romance, and survive an attack from a colossal titan.

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click on the image below. Good luck!

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships Jul 13

Happy Friday, friends! In today’s installment I’ve got reviews of Guardian Angels and Other Monsters by Daniel H. Wilson and Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik, plus the British Fantasy Awards shortlist, a Halo TV series, read-alikes for recent favorites, and more.


This newsletter is sponsored by Fawkes by Nadine Brandes.

Fawkes book coverBoth Epic Reads and BN Teen have named Fawkes to their ‘Most Anticipated July Reads’ lists.

“I was up late in the night reading, waiting to get to the fifth of November to see how the plot would actually unfold, and it did not disappoint. An imaginative, colorful tale about choosing for yourself between what’s right and what others insist is the truth.” –Cynthia Hand, New York Times bestselling author of My Lady Jane

“Hold on to your heart as this slow-burning adventure quickly escalates into an explosion of magic, love, and the truth about loyalty.” –Mary Weber, bestselling author of the Storm Siren Trilogy


The British Fantasy Award shortlist has been announced! Three cheers for Sofia Samatar’s Tender, Victor LaValle’s The Changeling, and S.A. Chakraborty for making the list. Somehow I haven’t read any of the nominees for Best Fantasy, must get on that.

This is not a drill: the sequel to Zen Cho’s Sorcerer to the Crown is called The True Queen and will be released on March 12, 2019! This is me right now.

Halo fans, rejoice: you’re getting a TV series, from Showtime.

Remember that time I raved about Witchmark by CL Polk? This piece recommends read-alikes! More delicious fantasy for my TBR. (Also I cosign that Gilded Cage rec, although it is an overall darker book.)

Need some non-Western fairytales? I love this list from S.A. Chakraborty for reading beyond One Thousand and One Nights.

You know who’s good at recommending books? Mary Robinette Kowal, that’s who.

Which Pevensie sibling are you? Apparently I am Susan, to my utter lack of surprise. (I am dying to know if anyone actually gets Edmund.)

Reminder! You can and should enter the drawing for our Best of the Year YA Giveaway, which includes such excellent SF/F YA titles as Dread Nation, Undead Girl Gang, Tess of the Road, and The Cruel Prince.

Today in reviews, we’ve got some spooky sci-fi tales and a fairytale retelling.

Guardian Angels and Other Monsters by Daniel H. Wilson

a pair of mechanical metal wings against a black background with the title in a red fontI first read Wilson earlier this year when I picked up The Clockwork Dynasty, and I was intrigued when I found Guardian Angels and Other Monsters in a friend’s book stacks. If you’re looking for dark and twisty sci-fi stories comparable to the works of Lauren Beukes and Victor LaValle, add this one to your TBR.

While the stories range in geography — Portland, Oklahoma, and Africa all feature — and in level of “OMG WTF,” there are a few through-lines. All are definitely on the sci-fi side of SF/F, and most are about family in one form or another. Whether they’re parents, siblings, or found family, the characters contemplate the most intimate relationships. A guardian robot tries to keep its charge safe; a mother contemplates her strange child; an abused, neurodiverse young man searches for respect from his older brother. And while scientific break-throughs might change the trappings of those relationships, ultimately the heart of them stays the same. Technology can hurt or it can heal, but people will always be people — for better or worse. Wilson explores what “better” and “worse” can look like, and the results are both chilling and engrossing.

For fans of Wilson’s work, there’s a story each attached to the Robopocalypse and Clockwork Dynasty worlds. For new fans, the stories stand well enough alone; no previous reading required.

Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik

Trigger warning: repeated acts of domestic violence and child abuse

spinning silverSpinning Silver follows a rotating and shifting cast of first-person narrators from in and around a small, Russian-inspired medieval village. The three primary narrators, all young women, are also my favorites: Wanda, a young villager with an abusive father; Miryem, a Jewish girl who is the primary breadwinner for her family; and Irina, the daughter of a Duke who only sees her as a political bargaining chip. Each has a complicated relationship with her father, albeit in very different ways. Miryem has also unwittingly drawn the attention of a fairy king in the woods. As the characters’ orbits begin to overlap, the stakes get higher for everyone involved. What was once a matter of personal survival is now a question of life or death for untold innocents, and the paths to victory are tangled and uncertain.

Much like Uprooted, Novik is retelling a variety of fairy tales here; the Erlking, “Rumpelstiltskin,” and “The Juniper Tree” all feature. But this book is a much more timely and broad-ranging story, taking on anti-Semitism, abuse and trauma, and father-daughter relationships. She also digs deeply into even the “bad guys” of her story — and I put that in scare quotes for a reason. It’s a tightly paced, beautifully plotted and written book, and I think it’s my favorite thing she’s ever written.

I also gushed about this book on All the Books this week, if you want to listen to me try to summarize it out loud (which is always difficult for me!).

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

Categories
Audiobooks

Ears and Tears: Audiobooks That’ll Make You Cry

Howdy audiobook lovers,

Whatcha been listening to? Thanks to the wildly effusive reviews of the Book Riot Insiders during our last Audiobooks Chat, I’m listening to Outlander by Diana Gabaldon. Although it seems like I am the last person on earth who hasn’t read the books or watched the show, I’ll give a quick summary (no spoilers, I promise).


Just for Book Riot readers: sign up for an Audible account, and get two audiobooks free!


Claire Randall and her husband are on a second honeymoon in the Scottish Highlands in 1945, celebrating her return from war, where she was a nurse, when she walks through an ancient, standing stone circle. Immediately, she’s transported to the year 1743, where she’s a “Sassenach—an ‘outlander’—in a Scotland torn by war and raiding clans.”

This is not the type of book I normally gravitate towards–-I’m not much of a historical fiction, fantasy, or romance reader and Outlander is definitely a mashup of those three genres. I am, however, really enjoying the Scottish accents and the writing is excellent. I don’t know that I’ll make it through all of the books, but I’m way more intrigued than I would have thought and also…it’s a pretty steamy read, at least so far.

Now, I may have mentioned this a time or two, but I spent many years as a young adult librarian at a public library. And in addition to thinking teens are pretty freaking great, I’m also a huge fan of YA literature. Which is why I am especially jealous of all of you who can enter this giveaway: We’re giving away $500 of the year’s best YA fiction and nonfiction so far. $500 is a LOT of books and whoever wins will be set for reading material for the foreseeable future. Could it be you? Enter here.

A few newsletters ago, I mentioned an article that said audiobooks produce a more emotional reaction in readers than film adaptations of the same title. Some of you chimed in with stories of your most emotional listens.

Becky says, “Since I get emotional watching movies or TV and reading a book or article, listening to audiobooks get the same treatment. One memorable experience for me happened while I was listening to The Kite Runner in the car while I was driving somewhere by myself. By the second CD, I was distraught by the horrors of what was happening and needed to pull into a rest area to read the back of the cd box to help me decide whether to keep going with the novel. Strangely enough, I was relieved to discover it was a fiction book and not someone’s true story. Even though I know much of what happened in The Kite Runner really did take place, hearing a fictionalized version gave my emotions a little buffer space. Tears still fell, but I wasn’t distraught.”

This is kind of the opposite reaction that I had listening to Star of the North. It’s a fictional novel, so I assumed some of the worst/hardest to believe parts about North Korea’s government were exaggerated or outright fabricated. When I got to the end and read that everything was based on actual accounts of prisoners/programs implemented by the government, etc., it was even more chilling. It’s interesting how fiction can be a buffer for our emotional distress and the various reactions we have when we find out how much of the story is true. Also, I’m clearly desperate for someone to talk about Star of the North with. Have you read it? Tell me your thoughts @mamacb or email me at katie@riotnewmedia.com.

Danni mentioned that, like my friend Emily, she didn’t cry at either the movie or the book of The Perks of Being a Wallflower (literally how is this possible?!). But she has a rec that might just crack even Emily’s cold, dead heart. She says, “I never never never cry at books or movies… I didn’t cry at the PERKS movie or book. But I was absolutely SOBBING uncontrollably while listening to Lily and the Octopus by Stephen Rowley (highly recommend!).”

As for me, here are the last three audiobooks I remember shedding tears while listening to but still loved.

Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman
So the kind of stuff that makes me cry isn’t when a character has some kind of deep, intense, trauma (and it’s not spoiling anything to tell you that Eleanor indeed has that) but more often it’s petty cruelty that does me in (and Eleanor faces plenty of that in this novel as well). See, Oliphant is a bit of an odd duck, both in terms of her behavior and looks. Unfortunately for her, she works in an office where the social dynamics are akin to a high school cafeteria.

However, it’s not just mean/sad stories that get my waterworks going but also when someone refuses to play that horrible game and shows genuine kindness and caring to the aggrieved party. And that’s really when I started to lose it. The kindness that her fellow coworker, Raymond, shows Eleanor and the way they develop a deep, meaningful friendship made me grateful I was listening to the audiobook and didn’t end up with embarrassing tear blotches on the pages of the book.

HungerHunger: A Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay
Ok, sometimes the big trauma makes me cry, too. I don’t know what my reaction would have been reading this in print, but hearing Gay narrate it made me lose. my. shit. You can hear her voice crack as she recounts the most painful experiences of her life and the impact they had on the rest of her life. It’s not easy listening but, like everything Gay does, it’s brilliant and deeply meaningful.

not my fathers son by alan cumming coverNot My Father’s Son by Alan Cumming
It’s easy to think the successful actors we see on TV are trauma-free, well-adjusted individuals who get to go to fancy parties and collect big paychecks. This is especially true if they aren’t the type of celeb to cause a scene in hotel rooms or brawl with paparazzi. But that’s not always the reality and Alan Cumming is an example of a brilliant, successful actor who had it anything but easy growing up.

As the publisher notes, “Alan Cumming grew up in the grip of a man who held his family hostage, someone who meted out violence with a frightening ease, who waged a silent war with himself that sometimes spilled over onto everyone around him. That man was Alex Cumming, Alan’s father.”

What moved me so much about this book is how palpably you can feel Cumming trying to work through his complicated feelings about his father on the page.

He’s also, as one might expect, an excellent narrator and this smart, funny, and moving book will definitely make you shed a tear or…300.

I’m on the road next week, so I’ll be sending the next newsletter from Colorado!

Until then audiophiles, happy listening!

~Katie

Categories
In The Club

In the Club Jul 11

Welcome back to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met and well-read. Let’s dive in.


This newsletter is sponsored by Flatiron Books and If You See Me Don’t Say Hi by Neel Patel.

A Vanity Fair Ultimate Fiction Pick for summer and a bookseller favorite, If You See Me Don’t Say Hi is a modern story collection that Behold the Dreamers author Imbolo Mbue calls “a joy to read, reminiscent of Jhumpa Lahiri and David Ebershoff.”


Let’s start a dinner club! This post about fiction related to food has me both hungry and ready to read.
Book group bonus: I grew up wanting to eat all the woodland animal foods in the Redwall books (sugared violets!) so this would 100% be an excuse for me to finally get The Redwall Cookbook. Plus, reading middle-grade books in the summertime is always a nice way to give your brain a break.

The Golden Booker has been chosen, and the winner is Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient.
Book group bonus: You could do a (re)read, but there’s also a lot of interesting discussion to be had about the whole Golden Booker program, the judge selections, and the public voting!

What is gothic fiction? (As opposed to goth fiction, which is definitely separate.)  We have answers and suggestions!
Book group bonus: I would like to add The Monsters of Templeton by Lauren Groff to this list as well, and submit it for your consideration — it has a ton of great plot points to discuss.

Get crafty: Got crafters in your group, and/or people interested in learning? Here’s a round-up of crochet books!
Book group bonus: The best Easter I ever spent was in the company of several bookish friends learning how to cross-stitch, so I highly recommend doing some form of “learning to craft” meeting, crochet or otherwise!

Related to last week’s playlist link, here are 50 must-reads about music.
Book group bonus: Combine these ideas! For example: read Toni Morrison’s Jazz and have everyone come ready with a favorite jazz song to play for the group.

From the headlines: Here’s a round-up of all our posts on books around immigration and the immigrant experience (there are a lot).
Book group bonus: In case you’re wanting to read timely/politically relevant books, which I bet many of you are.

Want more takes on the best books of 2018 so far? Here are the picks from EW, and here are the bestsellers from Publishers Weekly.
Book group bonus: Do a compare and contrast between these and Book Riot‘s, or any other’s you’ve come across. Double bonus: What’s on your group’s best-of list so far?

And that’s a wrap: Happy discussing! 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 (including the occasional book club question!) you can find me on the Get Booked podcast with the inimitable Amanda.

Your fellow booknerd,
Jenn

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

Categories
Letterhead

TBR Insiders Launch

For as long as Book Riot has been around, we’ve heard from diehard book nerds who dream of getting truly personalized book recommendations. Today, we are thrilled to introduce TBR (Tailored Book Recommendations) to offer you just that!

We’re opening the doors to Insiders first because 1) early access to new Book Riot stuff is one of the perks of being an Insider, and 2) as with any brand-new internet thing, glitches and bugs can pop up, and we know you’ll help us squash them. Please keep this beta special by not sharing it on social or outside the BR community.

We’re excited to hear your feedback and make TBR as rad as it can possibly be, and we’ll let you know when it’s cool to tell the world. For now, come on in and check it out.

 

Categories
What's Up in YA

3 YA Pilots Ordered By Amazon, Jimmy Fallon Picks a YA Title To Launch Book Club, & More YA News

Hey YA Readers: Let’s catch up on the latest in YA haps.

“What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by Audible. Just for Book Riot readers: sign up for an Audible account, and get two audiobooks free!


Let’s take a peek at the world of recent YA news:

Cheap Reads

Grab ’em while they’re hot and super affordable ebooks.

This Savage Song book coverMaureen Johnson’s 13 Little Blue Envelopes is $2.

Grab a copy of Victoria Schwab’s This Savage Song for $2.

If you want some pirate adventure in your reading life, you’ll want to drop $2 for LA Meyer’s Bloody Jack.

Akemi Dawn Bowman’s Morris-nominated Starfish is $2.

Pick up Stacey Lee’s Secret of a Heart Note for $2.

Keeping Her Secret by Sarah Nicolas — one of our very own Book Rioters — is $1. Today’s the last day on the sale, so grab it ASAP.

Blast From The Past

A handful of Book Riot YA pieces from this month in years gone by:

This Week’s Book Mail

Curious what books are coming soon? Here’s a peek at the YA titles that hit my mailbox this week:

A Very Large Expanse of Sea by Tahereh Mafi

When We Caught Fire by Anna Godbersen

Sawkill Girls by Claire LeGrande

Broken Things by Lauren Oliver

This Is Kind of An Epic Love Story by Kheryn Callender

That Night by Amy Giles

The Loneliest Girl in the Universe by Lauren James

Open Mic Night at Westminster Cemetery by Mary Amato

Girls On The Line by Jennie Liu

I, Claudia by Mary McCoy

Campfire by Shawn Sarles

Sea Prayer by Khaled Hosseini

The Unwanted: Stories of Syrian Refugees by Don Brown

Rad Girls Can by Kate Schatz

You Are The Everything by Karen Rivers (not pictured)

____________________

See you all back here next week!

–Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars on Twitter and Instagram.

 

Categories
TBR

TBR Dev Test

Testing to make sure we’re getting through!

Dropping in some content here:
(original post here: https://ohayou.bookriot.com/2018/06/30/the-books-we-refuse-to-lend/)

One of the most beautiful things amongst book lovers is their joy of sharing; those who love reading find satisfaction in passing along the stories which changed our lives and touched us deeply, there is solace in meeting someone who is willing to read the tales that have moved us. We love libraries, we think they are one of the greatest ideas humans have come up with. It is not a surprise that we enjoy, and even encourage, lending books.

Yet, there are exceptions to this rule. Books we hold so dear that we refuse to even let them out of our sight. Here are a few examples of books our contributors refuse to lend, and their – more than reasonable – excuses.

I have read this book a few times and I own two copies: one in English, that I bought at a flea market in London for £4, and another in my native language, Portuguese, which I bought second-hand for about €4. Now, I don’t mind lending the English version; it’s the Portuguese version that you won’t pry from my dead hands. The reason why I won’t lend this book is simple: it is to me what a bible is to some people, even if it’s not my favourite book: it has a wonderful hardcover, an edition I never saw anywhere else (not the usual movie cover, either, just Ralph Fiennes in the desert holding Herodotus), and it’s a book I find comforting to take with me on plane trips, or when I feel anxious for some reason. I would be pretty upset if I lost this specific book, so I prefer not to lend it to anyone.

Categories
Today In Books

Jane Austen’s Unfinished Last Novel Will Be Adapted: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Flatiron Books and If You See Me Don’t Say Hi by Neel Patel.


PBS Masterpiece To Adapt Jane Austen’s Sandition

Austen’s unfinished novel about a sleepy fishing village turned fashionable seaside resort and a young, unconventional heroine is getting a television adaptation. PBS Masterpiece and British broadcaster ITV have teamed up to produce the eight-part adaptation of Sandition, with War and Peace and Mr. Selfridge writer Andrew Davies on the team.

Winnie-the-Pooh Map Sets Record At Auction

The original map of Winnie-the-Pooh’s Hundred Acre Wood by the artist EH Shepard just set a world record for a book illustration sold at auction. The map, which was privately owned and unseen for nearly 50 years, is selling at London auction house Sotheby’s for £430,000. Captioned “Drawn by Me and Mr Shepard helpd,” (“Me” being Christopher Robin) the map is littered with spelling errors like “nice for picnicks” and “100 aker wood.”

Inside The Largest Chained Library

BBC took us inside an ancient library. The library at Hereford Cathedral in the UK is the largest surviving chained library in the world–chained as in all the books are locked in by chains. The library was rebuilt exactly as it had been from 1611 to 1841. Take a peek!

 

And don’t forget–we’re giving away $500 of this year’s best YA books (so far)! Click here to enter.