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Giveaways

Win a Copy of THE CON ARTIST by Fred Van Lente!

 

We have 10 copies of The Con Artist by Fred Van Lente to give away to 10 Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

Comic book artist Mike Mason arrives at San Diego Comic-Con expecting just another con—and maybe a chance to reunite with his ex-wife—but when his rival murdered, he becomes the prime suspect. To clear his name, Mike will have to navigate every corner of the con, from intrusive fans and obsessive collectors to the world’s slowest chase scene down the aisles of Hall H. In the process, he unravels a dark secret behind one of the industry’s most legendary creators. With ten illustrations and an unconventional setting, The Con Artist is perfect for comic fans and mystery lovers alike.

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

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Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

061018-InTheDistanceWithYou-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Other Press.

This Chilean literary thriller tells the story of three lives intertwined with that of an enigmatic author, whose character is inspired by the groundbreaking Brazilian writer Clarice Lispector.

Three figures gather around the comatose body of a legendary Latin American writer. As Daniel, Emilia, and Horacio tell their stories, they reconstruct Vera’s past, trying—in different ways and before it’s too late—to unveil the dying woman’s secrets. Spanning from modern-day Chile to the 1950s, 60s, and through the years of the Pinochet dictatorship, In the Distance With You reveals successive mysteries and discoveries like a set of Russian nesting dolls.

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Book Radar

Donald Glover Might Play Willy Wonka, and More Book Radar!

Hello, lovely people. I know I am always excited and enthusiastic about books, but I want you to know that it’s hard out there, and I hope you are all doing well. I appreciate you all. Be kind to yourself and remember you’re important! I hope everything in your world is marvelous as it can be and you’re reading something wonderful. Enjoy your upcoming week, and be excellent to each other. – xoxo, Liberty


As part of Season 2 of our podcast series Annotated, we are giving away 10 of the best books about books of 2017. Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the image below:


PS – Don’t forget we’re giving away $500 to the bookstore of your choice! Enter here by June 21st!

Here’s this week’s trivia question: What is the name of Don Quixote’s squire in the novel by Cervantes?

Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

the underground railroadBarry Jenkins will direct the series adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s Underground Railroad.

Rainbow Rowell sent the bookish internet into a frenzy with the announcement of a new book in 2020.

J.K. Rowling says she’ll write another children’s book after Fantastic Beasts 3.

HBO orders a Game of Thrones prequel pilot.

The Gender Games by Juno Dawson will be a television show, picking up where the book leaves off.

Leslie Odom Jr., Freida Pinto, Cynthia Erivo, and Orlando Bloom join the cast of Needle in a Timestack, based on a short story by Robert Silverberg.

Donald Glover reportedly on shortlist to star as Willy Wonka in a new film.

American Gods casts new actors for season 2 characters.

Daniel Radcliffe, Bobby Cannavale, and Cherry Jones will star in Broadway’s The Lifespan of a Fact.

Knopf wins debut novel about Dr. Zhivago for seven figures.

Brian Allen Carr (omg I love him) has a new book coming in 2019.

Gwenda Bond will write the first Stranger Things book!

Michael Wolf is writing a follow-up to Fire and Fury.

James McAvoy and Clarke Peters join the BBC One adaptation of His Dark Materials.

And Lizzy Caplan will join the cast of the Are You Sleeping? adaptation.

Cover Reveals

Here’s the cover for The Cold Is in Her Bones by Peternelle van Arsdale (Margaret McElderry Books, January 22, 2019)

Nnedi Okorafor shared the cover of the upcoming Binti omnibus. (DAW Books, February 5, 2019)

Here’s Two Can Keep a Secret, the follow-up to One Of Us is Lying by Karen M. McManus. (Delacorte Press, January 8, 2019)

And the gorgeous cover of Cindy Pon’s Ruse, the follow-up to Want. (Simon Pulse, January 22, 2019)

Sneak Peeks

sharp objects show posterHere’s the official trailer for HBO’s Sharp Objects adaptation.

Here’s the first trailer for Widows, based on the novel by Lynda La Plante.

And the first trailer for Peter Jackson’s Mortal Engines film.

And the first look at Claire Foy as Lisbeth Salander in the new The Girl… movie.

Book Riot Recommends 

At Book Riot, I work on the New Books! email, the All the Books! podcast about new releases, and the Book Riot Insiders New Release Index. I am very fortunate to get to read a lot of upcoming titles, and learn about a lot of upcoming titles, and I’m delighted to share a couple with you each week!

Loved, loved, loved:

fruit of the drunken treeFruit of the Drunken Tree: A Novel by Ingrid Rojas Contreras (Doubleday, July 31)

Inspired by the author’s own experiences, this is the story of seven-year-old Chula, who lives a carefree life with her sister in a gated community in Bogotá. But when a young woman from the guerilla-occupied section of the city is hired as her family’s live-in maid, Chula begins to learn about privilege and the encroaching violence, crime, and conflict that is taking place beyond the walls.

Excited to read:

seventeen by hideo yokoyamaSeventeen: A Novel by Hideo Yokoyama, Louise Heal Kawai (Translator) (MCD, November 13)

I am a big fan of Yokoyama’s huge police procedural, Six Four, so I can’t wait to get my hands on his new one. It’s about an air disaster in 1985 and an unsolved mystery seventeen years later. I am also a fan of this new wave of books coming out that take place during the years I was growing up (Every Other Weekend, You All Grow Up and Leave MeMarlena) because I can’t remember anything special about those years myself but I love reading about them and going, “OH YAH I FORGOT ABOUT THAT.”

What I’m reading this week.

record of a spaceborn fewRecord of a Spaceborn Few (Wayfarers) by Becky Chambers

Accidentally Like a Martyr: The Tortured Art of Warren Zevon by James Campion

A Gentleman’s Murder by Christopher Huang

Confessions of the Fox by Jordy Rosenberg

Summer Bird Blue by Akemi Dawn Bowman

Non-book-related recommendation.

Look at cute animals pictures. I’ll start you off: Here is a kitten named Chai, and omg, she is the cutest.

And this is funny.

Rakesh Saytal is revealing a different story from his childhood every day in June for Pride Month.

Trivia answer: Sancho Panza.

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Children’s Books About Authors

Hi Kid Lit friends,

It’s no surprise that writers are fascinated by other writers, and that readers enjoy reading books about the lives of their favorite authors. Here are some awesome children’s books about authors that may pique your curiosity!


captain superlative coverSponsored by Disney Publishing Worldwide

Red mask, blue wig, silver swimsuit, rubber gloves, torn tights, high top sneakers and . . . a cape? Who would run through School dressed like this? Janey—quick to stay in the shadows—can’t resist the urge to find out. The answer pulls invisible Janey into the spotlight and leads her to an unexpected friendship with a superhero like no other. But superheroes hold secrets and Captain Superlative is no exception. When Janey unearths what’s at stake, she faces her own dark secrets and discovers what it truly means to be a hero . . . and a friend.


A Poem for Peter: The Story of Ezra Jack Keats and the Creation of The Snowy Day by Andrea Davis Pinkney, illustrated by Lou Fancher and Steve Johnson

This picture book biography of Ezra Jack Keats’s life is lovely, written in verse with gorgeous illustrations. The reader gets to watch Ezra grow up and get his first job illustrating a children’s book. When he gets the opportunity to write and illustrate his own book, he chooses to create…

Peter,
forging your path in knee-deep wonder.
Peter,
welcoming us into your play.
Peter,
marching out in a whole new way.

Big Machines: The Story of Virginia Lee Burton by Sherri Duskey Rinker, illustrated by John Rocco

Virginia Lee Burton, known as Jinnee, had the gift of storytelling and drawing. When her two sons, Aris and Michael, were born, she drew them their favorite things: BIG MACHINES! After drawing Choo Choo the train for Aris, she told the story of when Choo Choo escaped (but then came home safely). Michael loved watching big trucks dig up the dirt, so Jinnee drew a steam shovel named Mary Anne. Fans of Burton’s books will delight in this picture book biography.

Out of Wonder: Poems Celebrating Poets by Kwame Alexander with Chris Colderley and Marjory Wentworth, illustrated by Ekua Holmes

They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, and the poems in this book are lovingly written by Kwame Alexander with Chris Colderley and Marjory Wentworth in celebration of the world’s most beloved poets: Mary Oliver, Gwendolyn Brooks, Sandra Cisneros, Nikki Giovanni, Emily Dickinson, William Carlos Williams, Robert Frost, Okot p’Bitek, and many more. Paired with Ekua Holmes’s vibrant paintings, this book is a treasure and will inspire readers to dive deeper into poetry.

One Fun Day with Lewis Carroll: A Celebration of Wordplay and a Girl Named Alice by Kathleen Krull, illustrated by Júlia Sardà

I love the way this book begins: “Lewis Carroll was an expert at fun. A day with Lewis was always fabulous and joyous–as he would say, frabjous.” Throughout this story are references to his classic works, accentuated in red type, along with fun illustrations with much to discover on each page. The book culminates with Lewis in a rowboat with a friend, spinning a story about a girl name Alice who falls down a rabbit hole, and the story gets curiouser and curiouser…

Ordinary, Extraordinary Jane Austen by Deborah Hopkinson, illustrated by Qin Leng

For those of us who love Jane Austen, this picture book is a perfect way to introduce younger readers to this extraordinary woman. Jane was an introvert who loved reading novels, but she questioned why all the books in her father’s vast library were written by men and focused solely on faraway adventures and romances. Jane wanted her books to be a mirror to the ordinary world, so she wrote them herself.

Emily by Michael Bedard, illustrated by Barbara Cooney

I need a new copy of this book because we have read this so many times that the pages have fallen out. Much has been written about Emily Dickinson and her reclusive tendencies, but I love this one because it is illustrated beautifully by Barbara Cooney. In this story, a young girl goes to Emily’s house with her mother, who goes to play the piano for Emily. There, the girl sneaks a gift up to Emily, who listens from the landing, and in return, Emily gives the girl a precious gift of her own—the gift of poetry.

Alabama Spitfire: The Story of Harper Lee and To Kill a Mockingbird by Bethany Hegedus, illustrated by Erin McGuire

Much has been written and speculated about Nelle Harper Lee, the author of To Kill a Mockingbird. Born in 1926, she wore dungaree overalls and roamed the red soil of Monroeville, Alabama with her brother Edwin. She watched her father, a lawyer, try cases in the courthouse, and when Truman Capote came to live in Alabama from New York City, she became his protector on the playground. The two became fast friends, and many of their childhood memories were put into their books and writing.

Some Writer!: The Story of E.B. White by Melissa Sweet

I adore this book by master storyteller and illustrator Melissa Sweet. It includes White’s personal letters, photos, and family ephemera from the E.B. White estate, paired with Sweet’s lovely collage and illustrations. This is a longer picture book biography, suitable for all ages, with lovely backstory on how his classic children’s books came to be.

Tru and Nelle by G. Neri

This is a middle grade historical fiction recounts the friendship between Nelle Harper Lee and Truman Capote, who first came to know each other in Monroeville, Alabama in the 1930s. I adored this book and found it captivating, and I also loved the sequel Tru and Nelle: A Christmas Tale.

 

House of Dreams: The Life of L.M. Montgomery by Liz Rosenberg and Julie Morstad (Candlewick, 6/12/18)

This is a lovely middle grade biography about the author of Anne of Green Gables. When she was fourteen years old, Maud wrote in her journal, “I love books. I hope when I grow up to be able to have lots of them.” Not only did Maud grow up to own lots of books, she wrote twenty-four of them herself as L.M. Montgomery. The final illustrations were not included in the review copy I received, but I expect they will be lovely based on the cover and the fact that Julie Morstad is the illustrator.

Zora and Me by Victoria Bond and T.R. Simon

This middle grade book is a fictionalized story about Zora Neale Hurston, a riveting storyteller. Her latest creation is a shape-shifting gator man who lurks in the marshes, waiting to steal human souls. But when boastful Sonny Wrapped loses a wrestling match with an elusive alligator named Ghost — and a man is found murdered by the railroad tracks soon after — young Zora’s tales of a mythical evil creature take on an ominous and far more complicated complexion, jeopardizing the peace and security of an entire town and forcing three children to come to terms with the dual-edged power of pretending. This novel is the first project ever to be endorsed by the Zora Neale Hurston Trust that was not authored by Hurston herself. The next book in the trilogy is Zora and Me: The Cursed Ground by T.R. Simon (Candlewick, 9/11/18).

 

New Releases

All of these books release this Tuesday unless otherwise noted. The book descriptions are from Goodreads, but I’ll add a ❤ if I particularly loved a title.

Picture Book New Releases

Little Robot Alone by Patricia MacLachlan and Emily MacLachlan Charest, illustrated by Matt Phelan (HMH Books for Young Readers)

Little Robot’s life is peaceful—yet maybe it’s a little too peaceful. But wait! He has an idea. With a little hard work, perseverance, and resourceful thinking, can Little Robot build his way to the perfect cure for loneliness?

❤ Bear’s Scare by Jacob Grant (Bloomsbury)

Bear likes to keep his house clean and tidy. In fact, the only thing Bear loves more than cleaning is taking care of his small stuffed friend, Ursa. Then Bear sees a sticky spiderweb . . . and where there’s a web there is certainly a spider! The messy guest must be found, but what Bear and Ursa finally discover might just be an unlikely friend. Opposites attract in this adorable story, where new friends come in all shapes and sizes.

Don’t Eat That! by Drew Sheneman (Penguin Random House)

Bear is hungry. Gertie wants to help. But finding the perfect snack is harder than it looks. Will Gertie and Bear silence Bear’s tummy grumbles before hunger gets the best of them?

 

Middle Grade New Releases

❤ The House That Lou Built by Mae Respicio (Random House)

Lou Bulosan-Nelson has the ultimate summer DIY project. She’s going to build her own “tiny house,” 100 square feet all her own. She shares a room with her mom in her grandmother’s house, and longs for a place where she can escape her crazy but lovable extended Filipino family. Lou enjoys her woodshop class and creating projects, and she plans to build the house on land she inherited from her dad, who died before she was born. But then she finds out that the land may not be hers for much longer.

❤ Flor and Miranda Steal the Show by Jennifer Torres (Little, Brown)

Miranda is the lead singer in her family’s musical band, Miranda y Los Reyes. Her family has worked hard performing at festivals and quinceañeras. Now, they have a shot at the main stage. How will Miranda make it a performance to remember? Flor’s family runs the petting zoo at Mr. Barsetti’s carnival. When she accidentally overhears Mr. Barsetti and Miranda’s dad talk about cutting the zoo to accommodate Miranda y Los Reyes’s main stage salary, she knows she has to take action. Will she have the heart for sabotage once she and Miranda actually start to become friends?

Everything Else in the Universe by Tracy Holczer (Penguin Random House)

Lucy is a practical, orderly person–just like her dad. He taught her to appreciate reason and good sense, instilling in her the same values he learned at medical school. But when he’s sent to Vietnam to serve as an Army doctor, Lucy and her mother are forced to move to San Jose, California, to be near their relatives–the Rossis–people known for their superstitions and all around quirky ways. Lucy can’t wait for life to go back to normal, so she’s over the moon when she learns her father is coming home early. It doesn’t even matter that he’s coming back “different.” That she can’t ask too many questions or use the word “amputation.” It just matters that he’ll be home. But Lucy quickly realizes there’s something very wrong when her mother sends her to spend the summer with the Rossis to give her father some space.

❤ Lions & Liars by Kate Beasley, illustrations by Dan Santat (Farrar Strauss Giroux, 6/5/18)

Frederick Frederickson has a food-chain theory about life. There are lions, like the school bully. Gazelles, like the bullied kids. There are meerkats, and the fleas that live on the butts of meerkats. Frederick’s a flea. Fifth grade is off to a terrible start when Frederick is sent to a disciplinary camp for troublesome boys. His fellow troop mates―Nosebleed, Specs, The Professor, and little-yet-lethal Ant Bite―are terrifying. But in between trust-building exercises and midnight escape attempts, a tenuous friendship grows between them. Which is lucky, because a Category 5 hurricane is coming and everyone will have to work together―lions and fleas alike―to survive!

The Button War by Avi (Candlewick)

Twelve-year-old Patryk knows little of the world beyond his tiny Polish village; the Russians have occupied the land for as long as anyone can remember, but otherwise life is unremarkable. Patryk and his friends entertain themselves by coming up with dares — some more harmful than others — until the Germans drop a bomb on the schoolhouse and the Great War comes crashing in. As control of the village falls from one nation to another, Jurek, the ringleader of these friends, devises the best dare yet: whichever boy steals the finest military button will be king. But as sneaking buttons from uniforms hanging to dry progresses to looting the bodies of dead soldiers — and as Jurek’s obsession with being king escalates — Patryk begins to wonder whether their “button war” is still just a game.

The Legend of Greg by Chris Rylander (Putnam)

Risk-averse Greg Belmont is content with being ordinary. He’s got a friend–that’s right, just one–at his fancy prep school, and a pretty cool dad (even if he is obsessed with organic soaps that smell like a mix of salted pork and Icelandic bog). The problem is, Greg isn’t ordinary . . . he’s actually an honest-to-goodness, fantastical Dwarf! He discovers the truth the day his dad brings home a gross new tea–one that awakens bizarre abilities in Greg. Then a murderous Bro-Troll kidnaps his dad and Greg is whisked away to the Underground, where Dwarves have lived for centuries right beneath the streets of Chicago.

The Kid’s Awesome Activity Book by Mike Lowery (Workman)

A book that begs to be doodled in with 96 wacky prompts, games, and crafts, and adorable creatures to boot, The Kid’s Awesome Activity Book is packed with activities that take delightful twists and turns, inviting kids to design, draw, and dream—and encouraging creativity on and off the page. Enter an ancient cave to decode a mummy’s message. Find your way through a beehive maze. Write a song for a cat rock band. Design a personalized spaceship—and so much more.

I received a galley of Zora & Me: The Cursed Ground (Candlewick, 9/11/18) by T.R. Simon, the second book in the Zora & Me trilogy. I am only one chapter in, but I’m captivated by the gorgeous writing and the way the author pulls the reader into the setting and story.

This week I read Running on Sunshine: How Does Solar Energy Work? by Caroline Cinami Decristofano, illustrated by Giovana Medeiros, to my eight-year-old. I myself am puzzled by how solar energy works, so it was fun to explore the science and new solar technologies with her. Did you know Australia had a solar energy car race every year? And that engineers are experimenting with solar panel roads that light up at night when animals step onto it?

I read and finished Louisiana’s Way Home (Candlewick, 10/2/18) by Kate DiCamillo in one sitting. This story is about Louisiana, one of the Three Rancheros from DiCamillo’s National Book Award finalist book Raymie Nightingale. I loved everything about this book.

 

Around the web…

The Free ARC Book Fair, via Publisher’s Weekly

6 Picture Books to Give as Graduation Presents (other than Oh, The Places You’ll Go!, via Book Riot

 

One last thing: did you know that Book Riot is giving away $500 to the bookstore of your choice? Enter here!

I’d 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

*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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Today In Books

Student Volunteers Replacing School Librarians Criticized: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Tonight I’m Someone Else by Chelsea Hodson from Holt Paperbacks.

cover image: purple background with doodled face features nose, eye, mouth


Student Volunteers Replacing School Librarians Criticized In Scotland

Three Scotland schools are testing out a trial program from the Scottish Borders council that will place pupils and volunteers in school library staff positions for cost-cutting reasons. Many parents, experts, librarians, and unions are critical of this plan: “Librarians do not just open the library door and check out books: they have the knowledge and skill to support learners in their study and research, and to support literacy skills.”

He Once Got Himself Arrested On Purpose–And 12 Other Surprising Facts about George Orwell

If your well of facts for “Hey did you know” is running low Mental Floss has put together a list of surprising facts about novelist Eric Arthur Blair, the man behind the pen name George Orwell. You probably already know he wrote Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four but do you know how many foreign languages he knew? Or that he coined the term “cold war?”

Poet Gwendolyn Brooks Statue Unveiled

Poet Gwendolyn Brooks is now the first black, Chicago-based poet honored with a statue and memorial in a city park. Just another “first” for this extraordinary poet who was also first the black person to win a Pulitzer Prize (for Annie Allen) and the first black woman to be the poet laureate of Illinois. If you’re in Chicago you can see her statue at her namesake Gwendolyn Brooks Park or enjoy your weekend with a poetry collection: A Street in Bronzeville.

Don’t forget we’re giving away $500 to the bookstore of your choice! Kiss a four-leaf clover and enter here!

Categories
Giveaways

Win THE WIFE BETWEEN US by Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen!

 

We have 1 copy of The Wife Between Us by Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen to give away to a lucky Riot reader! And it comes with a Lo & Sons weekender tote!

Here’s what it’s all about:

The instant New York Times Bestseller!

“A fiendishly smart cat-and-mouse thriller” —New York Times Book Review

“Buckle up, because you won’t be able to put this one down.” —Glamour

“Jaw dropping. Unforgettable. Shocking.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“The best domestic suspense novel since Gone Girl.” —In Touch Weekly

When you read this book, you will make many assumptions.

You will assume you are reading about a jealous ex-wife.

You will assume she is obsessed with her replacement – a beautiful, younger woman who is about to marry the man they both love.

You will assume you know the anatomy of this tangled love triangle.

Assume nothing.

Twisted and deliciously chilling, Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen’s The Wife Between Us exposes the secret complexities of an enviable marriage – and the dangerous truths we ignore in the name of love.

Read between the lies.

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

Categories
Today In Books

Anthony Bourdain Has Died: Today in Books

Sponsored by Blood Will Out by Jo Treggiari


Anthony Bourdain Has Died

Anthony Bourdain, world-famous chef, television host, and author of Kitchen Confidential, A Cook’s Tour, and many other books, has died from suicide at age 61. His body was found in his hotel in France, where he was staying to film his show Parts Unknown. “Chef Gordon Ramsay honoured him as a man who ‘brought the world into our homes and inspired so many people to explore cultures and cities through their food’.”

Stranger Things Books Are Coming in the Fall

Penguin Random House announced today upcoming books about/set in the universe of the hit Netflix series Stranger Things. The releases begin with a behind-the-scenes book and a young readers’ gift book coming out this fall, and next year author Gwenda Bond will a prequel novel about Eleven’s mother. The books will have audiobook versions–here’s hoping the cast reads them!

James McAvoy to Star in BBC’s Adaptation of His Dark Materials

Actor James McAvoy has been cast to play Lord Asriel in the BBC’s eight-part adaptation of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials series (Daniel Craig played the part in the full-length movie). The adaptation will be directed by Tom Hooper, and will also star Lin Manuel-Miranda and Clarke Peters.


We’re giving away $500 to spend at the bookstore of your choice! Click here to enter.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

“I Have Just Resolved A Crime Via Twitter!”

Hello mystery fans! Hope you have a good book to read this weekend!

From Book Riot and Around the Internet

The Best Mystery Audiobooks for Road Trips

7 Books About Cults That Demonstrate How Dangerous Groupthink Really Is


Sponsored By The Shimmer by Carsten Stroud, from MIRA Books

A police pursuit kicks Sergeant Redding and his trainee, Julie Karras, into a shoot-out that ends with one girl dead and the driver of the SUV fleeing. Redding stays on the hunt, driven by the trace memory that he knows that running woman.

Redding and his partner chase a seductive serial killer who can ride ‘The Shimmer’ across decades. The stakes turn brutal when Jack, whose wife and child died in a crash the previous year, faces a terrible choice: help catch the killer, or change time itself and try to save his wife and child.


Catapult has a monthly column that explores out of print African-American authors and last month the spotlight was on Charlotte Carter and her noir novel Rhode Island Red. (While the paperback/hardcover are out of print you can still read it in ebook.)

Giveaway: Book Riot is giving away $500 to the bookstore of your choice! Enter here you lucky people!

News and Adaptations

Here’s the official trailer for the adaptation of The Girl in the Spider’s Web, which will be in theaters November 9th.

Rea Frey’s Not Her Daughter, releasing in August, has sold its film and television rights. The novel is “The story of a child kidnapped away from a mother who isn’t sure she wants her back.” Well now I’ve got to read it to find out why…

cover image: dark forest with light down the center path with a woman standng from behind in jeans and jacketKelley Armstong’s popular Canadian Rockton crime thriller trilogy has sold TV rights to Temple Street Productions (Orphan Black and Queer As Folk). If you like to read the books first: City of the Lost; A Darkness Absolute; This Fallen Prey.

The Lambda Literary Awards were announced and here are the crime winners: The Fact of A Body by Alexandria Marzano-Lesnevich (Review); Night Drop by Marshall Thornton; Huntress by A.E. Radley.

cover image: scary shadowed gothic mansion and a giant key with skull overlayedAfter Hulu decided not to go forward with its adaptation series of Joe Hill’s crime graphic novel Locke & Key, it seems Netflix has swooped in and is locking in that deal. But it won’t be the Hulu series– apparently Netflix’s deal is for the rights and there will be redevelopment and recasting. Guess we’ll have to stay tuned.

Not an adaptation but if you’ve been wanting more Gillian Flynn in your life she co-wrote the upcoming thriller Windows with Steve McQueen. Watch the trailer here.

The BBC’s fantastic Killing Eve (adapted from Luke Jennings’ Codename Villanelle) will stream later this year on Hulu.

True Crime

California judge unsealed suspected Golden State Killer’s search and arrest warrants.

An editor from The Staircase apparently fell for the doc’s subject and I swear Twitter always gives me the news I don’t want to know. Here’s the thread.

And in fake news: The Twitter Crime Mystery that Gripped Spain “Police! I have just resolved a crime via Twitter! You need to deal with it immediately,” wrote a Spanish social media user going by the name of Mr Brightside on Saturday afternoon.

Kindle Deals

cover image: zoomed in on half of a japanese woman's face as tear rolls down her facePenance by Kanae Minato, Philip Gabriel (translation) is $2.99! (Dark, character driven crime novel: full review)

All three books in Marcia Clark’s (yes, that one) Samantha Brinkman series are each $1.99: Blood Defense; Moral Defense; Snap Judgement. (review)

 

Currently Reading:

cover image: village on ocean water with a woman from behind walking down dockI really enjoyed William Shaw’s procedural The Birdwatcher (review) and had wanted more of one of the side characters. And my wish was granted with Salt Lane which follows DS Cupidi as the main character. So far it’s really scratching my itch for a good procedural.

After Blackout I was left with wanting more cults so I’m making my way through Cult X which has the bonus for fans of university lectures as it also goes into religious/philosophical/scientific lectures.

cover image: young white woman's face coming out of water and fogAnd I’ve been craving more YA mysteries lately so I started, and am really enjoying, Marisha Pessl’s Neverworld Wake. It has a super strong voice from the beginning.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, and Litsy–you can find me under Jamie Canaves.

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own you can sign up here.

Categories
True Story

The Amazon, Alzheimer’s and More New Books of June

Hello, fellow humans! I decided to devote this first newsletter of June to a selection of the great new books that came out this week. These hardly even scratch the surface, but feature the Amazon jungle, refugees, Alzheimer’s disease, and British nobility.


Sponsored by Tonight I’m Someone Else, Chelsea Hodson. Published by Holt Paperbacks.

From graffiti gangs and Grand Theft Auto to sugar daddies, Schopenhauer, and a deadly game of Russian roulette, Chelsea Hodson probes her desires in these essays to examine where the physical and proprietary collide. She asks what our privacy, intimacy, and bodies are worth in the increasingly digital world of liking, linking, and sharing. This tender and jarring collection is relevant to anyone who’s ever searched for what the self is worth.


But before we get into the newsletter, a quick reminder that Book Riot is giving away $500 to the bookstore of your choice. Think of all the books you could get with $500 – probably every one mentioned in this newsletter, plus more. Enter here!

Third Bank of the River by Chris Feliciano Arnold – This book is a history of the Amazon River, “from the arrival of the first Spanish flotilla to the drones that are now mapping unexplored parts of the forest.” It’s also an exploration of the conflict between the isolated tribes that live along the river, and the modern businesses and criminals who want to use the land and resources. I’ve read a lot of historical nonfiction about this area, but nothing contemporary, so I’m very curious.

Goodbye, Sweet Girl by Kelly Sundberg – In this memoir, Sundberg chronicles her marriage, tracing it from a love story to a terrifying look at domestic abuse. She writes about why she stayed in a violent relationship, the stories she told herself about their life together, how her childhood in an isolated Idaho town contributed to her feelings on marriage, and how she eventually left her husband. I am not sure I will be able to read this one, but it sounds really moving and important.

The Boy on the Beach by Tima Kurdi – Ever since I finished Exit West by Mohsin Hamid I’ve been keeping my eyes open for books about refugees and the refugee crisis to help me learn about it more. This memoir is about the family of Alan Kurdi, a Syrian boy who drowned while fleeing the country and, in death, became a symbol for the entire crisis. Tima Kurdi, living in Vancouver at the time, recognized her nephew and the journey he was trying to make. In this book she recounts her own emigration from Syria and her work as an advocate for the displaced.

Somebody I Used to Know by Wendy Mitchell – This is another one I may or may not be brave enough to actually read. In 2014, when she was just 58 years old, Wendy Mitchell was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease. In this memoir, she writes about her mental decline, her advocacy for people with this disease, and her efforts to “outwit” her Alzheimer’s as long as possible. Again, tough but important.

Sick by Porochista Khakpour – This book has been on many, many most-anticipated book lists, but it snuck up on me a little bit. For most of her adult life, Khakpour has been sick, but struggled to get a diagnosis for her condition. Feeling ill contributed to mental health problems and drug addictions, and cost her a lot of money, until she finally was diagnosed with Lyme’s disease. This book is about all of that, and the ways that the medical system fails to adequately address female illness.

Homelands by Alfredo Corchado – Corchado came to the United States from Mexico in 1987, and soon made a close group of friends at a local Mexican restaurant. Over the next 30 years, the friends meet regularly, “coming together of their shared Mexican roots and their love of tequila.” This book is a collection of their stories, told alongside the larger narrative of the last great Mexican migration during the 1970s and 1980s. This book seems particularly relevant in our current political climate.

Black Klansman by Ron Stallworth – When I saw the first movie trailer for BlacKkKlansman, I did not realize it was based on a book! This memoir is about the first black detective in the Colorado Springs Police Department, who poses as a white man and is invited to join the Ku Klux Klan. Since he obviously can’t go to meetings himself, he partners with a white police officer to infiltrate the KKK and sabotage the organization from within.

Those Wild Wyndhams by Claudia Renton – British aristocrats! I am still on a British bender thanks to the Royal Wedding, so of course this one caught my eye. This book is a “dazzling portrait of one of England’s grandest, noblest families,” focusing on four sisters who were “confidantes to British prime ministers, poets, writers, and artists, their lives entwined with the most celebrated and scandalous figures of the day.” In my head, this is sort of like rich, British, Little Women, but that could be totally off.

And with that, I’m out! You can find me on Twitter @kimthedork, and co-hosting the For Real podcast here at Book Riot. Happy reading!

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships Jun 8

Happy Friday, aliens and archivists! Today I’ve got reviews of The Wrong Stars by Tim Pratt and The Book of M by Peng Shepherd, plus some film news, SF in translation, YA picks, and more.


This newsletter is sponsored by Epic Reads and The Bird and the Blade by Megan Bannen.

a close-up of red and gray feathersWhen the kingdom is conquered by enemy forces, Jinghua she finds herself a conspirator in the escape of Prince Khalaf and his father.

While on the run, Jinghua’s feelings for Khalaf begin to evolve into an impossible love. But Khalaf seeks to restore his kingdom by forging a marriage alliance with Turandokht, who requires all potential suitors to solve three impossible riddles to win her hand. If they fail, they die.

With Khalaf’s life and kingdom at stake, Jinghua must reconcile her past with her feelings for Khalaf . . . even if it means losing him to the girl who’d sooner take his life than his heart.


Craving some feminist YA fantasy? Us too, and these have all been released in 2018!

Thinking about sci-fi in translation is something Dale Knickerbocker (editor of the Lingua Cosmica anthology) has done a lot of, and I love this interview with him.

A film historian sat down and ranked Star Wars by screen time for women, and the results are not surprising, but very telling. It is deeply sad that all of the prequels underperform everything except for A New Hope. Not because I care for the prequels (I do not!) but because we clearly lost ground there.

In exciting film news, Cat Valente’s Space Opera is getting an adaptation! I cannot wait to hear how they interpret the music from the book.

And of course, I could not pass up this Patronus quiz. I got a Komodo dragon which is miles more exciting than whatever I got on Pottermore (clearly, since I don’t even remember).

How about some ebook deals? Molly Tanzer’s queer rewrite of The Picture of Dorian Grey, Creatures of Will and Temper, is on sale for $2.99. The first book in Michelle Sagara’s Elantra series, Cast in Shadow, which I’ve recommended several times on various podcasts, is on sale for $1.99! And Zoo City, by personal favorite Lauren Beukes, is $2.99. Enjoy!

And now, reviews!

The Wrong Stars by Tim Pratt

two space ships positioned in front of a blue planet with ringsTake some Firefly and Aliens, mix with a dash of Douglas Adams and Lovecraft, then make it queer and racially diverse, and you’ve got something like The Wrong Stars. I found it thanks to this excellent Twitter thread, which exploded my library holds list, and I am so grateful to the OP for it!

The White Raven’s motley crew are a little bit mercenaries, a little bit salvage, and a little bit freighters; they patrol the edges of the solar system, taking what jobs they can get. They’re doing pretty well when they stumble across a wreck of a 500-year-old spaceship and discover it has a survivor on board, in cryo-sleep. A lot of things don’t add up about this (what is the craft doing where it is? How did it survive for so long? How did it not get found earlier?), and things only get more complicated when they wake up the survivor. The story she tells about an alien encounter doesn’t jive with the established relationships humanity has with the alien race they call the Liars. In the process of trying to find out what really happened to her, they stumble upon a galactic conspiracy that changes everything.

This book takes a ton of my favorite tropes and mashes them all together with glee and skill. Found family; alien encounters; wormhole travel; space stations; the complications of galactic law enforcement; AI; and a ticking clock race to the finish — I literally could not ask for more. Pratt gives all his characters and his galactic civilizations depth, his action sequences are page-turners, and the tone stays light-hearted (and sometimes even meta) despite the high stakes. I don’t use the word “rollicking” often, but it applies here. The sequel should be out this fall, and I will be awaiting it with the grabbiest of grabby-hands.

The Book of M by Peng Shepherd

a silhouette of a truck with its headlights on, traveling directly towards the viewer, against a blue and cloudy night skySet in a version of our world where people’s memories are disappearing along with their shadows, The Book of M asks big questions about identity and love, and provides a road trip through a shattered America along the way. It is, hands down, one of my favorite books of 2018 so far.

Max and Ory have been holed up in a hotel ever since the epidemic started. No one knows how or why it spreads, but people around the world are losing their shadows, then their memories, and then dying. It’s not just memories of friends and families; eventually, the shadowless forget to eat, or how to breathe. So far the couple is managing fine — until the day Max’s shadow disappears. Ory comes back from a supply-gathering trip to find her gone, and heads off in search of her. Meanwhile Naz — an Olympic-bound archer who is forced on the run with her sister — is just trying to stay alive. Her journey from her apartment in Boston to DC gives us a close-up view of the crumbling urban spaces of the Northeast. As Max, Ory, and Naz’s stories begin to overlap and intersect, there is hope, terror, and magic aplenty.

I white-knuckled my way through the last few chapters of this plot, both because of the final battle sequence (it’s a doozy) and the final puzzle piece of character interactions. Then I cried, and had to just sit on the couch for a bit to put myself back together again. Shepherd has written a beautiful, thoughtful, and engrossing debut, and I can’t wait to see what she does next.

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.

Happy Pride this month and all months!,
Jenn