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Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Read It Forward Book Recs.

Read It Forward’s mission is to help you find your next great read! We wish we could be with you all the time to talk about books, but since we can’t, our team has been hard at work to build a super-fun tool that will connect you with a book recommendation whenever you need one!

Introducing Read It Forward Book Recs, our very own Facebook messenger chatbot, built to help you find your next great read! The bot is available via Facebook messenger on both desktop and mobile. Take it for a spin—and happy reading!

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Today In Books

This Could Be The Future Of Books: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Read It Forward Book Recs.

digital drawing of redhead woman holding phone getting book recommendations


This Could Be The Future Of Books

Serial Box serializes books like podcast episodes so they are bite-sized and release weekly for about 10 to 16 weeks. They also have a print edition you can read on ereaders so you can switch between listening and digital reading. I don’t know, this sounds a lot like an audiobook you have to wait for chapters of and pay as you go along ($1.59 per episode) but everyone reads differently so this may totally work for you–in which case, get your serialized reading on and enjoy!

Test Your Literary Quote and Geography Knowledge

It’s the weekend, let’s play a literary game: The Guardian has a fun quiz for you to guess the city based on a literary quote. Which city did Margaret Atwood describe as ‘New York without the garbage and muggings’? Which writer called one London area ‘ungentrified, ungentrifiable’?

Let’s Roundup This Week’s Adaptation News

Between the world news and all the adaption news that drops during the week it’s easy to miss announcements so I’ve collected for you some of the things we found out this week. The Ruin by Dervla McTiernan (Irish crime thriller releasing July 3rd) has been optioned for film. Ryan Coogler, the Black Panther director, is totally here for a film centered on the women of Wakanda. Annette O’Toole (Mama Kent!) and Corbin Bernsen (Shawn’s Papa!) have been cast in season 2 of The Punisher. Annette Bening (Heart eyes emoji) has been cast in the Captain Marvel film. And John Green’s Looking for Alaska is in final deal stage to be an eight-episode series on Hulu.

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Today In Books

Why This Stephen King Book is So Hard to Find: Today in Books

Sponsored by Men Without Women by Haruki Murakami new in paperback from Vintage Books.


The Hard-to-Find Stephen King Novel

King’s 1977 novel Rage, published under his pen name Richard Bachman, is about a young man who murders two faculty members at his school and then takes his algebra class hostage with a gun. King “let the book fall out of publication in 1998 after real-life tragedies allegedly inspired by ‘Rage'”, but the book is still findable on Amazon…for $500-$700. I read the book in high school when it was in a second-hand copy of Bachman stories I found at Goodwill. Which I gave away after I finished reading it. Of course.

Ronan Farrow to Publish Book About Sexual Abuse Reporting

Ronan Farrow will expand on his reporting on sexual abuse in a new boo to be published by Little Brown. Called Catch and Kill, the book will “reveal the full extent of his reporting, and what he discovered about how far private investigators, former spies, high-priced lawyers, and embattled executives allegedly went to terrorize, intimidate and silence the women whose stories helped launch an international conversation on sexual misconduct and the abuse of power.” Can’t wait to rage-read this one.

Is Handmaid’s Tale Merch Going Too Far?

The popularity of the adaptation of The Handmaid’s Tale has led to the inevitable explosion of THT-themed merchandise available for purchase, and a conversation has begun about whether commodifying a show about violence against women is a capitalist bridge too far. “Looking at the Handmaid’s swag, I’m reminded of my time as a health-care marketing writer, when I interviewed women in breast-cancer support groups; these women loathed all things pink ribbon.” Something to think about.

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The Goods

$20 Tees

Fill your closet with bookish looks for summer! $20 tees through Sunday 5/13.

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Giveaways

Win a Stack of Ten $50 Barnes & Noble Gift Cards!

For a book nerd, there isn’t much better than having a gift card just sitting there ready to be spent at a bookstore. But what if I told you that you could not only go on a book-buying spree yourself, you could also take 9 friends with you.

That’s what this giveaway is: you could win $50 gift cards to Barnes & Noble for 10 people. Pretty cool, right?

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

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The Kids Are All Right

Interview with Penderwicks author Jeanne Birdsall, New Releases, and More!

Hi Kid Lit friends,

This Tuesday, the last book in The Penderwicks series will be released. I had the opportunity to interview author Jeanne Birdsall about how she feels about finishing her bestselling series, her pets, and what’s next.


Sponsored by Candlewick Press

Judy Moody is the perfect protagonist for today’s early chapter book readers. The curious, exuberant third-grader is smart but not a great speller; she loves science but is also artistic; she is caring but cranky; and she’s honest. She is as multifaceted and complicated as the children who read about her. The award-winning series by Megan McDonald and Peter H. Reynolds was first published in 2000, there are now 34 million books about Judy and her little brother, Stink, in print worldwide, in twenty-eight languages. With an exciting series relaunch in 2018, a whole new generation of readers can discover this plucky heroine.


  1. Congratulations on The Penderwicks at Last, the final book in the Penderwicks series! I am a huge fan. When you were writing this one, how did it feel knowing that this would be the last book you wrote about the Penderwick family?

There were a few sad moments, like when I realized I was writing about the very last Meeting of the Penderwick Siblings (MOPS). But the characters aren’t leaving me. They still, and always will, live on in my imagination.

  1. The first three Penderwick books are set in the same general time period, the fourth one jumps in time to Batty being ten, and the fifth one jumps in time again to Lydia (who is two in the fourth book) being eleven. Did you always know you wanted to jump in time to tell Batty’s and Lydia’s stories?

Here’s what I knew from the very beginning: there were going to be five or six books, the original four sisters would age throughout the series, and the point of view would always be that of a character the same age as middle grade readers. I had no interest in getting inside the heads and emotions of teenagers, even when those teenagers were my beloved Penderwicks.

The jumps in time, though, weren’t necessarily to tell Batty’s and Lydia’s stories, but to move the plot forward to the next part of the family story I wanted to tell.

  1. The final book is set in Arundel, the setting of the the first book. Was it always your plan to revisit Arundel, and what was it like for you to go back to that setting?

When I finished writing the first book, I intended not to go back to Arundel, where I’d have to deal with Mrs. Tifton all over again. But at some point, I realized that Jeffrey would want the Penderwicks to return to his old home, and the last book was the right time for that to happen.

It ended up being lots of fun going back, particularly when I could contrast Lydia’s (and Ben’s) new impressions of Arundel with the older sisters’ memories. Memory is one of the themes of this last book—how fluid it can be, the richness it can add to a person’s life, how it allows us to live in the present and the past simultaneously. All those layers of experience.

  1. I am a huge fan of animals, and I subject Book Riot newsletter subscribers to weekly photos of my pets. I know you are also a huge animal person. Can you tell us about your current pets, and maybe send us a photo of you with them?

Unfortunately, we’re now down to just one dog, our beloved, ancient, and blind and deaf Cagney (named after the Arundel gardener). He no longer likes having his picture taken, thinking his days should consist only of naps, meals, and walks. I agree with him.

But here’s a photo of a puppy in our life. Illustrator Jane Dyer, friend and neighbor, brings young Phineas over most days to visit. Here he is on his three-month birthday.

photo credit: Jeanne Birdsall

  1. If you can share, what are you working on now?

A middle grade novel with a backstory in Scotland. I visited Edinburgh for research! But the real story takes place in the Boston area, including in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, one of my favorite places. (And no, the book isn’t like From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler—I wouldn’t dare try!)

  1. What are three recent favorite children’s books (picture books or middle grade) that you have read? 

Because I need to protect my imagination and voice, I don’t read a lot of contemporary children’s books. I especially stay away from books that have similar themes to mine, ones that might confuse me, and make me second-guess my own writing and decisions. It’s much safer to re-read the books I loved as a child — they’re already part of my inner landscape.

But I do treat myself to books my friends write. (Getting to know other writers is the best part of being one.) Last fall I read Rita Williams Garcia’s Clayton Byrd Goes Underground and, yes, I was intimidated by the way she bends language to her will, how she makes you hear the music in her words. But Rita’s voice is so distinctly her own that I couldn’t, even sub-consciously, imitate it. Adam Gidwitz’s latest, the first volume in The Unicorn Rescue Society series, has everything we expect from Adam, and always get – excellent writing, fun, delightful characters, and a touch of the mysterious. Most recently, I’ve read an early version of Susan Hill Long’s next book. Even unpolished, the book grabbed me and wouldn’t let me stop until I’d finished reading it. A month later, the characters are still floating around in my head and making me laugh. I can’t tell you more, but I sure can’t wait for it to be a real book.

And I’m about to dive into N.D. Wilson’s final volume in his Outlaws of Time series. It will be an outstanding adventure and a lot of fun to read, because everything Nate writes is. He combines the classic adventure tale—think Kipling, Haggard, Tolkien, Dumas—with his own passionate love of America’s landscape. Deserts, prairies, swamps, and mountains are all fodder for his stories. Reading them always makes me feel braver and stronger, like I can do anything.

The Penderwicks at Last is out this Tuesday, May 15th from Penguin Random House.

 

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

❤ The Hyena Scientist by Sy Montgomery, photographs by Nic Bishop (HMH Books for Young Readers)

Timely and inspiring, The Hyena Scientist sets the record straight about one of history’s most hated and misunderstood mammals, while featuring the groundbreaking, pioneering research of a female scientist in a predominately male field in this offering by Sibert-winning duo Sy Montgomery and Nic Bishop. As a scientist studying one of the only mammalian societies led entirely by females, zoologist Kay Holecamp has made it her life’s work to understand hyenas, the fascinating, complex creatures that are playful, social, and highly intelligent—almost nothing like the mangy monsters of pop culture lore.

How to Code a Sandcastle by Josh Funk, illustrated by Sara Palacios (Penguin Random House)

All summer, Pearl has been trying to build the perfect sandcastle, but out-of-control Frisbees and mischievous puppies keep getting in the way! Pearl and her robot friend Pascal have one last chance, and this time, they’re going to use code to get the job done. Using fundamental computer coding concepts like sequences and loops, Pearl and Pascal are able to break down their sandcastle problem into small, manageable steps. If they can create working code, this could turn out to be the best beach day ever!

My Mindful Breath by Nick Ortner and Alison Taylor, illustrated by Michelle Polizzi (HarperCollins)

Do YOU have the magic breath?

Let’s see…Take a deeeeeep breath in…and BLOW it out…

…and like magic, you can feel better just by breathing! Sometimes it’s hard to feel happy. But with this interactive picture book, children breathe along as they learn how to make angry or sad thoughts disappear. In a world that is sometimes too busy, with too many things going on, My Magic Breath will help steer children into a serene space of mindfulness, self-awareness, and balance.

Rock ‘n’ Roll Soul by Susan Verde, illustrated by Matthew Cordell (Abrams)

With the school talent show coming up, a young music lover spends most of her time daydreaming about the perfect act. She notices the sounds around her, like the brrrrring of the school bell or the rappa-tappa-tap of rain on the windowpane. But the talent show is the place to reveal her own voice. Will she mix up some hip-hop beats? Will she command an orchestra of dozens, bringing the classics to life? Or, will she go electric, Jimi Hendrix style? Marching out on the talent show stage to the beat of her own drum, this sweet and sassy musician ultimately chooses to be herself and sing her own song loud and proud, “I’ve got a rock ’n’ roll soul!”

 

Middle Grade New Releases

Secret Sisters of the Salty Sea by Lynne Rae Perkins (HarperCollins)

Alix and her sister, Jools, have never seen the ocean. When their parents pack them up for a week at the shore, Alix is nervous about leaving home, but excited, too. At the beach, the girls make friends, go exploring, and have adventures both big and small. They pick periwinkles, spot crabs, and discover that the beach is full of endless possibilities. As the week comes to an end, Alix is surprised to find she doesn’t want to leave!

❤ You Are Mighty: A Guide to Changing the World by Caroline Paul, illustrated by Lauren Tamaki (Bloomsbury)

Being a good citizen means standing up for what’s right-and here’s just the way to start. From the author of The Gutsy Girl comes a book for those with a fierce sense of justice, a good sense of humor, and a big heart. This guide features change-maker tips, tons of DIY activities, and stories about the kids who have paved the way before, from famous activists like Malala Yousafzai and Claudette Colvin to the everyday young people whose habit changes triggered huge ripple effects. So make a sign, write a letter, volunteer, sit-in, or march! There are lots of tactics to choose from, and you’re never too young to change the world.

Hyacinth and the Stone Thief by Jacob Sager Weinstein (Random House)

Now that Hyacinth Hayward knows about the enchanted rivers under London, she’s determined to find out more. Unfortunately, London isn’t cooperating. Instead, Hyacinth stumbles on a new adversary–a girl who is trying to steal all the ancient stones that keep the city in balance. A girl with glowing, magical fingers, whose entire body is tattooed with spells. A girl called Minnie Tickle. (What? Were you expecting something more . . . fearsome?) To stop her, Hyacinth will need help from stone itself–specifically, a giant talking lion statue and his talking statue friends. Can this enthusiastic but scattered company defeat Minnie before London sinks like a stone?

I read some awesome books this week! I picked up The Parker Inheritance by Varian Johnson from the library, and I was intrigued by the compelling plot and mystery. When Candice finds a letter in an old attic in Lambert, South Carolina, she isn’t sure she should read it. It’s addressed to her grandmother, who left the town in shame. But the letter describes a young woman. An injustice that happened decades ago. A mystery enfolding its writer. And the fortune that awaits the person who solves the puzzle. I loved the way the story jumps back in time to describe the backstory and how it seamlessly relates to the current plot line.

I have been looking forward to Sophie Blackall’s Hello Lighthouse for the past few months. It is a gorgeous story about a lighthouse keeper and the course of his life and work in a remote lighthouse. The days and seasons pass as the wind blows, the fog rolls in, and icebergs drift by. Outside, there is water all around. Inside, the daily life of a lighthouse keeper and his family unfolds as the keeper boils water for tea, lights the lamp’s wick, and writes every detail in his logbook. Blackall is the illustrator of the Caldecott-winnter Finding Winnie, and a middle grade follow-up is planned called Winnie’s Great War by Lindsay Mattick and Josh Greenhunt, illustrated by Sophie Blackall. Winnie’s Great War is out September 18, 2018.

I loved The Miscalculations of Lightning Girl by Stacy McAnulty. It is about twelve-year-old Lucy who was hit by lightning when she was eight. The zap gave her genius-level math skills, and ever since, Lucy has been homeschooled. Now, at 12 years old, she’s technically ready for college. Then, Lucy’s grandma decides that Lucy needs a change in routine. She insists that Lucy do four things: Go to middle school for 1 year. Make 1 friend. Join 1 activity. And read 1 book (that’s not a math textbook!). I adored Lucy and found her so endearing and funny. This book is entertaining from beginning to end.

Children’s Book Festivals!

Did you know there are book festivals happening nearly every weekend in some part of America? Book festivals usually consist of various author panels and writing workshops plus a book sales area and author signings. It’s a fun way to meet and interact with your authors as well as support your local indie bookstores! There are two book festivals that I know of happening this Saturday, May 19.

One is the second annual OMG (Oh Middle Grade!) Book Fest at Tattered Cover Bookstore, 2526 East Colfax Avenue, Denver, Colorado from 1pm – 3pm on Saturday, May 19th. Tween readers will experience themed activities with all of the OMG authors, including local author, Newbery Medalist Avi. More information can be found here.

The second book festival is the Gaithersburg Book Festival in Maryland on Saturday, May 19th from 10am – 6pm. It is located at the Gaithersburg City Hall Grounds and consists of both children’s book authors and adult book authors. Check out the full line-up of authors and the schedule on their website.

 

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

Nala and the library book bin!

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Today In Books

The Diversity Gap In Children’s Publishing: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Trazer: Kids of Stolen Tomorrow by Joseph O. Adegboyega-Edun.


The Diversity Gap In Children’s Publishing

The Cooperative Children’s Book Center (CCBC) released statistics on the number of children’s books by and about people of color published in 2017. The report shows that the number of diverse books hit 31%, which is the highest year on record since 1994. However, the number of books actually written by authors of color shows little progress, up only 1% from 2016’s abysmal 6%.

Teach This Poem Wins Innovations In Reading Prize

The Academy of American Poets won this year’s Innovations in Reading Prize for its “Teach This Poem” program. The three-year-old program helps teachers add poetry to their curriculum through weekly, curated resources, and strives to make poetry more accessible to students. Past winners of this National Book Foundation award include Barbershop Books, inspiring young black boys to read, and Next Chapter Book Club, a reading program for adolescents and adults with disabilities.

Chelsea Clinton’s New Children’s Activism Book

Chelsea Clinton has another children’s book in the works. Start Now! You Can Make a Difference is a book about standing up for your beliefs, aimed at young activists. Clinton is already a bestselling children’s book author with her previous titles She Persisted: 13 American Women Who Changed the World and She Persisted Around the World: 13 Women Who Changed History.

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Unusual Suspects

The CIA May Be Sued for Not Clearing a Book

Hello mystery fans! I finished reading a thriller where the MC knew someone was in her home because the book she was reading had been moved and then I reached for the remote and it wasn’t where I left it, so of course I freaked and then spent two days reading romance novels because I am not a ridiculous person at all. How’d your week go?


Sponsored by Everything that Follows by Meg Little Reilly

Three friends take their partying from bar to boat on a misty fall evening. Just as the weather deteriorates, one of them suddenly goes overboard. Is it an accident? The result of an unwanted advance? For fans of Megan Abbott and Chris Bohjalian comes a novel of moral complexity about friends who must choose between self-preservation and doing the right thing in the wake of a fatal boating accident. Set in the moody off-season of Martha’s Vineyard, Everything That Follows is a plunge into the dark waters of secrets and flexible morals. The truth becomes whatever we say it is…


From Book Riot and the Internet

Moriarty Was an Afterthought “In real life, it came from Doyle’s desire to be rid of Sherlock Holmes, a character he’d grown tired of writing.”

On Hey YA Kelly and Eric talk about YA thrillers, what classifies a thriller, and give book recs.

The Perfect Crimes: Why Thrillers Are Leaving Other Books for Dead

The Wild True Stories Behind Some of the Most Epic Crime Movies Ever

Read an excerpt from the North Korea kidnapping tale Star of the North

11 Thrilling Facts About Dial M for Murder

Adaptations and News

cover image: bright green sky with silhouette of hilicopter and man hanging from rope In action/spy/thriller news–and muscly men: Dwayne Johnson has cast John Cena in his upcoming adaptation of Robert Ludlum’s The Janson Directive. There’s a kidnapping, a U.S. covert agency, and a marked-for-death-running-for-his-life plot so pass the popcorn I’m in.

The CIA Cleared Her Book Twice. Then It Took It Back. Why? It’s a Secret. A former counterterror analyst—who’s written about Libya since leaving—plans to sue the CIA after it reversed itself to find her ‘entire manuscript reveals classified information.’

cover image: yellow sky with black and white image of trees and corner of a homeApple picked up the series adaptation of Are You Sleeping (review) from Reese Witherspoon’s production company starring Octavia Spencer. I’m still not sure how viewing Apple series will work (membership? buy digitally?) BUT this is high on my must-watch list because the book’s examination of true crime podcasts is great for adaptation, Spencer is amazing, and so is Witherspoon.

If your life needed more Robert Downey Jr. as Sherlock Holmes: Happy day, a third film in the franchise will be releasing in 2020. Jude Law will also be back as Watson, but a director has not yet been announced.

Okay, not an adaptation but I HAVE to mention that Jessica Chastain has put together an awesome all-woman cast for an international spy thriller film (Lupita Nyong’o, Penelope Cruz, Marion Cotillard, and Fan Bingbing)! Think Mission Impossible/Bourne but women–and yes, I very much want this film buuuuuut I also very much, pretty please, want a book series! *Stares at publishing

True Crime

15 True Crime Books to Read Once Your Podcast Queue Is Empty

This Is Your Brain On True Crime Stories: There may be psychological reasons these accounts are so compelling.

You can now stream the Duplass brothers four-part docuseries about the 2003 “pizza bomber heist” in Pennsylvania: Evil GeniusThe True Story of America’s Most Diabolical Bank Heist.  (Trailer)

Watch Now

Dark Crimes (based on a 2008 The New Yorker article True Crimes) is about a detective who becomes suspicious of an author when his novel hits too close to an unsolved case. It stars Jim Carrey and is now in theaters. (Trailer)

 

 

Kindle Deals

cover image: a person running away with the entire cover washed in redThe Thief by Fuminori Nakamura is $2.99

A Madness So Discreet by Mindy McGinnis is $1.99

Night Film by Marisha Pessl is $1.99

 

 

Bit of My Week In Reading

cover image: a young brown skinned woman in a tight orange dress and full makeup in front of city buildings lit up at nightThe break from murder romances: Dating You/ Hating You and Truth or Beard. AND then I jumped right back into murder and mystery and am currently reading: The Boss (Crime/romance: Think Robin Hood if he were a group of sex workers stealing from crappy guys to fund a woman’s clinic); Purrder She Wrote (Cozy: That pun title spoke to me!); A People’s History of the Vampire Uprising (“Part social-political satire, part international mystery”: Vampires!)

I finished reading: Still Lives by Maria Hummel (A good mystery that uses art to speak about violence towards women.); The Lonely Witness by William Boyle (A good character driven crime novel I inhaled.)

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.

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True Story

New Nonfiction for May!

It’s new books week here at the True Story newsletter! May is jam-packed month of new nonfiction, which all sounds pretty excellent. This week, I’ve rounded up seven titles from the first couple of weeks that I think are interesting. I’m hoping to do another round up next week as well. Yay, books!


Flatiron Books and The Fact of a Body by Alexandria Marzano-Lesnevich

An intellectual and emotional thriller that is also a different kind of murder mystery, THE FACT OF A BODY is a book not only about how the story of one crime was constructed — but about how we grapple with our own personal histories.

 

 

 


 

Great American Outpost by Maya Rao – I used to live out on the prairie, close to the border of Minnesota and North Dakota, so news stories about the oil boom in cities like Williston and Dickinson were always catching my attention. This book is one of the first I’ve seen to try and cover this time and place, so I’m interested. In the book, journalist Maya Rao spent put boots on the ground to chronicle this “modern-day gold rush” and the people affected by it in both good and bad ways.

The Electric Woman by Tessa Fontaine – Of course I am going to get psyched about a memoir with the subtitle “a memoir in death-defying acts” that chronicles a woman’s relationship with her mother and her time on the the road as part of the last traveling American sideshow.

Chasing New Horizons by Alan Stern and David Grinspoon – Space nonfiction! This is a weakness of mine. This book is about the first mission to Pluto, when New Horizons made history capturing images of the distant planet, including the men and women inside and outside of NASA who helped make it happen.

Not That Bad, edited by Roxane Gay – This essay anthology of “dispatches from rape culture” is probably one of the most anticipated books of 2018, and for good reason. Contributors include writers, performers, critics, and more, writing about “what it means to live in a world where women have to measure the harassment, violence, and aggression they face.” All of the contributors read their pieces for the audio book, so that may be a great format for this one.

Little Shoes by Pamela Everett – Historical true crime! After her father makes a cryptic comment about a tragedy in the family’s past, Everett starts digging. She uncovers 1937 triple murder in California that prompted a manhunt, the use of criminal profiling in court casts, and the beginning of modern sex offender laws. I appreciate true crime that connects with victims and families in a humane way, so I think this will be interesting.

Milk by Mark Kurlansky – Mark Kurlansky is back with another global food history! This time, he’s looking at milk, from Greek myths and the domestication of animals, to the industrial revolution and the food’s role in modern food politics. Salt, one of his previous books, has been on my TBR forever, but I’m almost more excited about picking this one up.

Gaslighting America by Amanda Carpenter – This book, written by a conservative former staff member to a competing presidential campaign, looks at Trump’s formula for lying and fabrication, and why it continues to work. As a former journalist, I’m interested in this perspective because I think the media is really struggling about what to do with a president and supporters who just don’t seem to care about the truth.

Old Books (and Stuff)!

But to keep this newsletter from being entirely new books, I’ve got a few links that will recommend some older titles you may have forgotten about:

And that’s all the nonfiction I can fit in this newsletter this week. Until next week, find me on Twitter @kimthedork, and co-hosting the For Real podcast here at Book Riot. Happy reading!

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships May 9

Happy Friday, monsters and marauders! Today in reviews we’re looking at the Dark Matter anthology and Seth Dickinson’s The Traitor Baru Cormorant, plus adaptation news, WakandaCon, animal sidekicks, and more.


This newsletter is sponsored by The Unblemished Trilogy by Sara Ella.

Unbreakable by Sara EllaSara Ella masterfully takes readers to new worlds in the jaw-dropping finale to the Unblemished trilogy, as Eliyana fights to save everything—and everyone—she loves.

With the fate of the Reflections at stake, Eliyana must destroy the void… but at what cost? Traversing the realms of fantasy and reality through a labyrinth of plot twists, Unbreakable delivers a thrilling conclusion to Sara Ella’s Unblemished Trilogy. Sara Ella continues to examine real world issues young women face every day regarding their own self-worth, strength, and confidence to define themselves in a complicated, mixed-up world that doesn’t always make sense.


Wakanda Forever, as well as this August in Chicago: Alert! This is not a drill! You can attend WakandaCon this summer! If you do go, please tell me about it and send pictures!!

Frankenstein turns 200 this year, and you may have noticed the abundance of coverage. There’s also a film opening later this May, starring Elle Fanning as Mary Godwin Shelley. In honor of the original horror/sci-fi writer, here are two favorite related posts. This one is a round-up of women writing in horror today, and here’s my favorite unpacking of the concept of motherhood in Frankenstein.

Need less capes in your comics? If you too are tapped out on superheroes, we’ve got a list of comics with plenty of SF/F adventures and zero characters bit by radioactive spiders.

Updates on The Passage‘s TV adaptation: Back in February, the adaptation underwent reshoots and entirely removed Alicia’s character. Earlier this week, Fox gave it the greenlight. I love the casting for Amy and Wolgast (and the continued career renaissance of Mark-Paul Gosselaar, who was fantastic in Pitch), but I cannot believe they took out Alicia. What plot changes have they made alongside character changes, I wonder? I suppose we’ll have to stay tuned.

Looking for climate-related fiction? I’m on the record as hating the term “cli-fi” (JUST CALL IT “near future” WHY DOES IT NEED A SPECIAL NAME), but others disagree and here’s a primer about the sub-genre if you are one of them.

Need some help selecting Star Wars reads? Our contributors have put together a list of their favorites.

What would your animal sidekick be? This quiz will tell you! I got unicorn and I am DELIGHTED.

Today’s reviews cover some backlist titles worth moving to the top of your TBR stack.

Dark Matter: A Century of Speculative Fiction from the African Diaspora, edited by Sheree R. Thomas

Trigger warnings: issues with consent, gender identity, and sexuality

Dark Matter anthologyWhen I fell down the rabbit-hole of trying to find “books like Black Panther” for various askers, this was one of the ones that made it to my library holds list — and I’m here to tell you, it should definitely be on yours.

With 31 works by names that range from familiar (Octavia Butler, Samuel Delaney, Walter Mosley) to potentially surprising (W.E.B. DuBois) to personal favorites (Nalo Hopkinson, Tananarive Due, Nisi Shawl) to less well-known (Akua Lezli Hope, Evie Evie Shockley), this collection is both a revelation and an affirmation of the lengthy history of black writers in sci-fi and fantasy. Reading these stories one after another both builds on their power and contextualizes them. Rather than arrange them in chronological order, Thomas has chosen to move around in both time and space, and they flow beautifully from one to the next.

While all these stories envision fictional (often future) spaces, they are also clearly products of their respective times. But just as it’s helpful to envision where we wish to go next, it’s important to see where we’ve been, and these authors all had powerful visions. If you’re looking for more black authors in speculative fiction; if you love anthologies; if you’re curious about the roots of Afrofuturism; if you want to see what today’s authors are building on; you should pick up this collection post-haste.

The Traitor Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson

Trigger warnings: institutionalized homophobia, torture

I read this book for our “Lady Vengeance”-themed SFF Yeah! episode, but it was too engrossing not to talk about it here as well. I also want to be sure that I adequately warn readers about the “this book will stomp on your heart” nature of The Traitor Baru Cormorant: seriously, consider yourself warned.

Baru is an anti-heroine, and how. When the Empire of Masks arrive on her isolated island, ostensibly just to trade, her parents are wary. And they are right to be wary: the Empire starts with economic dominance, and ends with the decimation of Baru’s culture, society, and her own family. Using her incredible mental talent for numbers and her sheer stubbornness, she attends one of the Empire’s schools with one goal: to achieve enough power to free her people from its grip.

When her first posting is to an actively rebellious province, Baru has to decide if her own quest for freedom outweigh that of others. Will she join the rebels, or will she help to crush them? Will the woman she wants but can’t have be her downfall, or will she keep up her pretenses? The answers Baru finds are hard, so very hard. The world of the novel is huge, complex, and diverse, and the plot grapples with colonization, war, sexuality, and morality. If you had told me that a fantasy novel about an accountant would punch me in the gut and then rip my heart out of my chest, I would have laughed, but that’s exactly what this book did.

If you’re feeling strong and enjoy watching characters make terrible mistakes for complicated reasons, this is the book for you. Bonus: the sequel, The Monster Baru Cormorant, comes out October 30th.

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.

Never give up, never surrender,
Jenn