Categories
The Stack

071018-TheFurnace-The-Stack

Today’s The Stack is sponsored by Tor Books.

One decision. Thousands of lives ruined.

As a young grad student Professor Walton Honderich participated in a government prison program that led to the death of his friend and resulted in unimaginable torment for an entire class of people across the United States.

Twenty years later Walton struggles against the ghosts that haunt hm.

A dark, compelling work of psychological suspense and a cutting-edge critique of our increasingly technological world, Prentis Rollins’s new graphic novel The Furnace speaks fluently to the terrifying scope of the surveillance state, the dangerous allure of legacy, and the hope of redemption despite our flaws.

Categories
Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

071018-I’mNotMissing-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Flatiron Books and I’m Not Missing, the YA debut from Carrie Fountain.

Miranda’s best friend, Syd, is missing, suddenly and inexplicably, leaving behind nothing but a pink leopard print cell phone with a text message from the mysterious HIM.

Categories
Kissing Books

Book Deals and Series Starters

It’s been a nice couple weeks for reading, lovers! Most of the regular season shows are over, and it’s pretty easy to just watch the summer shows when I’m eating or doing something else that doesn’t allow me to hold a book. It’s nice to break up every couple books with a new episode of The Bold Type or something else fun. But this is about books, so let’s get to it.


Sponsored by DREAM LOVER by Stacey Keith

Timid social worker April Roby believes in avoiding entanglements until she meets Brandon McBride, the muscle-bound, motorcycle-riding bad boy, older brother of one of her latest client.  Neither one of them is looking for a fairy-tale ending; but in Cuervo, Texas, they just might get one anyway . . .


News and Useful Links

The New York Times made a good start in talking about issues with diversity in romance. They name quite a few awesome authors, but could have gone a little further with less-famous authors of color and other issues facing queer romance. I hope there will be a follow-up.

Do you buy books from Smashwords? They’re having a huge sale right now. Never checked it out? Wander around!

HAVE YOU SEEN THIS COVER?!?!?! (Hint: Cat Sebastian’s got a new book called A Duke In Disguise coming out.)

This is a thing and I have questions. Like, if Harlequin was so interested in underrepresented groups, why did they discontinue their one line that only published books by authors from an underrepresented group? Why didn’t they retain all of those authors when they closed the imprint? Are they making them resubmit proposals? I’m glad that Harlequin/Mills & Boon is reaching out to even more underrepresented people, but I don’t like that it’s after they’d displaced others that already wrote for them.

In other news, is it next year yet?

What are your thoughts on mercenary librarians? You probably want to sign up for info about them, huh?

Deals!

cover of still not over you by aarti v ramanStill Not Over You by Aarti V. Raman is 99 cents.

Several of Christi Caldwell’s Sinful Brides books, including The Rogue’s Wager, are 1.99 right now.

Jayne Ann Krentz’s Sharp Edges is 1.99, too.

Afterburn & Aftershock by Sylvia Day is 99 cents! (Have you seen the movie on Passionflix?)

Over on Book Riot

Ladies with babies, oh yeah.

Prime member? Free money!

How do you use your holds?

Recs!

Are you familiar with the #readmyowndamnbooks reading challenge? It was one I started doing a couple years ago and have never succeeded at. Books I don’t own are such a draw, I can’t avoid or escape them. But sometimes I like to give it a brief try, and this month I wanted to pull a few books off my shelf that would be good to share with you all. They’re all series starters, each of which has at least a few books out. The series aren’t all complete, but they’re all worth starting.

cover of taking the lead by cecilia tanTaking the Lead
Cecilia Tan

If you’re looking for a new series that will just…set everything on fire, you can’t go wrong with Cecilia Tan. A master of the erotic romance, Tan is the author you can always turn to if you’re looking for something where the sex is central to the plot. In this particular series starter, a Hollywood heiress and a rising rock star hit it off almost immediately, and then have a million problems when she can’t come to terms with her own sexual needs. If BDSM isn’t your thing, this series is very much not for you. But if it is…you’re going to have a lot of fun.

there are two young asian women. one has her hair in a ponytail and is wearing a black catsuit, kicking a cupcake with teeth. the other is wearing a hoodie and a tshirt and holds a ball of fire in her right hand.Heroine Complex
Sarah Kuhn

And speaking of fun, this series is the complete opposite of the angst-ridden world of Ricki and Axel. Set in a world where superheroes have assistants and live stream their demon attacks, Heroine Complex is almost over-the-top ridiculous but absolutely great at it. When Evie has to masquerade as her boss, San Francisco’s most popular (and most difficult) superheroine, she suddenly has even more problems than cupcake demons on her hands—including unneeded romantic ones.

cover of lady bridget's diaryLady Bridget’s Diary
Maya Rodale

Yes, this is exactly what you think it is. In the late Regency period, Lady Bridget Cavendish is one of three sisters of a new Duke. But she and her siblings are American, and Lord Darcy is not amused by her callous manners. (You see where this is going.) If you like smart women and siblings who are great for comic relief, this is the book for you. (Also, I’m looking particularly forward to Lady Claire is All That, because apparently I’m all about ladies doing math after the magic that was Courtney Milan’s Talk Sweetly To Me.)

Up next, I’d love to start a few things on my digital shelves, including Farrah Rochon’s Deliver Me, Alyssa Cole’s Radio Silence, and Courtney Milan’s Unveiled. And a million more because I can’t stop acquiring books. But these are a good start, right?

New and Upcoming Releases

cover of mr hotshot ceo by jackie lauMr. Hotshot CEO by Jackie Lau
Unfit to Print by KJ Charles
My Lord, Lady and Gentleman by Nicola Davidson
The Other Lane by Marla Holt
Pushing Thirty by Necole Ryse (July 17)
Competence by Gail Carriger (July 17)

As usual, catch me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or send me an email at jessica@riotnewmedia.com if you’ve got feedback or just want to say hi!

Categories
Today In Books

Watch the New Trailer for OITNB: Today in Books

We are giving away a stack of 11 of our favorite Beach Reads for Summer 2018! Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click on the image below. Good luck!


Watch The Trailer For OITNB Season 6

Netflix dropped the trailer for the sixth season of Orange is the New Black, the series adapted from Piper Kerman’s memoir, Orange Is the New Black: My Year in a Women’s Prison. I don’t want to spoil anything for anyone who hasn’t binge watched the previous seasons, but if you want a play-by-play of the trailer with a little look back at season five, you can check out this BuzzFeed announcement.

The English Patient Wins Best Of Man Booker

Michael Ondaatje’s wartime love story The English Patient won the Golden Man Booker Prize. This “best of” Booker Prize commemorates the 50th anniversary of the Man Booker. The public voted to choose the winner from a shortlist of five previous Man Booker winners selected by a panel of judges.

Stolen Yeats Letters Identified

A researcher discovered a collection of unpublished, stolen letters written by W.B. Yeats. The letters, burgled in the 1970s, had only recently been returned to Princeton University, delivered anonymously. In the recovered collection, the Irish poet corresponded with his publisher and publishing assistant. “I am desperately hard up and owe about £20,” Yeats wrote in a letter. That writer’s life.

 

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

Categories
Book Radar

Oprah Is Producing an Adaptation of AN AMERICAN MARRIAGE, and More Book Radar!

Happy Monday, readers! It is so hot in Maine, my brains are melting out my ears. I do not know many people who aren’t experiencing sweltering heat these days. I hope it breaks soon! It was a slow news week last week, because of the holiday and vacations, but I still have a few great bookish tidbits to share with you. Enjoy your upcoming week, and be excellent to each other. – xoxo, Liberty


Sponsored by: Wicked Cow

Everyone thinks Lulu is a bulldog, but she knows that can’t be true, because Lulu is a Rhinoceros—that is what she sees staring back at her when she looks in the mirror. But sometimes, being yourself can be a difficult road to walk. And just when all hope seems lost, Lulu finds a small friend that makes a big difference in her life when she realizes that the courage to be herself has been inside of her all along.


PS – Don’t forget we’re giving away $500 of the year’s best YA fiction and nonfiction so far! Enter here by July 31st!

Here’s this week’s trivia question: What was Toni Morrison’s name at birth? (Answer at the bottom of the newsletter.)

Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

NOS4A2YouTube star Jahkara Smith will appear in the television adaptation of NOS4A2. (P.S. She is amazing, go watch all her videos right now!)

Fancy Nancy is going to be a television series.

The graphic novel Infidel is going to be a horror film. (I can’t remember if I already included this news in an older newsletter, but I just read the book this weekend, so I thought I’d share it.)

The Night Manager is getting a second season.

Oprah Winfrey casually dropped the news that she’s producing a film version of An American Marriage by Tayari Jones.

Cover Reveals

Here it is, the cover for The Kingdom of Copper, S.A. Chakraborty’s follow-up to The City of Brass! (Harper Voyager, January 22, 2019)

And here’s the first look at Samira Ahmed’s upcoming book, Internment! (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, March 19, 2019)

And Happily Ever After has TWO, yes, TWO cover reveals: One for Patricia Briggs and one for Anne Bishop.

Sneak Peeks

the miseducation of cameron post posterHere’s the first look at a trailer for The Miseducation of Cameron Post! (I love this book so much!)

And here’s the first trailer for The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, coming to Netflix.

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:

cover image: black and white image of a tree trunk and rootsThe Witch Elm by Tana French (Viking, October 9, 2018)

While on the one hand I want Dublin Murder Squad mysteries every year until the end of time, I really enjoyed this break from the series. It’s about a young man named Toby who stays at his ancestral home while recovering from an assault. While he’s there taking care of his dying uncle, a skull is found in the garden, leading him to believe his past is not what it seems. I love an unearthed skeleton mystery – who could it be?!? – and to get one from Tana French is even better!

Excited to read:

spin by lamar gilesSpin by Lamar Giles (Scholastic Press, January 29, 2019)

A young DJ is found dead at her turntables and it is up to two sworn enemies to work together to find her killer. WHAT FUN. I really enjoyed Endangered by Giles, and I am constantly looking for more YA mysteries, so I am excited for this!

What I’m reading this week.

The Lady's Guide to Petticoats and PiracyThe Lady’s Guide to Petticoats and Piracy by Mackenzi Lee

The Shadowglass (The Bone Witch) by Rin Chupeco

The Lost for Words Bookshop by Stephanie Butland

Kill the Farm Boy by Delilah S. Dawson and Kevin Hearne

Killing Commendatore by Haruki Murakami, Philip Gabriel and Ted Goossen (Translators)

And this is funny.

Kelly Link, again, always.

Trivia answer: Chloe Ardelia Wofford.

Categories
Riot Rundown TestRiotRundown

070818-TheFreedomBroker-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by K.J. Howes The Freedom Broker

Expert kidnap and ransom negotiator, Thea Paris is facing the most urgent and challenging rescue mission of her life: her own father’s. As a child, she watched, paralyzed with fear, when her brother was abducted in the middle of the night. This life-changing experience drove her to become what she is today: a world-class freedom broker. Twenty years later, Thea’s oil magnate father, Christos, days away from the biggest deal of his career. The brutal kidnappers leave bodies in their wake but no ransom demand. Can Thea rescue her father and reunite her family?

Categories
Today In Books

A Young, Sexy Crime-Fighting Sigmund Freud: Today In Books

We’re giving away $500 of the year’s best YA! Click here, or on the image below to enter:


A Young, Sexy Crime-Fighting Sigmund Freud

So that’s a thing that is coming to Netflix. The psychoanalyst, and prolific writer, will be searching for a serial killer in an upcoming drama that will obviously be fictional history. Freud is currently casting and will start filming in the fall. I’m sure there will be plenty of Oedipus jokes to come.

Jahkara Smith Cast In AMC’s Upcoming NOS4A2 Adaptation

YouTube star Jahkara Smith, who uses makeup tutorials for hilarious and scathing social commentary, has landed a recurring role in the adaptation of Joe Hill’s awesome NOS4A2. Smith working on an adaptation on a super imaginative horror novel seems perfect and I can’t wait. Is it 2019 yet?!

Rapper Stormzy Announces Publishing Imprint

English rapper Stormzy, in partnership with Penguin Random House, has a new publishing imprint called #Merky Books. With plans to publish two to three books a year, it will also offer writing competitions and paid internships beginning in 2019. “I know too many talented writers that don’t always have an outlet or a means to get their work seen and hopefully #Merky Books can now be a reference point for them to say “I can be an author.”

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Kid Lit Signs from the Families Belong Together March

Hi Kid Lit friends,

There have been lots of ways the kid lit community has rallied against the recently rescinded policy of separating children – some as young as four months old – from families who cross the border of the United States seeking refuge. Last Sunday, people in cities all across the nation marched in support of keeping families together.


Sponsored by Graphix, an imprint of Scholastic.

Raina Telgemeier’s #1 New York Times bestselling, Eisner Award-winning companion to Smile!

Raina can’t wait to be a big sister. But once Amara is born, things aren’t quite how she expected them to be. Amara is cute, but she’s also a cranky, grouchy baby, and mostly prefers to play by herself. Their relationship doesn’t improve much over the years, but when a baby brother enters the picture and later, something doesn’t seem right between their parents, they realize they must figure out how to get along. They are sisters, after all.

Raina uses her signature humor and charm in both present-day narrative and perfectly placed flashbacks to tell the story of her relationship with her sister, which unfolds during the course of a road trip from their home in San Francisco to a family reunion in Colorado.


The group Kid Lit Says No Kids In Cages began with about twenty kid lit authors and has grown to thousands of supporters. They desired to heighten awareness of the issue by raising funds that would be distributed to six organizations working with immigrant advocacy and legal representation. You can sign the pledge in support of their statement here, and donate here.

Raising Our Voices is another group that formed in response to government’s recently rescinded policy of separating the children of undocumented immigrants from their families. Audio producer Julie Burstein and Pippin Properties creative director Holly McGhee created a website and loaded images created by children’s book illustrators that could be downloaded for free. There are instructions on the website about how to print the images onto signs for marches. Recently, postcard images that can be printed out and mailed to children who are still separated from their parents have been added to the website.

Families Belong Together by Peter H. Reynolds:

Asylum by Erin Entrada Kelly:

Where Are The Children by Edel Rodriguez:

Falling by Yvette Fedorova:

Art by Jennifer K. Mann:

I know I listed some children’s books with immigration themes in the last newsletter, and here are those links in case you missed it, plus a few more lists:

New Children’s Books with Immigration Themes, from Book Riot’s The Kids Are All Right newsletter

Children’s Books About the Immigrant Experience, via Book Riot

Fifteen Books for Kids About the Immigrant Experience in America, via Brightly

30 Multicultural Picture Books About Immigration, via Colours of Us

Six Middle Grade Books On the Immigrant Experience, via Book Riot

And this is a podcast from Scholastic Reads about immigration stories.

I love Harlem’s Little Blackbird: The Story of Florence Mills by Renee Watson, illustrations by Christian Robinson. The language here is just gorgeous, and the bold colors really capture the energy and vibrancy of Florence Mills’s life.

Magnificent Creatures: Animals on the Move! by Anna Wright (Faber and Faber Children’s, 6/17) is so lovely. Wright’s delicate use of pen and ink, watercolor, and fabric collage works perfectly with scientific facts about each animal featured.

The Benefits of Being an Octopus by Ann Braden (Sky Pony Press, 9/4) takes an honest look at housing insecurity. Seventh-grader Zoey has her hands full as she takes care of her much younger siblings after school every day while her mom works her shift at the pizza parlor. When Zoey joins the school debate team, she begins seeing the world in a different way and finds ways to make positive change in her life and in the people around her.

Giveaway Alert! Win $500 of the year’s best YA fiction and nonfiction so far. Link to enter here. Contest ends on July 31st.

As I mentioned in last week’s newsletter, we are moving to a twice-a-week newsletter! New releases will now be in our Tuesday emails, and Sundays will be reserved for themed book lists, author interviews, features, and maybe some cover reveals… stay tuned!

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!*

Categories
Today In Books

Arsenic and Old Books: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by K.J. Howe’s The Freedom Broker.


Arsenic And Old Books

So, it turns out that three rare books from the 16th and 17th centuries contain large concentrations of arsenic on their covers. The poisonous books hail from the University of Southern Denmark’s library collection. Researchers were trying to read recycled Latin texts used to make the books’ covers when a lab came back with the results that the green pigment layer obscuring the texts was arsenic. (Note to self: never lick fingers after touching books again.)

ALA Approves Graphic Novel Roundtable

The American Library Association’s governing council approved a Graphic Novel Roundtable. This means we may get awards, events, guests and more from the ALA around graphic novels. The decision was announced at the ALA annual conference.

Philip Pullman Argues Against Emphasis On Exams

Philip Pullman, author of His Dark Materials, spoke against the emphasis on exam results in education and reading. “The function of a book or a poem or a story is to delight, to enchant, to beguile,” said Pullman. The author was one of dozens of children’s writers to sign a letter calling for Sats (curriculum assessments carried out in primary schools in England) to be scrapped.

 

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

Categories
Audiobooks

New Audiobooks for July!

Happy July, Audiophiles! Hope you are enjoying the summer sun (don’t forget sunscreen!) or, like me, hiding indoors from heat, bugs, and other outside summertime things. But whether your indoors or out, there are plenty of new audiobooks to keep you company.


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


But first! We’re giving away $500 of the year’s best YA fiction and nonfiction so far. THAT IS A LOT OF YA BOOKS, Y’ALL! Enter here.

New Audiobooks for July (publisher description in quotes)

It All Falls Down by Sheena Kamal; narrated by Bahni Turpin; release date: 07-03-18

The suicide of Nora Watts’ father filled her life with grief and unanswered questions. Her journey to understand the truth of his father’s life and death takes her from the “hazy Canadian Pacific Northwest to the gritty, hollowed streets of Detroit.” While Nora tracks down the secrets of her father’s life she thinks might help fill in the gaps of her own identity, back in the Pacific Northwest, the mistress of a billionaire turns up dead from an apparent overdose. The woman’s death has a connection to Nora, one that could end up killing her. I don’t usually write about sequels (this one is a sequel to The Lost Ones) and, having just started, I can tell you that if you want to listen to both, you should listen to The Lost Ones first because the ending revealed in the beginning of It All Falls Down. But I’m digging it so far!

The Future of Terrorism: ISIS, Al-Qaeda, and the Alt-Right by Walter Laqueur and Christopher Wall; narrated by Christopher Price; release date: 07-03-18

We don’t always get the audiobooks we want, we get the ones we deserve. Terrorism isn’t a pleasant thing to read or think about but it’s something that we all reckon with–-whether we’re following coverage of the latest terrorist attack on the news or it happens down the street from where we live. Publishers Weekly says of The Future of Terrorism, “A brief, fast-paced historical overview leads to probing and provocative ruminations on the multifarious factors that draw young men toward violence in the service of an ideology … The authors’ nuanced perspective on a complex phenomenon will appeal to readers interested in what lies beyond the headlines.”

Reimagining Equality: Stories of Gender, Race, and Finding Home by Anita Hill; narrated by Bahni Turpin; release date: 07-03-18.

Narrator Bahni Turpin is having a helluva month! She’s also the narrator of It All Falls Down and The Healing by Gayl Jones (mentioned below). But I’m thrilled to see Anita Hill’s book–-I’ve long felt that she was among the first two stand up and say #MeToo and #TimesUp, before there were hashtags and movements around issues of workplace sexual harassment.

In this book, the subject is not sexual harassment but the “crisis of home.” Hill “exposes its deep roots in race and gender inequities, which continue to imperil every American’s ability to achieve the American Dream…The achievement of that ideal, Hill argues, depends on each American’s ability to secure a place that provides access to every opportunity our country offers.” I’m really interested to hear her thoughts on this.

The Occasional Virgin by Hanan al-Shaykh; narrated by Soneela Nankani; release date: 07-10-18

The Occasional Virgin follows two women, Yvonne and Huda, “both women spent their childhoods in Lebanon—Yvonne raised in a Christian family, Huda in a Muslim one—and they now find themselves torn between the traditional worlds they were born into and the successful professional identities they’ve created.” More successful in career than relationships, the two women meet in London and “ a chance encounter with a man at Speaker’s Corner leads to profound repercussions for them both. As the novel continues, each woman will undertake her own quest for love and romance, revenge and fulfillment.” Revenge and fulfillment? YES, PLEASE!

If You See Me, Don’t Say Hi: Stories; written and read by Neel Patel; release date: 07-10-18

I know people say not to judge a book by its cover, but I am judging it by the title and I LOVE IT. I’m also a sucker for linked stories which, when I was writing fiction, was what I wanted to do. “In 11 sharp, surprising stories, Neel Patel gives voice to our most deeply held stereotypes and then slowly undermines them. His characters, almost all of who are first-generation Indian Americans, subvert our expectations that they will sit quietly by. We meet two brothers caught in an elaborate web of envy and loathing; a young gay man who becomes involved with an older man whose secret he could never guess; three women who almost gleefully throw off the pleasant agreeability society asks of them; and, in the final pair of linked stories, a young couple struggling against the devastating force of community gossip.”

The Healing by Gayl Jones narrated by Bahni Turpin; release date: 07-10-18

“Harlan Jane Eagleton is a faith healer, traveling by bus to small towns, converting skeptics, restoring minds and bodies. But before that she was a minor rock star’s manager, and before that a beautician. She’s had a fling with her rock star’s ex-husband and an Afro-German horse dealer; along the way she’s somehow lost her own husband, a medical anthropologist now traveling with a medicine woman in Africa. Harlan tells her story from the end backwards, drawing us constantly deeper into her world and the mystery at the heart of her tale – the story of her first healing.”

The Death of Truth: Notes on Falsehood in the Age of Trump by Michiko Kakutani; narrated by Tavia Gilbert; release date: 07-17-18

The New York Times’ infamous (former) book critic is back for a meditation on how to deal with our “post-truth” world. I know I’m not alone in feeling constantly overwhelmed by the way in which fact no longer seem to matter so if Kakutani can help us see our way through this, I’m all ears.

You’re on an Airplane: A Self-Mythologizing Memoir written and read by Parker Posey; release date: 07-24-18

I feel the need to personally apologize to each and every newsletter reader because HOW COULD I NOT KNOW PARKER POSEY WAS WRITING AND NARRATING AN AUDIOBOOK?! I love Posey so much. I’ve loved her since Party Girl–-the best ’90s movie about a wannabe librarian you’ll ever see–-but anyway, she’s hilarious and smart and I expect this audiobook will be the same.

“Parker takes us into her childhood home, behind the scenes of the indie film revolution in the ’90s, the delightful absurdity of the big-budget genre thrillers she’s turned into art in a whole new way, and the creativity that will always be part of both her acting and her personal life. With Posey’s memorable, hilarious and poignant voice, her audiobook gives the listener a feeling of traveling through not only a memoir, but an exploration, meditation, and celebration of what it means to be an artist. Buckle up and enjoy the journey.”