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This Week In Books

Tiny House Bookstore Serves French Readers: This Week in Books

I Will Never Stop Eating Up Bookish Tiny Houses

Yup. Can’t stop won’t stop, so thank you to French firm La Maison Qui Chemin, for giving us a drool-worthy tiny house bookstore–although those of us who do not live close enough to La librairie itinérante (the traveling bookstore) can only enjoy a virtual experience courtesy of the gallery included in the article. The tiny house bookseller, Jean-Jacques, plans to wander all over France, visiting places that don’t have bookstores. Rioter Kelly Jensen said she realized her dream to bring tiny house bookstores to America, and I fully and selfishly support this idea. Please make it happen, Someone Anyone.

First Chinese Woman to Win Hugo Featured in Audi Commercial

It’s interesting to see a Sci-Fi author in a celebrity role, and I must say, the commercial Hao Jingfang (author of Folding Beijing, translated by the ubiquitous Ken Liu) headlines is visually impressive and plays my Blade Runner and Inception loving heart like a fiddle. It’s nice to see her gaining recognition beyond the book world because she deserves it, and because it will hopefully give her work and other works in translation more global exposure. I’ve also heard rumor that Folding Beijing will be adapted into a film, so look out for it!

All the Hypotheses about the Most Misspelled Words in America

My brain is determined to employ pseudo-psychology to find a correlation between regional culture and each state’s most misspelled word. Quit now, brain. Google released a new spelling map showing each U.S. state’s most Googled word for its spelling. I will never get over that Wisconsin is Wisconsin’s word. The map was released in honor of the 90th Annual Scripps National Spelling Bee–I’ve made a date with YouTube to watch it all. Let’s scatter those spelling geniuses across the states on tutoring missions.

And the Award for Coolest Dad Goes To…

Daniel Radosh–not because he’s the Daily Show head writer but because he wrote the perfect letter in response to a request from his son’s school to sign a permission slip allowing his child to read Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451…because swearing or whatever. Here’s a tasty snippet of his response to be getting on with: “It’s easy enough to read the book and say, ‘This is crazy. It could never really happen,’ but pretending to present students at the start with what seems like a totally reasonable ‘first step’ is a really immersive way to teach them how insidious censorship can be I’m sure that when the book club is over and the students realize the true intent of this letter they’ll be shocked at how many of them accepted it as an actual permission slip.”


Thanks to Bookclubbish.com, publisher of Not A Sound by Heather Gudenkauf, for sponsoring this week’s newsletter.

When a tragic accident leaves nurse Amelia Winn deaf, she spirals into a depression that ultimately causes her to lose everything that matters—her job, her husband, David, and her stepdaughter, Nora. Now, two years later and with the help of her hearing dog, Stitch, she is finally getting back on her feet. But when she discovers the body of a fellow nurse in the dense bush by the river, deep in the woods near her cabin, she is plunged into a disturbing mystery that could shatter the carefully reconstructed pieces of her life all over again.

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DEV

REDUX: May Your TBRs Grow Longer: A Round-Up of YA Talk at Book Riot This Month

Happy end-of-May, YA fans!

This week’s “What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by We Are The Ants by Shaun David Hutchinson from Simon Pulse.

From the “author to watch” (Kirkus Reviews) of The Five Stages of Andrew Brawley comes a novel about a teenage boy who must decide whether the world is worth saving.


Is it me or has it felt like May has been the never-ending month? Let’s take this US holiday for the opportunity to catch up on all of the YA happenings on Book Riot this last month.

Before signing off, let’s take a moment to dig into the past. A few links from Mays gone by at Book Riot with a YA focus.

A couple of weeks ago, I asked at the very end of a newsletter for readers to share their dream politician-author pairing (in honor of the Bill Clinton-James Patterson novel). There were a few responses, but these two were probably my favorites. The first needs no explanation; the second explanation only makes the pairing even stronger.

  • Harvey Milk & Bill Konigsberg.
  • President Theodore Roosevelt hook up with Leigh Bardugo: President Roosevelt likes adventure.  His adventures in the Amazon and Africa are well known. According to his biographer, Theodore Roosevelt read countless number of books in one sitting.

Thanks for hanging this week, YA Rioters. We’ll see you again next Monday, when we’ll finally be able to sing the famed Carousel jingle.

— Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars, currently reading & loving Aftercare Instructions by Bonnie Pipkin

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Riot Rundown

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Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Epic Reads.

Darcy hooks up, gets drunk, lies to her mom, and smokes. Because of this, her small town in rural Maine labels her “trashy,” “easy,” and “slutty.” What she’s doing isn’t any different from what the guys in her town do, yet she’s the only one who gets flack for it.
But the fun is what’s been keeping Darcy’s mind off the things she wants to forget: a disturbing secret she shares with her cousin Nell, the mysterious disappearance of her ex-best friend, and that hazy Fourth of July party that ended with Darcy drunk and unsure of what exactly happened.

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Giveaways

Win a Copy of SISTER, SISTER by Sue Fortin!

 

 

We have 10 copies of Sister, Sister by Sue Fortin to give away to 10 Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

From the USA Today bestselling author comes a brand new psychological thriller…

Alice: Beautiful, kind, manipulative, liar.

Clare: Intelligent, loyal, paranoid, jealous.

Clare thinks Alice is a manipulative liar who is trying to steal her life.

Alice thinks Clare is jealous of her long-lost return and place in their family.

One of them is telling the truth. The other is a maniac.

Two sisters. One truth.

Go here to enter, or just click the cover image below. Good luck!

 

 

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Book Radar

Gay Pride, Crazy Rich Asians, and more blips on the Book Radar!

It’s Monday. Again. But there’s no reason to pout, as long as there are books in the world. Here’s a bunch of bookish news to start your week off right. Be excellent to each other. – xoxo, Liberty


Today’s newsletter is sponsored by Leaving Lucy Pear by Anna Solomon.

One night in 1917 Beatrice Haven sneaks out of her uncle’s house on Cape Ann, Massachusetts, leaves her newborn baby at the foot of a pear tree, and watches as another woman claims the infant as her own. The unwed daughter of wealthy Jewish industrialists and a gifted pianist bound for Radcliffe, Bea plans to leave her shameful secret behind and make a fresh start. Ten years later, Prohibition is in full swing, post-WWI America is in the grips of rampant xenophobia, and Bea’s hopes for her future remain unfulfilled.


Deals, Reels, and Squeals

my brilliant friendA look at the casting call for Elena Ferrante’s My Brilliant Friend movie.

A modern gay take on Pride And Prejudice is heading our way.

Juno Temple & Janelle Monae to star in an episode of Philip K. Dick’s Electric Dreams.

Here’s a look at the full cast of Kevin Kwan’s Crazy Rich Asians.

AMC is developing a series based on Joe Hill’s NOS4A2.

Mark-Paul Gosselaar to lead the cast of The Passage. (I first typed that as ‘lead the cats’ and now that is a thing I would also like to see.)

HBO nabs Today Will Be Different, a limited series starring Julia Roberts, based on the novel by Maria Semple.

Cover Reveals

So excited for Samira Ahmed’s Love, Hate & Other Filters! (Jan. 16, 2018)

Unnamed Press revealed the cover for Djinn City by Saad Hossain. While you’re waiting, you should read his novel Escape from Baghdad – it’s one of my favorites! (Oct. 24)

A.S. King’s The Dust of 100 Dogs is getting an amazing new cover, which is similar to the old amazing cover! (Oct. 3)

And here’s Gae Polisner’s In Sight of Stars, coming next year. (March 2018)

Sneak Peeks!

Murder on the Orient Express PosterThe official trailer for the Murder on the Orient Express remake is out. (I am not very interested, but Kenneth Branagh is always amazing, so maybe yes I am?)

The trailer for Netflix’s new animated Castlevania series is up. It’s written by Warren Ellis!

Brendan Gleason and Hugh Grant are on board for the Paddington sequel.

Here’s my boyfriend Idris Elba in the trailer for The Mountain Between Us.

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 I’m delighted to share a couple with you each week!

an excess maleAn Excess Male by Maggie Shen King

If you’ve inhaled all of The Handmaid’s Tale series and need another eerie dystopia, mark this one down! Set in near-future China, it’s an examination of the ramifications of the “One Child Policy” that favored male children. Now it’s 2030 and there are not a great number of women. But there are 40 million unwed men in a society that looks down on bachelors, so women are able to take three husbands. The book stars Wei-guo, who has entered into an arrangement as a third husband, the lowest position in the household. He and his family struggle to make their way in a world of authoritarian measures, reinvigorated Communist ideals, and social engineering. It’s so fantastic! (Harper Voyager, Sept. 12)

revenge of the nerdRevenge of the Nerd: Or . . . The Singular Adventures of the Man Who Would Be Booger by Curtis Armstrong

Nostalgia, full steam ahead! This is a delightful memoir from the classically-trained actor Armstrong, probably most famous for his roles in Revenge of the Nerds, Moonlighting, and Better Off Dead. (Although I love him the most in One Crazy Summer.) This is the story of his forty-year career being typecast as a nerd…because he is a nerd. I am almost more fascinated by character actors than the actual stars of film and television. They are much more interesting! And this is a charming look at one of the most famous character actors of all time. (Thomas Dunne Books, July 11)

And this is funny.

Author Laura Ruby’s cat really enjoys the gift she received.

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Giveaways

Mailbag Giveaway: Advanced Reading Copies Edition!

A few times a month, we give away a haul of 10 books from our book mail, and this week it’s all advanced review copies of exciting upcoming titles! We’ve got Philippa Gregory’s newest, Ruth Ware’s newest (she wrote The Woman in Cabin 10), and more!

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the image of all the books you could win below!

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What's Up in YA

YA Road Tripping Outside the US of A

Hey YA readers!

This week’s edition of “What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by Wildman by J. C. Geiger.

When Lance’s ’93 Buick breaks down in the middle of nowhere, he tells himself Don’t panic. After all, he’s valedictorian of his class. First-chair trumpet player. Scholarship winner. Nothing can stop Lance Hendricks.

But the locals don’t know that. They don’t even know his name. Stuck in a small town, Lance could be anyone: a delinquent, a traveler, a maniac. One of the townies calls him Wildman, and a new world opens up. Lance finds himself drifting farther from home and closer to a girl who makes him feel a way he’s never felt before—like himself.

____________________

 

YA road trip books are among my favorite, and they have been for a long, long time. I love how representative they are of the age of adolescence — there’s freedom, as much as there’s restriction. There’s excitement, as much as there’s fear. There are the grand plans and dreams, as much as there are the roadblocks.

But over the last few years, I’ve kept and eye on the evolution of the YA road trip novel, in part because these books tend to be very white. This isn’t particularly surprising, as the stakes for teens of color to just hop into a car and go on a road trip are much higher than, say, a middle class white girl and her friends. Those stakes are not only in terms of personal safety, but also in financial status. There are a small number of exceptions to this, though by and large, you’ll find few YA road trip novels starring a cast of characters of color.

Though I’d be first in line to read one and more, to read one that really digs into those challenges.

Road trip novels are also very US-centric. This isn’t particularly surprising, either, in part because the bulk of YA books in English are published in the US and thus, have a likely large US-based readership. It’s also the case that the US is car-centric in a way that other countries are more public transit oriented.

But over the last year or two, there have been more road trip books set abroad. In light of the start of road trip season, as well as the beginning of summer, let’s take a look at the YA road trip books which are set outside of the USA. Note: these will, as mentioned above, be very white. I’d love to hear about additional titles which are more inclusive and/or set in countries and/or continents not noted here.

Descriptions for these titles come from Goodreads. Enjoy!

 

13 Little Blue Envelopes by Maureen Johnson

Inside little blue envelope 1 are $1,000 and instructions to buy a plane ticket.

In envelope 2 are directions to a specific London flat.

The note in envelope 3 tells Ginny: Find a starving artist.

Because of envelope 4, Ginny and a playwright/thief/ bloke–about–town called Keith go to Scotland together, with somewhat disastrous–though utterly romantic–results. But will she ever see him again?

Everything about Ginny will change this summer, and it’s all because of the 13 little blue envelopes.

 

And We’re Off by Dana Schwartz

Seventeen-year-old Nora Holmes is an artist, a painter from the moment she could hold a brush. She inherited the skill from her grandfather, Robert, who’s always nurtured Nora’s talent and encouraged her to follow her passion. Still, Nora is shocked and elated when Robert offers her a gift: an all-expenses-paid summer trip to Europe to immerse herself in the craft and to study history’s most famous artists. The only catch? Nora has to create an original piece of artwork at every stop and send it back to her grandfather. It’s a no-brainer: Nora is in!

Unfortunately, Nora’s mother, Alice, is less than thrilled about the trip. She worries about what the future holds for her young, idealistic daughter and her opinions haven’t gone unnoticed. Nora couldn’t feel more unsupported by her mother, and in the weeks leading up to the trip, the women are as disconnected as they’ve ever been. But seconds after saying goodbye to Alice at the airport terminal, Nora hears a voice call out: “Wait! Stop! I’m coming with you!”

 

Girl Online: On Tour by Zoe Sugg

Penny’s bags are packed.

When Noah invites Penny on his European music tour, she can’t wait to spend time with her rock-god-tastic boyfriend.

But, between Noah’s jam-packed schedule, less-than-welcoming bandmates and threatening messages from jealous fans, Penny wonders whether she’s really cut out for life on tour. She can’t help but miss her family, her best friend Elliot . . . and her blog, Girl Online.

Can Penny learn to balance life and love on the road, or will she lose everything in pursuit of the perfect summer?

 

High Dive by Tammar Stein

Arden has a plane ticket to Sardinia to say goodbye to her family’s beloved vacation home after her father’s sudden death and her mother’s deployment to Iraq as an army nurse. Lonely for her father and petrified for her mother’s safety, Arden dreads her trip to the house in Sardinia—the only place that has truly felt like home to her. So when she meets a group of fun, carefree, and careless friends on their summer break, she decides to put off her trip and join them to sample the sights and culinary delights of Europe. Soon they are climbing the Eiffel Tower, taking in the French countryside on a train chugging toward the Alps, and gazing at Michelangelo’s David in Florence, all the while eating gelato and sipping cappuccino. Arden tries to forget about the danger her mom faces every day, to pretend she’s just like the rest of the girls, flirting with cute European guys and worried only about where to party next.

But the house in Sardinia beckons and she has to make a choice. Is Arden ready to jump off the high dive?

 

How Not To Disappear by Clare Furness

Our memories are what make us who we are. Some are real. Some are made up. But they are the stories that tell us who we are. Without them we are nobody.

Hattie’s summer isn’t going as planned. Her two best friends have abandoned her: Reuben has run off to Europe to ‘find himself” and Kat is in Edinburgh with her new girlfriend. Meanwhile Hattie is stuck babysitting her twin siblings and dealing with endless drama around her mum’s wedding. Oh, and she’s also just discovered that she’s pregnant with Reuben’s baby.

Then Gloria, Hattie’s great-aunt who no one even knew existed, comes crashing into her life. Gloria’s fiercely independent, rather too fond of a gin sling and is in the early stages of dementia. Together the two of them set out on a road trip of self-discovery — Gloria to finally confront the secrets of her past before they are erased from her memory forever and Hattie to face the hard choices that will determine her future.

 

The Land of 10,000 Madonnas by Kate Hattemer

Five teens backpack through Europe to fulfill the mysterious dying wish of their friend.

Jesse lives with his history professor dad in a house covered with postcards of images of the Madonna from all over the world. They’re gotten used to this life: two motherless dudes living among thousands of Madonnas. But Jesse has a heart condition that will ultimately cut his life tragically short. Before he dies, he arranges a mysterious trip to Europe for his three cousins, his best friend, and his girlfriend to take after he passes away. It’s a trip that will forever change the lives of these young teens and one that will help them come to terms with Jesse’s death.

 

To Timbuktu: Nine Countries, Two People, One True Story by Steven Weinberg and Casey Scieszka (Note: this is a little more on the travelogue side and definitely a memoir, but since it is outside of Europe, I wanted to include it)

Casey and Steven met in Morocco, moved to China then went all the way to Timbuktu. This illustrated travel memoir tells the story of their first two years out of college spent teaching English, making friends across language barriers, researching, painting, and learning to be themselves wherever they are.

 

 

Royally Lost by Angie Stanton

Dragged on a family trip to Europe’s ancient cities, Becca wants nothing more than to go home. Trapped with her emotionally distant father, over-eager stepmother, and a brother who only wants to hook up with European hotties, Becca is miserable. That is until she meets Nikolai, a guy as mysterious as he is handsome. And she unknowingly finds herself with a runaway prince.

Nikolai has everything a guy could ask for-he’s crown prince, heir to the throne, and girls adore him. But the one thing he doesn’t have…is freedom. Staging a coup, he flees his kingdom and goes undercover on his own European tour.

When Nikolai and Becca meet, it’s their differences that draw them together. Sparks fly as they share a whirlwind of adventures, all the while dodging his royal guard. But Becca’s family vacation ends in a matter of days. Will Nikolai and Becca be forced to say goodbye forever, will his destiny catch up to him, or will they change history forever?

 

 

Wanderlove by Kirsten Hubbard

It all begins with a stupid question:

Are you a Global Vagabond?

No, but 18-year-old Bria Sandoval wants to be. In a quest for independence, her neglected art, and no-strings-attached hookups, she signs up for a guided tour of Central America—the wrong one. Middle-aged tourists with fanny packs are hardly the key to self-rediscovery. When Bria meets Rowan, devoted backpacker and dive instructor, and his outspokenly humanitarian sister Starling, she seizes the chance to ditch her group and join them off the beaten path.

Bria’s a good girl trying to go bad. Rowan’s a bad boy trying to stay good. As they travel across a panorama of Mayan villages, remote Belizean islands, and hostels plagued with jungle beasties, they discover what they’ve got in common: both seek to leave behind the old versions of themselves. And the secret to escaping the past, Rowan’s found, is to keep moving forward.

But Bria comes to realize she can’t run forever, no matter what Rowan says. If she ever wants the courage to fall for someone worthwhile, she has to start looking back.

 

Why We Took The Car by Wolfgang Herrndorf, translated by Tim Mohr

Mike Klingenberg isn’t exactly what you’d call one of the cool kids at his school. For one, he doesn’t have many friends. (Okay, zero friends.) And everyone laughs when he has to read his essays out loud in class. (Not in a good way.) And he’s never, ever invited to parties—especially not the party of the year, thrown by the gorgeous Tatiana.

Andre Tschichatschow, a.k.a. Tschick (not even the teachers can pronounce his name), is new in school, and a whole different kind of unpopular. He always looks like he’s just been in a fight, he sleeps through nearly every class, and his clothes are a tragedy.

But one day Tschick shows up at Mike’s house out of the blue. Turns out he wasn’t invited to Tatiana’s party either, and he’s ready to do something about it. Forget the popular kids: Together, Mike and Tschick are heading out on a road trip across Germany. No parents, no map, no destination. Will they get hopelessly lost in the middle of nowhere? Probably. Will they make bad decisions, meet some crazy people, and get into trouble? Definitely. But will anyone ever call them boring again?

Not a chance.

 

The Wonder of Us by Kim Culbertson

Riya and Abby are: Best friends. Complete opposites. Living on different continents. Currently mad at each other. About to travel around Europe.

Riya moved to Berlin, Germany, with her family for junior year, while Abby stayed behind in their small California town. They thought it would be easy to keep up their friendship—it’s only a year and they’ve been best friends since preschool. But instead, they ended up fighting and not being there for the other. So Riya proposes an epic adventure to fix their friendship. Two weeks, six countries, unimaginable fun. But two small catches:

They haven’t talked in weeks.

They’ve both been keeping secrets.

Can Riya and Abby find their way back to each other among lush countrysides and dazzling cities, or does growing up mean growing apart?

____________________

Thanks for hanging out and we’ll see you back here next week with an installment of all the YA news you can use.

— Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars

 

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The Stack

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Today’s The Stack is sponsored by Insight Comics.

Volume One of the critically-acclaimed and original dark fantasy saga “Elves” comes to US audiences for the first time this May.

The Blue Elves in a small port town have all been massacred. Lanawyn (Lana-WIN), a Blue Elf, and Turin, her human ally, set out to discover who is responsible. The trail they uncover together leads back to a warlike clan of humans who hate Elves.

Meanwhile, the Sylvan Elves have hidden themselves away from the world, jealously preserving their independence. Eysine (AY-seen), the City-State of the East, has always observed respect for the ancient pact between Elf and Man. But when a powerful army of Orks besiege the kingdom, Eysine must remind the Elves of the treaty that linked their two peoples.

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Riot Rundown

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Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by The Crime Book, the newest tile in DK’s award-winning “Big Ideas Simply Explained” series.

The Crime Book is a complete compendium for crime aficionados to add to their collection. From Jack the Ripper to Jeffrey Dahmer, it is a full study of international true crime history that unpacks the science, psychology, and sociology of criminal behavior with infographics and in-depth research.

Foreword writer and consultant Cathy Scott is a Los Angeles Times best-selling author and investigative journalist best known for her books The Killing of Tupac Shakur and The Murder of Biggie Smalls.

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Audiobooks

Science, Dogs, and David Sedaris!

If you are a book nerd like me (and if you are reading this, you probably are) the summer months can be especially delightful for audiobooking. It’s beautiful out, so you want to leave your house (or people are forcing you to leave the house). Like a true “indoor kid,” I want to be reading pretty much all the time. Audiobooks are great for hikes, lounging by the pool, road trips, and whatever else you have planned for these summer months.


Sponsored by the new summer must-haves: freshly picked audiobooks from bestselling author Warren Adler. Discover them all here.

Want a free Warren Adler audiobook of your choice? Just email bookreviews@warrenadler.com with the subject line “Audiobook Month” and the title you’d like to receive and we’ll send it to you! Limit to 20 entries.


In July, I’ll be braving a two-week road trip from California to Oklahoma (don’t ask). Audiobooks are going to play a VITAL role. I’ll be journeying with a sci-fi lover, which is not my typical genre. I’m trying to think of books we’ll both enjoy for the trip. If you have any suggestions, tweet them to me at @msmacb or email me at katie@riotnewmedia.com and I’ll compile a list of whatever suggestions I get and post it on Book Riot. Then, I’ll listen to as many as I can on the trip and report back.

If sci-fi audiobooks that are palatable to non-sci-fi listeners is also an interest of yours, I strongly recommend the Ready Player One audiobook, written by Ernest Cline and narrated by Wil Wheaton. Set in the not-too-distant future (2044), Wade Watts is a high school student living in “the stacks,” trailers stacked atop each other. There’s never enough money, food, or space, and the only escape Wade has is “the Oasis” a virtual reality world with infinite possibilities. Buried inside the Oasis is a buried treasure that could solve all of Wade’s problems. Filled with ’80s nostalgia, corporate bad-guys, and magical treasure hunting adventures, this is an incredible book that’s even better an audio.

Another one from the backlist:

I watched *all* of Big Little Lies this weekend and while I think it was so well done (and talk about a killer cast–-pun very much intended), I’m happy I listened to the audiobook first. For the uninitiated: “Big Little Lies focuses on three women, all of whom have children at the same preschool. One is a great beauty married to a fabulously rich businessman; they have a “perfect” set of twins. One is the can-do mom who can put together a mean pre-school art project but can’t prevent her teenage daughter from preferring her divorced dad. The third is a withdrawn, single mother who doesn’t quite fit in. Right from the start–thanks to a modern “Greek chorus” that narrates the action–we know that someone is going to end up dead. The questions are who and how. Miraculously, Moriarty keeps this high concept plot aloft, largely because she infuses it with such wit and heart. She also knows not to overplay the message she’s sending: that we all tell lies–to each other and, more importantly, to ourselves.”

Over at Book Riot:

One Rioter discusses how audiobooks reignited her love of poetry.

New Releases:

The great Carl Sagan was the voice of the original Cosmos and a hero to many. Three of his books have just-released audio versions: Cosmos, The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark, and Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space. 

The current voice of Cosmos also has a newly-released book on audio: Neil de Grasse Tyson’s Astrophysics for People in a Hurry is narrated by the author (yay!) and explores questions like, “What is the nature of space and time? How do we fit within the universe? How does the universe fit within us?”

Theft by Finding: Diaries (1977-2002) by David Sedaris, read by David Sedaris.

David Sedaris audiobooks are pretty much a sure thing…especially his memoir/non-fiction. This has all the makings of an excellent book–what more could you want than David Sedaris literally reading the highlights of 25 years of diary entries?

 

File Under: Things Everybody but Me Has Probably Known About Forever

Did y’all Know that Spotify has a Spoken Word Option? Under which you can find audiobooks? [insert seventy-five million heart eyes emojis]. Right now I have the free version of Spotify because I don’t use it enough to warrant the $10/month premium version but depending on how much I start using the audiobook collection, I’ll likely be shelling that $10/month in the not-too-distant future.

Links for Your Ears (this is such a gross image; I keep picturing sausage links hanging from someone’s earlobes but I’m also kind of attached to the phrase, so…)

7 Best Audiobooks for Dog Lovers

I’m so happy that Inside of a Dog’s Mind is on this list. I love this book so much; I gave it to my grandmother for Christmas and she loved it, too. What’s that, you say? You’d like me to take this opportunity to unnecessarily insert a picture of my dog here? Ok, well if you insist. Here’s one from World Book Night in 2013, when she “helped” me pass out copies of The Handmaid’s Tale. 

People doing cool things to support audiobooks and accessibility

Last week it was Bangkok, this week it’s Glasgow and Odisha, India. Awesome, right?

Partially sighted Glasgow man skydives for charity

Samaritans for Sightless

 

For Writers:

Audiobook Narration, Production, Distribution, And Marketing Tip

Audiobook Review:

Between the World and Me Audiobook Review

Until next week, Audiobookers, and say hello anytime!

~Katie