Categories
Giveaways

Win a Copy of CHILDREN OF BLOOD AND BONE by Tomi Adeyemi!

 

We have 10 copies of Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi to give away to 10 Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

They killed my mother.

They took our magic.

They tried to bury us.

Now we rise.

“The next big thing in literature and film.” —Ebony

“One of the biggest young adult fiction debut book deals of the year. Aside from a compelling plot and a strong-willed heroine as the protagonist, the book deals with larger themes, like race and power, that are being discussed in real time.” —Teen Vogue

In Children of Blood and Bone, Tomi Adeyemi conjures a stunning world of dark magic and danger in her West African-inspired fantasy debut, perfect for fans of Leigh Bardugo and Sabaa Tahir.

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

Categories
Book Radar

A New Zora Neale Hurston Novel in 2018 and More News

Welcome to another Monday, book lovers! I have paused my reading in order to share a few great things with you today. I hope you also had a wonderful weekend, and that you’re reading something marvelous! Enjoy your upcoming week, and be excellent to each other. – xoxo, Liberty


We’re giving away a stack of our 20 favorite books of the year. Click here to enter, or just click the image below.


Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

the darkest mindsAmandla Stenberg to star in Fox’s adaptation of Darkest Minds.

FX to develop Welcome To Night Vale podcast for television.

New novel from Zora Neale Hurston to be published in 2018.

John Legend to produce Long Way Down for Universal.

Netflix’s Marvel’s Jessica Jones has set a premiere date for the second season.

Willa Fitzgerald joins the cast of The Goldfinch.

Reporters Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey will publish a book about the recent sexual abuse and harassment allegations that have rocked the country.

Ernie Cline is writing a sequel to Ready Player One.

burial ritesJennifer Lawrence to star in the adaptation of Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites.

Emily Rios joins cast of If Beale Street Could Talk.

A Well-Read Black Girl anthology is on its way!

She-Ra, Princess of Power, is coming to Netflix, with Noelle Stevenson attached.

PRH to publish first all-female Doctor Who short story collection.

Cover Reveals

Here’s the first look at the cover of The Cabin at the End of the World by Paul Tremblay. (William Morrow, June 26, 2018)

Penguin Teen reveals the look at a YA summer release: Lies You Never Told Me by Jennifer Donaldson. (Razorbill, May 29, 2018)

And WOW this cover of The Heart Forger by Rin Chupeco! (Sourcebooks Fire, March 20, 2018)

Sneak Peeks!

the terrorHere’s the teaser trailer for AMC’s adaptation of Dan Simmon’s The Terror.

And the first look at the trailer for Every Day.

And here’s the official trailer for Ready Player One.

Here’s the latest Annihilation trailer. WTF is happening?!?

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!

the lost girls of camp forevermoreThe Lost Girls of Camp Forevermore by Kim Fu (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, February 13, 2018)

Any of you get to go to summer camp? I never did, which might explain why I can’t pass up novels that take place at camps. This is a wonderful one, about a group of girls at sleepaway camp who are stranded on an island during a kayaking trip, and how that one night will shape their lives forever.

the merry spinsterThe Merry Spinster: Tales of Everyday Horror by Mallory Ortberg (Holt Paperbacks, March 13, 2018)

Delightful dark tales with a feminist twist from the always wonderful Ortberg. This collection features new takes on classic stories, injected with wit, mischief, and a dash of psychological horror. Perfect for fans of Angela Carter, Kelly Link, and Catherynne Valente.

And this is funny.

Alternative proofreading marks.

Categories
Today In Books

New Novel From Zora Neale Hurston: Today in Books

New Novel From Zora Neale Hurston

In spring 2018, we’re getting a new book by Zora Neale Hurston, author of Their Eyes Were Watching God. Barracoon: The Story of the Last “Black Cargo” was unpublished when Hurston died in 1960. The story is about “the last known survivor of the slave trade who was illegally smuggled from Africa on the last slave ship to the U.S.” Hurston, who was an anthropologist as well as a writer, based the novel on her interviews with a survivor of the slave trade who told her about his capture and bondage fifty years after the slave trade was outlawed.

Amandla Stenberg To Star In Darkest Minds Adaptation

Amandla Stenberg will star in a film adaptation of Alexandra Bracken’s YA dystopian novel The Darkest Minds. The story follows 16-year-old Ruby who’s on the run from a government “rehabilitation camp” for children with abilities. In her search for a safe haven, she joins up with a group of similarly afflicted kids. The film will be directed by Jennifer Yuh Nelson (Kung Fu Panda 2).

Authors Guild Releases Report On Translation Pay (It’s Not Great)

The Authors Guild released a report on working conditions for translators in the U.S. According to the report, 65% of literary translators earned less than $20,000 in gross income in 2016 with only about 8% earning $60,000-$100,000. The survey also noted that income for literary translators hasn’t changed significantly over the past five years. While only 39% reported spending more than half of their working time on translation projects, only 17% reported earning more than half of their income strictly from translation work.


Make your feed all the more bookish by following Book Riot on Instagram. Check us out here, or just click the image below:

Categories
What's Up in YA

The Best 2017 YA Books As Selected By You (& Even More 2017 YA Not To Miss!)

Hello YA Readers! Let’s talk about YOUR favorite books this year!

We’re giving away a stack of our 20 favorite books of the year. Click here to enter, or just click the image below.


I’m excited to share what you, the readers of “What’s Up in YA?” have deemed your favorite reads of the year. I’ve combed through the responses and pulled together not a top ten, but instead, a top twelve. Why twelve? Because a number of titles had an equal number of votes, and I’d rather just include them all for the sake of a nice list than to sacrifice them for a shorter one.

Results are alphabetical, and I’ve elected not to include summaries for sake of space. You can click the links to find ‘em.

 

“What’s Up in YA?” Readers Best YA Books for 2017

A Court of Wings and Ruin by Sarah J. Maas

Dear Martin by Nic Stone

Eliza and Her Monsters by Francesca Zappia

Far From The Tree by Robin Benway

The Gentleman’s Guide to Vice and Virtue by Mackenzi Lee

The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas

Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds

The Lord of Shadows by Cassandra Clare

Strange The Dreamer by Laini Taylor

The Takedown by Corrie Wang

Turtles All The Way Down by John Green

The Upside of Unrequited by Becky Albertalli

 

The other survey question was about the titles you wish more people would read. Like last year, a number of the responses were repeat titles of your favorite titles — I’m going to rework that question next year since, obviously, we hope more people read our favorite books. I took the above titles out of the results for the next question and pulled together 10 of the titles which had more than a single vote (and none of these had more than four votes). Again, results are alphabetical and you can click through for descriptions.

 

“What’s up in YA?” Reader Shoutout Titles

Allegedly by Tiffany D. Jackson

Bad Romance by Heather Demetrios

The Epic Crush of Genie Lo by Yee Fung Cheng

In Other Lands by Sarah Rees Brennan

Little and Lion by Brandy Colbert

Moxie by Jennifer Mathieu

The One Memory of Flora Banks by Emily Barr

Piecing Me Together by Renee Watson

Queens of Geek by Jen Wilde

Thick As Thieves by Megan Whalen Turner (“and the whole series” says one reader)

 

if I may, a trio of more titles worth giving a boost to here as we round out the year in YA reading. At least one of these had been mentioned in the survey:

 

A Short History of The Girl Next Door by Jared Reck — this one made me cry some buckets of tears while also making me cheer. It’s about a boy who discovers how much he loves his neighbor, who he’s grown up with, when she begins dating someone who isn’t him. The story is about love and friendship, but it’s also about growing up and letting go of other people. There’s a nice look at toxic masculinity, and the book features younger teen characters, which is rarer and rarer. Bonus: a short read!

 

Calling My Name by Liara Tamani — if you’re looking for a story about a young black girl’s coming of age in Houston, Texas, and growing up in a religious family, this will be your winner. Lyrical writing and told through vignettes, this will likely resonate with a lot of readers. A quieter book, but not one to be overlooked.

 

 

Like Water by Rebecca Podos — What happens to the kids who don’t flee their small town once graduation happens? This is a book about Vanny, who stays behind in her small New Mexico town to help run her family’s restaurant and help her dad who struggles with a debilitating illness. This one digs into sexuality a lot and in fresh, exciting ways.

 

____________________

Thanks for hanging out today and all year long, YA lovers. We’ll see you again in the new year.

 

–Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars

Categories
The Goods 2

Best Books Box – Read Harder

Get ready to start your new reading resolutions and get a jump on the 2018 Read Harder Challenge. We have 24 awesome new tasks to help expand your literary horizons, and the books in our Best of 2017 box will give you a jump start!

Get 4 rad reads plus 3 fun bookish items, with a total value exceeding the cost of the box.

Categories
Today In Books

Move Over Hygge: Today in Books

Prepare For More Scandinavian Lifestyle Titles

Make room, hygge, there are some new kids on the block. Namely lykke (happiness), lagom (not too much, not too little), and dostadning (uh, death cleaning). The New York Times profiled three books shuffling for space alongside still-trending hygge, which is the booknerd-friendly Danish word for coziness: The Little Book of Lykke: Secrets of the World’s Happiest People; Lagom: The Swedish Art of Living a Balanced, Healthy Life; and The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning: How to Make Your Loved Ones’ Lives Easier and Your Own Life More Pleasant. You can bet this isn’t the last time we see those words in the book world.

Wait, There’s A Tolkien Movie?

Nicholas Hoult will star as J.R.R. Tolkien in a film that explores the author’s formative years. Tolkien, which just wrapped filming, follows the Lord of the Rings author into the outbreak of World War I, delves into his friendship with a group of outcasts, and, in effect, explores the inspiration for his Middle-earth novels. The film also stars Lily Collins as Tolkien’s wife, Edith, and is directed by Dome Karukoski.

The Serpent King Will Be Adapted

Jeff Zentner’s The Serpent King has been optioned for film and television, according to a Twitter post from producer Matt Sutherland. The Young Adult novel follows a group of outcasts preparing to graduate high school and leave their small town.

 

We’re giving away a stack of our 20 favorite books of the year. Click here to enter.


Today in Books is sponsored by David Kranes, abracadabra, University of Nevada Press.

Abracadabra begins with Mark Goodson, a seemingly well-adjusted married man, disappearing during a magic act. It falls to a former professional football player, Elko Wells, to uncover the far darker story of Mark’s marriage and family and weave together a story at once compelling and true. Magicians and misdirection, gambling, down-on-one’s-luck, the crazed sense of possibility and impossibility, mistaken identity, impersonators and body doubles, people acting bizarrely with all sorts of chaos, and overlaps thrown in for good measure. The twists this plot takes are all but impossible to anticipate. Reading Abracadabra is deliciously magical.

Categories
True Story

The Most-Read Nonfiction Book of the Year, According to Amazon

For whatever reason, I cannot get enough of the year-end best books list. This year, more than usual, it feels like time just flew by so quickly that I can hardly remember all of the great books I was excited about that promptly fell of my radar. This week I have a couple more retrospectives to share, along with some more awards news and some Hollywood memoir news. Here we go!


Sponsored by LIFE IS LIKE A MUSICAL by Tim Federle

A new self-help guide—with jazz hands!—from bestselling author Tim Federle, Life is Like a Musical features 50 tips learned backstage, onstage, and in between gigs, with chapters such as “Dance Like Everyone’s Watching” and “Save the Drama for the Stage.” This charming and clever guide will appeal to all ages and inspire readers to step into the lead role of their own life, even if they’re not a recovering theater major.


2017 This Year in Books from Amazon

This week, Amazon released a stellar data visualization for this year in books, based on data gathered from the Kindle and through Audible. It includes the most-read books of the year, the most popular books in each state, and the most frequently-highlighted passages for the year. The top nonfiction book of the year – The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck by Mark Manson – surprised me at first, but after I thought more it kind of makes sense. Apparently we all needed to figure out ways to let some of the nonsense of 2017 roll off our backs. It’s a fun page to scroll through if you’ve got a few minutes.

Speaking Of Best Books…

Book Riot’s Best Books of 2017 was also published this week! All of the Book Riot contributors submit nominations, which are then tallied to put together the final list. There are six nonfiction books on the list that have all gotten rave reviews. I was lucky enough to blurb one of my favorites, One Day We’ll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter by Scaachi Koul. Check this list out too!

Young Adult Nonfiction Awards

Earlier this month, the Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA) announced the five finalists for the 2018 Excellence in Nonfiction Award. The five titles on the shortlist are:

Performers Getting Book Deals

Actress Sally Field will be publishing a memoir in 2018. According to the New York Times, Field has been working on the book for more than five years. The title is In Pieces.

Actor Kal Penn has also signed a deal to publish an essay collection in 2019. Entertainment Weekly reports that the book will cover numerous topics, “including his ambition as an actor, the challenges of navigating Hollywood, and his unusual sabbatical from actor to White House staffer.”

And finally, we’ve got a big giveaway to share – a stack of our 20 favorite books of the year! Click here to enter. These books are so good! As always, thanks for reading!

– Kim Ukura, @kimthedork, kim@riotnewmedia.com

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships Dec 15

Happy Friday, changelings and chrononauts! Today we’ve got reviews of Cold Wind and Radio Silence, some adaptation news, some sf/f holiday cheer, and more.


The Language of Thorns by Leigh BardugoThis newsletter is sponsored by The Language of Thorns by Leigh Bardugo.

Inspired by myth, fairy tale, and folklore, #1 New York Times-bestselling author Leigh Bardugo has crafted a deliciously atmospheric collection of short stories filled with betrayals, revenge, sacrifice, and love. Perfect for new readers and dedicated fans, the lavishly illustrated tales in The Language of Thorns will transport you to lands both familiar and strange—to a fully realized world of dangerous magic that millions have visited through the novels of the Grishaverse.


A present for John Scalzi fans: We’re getting a movie adaptation of Old Man’s War from Netflix. Let the fancasts begin!

Need more YA for your TBR? Alex Tor.com picked some favorite YA SFF of 2017, and they are organized by handy categories like “Court Intrigue” and “I’m Not Crying, You’re Crying.”

Calling all Gryffindors: here’s a reading list just for you.

Not a gift guide but a guide to gifting: Aisha breaks down how to be a good gift-giver, and her advice is A++.

If you’re a long-time reader, you know that Doctor Who is not one of my specialties, so I cannot comment on how correct they are, but! The folks at Syfy decided to rank all the Doctor Who Christmas specials.

Hosting a holiday party and want to add some Star Trek to it? Here’s a recipe for Romulan ale.

Courtesy of Kelly Link: What would your fantasy series be called? Mine was A Bodega of Amethyst and Dusk, which I now feel obliged to write.

Watch this immediately: John Boyega and Gwendoline Christie play “What’s In The Box” and I literally wept with laughter for 5 minutes. ACTUAL TEARS.

Last not but least: we’re giving away a stack of our 20 favorite books of the year! And said stack includes stellar SF/F titles Her Body and Other Parties, The Gauntlet, and A Conjuring of LightClick here to enter.

Today’s reviews are books that make me want to bundle up. Best read under a blanket and with the hot beverage of your choice.

Cold Wind by Nicola Griffith

cover of Cold Wind by Nicola GriffithThis is the first time I’ve ever reviewed a short story for this newsletter, I do believe! But this one is so perfect for the holiday season, I couldn’t pass it up.

Set in a Seattle bar on the Winter Solstice and following a narrator whose motivations twist and turn along with the plot, this is a story that calls on the spirits of the the darkest part of the year. Griffith plays cat and mouse with the reader and her characters as she melds myth and contemporary life and looks at desire in its various forms. To say much more would be to spoil the delicious unfolding of the plot, so I will just say that it is atmospherically perfect. You can purchase the story, or read it online right here.

Radio Silence (Off the Grid #1) by Alyssa Cole

cover of Radio Silence by Alyssa ColeWhether or not you think you like romance novels, I urge you to pick this near-future tale up. It starts off with our heroine, Arden, trudging through the snow. She and her friend John are headed to his family’s cabin near the Canadian border because the world is ending.

No electricity, no running water, no trappings of civilization — they all shut down one day and no one really knows why. Rather than wait around Rochester NY to find out, they decide to head for the hills. But the journey isn’t an easy one, nor does their arrival at the cabin mean that everything is going to work out. When John’s parents go missing, Arden must help John and his siblings figure out what to do and who to trust, all while trying to understand her own feelings for his brother Gabriel.

A zoomed-in near-future apocalypse story, Radio Silence sorts through the emotional heft of love among the ruins. Its steamy scenes balance out with the day-to-day work of living in a world that is changing shape; the family dynamics will be oh-so-familiar to anyone who has ever spent a long weekend with relatives in close quarters, then heightened by the societal upheaval. I laughed, I bit my nails, I occasionally blushed — and then I read the rest of the series as well. This story will make you thankful both for good reading material and for your central heat during the next blizzard!

And that’s a wrap! You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. If you’re interested in more science fiction and fantasy talk, you can catch me and my co-host Sharifah on the SFF Yeah! podcast. For many many more book recommendations you can find me on the Get Booked podcast with the inimitable Amanda.

Your fellow booknerd,
Jenn

Categories
The Goods

Free Domestic Shipping

Whether you’re tying up loose ends and buying the last stocking stuffers on your list or picking up big, beautiful gifts for the book lovers in your life (we suggest the Best Books of 2017 box!), take a little edge off your holiday stress.

Free domestic shipping on all US orders through 12/17!

Categories
The Stack

121417-BRInstagram-The-Stack

Make your feed all the more bookish by following Book Riot on Instagram. Check us out here, or just click the image below: