Categories
Riot Rundown

121417-EverTheBrave-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Ever the Brave by Erin Summerill.

The stakes are higher than ever in the sequel to the romantic fantasy adventure Ever the Hunted, as Britta struggles to protect her kingdom and her heart. After saving King Aodren with her newfound Channeler powers, Britta only wants to live a peaceful life in her childhood home. Unfortunately, saving the King has created a tether between them she cannot sever, no matter how much she’d like to, and now he’s insisting on making her a noble lady. If Britta cannot find a way to harness her new magical ability, her life—as well as her country—may be lost.

Categories
Today In Books

Amazon’s Year in Books: Today in Books

Amazon Releases Year In Books List

This Year in Books celebrated the books that defined 2017, and highlighted some of the year’s most-read books. It probably comes as no surprise that Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale received that distinction in the Fiction genre. Nonfiction’s most-read book was Mark Manson’s The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck. These picks reflect customers’ favorite Kindle and Audible books. Check out the page for all sorts of Amazon-gleaned data for 2017.

A Predictive Keyboard Writes A Harry Potter Story

Using J.K. Rowling’s books, a predictive keyboard wrote a new Harry Potter story and it is good stuff. “Good” meaning hilarious. The story is titled, Harry Potter and the Portrait of What Looked Like a Large Pile of Ash. Here’s a taste: “He saw Harry and immediately began to eat Hermione’s family. Ron’s Ron shirt was just as bad as Ron himself.” Pure gold.

The Seattle Public Library Tweets Criminal Justice Reform

The Seattle Public Library announced on Twitter that they teamed with some of the city’s legal advocates to discuss criminal justice, and equity and inclusion. What followed was a thread sharing facts, information, and resources on the racial disparities present in our criminal justice system. If you want to join in and share facts from reputable sources, tag @SPLBuzz and use the #criminaljustice hashtag through the end of the 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.

Categories
Audiobooks

2017 Book Riot Audiobook Highlights

Hello audiobook lovers!

Thanks to all who have written to let me know what their favorite audiobooks for 2017 are. I’ll put the list together for next week, so if you want to chime in, hit me up at katie@riotnewmedia.com or on twitter at msmacb, and use #BRaudio2017 to let me know which audiobook(s) topped your list in 2017 (they don’t have to have been published in 2017, you just have to have listened to them for the first time 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.


In the meantime, I’ve got a couple of a big, honking list of Book Riot posts for you. There have been so many great pieces about basically any aspect of audiobooking one could hope for, so I decided to go through them all and bring you some highlights from the year.

But first! Did you know we’re giving away a stack of our 20 favorite books of the year! That’s right, the most knowledgeable book people I know put together a list of the 20 best books of the year and YOU CAN GET THEM FOR FREE. Click here to enter.

Without further ado…a selection of my favorite Book Riot audiobooks posts from 2017 (in no particular order…I was trying to go chronologically but that didn’t work out so…no particular order).

Dangers of Listening to Audiobooks at the Gym (Comics)

OK, to be fair, the concept of doing anything at the gym is foreign to me. Because I am a terrible adult. But all of these things have happened to me whilst walking my dog or listening to audiobooks in any number of public places.

When To Play It Big: Q&A with Audiobook Narrator Robin Miles

The narrator of books like  An Untamed State by Roxane Gay,  A Thousand Lives: The Untold Story of Hope, Deception, and Survival at Jonestown by Julia Scheeres, and Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie talks narration secrets with Book Riot’s Erin Burba.

Audiobooks for Short but Loud Commutes

Because commuting is kind of the worst. And audiobooks are kind of the best. (You see where I’m going with this…)

Best Audiobooks of 2017 Thus Far

In June, rioter Jamie put together a list of the best 2017 audiobooks in various categories. Six months later? I’d say her assessment is pretty spot-on. What do you think?

Hilarious Audiobooks for Your Summer Road Trip

Because nothing makes the time go by like laughing so hard that you have to make an emergency bathroom stop.

Audiobooks: My Unexpected Journey to a Happier Life

One of the themes of this list is readers discovering something about themselves (or learning something, or finding comfort about something) through audiobooks.

25 Best Children’s Audiobooks

Got kids? Read this.

 

How Audiobooks Made Me Appreciate Non-fiction

I relate to this so much. I have listened to and enjoyed so many nonfiction audiobooks I don’t think I would have made it through in print. Thank you, audiobooks!

Badass Women in Politics: The Audiobooks Edition

By yours truly. Because the need for more women in politics (and in positions of power everywhere) has perhaps been the defining truth of 2017.

Best Audiobook Apps

Ashley Holstrom put together an amazing post with possibly everything you would ever need to know about audiobook apps.

How to Become an Audiobook Narrator

I’ve gotten a number of questions about how one becomes an audiobook narrator and the truth is, I have no idea. Well, prior to September, I had no idea. Now, thanks to Rebecca Renner and Noah Michael Levine, I do!

Short Nonfiction Audiobooks To Expand Your Mind

Good, because if my mind is going to be expanded, I don’t want it to be for a lengthy period of time. I want short bursts of mind expansion before I go back to rotting my brain with trash. Basically, this is mind expansion for lazy people (yaaaay!!).

Best Spanish Audiobooks for Learning Spanish

I don’t know why it never occurred to me to brush up on my Spanish through audiobooks before but it’s kinda genius, right? (Or should I say genio?)

Free Romance Audiobooks

Free stuff=good. Romance audiobooks=good. Free romance audiobooks=great.

Audiobooks Don’t Count:” A Suggestion of Extreme Privilege

They do. They do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do they do.

Why I Listen To the Hard Stuff

I loved and related to this piece from Nikki Demarco so much.

Best Full Cast Audiobooks:

Full cast audiobooks always make me feel like I have really terrible seats at a great theater performance. It’s such a treat, especially when you’re not at the theater and you’re sitting in traffic.

Self-help Audiobooks to Untrash Your 2018

As someone whose life is in perpetual need of untrashing, Imma bookmark this post.

Most Popular Audiobooks of the Last 20 Years

Read them all!

That’s all for this week (and don’t forget to send me your favorite listens of the year!)

Thanks for being awesome,

~Katie (and Sally, who I’m shamelessly including a picture of because look how cute she is!)

 

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Giveaways

Win Book Riot’s Favorite Books of the Year…All 20 of Them!

 

Here they are: Book Riot’s favorite books of the year. We came up with the list via an internal nomination system this year, and we’re giving away the 20 books that got the most votes. One big stack to one avid reader.

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

 

Categories
Kissing Books

Romance Novels For Hillary and Green Card Marriages

Well, folks. We’ve had quite a couple weeks. I thought it was going to be pretty quiet, and then things just started coming out of nowhere. Zoom, pow, indeed. Get ready; it’s gonna be a long one.


Sponsored by A Duke in Shining Armor, by Loretta Chase

The seventh Duke of Ripley will never win prizes for virtue, but even he draws the line at running off with his best friend’s bride. All he’s trying to do is recapture the slightly inebriated Lady Olympia and return her to her bridegroom. The bookish and bespectacled Olympia is bent on getting away from her puzzling marriage to a rakish duke – but is even more puzzled when the world-famous hellion the Duke of Ripley is trying to do the honorable thing in returning her to her intended. Whatever his motivations, she has no intention of making this an easy chase…


We’ve all probably seen the HRC pullquote about romance novels by now; let’s talk about the reactions we’ve seen:

What this whole thing going on, author Melissa Blue had some words for romancelandia. And there was so much truth, I’d love to see a broader response to her question. Why do we get up in arms immediately upon an outsider’s opinions (especially a high profile one), but spend so little time as a greater community combating the toxicity within? I have no answers, but it’s something I’ve been thinking about.

In related (but not completely connected) news, there are going to be more Rogue Anthologies! And guess what? They’re taking submissions. Have you been looking to publish your resistance romance? Now’s your chance.

Courtney Milan was at the forefront of one of the lastest #metoo conversations, discussing her experience as her non-romance alter ego Heidi Bond, who had do deal with a horrible human being who took her habit of reading romance novels as an in for sexual harassment. No good. Disgusting, actually. But she had more to say earlier this week.

And to wipe that image from your mind: shared without comment. Just pure joy.

Also, if you haven’t read this Shondaland article in celebration of A Hope Divided, you should get on that pretty much immediately.

Bad news: there’s been some dissent among the romance world about the Netgalley blurb for the latest Kristan Higgins book. A few authors have sent her imploring tweets to rethink the book, while others have expressed support for her telling this story. She herself has put out a statement.  I don’t believe in censoring work, especially that which I haven’t read, but I’m moving forward warily with this one. I’ve never read any of her stuff; how does she approach the underrepresented? We’ll see. Her statement leaves me hopeful, but as I said before, I’m still wary. 

Good news: Book Concierge is back! (Though NPR and I are going to have to chat about how few romances are in their “Love Stories” category.)

In movie news

PassionFlix has reopened their Founding Member level. Support the platform, get a couple years free? Plus some other pretty awesome perks? Good deal. Also, you get to watch The Trouble With Mistletoe when it releases.

If you’re not down for another movie subscription, that’s okay! PassionFlix has put their first two original features, Hollywood Dirt and Afterburn Aftershock on Amazon to download! Check them out.

And okay. The Spirit of Christmas might not be a book, but it is definitely a happy place in this current state of ridiculousness. I was introduced to it by that same Melissa Blue mentioned earlier (re-recommending something originally recced to romancelandia by Rebekah Weatherspoon) and I watched it pretty much immediately. Romance ghosts are a tropetonite of mine, and the Prohibition-era costumery? Oh my. On the fence about a slightly ridiculous, but utterly wonderful holiday romance? Read this article.

Deals!

Jill Shalvis’s Chasing Christmas Eve is 1.99. Gotta read at least one of those every holiday season, huh?

Tracey Livesay’s Along Came Love is 99c! If you adored Love on My Mind but haven’t gotten to Livesay’s other books yet, now is definitely the time.

Who wants A Royal Christmas Wedding? We won’t get one this year, but you can read about one for 1.99!

If you’ve been meaning to read The Bollywood Bride, now would be a good time. It’s 2.99 right now!

Over on Book Riot…

Romeo watched Love Between the Covers and was fascinated. He had to do more research.

Romance mysteries? Yes, please!

I have been remiss in the whole holiday romance thing, but Alison is here to help!

Oh hey, more royal romances!

Bears. That’s a thing we like.

Want some good BDSM? We got ya covered.

And of course, more #romancenovelsforhillary.

Oh oh! Also! We’re giving away a stack of 20 books based on our favorite books of the year (did you see that post go up on Tuesday?)! You’ve got a whole month (until 1/14) to enter!

A few recs

Roomies
Christina Lauren

Holland works on the biggest show on Broadway. Sure, she’s a merch vendor and takes photos, but she’s just as much a part of the show as her uncle, the great creator Robert Okai. When a key musician walks off, leaving Robert in a serious bind, Holland has the perfect recommendation: this mesmerising street musician she goes out of her way to experience on a regular basis. After a masterful audition, everyone’s in agreement that Calvin is the best man for the job. There’s just one tiny problem: he’s long overstayed his student visa. Holland wants to do something for her uncle, and so comes up with the harebrained scheme that could allow Calvin to stay in the country. She’s already got the hots for him, so why not marry him?

When I got to the last line, my only word was “Kyooooooooooooot!” There’s a nuanced story here, and it’s great to watch both of these people become their best selves.

The Wall of Winnipeg and Me
Mariana Zapata

Of course, once I finished Roomies, I wanted more books about marriages of convenience. The first one I picked up was this one. And I’m gonna warn you, like most of Mariana Zapata’s books, it’s a big-ass sucker, so you might spend the rest of your December reading this one.

Vanessa is a PA. Her client is a Canadian football player (playing in the US) whose nickname is The Wall of Winnipeg. The nickname, from what I can tell, is twofold: the man is so big he has to get his clothes tailored. He is also pretty much an emotional wall. So when Vanessa has saved enough to go off on her own, with the time and stability to continue her graphic design company, she gives her notice and goes her way, not looking back. But just a month later, he starts showing up, asking her to come back. Eventually, he realizes she would be perfect for a little problem he has: if she marries him, he won’t have to worry about his work visa running out.

So how’s that gonna go? I don’t know, I’ll tell you in January.

Up next: I don’t know if I’ll be done with green card marriages when I’m done with Vanessa and the Hulk, but I just came across Operation Green Card, which is the most recent Bluewater Bay book, and I am all about it. A gay Russian man worried for his safety and a wounded American vet get married. They don’t know each other, but they’re gonna get to know each other now. With the backgrounds of each of the characters, it’s probable that we’ll touch on some serious, but I’m also looking forward to what I hope will be some pretty adorable stuff.

Bonus rec: If you get through these and want more forced exposure, Alexis Daria’s Dance With Me just came out! And it’s almost as good as Take the Lead. Almost. Millimeters away.

Finally, new and upcoming releases!

It Takes Two to Tumble by Cat Sebastian (THAT COVER THO—it straight up looks like The Sound of Music)
Wrong to Need You by Alisha Rai (OMG SOOOO GOOD)
West Coast Love by Tif Marcelo
Right Here, Right Now by Georgia Beers
The Hookup by Kristen Ashley (12/19)
The Art of Running in Heels by Rachel Gibson (12/26)
A Distant Heart by Sonali Dev (!!!!!) (12/26)

Also, Rebekah Weatherspoon has been talking about this holiday novella she couldn’t help writing, and it doesn’t have an Amazon link yet, but it has a blurb on her website! Keep an eye out!

Okay. *wipes forehead* That was a lot, but we’ve got plenty to get us through at least some of the coming holidays. 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

NIMONA Creator to Reboot She-Ra: Today in Books

Nimona Creator To Reboot She-Ra For Netflix

You read right. The Eisner Award-winning creator of Nimona and Lumberjanes, Noelle Stevenson, is showrunning a She-Ra reboot for Netflix. The series is being described as “an epic and timely tale that celebrates female friendship and empowerment, led by a warrior princess tailor made for today.” Netflix members worldwide will get the She-Ra reboot in 2018. May it be as wonderful as Nimona.

Feminism Declared Merriam-Webster’s Word Of The Year

Merriam-Webster wasn’t about to let Dictionary.com give all the side-eye by naming “complicit” their word of the year. So MW announced “feminism” as their 2017 selection. Alright, it isn’t a competition, and 2017 has given us enough side-eye to go around and then some. News coverage of the Women’s March on Washington D.C. led to a spike in look-ups for feminism, according to MW. Searches spiked again when Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s advisor, said she didn’t consider herself a feminist, and again around the releases of Hulu’s The Handmaid’s Tale and the Wonder Woman film.

The 2018 Poem-A-Day Series

The Academy of American Poets announced its selection of 12 guest editors for the 2018 Poem-a-Day series. Each guest judge will curate a month of poems for the daily poetry series sharing previously unpublished poems by today’s poets. The guest judges include poet laureate of the United States Tracy K. Smith, Pushcart Prize recipient Kaveh Akbar, and Lamba Literary Award-winner Dawn Lundy Martin.

And, in case you missed it, we’re giving away a stack of our 20 favorite books of the year! Click here to enter.


Today in Books is sponsored by Running Press Book Publishers.

Smash the patriarchy this holiday season with great gifts for your favorite females from Running Press. Give the gifts of confidence, creativity, humor, magic, and self-care with books for every woman in your life: YOU ARE A BADASS for her entrepreneurial spirit, PATTERN BEHAVIOR for some nostalgic laughs, PRACTICAL MAGIC for weekend witches, FEMINIST ICON CROSS-STITCH for year-round craftivism, and SLOW BEAUTY for natural and nourishing mindfulness.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Quirky Mystery Awards & More!

Hello fellow mystery fans! Happy Hanukkah! I’m currently excited about 3 things: my annual from-me-to-me gift has arrived; I’m wrapping a bunch of books I’m gifting this year; and Rioter Deepali Agarwal wrote The 2017 Oscars, But for Books (hot-mess detective included) which made me happy and inspired this newsletter. Here are my quirky awards I’d present to some of the mystery and thrillers I read this year.


Sponsored by AL CAPONE: His Life, Legacy, and Legend by Deirdre Bair, new in paperback from Vintage Books.

Through exclusive access to Capone’s family and rigorous research, National Book Award–winning biographer Deirdre Bair gives us the definitive account of the notorious mobster, a quintessentially American figure. At the height of Prohibition, Al Capone loomed large as Public Enemy Number One while his multimillion-dollar Chicago Outfit dominated organized crime. But then came the fall: a legal noose tightened by the FBI, a conviction on tax evasion, a stint in Alcatraz. When released, he was a much diminished man and lived quietly until the ravages of his neurosyphilis took their final toll.


99% Chance You’ll Never Guess the Solve Award:

Six Four by Hideo Yokoyama, Jonathan Lloyd-Davies (Translation): Mikami, now working in press relations, as he’s struggling with the disappearance of his daughter, finds himself digging into a fourteen-year-old unsolved kidnapping/murder known as Six Four. This is a slow burn procedural–it’s a deep dive into the inner working of the department and its politics–you may even question if they’re planning on solving the main case and then BAM, the last 20% you find yourself in a thriller and most likely realize you would have never solved the mystery on your own.

Channeling Stephen King’s Horror/Suspense Award:

The Hole by Hye-Young Pyun, Sora Kim-Russell (Translation): Imagine an accident kills your wife and leaves you bedridden under the care of your mother-in-law. Now imagine that with all that time on your hands you start thinking your mother in law isn’t really here to care for you…

 

 

Whiplash From Twists Award:

Gone Without A Trace by Mary Torjussen: Dude straight up vanishes from his girlfriend’s life as if he had never been there, which had me asking a bunch of questions from the get-go. And I won’t say more because this is a twisty thriller…

 

 

 

Best Attention-Grabbing Opening Award:

The Birdwatcher novel cover railed dock on ocean viewThe Birdwatcher by William Shaw: William South, a police sergeant in Kent, is assigned to a murder case but he has two reasons he tries to get out of it: first, he’s a birdwatcher and he doesn’t want to miss out on the arrival of migrating birds; second, HE’S A MURDERER HIMSELF. <– That’s the first page!

 

Best Use of a Baby Elephant Award:

The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra cover design: yellow with red border with an elephant between title words and a mustache at the bottomThe Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra by Vaseem Khan: As he’s retiring, Inspector Chopra ends up unable to let go of the case of a drowned boy and, unrelated, inheriting a baby elephant. Being that he lives in an apartment and knows nothing about the care of elephants he has his hands full.

 

 

Badass Greek Goddess Award:

Winter of the Gods (Olympus Bound #2) by Jordanna Max Brodsky: A mystery set in modern day NY with a kick-ass hilarious goddess, who is secretly living amongst mortals and is asked to help with an investigation because someone is hunting down the gods…

 

 

Best Feminist Thieves Award:

Uptown Thief (Justice Huslers #1) by Aya de León: Imagine Robin Hood, but women running a women’s health clinic who have a side escort business to fund the clinic by finding marks to rob… (crime/romance)

 

 

 

Best Mix of ChickLit and Mystery Award:

I’ll Eat When I’m Dead by Barbara Bourland: Think The Devil Wears Prada minus the monster boss, where the women are friends, and activists, and now throw in murder and a hot detective!

 

 

 

For Action Movie Fans Award:

August Snow by Stephen Mack Jones: Snow may have turned down Eleanore Paget’s request to hire him to investigate her investment bank but when she dies he finds himself on the case, and in constant danger.

 

 

 

Best Use of Historical Invention Award:

Murder Between the Lines (Kitty Weeks Mystery #2) by Radha Vatsal: Set in N.Y. at the beginning of WWII the novel is filled with historical facts and puts Kitty into women’s suffrage events, visits from President Wilson, and even has her looking into Thomas Edison’s battery invention, all while digging deeper into the death of a girl since she’s unable to accept the sleepwalking explanation.

Links:

Today in for a split second I almost quit my job so I could enter this giveaway: Book Riot is giving away 20 (TWENTY!) of our favorite books of 2017 to ONE ridiculously lucky winner!!! Check out the list of books and enter!

Rincey and Katie’s new Read or Dead episode with another excellent title: You Love Baby Elephants, I Love Severed Hands

Rioter Tasha Brandstatter has 44 Mystery Romance Novels To Read Right Now

Audible’s pick for Best Mysteries & Thrillers of 2017 plus the 4 finalist.

This publishing deal sounds amazing: “Oyinkan Braithwaite’s MY SISTER, THE SERIAL KILLER, set in Nigeria about a woman who must decide how far she is willing to go to keep her younger sister’s habit of killing her boyfriends a secret.” (via PublishersLunch December 7th email)

Big Little Lies is officially coming back, HBO announced, and there will be a new director for all seven episodes, Andrea Arnold (Transparent, I Love Dick)

The 3rd book in Joe Ide‘s IQ series comes out next fall! (muppet arms!)

Jessica Knoll, author of Luckiest Girl Alive, has written a second book, The Favorite Sister, and you can read an excerpt now at EW.

(TW: sexual assault) Wired wrote about a battle between those who think the algorithm code being used in a program analyzing DNA should be revealed and the company that doesn’t want to: The Impenetrable Program Transforming How Courts Treat DNA Evidence 

At The New York Times: Unearthed Raymond Chandler Story Rebukes U.S. Health Care System

For horror/thriller fans: Final Girls by Riley Sager (pseudonym for Todd Ritter) is being adapted by Universal Pictures.

CBS’ Elementary got an extra order of episodes for season 6. (Yay!)

Not an adaptation but Netflix picked up Day and Night, an upcoming 32-part Chinese detective drama, which sounds great for procedural fans–meaning me!

Author Louise Erdrich is working on a mystery that will be set in Birchbark Books, the bookstore she owns.

Kindle Deals!

The Perfect Stranger by Megan Miranda is $1.99 (review)

Karin Slaughter’s Fractured (Will Trent #2) is $6.99

Jackaby by William Ritter is $4.21 (review)

 

 

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

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And if you like to put a pin in things here’s an Unusual Suspects 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.

Categories
Giveaways

Win a Stack of Great Books for Feminists!

 

10 winners will each receive copies of: You are a Bad Ass Deluxe, Feminist Icon Cross-Stitch, Pattern Behavior, Slow Beauty, and Practical Magic.

Smash the patriarchy this holiday season with great gifts for your favorite feminists from Running Press. Give the gifts of confidence, creativity, humor, magic, and self-care with books for every woman in your life: YOU ARE A BADASS for her entrepreneurial spirit, PATTERN BEHAVIOR for some nostalgic laughs, PRACTICAL MAGIC for weekend witches, FEMINIST ICON CROSS-STITCH for year-round craftivism, and SLOW BEAUTY for natural and nourishing mindfulness.

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

Categories
In The Club

In The Club Dec 13

Welcome back to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met and well-read. Let’s dive in.


House on Foster Hill coverThis newsletter is sponsored by The House on Foster Hill by Jaime Jo Wright.

Weaving a tale of mystery and romance, this promising author’s critically acclaimed debut is a dual-time narrative about an abandoned house and two women, a century apart, changed by the deadly secrets it holds. Can they unravel its mystery and find a renewed hope before any other lives—including their own—are lost? “With sharp dialogue and plenty of scares, this is a gripping tale that never loses sight of the light.” –Foreword Reviews


Do you want a bunch of great books? We’re doing another giveaway! It’s a stack of our 20 favorite books of the year, and you can click here to enter.

There’s no time like the end of the year to think about rebooting your book club, and Tara has some suggestions as to how.

Tis the season for best-of lists! These can be great for deciding what you’ll be reading in the coming months; many of the books will be headed to paperback editions, they’ve been vetted and read and reviewed, and there’s (usually) a decent variety of themes to pick from. And this year’s pickings are particularly good:

Vulture has declared their top 10 best comics of 2017, as did the AV Club. Some overlap here, but not as much as you might expect. I am woefully behind on my comics reading, so I’ll be bookmarking these to start remedying in 2018.

Huffington Post has their 10 best fiction up (including a bit of sci-fi, but mostly literary fiction), as does The Guardian. I really love HuffPo’s list in terms of books I’m excited to see get press. The Guardian’s is more of a surprise in terms of the picks, because I’m not familiar with quite a few of them!

The Guardian also picked their favorite mystery/thrillers of the year, and they’ve got quite a few Book Riot favorites in there. (Attica Locke 5ever.)

NPR’s Best Of includes 350 (!!!) books that their staff loved from the past year. You could spend hours filtering through it all (if you haven’t already), especially since some of these characters are thematic rather than genre. For example: Ladies First; Rather Short; Rather Long.

The Book Riot contributors decided to make up new awards categories for some of this year’s best books — please enjoy the results. My personal favorite is the “What The F*** Just Happened,” for perhaps obvious reasons.

We also picked our favorite queer books of 2017, and it’s a long and wide-ranging list in terms of both genres and representation!

Also in themed best-ofs, here’s Rebecca’s take on the best genre-bending nonfiction of the year.

And here are our official, voted-on, Best Books of 2017 across all categories!

And that’s our show: Happy discussing! 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 (including the occasional book club question!) you can find me on the Get Booked podcast with the inimitable Amanda.

Your fellow booknerd,
Jenn

More Resources: 
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page

 

Categories
Riot Rundown

121217-TLOT-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown 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.