Categories
This Week In Books

Mary Shelley and Virginia Woolf Coming to the Big Screen: This Week in Books

New Films to Portray Mary Shelley and Virginia Woolf

We like to think we stay pretty on-top of book-related film news around the Riot, but this week brought notice of to new-to-us films about landmark female writers. A biopic of Mary Shelley, focusing on her relationship with Percy Bysshe Shelley, has (apparently!) been in the works for a few years now. Bop on over to Tor.com for a first look at Elle Fanning as the Frankstein scribe. Meanwhile, from the Department of We Couldn’t Be More Excited, Eva Green and Gemma Arterton will play Vita Sackville-West and Virginia Woolf in a film about the historic pair’s longterm romantic relationship.

Anonymous Book Fairy Distributes Free Books to Support the Resistance

A customer of San Francisco’s beloved Booksmith purchased 50 copies of George Orwell’s 1984 last week and left them at the store, where they were displayed with a sign exhorting customers to “Read up! Fight back!” Booksmith owner Christin Evans reports that the copies were quickly snapped up, prompting the unnamed benefactor to a repeat performance with Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and Erik Larson’s In the Garden of Beasts. Other customers have since been inspired to follow suit. This is rad in its own right, but could it be the start of a larger movement to use reading to encourage resistance?

New Salman Rushdie Novel to Take on Trump

Speaking of books as resistance, news broke this week that Salman Rushdie’s thirteenth novel, The Golden House, due out this September, will take on the last eight years in American politics and feature “the insurgence of a ruthlessly ambitious, narcissistic, media-savvy villain sporting makeup and coloured hair.” Rushdie is certainly no stranger to the intersection of literature and politics. His history makes him uniquely positioned to resist threats of retribution, and his record of success and critical acclaim will make him a tough target for the predictable backlash tweets asserting he’s a washed up has-been. Sad! This will be a good one to watch.


Thanks to The Cruelty by Scott Bergstrom for sponsoring This Week in Books.

Taken meets The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and The Bourne Identity in this action-packed debut thriller (optioned for film by Jerry Bruckheimer) about a girl who must train as an assassin to deal with the gangsters who have kidnapped her father.

 

Categories
Riot Rundown

021217-TragicKindOfWonderful-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by A Tragic Kind Of Wonderful by Eric Lindstrom.

For Mel Hannigan, bipolar disorder makes life unpredictable. Her latest struggle is balancing her growing feelings in a new relationship with her instinct to conceal her diagnosis by keeping everyone at arm’s length. But when a former friend confronts Mel with the truth about the way their relationship ended, deeply buried secrets threaten to upend her shaky equilibrium.

As the walls of Mel’s compartmentalized world crumble, she fears that no one will accept her if they discover what she’s been hiding. But would her friends really abandon her if they learned the truth? More importantly, can Mel risk everything to find out?

Categories
The Goods 2

Book Mail 3 Reveal

It’s no secret that book mail is the best mail, and (obvi) books about books are the best, too. Our latest Book Mail box gives you a double dose of that bookalicious magic.

In this box, you’ll get two amazing books about the transporting power of reading, special exclusive content from one of the authors, a personal library kit, custom pencils (exclusive to Book Mail), and two rad pairs of literary socks. Snag one now!

Categories
Giveaways

Sci-Fi and Fantasy Giveaway

Another week, another Mailbag giveaway! This week we’re giving away a haul of ten sci-fi and fantasy novels (a combo of book mail and some BR faves) to promote our SFF newsletter, Swords and Spaceships! Written by our resident SFF expert Jenn Northington, Swords and Spaceships brings news and book recs (old and new) from the world of SFF to your inbox.

And in case you missed them, we have giveaways running for a Nook Glowlight Plus and Scratch: Writers, Money, and the Art of Making a Living.

To enter the sci-fi & fantasy giveaway, go here, or just click the image below:

Categories
Riot Rundown

020917-TheClairvoyants-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Henry Holt and Co., publisher of The Clairvoyants by Karen Brown.

The Clairvoyants is a modern gothic ghost tale filled with psychological thrills that follows the life of an unusual young woman. Ever since she was a child, Martha May could see ghost around her family home on the sea. Now a young woman, she desperately hopes to escape her past by fleeing inland to a small college town. Martha is swept up in a new life—young love, distance from a dysfunctional family, and unobservant of news of a disappeared woman. Until the missing woman appears outside of Martha’s apartment, in a down coat, her hair coated with ice.

Categories
The Stack

020917-ItsAllFine-The-Stack

Today’s The Stack is sponsored by It’s All Absolutely Fine by Ruby Elliot.

It’s All Absolutely Fine is for anyone who struggles with not feeling absolutely fine. Tackling the not-so-simple subjects of depression, anxiety, and body image, Ruby’s unique, humorous, and brutally honest voice and eccentric illustrations will remind readers that they’re not alone—and that it’s okay to struggle and to talk about struggling.

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks!: February 9, 2017

This week’s Audiobooks! Newsletter is sponsored by Playster.

Playster is the world’s first all-in-one entertainment service. It takes care of everything — ebooks, audiobooks, music, movies, TV shows and games — and gives you unlimited access to millions of titles for one flat monthly fee. That’s right! Playster lets you enjoy unlimited audiobooks and ebooks — no restrictions, no credit systems.

The service is accessible through all web browsers, and Playster’s Android and iOS apps, on virtually any device. What’s more, the offline mode lets you save all of your favorites for on-the-go reading when there’s no Internet access around. Sign up today to get your free 30 day trial!


Hi fellow listeners, the Audie Award finalists were announced late Wednesday to honor the best audiobooks of the year, and I have some first impressions to share with you!

I’m amped that The Underground Railroad and Another Brooklyn have each received TWO nominations, both for Literary Fiction/Classics and Best Female Narrator. And I’m excited to see several more of Book Riot’s favorite listens, too, like You Can’t Touch My Hair, Around the Way Girl, Shrill, Sleeping Giants, IQ, and Homegoing.

Filed under “surprise,” Born a Crime and Behold the Dreamers didn’t get any nods. Born a Crime likely came out too late in the year, but Prentice Onayemi’s performance on Behold the Dreamers is a Book Riot favorite. I also did a double take at the category for Shrill… the humorous feminist essay collection is a finalist for Business/Personal Development??

On the inclusivity front, the Audies did really well in some categories but is still very uneven in others. We like the inclusivity we see in Literary Fiction/Classics and Humor, but too many categories are still 100% white and male (or 100% white and female). See the full list of finalists here.

Finally, You Can Listen To The Full Little House on the Prairie Series

Fans of Laura, Pa, Ma, Mary, Carrie, and Jack: all nine books of the Little House series by Laura Ingalls Wilder are now available on Audible, read by the fantastic Cherry Jones! We’ll always have a soft spot for these books told from Laura’s point of view about her pioneer family’s life in a little log cabin on the edge of the Big Woods in the late 1800s. I might not fall asleep to the sound of Pa’s fiddle at night, but I wouldn’t mind drifting off to Cherry Jones reading these familiar stories <3

John Cleese’s New Audiobook: “I Think It’s the Best Thing I’ve Ever Done”

Calling all Monty Python and Fawlty Towers fans! When he finished writing his memoir So, Anyway…, John Cleese felt creatively drained, and that wasn’t the mental place he wanted to be in while recording the audiobook. So he gave himself permission to wait until he was recharged and ready to do it properly. The payoff? “I think it’s the best thing I’ve ever done,” he told Book Riot’s Swapna Krishna.

Read on for John Cleese’s thoughts on comedy, self care for creatives, and why So, Anyway… is even better on audio! (Hint: he miiight have rewritten it a little bit as he went along.)

These Audiobooks are Up for Grammys

The Grammy Awards are this Sunday, and books by Amy Schumer, Carol Burnett, Patti Smith, Elvis Costello, and John Doe are all up for Best Spoken Word Album. You can listen to excerpts from all five titles at EW (if you’re not blinded by all that whiteness).

Smalls out! Thanks for nerding out about audiobooks with me. If you want to stay in touch and swap audiobook recommendations before the next Audiobooks! Newsletter, you can find me on Twitter at Rach_Smalls or on Instagram at Ladybits Knits.

High five,
Rachel

Categories
Giveaways

Win a CHRONICLES OF NARNIA Prize Pack!

This giveaway is sponsored by HarperAudio, publisher of The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis.

Take The Voyage of the Dawn Treader audio tour! Journey through an interactive map of audio excerpts from Lucy, Edmund, Eustace and Caspian’s trip to the eastern end of the world in C. S. Lewis’ The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, then enter for a chance to win the ultimate Chronicles of Narnia prize pack! PLUS, take advantage of a limited time offer to buy the digital audio edition of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader for $4.99 (70% off retail)!

This Prize Pack includes:

  • Audiobook CD and hardcover editions of The Complete Chronicles of Narnia Box Set
  • Skullcandy Headphones
  • Travel Journal

Visit the site for details and official rules.

Go here to enter the giveaway, or just click on the cover image below:

Categories
What's Up in YA

021317 Sporty Girls in YA Fiction

Hey YA Lovers!

This week’s “What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by The Clairvoyants by Karen Brown. 

The Clairvoyants is a modern gothic ghost tale filled with psychological thrills that follows the life of an unusual young woman. Ever since she was a child, Martha May could see ghost around her family home on the sea. Now a young woman, she desperately hopes to escape her past by fleeing inland to a small college town. Martha is swept up in a new life—young love, distance from a dysfunctional family, and unobservant of news of a disappeared woman. Until the missing woman appears outside of Martha’s apartment, in a down coat, her hair coated with ice.

____________________

This week’s newsletter is inspired by a wonderful piece recently published at Teen Vogue, the best source of news around (do not read that with sarcasm). The opening of the article:

More than 3.3 million girls played high school sports last year, according to the National Federation of State High School Sports Associations, and Willa Smith, an 18-year-old swimmer from Austin, Texas, is one of them. So if there are so many girls playing sports, and we know that representation is so important and valuable, why aren’t there more YA books about athletic girls?”

The piece goes on to talk with a number of publishing industry folks, including editors and writers, about why there isn’t more representation of girls in sports. It’s excellent, well-written, and thought-provoking.

In honor of that piece, and in honor of talking about the importance of seeing girls involved in sports in YA fiction, I thought it’d be worth pulling together a pile of recent (the last 2-3 years) and forthcoming titles featuring girls who are athletic. Some of these were mentioned in the original article, and they range from girls who run to girls who race horses to girls who love a great game of foot/base/basket ball and more.

This isn’t comprehensive, nor is it meant to disprove the article. It’s simply meant to add some more titles onto the still-too-small list of girls who sport. Worth noting: something that will be immediately obvious to those scanning through these titles is that there are even fewer girls of color represented in sports. I’ve marked those with an * in cases where I feel confident doing so, either via description or having read the book, as a means of highlighting the paucity of those titles. I’ve also stuck to fiction, but it’s worth pointing out that those YA nonfiction titles featuring athletes — the Simone Biles memoir, the Michaela DePrince memoir, and others — have sold well and are well-loved by readers looking up to those sporty girls.

Descriptions from Goodreads.

The Art of Lainey by Paula Stokes

Soccer star Lainey Mitchell is gearing up to spend an epic summer with her amazing boyfriend, Jason, when he suddenly breaks up with her—no reasons, no warning, and in public no less! Lainey is more than crushed, but with help from her friend Bianca, she resolves to do whatever it takes to get Jason back.

And that’s when the girls stumble across a copy of The Art of War. With just one glance, they’re sure they can use the book to lure Jason back into Lainey’s arms. So Lainey channels her inner warlord, recruiting spies to gather intel and persuading her coworker Micah to pose as her new boyfriend to make Jason jealous. After a few “dates”, it looks like her plan is going to work! But now her relationship with Micah is starting to feel like more than just a game.

What’s a girl to do when what she wants is totally different from what she needs? How do you figure out the person you’re meant to be with if you’re still figuring out the person you’re meant to be?

 

Ask Me How I Got Here by Christine Heppermann

Addie has always known what she was running toward. In cross-country, in life, in love. Until she and her boyfriend—her sensitive, good-guy boyfriend—are careless one night and she ends up pregnant. Addie makes the difficult choice to have an abortion. And after that—even though she knows it was the right decision for her—nothing is the same anymore. She doesn’t want anyone besides her parents and her boyfriend to know what happened; she doesn’t want to run cross-country; she can’t bring herself to be excited about anything. Until she reconnects with Juliana, a former teammate who’s going through her own dark places.

 

Being Sloane Jacobs by Lauren Morrill

Meet Sloane Emily Jacobs: a seriously stressed-out figure-skater from Washington, D.C., who choked during junior nationals and isn’t sure she’s ready for a comeback. What she does know is that she’d give anything to escape the mass of misery that is her life.

Now meet Sloane Devon Jacobs, a spunky ice hockey player from Philly who’s been suspended from her team for too many aggressive hip checks. Her punishment? Hockey camp, now, when she’s playing the worst she’s ever played. If she messes up? Her life will be over.

When the two Sloanes meet by chance in Montreal and decide to trade places for the summer, each girl thinks she’s the lucky one: no strangers to judge or laugh at Sloane Emily, no scouts expecting Sloane Devon to be a hero. But it didn’t occur to Sloane E. that while avoiding sequins and axels she might meet a hockey hottie—and Sloane D. never expected to run into a familiar (and very good-looking) face from home. It’s not long before the Sloanes discover that convincing people you’re someone else might be more difficult than being yourself.

 

The Boy Next Door by Katie Van Ark

Maddy Spier has been in love with the boy next door forever. As his figure skating partner she spends time in his arms every day. But she’s also seen his arms around other girls—lots of other girls.

Gabe can’t imagine skating with anyone but Maddy, and together they have a real chance at winning some serious gold medals. So, he’s determined to keep thinking of her like a sister. After all, he’s never had a romantic relationship that lasted for more than two weeks.

But when their coach assigns a new romantic skating program, everything changes. Will this be the big break that Maddy’s been hoping for or the big breakup that Gabe has always feared?

 

Coming Up for Air by Miranda Kenneally (July 1; all of her books fit here!)

Swim. Eat. Shower. School. Snack. Swim. Swim. Swim. Dinner. Homework. Bed. Repeat.

All of Maggie’s focus and free time is spent swimming. She’s not only striving to earn scholarships—she’s training to qualify for the Olympics. It helps that her best friend, Levi, is also on the team and cheers her on. But Levi’s already earned an Olympic try out, so she feels even more pressure to succeed. And it’s not until Maggie’s away on a college visit that she realizes how much of the “typical” high school experience she’s missed by being in the pool.

Not one to shy away from a challenge, Maggie decides to squeeze the most out of her senior year. First up? Making out with a guy. And Levi could be the perfect candidate. After all, they already spend a lot of time together. But as Maggie slowly starts to uncover new feelings for Levi, how much is she willing to lose to win?

 

Defender by Graham McNamee

They call her Tiny, but Tyne Greer is six foot six, a high school basketball star who is hoping the game will be her ticket out of the slum. She lives in a run-down building called The Zoo, where her father is the superintendent. One day she discovers a crack in the wall of an abandoned basement room. And sealed up in the wall is a girl’s body. Horrified, she runs to get her dad. But after he goes to take a look, he comes back and tells Tyne that nothing’s there. No girl. No body. He tells her she must be seeing things in the dark.

Tyne is sure it was real, though, and when she finds evidence that the body was moved from the hole in the wall, she knows the only one who could have done it is her father. But why? What is he hiding?

Tyne’s search for answers uncovers a conspiracy of secrets and lies in her family. The closer she gets to the truth, the more dangerous it becomes for her. Because some will do anything to bury the past…and keep her silent.

 

Exit, Pursued By A Bear by EK Johnston

Hermione Winters is captain of her cheerleading team, and in tiny Palermo Heights, this doesn’t mean what you think it means. At PHHS, the cheerleaders don’t cheer for the sports teams; they are the sports team—the pride and joy of a tiny town. The team’s summer training camp is Hermione’s last and marks the beginning of the end of…she’s not sure what. She does know this season could make her a legend. But during a camp party, someone slips something in her drink. And it all goes black.

In every class, there’s a star cheerleader and a pariah pregnant girl. They’re never supposed to be the same person. Hermione struggles to regain the control she’s always had and faces a wrenching decision about how to move on. The assault wasn’t the beginning of Hermione Winter’s story and she’s not going to let it be the end. She won’t be anyone’s cautionary tale.

 

*The Heartbeats of Wing Jones by Katherine Webber (March 14)

Wing Jones, like everyone else in her town, has worshipped her older brother, Marcus, for as long as she can remember. Good-looking, popular, and the star of the football team, Marcus is everything his sister is not.

Until the night everything changes when Marcus, drunk at the wheel after a party, kills two people and barely survives himself. With Marcus now in a coma, Wing is crushed, confused, and angry. She is tormented at school for Marcus’s mistake, haunted at home by her mother and grandmothers’ grief. In addition to all this, Wing is scared that the bank is going to repossess her home because her family can’t afford Marcus’s mounting medical bills.

Every night, unable to sleep, Wing finds herself sneaking out to go to the school’s empty track. When Aaron, Marcus’s best friend, sees her running one night, he recognizes that her speed, skill, and agility could get her spot on the track team. And better still, an opportunity at a coveted sponsorship from a major athletic gear company. Wing can’t pass up the opportunity to train with her longtime crush and to help her struggling family, but can she handle being thrust out of Marcus’s shadow and into the spotlight?

 

Lessons in Falling by Diana Gallagher

When Savannah Gregory blows out her knee –and her shot at a gymnastics scholarship – she decides she’s done with the sport forever. Without gymnastics, she has more time for her best friend, Cassie. She’s content to let her fun, impulsive best friend plan a memorable senior year.

That is, until Cassie tries to kill herself.

Savannah wants to understand what happened, but Cassie refuses to talk about it and for the first time, Savannah has to find her own way. The only person she can turn to is Marcos, the boy who saved Cassie’s life. Being with him makes her see who she could be and what she really wants: gymnastics.

But Cassie doesn’t approve of Marcos or of Savannah going back to gymnastics, and the tighter she tries to hold onto Savannah, the farther it pulls them apart. Without Cassie to call the shots, Savannah discovers how capable she is on her own—and that maybe her best friend’s been holding her back all along.

 

A Matter of Heart by Amy Fellner Dominy

Readers will happily sink into this emotionally grounded, contemporary young adult novel about the sudden end of one girl’s Olympic swimming dreams and the struggles she endures before realizing there are many things that define who we are.

Sixteen-year-old Abby Lipman is on track to win the state swim championships and qualify for the Olympic trials when a fainting incident at a swim meet leads to the diagnosis of a deadly heart condition. Now Abby is forced to discover who she is without the one thing that’s defined her entire life.

 

On The Road to Find Out by Rachel Toor

On New Year’s Day, Alice Davis goes for a run. Her first ever. It’s painful and embarrassing, but so was getting denied by the only college she cares about. Alice knows she has to stop sitting around and complaining to her best friend, Jenni, and her pet rat, Walter, about what a loser she is. But what doesn’t know is that by taking those first steps out the door, she is setting off down a road filled with new challenges—including vicious side stitches, chafing in unmentionable places, and race-paced first love—and strengthening herself to endure when the going suddenly gets tougher than she ever imagined.

 

The One Thing by Marci Lyn Curtis

Maggie Sanders might be blind, but she won’t invite anyone to her pity party. Ever since losing her sight six months ago, Maggie’s rebellious streak has taken on a life of its own, culminating with an elaborate school prank. Maggie called it genius. The judge called it illegal.

Now Maggie has a probation officer. But she isn’t interested in rehabilitation, not when she’s still mourning the loss of her professional-soccer dreams, and furious at her so-called friends, who lost interest in her as soon as she could no longer lead the team to victory.

Then Maggie’s whole world is turned upside down. Somehow, incredibly, she can see again. But only one person: Ben, a precocious ten-year-old unlike anyone she’s ever met.Ben’s life isn’t easy, but he doesn’t see limits, only possibilities. After awhile, Maggie starts to realize that losing her sight doesn’t have to mean losing everything she dreamed of. Even if what she’s currently dreaming of is Mason Milton, the infuriatingly attractive lead singer of Maggie’s new favorite band, who just happens to be Ben’s brother.

But when she learns the real reason she can see Ben, Maggie must find the courage to face a once-unimaginable future… before she loses everything she has grown to love.

 

Other Broken Things by Christa Desir (not mentioned in the description, but this one features boxing)

Nat’s not an alcoholic. She doesn’t have a problem. Everybody parties, everybody does stupid things, like get in their car when they can barely see. Still, with six months of court-ordered AA meetings required, her days of vodka-filled water bottles are over.

Unfortunately her old friends want the party girl or nothing. Even her up-for-anything ex seems more interested in rehashing the past than actually helping Nat.

But then a recovering alcoholic named Joe inserts himself into Nat’s life and things start looking up. Joe is funny, smart, and calls her out in a way no one ever has.

He’s also older. A lot older.

Nat’s connection to Joe is overwhelming but so are her attempts to fit back into her old world, all while battling the constant urge to crack a bottle and blur that one thing she’s been desperate to forget.

Now in order to make a different kind of life, Natalie must pull together her broken parts and learn to fight for herself.

 

*Pointe by Brandy Colbert

Theo is better now.

She’s eating again, dating guys who are almost appropriate, and well on her way to becoming an elite ballet dancer. But when her oldest friend, Donovan, returns home after spending four long years with his kidnapper, Theo starts reliving memories about his abduction—and his abductor.

Donovan isn’t talking about what happened, and even though Theo knows she didn’t do anything wrong, telling the truth would put everything she’s been living for at risk. But keeping quiet might be worse.

 

A Season of Daring Greatly by Ellen Emerson White (2/14)

Eighteen-year-old Jill Cafferty just made history. Her high school’s star pitcher, she is now the first woman drafted by a major league baseball team. Only days after her high school graduation, she’ll join the Pittsburgh Pirates’ Class A Short Season team . . . but not everyone is happy to have her there.

On top of the pressure heaped on every pitcher, Jill must deal with defying conventions and living up to impossible expectations, all while living away from home for the first time. She’ll go head-to-head against those who are determined to keep baseball an all-male sport. Despite the reassurance of coaches and managers alike, a few of her teammates are giving her trouble. The media presence following her at each game is inescapable. And to top it all off, Jill is struggling with the responsibilities of being a national hero and a role model for young women everywhere. How can she be a role model when she’s not even sure she made the right choice for herself? Didn’t baseball used to be fun?

 

*See No Color by Shannon Gibney

For as long as she can remember, sixteen-year-old Alex Kirtridge has known two things:

1. She has always been Little Kirtridge, a stellar baseball player, just like her father.

2. She’s adopted.

These facts have always been part of Alex’s life. Despite some teasing, being a biracial girl in a white family didn’t make much of a difference as long as she was a star on the diamond where her father—her baseball coach and a former pro player—counted on her. But now, things are changing: she meets Reggie, the first black guy who’s wanted to get to know her; she discovers the letters from her biological father that her adoptive parents have kept from her; and her body starts to grow into a woman’s, affecting her game.

Alex begins to question who she really is. She’s always dreamed of playing pro baseball just like her father, but can she really do it? Does she truly fit in with her white family? Who were her biological parents? What does it mean to be black? If she’s going to find answers, Alex has to come to terms with her adoption, her race, and the dreams she thought would always guide her.

 

The Sky Between You And Me by Catherine Alene

Lighter. Leaner. Faster.

Raesha will do whatever it takes to win Nationals. For her, competing isn’t just about the speed of her horse or the thrill of the win. It’s about honoring her mother’s memory and holding on to a dream they once shared.

Lighter. Leaner. Faster.

For an athlete. Every second counts. Raesha knows minus five on the scale will let her sit deeper in the saddle, make her horse lighter on her feet. And lighter, leaner, faster gives her the edge she needs over the new girl on the team, a girl who keeps flirting with Raesha’s boyfriend and making plans with her best friend.

So Raesha focuses on minus five. But if she isn’t careful, she will lose more than just the people she loves. She will lose herself to Lighter. Leaner. Faster.

 

*A Time to Dance by Padma Venkatraman

Veda, a classical dance prodigy in India, lives and breathes dance—so when an accident leaves her a below-knee amputee, her dreams are shattered. For a girl who’s grown used to receiving applause for her dance prowess and flexibility, adjusting to a prosthetic leg is painful and humbling. But Veda refuses to let her disability rob her of her dreams, and she starts all over again, taking beginner classes with the youngest dancers. Then Veda meets Govinda, a young man who approaches dance as a spiritual pursuit. As their relationship deepens, Veda reconnects with the world around her, and begins to discover who she is and what dance truly means to her.

 

Tumbling by Caela Carter (there is at least one girl of color in the story)

Five gymnasts. One goal.

Grace lives and breathes gymnastics—but no matter how hard she pushes herself, she can never be perfect enough.

Leigh, Grace’s best friend, has it all: a gymnastics career, a normal high-school life…and a secret that could ruin everything.

Camille wants to please her mom, wants to please her boyfriend, and most of all, wants to walk away.

Wilhelmina was denied her Olympic dream four years ago, and she won’t let anything stop her again. No matter what.

Monica is terrified. Nobody believes in her—and why should they?

By the end of the two days of the U.S. Olympic Gymnastics Trials, some of these girls will be stars. Some will be going home with nothing. And all will have their lives changed forever.

 

____________________

Something interesting worth noting and thinking about: while compiling this list, more than one of these books was described as being like Friday Night Lights. None of the books with that description were about football.

We have so few well-known comparisons to make wherein the stars are female athletes, and that’s just sad. Now to make shows like Pitch be the comp. . .

We’ll see you next week, YA fans. Until then, grab a great book and sink in.

 

 

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Serial Killers, Ghosts, & More Mystery/Thrillers

Do you ever reach a point where all the mystery you’ve been reading bleeds into real life? The other night I let the dog out and she charged out barking so I followed to see what had caught her attention and I found myself staring at a very large silhouette of a man holding an ax above his head. I’d just finished a novel about serial killers so I internally screamed “Serial killer! Run!” Then I realized it was my neighbor chopping his Christmas tree, I’m guessing for a bonfire. OR all my reading sounded my alarm bells and saved my dog and I because mystery books save lives.


Today’s newsletter is sponsored by The Cruelty by Scott Bergtsrom.

Taken meets The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and The Bourne Identity in this action-packed debut thriller (optioned for film by Jerry Bruckheimer) about a girl who must train as an assassin to deal with the gangsters who have kidnapped her father.

 


What serial killer book was I reading?

What You Don’t Know by JoAnn Chaney: This was chilling, brutal, exceptionally written, and it gave me nightmares–I loved every minute of it. (Let’s not think too hard on what that says about me.) Chaney has written flawed characters (as humans are) that are incredibly real and rather than pushing me to dislike them I found myself constantly wondering what I would do in their situation. The novel begins by alternating point of view between three of the main characters: a pair of detectives that could not be more different from each other; a journalist who has reached the point of I’ll-do-anything to get back my career; and the serial killer’s wife, trying to start a new life. As the story unfolds–if the serial killer is in prison who is committing the new murders?!–we get more points of view added taking us deep into these characters lives, fears, desires, struggles, and need.

Six Four by Hideo Yokoyama, Jonathan Lloyd-Davies (Translator): I picked this up because of the marketing that it had “a twist no reader could predict,”–and it did–but the novel was not what I was expecting. In an interview Yokoyama explained how he’s more “interested in the psychology and social dynamics of characters who happen to be affected by crime.” And that is what you get about 80% of the time as you follow Mikami, now working in press relations, as he’s struggling with the disappearance of his daughter, pushback from the media who are upset the police are holding back the name of a driver from an accident, and his digging into a fourteen-year-old unsolved kidnapping/murder known as Six Four. As a reader of a lot of U.S. police procedures I am accustomed to a book that would focus solely on this once-investigator obsessing over solving Six Four AND finding his daughter. Instead he’s wrapped up in all the politics happening in the department, dealing with his wife who isn’t leaving the house since their daughter’s disappearance, and trying to unravel a screw up during the Six Four investigation. It isn’t until about the 80% mark that it switches into a suspenseful thriller-ish novel and then BAM, you get the twist. Totally satisfying for me.

I’m intrigued:

Calvin and Hobbes meets Sin City” is all I had to hear. Now to patiently wait for the release of Spencer & Locke.

I had never heard of these studios or this YA book before but I have to say that title has me reeeeal interested: ‘The Dead Girls Detective Agency’ YA Novel Being Adapted As Digital Series.

Becoming Bonnie, a forthcoming historical novel–which also sold the rights to the sequel–about a young Bonnelyn Parker (from Bonnie & Clyde) sounds interesting.

Sarah Paulson will star in Amazon’s Lost Girls based on Robert Kolker’s book about the serial killer who found his victim’s using Craigslist.

When genres blend wonderfully:

The Possessions by Sara Flannery Murphy: I read a galley of this book a while ago and it’s still with me because there was this strange creepy factor throughout that I couldn’t look away from which had me constantly turning the page. Eurydice (Edie) works at the Elysian Society which basically means people come to speak to the dead through her. Not in a scam that she pretends to pass on messages kind of way. In a very real way that she takes a pill that allows the actual person who has passed on to inhabit her body temporarily and spend time with their loved one who has paid money for the service. During the service Edie has no idea what is happening, it’s kind of lights out for her (which is where my imagination kicked into gear and was creeped out). Edie is great at her job until Patrick comes to spend time with his deceased wife Sylvia and Edie becomes obsessed with Patrick and the mystery of Sylvia’s death…

You can read an adapted excerpt from Mrs. Sherlock Holmes: The True Story of New York City’s Greatest Female Detective and the 1917 Missing Girl Case that Captivated a Nation. (Whew, that’s a mouthful title!)

From Book Riot: Books for Fans of My Favorite Murder by Hannah Engler and with news of a possible Veronica Mars’ miniseries I plead for new books.

Have you been watching Riverdale? For me it’s a bit 90210 with a Twin Peaks vibe and some serious Archie angst. I really like it and am really enjoying the murder mystery part of it. I’m also here for Rioter Preeti Chhibber’s weekly podcast Riverdale: #HotArchie Edition.

I have to go shopping now:

Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries T-shirt

Nancy Drew wrapped pencils

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime feel free to come talk books with me on Litsy, you can find me under Jamie Canaves.