Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks!: October 20, 2016

This week’s Audiobooks! Newsletter is sponsored by TryAudiobooks.com/cooking.

ds9mr_9nnvka33d9utosu2rdt87yw1bqk4qmnpmj2wiwsjt85tdwjv9xj7j87ncyv_lftebo4mpc6ve1cr1dljly5iulnylk_9bxkclpmqn6mmneyzwmgc3stptk3ckigda8lfqvListen while you cook! While spending hours in the kitchen prepping meals for the holidays, put on a good audiobook and let the story help you along. Cooking for Picasso and The City Baker’s Guide to Country Living are great cooking memoirs or you can listen to Where Am I Now? read by Mara Wilson herself! Let audiobooks be your secret ingredient this holiday season. Visit TryAudiobooks.com/cooking for a free download and get started!


Dear audio-bookworms, please excuse me while I sweep the broken pieces of my heart up off the floor. I just finished the most amazing audiobook, and it was totally by accident. You know when you finish one audiobook but you haven’t queued up the next one yet? (Gasp, the horror.) Well, that just happened to me! I had no choice but to pray for an old forgotten audiobook on my phone.

I asked, and the universe answered.

BookOfUnknownAmericansThe Book of Unknown Americans by Cristina Henríquez has already gotten heaps of love and praise. But what we still need to talk about is how fantastic it is on audio. Performed by six actors, we meet a striking teenager whose family has left behind their comfortable life in Mexico in hopes of getting treatment for her traumatic brain injury in the US. Some of their new neighbors are great (like the boy from Panama who’s got a little crush), and some are… not great. Ultimately, their new life sets in motion a chain of events that is at turns beautiful, at turns tragic.

I especially loved the cool little vignettes between the main chapters that tell the stories of immigrants from all over the Americas. The narrators breathe so much texture into these stories, and the simple, beautiful language works perfectly on audio. Here’s hoping you’ve fallen in love with some great listens lately, too!

10 Amazing YA Books That Are Even Better on Audio

echoWhen it comes to taste in YA books, librarian extraordinaire Molly Wetta is just about flawless. While she didn’t always love audiobooks, she’s now a total convert. Don’t miss her list on Book Riot of all-time favorite YA audiobooks. Yep, these books are amazing in print, but she swears they’re even BETTER on audio!

Meet the Voice of Brit Bennett’s The Mothers

The Mothers by Brit Bennett is just about the hottest new release this fall. I think literally every Book Riot contributor is reading it right now — including me! Naturally, we were beyond honored to have guest contributor Robin Whitten, founding editor of AudioFile Magazine, chat with narrator Adenrele Ojo about what it was like to record The Mothers, the one author she’d especially love to voice, what her special recording session rituals are, and more!

Ron Swanson or Tom Sawyer: Who Said It?

I’ve already mentioned the joyful news that Nick Offerman is the voice of Tom Sawyer on a new audiobook. But why is this pairing so magical — is it the visual of his Parks and Rec character Ron Swanson whitewashing a fence in his big beautiful mustache? Fortunately, Book Riot contributor Deepali Agarwal was willing to roll up her sleeves and do some research. You know, for science.

Take a look at these pics of Ron Swanson and the quotes they’re paired up with, and see if you can tell who said it: Swanson or Sawyer?

Categories
Book Riot Live Letterhead

102016 BR Live Press Release

WALTER MOSLEY, MARA WILSON, KEN LIU, AND SARA FARIZAN TO BE FEATURED IN BOOK RIOT LIVE 2016 LINE-UP

Programming for the November 12 – 13 reader convention is available at BookRiotLive.com

(Brooklyn, NY) Book Riot Live, a reader-favorite convention celebrating books and the reading life, takes place on November 12 and 13 at Metropolitan West in New York City and will feature authors, publishing professionals, and other personalities who showcase the diversity of talent in the books and comics world.

Festivities will commence on Friday, November 11, 7:00pm at The Strand’s Rare Book Room where Diane McMartin, Certified Sommelier and author of THIS CALLS FOR A DRINK! will pair books with hand-selected wine.

Programming, which includes panels, games, and live podcast recordings, will begin on Saturday, November 12 at 9:30am and continue throughout Sunday, November 13. Walter Mosley and Mara Wilson, who have told stories on stages, screens, and the page, will be in conversation about their experiences, the pros and cons of different mediums, and more. Ken Liu will join other creators to discuss how they discovered their creative voice, and Sara Farizan will take on Mara Wilson and Mark Oshiro (returning champion) in Nerd Jeopardy.

“Book Riot Live is an event designed to bring together readers with their favorite — or soon-to-be-favorite — creators. There are so many artists and writers doing incredible work across so many genres, and this is our opportunity to bring them together under the same roof,” said Events Director Jenn Northington. “Book Riot Live is an extension of Book Riot’s commitment to inclusive coverage of books, reading, and comics; as always, our goal is to surprise and delight readers from all walks of life.”

The second Book Riot Live will repeat favorite features from last year including a bean bag chair-filled reading lounge, personalized reading recommendations by staff from the Brooklyn Public Library, and a live recording of the popular All the Books! podcast hosted by “well-readheads” Liberty Hardy and Rebecca Schinsky.

Book Riot Live 2016 will be held at Metropolitan West, 639 West 46th Street, New York, NY. Tickets may be purchased in advance at BookRiotLive.com or at the door. Tickets for the full weekend are $169, and single-day tickets are $89. Press passes are available upon request by emailing contact@bookriotlive.com

About Riot New Media Group, Inc:

Riot New Media Group, founded in 2011, creates communities dedicated to the idea that content around fandoms should be just as diverse as the fans are. So sometimes we are serious and sometimes we’re silly. Some of our contributors are pros. Many of them aren’t. We like a good list just as much as we like a good review, and we believe that there are smart, funny, and informative things to say about both. RNMG reaches 11MM monthly unique visitors through Book Riot, Book Riot Comics, and the Riot Ad Network.

Celebrating Books and the Reading Life: http://bookriotlive.com

Categories
Giveaways

Win a IF YOU GIVE A MOUSE A BROWNIE Prize Pack!

We have one prize pack for one lucky Riot reader, which includes:

If You Give a Mouse a Cookie;

If You Give a Mouse a Brownie;

a $50 Visa gift card to put towards building your little library

You’ve given a mouse a cookie, but what happens if you give a Mouse a brownie? Mouse is back in this delicious new story in the #1 New York Times bestselling If You Give series, which has sold over 14 million copies, from author and illustrator duo Laura Numeroff and Felicia Bond. This book is also the first one to feature Mouse in 14 years.  With its spare, rhythmic text and circular tale, If You Give a Mouse a Brownie is perfect for beginning readers and storytime.

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

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Categories
Book Riot Live

Book Riot Live October 19

Unbound Worlds is one of our presenting sponsors, and they want to give you books! If you love science fiction, fantasy, and genre-bending literature, do not miss this sweepstakes for a library of 23 science fiction and fantasy titles.


Rachel Fershleiser posing with a sign that says 24 Days Til Book Riot LiveLike moderator Rachel Fershleiser, we are head-over-heels excited that Book Riot Live is less than a month away! If you’re already registered, you should have received an email invite from Sched to set up your personalized con schedule and RSVP for limited-seating panels. (If it hasn’t turned up yet, hit reply and let us know.) If you haven’t gotten your tickets yet, there is still time! Get them for $20 off with code BOOKNERD.

Speaking of panels you’ll want to go to, here are a few more highlights from this year’s schedule:

Slash, Live
Sponsored by Swoon Reads
Slash returns! Love fanfiction, pop culture, and shipping? Join us for a live, no-holds barred game in which players compete to create the best romantic fan fiction pairing. Featuring Book Riot Comics contributor Jessica Plummer, writers Alyssa Cole and Zoraida Córdova, and Harlequin editor Michael Strother.

Rewriting History
Sponsored by Candlewick Press
How do you find a previously unknown story and bring it to light? How do you tell a known story in a new way? What can you make up and what has to be “true”? YA author Meg Medina, alt-history novelist Nisi Shawl, and historian-and-poet Patrick Phillips discuss these questions and more.

Farm to Table: How A Book Gets Made
Sponsored by Speaking American: How Y’all, Youse, and Your Guys Talk from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
How does a book get from submitted manuscript to your bookshelf? Not always the way you think! Find out more from publishing experts who work behind the scenes:

  • Self-publishing and small presses: author Ayize Jama-Everett
  • Book packaging: Sona Charaipotra, Cake Literary
  • Editor: Michael Reynolds, Europa Editions
  • Marketing: Kathryn Ratcliffe-Lee, Harper Perennial

Book Riot Live is sponsored by Bookwitty and Unbound Worlds

Categories
New Books

Monkey Musicals, Bear Hotels, and More New Books!

Happy Tuesday! It’s time for another round of “Make Your TBR Lists Explode.” The hits just keep on coming – there are so many great books out today! And on this week’s episode of the All the Books! Rebecca and I talked about some of the books coming out in the last half of 2016 that we are excited about, including IQ, His Bloody Project, and American Housewife.

study-in-scarlet-womenThis week’s newsletter is sponsored by A Study in Scarlet Women by Sherry Thomas.

Discover the new Sherlock Holmes inspired series from bestselling author Sherry Thomas.

While the inquisitive Charlotte Holmes has never accepted the demureness expected of women in London society, even she did not predict that she would become an outcast.

When the city is struck by a series of unexpected deaths, suspicion falls on her sister and father. Charlotte is determined to find the true culprits. She’ll have some help, but in the end, it’s up to Charlotte, a brilliant mind wrapped in a most feminine package, to challenge society’s expectations and solve the mystery under the assumed name Sherlock Holmes.

mister monkeyMister Monkey by Francine Prose

This is Prose at her wittiest and most playful yet. Mister Monkey is about, er, Mister Monkey, an off-Broadway children’s musical, and also a production where dreams go to die. Most of the people involved once had grand Broadway dreams but are now reduced to acting in a ridiculous musical for kids. Told in multiple viewpoints, Mister Monkey is a brilliant, bizarre, and biting look at dashed dreams and more. Two opposable thumbs up.

Backlist bump: Blue Angel by Francine Prose

hotel bruceHotel Bruce by Ryan T. Higgins

Bruce the Bear is back from his southern migration with his geese friends and ready to relax – but while he was away, three mice have turned his den into a hotel! What will Bruce do???? This is another delightfully charming installment in the Bruce series, and like the first book, full of great stuff for kids and grownups.

Backlist bump: Mother Bruce by Ryan T. Higgins

thrill meThrill Me: Essays on Fiction by Benjamin Percy

A collection of work by Percy is fabulous, but it’s extra-exciting when it’s published by the amazing Graywolf Press, purveyors of fantastic non-fiction. This is a wonderful collection, surrounding things to do with fiction. The title essay is a challenge to the notion that literary and genre fiction are somehow mutually exclusive, and the whole books is full of Percy’s advice, wit, and wisdom on the craft of writing. GOOD STUFF.

Backlist bump: Refresh, Refresh: Stories by Benjamin Percy
the unreal and the realthe found and the lostThe Unreal and the Real: The Selected Short Stories / The Found and the Lost: The Collected Novellas by Ursula K. Le Guin

O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay! Two GIANT editions of work by living legend Ursula K. Le Guin. If you’ve never read her before, these are a great place to start, and if you’re a big fan, then WOOHOO! A whole kittenton of her collected work.

Backlist bump: Read everything she has written, obviously, but also check out this wonderful new profile of Le Guin in the New Yorker.

heart and brainHeart and Brain: Gut Instincts by The Awkward Yeti

Oh, how I love this web comic! And the collection includes even more great stuff. Heart and Brain are kind of like the Pinky and the Brain of the body: Heart is the playful, silly one and Brain is the rational worrier. Together, they star in funny, yet poignant, comics about every day life. It’s a great escape, especially if something big and worrisome has been stressing you out. (Like, say, 2016?)

Backlist bump: Heart and Brain: An Awkward Yeti Collection

YAY, BOOKS! That’s it for me today – time to get back to reading! If you want to learn more about books (and see lots of pictures of my cats, Millay and Steinbeck), or tell me about books you’re reading, you can find me on Twitter at MissLiberty, on Instagram at FranzenComesAlive, or Litsy under ‘Liberty’!

Stay rad!

Liberty

Categories
The Goods

YA Book Mail is Here!

The new YA Book Mail box launched yesterday, and it’s going fast! Get yours while supplies last.

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Looking for adult fiction? The September Book Mail box was magical, and we have some extras still available! Peep the #bookmailbox hashtag on social or check out this unboxing video for a look at the contents.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords & Spaceships October 21

Welcome back, nerd-friends and fellow geeks, to our second installment of Swords and Spaceships!

This week’s newsletter is sponsored by The Tourist by Robert Dickinson.

The Tourist by Robert Dickinson

“A seductively intriguing work of speculative fiction.”―Kirkus

It was supposed to be an ordinary tour of the 21st century. A bus would take them to the mall. They’d have an hour or so to look around. Perhaps try the food.

A traffic accident on the way back to the resort provided some additional interest – but the tour rep had no reason to expect any trouble.

Until he noticed one of his party was missing. Which, according to the records from the future, is impossible.

She is the Tourist, and her disappearance could change the past and the future forever.

Let’s start off with some linky goodness.

If you live in San Francisco, you can train to be a Jedi Knight. This looks a little hardcore for my taste (ForceFit? CrossSaber?), but competitive lightsabering probably sounds great to at least some of you.

Remember how much I love Ted Chiang? You can read a short story of his for free at Electric Literature! If you ever wondered what parrots thought about humanity’s obsession with extraterrestrial life, wonder no more.

Our President and Nerd-in-Chief Barack Obama has some thoughts about AI in this excellent interview with MIT’s Joi Ito. I had not previously considered the moral dilemmas involved in programming self-driving cars, or the ways in which cybersecurity is like epidemic prevention. It’s a long read, but a good one.

Kim Stanley Robinson has some words for Elon Musk and the rest of us about Mars colonization (plus a zinger on sustainability).

Carmilla is getting a movie! Even though I have never actually watched this modern lesbian vampire love story, I have seen enough GIFs as a Tumblr user that I am already fond of it, and now I’ve got a reason to finally sit down and catch up. Let’s all watch together, shall we?

Here are this week’s books I strongly (SO STRONGLY) encourage you to add to your TBR pile:

Infomocracy by Malka Older
Infomocracy by Malka OlderThis is the election-year book you didn’t know you wanted, and I need you all to read it so that we can talk about Democracy In The Future! After finishing it, I felt a little bit better about the garbage fire that is this election season, although I couldn’t tell you exactly why. Perhaps it’s the way that Older is so thoughtful about the issue of democracy itself, and the different ways her characters relate to it. Perhaps it was the high-wire fight sequences (actual wires occasionally involved! Plus much stabbing) balanced with Very Important data-crunching (we’re talking world-saving data crunching here). Perhaps it was the characters themselves, who range from campaign staff to covert agents to punk dissenters to combinations-thereof. Probably it was all of these things, and the brio that marks Older’s writing. If you can’t stop thinking about politics but need a new way to think about them, pick this up ASAP.

Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho
Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen ChoI would recommend (and have been recommending) this to you regardless, but it is our very first #RiotRead book club pick! Find out exactly what that means right here. As to why you should read it, I have so many reasons. It’s a more diverse, more light-hearted (and way less footnoted) comp to Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, if English Magic is your bag; if you love Historical Ladies Doing It For Themselves, it has that and then some; if you have always wanted a magical familiar, you will be delighted with this new take on the theme. And if you really, really, really need something delightful and distracting, I cannot recommend a better fantasy novel. The only caveat I have, so that you can’t say I didn’t warn you, is that it’s the first in a series and the new book isn’t out until July of 2017. WOE. Read it anyway.

Categories
Giveaways

Win 10 New Mystery/Thriller Titles!

Fans of thrills and whodunits (and combinations thereof), this one’s for you: introducing our new, biweekly newsletter for all things mystery and thriller, Unusual Suspects! You’ll be getting news and goings-on from the bookish mystery/thriller world, along with rad book recommendations for reads both new and old. The first installment will hit your inbox in November, and to celebrate, we’re giving away these 10 new mystery/thriller releases to one lucky Riot reader.

We’ve got the tie-in edition of The Girl on the Train, Ausma Zehanat Khan’s latest, and more! Enter to win by going here, or just click the image below:

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Categories
This Week In Books

Bob Dylan Wins Nobel Prize in Literature: This Week in Books

Bob Dylan Wins Nobel Prize in Literature

Many people were surprised at the news this week that Bob Dylan had won the 2016 Nobel Prize in Literature. Rumors, though, that Dylan could win the prize have been circulating for years, and 20 years ago, Allen Ginsberg himself wrote to the Nobel committee nominating Dylan. Dylan is the first American to win the award since Toni Morrison in 1993, and it will likely be some time before another American wins.

For my part, I think Dylan is absolutely deserving of the Nobel, but I wish someone else would have won. The Nobel exists to recognize outstanding achievement in literature and has unparalleled power to introduce underknown writers to the world. There is probably no Nobel literature winner who was and is better known than Bob Dylan. Even if the Nobel committee was interested in expanding the range of what can be considered literature, surely there are myriad singer-songwriters from countries around the world they could have chosen.

I will close, though, with my favorite “literary” Dylan song, “A Hard Rains A-Gonna Fall,” a Woody Guthrie/Allen Ginsberg mash-up that manages to become its own aesthetic.

HarperCollins UK Launches a Site Dedicated to Literary Events

Literary events range from tiny book groups in local libraries to enormous, multi-day literary festivals. And even in a medium-sized city, it is very difficult to keep track of what is going on at bookstores, college campuses, libraries, arts centers, and on and on.

BookGig, from the UK division of HarperCollins, is trying to solve that problem for readers, though just for UK literary events for now. The site is meant to be publisher agnostic, so that events from all kinds and sizes of publishers will be included (smart) and submitting an event for inclusion is open to all (tricky). The underlying premise of BookGig seems to be that more people would go to literary events if they had better information. This is possible. It is also possible that people make the effort to find out about the events, authors, and venues they care about despite the difficulty, and that more information won’t necessarily lead to more attendance. We shall see.

Random House Experiments with Short-form, Direct to Readers

Publishing has started dipping its collective toe in the direct-to-reader world, from branded ereading apps, to ebooks deals newsletters, to exclusive deals on publisher websites.

Season of Stories, from Penguin Random House, is a twist on these experiments: free, email stories from PRH authors, including Anthony Marra, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, and Adam Johnson. Through the fall and winter, subscribers will get a complete story emailed to them weekly.

What does PRH want from this? Could be exposure for its authors. Could be finding out if there is appetite for direct, short-form content. Could be email acquisition for other projects. It seems like a low-cost, innovative effort with a definite beginning and end. So, it clears several of the requirements for a useful experiment.


Before you go, check out this pretty great giveaway we are running. We’ve got 5 advanced, signed copies of George Saunders’ upcoming novel, Lincoln in the Bardo to give away. And not just that: winners will also receive the complete Saunders backlist. So go here to enter if that is interesting to you, or just click the image below.

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Categories
Riot Rundown

101616-Macmillan-Nemesis-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Nemesis by Anna Banks.

nemesis_200wPrincess Sepora is the last Forger in all the five kingdoms. The spectorium she creates provides energy for all, but her father has found a way to weaponize it, forcing her to flee his grasp. Sepora is captured in the kingdom of Theoria and placed in the young king’s servitude.

Tarik has just taken over rulership of Theoria, and is facing a new plague sweeping through his kingdom and killing his citizens. When the two Sepora and Tarik finally meet face to face, they form an unlikely bond. Her gift may be able save his kingdom.But should she risk exposing herself and her growing feelings for her nemesis?