Categories
Giveaways

Win ROUGH & TUMBLE

Steamy, wicked, wild, and sweet–stumbling upon that just-right romance novel will leave you desperate to prolong the pleasure. But if luck is with you, the book that has you head over heels will not be a standalone. Share your favorite romance series, and be entered to win a copy of Rough & Tumble by Rhenna Morgan!

Here’s what it’s all about:

A self-made man with his fingers in a variety of successful businesses, Jace Kennedy lives for the challenge and he always gets what he wants. From the start, he sees Vivienne Moore’s hidden wild side and knows she’s his perfect match, if only he can break it free. He can walk society’s walk and talk society’s talk, but when he wants something, he finds a way to get it. He’s proud of who he is and where he came from, and he’ll be damned if he lets Vivienne go before showing her the safest place of all is in the arms of a dangerous man.

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

Categories
The Stack

022317-HiLo-TheStack

Blast off with HiLo in Judd Winnick’s New York Times bestselling graphic novel series!

HiLo doesn’t know where he came from or what he’s doing on Earth. (Or why going to school in only your underwear is a BAD idea!) . . . But with the help of new friends D.J. and Gina, he’s found his way into a whole lot of hilarious trouble.

Will be there be danger? YES? Will there be surprises? OF COURSE! Can Hilo survive a day at school? WE SURE HOPE SO!

Find out in Hilo Book 3: The Great Big Boom, on sale now!

Categories
Giveaways

Win THE LOST GIRL OF ASTOR STREET

We have 10 copies of The Lost Girl of Astor Street by Stephanie Morrill to give away to 10 Riot readers.

Here’s what it’s all about:

When her best friend vanishes without so much as a good-bye, Piper Sail takes on the role of amateur sleuth in an attempt to solve the mystery of Lydia’s disappearance. Given that Piper’s tendency has always been to butt heads with high-society’s expectations of her, it’s no surprise that she doesn’t give a second thought to searching for answers to Lydia’s abduction from their privileged neighborhood.

As Piper discovers that those answers might stem from the corruption strangling 1924 Chicago—and quite possibly lead back to the doors of her affluent neighborhood—she must decide if she’s willing to risk her life of privilege for the sake of the truth.

Interested? Then go here to enter, or just click the cover image below. Good luck!

Categories
What's Up in YA

A Journey Into The Book Riot YA Archives

Welcome back, YA Fans!

This week’s “What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by The Gilded Cage, Book One in the Dark Gifts series.

The world belongs to the Equals—aristocrats with magical gifts—and all commoners must serve them for ten years.

But behind the gates of England’s grandest estate lies a power that could break the world.

Our heroes are a brother and sister who are brought to serve Britain’s most powerful family. It’s upstairs-downstairs drama; beautiful and wicked aristocrats romancing rebellious commoners; and an epic of politics, passion, and revolution.

Not all are free. Not all are equal. Not all will be saved. 

Let’s try something a little different with this week’s newsletter. Rather than a round-up of links to YA news — there hasn’t been much since last week — and rather than a book list or discussion, I thought it might be interesting to take a dive into YA/Book Riot history. Since Book Riot has been going for over five years, we’ve amassed a lot of writing, and it’s fascinating to peek back each year and see not only what we were talking about here, but what the bigger, broader YA world was talking about or interested in at the time.

It’s interesting to see when YA coverage on Book Riot became a big part of what we do. In the early years, it was here and there. But as the YA world itself grew, so did our coverage and interest in books for young adults. I’ve gone through our archives and pulled out a collection of interesting, provocative, and otherwise amusing pieces that highlight YA lit…and some kid lit more broadly. For each year, I’ve pulled 3-5 posts that were among the most popular that month; this means in some cases, those posts might not have been published that particular month, but they had some good interest that month (I believe that was only the case a couple of times — most of the high interest centered around posts written February of that particular year).

2012

 

You may think I am joking, but Dahl has plenty of useful lessons for kids. For instance, he taught me early on that families are unhinged carnivals that dance alongside our lives – places where magical and terrible things can happen within the same heartbeat. There is more where that came from.

I am not sure how deeply engrained Dahl’s books are in the average childhood beyond the UK – the paltry showing in the US-based Parent & Child poll suggests they are not – so for your delectation, here are a few life lessons gleaned from Dahl’s books.

From A Roald Dahl Survival Guide for Kids

 

Those Degrassi Talks books were pretty amazing things. They were partnered with a television series with the same title (which I think I only ever saw in health classes) where the cast of Degrassi would talk about serious issues involving teenagers. They were important books not just because they could stand in for difficult conversations parents didn’t want to have with their kids, but more importantly they predicted the questions before I even knew what my questions were. I remember so clearly the copy of Degrassi Talks: Sex because it was comically, hilariously dog-eared and spine-cracked, but according to the card in the pocket it had never been checked out once. These books existed in the library to be surreptitiously consulted (and occasionally giggled over) as needed.

From Wheels, Degrassi, and Why Tough YA Books and Libraries Are So Important

 

Sometimes, when faced with difficult real life situations, I find myself wondering how my favourite young adult heroines would feel and act in a similar context. I mean, the fact is that lots of them don’t really have to deal with these sorts of problems very often, which got my brain a-clickin’. How would our heroines deal with banal, everyday things like an annoying coworker or a website that won’t align properly or a car alarm going off? Or, in the flowcharts that follow, how would they cope with having to pay the rent?

From What Would *Insert YA Heroine Here* Do?

2013

 

In the latest round of Riot Recommendation, we asked you to shout out the YA series (or series you read as a young adult) that had real staying power, the ones you still think about and re-read today. There were a TON of responses from all over the genre board. Here’s a collection of all your recommendations from Facebook, Twitter, and the comments.

From Young Adult Series You Still Think About Today: A Reading List

 

 

From New Posters for Catching Fire

 

I understand that Stephen Chbosky (author of the novel, writer/director of the film) needed to reinvent Charlie as a more active character in adapting the story for film, because we can’t have ninety minutes of straight voiceover where we’re trapped behind Charlie’s eyeballs. We need to see a character in film making bold choices for himself, otherwise we are on the floor of the movie theater sleeping on top of spilled soda and popcorn. Still, I wanted a slower build and more of an arc from wallflower to almost-normal kid rocking the dance floor. Whatever, I’ll go re-read the book. This will be my answer every time I have a problem with this film.

From Thoughts on “The Perks of Being A Wallflower” Adaptation

 

2014

 

The uncomfortable truth is this: At Bella’s age, I was a lot like her. A whole lot. The things about her that weren’t like me, I realize now, I envied when I read the series. That lightens my load a little bit, but putting it out there after the things I’ve said about Bella feels raw: Now the folks who have heard me say those things will know that, mostly, I was berating the traits I found annoying in myself at fifteen, sixteen, even twenty. Even thirty, sometimes.

It’s amazing how much capacity we have for change when we face the truth, though, and that can hurt when the truth about you is that you would have envied Bella Swan.

From An Apology to Bella Swan

 

I was working in a fairly well-known children’s bookstore in New York last summer, one that is especially known for its employee recommendations and vast knowledge of books. One afternoon, a well-heeled Upper West Side mom asked me for book suggestions for her 10-year old daughter. I immediately thought of Judy Blume, and at my suggestion of one of her titles, the mother looked at me with disdain, saying, “Don’t you think that’s a bit…dated?” I almost fainted on the spot. Blasphemy! Here are some classic children’s/YA books that will never carry that dreaded description.

From 10 Classic Children’s and YA Books That Will Never Be Dated

 

It’s black history month, and rather than offer up a straightforward book list of young adult titles that highlight aspects of black history in the United States, I wanted to do something different — and something that would be much more visually arresting.

I pooled together as many YA books that were historical fiction (meaning no magical/fantastical elements) and featured black main characters or stories. The pickings were so meager, I also looked at middle grade novels which could appeal to young adult readers. But even with those titles included, I hope that this time line is not only illuminating in terms of what is out there, but I hope it’s even more illuminated about what books are not out there.

From Black History in YA Fiction: A Time Line

 

  1. You make eye contact with a handsome stranger on the train. If he gets off at your stop, he is totes your future boyfriend. Duh.

From 20 Signs You’re Reading Too Much YA

 

2015

 

  1. A story about four female best friends growing up in the early 1970s, a la Now & Then

Now & Then is maybe my favorite movie. I watched it all the time growing up, and it’s still one I love to pop in. The opportunities to explore some of the themes and the time period it’s set in feel endless.

This is the story of four women who are reflecting back on the summer of 1970, when they were young teens in a small Indiana town. The girls go through many huge things in one summer, which makes it ripe for a YA novel since those life-changing summers are part and parcel of the teen experience. More, this time period of change in social culture feels like it has so much opportunity to dive in.

From YA Novels (Based On Movies) That Should Exist

 

Kody Keplinger wrote The DUFF (recently made into a movie starring Mae Whitman and Robbie Amell – it’s amazing and you should see it!) and her other YA books with a musical muse. She rearranges the songs to fit a specific emotion or scene in her books, and her playlists are posted on her website here.

From YA Novels With Soundtracks

 

Theory: there is something about YA and the letter K. Call it koincidence or konspiracy (I know, I know. I’ll show myself out), but even beyond the obvious example of Katniss Everdeen, some of the coolest, most interesting heroines in YA sci-fi/fantasy seem to have K names. In case you don’t already know them, allow me to introduce Kami, Karou, and Katsa: each awesome, each with her own YA universe.

From Awesome YA Heroines Whose Names Start With “K”

 

2016

 

It’s hard to put a number down for what average sales for a book are, since a lot of factors come into play: whether the book is by a new author, one who is seasoned, whether it’s of current interest, where it’s placed in the bookstores, and so forth. I’ve read average sales ranging from 500 copies to 10,000.

So what do best selling books look like? Imagine a book selling tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of copies.

Thanks to the magic of Wikipedia, there’s a nice breakdown of books throughout time and their recorded/reported sales numbers. This accounts for books across all countries, ages, and genres. Being my interest is in young adult novels, I thought it’d be interesting to break out the numbers for those books.

From The Best Selling YA Books of All Time

 

So what makes a book a good crossover? For me, it’s having a certain voice, a focus on a young main character, or themes and plot elements that are relatable across a broad spectrum of readers. For an adult book to have YA crossover, that can mean the stories are focused on teenagers or feature teenagers at the core and the writing is mature, thoughtful, and characters aren’t focused on achieving certain adult markers (marriage, children, and so forth). That doesn’t mean they aren’t doing adult things like leaving home or going to college or becoming involved in a serious relationship; it just means the way those things are included in the story feels like something YA readers would relate to or “get” in some capacity.

From 3 On A YA Theme: Adult Novels for YA Fans and Vice Versa

 

That MORE includes the Amelia Bloomer List, which is an annual list that honors “youth books with strong feminist themes” for ages birth to eighteen. The Amelia Bloomer Project started in 2002, and is—as you have probably already guessed—named for women’s rights advocate Amelia Bloomer.

This year’s list includes lots of books that I’ve already read and loved—volumes 1 and 2 of Lumberjanes (Friendship to the MAX!), Interstellar Cinderella (space mechanic!), Infandous (fairy tales and mythology and art and sex and mother-daughter relationships!), Kissing in America (love letter to female friendship in road trip form!), All the Rage (this decade’s Speak!), We Should All Be Feminists (so tiny! so necessary!), Audacity (fictional biography of social justice pioneer! in verse form!)—but as with any booklist, the titles that interest me even more are the ones I haven’t read yet.

 

From Inspiring Young Feminists: The Amelia Bloomer List

 

Here at Book Riot we’ve had a lot of questions come in about this very topic, especially among kids ages twelve to thirteen. Here is a list of recommended books with high interest plots (special thanks to Ms. Pryor and Ms. Millman, librarians extraordinaire, for their help in compiling this list!), plus some more tips for keeping your reluctant readers turning those pages throughout the summer.

From The Ultimate Guide To Books for Reluctant Readers Ages 12 to 13

 

____________________

And may you be so inspired to pick up and read or revisit a book published from years gone by in the next week or two!

We’ll see you next Monday with a really fun, inspiring interview to kick off Women’s History Month.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships Feb 24

Happy Friday, nerd-friends and geek-pals.

First things first:
– A correction is called for; despite it being on the cover image and everything, I had Lara Elena Donnelly’s name wrong last issue. Mea culpa!
– And a MUPPET ARMS! The Nebula has announced the 2016 nominees and I cannot stand how excited I am about the list for Novel. I have read all but Borderline (must get on that) and could not agree more with their nominations! I am trying to ration exclamation marks but it’s not working!?!

For today’s issue, I have a book listicle spectacular for you. Ready, set, TBR:

I have no real feelings about 50 Shades of Grey but I do love this post about eight sci-fi/fantasy books sexier than it.

Here is a list of Middle-Eastern inspired SF/F and while it’s light on authors actually from the Middle East, I extremely cosign their recommendation of Alif the Unseen. Before she was the pen behind Ms. Marvel, G. Willow Wilson wrote a killer tech-punk action novel, plus genies! It’s also one of the few books out there that plays equally with technology and fantasy.

Want some comics that scratch the fantasy itch? Christine has five recs for you. Points of interest: Mike Carey is the same writer as M.R. Carey (The Girl With All The Gifts) and Marjorie Liu is the author of the Hunter Kiss urban fantasy series as well as Monstress. Multi-tasking!

Japanese speculative fiction in translation! I’ve been a fan of Japanese noir for some time, but haven’t delved much into speculative fiction yet, so this is exciting. I have my eye on Mr. Turtle in particular, as the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles were very important in my formative years.

And finally, how about some color on the silver screen? Jessica has a wish-list of diverse fantasies she’d love to see adapted.

Speaking of things I’d love to be adapted…

Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee

ninefox gambit by yoon ha leeWow, you guys. SERIOUSLY WOW. This space opera belongs on your shelf next to the works of China Mieville, Iain M. Banks, and Cixin Liu. The sequel The Raven Stratagem comes out in June and I will be counting down the days. (Bonus: just listed for the Nebula Award for 2016 Novel!)

Captain Kel Cheris has kept her head down and worked her way quietly through the ranks, but a battle with heretics that goes sideways draws the attention of the higher-ups to her mathematical talent. Her skills get her assigned to a mission that is all risk and little reward, and which requires her to be pseudo-possessed by the centuries-old ghost of a brilliant and insane tactician. (And this is me simplifying the plot!)

Lee has built an empire in space in which the mechanics of calendars are all-important, heresy not only disrupts governance but changes the way the universe works, and everyone’s motives are inscrutable and suspect. The action sequences are intense, the plotting is top-notch, the conspiracies are shocking, and the characters are fantastic. Truly, I do not have superlatives enough to tell you how much I enjoyed Ninefox Gambit.

 

Uprooted by Naomi Novik

uprooted by naomi novikThis one made the rounds of favorites when it came out in 2015, but I recently ran into someone who hadn’t read it yet and it reminded me that some of you might need a push! Naomi Novik is best-known for the Temeraire series, which just recently came to an end (long live fussy dragons during the Napoleonic wars!), but this stand-alone novel is gorgeous.

Inspired by a Polish folktale, Uprooted follows a young woman named Agnieszka as, against all expectations, she is chosen by a wizard to be his … housekeeper? Kind of? In exchange for a village girl every ten years, the Dragon (title, not literal dragon) protects the village from the ravages of the very-angry forest on its borders. Agnieszka is not expecting to be taken since she’s neither the most beautiful nor graceful nor bravest nor, well, you get the idea. But what she has in spades is moxie, and is thus the perfect person to star in an epic adventure.

There are a bunch of twists and turns to this fairytale rewrite, which always makes me happy. Novik knows the tropes well and isn’t afraid to spin them around until they lead off in unexpected directions. Evil forest, terrifying wizard, plucky young heroine, royalty in peril: all are there, but none are what they seem. And while the ending is satisfying, I hope someday that I get to return to Agnieszka’s world. Maybe now that Novik is done with historical dragons, we’ll get a sequel?


This newsletter is sponsored by our giveaway.

We’re giving away a pair of Apple’s fancy new AirPods (which are an audiobook lover’s dream). Enter here for a chance to win, or just click the image below:

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks!: February 23, 2017

Howdy, audiobook friends. Pinch me, because I think I might be a ghost stuck in the bardo… I’m still recovering from talking to George Saunders about the making of his 166-voice celebrity studded audiobook, Lincoln in the Bardo (!!!). I loved this funny, spine-tingly listen more than I can say, and am so excited that George Saunders and executive producer Kelly Gildea kindly gave Book Riot this behind-the-scenes look at the making of this special audiobook. Enjoy!

Twin Peaks Fans: You Need This Audiobook

Hunker down with a slice of pie and a coffee percolator, because there’s a new Twin Peaks audiobook you need to check out. Book Riot contributor Leila Roy talks about why she needed — NEEDED! — The Secret History of Twin Peaks in both print AND audio, which has Twin Peaks stars Kyle MacLachlan, Russ Tamblyn, Michael Horse, and David Patrick Kelly on its roster of narrators. Read on for Twin Peaks-related swooning and heart eyes (plus a clip from the audiobook).

The Underground Railroad Is Available On Audio For Free

This is not a drill. Repeat, this is not a drill! For a limited time, you can listen to The Underground Railroad for free from BBC Radio’s website. Book Riot contributor Nicole Froio writes, “Colson Whitehead’s gut-wrenching, award-winning novel tells the story of Cora, a slave on a cotton plantation in Georgia, by mixing brutal depictions of suffering and oppression with a sci-fi-esque re-imagined and fully functioning underground railroad.”

This original audio production is different from the audiobook version US listeners might already know. Read by The Wire’s Clarke Peters, it’s been adapted for radio in 10 mini episodes that are streaming for free thru March 22. Get listening!

Six Weeks of Free Audiobooks from Penguin Random House

Here’s another cool freebie: Season of Stories is back, this time with a collection of short daily listens from exciting authors like Yaa Gyasi, Margaret Atwood, Jhumpa Lahiri, Adam Johnson, and more. The idea is to start each week with a new story, and follow along until that story ends on Friday. Six weeks, six free stories from Penguin Random House. I dig it.

That’s a wrap on audiobook goodies for the week. Thanks for hanging out to chat audiobooks! If you want to stay in touch and swap recommendations before the next Audiobooks! Newsletter, you can find me on Twitter at Rach_Smalls or on Instagram at LadybitsKnits.

High five,
Rachel

Categories
Unusual Suspects

The Argentinian Agatha Christie, & More Mystery/Thrillers

Whether you’re finding yourself buried under snow or in unseasonably warm weather I hope it’s with a good book in your hand! I for one am on a fantastic reading roll and am diving straight in this week because there are so many books to talk about!


Today’s newsletter is sponsored by Hades by Candice Fox.

On a dark night in a junkyard on the outskirts of Sydney, Australia, Hades Archer disposes of things other people either don’t want, or cannot face. Old machinery and dead bodies are dismembered with equally cool precision, until two children are delivered for disposal, still alive. Hades nurses them back to health and raises them as his own. They are twins, a boy and a girl, whom he names Eric and Eden.

Flash forward: the twins, now adults, are detectives in the Sydney Metro Police homicide squad, when a series of bodies turn up with vital organs missing. A serial killer is stealing organs from healthy people and selling them to the desperately ill. Eric and Eden team up with Frank Bennett, a tarnished detective fighting his own demons, as they track down a madman who lives for the kill…


A great series with rich and wonderful characters that expertly blends detective mystery with history and politics:

Among the Ruins (Rachel Getty & Esa Khattak #3) by Ausma Zehanat Khan: Getty and Khattak are back with a new mystery that they’re solving unofficially, and on different continents. Zahra Sobhani, a Canadian-Iranian filmmaker, is dead and Khattak is asked to look into her death while in Iran (on leave from Canada’s Community Policing dept.), which is unsafe for him and difficult since he can’t use his usual resources–except for Getty, back in Canada who he has helping him. I really liked the mystery (which turned out to not go in the direction I was expecting), the three points of view (Getty, Khattak, and a prisoner’s), and as always my favorite part of Khan’s series is the deep dive into politics and cultures.

I hope this is the beginning of a series:

August Snow by Stephen Mack Jones: An ex-marine, ex-cop–who won a gigantic wrongfully-dismissed lawsuit against the police department–returns to his childhood home in Mexicantown, Detroit and quickly finds himself wrapped up in a mystery. 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. Jones does a fantastic job of bringing Detroit to life like a character, including the racial harmony, tension, and racism. While much of the FBI, cybercrime, and shoot-’em-up scenes aren’t plausible they reminded me of my love for action movies, and I could see August Snow easily being a great television/film character.

Read an excerpt: Miss Kopp’s Midnight Confessions, Amy Stewart’s next release in the Kopp Sisters series.

Clare Mackintosh, I Let You Go, discusses I See You on Flavorwire’s ‘The Sweetest Debut.’

Awesome:

Winter of the Gods (Olympus Bound #2) by Jordanna Max Brodsky: Selene DiSilva is a goddess, living with a mortal man, in N.Y. when they’re asked to help with a murder investigation. But this isn’t what anyone at first suspects and soon DiSilva realizes that someone is hunting the gods… Let’s count all the things that make this book awesome: 1. Greek gods secretly living amongst mortals. 2. A kick-ass (literally and figuratively) goddess who is also hilarious. 3. A mystery. 4. Awesome fight scenes. 5. A modern, unique take on Greek mythology. 6. A human and goddess relationship…  I need book #3 NOW!

Argentinian Agatha Christie:

Death Going Down by Maria Angélica Bosco, Lucy Greaves (Translator): Bosco is known as the Argentinian Agatha Christie and that’s a hard title to live up to so I went into this excited, but also aware that I was most likely going to be disappointed. I was not! Bosco has written a great whodunnit that starts with a woman being found dead in the elevator of an apartment building in Buenos Aires–not everyone is buying the suicide angle and there’s a building filled with suspects and secrets! At 160 pages this is a satisfying quick-ish read. I for one am hoping for more of Bosco’s work to be translated, and if not I’ll just have to brush up on my Spanish.

Now in paperback:

Perfect Days by Raphael Montes (Annie Wilkes + Norman Bates had a terrifying book baby!)

The Ex by Alafair Burke (Did he or didn’t he?!)

The Widow by Fiona Barton (Unsettling, deep dive into how spouses stay after the other is accused of a horrible crime. Great on audio! Perfect for Dateline fans.)

The Lion’s Mouth (Hanne Wilhelmsen #4) by Anne Holt (Great mystery/political thriller that works as a standalone.)

Amy Dunne has a best friend:

Dead Letters by Caite Dolan-Leach, Jorjeana Marie (Narrator): Okay, so not really but I promise you one of the characters in this book and Amy Dunne would make the perfect friends–god help everyone else. Ava returns home to her family’s failing vineyard after her identical twin sister Zelda dies in a fire. But Ava is suddenly finding herself receiving messages from Zelda which send her on an elaborate game to unravel the mystery of where Zelda might really be… Think a fractured family is forced to reunite literary novel that is held together by a mystery and sprinkled with suspense.

Teaser trailer: The Sinner: USA upcoming adaptation of the same titled novel by Petra Hammesfahr starring Jessica Biel, Christopher Abbott, and Bill Pullman. This looks sooooo good!

I have to go shopping now:

Murder, She Wrote illustrated and handmade cushion

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.

Categories
The Goods

But First, Books launch

You wake up thinking about books and fall asleep thinking about books. You’re a Reader. Let the world in on your priorities with our new But First, Books tee, available in traditional crew-neck and a new women’s casual fit.

Categories
Letterhead

Find (Or Start) A Book Group Near You!

Ready, set, book club!

We’ve been hard at work figuring out how to make our Read Harder Book Groups more accessible and flexible since the demand for new groups far outstrips our ability to provide a contributor to host them, as some of you know first-hand. After a lot of thought and brainstorming, we’re turning over hosting and group logistics to YOU.

We’ve updated our site to provide resources for those who run (or want to start!) a group; you can also submit your group to be listed, if it’s open to the public. And we’ve launched In The Club, a book-group focused newsletter with resources and recommendations to keep your group well-met and well-read.

So here’s your step-by-step manual for joining the book group scene:

1. Download our Book Group in a Box guide.
2. Sign up for our In the Club newsletter.
3. Check the listings on the Book Group Resources page and join (or organize!) a group in your area.
4. READ ALL THE BOOKS.

Categories
Kissing Books

Making Lemonade and Giveaways: Kissing Books for February 23, 2017

Hey there, love lovers! How was your Valentine’s Day? I might have gone a little overboard with the half-priced dark chocolate, but I have no regrets. No regrets at all.

Have you seen Fifty Shades Darker yet? I still haven’t, but I have the feeling that one’s going to wait for Amazon Prime.


Todays newsletter is sponsored by Rough & Tumble by Rhenna Morgan.

A self-made man with his fingers in a variety of successful businesses, Jace Kennedy lives for the challenge and he always gets what he wants. From the start, he sees Vivienne Moore’s hidden wild side and knows she’s his perfect match, if only he can break it free. He can walk society’s walk and talk society’s talk, but when he wants something, he finds a way to get it. He’s proud of who he is and where he came from, and he’ll be damned if he lets Vivienne go before showing her the safest place of all is in the arms of a dangerous man.


And speaking of things to watch, CBS Sunday Morning aired a segment about romance novels and novelists, including Eloisa James and Beverly Jenkins. Did you see it? I missed the original airing, but huzzah for Youtube, right? It’s always nice to see the faces and hear the voices of people whose words we read all the time! (PS, did anyone else giggle when Beverly Jenkins mentioned turning lemons into lemonade? Lemons always makes me thing of the term as it’s related to fanfiction.) 

Do you read with your ears? The 2017 Audie Awards finalists were announced recently. I haven’t listened to romance in a while, but nearly everything on both the romance and erotica shortlists are on my to-read list. Maybe I’ll try listening again!

Over on Book Riot, there’s a giveaway going on! Share your favorite romance series for a chance to win Rough & Tumble by Rhenna Morgan from Carina Books. Oh hey, and there’s another one to win $250 to Amazon. That’s a lot of novels, peeps.

On Valentine’s Day, the editorial director of Carina Press joined us for a look forward, discussing romance trends in the coming year. It looks like we might be seeing more speculative fiction of all kinds on the shelves in the coming year. I’ve already started seeing fantasy romance more often, which has not been a thing for a while.

Need a little inspiration for your own steamy romance? Check out this list of 100 Sex Education Books.

Also, if you want to walk around with song bytes in your head all day, have a look at books with slow jam titles.

Finally, quick reviews!

An Unseen Attraction by KJ Charles

This is the first book in Charles’ new Sins of the Cities series, and boy does it set up a great series (I hope). Clem Talleyfer, an Anglo-Indian lodging house manager, is definitely more than fond of one of his lodgers, Rowley Green, a taxidermist who runs the shop across the street. Each man has his own problems: Rowley’s work leads his fellow lodgers to avoid him.  Clem thinks and processes a little differently than the average person, leading his lodgers to make attempts to undermine him. When people start to disappear and violence is committed upon both of them, they use their own strengths to keep themselves (and each other) alive, all while attempting to pursue a relationship without getting sent to jail. Not to mention, there’s a fog settling, and it feels a little different than the others. (Did I mention this whole series is going to take place during The Great Fog? No? Oh man.)

Read Harder Bonus: LGBTQ+ Romance!

The Perfect Play by Jaci Burton (Hey, I finally finished one of those football romances!)

Okay, this is an old one (it came out in 2011), but that means if you like it, you’ve got more than 15 Play by Play novels and novellas to read when you’re done. In this one, Mick Riley, star quarterback and all around beautiful man, runs into Tara Lincoln in the bowels of the stadium. He gives her directions and she’s gone. When he sees her again, it’s at the team’s end-of-season party, which she has planned. The two hit it off immediately, and have an awesome night together (and not just sexytimes, either), but she’s not interested in pursuing a relationship. Here’s where it could turn into a hard pass for some of you: he’s interested, and won’t say no until she agrees to go out with him. With a new business and a teenage son, she doesn’t think she has time for Mick, even when he’s not scared away by the fact that she had a kid at sixteen. They have a go at it anyway. And even with Mick’s agent trying to split them up every step of the way, and insecurities on both sides affecting their progress, they might actually become a family yet.

Read Harder Bonus: There’s a good amount of sportsballing in this book.

If the Dress Fits by Carla de Guzman

You might have seen this book in my list of fat heroines two weeks ago. I’m going to keep talking about this book.

Martha Aguas, accountant, fixer, and fantastic dresser, is pretty happy with her life. Sure, she has body issues, but doesn’t everyone? When she keeps running into Enzo, her first (her last, her everything), she is sure it’s fate sending her a sign. But everything comes crashing down when it turns out Enzo wants to marry her cousin Regina—who wants Martha to help her plan the wedding. To make matters worse, she has accidentally claimed that she has a boyfriend. Her extended family is delighted, and can’t wait to meet him. Unfortunately, they all think it’s Max, her BFF, an adorable bookish veterinarian who surprisingly…goes along with it? Sure, there are a few typos and there’s a factual error here and there, but I want to marry this book and kiss it every day, all the while correcting its grammar and fixing its seams.

Read Harder Bonus: Set in Manila with a Filipino narrator, this counts for the final RH challenge.

And as usual, here are some books to look out for that have come out recently or will be out soon:

Hot Licks, AM Arthur

Clean Breaks, Ruby Lang

Combatting Fear, Sandy Vaile

Rough & Tumble, Rhenna Morgan

Mine at Midnight, Jamie Pope

Delicious Satisfaction, Sabrina Sol (February 27)

Wait For it, Molly O’Keefe (February 28)

The Undateable, by Sarah Title (February 28)

No Other Highlander, by Adrienne Basso (February 28)

 

That’s probably good for now, right?

Do you have suggestions for me? Would you like to see a particular type of coverage or feature? Drop me a line at jessica@riotnewmedia.com or catch me on Twitter @jessisreading or Insagram @jess_is_reading (somebody beat me to the other one, darnit).

Till next time, my dears!

—Jess