Categories
Giveaways

Win a $100 Gift Card to the Book Riot Store!

We’re all here because we love books, but one of the great secrets about being a reader is how great all the book-adjacent stuff is too. There are t-shirts and tote bags and coffee mugs galore, and you can find a whole bunch of them in one great place at the Book Riot Store.

To promote the Book Riot Store during this most wonderful time of the year, we’re giving away a $100 gift card to one lucky Riot reader.

Entries will be open until November 29th, 2016 at 11:59pm Eastern. One entry per email address, and the giveaway is open worldwide. One winner will be randomly selected and then emailed their gift card (so be sure to enter with an email address you actually check).

Ready? Now go here to enter, or just click the image below. Good luck!

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Categories
Riot Rundown

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We’ve got a sweet little Instagram account. Books, recommendations, and a whole bunch of reader-nerd stuff.
Come check it out:

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Categories
The Goods

YA Book Mail #2 Revealed!

We all know that bookish mail is the best mail, and for YA fans, nothing tops our YA Book Mail boxes. The second dispatch went out last month with books and items on a ~strange and peculiar~ theme, and we’re ready for the reveal.

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  • A Fierce and Subtle Poison by Samantha Mabry
  • Places No One Knows by Brenna Yovanoff
  • Signed bookplate from Samantha Mabry
  • Places No One Knows bookmark
  • “Peculiar” necklace
  • Bunnicula pouch
  • Borrower’s Reminder slips for borrowed books

Want one? We saved some extras for the holidays! Get one for yourself and your favorite YA fans now.

Looking for more of a mix? Our Best Books of 2016 box is packed with an eclectic array of 4 great reads and 3 gift items. It’s flying off the digital shelves.

Categories
Giveaways

November 2016 Mailbag giveaway #2

It’s the most wonderful time of the…week? We’ve got another batch of ten books from our book mail to give to one lucky reader, including the paperback of Riot favorite The Sorcerer to the Crown, the graphic novel adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s The Lottery, and more!

The giveaway is open internationally, and entries will be accepted through November 27th. So go here to enter, or just click the image of the giveaway stack below. Good luck!

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Categories
New Books

Island Nations, Deathbed Confessions, and More New Books!

Holy cats, it’s Tuesday again already! Just enough time to grab a new book to hide behind at Thanksgiving dinner. The book at the top of my shopping list is The Princess Diarist by Carrie Fisher, in which she supposedly dishes up all the gossip about the set of the first Star Wars film. YES, PLEASE. And on this week’s episode of the All the Books! Rebecca and I talked about a lot of books, including Scythe, Eating Words, and the two new Queen Victoria books.

letters-of-note-vol-2This week’s newsletter is sponsored by Letters of Note: Volume 2 compiled by Shaun Usher.

From the editor of the New York Times bestseller and instant classic Letters of Note, comes this companion volume of more than 125 captivating letters. Each turn of the page brings delight and discovery in a collection of correspondence that spans centuries and place, written by the famous, the not-so-famous, and the downright infamous. Entries are accompanied by a transcript of the letter, a short contextual introduction, and a spirited illustration—in most cases, a facsimile of the letter itself. As surprising as it is entertaining, Letters of Note: Volume 2 is a book of endless enjoyment and lasting value.

the good negressThe Good Negress by A.J. Verdelle

Algonquin Books has brought this stunner–originally released in 1995– back in paperback. Set in the 1960s, it’s the story of a teenage black girl named Denise, who is sent from her grandmother’s rural Virginia home to live with her estranged mother in Detroit, where she is expected to do chores and help care for her mother’s new baby. But when a teacher opens Denise’s eyes to the possibilites of the world outside her new home, she is torn between responsibility and independence. This finalist for the PEN/Faulkner award is a beautiful, necessary addition to any library.

Backlist bump: Caucasia by Danzy Senna

moonglowMoonglow by Michael Chabon

The powerful driving force of Chabon’s new novel is the deathbed confessions of the narrator’s grandfather. Revealing the pains and surprises caused by secrets, lies, and war, Moonglow is a rich examination of a family history built on hidden truths, an emotional love story, and a fantastic work of autobiographical family history-turned-novel. (The novel is based on Chabon’s own grandfather’s stories.)

Backlist bump: Manhood for Amateurs: The Pleasures and Regrets of a Husband, Father, and Son by Michael Chabon

island people Island People: The Caribbean and the World by Joshua Jelly-Schapiro

A comprehensive and intriguing look at the nations of the Caribbean, their shifting identities through the centuries, and their music, politics, religions, cutltures, and people. Jelly-Schapiro delves deep into the sometimes ugly history of such beautiful places, as well as thoroughly examining what role the Caribban has played in shaping the present world. But you don ‘t have to take my word for it – it’s also highly recommended by Marlon James! I’ll read anything he tells me to read.

Backlist bump: The Sex Lives of Cannibals: Adrift in the Equatorial Pacific by J. Maarten Troost

 

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
Riot Rundown

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Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by COMIC BENTO, the original graphic novel subscription box service.

bento_200wComic Bento is the original Graphic Novel subscription box!! Every month a box filled with $60-$80 worth of Graphic Novels ships right to your door! With a different theme each month, you’re sure to discover classic favorites, hidden gems and new and exciting worlds among the curated selections! If you’re a longtime comics reader or new to the world of ink and excitement, Comic Bento is for you!

Head to www.comicbento.com and subscribe! Use code RIOT15 and get 15% off your subscription!

Categories
This Week In Books

The National Book Award Winners: This Week in Books

2016 National Book Award Winners

Black lives and stories took center stage at this year’s National Book Awards, hosted last week by Larry Wilmore. The highest honors for fiction (The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead), nonfiction (Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America by Ibram X. Kendi), and young people’s literature (March: Book Three by Congressman John Lewis, Andrew Aydin, and Nate Powell) all address America’s racist history and its ongoing impact. These books would have been important and worthy in any year, but they feel especially necessary in these post-election days. What a timely reminder of the power of literature.

Let us all follow the advice Whitehead gave in his acceptance speech: “Be kind to everybody, make art, and fight the power.”

Teen Vogue Introduces ‘Lit Review’ Book Club

Look, I know it says “teen” in the title, but this is one publication we should all be paying attention to. Teen Vogue is under new leadership, and its content and social media presence have been on fire for the last several months. They’re doing the work to encourage young people to be worldly and socially conscious, and the new Lit Review book club is one more fantastic piece. The inaugural selection is Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching GodWith a tone-setter like that, this is bound to be a project to follow.

Fox Commits to Passage Pilot

Justin Cronin’s Passage trilogy fizzled to an end with the May release of The City of Mirrors, but the story will find new life on the screen. Fox has committed to produce a pilot to be written by Liz Heldens (of Friday Night Lights) and directed by Matt Reeves (co-creator of Felicity). Perhaps most interesting among the details is the note that Fox 2000 won rights to the first book all the way back in 2007–when it was only half-finished!–in a bidding war for $1.75 million. Hold onto your hats. If this one gets picked up, none of us will be getting much sleep.


Thanks to Letters of Note: Volume 2 compiled by Shaun Usher for sponsoring This Week in Books.

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From the editor of the New York Times bestseller and instant classic Letters of Note, comes this companion volume of more than 125 captivating letters. Each turn of the page brings delight and discovery in a collection of correspondence that spans centuries and place, written by the famous, the not-so-famous, and the downright infamous. Entries are accompanied by a transcript of the letter, a short contextual introduction, and a spirited illustration—in most cases, a facsimile of the letter itself. As surprising as it is entertaining, Letters of Note: Volume 2 is a book of endless enjoyment and lasting value.

Categories
Giveaways

Win a Graphic Novel Subscription Box!

This weekend giveaway is sponsored by COMIC BENTO, the original graphic novel subscription box service!

Five lucky Riot readers will receive a surprise Comic Bento box from a previous month.

Comic Bento is the original Graphic Novel subscription box! Every month a box filled with $60-$80 worth of Graphic Novels ships right to your door! With a different theme each month, you’re sure to discover classic favorites, hidden gems and new and exciting worlds among the curated selections! If you’re a longtime comics reader or new to the world of ink and excitement, Comic Bento is for you! Head to www.comicbento.com and subscribe! Use code RIOT15 and get 15% off your subscription!

Entries are limited to the United States and will be accepted until 11:59pm, Friday, November 25th. Winner will be randomly selected. Go here to enter the giveaway, or just click the image below. Good luck!.

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Categories
The Goods

Give the Gift of Books

Shopping for book lovers can be tough, so we’re here to make it easy! Our book boxes include rad reads and hand-selected gift items for the perfect all-in-one.

For the eclectic reader in your life, there’s the Best Books of 2016 box, which contains four (!) great books and three awesome gifts. These are super-limited and going fast. Don’t wait.

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For the escapist, there’s the Magic & Myth Book Mail box. We held some extras for the holidays, so take a peek below and snag one while you can. These include exclusive original content from authors Zen Cho and Adrienne Celt!

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And for those who like things a little ~off~, there’s the Strange & Peculiar YA box.

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Click here for more details on past Book Mail boxes and to join the wait list–the next surprise ships out in December.

Categories
What's Up in YA

YA Adaptation News, Space for Gay Teens, & No Apologies for Social Politics

Hello YA Fans!

square-product-imageThis week’s “What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by Audiobooks.com.

Get your book fix on the go with Audiobooks.com! Whether you’re in the car, at the gym or on the couch, Audiobooks.com makes it easy to listen to over 100,000 titles on their user-friendly apps for iOS and Android. Stream books live or download for offline listening, and enjoy cool features like sped-up narration and custom bookmarking. You can browse by genre or curated lists, check out promotions and giveaways, and switch seamlessly between devices with cloud-syncing technology. And best of all, your first book is free! Try Audiobooks.com today.

A number of emails came through in response to last week’s newsletter. I thought it would be worth addressing a recurring theme in a number of them which boiled down to this: keep politics out of a newsletter about YA books.

The response to that, in a word, is no.

Reading is a political act. Whether or not you believe yourself to be political or active or socially conscious, partaking in reading is inherently political.

So no, politics don’t be removed from talking about YA books — or any books — here or elsewhere in the Book Riot world. That’s what we do, and it’s what we do well.

That said, let’s take a look at some recent news from around the YA world, link-style:

  • There’s an official trailer out for the film adaptation of Lauren Oliver’s Before I Fall (which hits theaters in early March). I know that Zoey Deutch is only 22 in real life, but she and her co-stars look that age, rather than teenagers.
  • The World Science Fiction Society is considering adding a YA-specific award that can be given out at their WorldCon event (they do the Hugo and Campbell awards, for those who may be more familiar with those). Can you help name the award?
  • This is an interesting piece about an adult reader picking up Twilight AS an adult and seeing the abusive relationships at play. It’s thoughtful and critical, but it’s a prime example, I think, of why adults have to remember to take off the adult lenses when reading YA books and accept that teenagers are the characters in the story and thus, are the ones making dumb mistakes. It doesn’t at all excuse abuse, but this is a fascinating exercise in teen vs adult eyes and readership. I see a lot of people complain about teenagers being dumb in YA books, and too often, it’s adults who are forgetting that YA books are about teenagers. . . and teenagers do dumb things (which is part of why stories about them are so good!).
  • Bustle has been doing an excellent job on YA news lately, if that weren’t clear. Here’s a piece that fans of Melina Marchetta will love — it’s an interview with her about her recent adult novel, but it teases at another potential Saving Francesca sequel. If you haven’t read those books, do yourself the big favor of checking out Marchetta’s YA work. You can start with the Francesca books (which I adore!) or dive right into her fantasy series, which begins with Froi of the Exiles (as someone who doesn’t read enough fantasy, I found myself deeply in love with this story).
  • A lot of people shared this piece over the last couple of weeks, and there could easily be an entire newsletter dedicated to it. It’s about gay characters in YA and how they’re no longer as taboo as they once were. It, of course, is pretty much limited to gay boys in YA; that’s not a bad thing, except it’s exceptionally limiting about the range of queer stories that are finding their way onto more and more shelves in YA. Looking for some love for books like Sarah McCarry’s About A Girl (with two girls kissing on the cover!), Malinda Lo’s Adaptation duology (which features a romantic queer relationship among more than two people!), and trans love/romantic YA stories like Anna-Marie McLemore’s When The Moon Was Ours and Meredith Russo’s If I Was Your Girl. I also get my back up a bit about the phrase “taking over” when it comes to any marginalized group eking out even the slightest space on a bookshelf.

How about some “best of” 2016 news? If I’m being perfectly honest, I cannot read these lists yet. I find the “best of” creep happening in October to be a disservice to books and to readers; I understand the “best of” lists hitting in mid/late November, if for no other reason than it serves as a shopping list for many, but October is way, way too soon. I can’t comment on these because I’ve yet to read them, but I know they’ll be of interest to many (spoiler: in December I’m sure we’ll be talking about these in more depth!):

Still needing to think about the election? Although the entirety of this newsletter has been politics, let me go ahead and proclaim this part of the newsletter is BLATANTLY POLITICAL. Here’s some good reading and action plans in the wake of our future as Americans…and global citizens:

  • Tessa Gratton’s “As I Lay Awake” is a reflection more than worth reading and thinking about.

If you’re struggling with what you can do, actionable steps you can take to make a difference, one of the things worth doing is making a phone call or two. This week, I poked around for an organization to which I could donate books locally — I’m lucky to get so many books sent to me and one thing I can do is drive them to a local facility that will get them into the hands of kids. I’m in a small town in Wisconsin in a very red county; organizations that help kids and families exist everywhere, and it literally takes a phone call to set up a relationship. I’m eager to be driving 100s of books over to the non-profit that houses and supports children from abuse and neglect, and it was through that phone call I got to hear stories about how many of the children and teens there are avid, devoted readers.

So I’m ending this newsletter with this: can you help? Can you take one step that betters the lives of young readers in some capacity this week?

If you do, if you’ve been thinking about it, or if you need support or ideas, please drop a response and I’d love to share, generate ideas, or offer support to taking those steps. Want to help but have no idea where to begin? Let me know. I am happy to shoulder some of the work to put you in touch with local orgs or with orgs that are local to me or other YA/teen advocates. Together we can do something, even at a small level. Safety pins are great, but they don’t do the work.

We have to do the work.