Categories
True Story

Summer Reading Recommendations

We are in the full-fledged summer reading season. My sunroom is piled high with books that have made it onto my (overly ambitious) summer TBR. Just to name a few, I would love to read Pandora’s Jar by Natalie Haynes, This Is Major by Shayla Lawson, and High on the Hog by Jessica B. Harris. So I’ll keep reading and report back. But what are you reading this summer? As always, this newsletter will be full of recommendations for you. But first, let’s accessorize with bookish goods!

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

Bookish Goods

a photo of a linen bookmark featuring an illustration of a stack of books. you can customize the spines to say the titles of your favorite books

Personalised Favourite Bookstack Linen Bookmark by TheWildflowerinBloom

I adore a custom bookmark, and this one has that cute aesthetic that’s all the rage. $5

New Releases

a graphic of the cover of Shadow Men: The Tangled Story of Murder, Media, and Privilege That Scandalized Jazz Age America by James Polchin

Shadow Men: The Tangled Story of Murder, Media, and Privilege That Scandalized Jazz Age America by James Polchin

Over 100 years ago, Clarence Peters, a working-class man, was found dead. Later, Walter Ward confessed to the murder as an act of self-defense against a group of men that was blackmailing him. The court case swept through the country, drawing the attention of the masses as everyone seemed to be weighing in on the case.

a graphic of the cover of Out of the Sierra: A Story of Rarámuri Resistance by Victoria Blanco

Out of the Sierra: A Story of Rarámuri Resistance by Victoria Blanco

Through decades of interviews and research, Victoria Blanco details the history of the Rarámuri people’s resistance to colonization and their efforts to preserve their language and culture. One of the largest Indigenous nations in North America, the Rarámuri people in Chihuahua, Mexico, have endured immeasurable loss as they have refused to leave their sacred land.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

a graphic of the cover of Divine Might by Natalie Haynes

Divine Might by Natalie Haynes

We are now in a golden age of myth retellings. Everyone and their mother’s brother has been trying their hands at these myth-inspired tales, but few authors are as good as Natalie Haynes. While Haynes is known more for her fiction, Divine Might is brilliant nonfiction, with each chapter examining different goddesses and their stories. Haynes’ holistic way of viewing these goddesses invites readers to reexamine their own assumptions about these divine figures.

a graphic of the cover of The Light We Carry by Michelle Obama

The Light We Carry by Michelle Obama

Michelle Obama is back with The Light We Carry, a collection of essays that each expand on her ideas about standing her ground and going high when they go low. She also shares about her family’s experience weathering the pandemic. Her essays are kind, supportive, and encouraging, while firmly making her points. I highly recommend listening to the audiobook, which Obama reads herself. Listening to the audiobook feels like you’re sitting down with her for a cup of coffee while she shares encouraging anecdotes from her own life.

That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave, over on Instagram @kdwinchester, on TikTok @kendrawinchester, or on my podcast Read Appalachia. As always, feel free to drop me a line at kendra.d.winchester@gmail.com. For even MORE bookish content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy reading, Friends!

~ Kendra

Categories
Kissing Books

The Sweetest Science: 10 Gems of STEM-themed Romance

This post is written by Isabelle Popp.

The popularity of Ali Hazelwood’s romances has helped codify STEM romance as a subgenre unto itself. To varying degrees, STEM romances have been around as long as romances have had characters with jobs (as opposed to aristocratic characters). In particular, within the category romance — these are the shorter romance books released monthly in themed lines — medical romances have been a staple for decades.

I love a romance with a cool job. In fact, I did a roundup of the coolest romance jobs, many of which are in STEM fields. And because I love you, dear readers, this list has no overlap with that one. There’s a delicate balance to including someone’s work life in a romance. I want an interesting setting, and I want to learn a fun fact or two. People’s choice of careers can also be a way to develop character. At the same time, their job shouldn’t be their only characteristic. Moreover, I don’t want to get bogged down in the details. I want the core drama of the story to be the romance itself. If I wanted more work drama in my life, I wouldn’t have quit that one job (I’m sure you can relate).

Another trait common to STEM romances is addressing the exclusion and prejudice that are rampant in certain fields. I experienced this firsthand, as a woman with a science degree who has worked in several STEM-related fields. One classmate told me I got better grades than him because of my girly handwriting. One professor flat-out told my quantum mechanics class that women “couldn’t do physics.” And the less time I spend thinking about my time working in the video game industry, the better. Reflections on these harsh realities belong in romance simply because romance explores and comments on the breadth of the human experience.

So here’s a lovely curated collection of nerds falling in love for you.

cover of The Kiss Countdown

The Kiss Countdown by Etta Easton

Amerie, on a relatably questionable impulse, has pretended she is with a rando hot guy nearby to save herself from an embarrassing situation. Vincent, the convenient dude, is an actual astronaut, and he plays along! Turns out, he could use a fake girlfriend to appease his overly involved family. Amerie could use a free place to stay so she can put money into her struggling business. Wins all around! They didn’t plan to fall in love, but this is, after all, a romance. Houston, we have a love connection.

cover of Role Playing

Role Playing by Cathy Yardley

More male nurses in romance, please! Also more romances with characters in their forties and up! This book ticks both of those boxes. Maggie and Aiden meet via an online gaming group, but each of them has the totally wrong idea about how old the other is. When they meet in person, it’s definitely weird for a second. But then they figure out how well they fit together, especially in the face of their respective family drama. Aiden specializes in end-of-life care, which makes him a really special human being.

Spoiler Alert by Olivia Dade 

A geologist falling in love with a hunky actor is the romance novel of my dreams, and yet it exists in real life. Geologist April, a cosplayer, goes viral for daring to be fat in costume, and actor Marcus asks her out to spite the haters. Turns out they already know each other from an online fanfic community, but they don’t figure that out immediately. People who want to read about women in STEM and the ups and downs of fandom get a double dose of nerdery with this delicious book.

Tempest Book Cover

Tempest by Beverly Jenkins

If you live under a rock and haven’t yet read a Beverly Jenkins historical romance, here’s a great place to start. Regan Carmichael is a mail-order bride on her way to Old West Wyoming Territory to meet her groom, Dr. Colton Lee. When does meet him, she shoots him. How’s that for a meet-cute? Regan is feisty, Dr. Lee is soft, and their path to love is tender. Beverly Jenkins is the gold standard if you love to learn as you read romance. This book will shed some light on the history of Howard University’s medical school as well as the adoption of germ theory.

cover of The Truth According to Ember by Danica Nava

The Truth According to Ember by Danica Nava (August 6, 2024)

Ember has stretched the truth on her resume — both about her credentials and her ethnic background. Now she’s in a corporate job she loves, but that web of lies is still woven. When she meets the IT guy Danuwoa, they catch each other’s eye. But there’s a strict policy forbidding dating at her office. So the two of them date on the sly. Naturally, things are going to get out of hand. I love stories where fundamentally good people have to get themselves out of the messes they make! Read this, and you’ll realize that you, too, would risk it all for Danuwoa.

cover of Hold Me by Courtney Milan

Hold Me by Courtney Milan

Courtney Milan is an author with STEM bona fides, given her graduate degree in chemistry. Obviously the best degree for a romance writer to have! In Hold Me, both characters have STEM-related pursuits. Jay is a physicist and Maria is a science blogger and statistics student. The two know each other via the comments section of Maria’s blog, but Maria is very protective of her identity as a trans woman. When they meet in person, not knowing their existing relationship, the dynamic is very different. If you like a romance that involves the breaking and remaking of a man with some toxic traits, you’ll enjoy this.

book cover of Wild Life by Opal Wei

Wild Life by Opal Wei

This book is simultaneously so fun and so thoughtful. Zoey is a researcher working on the cure for the cancer that claimed her sister. When a vital tissue sample goes missing, she has to track it down — all the way to the rugged island estate of Davy, a former boy band bad-boy (say that five times fast). While the two of them are temporarily stranded on this island, they really have to face down their pasts and think hard about their futures. All while not getting mauled by the semi-domesticated cougar named Baby. Seriously, this is a delight.

cover of The 7-10 Split

The 7-10 Split by Karmen Lee 

(Full disclosure: my forthcoming romance debut is also a Harlequin Afterglow title.) Sapphic! Bowling! Romance! Do I really need to say more? Oh right, I do because it’s also a STEM romance. Grace is a new science teacher at her own former high school. There, she reconnects with Ava, another teacher and her former bestie. The two shared a kiss back in the day, but things really didn’t work out. Ava wants to hate Grace, but now they’re co-coaching the bowling team. If you love a small-town rivals-to-lovers romance, pick this one up.

cover of A Drop in the Ocean by Nikki Winter 

A Drop in the Ocean by Nikki Winter 

Kairo’s brother is getting married to her ex-girlfriend. Truly the only way to handle that situation is to bring a fake date to the wedding. And Kairo’s best friend, April, agrees to play along. The problem is, Kairo is already very much in love with April, and April’s fake affections are giving Kairo even more real feelings. Here’s the best part: Kairo and April are both marine biologists! Raise your hand if you, too, went through a marine biology phase! Raise your hand if you made it happen? High fives to those of you living the dream!

cover of Dating Dr. Dil

Dating Dr. Dil by Nisha Sharma

Kareena Mann is a hopeless romantic; television doctor Prem Verma is allergic to love. An argument between the two of them about the nature of love goes viral. While they should perhaps go their separate ways, you know they won’t. Prem’s dream clinic will be funded by Kareena’s aunties if he can convince Kareena that she is his soulmate. And Kareena will get her mother’s home if she can get engaged. So they are motivated to get together for practical reasons — and they discover they’re not as mismatched as they initially seemed.

Once you’ve read through this pile, you can find some more books in this same vein. We’ve got workplace romances, romances starring doctors, and authors like Ali Hazelwood. Science, Technology, Engineering, Medicine, and Romance. What could be better?

Categories
Kid Lit Giveaways

061124-TheTimeTravelTwins(pre-pub)-KidlitGiveaway

We are giving away twenty Advance Reader Copies of The Time Travel Twins by James Patterson and Tad Safran to twenty lucky Riot Readers!

Enter here for a chance to win, or click the image below!

All that stands between an evil villain and world domination is a pair of twelve-year-olds who just learned they’re time travelers. What could go wrong?!? This Revolutionary, action-packed adventure is perfect for fans of City SpiesTreasure Hunters, and Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales.

The Church twins dream of escaping the miserable misfortune of their isolated orphanage. Or, even better, the return of their parents. But even in their wildest dreams, they never imagined the truth: The twins can travel through time.

History, mystery, humor, and adventure collide in this delightfully clever new series. Enter to win an ARC.

Categories
Giveaways

061124-JuneEACHouse-Giveaway

Celebrate Pride year-round with Penguin Random House! Enter for a chance to win a collection of 25 new LGBTQ+ books!

Enter here for a chance to win, or click the image below!

Here’s a bit more from our sponsor: Check out the Pride in Your Words website for hundreds of queer book recommendations. Books offer community, even when we’re alone. And seeing yourself represented in the pages of a book is something everyone should be able to experience. Find your next read at prh.com/pridereads, this month and every month.

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book…

Welcome to Read this Book, a newsletter where I recommend one book that needs to jump onto your TBR pile! Sometimes these books are brand new releases that I don’t want you to miss, while others are some of my backlist favorites. This week, let’s talk about one of this year’s most anticipated reads for Pride Month!

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

a graphic of the cover of Housemates

Housemates by Emma Copley Eisenberg

I first discovered Emma Copley Eisenberg with The Third Rainbow Girl, a genre-defying nonfiction book that’s part memoir, part true crime, and part history. Now, Copley Eisenberg is back with her debut novel, Housemates.

Bernie answers an ad for a room for rent and joins Leah and their other housemates in their home in West Philadelphia. Both Bernie, a photographer, and Leah, a writer, struggle to find direction for their art. They each find a listening ear in the other, and their relationship begins to bloom.

When Bernie’s photography mentor dies, Bernie and Leah head out on a road trip to rural Pennsylvania to deal with Bernie’s part of the estate. Along the way, Bernie takes photographs while Leah writes short bits of copy to give the photographs some context. The two twentysomething artists find themselves in an artistic partnership that defies definition, a creative collaboration aimed at shedding light on the complex cultures of broader Pennsylvania.

Housemates is a love letter to the queer scene of West Philly, in equal parts critiquing and poking fun in the best possible way. Bernie and Leah’s story asks big questions about art, its creation, and its consumption. Eisenberg explores ideas around class and art, including the financial requirements to have the space to make good art. Who gets to tell their story? Whose art will be appreciated and whose will be overlooked?

Audie winner and AudioFile Golden Voice Marin Ireland narrates the audiobook. Ireland doesn’t over-perform the text. Instead, she uses her straightforward performance to make the story shine. With her narration, Bernie and Leah come alive, giving listeners new insights into their characters.


That’s it from me this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave, over on Instagram @kdwinchester, on TikTok @kendrawinchester, or on my podcast Read Appalachia. As always, feel free to drop me a line at kendra.d.winchester@gmail.com. For even MORE bookish content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy reading, Friends!

~ Kendra

Categories
Past Tense

Read Historical Fiction with Pride

Hi, historical fiction fans,

It’s the second week of June, and summer is well and truly here with temperatures in my area already getting up into the 90°s. June is also Pride Month here in the U.S. I started off the month with a really cute sapphic cozy fantasy called The Honey Witch. I’m also looking forward to reading When Among Crows, The Titanic Survivor’s Book Club, and The City in Glass. All three books feature LGBTQ characters.

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

Whatever you’re planning on reading this month, I hope it’s good!

Bookish Goods

A white candle in a glass jar with a black label and black lid is set against a dark background with vintage books and a dark green plant. The label on the candle reads "lostbrich candles: vintage books"

Vintage Books Candle from Lostbirch Candles

Is there anything better than the smell of old books? $21

New Releases

The Forgotten Names book cover

The Forgotten Names by Mario Escobar (June 11, 2024)

The Forgotten Names tells the true story of a woman who risked everything to reunite Jewish children with the names they had lost. When Valérie stumbles across a list of more than one hundred names during her thesis research, she discovers a ploy to sneak Jewish children to the French countryside right under the Nazi’s noses. She’s determined to help these people rediscover their lost names and heritage. But during a time in the 1990s when many people would rather forget—or even deny—the horrors of the Holocaust, Valérie must fight to preserve the truth.

cover of The Ballad of Jacquotte Delahaye by Briony Cameron; image in teal tint of a Black woman's face

The Ballad of Jacquotte Delahaye by Briony Cameron (June 4, 2024)

Based on true events, The Ballad of Jacquotte Delahaye follows the rise of one of the first female pirate captains to sail in the Caribbean. When she is forced to flee her home, she finds herself working as an indentured servant to the infamous pirate Blackhand. Along with her fellow crew, Jacquotte endures his ruthless command. But when the chance to pursue a better future for herself and her fellow pirates appears, will Jacquotte be able to secure it?

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

As most of you probably know, June is Pride Month in the U.S., where we celebrate and honor LGBTQ+ identities and history. A great way to celebrate is to try to read queer books this month. Focusing on reading LGBTQ books is something I try to prioritize every June. Here are two great historical fiction books featuring queer characters to get you started.

When the Angels Left the Old Country Book Cover

When the Angels Left the Old Country by Sacha Lamb

Uriel and Little Ash are the unlikeliest of friends as an angel and a trickster demon, but they’ve been studying the Torah together for eons. A missing girl takes them away from their studies and their little shtetl as they follow a conspiracy targeting immigrants. Even as they disagree on the purpose of their trip, Uriel and Ash’s heartfelt friendship keeps them together.

Mademoiselle Revolution Book Cover

Mademoiselle Revolution by Zoe Sivak

After escaping violence in Haiti, Sylvie de Rosiers finds herself once again in the midst of revolution in Paris, France. But this time, Sylvie wants to be more than an unwitting bystander. As she’s swept up into the circle of the revolutionary Robespierre and his equally brilliant mistress Cornélie Duplay, she learns to question everything and everyone—including herself.

That’s it for now, folks! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books, historical or otherwise, you can find me @rachelsbrittain on most social media, including Instagram, Goodreads, and Litsy.

Right now I’m reading The American Daughters by Maurice Carlos Ruffin. What about you?

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Summer Camp, Racing, And More Great Kids’ Books!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! I hope the kids in your life are enjoying their summer vacations. I think most schools are out now? I know Tennessee lets out really early, so I’m always surprised when I hear of kids still in school in June.

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

This week, I review four middle grade novels about summer camps, plus two great new releases.

Bookish Goods

Wet Bag in Stacked Books Fabric by monkeyfootdesigns

Wet Bag in Stacked Books Fabric by monkeyfootdesigns

Wet bags are great for wet wipes, diapers, swimwear, and more. This one can be made in multiple sizes and with a fun book pattern. $10+

New Releases

Cover of Play Outside With Me by Kat Chen, illustrated by Lorraine Nam

Play Outside with Me by Kat Chen, illustrated by Lorraine Nam

A new interactive board book series, Playdate, is launching with this title as well as Play with Me. In Play Outside with Me, Sam and a squirrel friend invite the reader to play on a playground. Sam and the reader blow bubbles, draw in chalk, slide, look at a ladybug, and more. This is a great new series for toddlers.

Cover of Daughter of the Light-Footed People by Belen Medina, illustrated by Natalia Rojas Castro

Daughter of the Light-Footed People by Belen Medina, illustrated by Natalia Rojas Castro

This fantastic nonfiction picture book uses sparse, evocative prose to tell the story of when María Lorena Ramírez won the Ultra Trail Cerro Rojo — a 31-mile race in Mexico — while wearing traditional clothes of the Rarámuri people. It opens with the sound Lorena’s huaraches make as she takes off across the canyons. As she runs, the texts reflects back on her childhood, building strength, playing with her siblings, and building patience as she walked to buy food and collect water. It’s a really cool true story.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

Sometimes, a year has a lot of books publish with similar themes, and this year, I’ve noticed a lot of middle grade summer camp novels, especially graphic novels. I’ve already reviewed Upstaged and Unhappy Camper, but here are four more to check out.

Cover of Camp Prodigy by Caroline Palmer

Camp Prodigy by Caroline Palmer

This is a cute and relatable middle grade graphic novel about a string music camp. Tate Seong has recently taken up viola after hearing the young prodigy Eli Violet backstage. Eli struggles with anxiety and was unable to perform that day, but their music struck a chord with Tate, and Tate’s supportive parents surprise them with the summer camp. Eli is attending the camp as well. Eli and Tate become friends, and Eli tutors Tate in viola. Meanwhile, Tate, who also has anxiety, comes out as nonbinary — like Eli — to their fellow viola players.

Cover of Summer at Squee by Andrea Wang

Summer at Squee by Andrea Wang

This is the only non-graphic novel on this list. Phoenny Fang is super excited about returning to the Summertime Chinese Culture, Wellness, and Enrichment Experience camp — called Squee by the campers— with her best friend. Their mothers run the camp, and the two will both be senior campers this year. But it turns out the senior campers are being separated into new cabins and teams this year to welcome and help an influx of new members, all of whom are adoptees. They have very different feelings about learning Chinese culture than Phoenny, which causes some frustration.

Cover of Summer Vamp by Violet Chan Karim

Summer Vamp by Violet Chan Karim

This is a very fun paranormal middle grade graphic novel, great for fans of Camp Sylvania. Maya has had a rough school year and is looking forward to the summer, that is, until her father announces that his girlfriend, Charlotte, is moving in with them. While Maya likes Charlotte well enough, she’s not ready for her to invade her home. However, Charlotte surprises her by arranging a culinary camp she can attend. Maya loves cooking and is super excited about the camp. But when Maya gets on the wrong bus, she ends up at a summer camp for vampires instead!

Cover of Sink or Swim by Veronica Agarwal & Lee Durfey-Lavoie

Sink or Swim by Veronica Agarwal & Lee Durfey-Lavoie

This standalone graphic novel happens in the same world as Roll with It. Ty is struggling with anxiety and depression as he and his friends, twins Max and Heather, arrive at summer camp. Ty has just gotten the cast for his broken arm taken off, which kept him from swim meets with the twins. He worries that they’ve grown more distant, and he also worries about his weight. Ty distances himself from everyone at camp, which hurts Max and Heather’s feelings. Max turns that hurt into anger, and he’s also harboring a secret crush on Ty.

picture of author's daughter playing with cats

Last week I mentioned that we were taking my daughter to a cat rescue center, The Catio Lounge, for her half birthday to play with the cats. We all had a blast!

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, Bluesky @AReaderlyMom.bsky.social, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

All the best,

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
What's Up in YA

BANNED TOGETHER: Empowering Teens and Fighting for the Right to Read

Hey, YA Readers!

Books impact us. They have the power to transform our perspective, allow us to see or find ourselves, and provide the opportunity to explore people and ideas that might be unfamiliar to us. That is precisely why books have been subject to censorship and targeting since the founding of America. What censors target with books aren’t the physical or digital objects themselves. They target the ideas and the people those books represent. The fight for the freedom to read and freedom from book bans is a fight for inclusivity.

Although they are the most frequent victims of book banning and though they should not be put in the place to have to fight for their right to read, teens have been on the front lines of this censorship battle from the beginning too. Indeed, today’s teens are among some of the biggest voices and most powerful forces pushing back against censorship. We’ve seen this since early 2021 as teens began showing up to school board meetings to address the impact of books being removed. We’ve seen it in teens like those at Central York who staged two protests, years apart, at the start of the school day. We’ve seen teen-led groups pop up nationwide with the goal of ending book bans and ensuring their diverse stories aren’t erased. Other teens have stood up in response to book bans at their school by creating little banned libraries—recognition of which has itself been censored—and through exhausting every avenue possible before ultimately electing not to shake an administrator’s hand at graduation.

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

Some teens have even developed their own banned books clubs. These are opportunities for them to read the books that are creating moral panic among adults and to discuss what’s in them—and where and how they themselves want to respond.

comic panel one of unstoppable readers by ashley hope perez and debbie fong for the forthcoming book banned together, edited by ashley hope perez.
comic panel two of unstoppable readers by ashley hope perez and debbie fong for the forthcoming book banned together, edited by ashley hope perez.
comic panel three of unstoppable readers by ashley hope perez and debbie fong for the forthcoming book banned together, edited by ashley hope perez.
comic panel four of unstoppable readers by ashley hope perez and debbie fong for the forthcoming book banned together, edited by ashley hope perez.

The above comic shares the story of the Vandergrift Banned Book Club, launched in response to book bans in Leander, Texas, schools. The Leander book banners began their campaigns early and, as you might recall, included a grown adult brandishing a pink dildo at a school board meeting.

All of the above examples are but a few of the ways teens have pushed back and reclaimed their space in a world where their perspectives, insights, and education are being stifled in the name of political points. They also illustrate the opportunity for adults to offer them not only encouragement but also support in launching or sustaining freedom to read movements in their own communities.

I’m excited to share that the above comic isn’t just something I found and shared here. It’s part of a powerful anthology being published next March for teens called Banned Together: Our Fight for Readers’ Rights (March 4, 2025). Check out the cover for the collection below.

banned together book cover

Here’s the official description:

A dazzling YA anthology that spotlights the transformative power of books while equipping teens to fight for the freedom to read, featuring the voices of 15 diverse, award-winning authors and illustrators.

Books are disappearing from shelves across the country.

What does this mean for authors, illustrators, and—most crucially—for young readers?

This bold collection of fiction, memoir, poetry, graphic narratives, essays, and other genres explores book bans through various lenses, and empowers teens to fight back. From moving personal accounts to clever comebacks aimed at censorship, fifteen legendary YA authors and illustrators confront the high-stakes question of what is lost when books are kept from teens.

Contributors include Elana K. Arnold, Nikki Grimes, Ellen Hopkins, Kelly Jensen, Brendan Kiely, Maia Kobabe, Bill Konigsberg, Kyle Lukoff, MariNaomi, Trung Lê Nguyễn, Ashley Hope Pérez, Isabel Quintero, Traci Sorell, Robin Stevenson, and Padma Venkatraman; the collection is a star-studded must-read that packs strength and power into every last word.

Striking illustrations from Ignatz-nominated artist Debbie Fong pair perfectly with the searing, impactful narrative. Resources include tips from the Vandegrift Banned Book Club and other teen activists, as well as extensive recommended book lists, a How to Start Your Own Little Free Library flier, and more.

I’m thrilled not only to know this book will exist. I also got to contribute to the collection and am deeply honored, given the incredible array of other authors involved. My piece talks about the sexual education I got in school, the ways early internet resources were crucial in my understanding of what it is to be feminist, and where and how we use our bodies to rally for the things that we believe in, even when it is our very bodies that disgust and appall decision makers.

As important and necessary as it is to continue creating and sharing information about book bans and the anti-censorship/freedom to read movement online, Banned Together is a vital resource for teens and their adult allies who, well, may need access to a book like this. It’s packed with a variety of styles of writing, including comics like the one above, memoir, poetry, how-tos, and more.

Banned Together: Our Fight for Readers Rights hits shelves on March 4, but you can preorder it now wherever you like to order books. Grab a copy for yourself, for your library if you work in one, for your classroom if you have one, and then a copy or two for your favorite teen literary activists.

Four years into this fight, there is one thing that is abundantly clear: we’re nowhere near done and it’s through sharing our stories that we’re able to continue to empathize, support, and bolster the work being done every single day to tamp down this continuously rising censorship tide.

This book is but one more ray of hope along the journey.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

A Double Dose of New Sci-Fi and Fantasy Releases

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’ve got your new releases for this second week of June. (How the HECK is it already the second week of June?) Today, you’re getting a double dose of new releases because I just couldn’t choose.

Over the last week, I’ve read a bonkers number of audiobooks (4!) and seen Furiosa three times, so my brain is just swimming with extremely cool things. Paladin’s Hope by T. Kingfisher delighted me the most.

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here are two places to start: Palestinian Children’s Relief Fund, which provides medical and humanitarian relief to children in the Middle East regardless of nationality, religion, or political affiliation; and Ernesto’s Sanctuary, a cat sanctuary and animal rescue in Syria that is near and dear to my heart.

Bookish Goods

Book-shaped bookmark holders

Book Shaped Bookmark Holders by mcs3Dstudios

3D printing can do a ton of cool stuff these days (have you seen what you can get out of Hero Forge now?) and this is a super fun and cute idea brought to us by that technology. Move over, old coffee cup! A new bookmark holder is in town. $9.50

New Releases

one of our kind book cover

One of Our Kind by Nicola Yoon

Liberty is a planned Black utopia and a place where Jasmyn and King Williams hope they will finally find a community of like-minded people who care about peace and social justice. What they find is mostly residents who care only about setting up spa treatments and ignoring any and all social activism. Jasmyn finds a few others who are as frustrated as her by this outlook…and then she discovers a terrible secret about Liberty and its founders.

hearts of fire and snow book cover

Hearts of Fire and Snow by David Bowles and Guadalupe García McCall

Blanca believes she can make a difference in the world, though she’s not getting a lot of support from her wealthy godfather or her spoiled-rotten boyfriend. When a new student shows up at her school, she decides to start with him. But their sudden friendship isn’t just personal chemistry…it’s the echo of lives lived a thousand years in the past.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

Double dose of new releases, coming in fast!

Cover of Dancers of the Dawn by Zulekha A. Afzal

Dancers of the Dawn by Zulekhá A. Afzal

Aasira is part of an elite troupe of dancers who serve at the pleasure of the queen—but all of them are so much more. They are also her assassins, wielders of magic and blade. Aasira is the rarest sort, one who wields flame to execute the enemies of the crown. But on the eve of her graduation from student to dancer, she begins to question the tension between her loyalty to her queen and the feeling that she was meant for more than death.

cover of The Stars Too Fondly by Emily Hamilton

The Stars Too Fondly by Emily Hamilton

Twenty years ago, the crew of the Providence vanished; now, Cleo and her friends want to know why, so they sneak aboard to find out. But then the ship starts on its own. They’re suddenly all en route to Proxima Centauri and unable to turn around, and the show is being sort of run by a hologram that looks and sounds like the ship’s former captain Billie. As the ship gets deeper into space, the laws of physics seem to fall apart, mysteries are revealed, and Billie and Cleo’s combative relationship evolves into something far deeper.

See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

It’s Tuesday again, friends, and I have a great upcoming book recommendation for you! This past weekend, I read Chickenpox by Remy Lai. It’s a middle grade graphic novel based on the time Lai and her four siblings all had chickenpox, and how annoying it can be to be the oldest child. It was excellent, so be sure to mark it down now, and pick it up when it’s out in January. Lai also has a really creepy graphic novel coming in August that I highly recommend called Read at Your Own Risk (and read at your own risk if you are freaked out by bugs!). Now, for today’s releases, I have a smart comedy about choice and agency, a contemporary retelling of The Brothers Karamazov, and a really unsettling horror novel with a cinematic theme.

As for other new releases, at the top of my list of today’s books that I want to get my hands on are The Sons of El Rey by Alex Espinoza, Mouth: Stories by Puloma Ghosh, and Familiaris, David Wroblewski’s prequel to The Story of Edgar Sawtelle. You can hear about more of the fabulous books coming out today on this week’s episode of All the Books! Vanessa and I talked about books we are excited about that are out this week, including Moonbound, Tehrangeles, and The Stardust Grail.

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

cover of Margo's Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe; illustration of a young blonde woman lying on a pink couch

Margo’s Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe 

I have been a fan of Rufi Thorpe since her first book, but it’s this, her fifth novel, that is going to send her into stardom, especially when the adaptation comes out. This smart, funny novel is about a young woman named Margo (surprise, surprise), who is navigating early adulthood as best she can. When she becomes pregnant after an ill-advised brief affair with her professor, Margo decides she’s going to have the baby. But this is hard, as she is seriously broke, with no help available from her parents, a former Hooters server and a pro wrestler. So using her gumption and some tips from her wrestler dad, Margo starts an OnlyFans channel. But when her channel is a surprise success, Margo will have to decide if the cash and notoriety are worth the judgment and internet permanence. Thorpe is an amazing observer of human nature, and like her previous novels, this one is filled with characters who are achingly human and will capture your heart, flaws, and all.

Backlist bump: Dear Fang, With Love by Rufi Thorpe

cover of The Sisters K by Maureen Sun; black and white with red font for the author's name

The Sisters K by Maureen Sun

This debut is a contemporary retelling of The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky. I fully admit to never having read that book, so I cannot say if it is similar or faithful, but I did think this was excellent. It’s about three sisters who grow up in California with a horrible, abusive father, who reunite at his deathbed after years of estrangement. One has become a cold-hearted lawyer, one is a discontented academic, and the youngest has been left to care for their dad, to the detriment of her own life. The death of their father could change their lives. The sisters want their inheritance, they want closure, they want to see that the man who tormented them for so long is really going to die. It’s a heartbreaking story about a legacy of violence, how it affected the relationships between the sisters and informed their adulthoods, and how complicated family can be. Sun has delivered an ambitious and promising debut, and I look forward to what she writes next.

Backlist bump: The Brothers K by David James Duncan

cover of Horror Movie by Paul Tremblay; image of a shattered VHS tape

Horror Movie by Paul Tremblay

Terrible things and curses surrounding movies and film sets are pretty much its own horror subgenre now, and this new novel is an excellent addition to the shelf. In 1993, a group of kids broke into an abandoned school building to film an indie horror film called Horror Movie. It was disturbing and eerie, and what eventually happened on that set became the subject of rumor and legend for years. Now, three decades later, a group of hardcore fans of the film are remaking it, and the only surviving cast member has been invited to consult and help out with the new shoot. But are they tempting fate by recreating a doomed film? I don’t want to tell you anything else about it, because it’s best for you to experience the horror for yourself. Tremblay has pulled out all the stops in this wicked, weird, and upsetting novel, perfect for fans of scary lore and horror films.

Backlist bump: The Remaking by Clay McLeod Chapman

an orange cat asleep in a silver mixing bowl; photo by Liberty Hardy

This week, I am reading The Mighty Red by Louise Erdrich and Deep Cuts by Holly Brickley. For viewing, along with the NBA Finals, my husband and I continued our true crime documentary streak by watching The Staircase. Now we’re trying to decide if we want to watch the Colin Firth fictionalized version. The song stuck in my head this week is “It’s a Shame About Ray” by The Lemonheads. And here is your weekly cat picture: This bread dough looks a little weird.

That’s all for this week! I appreciate you more than I can say, friends. Thank you for joining me each Tuesday as I rave about books! I am wishing you all a wonderful rest of your week, whatever situation you find yourself in now. And yay, books! See you next week! – XO, Liberty

”I have books, new books, and I can bear anything as long as there are books.” – Jo Walton, Among Others