Categories
Check Your Shelf

Never Call It A Book Ban

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I was in quarantine all last weekend, but I did get to come out of the bedroom (masked) to watch Adam Driver’s fourth hosting stint on SNL, and what a highlight it was! The Internet has been losing it over his skit as a baby on an airplane, but my personal favorite was the Midwestern dad in a passive-aggressive standoff at Christmas dinner. You’ll never hear (or say) “Beep beep” the same way again.

The holidays have arrived, and so has our new paperback level at TBR! If you (or a reader you know) are just over-carrying around bulky hardcovers or are looking for a more budget-friendly option, we’ve got you. Check out all the offerings at mybtro.com/gift, and give personalized reading recommendations customized for any and every reader.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Connecticut officials aim for first-in-the-nation action to address eBook costs.

An audit of the Multnomah County Library system (OR) showed that nearly 75% of frontline library staff feel unsafe at work.

Book Adaptations in the News

Killers of the Flower Moon isn’t for an Indigenous audience. It’s for the wolves.

The new trailer for Dune, Part 2 has just dropped.

Censorship News

Manufacturing problems with school and library books to cash in on solutions.

(Paywalled): The two new members of the Corpus Christi (TX) library board are affiliated with right-wing book banning groups.

The Graham City Council (TX) is considering whether or not to overturn the library board’s decision to retain We Need to Talk About Vaginas: An IMPORTANT Book About Vulvas, Periods, Puberty and Sex!, because a group of pastors complained to the city council.

Alachua County Schools (FL) have 13 active book challenges that were submitted by three parents in the district.

The review committee in Brevard County schools (FL) has recommended that Sold be restricted to high schoolers only.

Broward County Schools (FL) will retain the Bible.

“The New Hampshire Department of Education is heightening its scrutiny of books in libraries and classrooms, as schools continue to face pressure to remove titles that have LGBTQ+ characters or deal with mature or difficult sexual themes.” Yeah, not a good look, New Hampshire.

The newly appointed Central Bucks Board of School Directors, Karen Smith, was sworn into office Monday using a stack of banned books. [PA]

Residents in Worcester County (MD) are up in arms about the book All Boys Aren’t Blue.

A month after Hanover Public Schools (VA) removed 75 books from school libraries, the district is now reviewing two new titles: Valiant Ladies and the Bible.

Moore County Schools and Catawba County Schools (NC) will decide on the fate of their currently challenged books in 2024.

Berkeley County Schools (SC) spent thousands of dollars to purchase copies of several challenged books for a committee to review, and now the committee has been disbanded.

Beaufort County (SC) has finished reviewing all 97 challenged books and has removed five: Beautiful, The Haters, Nineteen Minutes, It Ends With Us, and Forever For a Year.

“Effingham County Commissioners [GA] and Live Oak Public Libraries officials met Monday night to discuss the content of certain books available in the libraries that, said one commissioner, could be ‘damaging to our children.’” Because the county commissioners are more knowledgeable than library employees.

Alabama governor Kay Ivey has proposed new rules that would restrict where libraries can shelve certain books, along with requiring advance approval to recommend, display, or promote material to children. Holy crap.

Last week, I shared a news item that the Foley Public Library (AL) relocated 11 books from the YA section to the adult section. Turns out that all 11 of those books were challenged by just one parent.

1819 News, a right-wing media group in Alabama, has taken it upon themselves to review books in the Orange Beach City school district that they think need to be removed. And the superintendent seems to be just fine with this.

“‘We are not book banners. We just want to have some kind of policy that can either label these books, segregate these books, have parental opt-out options, or in the event that some of them are too graphic—be removed from the schools.’” This is an actual quote from the Chair of the Knox County (TN) chapter of Moms for Liberty.

Wilson County Schools (TN) decided to keep Water for Elephants and The Lovely Bones on high school library shelves.

Sumner County Schools (TN) will retain the graphic novel Hey Kiddo. The parent who challenged the book said that it contained inappropriate language and premarital sex, but the review committee found no depictions of sex in the book.

A group of Iron River (WI) library patrons voiced their support for library employees and urged the board to respect the Constitution. There’s one current board member who has spoken out publicly against LGBTQ+ books available at the library.

The Brown County Library (WI) moved Let’s Talk About It from the teen section (where it belongs) to the adult section.

The Brainerd School Board (MN) will hear an appeal to their decision to retain Empire of Storms.

Superintendent Ryan Walters introduces new non-woke guidelines for Oklahoma libraries, and removes information literacy guidelines put out by ALA.

“‘In a state with the highest rate of domestic violence in the nation and a sexual assault rate that’s 45% higher than the national average, there are going to be students that live this experience and could benefit from seeing themselves represented in literature,’ said a parent.” This was at a recent Union school board meeting in Oklahoma in response to the book Lucky.

A conservative LGBTQ+ group in El Paso County (CO) supports the removal of “obscene” books from school libraries.

Laramie County School District 1 (WY) passed a controversial book policy despite public opposition.

“Dismissing words of caution from Community Library Network directors, a fellow trustee and without advice from library network legal counsel, the board majority unanimously approved drafts of its updated Materials Selection Policy and a new Materials Withdrawal and Reconsideration Policy during a special meeting Thursday at the Post Falls Library.” [ID]

After a failed first attempt to take control of the public library earlier in the year, the Liberty Lake City Council passed an ordinance that would give them some control over the library board’s policies.

“A conservative activist who teaches parents how to get books removed from school libraries has won her first major victory at a right-leaning Southern California school board, setting the district up for a fresh legal battle with the state.” And the first part of her advice to parents is to never use the term “book ban.”

A San Diego parent is “frustrated” that his 14-year-old was assigned The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian in class, even though the district says that parents can talk to the teacher to work out an alternate assignment for the student if they so choose. It doesn’t seem like this parent so chose.

Books & Authors in the News

Renowned producer, TV writer, and author Norman Lear has died at 101.

Best-selling author Tim Dorsey died earlier this month at 62.

Debut author Cait Corrain lost a book deal after she was accused of review-bombing other authors on Goodreads.

Numbers & Trends

Jane Austen’s annotated copy of Curiosities of Literature is up for auction and is expected to fetch up to $150,000.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

The Goodreads Choice Award winners have been announced.

Tyriek White wins the Center for Fiction’s 2023 First Novel Prize for We Are a Haunting.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Books as What We Do in the Shadows quotes. This is a thing of beauty.

On the Riot

How to build seasonal rereading rituals.

black and white cat squished up against a person's leg

Here’s Dini visiting me in Spaceship Quarantine. He absolutely refused to let me close the bedroom door, and honestly, how could you not feel better with such a squishy boy next to you??

All right, friends. It’s the weekend. Let’s get some rest and stay healthy!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book…

Welcome to Read This Book, a newsletter where I recommend one book that should absolutely be put at the top of your TBR pile. Recommended books will vary across genre and age category and include shiny new books, older books you may have missed, and some classics I suggest finally getting around to. Make space for another pile of books on your floor because here we go!

Today’s pick is an essay collection that leaves readers with a lot to chew on.

Book cover of Opinions: A Decade of Arguments, Criticism, and Minding Other People's Business by Roxane Gay

Opinions: A Decade of Arguments, Criticism, and Minding Other People’s Business by Roxane Gay

I have long been a fan of Roxane Gay’s writing, and this compilation of some of her essays spanning a decade does not disappoint. There are dozens of essays in this book, a few book reviews, and some celebrity interviews as well. The author, like many of us, loves to give her opinion and to give advice and you can sense her revelry in the act of doing so, even during some of the more heavy pieces.

This book is divided into seven sections, including “Identity/Politics,” “The Matter of Black Lives,” and “For the Culture.” She includes so many of what I consider to be her greatest hits, like “Cops Don’t Belong at Pride,” “How to Build a Monument,” “Who Gets to Be Angry?,” and “Dave Chappelle’s Brittle Ego.” I was overwhelmed by the amount of things that have happened in the past ten years and I nearly got whiplash as I bounced from essays on the Trump presidency to Chadwick Boseman to a beautiful memorial essay of Toni Morrison. I was also rocketed back in time to essays about the mass shooting at a church in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2015, the murder of Sandra Bland, and the mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas.

Not all the pieces require readers to reflect on the horrors of the past ten years, and the composition of this book is skillfully balanced with intelligent book reviews, entertaining and thoughtful critiques of films and shows, and even some hilarious observations like the ones included in “Why the Beach is a Bummer” and “Why Are Most Father’s Day Gifts So Terrible?”

The author’s celebrity profiles are brilliantly written in such a way that a few were of people about whom I initially was indifferent, but after reading Roxane Gay’s profiles, I found myself endlessly fascinated. There are nine profiles included, ranging from musicians like Nicki Minaj, Janelle Monáe, and Madonna to actors like Sarah Paulson and Tessa Thompson.

Finally, there are a few choice pieces from her “Ask Roxane” column, which I deeply appreciate as a person who loves to give advice myself. From cover to cover, this book is an excellent and wide-ranging read.

The holidays have arrived, and so has our new paperback level at TBR! If you (or a reader you know) are just over-carrying around bulky hardcovers or are looking for a more budget-friendly option, we’ve got you. Check out all the offerings at mybtro.com/gift, and give personalized reading recommendations customized for any and every reader.


That’s it for now, book-lovers!

Patricia

Find me on Book Riot, the All the Books podcast, Bluesky, and Instagram.

Find more books by subscribing to Book Riot Newsletters.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Cambridge author writes new Hercule Poirot novel

Hello, mystery fans! You can now stream Barbie on Max!

The holidays have arrived, and so has our new paperback level at TBR! If you (or a reader you know) are just over-carrying around bulky hardcovers or are looking for a more budget-friendly option, we’ve got you. Check out all the offerings at mybtro.com/gift, and give personalized reading recommendations customized for any and every reader.

Bookish Goods

a wood calendar for the month of January 2024 with an illustration of a tiger reading a book

2024 Wood Reading Animals Calendar by NightOwlPaperGoods

This is an adorable calendar for 2024 that’s great for any book lover and to gift to kids and adults! ($21)

New Releases

cover image for Fall

Fall (Detective Harriet Foster #2) by Tracy Clark

For fans of procedurals set in Chicago!

Detective Harriet Foster and her partner, Detective Vera Li, have their hands full and a ticking clock with their current case. Corrupt city council members are being murdered, and 30 dimes are left with the bodies. Clearly revenge is the easiest explanation, and since Marin Shaw was just released from prison and refused to point fingers at the rest of her corrupt coworkers, she seems the best suspect. But Shaw swears this crime she’s innocent of, leaving Foster and Li to either prove Shaw is lying or find out who has the motive and ability to frame Shaw…

I love Clark’s procedurals and characters — if you’re not already reading her work, definitely pick up her books. If you want to start at the beginning of this series, pick up Hide. And if you want a backlist series with four books, pick up Broken Places (A Cass Raines Mystery #1).

cover image for Murder Crossed Her Mind

Murder Crossed Her Mind (Pentecost and Parker #4) by Stephen Spotswood

For fans of partnered PIs and historical mysteries!

This is a really fun mystery series that neither veers too dark nor light, with great character voice and humor.

Our narrator, Will Parker, has lived an interesting life, which she’s recounting by telling the big cases she’s worked on in her career. She works for a famous PI, Lillian Pentecost, who recruited her from the circus when Lillian needed an assistant because she has multiple sclerosis. Their current case, in 1940s New York, involves a missing woman who never left her apartment but had once been recruited to track Nazis by the FBI. Except that’s not the only thing in her past that would make her a victim of foul play, so Will and Lillian have their work cut out for them — especially since we start with Will being attacked and getting a concussion!

I love the narrator, and really need the next book in the series now, please.

If you want to start at the beginning (you do!), pick up Fortune Favors The Dead!

Looking for more new releases? Check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Here are two books for holiday mystery reading this season!

cover image for Chanukah Guilt

Chanukah Guilt by Rabbi Ilene Schneider

For fans of cozy mysteries!

Rabbi Aviva Cohen is in her 50s living in South Jersey. She’s officiating a funeral because the deceased was wildly disliked, and Rabbi Cohen was the only rabbi not on a list who wouldn’t officiate. Then multiple people tell her it was certainly murder, which is followed by another murder, so clearly Rabbi Cohen must investigate — this is a cozy mystery, after all!

cover image for The Mousse Wonderful Time of the Year

The Mousse Wonderful Time of Year (Oxford Tearoom Mysteries #10) by H.Y. Hanna

Gemma Rose owns a traditional English tearoom in Oxford and, of course, is an amateur sleuth. This time, she has to solve a murder mystery with a body in the library of a country manor when she and a group of people are snowed in!

If you want to start at the beginning, pick up All-Butter ShortDead.

News and Roundups

Cambridge author writes new Hercule Poirot novel

The Best Stocking Stuffers for Readers in 2023

Murder in Boston Delivers a Long-Overdue Reckoning

Vanessa recommends a cryptid whodunit and historical fantasy in this week’s backlist picks. Did Nessie do it?! You’ll have to read to find out.

Liberty and Danika chat new releases and more, including The Great British Bump-Off, on All The Books!

Most Parents Trust, Respect, and Feel Safe with Librarians

Goodreads Staff Share Their Top Books of 2023

Lawsuits Are The Way Forward: A Look at Every Current Book Ban Lawsuit

Why Michael Connelly turns the legal system upside down in Resurrection Walk

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2023 releases and upcoming 2024 releases. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and get Tailored Book Recommendations!

Until next time, keep investigating! In the meantime, come talk books with me on Bluesky, Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, and Litsy — you can find me under Jamie Canavés.

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own, you can sign up here.

Categories
Giveaways

121423-Dec.EACPushes-2023-Giveaway

We’re partnering with Bookperk to give away a $100 gift card to Bookshop.org!

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

Here’s a bit more from our partner: Bookperk is the place for readers! Fantastic deals, exclusive giveaways, bookish finds & more — delivered daily for free.

Categories
The Stack

Embrace the Magic of…School?

Wait, that’s not right — or is it? Check out today’s Riot Recommendations to find out!

The holidays have arrived, and so has our new paperback level at TBR! If you (or a reader you know) are just over-carrying around bulky hardcovers or are looking for a more budget-friendly option, we’ve got you. Check out all the offerings at mybtro.com/gift, and give personalized reading recommendations customized for any and every reader.

Bookish Goods

a Batman Christmas ornament with the text "For the record, I do not smell"

Batman Ornament by PlymouthCustomDesign

Batman has a very important announcement to make this Christmas, so be sure to place this ornament in a prominent place on your tree! $18

New Releases

I Married My Female Friend Vol 1 cover

I Married My Female Friend Volume One by Shio Usui

Best friends Rumiko and Kurumi promised to marry each other if they were both still single in five years’ time — and the five years are up! Now that they’re married, they fully intend to go on being best friends and simply live together as roommates. But of course, that’s not quite how things unfold…

Thunderbolts Uncaged Omnibus

Thunderbolts: Uncaged Omnibus by Various Creators

At the moment, Marvel’s Thunderbolts is scheduled for release in mid-2025, so you’ve got plenty of time to catch up on this group and its history. This 1000-plus page omnibus includes plenty of adventures starring the team that went from undercover criminals to real heroes in their own right!

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

Riot Recommendations

Today’s Riot Rec theme is: magic schools! Who doesn’t love a comic set in a school where magic exists and young people learn to wield their powers for the forces of good?

The Black Mage cover

The Black Mage by Daniel Barnes and DJ Kirkland

St. Ivory Academy (appropriate name is appropriate) has never admitted a Black wizard into its ranks — until now, when a Black student literally named Tom Token is allowed to enroll. But a school with such a long history of exclusion and segregation is bound to have some dark secrets…secrets that Tom will risk his safety to bring into the light.

basil and oregano book cover

Basil and Oregano by Melissa Capriglione

As seniors at the Porta Bella Magiculinary Academy, Basil Eyres and Arabella Oregano are both determined to be the best in their class. Rather than competing, these two lovebirds team up to wow their teachers at the year-end festival. But Arabella has been keeping something big from Basil, and that something may come between their love and their ambitions for the future!

Okay, so maybe your school or workplace isn’t as enchanting as the ones featured here, but the world still holds plenty of amazing things, if you know where to look. Just look at these cool dinos we learned about this year! Neat, huh? Till next week, keep that child-like wonder burning bright, nerd friends.

~Eileen

Categories
Kissing Books

Sexy Fox Demons and Christmas Tree Farms

Hey y’all! Welcome, or welcome back, to the Kissing Books newsletter. I’m PN Hinton, here to share my love of the romance genre with like-minded readers through a myriad of ways.

Christmas is just nine days away, and while that revelation would normally send me into a mini-panic, this year I’m actually calm. I think a lot of that has to do with me realizing that while gifts in general are nice, they are also not necessary to enjoy the spirit of the season. I’m still going to give gifts, mind you, but I’m being mindful about quality over quantity. After all, it is the thought behind the gift that makes it special. And if that is something that you needed to be reminded of, then I hope that your spirits are a little bit lighter now.

And if you need a little gifting assistance, Tailored Book Recommendations is here to help! Here at TBR, we pair our customers with a professional book nerd (aka bibliologist) who just gets them. They fill out a survey and then sit back and relax as we pick books just for them. We’ve got three levels — recs-only, paperback, and hardcover — and you can gift a full year or one time, so there are options for every budget! Get all the details at mybtro.com/gift

Bookish Goods

picture of Tarot Card Book Sleeve

Tarot Card Book Sleeve by NeedlesRiddles

By now I’m sure everyone is well aware of my love of Tarot cards. It’s probably why a majority of my gifts from my book club were Tarot related. If you’re likeminded and like to protect your books and/or e-readers when you carry them around, then this is perfect for you too! $14

New Releases

cover of The Rising Sun

The Rising Sun by Twyla Turner

Out of all her friends, Kennedy is the hopeless romantic, which is why she questions being the last one left single. This thought leads her to pack her bags for a solo trip to Asia in the hopes of finding some inner peace. To her surprise, she runs into Koji, the boy who broke her heart back in college. Koji has always regretted letting the expectations of his overbearing parents interfere with their relationship. Now that the opportunity has presented itself, he is determined to do whatever it takes to show her that he is worth the second chance.

cover of Playing with Matches

Playing With Matches by Georgia Beers

Elizabeth has been called back home to help her family’s B&B as they prepare to host her ex’s wedding. Not wanting to be pitied for still being single, she claims that she is dating local woman Cori. While Cori initially has hesitations about the ruse, she eventually agrees to play the part of fake girlfriend for the duration of the wedding celebration. As the days pass, the lines between fake and real blur, and they’re left wondering if this scheme is Fate’s way of bringing them together for real.

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

Riot Recommendations

The days are getting shorter and the nights are getting longer, but somehow I still feel as busy as ever. If you’re in the same boat, then you may be finding it difficult to take a pause for reading, but it’s still important to take time for yourself, no matter what. And if reading is one of those ways, then I still firmly believe you should keep to it. If novels are harder for you to get into, check out these holiday novellas which will satisfy your reading desire while also being mindful of limited extra time.

cover of Mistlefoe

Mistlefoe by Kimberly Lemming

When Ruby goes searching for the fox demon that cursed her father, she never expected him to be so attractive. Lucca, said fox demon, agrees to lift the curse — provided she agrees to be his fake mate for the upcoming week-long Winter Festival. Knowing that her family’s livelihood depends on it, she agrees to the week-long ruse. What she didn’t know is that from the moment Lucca clapped eyes on her, he knew she was his Fated Mate and has no intention of letting her go once the celebration is over.

cover of 'Tis the Season

‘Tis the Season by L. Dreamer

After a lifetime of misjudgments and mistakes, Bridgette has settled into a career as the owner and operator of Dirty Hands Farm. The farm makes it a point to employ ex-cons who are looking to make a better life for themselves after serving their sentences. Olivia is a prosecutor who is well on her way to climbing the ladder in the legal world and tying the knot with her long-time boyfriend. When the two women cross paths at the Dirty Hand’s Christmas Tree farm, their lives are forever changed in ways neither could have predicted.

I recently heard about Third State Books, which is a new indie press focused on highlighting Asian American voices. One of their upcoming books is Pride & Preston Lin, which is a modern spin on Pride & Prejudice and I am super excited for it!

As previously mentioned, it’s also that time of the year where people talk about their ‘best of’ lists. Here is one for the best five romance books in 2023.

Pick some winter activities and get your own holiday movie!

And that’s all I have for y’all today. I’ll be back on Monday with a fresh new newsletter, and in the meantime, I can still be found flittering around on the bird app under @PScribe801. You can also give me a follow over on my new-ish Instagram @pns_bookish_world. Until we meet again, happy reading and stay hydrated.

Categories
What's Up in YA

Bowstack To The Max: YA Book Talk, December 18, 2023

Hey YA Readers!

It might be your last “regular” week at work for the year this week and if so, congrats–you’ve made it! If you’re still chugging along as normal, I see you too and hope you’ve got something warm to drink and sweet to eat. Those books you’ve got on your stack will be waiting eagerly for you when you’re able to get to them.

Let’s dig into this week’s new books and look at a fun trend prediction for 2024 through the lens of YA book covers.

Bookish Goods

large tote bag featuring an image of books on a shelf with flowers.

Floral Book Tote Bag by VincenzaSilviaCream

Are you in the market for a big tote bag? Look no further than this one, which measures 19″ L x 12″ H x 8″ W. You’ll be able to pack a lot of books in here, and it’s cute, too! $40.

New Releases

You don’t need me to repeat it, but I will: it’s the end of the year so the new releases aren’t as abundant as they are at other times of the year. You can find the entire roundup over here.

This week, there are zero new releases in hardcover, as far as I can tell. So I’m going to do something a little different: here are two paperback releases. There are not enough stand-alone/first-in-a-series new releases in paperback to do this for Thursday, so consider this entry for that newsletter, too. Want the full paperback release roundup though? No sweat–I’ve got you here!

the black queen book cover

The Black Queen by Jumata Emill

Nova Albright is going to be the first Black homecoming queen at Lovett High School. This is a huge deal, especially because the system at Lovett has been rigged in favor of white courts since the beginning, as the school came to be post-Katrina and combined the rich white students from one part of the Mississippi town with the lower-income Black students from another part of town. The Black students are de facto segregated at the school: they’re not in the AP classes, but they ARE there to help the school’s sports teams excel. This little factoid is important for several reasons, including why Nova’s crowning is especially important.

So it’s incredibly suspicious when Nova is found dead days before Homecoming on the same night a viral video of Tinsley McArthur emerges. Tinsley, who believes she deserved the crown. Tinsley, who has a family legacy to uphold. Tinsley, who was drinking with her friends that night and said she was going to murder Nova.

But Tinsley swears she’s innocent. This was a setup by her ungenerous so-called friends. She was drunk when she made that statement. She absolutely did not kill Nova. 

Or did she?

on top of glass book cover

On Top of Glass by Karina Manta

Looking for a teen sports memoir about coming of age as a queer person? This is a winner for that and more.

Karina skated at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships and quickly became a fan favorite. She then became the first skater on Team USA to come out as queer.

Her memoir explores life on the ice, as well as growing up in a big school where, even in an era where queerness became more accepted than in the past, she knew virtually no one else having the experiences she was. Because this is a sports memoir, it also explores the ups and downs of figure skating, including the unreal pressures placed upon athletes to look and act in a certain way.

YA On Trend

One of my favorite year-to-come reports to read is Pinterest’s. Utilizing what people have been searching for, the social media company creates a guide to the trends they expect to either emerge or really blow up in the next year.

A huge trend for 2024? Bows. Bows have been a topic of interest, whether they’re used for hair accessorizing, neck accessorizing, heels, crochet, what have you.

Naturally, I figured it was worth looking to see where YA stacks up in this trend. What book covers have given us bows in the past? These would be fun pulled together into a book display if you’re in a bookstore, library, or classroom and have the space. Some of these bows are going to be what springs to mind when you think of the word “bow”—but not the kind with an arrow—including those representative of cultural dress and style.

I’ve done the best I can tracking down cover artists to be difficult (see my annual rant about that here).

Ready? Set? Let’s bow stack!

Amy Chelsea Stacie Dee by Mary G. Thompson book cover

Amy Chelsea Stacie Dee by Mary G. Thompson, whose paperback edition sports a bow.

Canto Cantigo book cover

Canto Contigo by Jonny Garza Villa, publishing April 9, 2024. The cover was designed by Kerri Resnick and illustrated by Max Reed.

cheer up book cover

Cheer Up!: Love and Pom Poms by Crystal Frasier (Author), Val Wise (Illustrator), and Oscar O. Jupiter.

dungeons and drama book cover.

Dungeons and Drama by Kristy Boyce, publishing January 9. Cover illustrated by Liz Parkes.

the fox maidens book cover

The Fox Maidens written and illustrated by Robin Ha, publishing February 13.

rebel belle book cover

Rebel Belle by Rachel Hawkins. The third book in this series, Lady Renegades, is also an excellent fit for the theme.

As always, thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you on Thursday for your reader favorites of 2023.

Until then, happy reading!

–Kelly Jensen

Categories
Book Radar

Bikini Kill’s Kathleen Hanna Announces REBEL GIRL Book Tour and More Book Radar!

Hi Book Pals!

It’s a big week here in our household because it was my husband’s birthday yesterday. And we celebrated by going to not one but two bookstores. Oh, and maybe even more importantly, it was our cat Murray’s birthday the day before. My little orange angel is four years old! So happy birthday week to two of the most special people in the whole world. And on with the books!

Book Deals and Reveals

a love like the sun book cover

Let’s start with a gorgeous cover reveal! Check out the cover of A Love Like The Sun by Riss M. Neilson. It’s out from Berkley on June 11.

Literary Hub has singled out the 139 best book covers of 2023.

And here are the 12 book covers The New York Times calls the “edgiest, catchiest, most creative book jackets of the year.”

Bikini Kill’s Kathleen Hanna has announced a U.S. book tour in support of her new memoir Rebel Girl: My Life as a Feminist Punk. The book will be out on May 14, and a portion of all ticket sales from the tour will be donated to the nonprofit Peace Sisters

Jeffery Deaver has a new series coming out with Thomas & Mercer. The first book in the series, Fatal Intrusion, will be out in fall 2024.

Olivia Dade’s paranormal romantic comedy ZomRomCom is being called The Last of Us meets My Roommate Is a Vampire. And it’s out from Berkley in summer 2025!

Speaking of romance, Judith Rosen’s Bookstore Romance is coming out from Brandeis University Press in early 2025. The author calls the book “a celebration of love—and of bricks-and-mortar bookstores—told through the stories (in words and pictures) of couples who chose to get engaged, and sometimes married, in bookstores.”

Dictionary.com’s choice of Word of the Year nods to the prominence of AI in 2023 — and where it falls short.

Get your TBR ready and feast your eyes on all these fabulous new book releases coming in 2024.

Book Riot Recommends

Hi, welcome to everyone’s favorite segment of Book Radar called Book Riot Recommends. This is where I’ll talk to you about all the books I’m reading, the books I’m loving, and the books I can’t wait to read and love in the near future. I think you’re going to love them too!

Can’t Wait for This One!

i was a teenage slasher book cover

I Was A Teenage Slasher by Stephen Graham Jones (S&S/Saga Press, July 16)

Y’all know the drill with Stephen Graham Jones by now. He’s always releasing multiple works per year, and I’m always going to send all of them straight to the top of my TBR list. I don’t know how this author does it, but he writes fast and he writes exceptionally well. And there’s nothing quite like a Stephen Graham Jones horror novel. If you’ve read his books, you know what I mean.

Yes, the third and final novel in Stephen Graham Jone’s Indian Lake Trilogy, The Angel of Indian Lake, is coming out in March. But only three months later, we’re getting a fresh new standalone in I Was A Teenage Slasher. Lamesa, Texas is a small town in west Texas where everyone knows everyone else’s business. And in 1989 in Lamesa, a young teenager named Tolly Driver will be cursed to kill others for revenge.

This story is told from the close perspective of a killer, as Tolly Driver writes his autobiography. Stephen Graham Jones is a master of character studies, and I’m so excited to meet his newest protagonist.

Words of Literary Wisdom

“Florida’s soil is soaked with so much blood, it’s a wonder the droplets don’t seep between your toes with every step, Mama used to say.”
The Reformatory by Tananarive Due

What’s Up in the Book Community?

My iPhone is constantly telling me I spend too much time staring at my screen, which is honestly so rude. But this means I spend a lot of time scrolling around the online book community: BookTube, Bookstagram, BookTok, BookLinkedIn (JK. That’s not a thing…I don’t think). You get the idea. Don’t have the time, energy, or the will to do all of that yourself? No problem. I got you. In this weekly section of Book Radar, we’ll take a look at something cool, interesting, and/or newsy that’s going on in the book community.

If you’ve been following recent book news, then you know what story we have to talk about this week, friends. First-time author Cait Corrain has lost her book deal after posting fake negative reviews on other authors’ books on Goodreads. Corrain’s book agent, Rebecca Podos, also said she has cut ties with Corrain. The author has issued an apology on X Twitter. You can read more about the story here. Or if you’re more of a BookTube person, here’s a quick explanation.

And Here’s A Cat Picture!

orange tabby cat curled up on a sofa

We’ve got to end today’s newsletter by wishing Murray a HAPPY BIRTHDAY one more time! Happy birthday, sweet orange angel! Here’s to being four and more wonderful than ever! And many more years to come!

Okay, friends, that’s where we wrap up this newsletter today. I’ll see you on Monday. I hope you have a wonderful weekend.

Emily

Categories
Events

The Read Harder 2024 Challenge Has Arrived! 🥳

Are you ready to read harder? The 2024 Challenge, sponsored by ThriftBooks, is up! And it’s new and improved this year — we’re adding a community aspect to the newsletter, where we can share our progress and recommendations with like-minded readers all in one place. Get all the details (and the Challenge itself) right here!

logo for The Read Harder Challenge
Categories
Read Harder

Introducing the 2024 Read Harder Challenge!

It’s finally here: the 2024 Read Harder Challenge! Would you believe this is the TENTH YEAR of the Read Harder Challenge? Every year, we have fun cooking up the perfect tasks to get you out of your reading comfort zone, discovering your new favorite books. As always, there are 24 tasks: two for each month of the year.

You can approach this challenge any way you want: use one book to complete multiple tasks, or only assign each title once. Yes, audiobooks and comics count! Make this challenge your own. The important thing is that you branch out and pick up books you wouldn’t otherwise have tried.

This year’s tasks include all sorts of fun challenges, including some timely reading projects (we really need to collectively improve our media literacy skills), trending genres (cozy fantasy, anyone?), and tasks to diversify your reading in all sorts of ways.

Not sure where to get started? You’ll be receiving emails with recommendations for each task throughout the year! Free subscribers will get a couple book recommendations for each, while paid subscribers will get access to the whole list — plus more crowd-sourced in the comments! We’ll also be doing weekly progress check-ins for paid subscribers, where we can discuss what we’re reading, what we recommend for each challenge, and which tasks we need advice on how to complete. If you want to join the Read Harder community, you can subscribe for $6 a month or $60 for the year. Community features will go live in January!

Without further ado, here are the 24 tasks for the 2024 Read Harder Challenge! And if you want the downloadable PDF, you can grab that here.

  1. Read a cozy fantasy book.
  2. Read a YA book by a trans author.
  3. Read a middle grade horror novel.
  4. Read a history book by a BIPOC author.
  5. Read a sci-fi novella.
  6. Read a middle grade book with an LGBTQIA main character.
  7. Read an indie published collection of poetry by a BIPOC or queer author.
  8. Read a book in translation from a country you’ve never visited.
  9. Read a book recommended by a librarian.
  10. Read a historical fiction book by an Indigenous author.
  11. Read a picture book published in the last five years.
  12. Read a genre book (SFF, horror, mystery, romance) by a disabled author.
  13. Read a comic that has been banned.
  14. Read a book by an author with an upcoming event (virtual or in person) and then attend the event.
  15. Read a YA nonfiction book.
  16. Read a book based solely on the title.
  17. Read a book about media literacy.
  18. Read a book about drag or queer artistry.
  19. Read a romance with neurodivergent characters.
  20. Read a book about books (fiction or nonfiction).
  21. Read a book that went under the radar in 2023.
  22. Read a manga or manhwa.
  23. Read a howdunit or whydunit mystery.
  24. Pick a challenge from any of the previous years’ challenges to repeat!