Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Small Bites of SF/F

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’ve got new releases for you today, with half of them focused on short stories in case you’re in the mood for small bites. Whew, but it was one heck of a weekend here. Nine-plus inches of snow to shovel (RIP, me) and then thick fog! Ah well, as we like to say in Colorado, “We need the moisture.” May your weekend have been warmer, or at the least, may the plows have visited your street swiftly. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

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

Leather Book Harness

Leather Book Harness by FierceEagleLeather

These book holsters look very cool—a way to carry a book hanging from your belt, whether it’s what you’re reading, what you’re journaling in, or what you’re sketching in.

New Releases

infinity alchemist book cover

Infinity Alchemist by Kacen Callender

Ash wants to be one of the elite few legally allowed to study magic, but after his rejection by the Lancaster College of Alchemic Science, he takes his ambition underground by getting hired as a groundskeeper for the school. He studies alchemy there in secret until he’s caught by Ramsay, who promises to keep his secret if he helps her find a sacred book that will give her extraordinary power. It’s a quest that pits them both against powerful alchemists…including Ash’s estranged father.

Your Shadow Half Remains by Sunny Moraine

Your Shadow Half Remains by Sunny Moraine

The apocalypse has come and gone, brought on by a strange condition where meeting another human being’s eyes will cause both to break into deadly, violent rage. In order to survive, Riley hasn’t seen another human face in years. When Ellis moves in down the road, Riley can’t help but try to get to know him, as starved for human contact as she is. All she wants is to take just one look…

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

Riot Recommendations

Let’s do a bit of short story reading! So here’s a recent collection and an anthology to check out.

Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart: And Other Stories by GennaRose Nethercott

Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart: And Other Stories by GennaRose Nethercott

This collection focuses on the inner abomination that resides in the heart of every human, the way longing is both monstrous and necessary, and questions what a beast truly is.

Relit: 16 Latinx Remixes of Classic Stories edited by Sandra Proudman

Relit: 16 Latinx Remixes of Classic Stories edited by Sandra Proudman

This collection features 16 stories by Latinx authors that remix classics, myths, and fairy tales through the lens of their experience and imagination. Prepare yourself for Pride and Prejudice in space and The Great Gatsby in Costa Rica!

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
The Stack

More Comics = More Fun

For such a short month, February sure has a lot going on. There’s Black History Month all month, Chinese New Year this weekend, and Waitangi Day to celebrate and/or protest in Aotearoa/New Zealand today. Many countries have Valentine’s Day coming up, too. And, of course, there are new comics to investigate, like these ones!

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

Bookish Goods

A keychain cover shaped like Pochita from Chainsaw Man. The key sticks out in a way that resembles the character's nose. It is pressed into a lock, demonstrating how the product works.

Demon Rubber Key Cover by HighDesertGoodsLLC

What a clever key cover! Chainsaw Man fans will smile every time they unlock a door with one of these. $10

New Releases

King Cheer cover

King Cheer by Molly Horton Booth, Stephanie Kate Strohm, and Jamie Green

The sequel to Twelfth Grade Night is here! The Shakespeare-inspired adventures continue as Leah steps down as captain of the cheerleading squad, leaving a power vacuum that threatens to tear both the cheerleaders and the basketball players apart. Is Leah up to the task of fixing it all?

Amulet Book Nine Waverider cover

Amulet Book Nine: Waverider by Kazu Kibuishi

The Amulet series ends with this one final, epic confrontation! Siblings Emily and Navin have been through so much to protect their family and the many strange worlds they have encountered along the way. Now, they must combine their powers with those of some unlikely allies to find the peace they have long fought for.

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

Riot Recommendations

Today’s Riot Rec theme is: sequels! Since both of today’s New Releases are part of preexisting series, I figured we’d continue that theme down here, too.

The Night Eaters Her Little Reapers cover

The Night Eaters: Her Little Reapers by Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda

In the first book, She Eats the Night, twins Milly and Billy spent the night in a haunted house where a murder once occurred. Now, they continue to learn about their terrifying family history, which includes all manner of mythological creatures that might be even more frightening than they look…

sunshine book cover

Sunshine by Jarrett J. Krosoczka

In this sequel to the award-winning Hey, Kiddo, Krosoczka recalls the summer he spent working as a counselor at a camp for sick children. Despite his initial reservations, not only does he end up having a good time, he learns important lessons about how to cope with trauma and hard times.

If I have anything to say about it, the Stack will continue generating sequels for a long time to come! Stay tuned for the next edition on Thursday, nerd friends!

~Eileen

Categories
New Books

New Books for the First Tuesday of February!

Hello, my friends! I hope you are all reading something wonderful. This has been such a great year for books, and it’s only the first week of February! (It is February, right? My other guess is 42.) I have some bad news and some good news for you. The bad news is that the release date of My Favorite Thing Is Monsters Vol. 2 by Emil Ferris has been moved again, from April to the end of May. The good news is that I have read it, and it is sooooo great! Just you wait. I feel like it should be a national holiday or something when it comes out. We’ve all been so excited about it for so long! And wow, do I wish I could draw like Ferris. I can only draw stick figures!

At the top of my list of books to acquire today are Infinity Alchemist by Kacen Callender, Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart: And Other Stories by GennaRose Nethercott, and Dinner on Monster Island: Essays by Tania De Rozario. And on this week’s episode of All the Books!, Danika and I talked about great books we loved that are out this week, including Smoke Kings, The Teeny-Weeny Unicorn, and How to Live Free in a Dangerous World.

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

Today, I am doing a round-up of several exciting books from the first Tuesday of February 2024. Below, you’ll find titles (loosely) broken up into several categories to make it easier for your browsing convenience. I hope you have fun with it! And as with each first Tuesday newsletter, I am putting asterisks *** next to the books that I have had the chance to read and loved. YAY, BOOKS!

Biography and Memoir

Be Not Afraid of My Body: A Lyrical Memoir by Darius Stewart

Dinner on Monster Island: Essays by Tania De Rozario

How To Live Free In a Dangerous World: A Decolonial Memoir by Shayla Lawson

Outofshapeworthlessloser: A Memoir of Figure Skating, F*cking Up, and Figuring It Out by Gracie Gold

Nothing Ever Just Disappears: Seven Hidden Queer Histories by Diarmuid Hester

Alphabetical Diaries by Sheila Heti 

Medgar and Myrlie: Medgar Evers and the Love Story That Awakened America by Joy-Ann Reid

Fiction

Significant Others by Zoe Eisenberg

Fourteen Days: A Collaborative Novel edited by Margaret Atwood

The Adversary by Michael Crummey*** 

Self-Portraits: Stories by Osamu Dazai, Ralph McCarthy (translator)

Redwood Court by DéLana R. A. Dameron

Set for Life by Andrew Ewell 

The Women by Kristin Hannah

Float Up, Sing Down by Laird Hunt 

Antiquity by Hanna Johansson, Kira Josefsson (translator)

Ways and Means by Daniel Lefferts

cover of Greta & Valdin by Rebecca Reilly; pink with limes in a torn orange mesh bag

The Road from Belhaven by Margot Livesey 

Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart: And Other Stories by GennaRose Nethercott

Ordinary Human Failings by Megan Nolan 

Dixon, Descending by Karen Outen

Greta & Valdin by Rebecca Reilly***

Cahokia Jazz by Francis Spufford 

Corey Fah Does Social Mobility by Isabel Waidner

Middle Grade & Picture Books

The Teeny-Weeny Unicorn by Shawn Harris***

Zips and Eeloo Make Hummus by Leila Boukarim, Alex Lopez***

Ten Little Rabbits by Maurice Sendak 

Mystery and Thriller

Nightwatching by Tracy Sierra***

cover of Nightwatching by Tracy Sierra; glimpses of a woman's eye and a snowy house in the letters in the title

Smoke Kings by Jahmal Mayfield***

What Is Mine by Lyn Liao Butler

​​The Essential Harlem Detectives by Chester Himes

Everyone Who Can Forgive Me Is Dead by Jenny Hollander

The Antique Hunter’s Guide to Murder by C.L. Miller 

Nonfiction

Imagination: A Manifesto by Ruha Benjamin

Wrong Norma by Anne Carson 

The Thefts of the Mona Lisa: The Complete Story of the World’s Most Famous Artwork by Noah Charney

Radical Reparations: Healing the Soul of a Nation by Marcus Hunter

Alt-Nature by Saretta Morgan

Romance

cover of Bride by Ali Hazelwood; illustration of a woman in a white dress with a large grey wolf behind her

Bride by Ali Hazelwood

The Last Days of Lilah Goodluck by Kylie Scott

When Grumpy Met Sunshine by Charlotte Stein

A Love Song for Ricki Wilde by Tia Williams

Sci-fi, Fantasy, and Horror 

The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett 

Your Shadow Half Remains by Sunny Moraine

Tales of the Celestial Kingdom (Celestial Kingdom, 3) by Sue Lynn Tan and Kelly Chong

Young Adult

infinity alchemist book cover

Infinity Alchemist by Kacen Callender

Out of Body by Nia Davenport

Even If It Breaks Your Heart by Erin Hahn

No Time Like Now by Naz Kutub

Ways and Means by Daniel Lefferts

I Hope This Doesn’t Find You by Ann Liang

ASAP by Axie Oh

The Absinthe Underground by Jamie Pacton

Relit: 16 Latinx Remixes of Classic Stories by Sandra Proudman

an orange cat sitting in a white laundry basket; photo by Liberty Hardy

This week: I’m currently reading The Nightmare Before Kissmas by Sara Raasch and God Bless You, Otis Spunkmeyer by Joseph Earl Thomas. I’m also considering a reread of The Brief History of the Dead by Kevin Brockmeier, because the snow and cold have put me in the mood for a book about the end of the world. If you have never read it, I am jealous of any of you who read it for the first time. And speaking of snow and cold, I started watching the new season of True Detective. It has everything I love. Just really dire things happening to people isolated in the cold weather, getting scared by creepy, murdery stuff. And I love Jodie Foster so much. The song stuck in my head right now is “Ice Cream (Pay Phone)” by Black Pumas. And here’s a cat photo: Look at this ridiculous little laundry basket case.


That’s it for me today, friends. I am sending you love and good wishes for whatever is happening in your life right now. Thank you, as always, for joining me each week as I rave about books! See you next week. – XO, Liberty

Categories
Giveaways

020524-DreamscapeH12024-Giveaway

We’re giving away three audiobook bundles from Dreamscape to three lucky Riot readers!

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

New year, new worlds to explore! From a first-in-a-series isekai LitRPG to an epic journey through a ghost of a dragon, these audiobooks are sure to bring you on an out-of-this-world adventure. Enter for a chance to win Scorched EarthBecoming a BeaufontSecrets of the Prime Ones, and Gogmagog.

Categories
Canada Giveaways

020524-BetterLivingThroughBooks-Feb2024-CAGiveaway

To celebrate Better Living Through Books’ launch, we’re giving away 5 books featured in the newsletter!

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

  • Bored and Brilliant by Manoush Zomorodi
  • Start Here by Sohla El-Waylly
  • Four Thousand Weeks by Oliver Burkeman
  • How to Be Perfect by Michael Schur
  • Drop the Ball by Tiffany Dufu

All you have to do is subscribe to Better Living Through Books newsletter. Simply start a free subscription to Better Living Through Books after clicking above. No payment method required!

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Anxiety, Libraries, And More!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! Did you know tomorrow is World Read Aloud Day? My daughter’s school librarian is hosting a special read-aloud pajama party tomorrow night for bedtime. So cool! I loved my school library and librarian when I was a kid (you rocked Mrs. Wallace!), and I’m so glad my daughter has an awesome school library and librarian, too, especially considering the sharp decline in school librarians.

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

Bookish Goods

Library Bumper Sticker by OpalAndJune Shop

Library Bumper Sticker by OpalAndJune Shop

Speaking of libraries, check out this super cute bumper sticker! If I had a car, this would be on it, ha! $12

New Releases

Cover of Dancing in the Storm by Amie Darnell Specht, illustrated by Shannon Hitchcock

Dancing in the Storm by Amie Darnell Specht and Shannon Hitchcock

In this middle grade novel, 12-year-old Kate is diagnosed with a rare genetic disorder that coauthor Amie Darnell Specht also has—Fibrodysplasia Ossificans Progressiva (FOP). Kate loves gymnastics and is quite good at it. However, any sports are discouraged for people with FOP. She has to stop gymnastics, and several of her gymnastics friends refuse to understand or empathize. Meanwhile, adding to these changes, Kate loses her dog and adopts a new one.

I am always here for more disability rep from disabled authors, and this one is such a great glimpse into this rare disorder and also how disability can disrupt a child’s life but also create a new space that isn’t better or worse than the old one, just different. I also like all the nods to disabled community members.

Cover of Dear Muslim Child by Rahma Rodaah, illustrated by Aya Ghanameh

Dear Muslim Child by Rahma Rodaah, illustrated by Aya Ghanameh

This picture book is a lyrical celebration of Muslim children and the Islamic faith by the writer of Dear Black Child. Warm, joyful illustrations show children hanging lanterns for Nur, praying on prayer mats, and more. It’s an affirming, heartwarming picture book.

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

Riot Recommendations

I have anxiety and love reading children’s books depicting kids with anxiety. An estimated 12% of kids were reported as having experienced anxiety or depression in 2020, and I would not be surprised if that number were higher. Books like these are essential.

Cover of Drawing Deena by Hena Khan

Drawing Deena by Hena Khan

This is a lovely contemporary middle grade novel about a young Pakistani American girl who is trying to find her personal art style and help her mom with her Pakistani clothing home shop. Deena struggles with anxiety, though she doesn’t know to call it that yet. Meanwhile, she’s also experiencing friend drama because of social media. I loved Deena’s warm, supportive Pakistani family and community, and the depiction of anxiety is so realistic. This is likely to be one of my favorite middle grade novels of the year. This releases today!

Cover of The Many Masks of Zhou Cheng

The Many Masks of Andy Zhou by Jack Cheng

I really loved this novel, and I worry it’s not getting the number of readers it deserves! Andy, who is Chinese American, is the kind of kid who tends to follow along with whatever his overbearing best friend Cindy says. That worked fine in elementary school, but this year, they’re starting middle school, and everything feels different. Cindy forces him to join the Movement Club, a dance club, which doesn’t sit right with Andy. He also befriends Jameel, a Chaldean American, whom Cindy does not like for valid reasons. Meanwhile, Andy’s grandparents are visiting from China so his grandfather can seek needed medical care. Andy is also a talented artist who has anxiety and trichotillomania (hair-pulling). There’s also a character with an eating disorder. This is such a contemplative, nuanced novel.

Cover of My Thoughts Have Wings by Maggie Smith, illustrated by Leanne Hatch

My Thoughts Have Wings by Maggie Smith, illustrated by Leanne Hatch

I always thought my anxiety began during pregnancy, but then I read picture books like this, and I wonder. Maggie Smith is well known for her adult poetry collections and nonfiction, and this is her picture book debut. It’s a beautiful glimpse into a child’s life at night as she experiences intrusive thoughts while trying to sleep. Her mother comes in and snuggles with her in bed, reassuring her and guiding her to think about happy moments from the past, which helps calm the young girl’s mind. The illustrations are warm and tender. It’s a really beautiful and relatable book. This releases next Tuesday.

Cover of Are You Mad at Me? by Tyler Feder, illustrated by Cody Feder

Are You Mad at Me? by Tyler Feder, illustrated by Cody Feder

This is another very relatable picture book, as told by an ostrich with anxiety. Opal’s family is having a family party, and she’s in charge of picking up the dessert from the local bakery. But on the way, Opal constantly feels like everyone she encounters must be mad at her. This causes Opal to get a bad case of The Noodles, what her family endearingly calls Opal’s anxiety because of the way it makes her long neck wobble. By the end, Opal learns that not everyone’s feelings are directly related to her, and she enjoys the family party.

Copy That, Copy Cat phone pictures, the kids are all right

As the daughter of a Bookstagrammer, my kid knows exactly what to do with a camera—take book pictures. When I found her with my phone the other day and opened the photo library, I saw she had taken literally hundreds of pictures and videos of Copy That, Copy Cat by Katrina Tangen. It’s hard to argue about screen time when she’s taking pictures of books.

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
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!

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

Happy Black History Month! Today’s pick is a few years old but it has left a lasting impact on me.

Book cover of This is My America by Kim Johnson

This is My America by Kim Johnson

This work of young adult fiction is incredibly heavy and an absolutely absorbing read. Our protagonist is Tracy Beaumont, a Black teenage girl whose father, James Beaumont, is in prison. James Beaumont was wrongly accused of murder, and at the beginning of the book, he has 275 days before he will be executed. The book is told from Tracy’s point of view, and interspersed with the chapters of prose are Tracy’s weekly letters to Innocence X, a nonprofit legal organization that helps to prove the innocence of people who have been incarcerated. They only accept requests via handwritten letters, and Tracy has been writing weekly for seven years.

Tracy is a high school junior and lives with her mother, her older brother Jamal (a senior who runs track), and their little sister Corinne. Tracy is involved with the school newspaper and also runs a Know Your Rights class at the local community center in the Houston, Texas, suburbs where they live. Flash forward, and there has been a murder, and Tracy’s brother Jamal has been accused. This book is not only a tale about police brutality and abuse of power but also the insidiousness of white supremacy, not only the blatant KKK history of the town this takes place in but on the micro level as well. On top of all this, it’s a high-stakes anxiety-inducing mystery. Tracy is simultaneously trying to get help for her father while also trying to prove her brother’s innocence and keep him from facing the same possible fate. Of course, she is also trying to keep herself from being harmed by the police. Just to make things more complicated, she’s trying to manage friendships and relationships as a teen because it’s not like all those things stop when something larger is going on.

I have a lot of content warnings for this book: murder, anti-Black racism, including discussion of lynching and cross burning, anti-Asian racism, and an incarcerated loved one.


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
Bookish Goods

Bookish Good of the Week: February 4, 2024

Black Writers and Activists Bookmarks

Black Writers and Activists Bookmarks by GlasshousebyKai

Bring in Black History Month with these brightly-colored bookmarks featuring Black writers, artists, and activists. In addition to original art, each bookmark has a mini biography. Get 2 for $10, or all 4 for $18.

Categories
The Fright Stuff

Celebrate Black History Month with Horror Reads!

Happy Monday, Horror Fans! This is the day we talk about all things scary, spine-tingling, and spooky. Some people might dread Mondays, but how can we when we have so much horror content to look forward to? And on that note, let’s see what this week has in store for us, yeah?

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

Bookish Goods

mary shelley backpack

Mary Shelley Backpack by PenumbraPlace

You love horror, so why not wear the mother of horror on your back? This Mary Shelley backpack features the author’s image and signature on a durable, quality backpack. $78

New Releases

Cover of The House of Last Resort by Christopher Golden

The House of Last Resort by Christopher Golden

Oooh, I do love a haunted house story, and this one feels like a fresh twist on the genre. American couple Tommy and Kate Puglisi buy a home in a small Italian town called Becchina, but things feel off from the moment they move in. Between the secret rooms, the strange noises, the locked doors, and whispers throughout the village, something just doesn’t seem right in this house. And then they discover the house was once owned by the Church and that strange things happened there.

cover image for Almost Surely Dead

Almost Surely Dead by Amina Akhtar

This horror/psychological thriller novel mixes true crime with South Asian folklore. And it is a book from Mindy Kaling’s new imprint, Mindy’s Book Studio. One year ago, Dunia Ahmed was just a normal New Yorker. She was the daughter of Pakistani immigrants and a successful pharmacist. But then she went missing, and now she’s the subject of a true crime podcast. What really happened to Dunia? It’s not what you’d expect.

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

Riot Recommendations

cover of The Reformatory by Tananarive Due

The Reformatory by Tananarive Due

As we all know, February is Black History Month, so all month, I’m going to share some of my favorite horror books written by Black authors. So, if you don’t see your favorite this week, just know there are more recs coming. I feel like first, I have to shout out the latest from Tananarive Due! The Reformatory is set in Gracetown, Florida, in the summer of 1950. Robert Stephen Jones Jr. is sent to Gracetown School for Boys after kicking a white boy’s leg. Robert thinks he’s just being sent to a reform school, but Gracetown is something much more than that. It’s a segregated school that is haunted by the boys who have died there.

Book cover of House of Hunger by Alexis Henderson

House of Hunger by Alexis Henderson

I don’t feel like this book gets talked about enough, but it is so atmospheric and creepy and such an excellent exploration of classism and poverty (that, unfortunately, feels very relevant to contemporary life). Marion Shaw was raised in poverty. Now, she longs to escape the difficulties of city life, but she sees no way out. Could a newspaper ad searching for a bloodmaid be her way out? Marion knows very little about the position or the far north where she will have to travel, but she applies anyway. As the newest bloodmaid at the notorious House of Hunger, Marion meets Countess Lisavet, who presides over a court of hedonism. Marion is eager to please her mistress, who is both charismatic and terrifying. But when her fellow bloodmaids begin to go missing, Marion realizes she must learn the rules of the House of Hunger, or her own life will soon be at risk.

Thanks so much for tuning in to The Fright Stuff this week! I’m here because you’re here, and I’m so happy we can come together and talk horror every Monday. Until next time, you can follow me (and message me) on Instagram at emandhercat. Sweet dreams!

Categories
Kissing Books

Drummers, Chocolate, and Brides

Welcome to the Kissing Books newsletter. If you’re a regular reader, I’m glad to see you again. Or, if this is your first time here, I’m glad that you joined us. I’m PN Hinton, and I’ll be your guide through all things romance-related.

2024 is the tenth year of the Read Harder Challenge! Join us as we make our way through 24 tasks meant to expand our reading horizons and diversify our TBRs. To get book recommendations for each task, sign up for the Read Harder newsletter. We’ll also keep you informed about other cool reading challenges, readathons, and more across the bookish internet. If you become a paid subscriber, you get even more recommendations plus community features, where you can connect with a community of passionate, like-minded readers in a cozy and supportive corner of the internet. Sign up today!

How are everyone’s reading goals going so far this year? According to Storygraph, which I recently moved to, I’ve read four books already. To be fair, those are the ones that I tracked, since I didn’t count anything in December that rolled over. I’ve only purchased one new book this year, and that was with a gift card, so I’m counting it as a gift. Additionally, I’m going to be more strict with skipping BOTM when a book doesn’t call to me instead of feeling like I have to pick one for one reason or another. And, I’ve decided that I’m going to let myself re-read this year, especially comforting reads. All in all, I feel I’m doing great with all things bookish, and I hope the same is true for you.

Bookish Goods

picture of Book Lover Box of Chocolates

Book Lover Box of Chocolates by TheStepwrightInn

Valentine’s Day is right around the corner, and one of the go-to treats are chocolate boxes. This would be a perfect Galentine or Valentine gift, as well as a treat for yourself. Because you should also remember to give yourself gifts. $5

New Releases

cover of Girls with Bad Reputations

Girls with Bad Reputations by Xio Axelrod

As the daughter of an extremely overbearing mother, Kayla has been told all of her life to be quiet and not draw attention to herself. As an act of desperate rebellion, she took up the drums and found a new family in her band, the Lillys. When the band makes it big, she finds herself struggling with adjusting to the sudden stardom and finds comfort in Ty, the tour bus driver. Are these two kindred separates destined to unite, or will secrets and pressures from stardom doom their love story?

cover of Bride

Bride by Ali Hazelwood

When Vampyre Misery is called upon by her councilman father to enter into a marriage of convenience with Were Alpha Lowe in an attempt at an alliance, she agrees. But, despite how it may look to her father, it’s not because she cares about the war one way or another; it is because she feels Lowe knows something about the disappearance of her human best friend. After the ceremony, Misery is left alone in Were territory, though, where the two find it hard to deny the attraction between them that refuses to be ignored.

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

Riot Recommendations

Today is Chocolate Fondue Day AND National Weatherperson’s Day. So, today’s recommendations are both books that can be read in honor of one of those holidays.

cover of Sinful Chocolate

Sinful Chocolate by Adrianne Byrd

Charlie is a major player who has no interest in settling down with just one woman. But when he receives some startling news from his doctors, he begins to have second thoughts about the poor way he’s treated the women in his life. During this time, he meets Gisella and is taken aback by her beauty. She isn’t unaffected by him either, but between the warnings of her friends and the launch of her new shop, Sinful Chocolate, she isn’t sure she has time to enter into an affair with an alleged ex-heartbreaker.

cover of Weather Girl

Weather Girl by Rachel Lynn Solomon

When meteorologist Ari’s mentor seems too focused on her rollercoaster relationship with her ex-husband, who is also the news director of the station they work at, she isn’t sure how to get the help she needs. After a holiday party ends in disaster, she decides to team up with Russell, the station’s sports reporter, to “parent trap” their respective bosses. Soon, though, their plotting leads to feelings developing between the two of them.

And that’s all I have for you on this fine Monday. I’ll be back in your inboxes on Thursday, and you can find me over on Instagram under @pns_bookish_world. Until then, happy reading and stay hydrated.