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Unusual Suspects

The Apple Conspiracy: How Android Became The Smartphone Of Villains

Hello mystery fans! I’m currently inhaling Suspicious Partner which, like Crash Landing On You, melds thriller with romance, apparently a new favorite combo for me. So basically I’ll just keep hiding in books and K-dramas. And for you I have a new round of new releases, backlist, news and roundups—including way too much censorship news which everyone needs to pay attention to and get on Team Fight-These-Book-Banners (look up your current primary election races for school board members so you can vote against book banners).

Bookish Goods

blue tshirt that says Cabot Cove with a line illustration of a lighthouse and sailboat

Cabot Cove shirt by Primeteeshirt

For Cabot Cove fans, a cute tee. ($14+ –as of me writing this it’s on sale for $7+)

New Releases

What's Coming to Me cover

What’s Coming to Me by Francesca Padilla

This is one of my favorite covers of the year—you better believe I judge books by their covers. On the inside it’s about Minerva Gutiérrez who has quite a few things stacked against her at the moment: she hates her job at an ice cream shop, her boss is scum, her mother is ill, she’s been kicked out of school for fighting, and she needs money. So when the shop is robbed, with her and other employees inside, she’s not going to be a hero and fight. But afterwards she learns that there is a rumor that money is hidden on the property. So naturally she teams up with her neighbor friend CeCe to find and steal the money—bonus: revenge on her boss. What could go wrong?! I’m currently reading it and absolutely love Minerva’s voice from the start and think I’m going to switch formats over to the audiobook because it’s narrated by Frankie Corzo, who narrated Mexican Gothic.

cover image for Unmask Alice

Unmask Alice: LSD, Satanic Panic, and the Imposter Behind the World’s Most Notorious Diaries by Rick Emerson

This book is a walk-in closet bursting with bananapants. It’s the kind of nonfiction that focuses on very specific things that happened decades ago but that sadly are very much being repeated now (with the all the book banning, for example). The book takes you into how the ’70s book Go Ask Alice–a published diary about a drug addicted teen–became a hit, contrary to all the massive red flags about its publication. It’s about how publishing is an honor system with no real punishment for fraud unlike other products. It’s about the history of LSD. It’s the drug panics—the fear that people were lacing drugs in things for children based on absolutely nothing— and how people didn’t want to accept the reality of increasing middle class young white male suicides so blaming it on satan worship became the go-to. You watch journalist after journalist not do their very basic job and just repeat without question the most ludicrous theories until things like the game Dungeons & Dragons were being banned because people thought it was kids worshiping satan. It would be hilarious if it weren’t so true, and happening again right now in different movements built on creating a fear (panic) without any evidence. I highly recommend the audiobook (narrated by Gabra Zackman) and getting a reading buddy or someone you can shout “YOU WON’T BELIEVE THIS” at.

Now that’s my review for the book, and then I hit the author’s note at the end of the audiobook where he basically says he debated adding pages of sources and then just decided not to because the reader could just look up the stuff themselves. And exSQUEEZE me?! My dude, the book about the issues with fraud in publishing and the honor system should end with pages of sourcing. That’s how this works.

The whole story would make a great docuseries on something like HBO Max.

(TW suicide and everything related/ mentions rape cases and Manson cases/ mentions past baby death/ made up animal cruelty for satanic panic/ student abuse at school)

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

Riot Recommendations

Let’s do some mysteries told out of order!

A Prayer for Travelers cover image

A Prayer for Travelers by Ruchika Tomar

I was so impressed by how well this was written that while all the chapters are out of order, it’s never confusing and the reader always knows if they are pre-missing woman, post-missing woman, or in childhood. Cale lives in a small town in the Nevada desert with her grandfather who raised her when her friend Penny disappears. She’s incredibly worried but no one else seems to be, even the police have decided she just got up and left. So Cale decides she’ll find out what happened to her friend… Highly recommend for fans of Sadie.

(TW sexual assault on page/ terminal illness/ past child abuse/ talk of suicide with some details

genuine fraud cover image

Genuine Fraud by E. Lockhart

This story is mostly told backwards, the way All The Missing Girls is. The way it’s told gives you an interesting perspective: you generally know what happened but are working back to find out the how and why of it. We start with Jules, a woman who appears to be on the run and then go back to her friendship with Imogen as each story reveals a new layer of both women.

(TW I only remember suicide)

News and Roundups

cover image for Shutter

Liberty and Danika discuss new releases, including Shutter by Ramona Emerson, on All The Books!

The Apple Conspiracy: How Android Became The Smartphone Of Villains

92 Best Assassin Movies Ranked by Tomatometer

Everything you need to know about ‘Enola Holmes 2’

Censorship News

What Is Publishing Doing to Combat Censorship?

Politics, Not Professionals, Will Determine Book Selection in Bucks County, Pennsylvania

Utah State Board of Education Policy Opens Door to Book Bans; First Books To Go

The School Board Project, Round Two

Louisiana School Librarian of the Year Seeking Legal Action After Slander Campaign

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2022 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 Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, and Litsy — you can find me under Jamie Canavés.

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