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Today In Books

Taraji P. Henson to Star as Shug Avery in THE COLOR PURPLE: Today in Books

Alice Wong Announces Debut Memoir Year of the Tiger

Alice Wong, editor of the essay anthology Disability Visibility, has just announced her debut memoir, Year of the Tiger. The book draws from a collection of original essays, previously published work, conversations, graphics, photos, commissioned art by disabled and Asian American artists, and more. “It has been a labor of love and I hope you will enjoy it…” Wong wrote in an Instagram post. “This is my second book to come out in the middle of a pandemic which is just wild. If you have the means, please pre-order it and support your independent bookseller. The audiobook will be available for pre-order in a few months.”

Hulu Releases New Trailer for Chilling Thriller No Exit

The film adaptation of Taylor Adams’ snowy thriller No Exit will be released on Hulu later this month, and today the streaming platform released the first trailer for the upcoming film. No Exit is a film from 20th Century Studios, directed by Damien Power with a script from Andrew Barrer and Gabriel Ferrari. The film stars Havana Rose Liu, Danny Ramirez, David Rysdahl, Milla Harris, Dale Dickey, and Dennis Haysbert. You can watch the film exclusively on Hulu on February 25th.

Taraji P. Henson to Star as Shug Avery in The Color Purple

Oscar and Emmy nominee Taraji P. Henson will star as Shug Avery in The Color Purple, a film directed by Blitz Bazawule, who is best known for his work on Beyoncé’s “Black is King,” “The Burial of Kojo” and “Cherish the Day.” The upcoming Warner Bros. movie is an adaptation of the Tony-winning Broadway musical The Color Purple, which is itself an adaptation of Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. Henson joins previously announced cast members Corey Hawkins (as Harpo) and H.E.R. (as Squeak). The Color Purple is set to be released on December 20, 2023.

February 2022 Horoscopes and Book Recommendations

February 2022 is here! It’s time for this months horoscopes and book recommendations.

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Today In Books

Book Ban Efforts Continue to Spread Across the US: Today in Books

Adam Brody Joins Cast of Fleishman Is in Trouble

Actor Adam Brody has joined the cast of Fleishman Is in Trouble, a limited series based on Taffy Brodesser-Akner’s best-selling novel. Brody will star opposite Jesse Eisenberg, Claire Danes and Lizzy Caplan. The show has also added Maxim Jasper Swinton and Meara Mahoney Gross to its cast. Brody (The O.C., Promising Young Woman) will play Seth, an old friend of Toby Fleishman (Eisenberg). The series will stream on FX’s hub on Hulu.

Inside New Substack Comic Projects from Tom King, Brian K. Vaughan, Grant Morrison, and More

Digital comics are finding a new home on Substack, and here’s a look at some of the upcoming projects. Well-known comic creators, including House of X mastermind Jonathan Hickman and current Best Writer Eisner Award winner James Tynion IV, have stepped away from Marvel and DC to launch new comic projects on Substack. And now six new comics are launching on Substack this week: An independent publication from Grant Morrison; a joint project from Brian K. Vaughan (Saga) and Niko Henrichon; a solo project by Jen Bartel; a collaboration between Tom King (Strange Adventures) and Elsa Charretier (November); a new publication from Khary Randolph; and a newsletter from the Mangasplaining podcast.

Book Ban Efforts Continue to Spread Across the US

Challenges to books about sexual and racial identity are nothing new in US schools, but the politicization of book banning is. This week, The New York Times looks at the current rash of book banning that is happing across the country. “It’s being driven by legislation, it’s being driven by politicians aligning with one side or the other. And in the end, the librarian, teacher or educator is getting caught in the middle,” said Britten Follett, the chief executive of content at Follett School Solutions, one of the country’s largest providers of books to K-12 schools.

Getting Back to Work With These Office Romance Books

As people start to head back to the office after holiday breaks and long stints of working from home, now more than ever we’re in need of office romance books. These 11 romances will make you swoon.

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Today In Books

Netflix Loses Move to Get $5M QUEEN’S GAMBIT Suit Tossed: Today in Books

Cover Reveal for Upcoming YA Fantasy Novel from Roshani Chokshi, Evelyn Skye, and Sandhya Menon

Pie Lady Books on Instagram has an exclusive cover reveal for an upcoming YA fantasy title from Roshani Chokshi, Evelyn Skye, and Sandhya Menon. The novel, Three Kisses, One Midnight, is described as “a delicious concoction of storytelling about best friends who discover that love is the most powerful magic of all.” The book comes out on August 30th, and is available for preorder right now.

Netflix Loses Move to Get $5M Queen’s Gambit Suit Tossed

On Thursday, a federal judge denied Netflix’s request to dismiss Soviet chess icon Nona Gaprindashvili’s $5 million lawsuit, accusing the limited series The Queen’s Gambit of sexism and historical inaccuracy. District Judge Virginia A. Phillips wrote in a ruling revealed Thursday, “The fact that the Series was a fictional work does not insulate Netflix from liability for defamation if all the elements of defamation are otherwise present.” The series The Queen’s Gambit is based on the 1983 novel of the same name by Walter Tevis. Gaprindashvili has objected to a line in the final episode that mentions the chess player by name and claims that she’d never faced off against men. “The allegation that Gaprindashvili ‘has never faced men’ is manifestly false, as well as being grossly sexist and belittling,” the chess legend’s defamation complaint from September 2021 said. Gaprindashvili has requested a jury trial.

Author Nic Stone Responds to Controversy Over Dear Martin

Author Nic Stone has responded to the controversy in Monett, MO over her YA novel Dear Martin. The school district has pulled the novel from an English class because they claim teachers did not follow the correct protocol to have it added to curriculum. While Nic Stone says she understands protocol has to be followed, her biggest issue is the fact her book was replaced with To Kill A Mockingbird. ”What Dear Martin attempts to do is show how racism is experienced by the people actually experiencing it,” Stone says. “As opposed to showing it through the lens of someone else. Someone who is kind of looking at it from the outside and doing their best to be empathetic but experience and empathy are very very different.”

Mayor Withholds Library Funds Because of Queer Materials; You Can Help Raise It

In Ridgeland, Mississippi, mayor Gene McGee is withholding $110,000 in funds to the public library until they removed all “homosexual materials.” Now the library is fighting back, and here’s what you can do to help.

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Book Radar

NONA THE NINTH Cover is Revealed and More Book Radar!

Happy Monday, Book Friends!

Please forgive me as I reflect on the passing of time once again. January is just such a weird time of year. I feel like Januarys always last five hundred days, and then the rest of the year always goes by so quickly. So as we get ready to start February, in the back of my head, I’m thinking, “Dang, so it’s basically almost 2023 now.” Does anyone else feel this way?

And how did everyone’s reading go for the first month of 2022? I did pretty okay. I feel like I read a good mix of genres and I read a nice amount of books. In terms of the Goodreads challenge, I’m currently “on track,” which is fine I guess. There’s something really satisfying about seeing that tracker say, “You’re ahead by X amount of books.” But maybe that will come in February! Anyway, feel free to send me a message and let me know about your month. What did you read? What did you love? What did you not love so much? What are you looking forward to February?

Okay rants and reflections over. Let’s talk books!

❤️ Emily

Book Deals and Reveals

The eagerly awaited Nona the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir has gotten a cover reveal! This novel, the third in the bestselling Locked Tomb Series, will be out September 13, 2022.

Beasts of Ruin, Ayana Gray’s follow-up to Beasts of Prey, will be published on July 26th. Here’s the cover reveal and more details about the upcoming YA novel!

HBO has released the first teaser trailer for season 3 of My Brilliant Friendwhich premieres on HBO Max on February 28th. 

Penguin Teen is publishing James Brandon’s queer YA novel The Edge of Being on October 11th. Check out the cover reveal and an excerpt from the novel here.

Here’s the cover reveal for Cold Cold Bones by Kathy Reichs. This one’s coming in July!

Al Roker Entertainment has optioned best-selling novel The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray for a limited series.

Netflix has released the first images of Pieces of Her, an upcoming thriller series based on Karin Slaughter’s novel of the same name.

A graphic novel adaptation of the David Bowie-helmed science fiction movie The Man Who Fell to Earth is coming out this Fall. Here’s a first look at the cover, images from the graphic novel, and some plot details.

Locksmith Animation has optioned Marissa Meyer’s bestselling Lunar Chronicles novels for film.

Jamie Raab has stepped down as president of Celadon Books to become publisher-at-large at Macmillan.

The 15 books longlisted for Canada Reads have been narrowed down to 5, Here are the 5 Canada Reads contenders and their champions.

Black Children’s Book Week is February 27th through March 5th. Here’s how you can help celebrate.

Book Riot Recommends

I’m a Contributing Editor at Book Riot, I write the Today in Books newsletter, and I’m a Bibliologist for Book Riot’s Tailored Book Recommendations subscription service. I also have a PhD in English, so I’m basically a doctor of books. Books are my life, in other words, so in this section of the newsletter, let me share with you some upcoming books I’m super excited about. And I think you will be too!

Prepare Your Shelves!

cover of The Verifiers by Jane Pek

The Verifiers by Jane Pek (Vintage, February 22)

In February, you’re going to meet a new amateur sleuth that you’ll absolutely love. Jane Pek’s debut novel The Verifiers is the story of Claudia Lin. Claudia is a lit lover just like all of us. She’s obsessed with mystery novels, and she wrote her senior thesis on Jane Austen. Now, Claudia believes she’s landed her ideal job. She’s just been recruited by Veracity, a referral-only online dating detective agency. But when one of the agency’s clients goes missing, Claudia finds herself breaking the rules to dive deep into the secret world of people’s online lives and corporate deceit.

There’s so much to love about this unique mystery story. First and foremost, there’s Claudia, a snarky twenty-something Chinese-American lesbian with a less-than-perfect family life. This novel could just be a character-driven story about Claudia and her personal life, and that by itself would be a compelling read. And yes, on some level, this book is a character-driven novel about Claudia’s personal struggles. But then on top of that, The Verifiers is a page-turning mystery. This book also examines the experience of dating in the age of apps and social media, what it’s like to be an immigrant in America, and more.

Could The Verifiers be the first book in a new and exciting amateur sleuth series? I certainly hope so!

What I’m Reading This Week

Cover of The Low, Low Woods by Carmen Maria Machado

The Low, Low Woods by Carmen Maria Machado

Goliath by Tochi Onyebuchi

Empire of Wild by Cherie Dimaline

The Maid by Nita Prose

Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James

Monday Memes

My friend sent me this Monday Meme, because apparently this one has me written all over it. Just wanted to make sure everyone knows I had help finding this one!

Anyway, if you’re currently downing in a pile of unread books but you’re still looking to buy more, this one’s for you.

Other Things That Make Me Happy

Mardi Gras is coming, which means it’s King Cake Season in this part of the United States. And we’re totally obsessed with king cakes in this house. Never had a king cake? No problem. You can actually order them online and have them delivered to your home. After conducting a highly scientific king cake taste test, my very qualified King Cake Taste Testers have reached a decision, and the best place to get king cakes? Gambino’s Bakery.

Are you more interested in making a king cake for yourself? I love that can-do attitude. My mom makes a really delicious king cake. And while I don’t know her recipe, I think this one looks pretty great.

And Here’s A Cat Picture!

calico cat napping near stuffed animals

Well this is awkward. I thought I was going to share a cat picture as always. But when I went to take Cersei’s picture, all I saw was this pile of stuff animals. Definitely no cats to see here. No cats at all.

Sorry everyone. I know you came here for cats, but this is what I have for you today.

Anyway, I hope you have a wonderful week! See you Thursday!

❤️ Emily

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Today In Books

Broadway’s PHANTOM OF THE OPERA Welcomes First Black Christine to Cast: Today in Books

Locksmith Animation Options Marissa Meyer’s New York Times Bestselling Series The Lunar Chronicles for Film

Locksmith Animation has optioned Marissa Meyer’s New York Times bestselling novel series The Lunar Chronicles for film. The series reimagines classic fairy tale heroines in a futuristic world and consists of the novels Cinder (2012), Scarlet (2013), Cress (2014), and Winter (2015). “We are huge Marissa Meyer fans and cannot wait to bring CinderScarlettCress, and Winter to a worldwide audience through the talents of our extraordinary team,” said Locksmith Animation CEO Natalie Fischer. “This unforgettable series has garnered huge praise and popularity and we are determined to give this material the treatment it deserves.”

Broadway’s Phantom of the Opera Welcomes First Black Christine to Cast

Broadway’s longest-running musical The Phantom of the Opera is finally welcoming its first Black Christine to the cast. As of Wednesday, actor Emilie Kouatchou has taken over the lead role of Christine Daaé, starring alongside Ben Crawford as the Phantom and John Riddle as Raoul de Chagny. Based on Gaston Leroux’s classic novel, The Phantom of the Opera premiered on Broadway in 1988, and the original production won seven Tony Awards, including best musical. On being the first Black woman to play Christine since the Broadway play’s opening in 1988, Kouatchou said, “I just think that Black women, especially in theater, have to be — and it shouldn’t be this way — 10 times better and work 10 times harder. It took this long for any Black woman to play Christine, but there have been so many talented Black women who could have.”

Gaza Bookshop to Reopen After Successful Global Campaign

Last year, Sami Mansour’s bookshop in Gaza was destroyed by Israeli air strikes. Now, thanks to a successful global campain, Mansour plans to reopen the bookshop next month. Tens of thousands of donated books have started to arrive at the new location, which is located less than 100 meters from the shop’s original location. The new building cost $340,000 and needed to be gutted and remodeled. All funds generated by the campaign, which was launched by human rights lawyers Mahvish Rukhsana and Clive Stafford Smith, have gone towards the project. Additionally, the first cargo container of 50,000 donated books arrived in the Gaza Strip last week, and more are on their way. “I was so happy when I saw the first shipment had arrived … I felt like a reborn phoenix,” said Mansour. “I did not expect all this support. But it was something beyond imagination and something more than wonderful.”

Who Are the Moms for Liberty?: This Week’s Censorship News

Learn about the Moms for Liberty, one of the groups leading book banning efforts in the US. Plus, catch up on this week’s book censorship news.

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Today In Books

HBO Releases MY BRILLIANT FRIEND Season 3 Teaser Trailer: Today in Books

Al Roker Options The Personal Librarian for Limited Series

Al Roker Entertainment has optioned best-selling novel The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray for a limited series. The novel tells the story of J.P. Morgan’s personal librarian, Belle da Costa Greene, a Black woman with light skin who was forced to pass as white. The Personal Librarian is a favorite in our household, and it demonstrates historical fiction at its best,” said Al Roker. “We are always looking to work on projects with purpose and this story is relevant now more than ever. The female lead lives in secrecy and goes to the ends of the earth to hide her identity and protect her family in a very racist world and we look forward to bringing this story to more households. It also excites me whenever I can work with my wife on a project we both think is important.”

HBO Releases My Brilliant Friend Season 3 Trailer

HBO has released the first teaser trailer for season 3 of My Brilliant Friend, which premieres on HBO Max on February 28th. The third season will be eight episodes and will adapt Elena Ferrante’s novel Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay. The series stars Gaia Gerace as Lila and Margherita Mazzucco as Lenù.

Tennessee School District Bans Art Spiegelman’s Graphic Novel Maus

A Tennessee school board has removed the Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic novel Maus from an eighth-grade language arts curriculum due to concerns about profanity, nudity, and Holocaust depictions. In an interview with CNBC, Maus author Art Spiegelman said, “I’m kind of baffled by this,” and described the school board’s actions “Orwellian.” Author Neil Gaiman also spoke out against the ban in a tweet: “There’s only one kind of people who would vote to ban Maus, whatever they are calling themselves these days.”

2022 PEN America Literary Awards Finalists Announced

The 2022 PEN American Literary Award Finalists have been announced! This year’s awards will confer $350,000 to writers and translators in eleven different categories that include fiction, nonfiction, poetry, biography, essay, science writing, literature in translation and more.

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Read Harder

Read Harder Task #19: Read a Horror Novel by a BIPOC Author

Alright. I’m just going to come out and say it. Horror is the best genre out there. Good horror is thought-provoking, emotional, propulsive, and unforgettable. And I just can’t get enough of it. It was hard to narrow it down when it came to choosing which books to share with you for this challenge. But these are some of my personal favorite horror novels for this Read Harder 2022 Challenge: Read a Horror Novel by a BIPOC Author.

What was the first horror novel you read? For me, it was Stephen King’s It. For a lot of readers, King was probably one of their first introductions to the world of horror fiction. And that’s great and all, but there’s so much more horror fiction out there, and so many incredible horror books from BIPOC authors. Here are eight horror books that do all the good things that horror books should—they’re thought-provoking, emotional, propulsive, and unforgettable. Even if you’re a person who normally shies away from horror stories, I promise these are worth the risk of being a little scared.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

the only good indians

The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones

Speaking of unforgettable reads, Stephen Graham Jones’ The Only Good Indians is one that I’ll never be able to get out of my mind, and one I can’t stop recommending to people, which is why it’s #1 on a list that’s otherwise in no particular order. When four Blackfoot Indian men go hunting, they end up doing something that will haunt them forever. Quite literally. Now there’s a supernatural entity that’s hunting them, hellbent on revenge.

White Smoke cover image

White Smoke by Tiffany D. Jackson

If you love YA horror, please do yourself a favor and read White Smoke. When teenager Marigold moves with her family from California to the Midwestern city of Cedarville, everyone thinks it’s a chance for them to start over. But in horror language, we know what moving to a new house for a chance to start over means. It means the house is haunted, right? As soon as Marigold and her family move in, things seem off. The neighborhood is practically deserted, and they keep hearing weird sounds (and smelling weird smells) throughout the house. Is it just Marigold’s mind playing tricks on her, or does the house really want them out?

cover of Sorrowland

Sorrowland by Rivers Solomon

Sorrowland is horror meets sci-fi meets Afrofuturism meets wilderness survival tale. Vern is seven months pregnant when she escapes from the strict religious compound where she was raised. Now she finds herself alone in the wilderness, caring for her twin children, unable to trust anything in the world around her. But the religious compound she fled from isn’t willing to let her go that easily. And she feels herself going through unsettling changes.

Cover of The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson

The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson

The Year of the Witching is a dark fantasy/horror novel set in the puritanic lands of Bethel where Immanuelle Moore’s very existence is blasphemy because she is proof of her mother’s tryst with an outsider of another race. But her mother was hiding even more secrets than Immanuelle could have imagined, and something is calling her out to the woods surrounding Bethel.

cover of empire of the wild by cherie dimaline

Empire of Wild by Cherie Dimaline

Empire of Wild is inspired by the traditional Métis story of the Rogarou, a legendary werewolf-like creature. Joan’s husband Victor has been missing for over a year, but Joan refused to give up hope and keeps searching for him. Then one day in a Walmart parking lot, there he is. At first she’s relieved to see him, but he insists he is not her husband and that he does not recognize her at all. He says he is the Reverend Wolff and that he only wants to bring people to Jesus. But of course, it turns out that’s not his only mission.

white is for witching by helen oyeyemi

White is for Witching by Helen Oyeyemi

Looking for more haunted house-y type stories? Okay, you’ve got it. Here’s White is for Witching, a story about the Silver family, who moves to a mysterious house on the cliffs near Dover in the hopes of starting up a bed-and-breakfast. The matriarch of the family has gone missing, and the daughter, Miranda, feels the spirits within the strange house and the women who haunt the walls. And they are quickly pulling her in.

cover of fledgling by octavia butler

Fledgling by Octavia Butler

What would a horror novel list be without at least one vampire story? Although I guess calling Fledgling a vampire story is oversimplifying things… by a lot. Shori is 53 years old, but on the outside, she looks like a young girl. When we first meet her, she has no memory of who she is and she’s exhausted and hungry. But when she’s picked up by a man named Wright, together the two begin to uncover the secrets of her past and a world of vampire-like creatures that are unlike anything you’ve ever read about before.

Beloved Book Cover

Beloved by Toni Morrison

Beloved is the most haunting ghost story you will ever read. This Pulitzer Prize-winning novel is the story of Sethe, who was born into slavery but escaped to Ohio. Still, eighteen years later, living with her daughter Amy, Sethe still does not feel free. She’s haunted by the memories of her past and the horrifying things she had to endure to find freedom. Then a teenaged girl who calls herself Beloved shows up at her doorstep, and all of Sethe’s horrors of the past come to meet her in her present.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

And those are my recommendations! Want even more? Here are 20 horror books by authors of color. I’m so excited to read some good horror with everyone this year. Good luck with the Read Harder challenge!

Click here for the full Read Harder 2022 task list, and for previous recommendations, click here.

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Book Radar

Authors Name Their Most Anticipated Books of 2022 and More Book Radar!

Dear Book Friends,

Not to brag, but… I’m writing this to you with a cat in my lap. I’m really loving the winter weather because it means the cats are getting snugglier. For my cat people out there, I hope you’re getting lots of cat cuddles as well. And for my non-cat people, uh… you should like cats. They’re great. Anyway, as you’re reading this, maybe head over to Purrli and put some cat purrs on in the background so you get the full experience of what I was hearing while I was writing this. And now for books!

❤️ Emily

Book Deals and Reveals

stand up book cover

Last week, Publisher’s Weekly revealed the cover of bestselling author Brittney Cooper’s children’s book Stand Up!

The authors of some of your favorite books of 2021 have picked their most anticipated books of 2022. Check out these recommendations from Zakiya Dalila Harris, Kathy Wang, Katie Kitamura, and others.

Here’s the cover reveal for Rachel Griffin’s YA novel Wild is the Witch, out from Sourcebooks in August.

Entertainment Weekly has an exclusive excerpt and cover reveal of Stephen King’s upcoming fantasy novel Fairy Tale

Amazon Publishing’s Thomas & Mercer imprint acquired Zoje Stage’s Mothered at auction. The psychological horror novel is set for release in February 2023.

Tor.com has announced their first ever guest editor, R.F. Kuang, author of the Poppy War trilogy.

Hulu has given a series order to Saint X, a drama based on Alexis Schaitkin’s 2020 novel of the same name.

Disney+ has given a series order to Percy Jackson and the Olympians, based on author Rick Riordan’s best-selling series of the same name.

Here’s the teaser trailer for Guillermo del Toro’s adaptation of Pinocchio. The movie will be available on Netflix in December.

Here are the GLAAD Media Awards nominees for fair, accurate and inclusive LGBTQ representation in comic books and graphic novels.

The winners and honors of the 2022 ALA Youth Media Awards have been announced! Here’s who took home the awards and honors.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Book Riot Recommends

I’m a Contributing Editor at Book Riot, I write the Today in Books newsletter, and I’m a Bibliologist for Book Riot’s Tailored Book Recommendations subscription service. I also have a PhD in English, so I’m basically a doctor of books. Books are my life, in other words, so in this section of the newsletter, let me share with you some upcoming books I’m super excited about. And I think you will be too!

Can’t Wait for This One

the last housewife book cover

The Last Housewife by Ashley Winstead (Sourcebooks, August 16)

First of all, here’s another cover that I’m completely obsessed with. Really, can I hang this on my wall somewhere? Because it’s gorgeous. Second of all, I’ve heard such wonderful things about Ashley Winstead’s 2021 novel In My Dreams I Hold A Knife, but no, I have not read it yet. Should I pick that one up while I wait for this one? Let me know. Oh, and third of all, Ashley Winstead has not one but TWO books coming out this year. I am so jealous of people who can write this much. Teach me your ways, Ashley Winstead.

The first novel coming from Winstead this year is a romance novel, Fool Me Once, which will hit shelves in April. And yes, I have that one on my to-read list as well. But for now, let’s focus on this culty thriller novel we can expect out in August. Because aside from having a stunning cover, this book also sounds really, really phenomenal.

While in college in New York, Shay Evans and her friends got involved in a cult. By her senior year, Shay and her friend Laurel were the only ones who were able to get out. Now eight years have passed, and Shay is trying to live a normal domestic life in a Texas suburb. But when news reaches her that Laurel has died, Shay begins to suspect that she hasn’t been able to leave the cult behind entirely. This suspenseful thriller is going to be perfect for those fascinated by cult stories and true crime podcasts.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Words of Literary Wisdom

content warning: The quote below contains a derogatory queer term. It is not used in a way to cause harm but to point out the dissonance between how things were and how we remember them, but I wanted to point it out.

“Rampant nostalgia has romanticized the nineties, buffing over its rough spots, looking past lingering wounds… After the spirit of the riot grrrl got co-opted by marketing, the slogan “girl power” became plastered on T-shirts and stickers, endorsed by the Spice Girls, sold on billboards and ads. Meanwhile the media routinely described the nation’s First Daughter as “homely” and “ugly,” SNL lampooned Janet Reno as a big ugly dyke, and the entire nation, it seemed, collaborated in slut-shaming and fat-shaming Monica Lewinsky. Lilith Fair was dismissed as an ‘estrogenfest’ of ‘feminazis.’ The few characters of size on television included Roseanne, who was derided as disgusting by mainstream America, and Oprah, who was eternally losing weight.”

Margaret and the Mystery of the Missing Body by Megan Milks

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 enjoyed having the opportunity to attend virtual book festivals over the past few years, that’s not going anywhere in 2022. While the Savannah Book Festival will be an in-person event this year, they are including some virtual events that you can attend at home. These events will feature authors David Guterson, Laura Dave, Hala Alyan, and Alice Waters. Check out the festival’s website for a full schedule of virtual and in-person events.

Your Weekend Reading Soundtrack

It’s cold, so now’s the time to read while sitting next to a warm fire. And if you don’t have a fireplace in your house, don’t worry. I don’t either. Instead, how about we listen to these ambient fire sounds and throw on a heated blanket? Hey, we gotta work with what we have.

And Here’s A Cat Picture!

black cat next to a blanket that reads "Books! I Need More Books!"

Phantom has a very special message for you today, and it’s this: Yes, you do need more books. It’s 2022, and we’re not denying ourselves the things we love anymore. Thank you, Phantom. We love you and appreciate you.

And that’s it for today! I hope you have a wonderful weekend, and I’ll see you back here next week hopefully!

❤️ Emily

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Today In Books

Chukwudi Iwuji Teases New GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY 3 Character: Today in Books

Toni Collette and Bella Heathcote to Star in Upcoming Thriller Series Pieces of Her

Netflix has released the first images of Pieces of Her, an upcoming thriller series based on Karin Slaughter’s novel of the same name. The series stars Toni Collette and Bella Heathcote as mother and daughter. The images Netflix has released show both Collette and Heathcote in their roles. They also feature many members of the supporting cast, which include Jessica Barden, Jacob Scipio, Joe Dempsie, Aaron Jeffery, Omari Hardwick, Gil Birmingham, David Wenham, Calum Worthy, Nicholas Burton, and Terry O’Quinn. Pieces of Her will be released exclusively to Netflix on March 4.

Chukwudi Iwuji Teases New Guardians of the Galaxy 3 Character

Many of our favorite characters from the Guardians of the Galaxy universe will be back for Volume 3, but of course, the third film will introduce new characters as well. And Peacemaker actor Chukwudi Iwuji is teasing some of the details of his character in the new Guardians of the Galaxy film. While the name of the character has not been announced yet, Iwuji says he would describe his character as “Powerful. Extremely powerful. Complex…James and I were talking about it, but he’s certainly one of, if not the most complex characters we’ve seen in the freaking Marvel universe. So he’s deeply complex and deeply powerful, and I hope intriguing. I hope I bring that to it.” Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 will hit theaters on May 25, 2023.

Here’s A First Look at The Man Who Fell to Earth Graphic Novel

A graphic novel adaptation of the David Bowie-helmed science fiction movie The Man Who Fell to Earth is coming out this Fall. Here’s a first look at the cover, images from the graphic novel, and some plot details. The book will be written by Dan Watters (Cowboy Bebop) with art by Dev Pramanik (Dune: House Atreides).

United States Artists Announces the 2022 Class of Fellows

Earlier today, the United States Artists (USA) announced its 2022 Class of Fellows. The Class of Fellows is the largest it’s ever been, including six writing fellows who will each receive $50,000 to support their artistic work.

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R.F. Kuang is Tor.com’s First Guest Editor: Today in Books

Black Lawmakers Walk Out As Mississippi Senate Passes Anti-Critical Race Theory Bill

Last Friday, Mississippi’s Black state senators walked out of a vote in protest of a Republican-backed bill that would ban “critical race theory” in schools. The bill states “that any sex, race, ethnicity… is inherently superior or inferior” or that “individuals should be adversely treated on the basis of their sex, race, ethnicity.” Democratic lawmakers expressed concern that these rules could stifle the discussion of racism in the classroom. All 14 Black state senators withheld their votes when they walked out. The bill ended up passing 32-2, with two white Democrats voting against it. The bill will now advance to the Mississippi House, which is also controlled by Republicans. If it passes there, it will go to Republican Governor Tate Reeves, who has vowed to keep “critical race theory” out of schools.

Saint X Gets Series Order at Hulu

Hulu has given a series order to Saint X, a drama based on Alexis Schaitkin’s 2020 novel of the same name. The novel is being adapted for television by Leila Gerstein (Hart of Dixie, The Handmaid’s Tale), and it will be directed by Dee Rees (Mudbound, Pariah). Saint X is told from multiple perspectives, examining the mysterious death of a young woman on a Caribbean vacation. Gerstein and Rees will also executive produce the eight-episode adaptation of Saint X with author Schaitkin, Stephen Williams, Anonymous Content and DreamCrew Entertainment.

R.F. Kuang is Tor.com’s First Guest Editor

Tor.com has announced their first ever guest editor, R.F. Kuang, author of the Poppy War trilogy. Tor.com writes that Kuang “will be curating a limited series of essays to broaden the horizon of voices represented on Tor.com and forge new pathways for the future of SFF. We are thrilled to have her aboard!” You can read an interview with Kuang about her plans with Tor.com here.

8 Most Anticipated YA Contemporary Reads for Winter 2022

These books are some of the most exciting young adult contemporary reads coming out in the first few months of 2022.