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Today In Books

Librarians Are Google To Prison Inmates: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by The Center of the Universe by Ria Voros from KCP Loft.

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Librarians Are Google To Prison Inmates

What’s a person to do if they have no access to Google? Ask a librarian of course. The San Francisco Public Library receives about 60 letters a week with questions from prison inmates ranging from helpful resources for when they’re released to questions about technology. And of course for song lyrics. But the process isn’t as quick or easy as just Googling it–read more here.

App Summarizes Business Books Into 12 Minutes

Apparently business leaders are too busy to read the business books on their shelves, so Steve Cunningham created Readitfor.me. The app summarizes the most important business books into 12 minutes–including animated video summaries.

*Muppet Arms* Even More Killing Eve

The second season of Killing Eve just started and already we have news from BBC America that there will in fact be a murderous third season. And looks like the show will continue to change its showrunner/lead writer/producer every season as Suzanne Heathcote will get a crack at running this cat-and-mouse thriller next season.

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Today In Books

ALA’s 11 Most Challenged Books In 2018: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Caterpillar Summer by Gillian McDunn.

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ALA’s 11 Most Challenged Books In 2018

The American Library Association has released their yearly Top Ten Most Challenged Books, which ended up being 11 books this year. The ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom tracks news reports and voluntary challenge reports–noting that 82-97% of book challenges go unreported. Check out the books here and the reasons cited for wanting them banned.

Audible Class Action Lawsuits Settled

Lawsuits that accused Audible of “bait-and-switch tactics and false advertising and violated consumer protection laws when it limited the number of credits that a user could have in their account” appear to have settled. Audible agreed to give 12 million free audiobooks to the plaintiffs and 8.4 million users will be reimbursed for overdraft fees. I’ll just be over here spending the day thinking about 12 million free audiobooks.

Remember The Looking For Alaska Adaptation?

The Hulu eight-episode limited series based on the John Green novel cast some adults: Timothy Simons (Veep) and Ron Cephas Jones (This Is Us). Feels like we’ve been hearing about this for-EV-er so hopefully this news means it’s kicking into gear and will get to us soon.

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Today In Books

Canadians Push Back On Library’s Metal Detectors: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Maybe a Mermaid by Josephine Cameron and Macmillan Children’s.

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Canadians Push Back On Library’s Metal Detectors

In February the Millennium Library in Winnipeg began “checking bags and scanning patrons age 13 and older for metal objects.” The public has opposed while the library has defended the new policy citing a recent increase in violence and threats at the library. Due to the public’s outcry, the City of Winnipeg committee voted “to ask library services to detail just how many security incidents there are at the Millennium Library — and to look at other options to make patrons feel safe.”

A One-Woman Broadway Play Based On Maya Angelou?

GIVE ME THIS NOW! Phenomenal Woman will be a one-woman show drawing from Angelou’s writings, along with ‘some private musings that have never before been made public,’” said producers David Michael Rich and J. Todd Harris who hope to have it ready for a 2021 Broadway staging.

It’s The Weekend Here’s A Must-Read Long Read

Here is a long read from The Guardian that takes a deep dive into the romance genre’s very long running issue with racism and diversity.

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Today In Books

What A Time To Be Alive! Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by The Luminous Dead by Caitlin Starling.

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What A Time To Be Alive!

On April 10th, at 8:30PM ET, authors Marlon James and George R.R. Martin will be at the Jean Cocteau Cinema in Santa Fe, New Mexico to discuss Black Leopard, Red Wolf. It will be moderated by Andrea L. Mays and for those of us who can’t make it in person The Verge will live stream the conversation on Facebook and Instagram Live. Is it too early to start making all the popcorn?!

This Keeps Getting Better And Better

Netflix made all our hearts happy when they announced they’d be adapting the sequel to Jenny Han‘s To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before and now their is amazing casting news. Holland Taylor (The Practice, Legally Blonde ) and Sarayu Blue (I Feel Bad, No Tomorrow) have joined the cast!

The Fight Against Washington State’s Decision to Ban Book Donations to Prisons

The non-profit Books for Prisoners recently discovered that Washington State’s Department of Corrections had implemented a new policy essentially banning used publications within state prisons: “Effective March 25, 2019, facilities will no longer allow or accept used books into the facility from non-profit vendors.” You can sign Books to Prisoners petition to stop the ban here, and read Pen America’s statement on Washington State’s misguided and harmful decision here.

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Unusual Suspects

🌻Spring’s Most Anticipated Mysteries & Thrillers

Hi mystery fans! So I highly recommend the first two seasons of On My Block (Netflix) if you like a balance between having feels and dying of laughter. It isn’t a mystery/crime show buuut the setting reminds me of Joe Ide’s IQ series, the first season does have a mystery adventure story threaded through, and it’s partially a crime show revolving around gangs. Bonus: it’s a quick marathon. Okay, on to books!


Sponsored by Soho Crime

Diary of a Dead Man cover imageIn April 1938, a man calling himself Josef Hofmann arrives at a boarding house in Hamm, Germany, and lets a room from the widow who owns it. Fifty years later, Walter Gersdorff, the widow’s son, who was eleven years old in the spring of 1938, discovers the carefully hidden diary the boarder had kept during his stay, even though he never should have written any of its contents down. What Walter finds is a chronicle of one the most tumultuous years in German history, narrated by a secret agent on a deadly mission.


From Book Riot And Around The Internet

The Confessions of Frannie Langton by Sara Collins cover imageSpring’s Most Anticipated Mysteries & Thrillers

Writing Mysteries on the Page, Battling Mysteries in My Body

Why It’s Time to Stop Talking About Jack the Ripper

Aboriginal Teen Ghost and Other Favorite Mysteries and Thrillers

Rincey and Katie talk about mysteries with characters who have disabilities, recent news, and new releases on the latest Read or Dead.

9 Young Adult Suspense Novels for Teens

They All Fall Down book trailer

News And Adaptations

Our House by Louise Candlish cover image‘Death in Paradise’ Producer Red Planet Pictures To Adapt Louise Candlish’s Real-Estate Nightmare Novel ‘Our House’ For TV

BAFTA Bends The Rules To Allow ‘Killing Eve’ To Pick Up 14 Nominations For TV & TV Craft Awards

Paramount TV, Anonymous to Adapt Susan Orlean’s ‘The Library Book’

James Patterson donates $1.25 million to classroom libraries

Kindle Deals

The Last Place You Look cover imageThe Last Place You Look by Kristen Lepionka is $2.99 and such a great start to a PI series–I’ve loved watching Roxane Weary grow! (Review) (TW rape)

Bearskin by James A. McLaughlin is $2.99 and a good read for fans of crime novels in the wilderness. (TW rape/ animal cruelty)

Audiobooks On Hoopla (If you don’t know about Hoopla)

Fallen Mountains cover imageFallen Mountains by Kimi Cunningham, James Patrick Cronin (narrator) A great small-town mystery where all the secrets come out–Full review. (TW domestic violence/ addiction/ suicide)

Basil of Baker Street by Eve Titus, Ralph Lister (narrator) A fun children’s series starring a detective mouse who is a big fan of Sherlock Holmes.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, 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.

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Today In Books

Scribd Starts Original Content With Mueller Book: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Own It.: Make Your Anxiety Work for You by Caroline Foran.

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Scribd Starts Original Content With Mueller Book

Scribd, the ebook and audiobook subscription service, has now started to produce original content and it’s started with Mueller’s War by Garrett Graff. Graff, a journalist, has written about Mueller’s time in the Vietnam War when he served as a Marine. If that’s not your thing, don’t worry, they’ll be releasing one new original work a month and the upcoming lineup will have works from Roxane Gay, Mark Seal, Hilton Als, Peter Heller, and Paul Theroux.

Girl, Wash Your Face Author Accused Of Plagiarism

Rachel Hollis’ success as an author of Girl, Wash Your Face and Girl, Stop Apologizing–along with the Instagram content she posts to millions of followers–is being called out in various places claiming that Hollis borrowed from others without giving credit. Ya know, plagiarism. You can see the accusations and examples here.

Netflix Didn’t Cancel The Umbrella Academy

Netflix renewed the adaptation of Gerard Way‘s graphic novel for a second season! I for one am now torn between reading all the volumes in the comic book series or waiting to finish the show–which should I let spoil the other for me?!

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Today In Books

Microsoft Closing Ebook Program And Taking Back Your Library: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Babymoon by Hayley Barrett and Juana Martinez-Neal.


Microsoft Closing Ebook Program And Taking Back Your Library

The Microsoft Store no longer has a books category. If you’d previously purchased or rented ebooks you will only have access to them until the beginning of July and then they will disappear. While Microsoft will offer refunds this feels like a big reminder of why DRM-locked media is something I’ve never been a fan of.

Jenny Lawson Will Open A Bookstore

Author and journalist Jenny Lawson plans to open a bookstore in San Antonio (YAY!) and wants to hear your ideas for what makes a bookstore amazing. Also, you know, if you spot a great space in San Antonio, let her know. Read her announcement here.

$1.25 Million Pledge To Classroom Libraries

Author James Patterson will be donating $250 each to 4,000 teachers and $500 each to 500 teachers with three or less years experience to help them purchase books. And Scholastic Book Club will match Patterson’s donations with book club bonus points. Teachers have until July 31st to apply for the grant–make sure you share this with your teacher friends.

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Unusual Suspects

Modern Agatha Christie Remake 🔪

Hello mystery fans! This week I have for you a great modern And Then There Were None, a fun dark domestic thriller, and a really good crime novel about secrets and survival.


Sponsored by The Center of the Universe by Ria Voros from KCP Loft

The Center of the Universe cover imageGrace Carter’s mother — the celebrity news anchor GG Carter — is everything Grace is not. GG is a star with a following of thousands, while Grace — an aspiring astrophysicist — is into stars of another kind. Then one day GG disappears. News shows speculate about what might have happened and Grace’s family struggles as they wait for answers. While the authorities unravel the mystery behind GG’s disappearance, Grace grows closer to her high school’s golden boy, Mylo. She also uncovers some secrets from her mother’s long-lost past. The more Grace learns, the more she wonders. Did she ever really know her mother?


Great Modern And Then There Were None! (TW suicide/ eating disorder/ anxiety attacks)

They All Fall Down by Rachel Howzell Hall cover imageThey All Fall Down by Rachel Howzell Hall (April 9): I went into this with high expectations because I love Hall’s detective series and “remakes” of And Then There Were None (strangers suddenly deserted together and one by one they start to be murdered). Hall totally delivered! I don’t want to say much on plot, because the not knowing is a fun element of these stories, so I’m going to focus on why this really worked for me. I loved Miriam Macy–who accepts a trip to a Mexican island in hopes of winning a reality show and getting her life back in order–as the point of view because she clearly has baggage but is a fighter. And Hall used a lot of clever crime genre elements that all blended really well together: a main character known to lie who has anxiety and doubts what she sees; everyone has a motive so the killer can be anyone; they’re all stuck together because of a storm so they’re forced to solve the mystery or fight; the challenge of who we are as people when we’re forced to face our worse self; everyone’s got a secret they’re hiding; the boiled frog fable–you’re in danger and you didn’t even realize it until it’s too late! Hall is also brilliant in how she modernized this tale while staring the problematic aspects of the genre dead in the eyes. I’ll read anything she writes.

Fun Domestic Thriller! (TW suicide)

My Lovely Wife cover imageMy Lovely Wife by Samantha Downing: For me, this one did a really good balance of being bonkers enough to be fun, while also not going too off the rails where I think it’s too ridiculous to care–the details of the family dynamics worked really well. This starts with the husband out in a bar trying to get laid and, immediately, you have a few WTF moments which perfectly situate you for the ride you’re about to go on. Because why is this seemingly ordinary couple with two teenage kids straight up hunting women to murder? I told you it’s banana pants! But it also balances it so well with the day-to-day child care and marital issues that it gave the novel a good depth. I went with the audiobook and was pleasantly surprised that being in the husband’s head all the time didn’t make me want to murder dudes. If you’re looking for a dark-ish murder thriller that reads like fun–yes, you can judge me–pick this one up!

Really Good Crime Novel! (TW domestic and child abuse/ rape/ suicide)

The Night Visitors cover imageThe Night Visitors by Carol Goodman: This was a great crime novel where no one is who they seem, but why and how will that change the course of their lives? Alice and ten-year-old Oren have escaped an abusive home and need to hide. Mattie is a social worker living in the middle of the woods who takes them in. But both women clearly have secrets, and while they can spot the deception in the other both assume it’s just for survival reasons. Add a storm, tempers flaring, and secrets rising and you’ve got a volatile mixture destined for explosions. If you like crime novels, slow-burn suspense, and character driven reads, this was really good. I especially enjoyed the audio narrated by Jane Oppenheimer.

Recent Releases

The Killer in Me cover imageThe Killer in Me (Frankie Sheehan #2) by Olivia Kiernan (Really enjoying this dark Irish procedural series–bonus: audiobook has an Irish narrator.) (TW suicide/ animal cruelty/ domestic abuse)

Bluff by Jane Stanton Hitchcock

The Loch Ness Papers (Scottish Bookshop Mystery #4) by Paige Shelton

The Execution of Justice by Friedrich Duerrenmatt, John E. Woods (Translator)

The Poison Bed cover imageThe Poison Bed by Elizabeth Fremantle

An Artless Demise (Lady Darby Mystery #7) by Anna Lee Huber

Black and Blue (Doug Brock #3) by David Rosenfelt

Treason (Trident Deception #5) by Rick Campbell

Who Slays the Wicked (Sebastian St. Cyr #14) by C.S. Harris

Nancy Drew: The Palace Of Wisdom by by Kelly Thompson, Jenn St. Onge

And in case you missed it last week, and are looking for picture books, we have a new podcast, Kidlit These Days, hosted by New York Times bestselling author Karina Glaser and children’s librarian Matthew Winner.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, 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.

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Today In Books

The Political Scandal Surrounding A Children’s Book: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Forward Me Back to You by Mitali Perkins and Fierce Reads.

Forward Me Back To You cover image


The Political Scandal Surrounding A Children’s Book

Let’s catch-up shall we: Catherine Pugh is the Mayor of Baltimore and has a self-published children’s books, Healthy Holly. Recent reports have taken a look at the Mayor’s lucrative deals surrounding Healthy Holly and accused her of “self-dealing.” Maryland’s governor asked the state prosecutor to investigate the allegations. Mayor Pugh announced yesterday an indefinite leave of absence due to pneumonia. You can keep up with the developments here.

Children’s Books Without A Scandal News

Lupita Nyong’o revealed her upcoming children’s book cover and please ready all the heart eyes emojis! Sulwe by Lupita Nyong’o, illustrated by Vashti Harrison, is the story about a little girl in Kenya who has the darkest skin in her family and out of anyone she knows, and “a magical journey in the night sky opens her eyes and changes everything.” It’ll be on bookshelves October 1st. Why so far away?!

Another Trailer!

Avengers: Endgame (April 26th) dropped another special look trailer today. It’s angsty and the wrong Chris has a beard but I’m still gonna watch it! Oh, yeah, and tickets are officially on sale now!

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Today In Books

100 Years Of Literary Hoaxes: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Amazon Publishing.

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100 Years Of Literary Hoaxes

Regardless of where you land on loving/loathing April Fools’ Day you’ll probably find this roundup of literary hoaxes The New York Times put together entertaining. While you’ll probably remember James Frey’s (fabricated) story, this takes a deep dive into history and has many literary fraudsters you probably didn’t know about.

The Search for America’s First Published Poet’s Burial Site

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: Woman’s legacy and work forgotten throughout history. The first North American continent’s poet was Anne Bradstreet (The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America) and now Merrimack College students and professors are on a quest to find her burial site. Learn more about Bradstreet and the Finding Anne Bradstreet project here.

Spanish Audiobook Publishers Changing With Market

A recent study, Profile of the Spanish Audiobook Market, found that there’s been a shift from the U.S. being the largest market for Spanish audiobooks published by Spain and Latin America to Spain and Mexico being the largest market for these books. The reason? Basically better quality and access. Also, less narrators with Castilian accents for Latin American consumers. Read more on this growing market here.