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Today In Books

Nobel Prize In Literature Returns With Two Awards: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Disney Publishing Worldwide.

Everlasting Rose cover image


The Nobel Prize in Literature Award Returns

There will be two Nobel prizes in literature awarded: One for 2018 and one for 2019–2018 having been cancelled last year after the Swedish Academy basically fell apart following rape accusations against the husband of one of its members. In order to earn back trust, the Swedish Academy, and the Nobel Foundation, have listed the steps they’ve taken and will continue to implement.

Libraries Going Green

The New York Library Association created the Sustainable Library Certification Program so that libraries who choose to participate can do their part for the environment. Lindenhurst Memorial Library is the first Long Island library to get their Green Business Partnership status and the third in the state. Read here for how they’re achieving a more green status and, ya know, maybe get some ideas to implement yourself.

The Audie Award Winners Announced

Last night at the Audies Gala, the winners for the 2019 Audie Awards were announced in 24 categories that ranged in genres including Romance and Fantasy to categories including Audiobook of the Year and Multi-Voiced Performance. Check out all the winners here, including sound clips.

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Today In Books

Principal Reads Books Live On Facebook: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Penguin Random House.

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Principal Reads Books Live On Facebook

You can find elementary school principal Belinda George live on Facebook every Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. reading a book as a bedtime story, which she calls “Tucked-in Tuesdays.” What a great way to encourage reading and make sure every kid gets tucked in with a bedtime story.

New Legal Trouble For Roger Stone

Over a book, of course. Seems Stone has a book about to publish and his legal team failed to mention it to U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson who had placed Stone, who is accused of obstruction of justice and lying to congress, under a gag order. This will continue to be a developing story.

The 2019 Women’s Prize For Fiction Longlist!

From 163 entries 16 finalists for the longlist were selected, including seven debuts and a range of genres. Immediately spotted some Rioter favorites–An American Marriage, CirceFreshwaterMy Sister, the Serial Killer–and the top of my TBR list just grew!

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Today In Books

Story Land Will Have Adults Only Night: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by HQN Books.


Leave The Kiddos At Home

If you’re in New England and want a Peter Pan night of never growing up, your wish is about to come true. Saturday, June 22nd Story Land will hold a 21 and older only night from 6-9 p.m. and tickets will go on presale from March 15th-17th.

The Villains Are Coming

Serena Valentino’s Disney Villain book series will be adapted for the upcoming Disney streaming platform. Info on Book of Enchantment is still pretty scarce but Michael Seitzman is reported to be the showrunner “currently hiring writers, with a writers room slated to open in April.

The Misty Copeland Biopic Gets A Director

Based on Misty Copeland’s memoir Life in Motion: An Unlikely Ballerina, the biopic will be directed by Nzingha Stewart. Stewart, who has directed episodes of Pretty Little Liars, Grey’s Anatomy, and How to Get Away with Murder,  said “As an African American woman, I know firsthand that when Misty Copeland leaps, we all soar. As a filmmaker, I am thrilled to bring this hopeful, triumphant, and cinematic story to the big screen.” So ready the popcorn and the tissues.

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Today In Books

The Baby-Sitters Are Back: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Amazon Publishing and The Fever King by Victoria Lee.


Do Your Homework And Eat Your Veggies

Ann M. Martin’s The Baby-Sitters Club will once again be adapted! This time we’re getting a ten-episode series on Netflix. “’The themes of The Baby-Sitters Club still resonate 30 years after the original book series was released and there has never been a more opportune time to tell an aspirational story about empowering young female entrepreneurs,’ said Melissa Cobb, vice president of Kids & Family at Netflix.”

Serial Box + Marvel

Serial Box, a publisher that serializes stories that read like a television series broken down into episodes but, all together, make up a season, has partnered with Marvel. So we’re going to get new original stories, not based on films or comics, for Black Panther, Black Widow, Jessica Jones, and Thor in the Serials form. Cool!

New Play Adaptation!

Erika L. Sánchez’s I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter will be a play at Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago in 2020. Isaac Gomez will write the adaptation and Sandra Marquez will direct. So exciting!

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Unusual Suspects

Mila Kunis Adapting Thriller

Hello mystery fans! We survived the shortest month of the year that managed to feel as long as a year so let’s celebrate with all the linkable crime things and a weekend in the mystery bookfort. (That was a very long sentence for a very long month.)


Sponsored by Soho Crime.

Hunting Game cover imageAuthor Helene Tursten (Detective Inspector Huss series) returns with a new mystery series introducing her unforgettable heroine: hunter, fighter, and dogged police detective Embla Nyström. When two members of Embla’s party turn up dead during an annual moose hunt in rural Sweden, Embla must delve into the dark pasts of her fellow hunters in search of a killer. “Haunted, driven, immensely human . . . Embla is a winning new Scandinavian noir lead.” —BBC Culture


From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Spin cover imageYA Thrillers That Put Teenagers to the Test

11 Books About Stalkers and Obsessives for Fans of “You”

L.A. Times Book Prize finalists

Men and Women – Thrillers and Mysteries

 

News And Adaptations

Heaven My Home cover imageHeaven, My Home, the next book in Attica Locke’s Highway 59 series, has a cover! My excitement for this book and the adaptation for the series has no bounds!

Mila Kunis Snaps Up TV Rights to Journalist Andrea Bartz’s New Thriller, The Lost Night

9 Thrillers & Mysteries Becoming Movies Or TV Shows In The Near Future

All the Literary References in Netflix’s YOU

True Crime

bad blood by john carreyrou cover image“She Never Looks Back”: Inside Elizabeth Holmes’s Chilling Final Months at Theranos

Criminal groups are offering $360,000 salaries to accomplices who can help them scam CEOs about their porn-watching habits

The sensational society killings that rocked L.A. — still a mystery 90 years later

San Francisco ‘Doodler’ Killer Subject Of Crime Series From UK Outfit Ugly Duckling Films

Hockey dad’s discarded napkin at rink ties him to 1993 killing in Twin Cities 25 years later

Kindle Deals

Gold of Our Fathers by Kwei Quartey coverIf you’re looking for a great detective series set in Ghana, Gold of Our Fathers (Darko Dawson #4) by Kwei Quartey is $1.99!

If you’ve ever wondered what a book written by Annie Wilkes and Norman Bates’ child would be and want to read a truly disturbing thriller, Perfect Days by Raphael Montes is $6.99! (Review) (I don’t remember all the trigger warnings but recall rape and kidnapping.)

If you want to start a mystery series that follows the teen descendants of Sherlock Holmes and John Watson, A Study in Charlotte by Brittany Cavallaro is $1.99!

A Bit Of My Week In Reading

Orient cover imageI’m currently drowning in audiobooks–just like I like it–and am listening to: Orient by Christopher Bollen (A small town mixed with locals and new rich New Yorkers is rocked by a murder.);  Blanche Among the Talented Tenth by Barbara Neely (Cozy mystery); The Third Victim by Phillip Margolin (Serial killer thriller); City of Devils by Paul French (True crime set in 1930s/’40s Shanghai.).

My current print reads: Smoke and Ashes by Abir Mukherjee (I love this historical mystery series!); A Friend is a Gift You Give Yourself by William Boyle (I really like his crime writing.).

Just South of Home cover imageAnd my yay-look-at-the-galley-I-got: The Reign of the Kingfisher by T.J. Martinson (It’s a mystery book with superheroes!); Furious Hours: Murder, Fraud, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee by Casey Cep (Nonfiction that sounds super interesting.); Just South of Home by Karen Strong (I’m in love with this cover!)

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

Publisher Ready For Mueller Report: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Devil’s Daughter by Lisa Kleypas.

cover of devil's daughter by lisa kleypas


Publisher Ready For Mueller Report 

In anticipation of the possibility of Mueller’s Report being made public, Skyhorse Press is prepared to have it published in book form. How ready? It already has a cover and an attorney commissioned to write the introduction. Guess they got the early bird memo.

The Night Circus Adaptation Gets A Director

Erin Morgenstern’s amazing The Night Circus is being adapted to film by Lionsgate and we now know the director: Geremy Jasper. The adaptation has been in the works since 2011 and has had three writers on the script–Annie Baker, Moira Buffini, Patrick Ness–so here’s hoping that this director news means we’re going to get the film sooner than later.

The Booker Prize Has New Financial Supporter

Man Booker International Prize lost its financial sponsor and thus is going to be known as the The Booker Prize and The International Booker Prize (literature in translation prize). Its new financial support–for the next five years–is “Crankstart, the charitable foundation of Sir Michael Moritz KBE and his wife, Harriet Heyman.” All’s well that ends well.

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Today In Books

11-Year-Old Crochet Prodigy Gets Book Deal: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Beautiful Bad, a gripping psychological thriller by Annie Ward.

Beautiful Bad cover image


The Future Is In Good Hands

Jonah Larson has landed a book deal after an article about his crocheting went viral. The 11-year-old’s book–Hello, Crochet Friends! Making Art, Being Mindful, Giving Back: Do What Makes You Happy–will publish in July. So this article is totally worth clicking to see his you-should-be-a-star photo and to get to know him. Also, of course this amazing child has a “GoFundMe campaign to raise money for Roots Ethiopia, a nonprofit organization that partners with Ethiopian communities to improve education and support entrepreneurship.”

10,000 Public Domain Books Digitized By The Arabic Collections Online

The Arabic Collections Online hit a big milestone recently having digitized more than 10,000 public domain volumes making them available for free across the globe. You can read more about this awesome project, and their goal to digitize 23,000 books, here.

Free Online Resources For Teachers And Students

Anyone really can benefit from Masterpiece on PBS’s online Masterpiece Collection which, according to PBS, is “a treasure trove of videos from MASTERPIECE films, supported by essays and teaching tips, this collection offers innovative ways to access, understand, and analyze classic literature adapted for the screen.” Learn more about getting your literary classics learning on here.

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Today In Books

CRAZY RICH ASIANS Film Was Almost Super Shexy: Today In Books

You could win a six-month subscription to an amazing Romance box! Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the image below:

Fresh Fiction romance box ad


Someone Film These Missing Scenes, Please!

At the Women in Film Oscar Party screenwriter Adele Lim explained her first screenplay adaptation of Crazy Rich Asians had “all these hot, steamy, getting-it-on scenes.” She was obviously reigned in and we got a rom-com for all but I’d like to petition for some bonus scenes to be filmed for a special DVD release. And if Hollywood truly just hates making money then, um, sell that first script.

Shexy Voice Runs In The Family

Okay, I promise last shexy related news item–I didn’t choose this theme it apparently chose me! James Earl Jones’ son, Flynn, is a romance audiobook narrator and everything about this just feels so right.

I Had No Idea It Was An Adaptation

The creator and author of the show The Love Boat, which was adapted from her nonfiction book Love Boats, Jeraldine Saunders has died at 96. “Jeraldine was an active woman who never lost her interest in dancing, younger men, and the written word.”

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Unusual Suspects

Another Fantastic Lady Spy!

Hi mystery fans! This week I have a psychological thriller, historical mystery, and true crime that is sadly very relevant. Also, if you’ve been anticipating Chelsea Cain’s One Kick adaptation it premieres tonight on WGNAmerica. It’s titled Gone and stars Leven Rambin, Chris Noth, and Danny Pino–I’m making popcorn!


Sponsored by Fierce Reads and What We Buried by Kate A. Boorman

What We Buried cover image“Do you ever just want to be believed?” Siblings Liv and Jory Brewer have grown up resenting each other. The only thing they have in common is contempt for their parents. When their parents mysteriously vanish, Jory and Liv are forced to work together. What starts as a simple overnight road trip soon takes a turn for the dangerous and surreal. And as the duo speeds through the deserts of Nevada, brother and sister will unearth deep family secrets that force them to relive their pasts as they try to retain a grip on the present.


Psychological Thriller (TW suicide)

The Stranger cover imageThe Stranger by Melanie Raabe, Imogen Taylor (Translator): I needed something for my brain to obsess on in order to ignore *gestures wildly over there at all the stress * and this delivered. Sarah’s husband disappeared seven years ago and she’s finally started to accept that he isn’t returning, and so she’s moving on with her life with her young son. And then she gets the call that her husband Philip has been found and is returning home. That’s when everything goes WTF because as soon as Sarah sees him, she says, “That’s not my husband.” The beginning of the novel had me questioning behaviors too much to fully sink in but the what-is-happening kept me engaged. And then it turned into almost a cat-and-mouse between Philip and Sarah trying to outdo the other’s reactions to the situation: he has her blackmailed with “I know what you did” as she tries to prove that he isn’t Philip. I kept thinking “but if this is true, then this is implausible,” throughout which kept me having to turn the page because I had to know. I like the way Raabe “settled” the WTF-is-happening.

Another Fantastic Lady Spy! (TW suicide)

transcription cover imageTranscription by Kate Atkinson: This was my first Atkinson novel and I can see why so many love her work. She managed to write a great spy novel for crime fans and a great novel for historical fiction fans, while having the depth readers want in literary fiction. It’s RUL good! It’s two timelines: In 1950 Juliet Armstrong is a BBC radio producer for a children’s program when her past shows up. In 1940, just barely an adult, Armstrong is recruited into MI5 and trained to monitor British Fascist sympathizers by transcribing audio recordings. This isn’t a jumping-off-buildings-during-chase spy thriller, instead it’s filled with tension and fascinating scenes as it follows a group of spies during WWII. What I loved most was Armstrong’s character and her dry humor and observations in all the situations she’s placed in. I went with the audiobook, which I fully recommend for full immersion into this great story that will especially have you holding your breath as you reach the end.

Difficult But Important Read (TW mass shooting/ homophobia/ ableism/ suicide (thoughts included)/ PTSD and survival guilt discussed)

Columbine cover imageColumbine by Dave Cullen: So yes, I’m technically late to this one in that it published ten years ago, but there are so many important things to ponder and learn from that it’s never too late to read this investigation into the high school massacre that occurred April 20, 1999. I’ll say straight out it’s not an easy read, as it takes you into the tragedy with details, but to this day there is still so much wrong information associated with what happened and the book does an excellent job of not only giving the correct information but of showing how the misinformation started and how it spread. In a time when mass shootings continue, and social media changes the way we digest news, and journalism many times aims for being the first rather than the most accurate, there is so much to sit with and discuss while and after reading this book.

Recent Releases

Last Night cover imageLast Night (The Searchers #2) by Karen Ellis (I’m excited to read this next since I enjoyed the first in the series which follows FBI Agent Elsa Myers.)

The Lost Night by Andrea Bartz (“What really happened the night Edie died? Ten years later, her best friend Lindsay will learn how unprepared she is for the truth.”) (TW suicide)

The Huntress by Kate Quinn (“English journalist and a Russian female bomber pilot who join forces to track the Huntress, a Nazi war criminal gone to ground in America.”)

Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland by Patrick Radden Keefe (True crime in Ireland)

Down the River Unto the Sea cover imageDown the River Unto the Sea by Walter Mosley (Paperback) (Character driven PI–full review) (TW rape)

I’ll Be Gone in the Dark: One Woman’s Obsessive Search for the Golden State Killer by Michelle McNamara (Paperback) (One of the best true crime memoirs–full review) (TW rape)

Lying in Wait by Liz Nugent (Paperback) (Cruel AF–full review) (TW revenge porn/ Heads-up a character deals with fat shaming throughout the entire novel.)

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

Dickens Tried To Banish Wife To An Asylum: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Flatiron Books.

NIght Tiger cover image


Charles Dickens’ Wife’s Unseen Letters Reveal A Lot

That Charles Dickens’ was a dickens to his wife was already known–the dude separated from her when he started having an affair with an eighteen-year-old. But now, thanks to ninety-eight previously unseen letters written by Edward Dutton Cook– Dickens neighbor and friend–to a fellow journalist revealing what Catherine had shared with him before she died, we know he was even worse. You can read about Dickens gaslighting and trying to have Catherine locked away in an asylum here.

His Dark Materials Teaser

Watch the thirty second teaser for the upcoming adaptation of Philip Pullman’s trilogy. The BBC has yet to release an official premiere date for the series–which stars Dafne Keen, Ruth Wilson, James McAvoy, Clarke Peters, and Lin-Manuel Miranda–but it’s expected sometime this year.

You Can Now Peruse 800 Medieval Manuscripts Online

800 manuscripts, dated between 700 and 1200, from the collections of the British Library and the Bibliothèque nationale de France are now available online thanks to a two year project which digitized and organized the manuscripts by themes, authors, places and centuries. *Shines history nerd badge and dives in. *