Categories
Check Your Shelf

Lovers to Enemies to Lovers

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. It’s the last month of the fiscal year, and that means my budgets are spent and I’m getting the next few months of book orders ready to go for May 1. I feel so bad for our lone cataloger because as soon as the new fiscal year turns over, all of the collection managers rush in to work and order a gajillion titles through Baker & Taylor first thing in the morning.

Interested in fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Check out our newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox! Choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Publishers worry that AI chatbots will cut readership.

New & Upcoming Titles

Dr. Anthony Fauci has sold the rights to his memoir for just under $5 million.

John Grisham is writing a sequel to The Firm, which will be out in October 2023.

Jhumpa Lahiri has a new short story collection coming out in October.

Cover reveal for Angie Kim’s upcoming novel, Happiness Falls! (I’m so excited for this one!!)

Cover reveal for Lauren Groff’s upcoming novel, The Vaster Wilds.

And another cover reveal – this time, for J.M. Coetzee’s upcoming novel, The Pole.

45 swoon-worthy romance novels hitting shelves in 2023.

38 new mysteries and thrillers you need to get your hands on.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal.

April picks from Barnes & Noble, Epic Reads, Kirkus, New York Times.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Lone Women – Victor LaValle (Essence, LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

The New Earth – Jess Row (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Biography of X – Catherine Lacey (Guardian, NPR)

Romantic Comedy – Curtis Sittenfeld (Guardian, Washington Post)

Hang the Moon – Jeannette Walls (LA Times, NPR)

Ringmaster: Vince McMahon and the Unmaking of America – Abraham Riesman (LA Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

How Emily Henry cracked the modern romance novel.

Why are audiences so captivated by locked room mysteries?

On the Riot

A look at J.R. Moerhringer, ghostwriter to the stars.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

The best books of April, according to Goodreads.

Spring 2023 YA books to add to your TBR ASAP.

Reading pathways for Lucy Score.

Who gets to be the final girl in horror novels and movies?

All Things Comics

Amazon recruits Joe Quesada, former editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics, to develop new and existing comic book projects for adaptation.

Mike Flanagan (director of The Haunting of Hill House, Gerald’s Game, etc.) pitches a Clayface movie to Warner Brothers DC.

The original cast of Scott Pilgrim vs. the World is returning to voice an all new anime series for Netflix.

A Detroit resident uncovers one of the largest, most valuable comic book collections in the country.

On the Riot

8 new LGBTQ graphic novels you don’t want to miss.

The best graphic novels, as chosen by a high school comic book club.

8 doorstopper comics and graphic novels to immerse yourself in.

8 compelling horror manga that will haunt you.

Audiophilia

The 2023 Audie Award winners have been announced.

Brandon Sanderson has moved some of his recent projects off Audible, because “they treat authors very poorly.”

Barnes & Noble shares a list of fan-favorite audiobooks.

On the Riot

8 of the best audiobooks from the first quarter of 2023.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Board books about big feelings for babies and toddlers.

Amazing children’s books by Arab and Arab American authors.

Must-read poetry picture books by Black authors.

Adults

7 scary stories about fungi.

15 Black women writers to read ASAP.

6 historical mysteries from around the globe.

8 novels featuring artificial intelligence.

Top 10 stories about wolves.

5 books about magical teachers and mentors.

15 best Book-Tok recommended books to read in 2023.

10 must-read alternate history thrillers.

10 recommended memoirs.

11 iconic Latina poets.

10 African writers to read this year.

10 atmospheric thrillers perfect for a rainy spring afternoon.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

On the Riot

9 thoughtful books for shy kids.

Black girls of YA historical fiction.

3 YA books about vigilante justice.

10 of the best lovers to enemies to lovers romances.

25 must-read plays.

Travel the world with atmospheric reads.

10 swoon-worthy bisexual romance novels.

8 brilliant books by Indian authors set in India.

Black voices in speculative short fiction.

9 twisty suspense novels you won’t be able to put down.

8 of the best romance novels starring a married couple.

9 of the best alternate history books.

8 of the most surreal books ever written.

8 nonfiction books about Appalachia.

10 great books for plant lovers.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate as well that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black and white cat and a black cat curled up together in a basket

Gilbert and Dini have really taken to snuggling in the basket under our coffee table, and by that I mean Dini is usually in the basket first and Gilbert manages to worm his way in. The best part is that we usually don’t even notice until we look down and see two cats in the basket. Like just now! I just looked in the basket because I was pretty sure Dini had been sleeping in there a few minutes ago, and Gilbert joined him! What snuggly boys I have…

Okay, that’s all I’ve got for today. I’ll pop back again on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Never a Good Sign If John Oliver Is Interested In You

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. At my library, we have a ton of staff who have been out sick, but not from COVID…y’all, this cold and flu season has been ROUGH and there are still a bunch of nasty strains going around. I’m still masking at work for COVID reasons, but I’d be lying if I said this year’s cold & flu season wasn’t a major factor as well.

Interested in fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Check out our newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox! Choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

A federal judge has ruled in favor of the publishers in the lawsuit against the Internet Archive.

ALA has issued a statement condemning ongoing physical threats to library staff. And once again, the statement doesn’t include any examples of concrete actions that ALA will take in order to protect staff.

Worth Reading

Using statistics to establish library goals and strategies.

5 questions for better storytime planning.

Book Adaptations in the News

James Patterson signs a “first look” deal with Skydance TV, which will adapt Women’s Murder Club, Michael Bennett, and other Patterson series.

White Lotus star Will Sharpe will direct the film adaptation of Crying in H Mart.

Killers of the Flower Moon gets an October release date.

Emily Henry’s Book Lovers is being adapted into a movie.

You has been renewed for its fifth and final season.

Cillian Murphy is starring in the adaptation of Claire Keegan’s Small Things Like These. (You had me at Cillian Murphy.)

CJ Tudor’s debut horror novel, The Chalk Man, is being adapted as a series.

TJ Newman is adapting her debut thriller, Falling.

A24 is adapting Young Mungo as a TV series.

Force of Nature: The Dry 2 will hit theaters in Australia in August.

The trailer for the Bridgerton prequel, Queen Charlotte, has been released.

13 adaptations that are BETTER than the books.

Censorship News

Are literary agents seeing changes in publishing with the increase in book bans?

ALA reports a dramatic increase in book ban attempts in 2022.

A national poll shows that the majority of Americans support the freedom to read.

The “culture wars” are energizing feminist bookstores.

Trixie Mattel, Bob the Drag Queen, and other drag performers announced a new “Drag Isn’t Dangerous” campaign in partnership with other LGBTQ media organizations. And if you’re a fan of RuPaul’s Drag Race like I am, Jinkx Monsoon, Katya, Ginger Minj, and MORE Drag Race alums are also connected with the campaign.

Clear Creek ISD (TX) introduces new book challenge policies, which will allow parents and community members to “challenge any instructional or library book they believe violates a new set of guidelines, which include examples such as promoting or endorsing race or sex stereotyping or race or sex scapegoating.” (Sex and race scapegoating are defined as “assigning fault, blame or bias to a race or sex, or to members of a race or sex because of their race or sex.” So, nothing that implies that white people have a history of being racist.)

League City (TX) residents are literally lining up to be a part of the Helen Hall Library’s new Community Standards Review Committee, although some of the applicants have indicated that they very much oppose the committee and new policy, and want to make sure that the books aren’t just unilaterally removed.

A Twitter thread of challenges and complaints happening in this Texas school district. ​​

Alice Oseman, author of the Heartstopper graphic novel series, slams the thriving homophobia that has pushed some schools and libraries to remove her books.

A Florida professor says his contract was terminated for teaching about racial justice.

Over 80 books have been removed from Martin County School (FL) library shelves. But I want to highlight this quote from Grace Linn, a 100-year-old resident who spoke in favor of keeping the books: “‘Fear is not freedom. Fear is not liberty. Fear is control,” she said. “My husband died as a father of freedom. I am a mother of liberty. Banned books need to be proudly displayed and protected from School Board choices.’”

No books were removed at a seven hour special board meeting for Escambia County Schools (FL), although access to several were restricted. A choice quote from a local reverend: “Rev. Rick Branch of the First United Methodist Church said a full on ban of the books would be a ‘death by a thousand paper cuts.’ He also reminded the school board that last time they removed books, it was on ‘Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.’ “‘It’s almost never a good sign for John Oliver to be interested in you,’ he said. ‘(The books) are a chance students have for belonging. A chance they have for understanding. Stop taking away their identities. Their lifelines.’” Good rule to live by: It’s never a good sign when John Oliver is interested in you.

Florida charter school principal Hope Carrasquilla says she was forced to resign from the Tallahassee Classical School after parents complained about a lesson featuring Michaelangelo’s “David.

Louisiana school librarian Amanda Jones receives the American Association of School Librarians’ Intellectual Freedom Award.

Louisiana Congressman Clay Higgins has suggested replacing public libraries with “church-owned” alternatives. I wish I was making this up.

A look at how Mississippi author Angie Thomas’ books have been removed from multiple Mississippi schools and libraries.

An Auburn (AL) citizen accused the public library staff of grooming children, and another took it upon herself to just bring a stack of books to the police to have them investigate for distribution of pornography.

What happened when Arkansas Rep. Stephen Meeks challenged It’s Perfectly Normal at the Faulkner County Library.

You Know, Sex is being challenged at the Conway Public Library (AR).

Several parents at Guilford Public Schools (NH) are pushing for several LGBTQ books to be removed, although none of the parents have filled out the official reconsideration forms. Shocker.

Bow High School (NH) will keep Gender Queer.

An Elwood Middle School board meeting (NY) drew a significant police presence due to heated discussion over the removal of two LGBTQ books.

Hilton (NY) schools received two bomb threats in response to This Book is Gay being on library shelves.

Parents are upset that Fun Home is being used in West Morris Regional High School District (NJ) senior English Lit classes.

“Suffield First Selectman Colin Moll was criticized this week by a handful of residents for his decision to remove a children’s book about pronouns from a display at Kent Public Library [CT].” Yeah, because that’s censorship.

Three LGBTQ books are being challenged at Staples High School (CT) because they were featured on a banned books display.

Central York schools (PA) debate whether or not removing two books should be considered a ban.

The Telford (PA) community debates library content and funding at a recent council meeting. There is so much ridiculousness in here that I’d like to quote, but I don’t have room for all of it, so just read the article.

Central Bucks School District (PA) spent over $250,000 to defuse anti-LGBTQ criticism.

Pender County Schools (NC) have permanently removed seven books with several more under review. The removal list put forward by Concerned Citizens of Pender County initially came from the Pavement Education Project, a “nonpartisan” North Carolina group designed to alert parents to the presence of supposedly obscene materials in public schools.

A Spartanburg (SC) resident thinks that the picture book My Family, Your Family is confusing because it illustrates a child with two fathers, and one of the fathers is carrying a purse. This is one of several LGBTQ books for children that are being challenged.

The Haters will be removed from Beaufort County schools (SC).

13 Reasons Why will stay in Forsyth County Schools (GA).

A Connecticut man has been arrested for making a false bomb threat against the Hendersonville Public Library in Tennessee. This is the same library where the director was fired in connection to a Kirk Cameron story time, and the story got coverage on Fox News. Is there a connection between that coverage and the subsequent threats? You tell me.

I’m paywalled from the full article, but Forest Hills Public Schools (MI) are implementing a new system that gives parents control over what their children read, similar to what other school districts have implemented, and similar to the types of systems that very few parents choose to participate in.

A Creekside Elementary (WI) parent talks to the board about a cease and desist letter she received after she sent an email to the principal accusing him of “borderline grooming” for sharing an audio recording of him reading a book about a transgender child.

The Illinois House has passed the bill that would ban book bans in the state.

A new government reorganization bill in Iowa would significantly diminish the power and authority of the Iowa Commission of Libraries.

Meanwhile in Iowa, the Sioux City Community School District “allowed itself to be bullied into removing a book from school libraries after being mentioned by far-right extremist Chaya Raichik and her Libs of TikTok account despite having established procedures around library materials.” And thanked her on Twitter for bringing it to their attention.

Kalona Public Library (IA) received a challenge against Gender Queer.

Indianola School Board (IA) undergoes a lengthy word choice discussion in their policy around challenged books, and includes comments from a married couple that have ties to Moms for Liberty.

Columbia Public School (MO) board candidate Chuck Basye is basing his campaign around trying to get the graphic novel Flamer removed from school libraries.

Macon County (MO) commissioners are pushing for the public library to withdraw from a regional ILL consortium over LGBTQ books.

Rapid City Area Schools Board of Education (SD) is considering a policy change for restricting materials, because one of the board members thinks that the increase in emails she’s receiving about inappropriate books are indicative of a larger community concern, and not the result of a coordinated attack on free speech and education.

The Oklahoma State Department of Education is pushing to revoke teaching certificate of the former Norman Public Schools teacher who shared a QR code linked to the Brooklyn Public Library’s Books Unbanned resource with her students.

Nearly 700 people show up for the hearing regarding the status of the Meridian Library District in Idaho. And a recent analysis of residents’ comments show that the majority of citizens support the library, outnumbering critics 52-3.

The Bible has been challenged in Davis County (UT) schools.

40 books have been pulled from the shelves at Canby Public Schools (OR).

An investigation uncovers communication about a ban of Heritage Month displays at the Orem City Library (OR).

The San Francisco Public Library hosts its first ever Freedom to Learn summit for high school students, led by PEN America.

Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District (CA) is considering a ban on Persepolis.

Anchorage Public Library board voted to send the book Let’s Talk About It to the city attorney to determine if it violated state and local code.

Books & Authors in the News

Agatha Christie is the latest author to get a sensitivity update from publishers, similar to Roald Dahl and Ian Fleming.

Tomie dePaola will be featured on an official U.S. postage stamp on May 5th.

Numbers & Trends

The bestselling books of the week

Oprah’s book club by the numbers

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

Award News

President Biden awarded the 2021 National Humanities Medals last week.

Margo Jefferson wins the 2023 Rathbones Folio Prize for Constructing a Nervous System.

The 2023 National Book Critics Circle Award winners have been announced.

The Dylan Thomas Prize shortlist has been announced.

Pop Cultured

If you loved Poker Face, check out these other shows that influenced the series.

On the Riot

What happened to vlog adaptations of books?

Why do authors use pen names?

shadow of a cat on a white wall

Is this an artsy shot of a cat waiting for snuggles? Or an ominous shot of a cat trying to intimidate its owner into giving it an early mid-afternoon snack? Who’s to say?

Okay, please stay healthy out there, everyone! And wash those hands! I’ll see you all next week.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Morally Gray Characters and Hot Mess Heroines

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. This week is the week that BASEBALL starts!! Yes, my one and only sport that I care about is finally back! Since we live near Chicago, I’ve asked Blaine how many games he thinks will end up being snowed out in the first month of the season, and he said, “Oh, come on, you don’t know that it’s going to snow in April.” And now I’m just waiting for the weather to turn so I can pull a good “Told ya so.”

Anyway…back to books!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

A coalition of over 30 organizations and 70 public health advocates are urging Simon & Schuster to not publish Rebecca V. Culshaw’s upcoming book, The Real AIDS Epidemic, as Culshaw is a known AIDS denialist and the book will provide misinformation that harms HIV/AIDS efforts.

How a Times reporter found a pattern of plagiarism in a USC doctor’s books that his publisher missed.

The manuscript thief who stole 1,000 unpublished books will not receive prison time.

As machine translation software grows more sophisticated, could it entirely replace human translators?

How BookTok makes money.

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Weekly shares their Summer 2023 picks.

Millie Bobby Brown is publishing a historical fiction novel this fall.

Sly Stone is publishing a memoir through Questlove’s new book imprint.

Dolly Parton has a new book coming out about her passion for fashion: Behind the Seams: My Life in Rhinestones.

Prince Harry’s memoir gets the parody treatment with Spare Us!, which will be available in the UK in April.

Cover reveal for Alice Feeney’s upcoming book, Good Bad Girl.

30 new fantasy books to make your year extra magical.

Spring 2023 picks from AARP, Entertainment Weekly.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, Locus, New York Times, USA Today.

March picks from Crime Reads (debuts, international fiction), NYPL.

April picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, teens, children), The Root.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Biography of X – Catherine Lacey (Atlantic, LA Times, LitHub, New York Times, Vulture, Washington Post)

Benjamin Banneker and Us: Eleven Generations of an American Family – Rachel Jamison Webster (LitHub, New York Times, NPR, Washington Post)

Old God’s Time – Sebastian Barry (New York Times, NPR)

Flux – Jinwoo Chong (New York Times, Shondaland, Washington Post)

Commitment – Mona Simpson (Datebook, LA Times)

RA/Genre Resources

What we talk about when we talk about “cli-fi.” (But please, can we stop saying “cli-fi”?)

On the Riot

8 of the most anticipated YA debuts of 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Reading pathways for Rebekah Weatherspoon.

A guide to Taylor Jenkins Reid’s backlist.

An overthinker’s guide to giving book recommendations.

All Things Comics

The Great Gatsby is getting a graphic novel adaptation.

The future of black queer representation in comics is joyful.

On the Riot

Kodansha, the publisher of Attack on Titan, is launching a manga app.

A look at the novel and the comic adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird.

7 steampunk comics to TBR.

9 recently published graphic novels about politics and identity.

Audiophilia

On the Riot

A review of BookBeat for anyone looking for an Audible or Scribd alternative.

One listener’s plea to stop removing recipes from audiobooks!

Exploring the limitations of AI-narrated audiobooks from a disabled person’s perspective.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

13 YA reads trending on BookTok.

13 YA books with morally gray characters.

11 YA books for fans of Everything Everywhere All at Once.

Adults

10 books that celebrate the bonds between women.

11 outstanding second novels that beat the curse of the sophomore slump.

A reading list of heroines who are hot messes.

Books to understand the Vietnam War.

8 novels with characters who go to therapy.

Espionage novel recommendations from a former spy.

8 books that will take you somewhere new.

21 books similar to Daisy Jones and the Six.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

On the Riot

The best narrative nonfiction books for kids to make learning fun.

10 YA books that readers and critics disagree on.

10 physics books that will answer your questions about literally everything.

10 romance books that will destroy you and then put you back together.

8 spellbinding witchy books to read for Women’s History Month.

10 vengeful books like John Wick.

11 exciting Italian books in translation.

Marriage of convenience romance novels.

The best realistic science fiction to TBR.

24 of the best coming-of-age novels.

The most influential sci-fi books of the past 10 years.

10 gothic steampunk books to read by lamplight.

Books that actually use the word “lesbian” to describe their characters.

10 fascinating fantasy books like Babel.

10 siren and mermaid books to dive into.

8 terrifyingly claustrophobic horror novels.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate as well that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black cat slumped on a throw pillow with its front paws stretched out

I took this photo last week when I was attending our virtual monthly board, and Gilbert kept me company. On an unrelated note, this is often how I feel when I attend board meetings.

Welp, that’s all I’ve got — I’ll be back on Friday. Don’t forget to check out Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, with lots of info and advice from experts in the world of books and reading. Subscribe and choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

It’s Not the Drag Queens

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. My concentration has been absolutely shot this last week for various reasons, except for when I sit down to play my robot dinosaur video game, and then I can’t focus on anything else. So let’s jump into the newsletter!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

“‘Frankenstein’ apartments and weak libraries: Is this New York’s future?” Plus, NYC library supporters gathered to protest the proposed budget cuts.

Librarians and Connecticut lawmakers fight the high cost of eBooks.

Worth Reading

Behavior policies through a lens of equity and compassion.

Library workers and mental health advocacy.

Book Adaptations in the News

“Oscar Isaac will play a sexy Kurt Vonnegut in a new crime series.” Hey, I’m just quoting the experts here!

Oscar Isaac will also be starring in Guillermo del Toro’s adaptation of Frankenstein for Netflix, although no word on what his role will actually be.

Amazon has canceled Three Pines after just one season.

The Tattooist of Auschwitz has a director and a cast.

Amazon is adapting E. Lockhart’s We Were Liars as a series.

Lucy Boynton has been cast as the lead in One Day in December.

Alisha Rai’s Partners in Crime has been optioned for a TV series.

Michelle Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan reunite in the teaser trailer for American Born Chinese.

The Broadway production of Room has been postponed indefinitely due to a lack of funding and the withdrawal of the lead producer.

Banned & Challenged Books

What does ChatGPT have to say about book bans?

PEN America has a list of ways you can fight book bans and stay educated about what’s happening.

A state-by-state guide to the coalitions and campaigns fighting legislation criminalizing librarians.

A new U.S. House “parental rights” resolution will further ignite book bans.

The drag show bans sweeping the country are a chilling attack on free speech.

Book sanctuary cities are a response to book bans and censorship.

The Texas Education Agency announces a takeover of the Houston Independent School District.

Midland County Library (TX) held a public hearing on proposed collection policy changes.

The battle to criminally charge Texas librarians has just begun.

The New York Times looks at how Florida is reviewing social studies textbooks for forbidden mentions of racial history.

Florida book bans are not a hoax.

DeSantis’ effort to eliminate DEI efforts in universities passes in committee.

Florida teachers sue DeSantis’ government over school library restrictions.

Flagler County Schools (FL) elected to keep Nowhere Girls by Amy Reed, but the person who made the initial challenge said that she was going to appeal the decision before the meeting even started because she knew which way the committee was going to vote.

A look at the mess happening at Clay County schools (FL) in regards to their book challenge process. Worth noting: “there have only been 11 parents who have regularly agreed to be a part of the District Curriculum Council and that they are approaching burnout, suggesting that without volunteers on the council, current challenged books may take even longer to reach a completed review.” Not surprising that the people initiating the challenges are content to leave the actual work to others.

The increasing scrutiny of libraries in Arkansas is part of a national trend.

Arkansas House legislators pass a bill that would criminalize librarians who let kids see “harmful” content, and give local officials the power to decide what’s appropriate.

The Crawford County Library Board (AR) moved The Last Leaves Falling from the YA section to the adult section.

Former Siloam Springs (AR) City Administrator Phillip Patterson was responsible for the removal of 11 books from the public library.

Saline County (AR) resident Angela Gray spoke to the Quorum Court about her concerns regarding the public library. She said she checked out a number of “offensive” books on her child’s library card, saying “‘I checked these out online, then picked them up in a locker,’ Gray said, noting that no one supervised her retrieving the books or challenged her child’s right to check out the books.” Which I hardly need point out is EXACTLY how this process is supposed to work.

Best-selling authors are scheduled to speak at the first Mississippi Banned Books Festival.

An amendment to a Mississippi child protection bill could have major implications for libraries.

Henderson Public Library (TN) received a bomb threat in connection to a recent story hour event hosted by Kirk Cameron and the subsequent Fox News coverage. The library director has since been fired.

Missouri Republican House Budget Committee Chairman Cody Smith proposed a budget that would cut all state funding for libraries in retaliation to the recent lawsuit against the new sexually explicit materials bill in the state.

I’ll just leave this first sentence here: “Backdropped by a crowd showing strong support for the LGBTQ+ community, a Concord man dressed as Julius Caesar was prevented from speaking at a Dover School Board [NH] meeting on Monday because he’s not a city resident.”

A Greenville (NY) mom has referred to All Boys Aren’t Blue as “pornographic.”

Guilford (CT) parents debate if LGBTQ+ books are appropriate for school libraries.

Old Rochester Regional School District (MA) voted to retain 10 challenged books.

Central York (PA) School District quietly removed Push by Sapphire, allegedly to avoid backlash.

Norwin Schools in Pennsylvania will keep Al Capone Does My Shirts in 5th grade classrooms.

Perkiomen Valley School Board (PA) president Jason Saylor attempted to circumvent regular board procedure and fast-track a policy that would restrict district library books and textbooks, but the attempt was stopped by a 4-4 vote.

Laurie Halse Anderson showed up to the Central Bucks (PA) school board meeting to talk about how book bans impact her work and violate the First Amendment rights of students.

Roanoke County Schools (VA) amended their media policy to no longer require that all new books be read and reviewed by a librarian or teacher before it could be added. However, a two week period of parent review is still required by the policy.

A North Carolina reverend was angry to learn that his third grade daughter read a book about Islam at school, and is targeting a bunch of other books too.

A Montgomery County (NC) parent is upset about Flamer being available in the school library.

South Carolina students are upset that books are being banned, particularly in Beaufort.

Nearly a dozen people spoke out against the Greenville County Library System board (SC) and several of their trustees’ anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric and proposals.

A group of Hilliard (OH) parents are pushing to remove 40 books from the school libraries, many of which deal with LGBTQ+ issues and gender identity.

The caption says it all: “Hate groups White Lives Matter of Ohio, Patriot Front, Proud Boys and neo-Nazi group Blood Tribe traveled to Wadsworth Memorial Park to protest at an event in which a drag queen read a book on humanism written by a 9-year-old girl.” (There’s a large photo of a swastika flag at the beginning of the article.)

Forest Hills Public Schools (MI) quietly removed several books from school libraries without knowledge or input from the staff who oversee the collections.

A petition is circulating to remove Hillsdale Community Library (MI) Councilman Joshua Paladino from the library board, for his attempts to restrict LGBTQ+ books at the library.

A Michigan county prosecutor has raised the possibility of criminal charges against Lapeer District Library director Amy Churchill if Gender Queer is not removed from library shelves, although experts doubt that she will be able to be charged.

Hundreds show up in response to a Drag Queen Storytime event held at Sidetrack Bookshop in Royal Oak, Michigan.

SB 12 in Indiana would open the door to secrecy, shame, and fear instead of creating a safe learning space for students.

Keene Memorial Library (NE) will not be removing This Book Is Gay, and they will not be moving forward with a proposal that would allow anyone in the community to demand a book to be relocated.

North Dakota’s obscene materials bill is amended to only affect children’s sections in libraries, which is still NOT GOOD.

Three board members at the Enid Public Library (OK) were selected as “library board advisors” in regards to collection purchases, displays, and programs. “The decision as to new materials, displays and programs will remain the library director’s, but in the event of an appeal by an adviser, the material will not be purchased in the case of new or replacement materials; circulated in the case of donated material; scheduled in the case of library programs; or displayed in the case of library displays, but will be appealed before the library board.”

A group of protesters showed up at St. Patrick Presbyterian Church to protest books being kept in Greeley-Evans schools (CO). Why, you may ask? Because the pastor at St. Patrick’s is the president of the school district Board of Education.

Concerns rise over the politicization of school boards after the majority of the Elizabeth School Board (CO) resigns.

Campbell County Library (WY) hired Liberty Counsel, a right-wing nonprofit based in Florida, to propose changes to their collection development policy that would severely limit the books allowed in the children’s and teen’s sections, and quite possibly in the whole library. Worth noting that Liberty Counsel provides free representation and assistance to advance “religious freedom, the sanctity of life, and the family.”

Arizona governor Katie Hobbs vetoes a bill that would ban critical race theory in schools.

Why some Idaho officials aren’t concerned by anti-library bills and groups.

Davis Schools (UT) have removed 33 books from the library.

South Summit School District (UT) is now reviewing Brave New World after a single parent complained.

Ogden School District (OR) has received a challenge to three books earlier in March, the first in at least five years.

West Linn-Wilsonville Schools (OR) is keeping nine challenged titles on the shelves, although some will be restricted to high school access only.

The chair of the Crooks County Library Board (OR) was removed after she called for the resignation of another trustee who had called for the segregation of LGBTQ+ materials in the library and publicly named two patrons who had checked out LGBTQ books in a previous meeting. However, it was the board chair was removed because she behaved too “aggressively.”

Two 5th grade teachers at Palos Verde Peninsula school district (CA) received pushback for reading Too Bright to See aloud to their classes, which is an age-appropriate book with a transgender protagonist. Thankfully when the time for public comment at the next board meeting came, the number of LGBTQ supporters in attendance far outweighed the number of critics.

A member of “Gays Against Groomers” is upset that Fallbrook Union High School (CA) elected to keep Beyond Magenta in school libraries.

Western Placer Unified School District (CA) declined to make a decision about the fate of The Hate U Give. Nearly 200 residents showed up to the meeting.

A Calgary preacher was arrested near a drag storytime event, as he had been arrested previously for “hate-motivated offences following a Feb. 25 altercation at a library storytime drag event. Reimer was ordered to stay away from LGBTQ2S+ community members and events.”

The Cork City Council in Ireland say that they will not remove LGBTQ+ titles from the libraries after multiple staff members reported being targeted by a small group of harassers.

A Queensland, Australia resident got the police involved in trying to remove Gender Queer from the library.

PEN America has called on Hong Kong authorities to drop sedition charges against booksellers.

Conservatives are trying to ban books in your town. Librarians are fighting back.

Books & Authors in the News

Nobel Prize-winning author Kenzaburō Ōe has died at 88.

Rosalind Wiseman, author of the book Queen Bees and Wannabes which inspired the movie Mean Girls, is considering legal action against Tina Fey and Paramount for a lack of compensation.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

Award News

Barnes & Noble announces its Children’s & YA Book Awards shortlist.

Pop Cultured

Peacock has ordered a Monk reunion film.

On the Riot

Stranger than fiction: real life crimes inside the library.

A brief history of Project Gutenberg.

What is “bionic reading” and does it actually work?

9 of the best documentaries about writers.

Some things that avid readers find annoying about the book world.

Can you like books too much?

black and white cat sleeping on its side on an orange blanket

Dini continues his super cuddly streak — nearly every night now, he snuggles up to me while I play video games, and he makes biscuits on my legs. Look at how sleepy and smiley this boy is!

All right, that’s all for now. I’ll pop back into your inboxes next week! And don’t forget to check out Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, full of informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading. Subscribe and choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

THE LAST OF US Reading Lists

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’ve spent this last weekend in a half daze from playing video games for so many hours. How many hours, you ask? I have no idea because quite frankly I don’t want to know. But I think I’m hitting a bit of a saturation point and now I need to find some other things to keep me occupied. *insert grimace emoji here*

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

When will Gillian Flynn write the next Gone Girl? Later — she’s a publisher now. (But she does say that she’s completed the first draft of her next book!)

Turns out that America’s most recession-proof business is bookstores.

New & Upcoming Titles

Leigh Bardugo signs a blockbuster eight-figure, 12 book deal with Macmillan.

Cover reveal for Brandy Colbert’s upcoming book The Blackwoods.

Celebrity cookbooks released in 2023.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, New York Times, USA Today.

March picks from Tor.com (indie SFF), Vulture.

Spring 2023 picks from Buzzfeed, New York Times (fiction, nonfiction), USA Today.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Paris: The Memoir — Paris Hilton (Good Morning America, Poeple, USA Today, Vogue)

Old Babes in the Woods — Margaret Atwood (NPR, Shondaland)

Birnam Wood — Eleanor Catton (New York Times, NPR)

Heart Sutra — Yan Lianke (New York Times, NPR)

The Dog of the North — Elizabeth McKenzie (New York Times, Washington Post)

Hello Beautiful — Ann Napolitano (New York Times, Washington Post)

On the Riot

Who is Vivian Stephens?

12 March 2023 book club picks to get reading with.

Less is more: minimalist book covers of 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

The pleasure of linked stories.

8 book recommendation apps to find your next read.

A brief introduction to queer African lit.

The history of the “bury your gays” trope.

A brief history of children’s books and literature.

Reading pathways for Grady Hendrix.

The allure of books about faeries and the fae.

Why more men should read romance.

All Things Comics

K-Pop group NCT 127 is launching a new graphic novel, Limitless.

Here’s a look at the upcoming Pokémon manga.

On the Riot

8 fantastic middle grade fantasy graphic novels.

10 comics to read before you play Star Wars Jedi: Survivor.

9 excellent dark manga to fill you with despair.

Laughing along with 10 of the best comedy manga and manhwa.

A history of the “This Is Fine” comic.

Audiophilia

15 great books that are also great audiobooks.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Crafty books for creative tweens.

YA fantasies for fans of Shadow and Bone.

Adults

The Last of Us reading lists from LitHub, New York Times, Tor.com, Vulture.

10 poetry collections to read again and again.

A coming-of-age queer reading list.

Top 10 books about visionary scientists.

11 lesbian historical romance novels.

Science fiction books that predicted the future with terrifying accuracy.

Jesse Q. Sutanto’s favorite feel-good crime novels of the year.

8 master-class mysteries told from multiple perspectives.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

On the Riot

Books for the budding young naturalist in your life.

8 cozy fantasy books for kids.

YA, middle grade, and picture books to support the monumental task of loving yourself.

Middle grade fantasy that’s not based on Christian mythology.

40 of the best dystopian novels.

20 must-read historical fiction books set in China.

10 must-read Native American authors.

12 of the best books by Black authors that you’ve probably never heard of.

8 books that the author regretted writing.

11 books recommended by Colleen Hoover, and why her fans will love them.

13 apocalyptic infection books like The Last of Us.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black cat resting its head on an orange blanket and looking very grumpy

Gilbert is in no mood for the world’s nonsense. Or he’s just in need of a nap. It’s hard to tell with him.

Okay, everyone. I’ll pop back in on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Librarians Are Not Okay

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am dealing with a very frequent problem in my life, which is that I have a huge stack of books that I want to start reading, but I’ve also started a new video game that is stealing all of my attention away, and I can’t do both at once. (My husband got me hooked on Horizon Zero Dawn, and if you’ve never heard of it, it’s like a post-apocalyptic Oregon Trail, if Oregon Trail had robot dinosaurs. You have to collect healing plants, hunt wildlife, and trade with merchants, but also take down giant machines that spew fire and electricity. It’s AWESOME!) Anyway, very little reading happening in this house.

Don’t forget to take a look at Book Riot’s new newsletter, The Deep Dive, which features fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading. You can subscribe for $5/month at bookriot.substack.com.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Students are pushing back against UC Berkeley’s plan to permanently close three campus libraries due to budget issues.

Cool Library Updates

The Las Vegas–Clark County (NV.) Library District launches a cellphone lending program.

Medical kits target community health issues.

A woman born in the basement of the East Liverpool Carnegie library in the early 1900s celebrates her 94th birthday by returning to the stacks whence she came.

Worth Reading

The librarians are not okay.

The ongoing debate about cotton gloves vs. no gloves for handling rare books.

Book Adaptations in the News

Apple wins an Oscar for its animated adaptation of The Boy, the Mole, the Fox, and the Horse.

Denise Mina’s Morrow series is being adapted for TV.

Jennifer L. Armentrout’s From Blood and Ash series is being developed into an Amazon series.

Trailer for The Last Thing He Told Me.

30 new screen adaptations of books to add to your 2023 reading list.

Banned & Challenged Books

Anti-censorship groups across the USA.

“Books are not contraband:” Meet the FReadom Fighters taking on book bans and online abuse.

A children’s librarian is scolded by their principal for making book suggestions to a student, because they suggested a book that the student’s mom considered “inappropriate.”

Bookmobiles have a new mission: delivering banned books.

Students are switching up their college plans as more states pass anti-LGBTQ laws.

Here is the status of anti-drag bills across the U.S.

Under a newly introduced bill, Texas would require internet service providers within the state to block access to abortion websites.

The Texas House is making it a priority to require school library book vendors to rate titles with sexual content.

The Cy-Fair ISD (TX) has implemented a new policy that would restrict students to only reading books within their age level, and any adult books would require parental permission.

DeSantis holds an “Exposing the Book Ban Hoax” press conference, and says that he’s not trying to ban books, while celebrating all the books that he’s had banned.

Jodi Picoult hits back after DeSantis targets her books.

Dozens of books have been removed from Martin County (FL) schools.

Florida high school students say they should have the freedom to choose what they want to read.

The ACLU says that a proposed Florida law that would require people blogging about Ron DeSantis to register with the state is a clear violation of the First Amendment. Related: Florida is trying to take away the right to speak freely.

Apparently one of the Brevard County (FL) school board members thinks that it’s only book banning if a book is completely inaccessible EVERYWHERE.

Sold and Last Night at the Telegraph Club will stay on school library shelves in Flagler County (FL).

Hillsborough County (FL) School Board will issue a final ruling on This Book is Gay.

Pinellas School Board (FL) will reconsider its ban on The Bluest Eye over the summer.

The Duval County Public Schools (FL) supervisor of book reviews has resigned. This person previously said that gay characters were “contrary to the design of humanity.”

Livingston Parish Library (LA) director has resigned amidst ongoing censorship controversies.

The director of the Shreve Memorial Library (LA) says that the library “has no interest in governing anyone’s children.”

Gender Queer will stay in Hancock County schools and the Regional School Unit 24 in Maine.

Drag Story Hour protests take center stage in Jackson Heights in New York City.

This Montclair (NJ) nonprofit is donating LGBTQ-inclusive books to local preschools.

The Bluest Eye was pulled from a 9th grade English class at Washington Township High School (NJ).

The Sparta Board of Education (NJ) elected to remove The Upside of Unrequited based on a complaint from a single parent.

A really horrifying story of what happened at the Moon Township Library in Pennsylvania, where they made a Facebook post about the book The Hips on the Drag Queen Go Swish, Swish, Swish. People said they were going to send Kyle Rittenhouse to the library, and other people threatened the librarians’ children by name.

18 books from the Penncrest School District have been removed.

How Moms for Liberty is shaping the Warwick (PA) school board races.

Charles Sutherland, the former school librarian who was found spray painting the word “groomer” on two Maryland public libraries, has been charged with possession of actual child pornography. This is just so goddamned infuriating and so incredibly unsurprising.

Montgomery County (VA) Public Schools respond to a mom’s complaint about pornography in the school libraries, saying that they have a procedure in place if anyone wants to challenge a book in the library.

A Robeson County (NC) preacher is on a quest to ban books.

Why Tennessee’s law limiting drag performances likely violates the First Amendment.

A Wilson County (TN) man has filed a lawsuit accusing the Wilson County Book Review Committee of violating the state’s Open Meetings Act.

A book banning bill nears its final passage in the Kentucky General Assembly.

Faulkner County Library (AR) board canceled more than a dozen meetings and programs after the county judge warned members they needed to “avoid what happened in Craighead County.”

Moms for Liberty are banning books in Lonoke County (AR).

The Michigan Library Association says that public libraries are not able to purchase materials that would meet the legal definition of obscenity, thereby rendering a newly state-sponsored bill pointless.

The Patmos Library (MI) board are looking at collection development policy changes, which come after the library was defunded for keeping LGBTQ books in the collection.

Illinois proposes its first anti-book ban legislation. This comes on the heels of Governor J.B. Pritzker being the first governor to directly speak about the wave of censorship, book banning, and harassment being seen by schools and libraries.

Tim Vlcek, a school board candidate for Lyons Township High School (IL) said he was unfamiliar with the right-wing group Awake Illinois, which is odd because he attended one of their candidate training workshops in January.

St. Charles Public Library (IL) board candidates discuss book banning at a recent candidate forum.

Iowa House Republicans advanced a bill that would prohibit school libraries from including books with sexual content.

The Keene Memorial Library (NE) has a new policy that will allow parents to request that children’s books be relocated to the adult section, and there’s no possible way this can end well.

A Kansas state representative calls rainbow drawings at David Brewer Elementary “proof of indoctrination.”

Residents hosted a “read-in” at the Veterans Memorial Library (ND) to protest book-banning legislation.

Op/ed from North Dakota: “I went to a library to attend a book ban protest and didn’t see a single pervert or “groomer.”

Oklahoma Senate passed a bill that would put school library materials in age-restricted categories and require parental permission to check out certain titles. And the push to ban books for kids AND adults continues.

Park County School District 1 (WY) is discussing a new book policy, which would require each new book to be rated on a scale of 0 to 5 to determine their grade level/suitability. How does this even make sense?

Laramie County School District 1 (WY) are trying to define “sexually explicit” in their library policies.

Campbell County (WY) Public Library board is reviewing proposed changes to their collection development policy suggested by a Florida-based attorney with Liberty Counsel. Liberty Counsel “provides free assistance and representation to advance “religious freedom, the sanctity of life and the family,” according to its website.”

Greeley-Evans School District (CO) book review committee approves Beloved for high school libraries.

The 2023 Utah legislative session ended without passing any significant anti-library bills.

A bill to ban critical race theory in Arizona schools is headed to the governor’s desk. And people who want to report teachers using critical race theory or “emotional-support curriculum” can do so through a Department of Education hotline.

An anti-LGBTQ+ group ramps up its “continual harassment” of British Columbia school boards.

Libraries shouldn’t look for excuses to exclude.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

Books & Authors in the News

Disability activist and author Judy Heumann has died at 75.

Olivia creator Ian Falconer has died at 63.

The headline for this piece has changed: It currently reads “Updating kids’ classics: what’s really at stake?” but the original headline I saw read “Get over the Roald Dahl controversy — kid lit can and should be updated.”

Oprah selects Hello Beautiful as her 100th book club pick.

Numbers & Trends

The bestselling books of the week.

Award News

The 58th Nebula Award finalists have been announced.

The 2023 Lambda Award shortlist has been announced.

The International Booker Prize longlist has been announced.

The Baillie Gifford Prize for Nonfiction announces the shortlist for its 25th anniversary Winner of Winners award.

The 2023 Joyce Carol Oates Prize finalists have been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

The owner of the online bookstore Sistah Scifi is rolling out book vending machines that showcase titles by Black and Indigenous SFF authors.

On the Riot

Weird things that saved this school librarian’s life during the Scholastic book fair.

Unpacking the differences between Cabin at the End of the World and Knock at the Cabin.

20 book apps for every kind of reader.

What does overconsumption of books look like?

black cat sleeping on a red pillow

No caption for this one…just a perfect, precious little Gilbert.

All right friends, I’m off to kill more dinosaur machines. Have a good weekend!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Oscar Reading Lists Galore

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Y’all, we made it to Daylight Savings Time again! We’re not going to see any temperature changes in the Chicago area for the foreseeable future, but the early darkness has finally been vanquished! I don’t even mind that I’m missing an hour of sleep — the extra daylight is worth it.

Don’t forget that Book Riot is launching a new, in-depth newsletter, The Deep Dive, which features fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading! Subscription is $5/month, and you can subscribe at bookriot.substack.com.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Mattel is forming its own publishing imprint.

Penguin Random House increases starting salaries to $48,000.

AI meets its worst enemy: the U.S. Copyright Office.

New & Upcoming Titles

Simon & Schuster has halted publication of The Book of Animal Secrets: Nature’s Lessons for a Long and Happy Life by David B. Agus due to accusations of plagiarism.

Margaret Atwood is writing a memoir.

Trevor Noah has a new untitled book coming out this fall.

Jason Derulo has a nonfiction book, Sing Your Name Out Loud: 15 Rules for Living Your Dream, coming out in June. It’s an aptly-named book, because I did indeed sing his name in my head when I read the news.

V.E. Schwab is expanding the Shades of Magic series with a new book coming out in October.

Christopher Paolini is returning to the world of Eragon with Murtagh.

E.L. James has a new book coming out in June.

Former Bachelorette Rachel Lindsay explores a life if she had said “no” to The Bachelor in her debut novel, Real Love.

Cover reveal for Ali Hazelwood’s upcoming romance novel, Check & Mate.

Weekly picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, New York Times, USA Today.

March picks from Time, Tor.com (fantasy, horror/genre-bending, YA SFF).

Spring 2023 picks from Autostraddle, Town & Country.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

I Am Debra Lee – Debra Lee (Essence, Good Morning America, USA Today, Washington Post)

We Were Once a Family: A Story of Love, Death, and Child Removal in America – Roxanna Asgarian (New York Times, Washington Post)

Old Babes in the Wood: Stories – Margaret Atwood (Vanity Fair, Wired)

The Farewell Tour – Stephanie Clifford (New York Times, Washington Post)

Birnam Wood – Eleanor Catton (LA Times, Washington Post)

Womb: The Inside Story of Where We All Began – Leah Hazard (Guardian, New York Times)

The God of Endings – Jacqueline Holland (New York Times, NPR)

Pineapple Street – Jenny Jackson (Good Morning America, Washington Post)

The Curator – Owen King (New York Times, Tor.com)

RA/Genre Resources

Oscar reading lists for Tár, Elvis, Avatar: The Way of Water, Everything Everywhere All At Once, Top Gun: Maverick.

The novels behind this year’s best adapted screenplay Oscar nominees.

Must-read books that inspired Oscar-worthy films.

A bookish guide to the 2023 Oscars.

A complete guide to all the Bridgerton books in order.

The essential Patricia Highsmith.

The rise of “domestic noir” a decade after Gone Girl.

On the Riot

How might AI like ChatGPT impact the future of writing and books?

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

March picks for romance, horror, queer reads, SFF, mysteries/thrillers/true crime, YA, nonfiction, children’s books.

All Things Comics

Comics retailers navigate a new normal.

The Batman: Caped Crusader animated series is moving from HBO to Amazon.

A manga author with “zero” drawing talent is publishing Japan’s first fully AI-drawn manga.

Here’s an excerpt from Tegan and Sara’s upcoming graphic novel, Junior High.

On the Riot

10 new comics to read in March.

9 excellent new manga releases for March.

Where to start with Shazam comics.

8 of the best manga websites.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

Audiophilia

Libro.fm plans an expansion to the UK, Australia, and New Zealand.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

7 books to celebrate Women’s History Month.

10 must-read books about women in the workplace.

19 great books that capture what it’s like to live with a disability.

Top 10 retold fairy tales.

25 BookTok books that are actually worth the hype.

4 books about living gods working in mysterious ways.

5 novels featuring witchcraft.

10 inspiring Latina writers who paved the way in publishing.

On the Riot

8 volcano books for kids.

10 books like Legends and Lattes.

20 of the best award-winning fantasy books.

Must-read literature by transgender and non-binary authors.

8 award-winning nonfiction titles you may not have heard of.

20 folklore books from various cultures in the U.S.

8 of the most famous dragons in mythology and books.

10 engrossing books about black holes.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black and white cat laying on a bed with its two front fangs sticking out of its mouth

So my sinuses have thankfully decided to behave, but my husband now has my cold, so Dini and Gilbert have been keeping him company. He sent me this photo of Dini while I was at work and if you zoom in, you can see Dini’s adorable little toofies! If only cats could cure congestion and sinus pain…then they truly would be the world’s best medicine.

All right, that’s all for today — I’ll check back on Friday, after I’ve survived my first full week of work since coming back from California. We’ll see if I make it.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Elmwood Park Library Board Takes Over

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m back in the Chicago cold, where we’re putting the “meh” in the Midwest. I also have a cold, which thankfully didn’t crop up until yesterday and appears to be pretty mild. But my sinuses are very unhappy.

As a reminder, if you missed the announcement in the last newsletter, Book Riot is launching a new, in-depth newsletter, The Deep Dive, which features fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading! Subscription is $5/month for two newsletters each month, or you can get a free subscription to The Splash Pad, which rounds up some of the experts’ recommended reading and bookish lifestyle goods on a monthly basis. Subscribe at bookriot.substack.com.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Library visits and loans are recovering post-pandemic but funding is still dropping.

Noting the “changed complexion of staff,” the Elmwood Park Public Library board (IL) takes over and de-professionalizes the organization.

Cool Library Updates

Libraries lend cleanup kits to help beautify communities.

Worth Reading

Strategies for combating workplace inequity.

Book Adaptations in the News

Devil in the White City is no longer moving forward at Hulu after losing both the director and Keanu Reeves.

Bad Robot wins the film rights for Mona Awad’s Bunny.

Trailer for Peter Pan & Wendy.

Banned & Challenged Books

Giving up is not an option.

Volusia County Schools (FL) want to invest in Moms for Liberty’s book-rating website, BookLooks.

Tennessee governor Bill Lee makes his state the first to ban public drag shows, despite a photo from his 1977 high school yearbook in which he is dressed in drag.

A global view of book banning.

Books & Authors in the News

Christopher Fowler, author of the Bryant & May mystery series, has died at 69.

Scott Adams, creator of Dilbert, is burning bridges left and right after a recent racist tirade; his publisher and his Dilbert distributor have officially cut ties with him, and many newspapers have announced that they will no longer run Dilbert strips.

The James Bond novels are being rewritten to remove racist language, although here’s the problem with these rewrites.

Reese Witherspoon chose The Nightingale as her next book club pick, and this Rioter explains why her reasoning is misguided.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

Award News

The 2022 Bram Stoker Award finalists have been announced.

The longlist for the Women’s Prize for Fiction has been announced.

The finalists for the 2023 International Prize for Arabic Fiction have been announced.

On the Riot

Running a successful D&D convention at your library.

6 of the best ways to get paid to read books.

Why does Netflix keep canceling YA adaptations?

How this Rioter reads with all of their senses.

Why this Rioter is pledging to write more critical reviews.

black and white cat smiling while getting head scritches

This is Dini shortly after I woke up this morning…I think he’s happy to have us home again. And let’s be real — this is always the best part about coming home from vacation!

All right friends, I’ll see you next week! Have a good one!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Support Small Presses

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. All vacations must come to an end, and by the time you read this, I will be heading back to LAX, hopefully without another 4.5 hour stay at the car rental agency. I have to say, L.A. was interesting enough, but San Diego has been AMAZING. I definitely want to come back!

And in Book Riot news, we’re launching a new, in-depth newsletter, The Deep Dive, which features fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading! Subscription is $5/month for two newsletters each month, but if you’re on the fence or need some time before making the commitment, a free subscription will get you The Splash Pad, which rounds up some of the experts’ recommended reading and bookish lifestyle goods monthly. Subscribe and choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com.

Okay, now on to the newsletter!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Women are now publishing more books than men, and it’s good for business.

The Big Five aren’t enough: supporting small presses supports communities.

New & Upcoming Titles

Haruki Murakami is publishing a new novel in April.

Zadie Smith also has a new novel coming out in September.

Fonda Lee has a new sci-fi novel coming out that she describes as “a cyberpunk samurai space opera (without the space).”

A collection of rediscovered short stories by Terry Pratchett will be published in October.

Augusten Burroughs is writing his first picture book.

Cover reveal for Percy Jackson and the Chalice of the Gods.

7 new southern gothic novels by women writers.

11 2023 speculative fiction titles that are perfect for crime fans.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, New York Times, and USA Today.

March picks from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Crime Reads, Epic Reads, L.A. Times, LitHub (SFF), New York Times, The Root, Time.

2023’s most anticipated from PopSugar (historical fiction, fantasy).

RA/Genre Resources

Building a new canon of Black literature.

We still need Judy Blume.

The exuberant diversity of Ukrainian literature.

On the Riot

The best weekly releases to TBR.

Why do people read true crime?

Reading pathway for Valerie Burns.

When is a novel’s ambiguous ending justified?

25 most iconic book covers of all time.

All Things Comics

Marvel launches a 20th Century Studios imprint with a Planet of the Apes comic.

Great British Baking Show finalist Kim-Joy is publishing a graphic novel about how baking has helped her overcome social anxiety.

On the Riot

2023 queer comics and graphic memoirs to add to your TBR.

10 comics to read after Marvel’s Dark Web.

9 manga set at school.

Novels starring comic book characters.

When championing graphic novels, is it possible to go too far?

Audiophilia

The March 2023 Earphones Award Winners have been announced.

12 funny audiobooks to make you laugh out loud.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

15 children’s books that teach, not preach.

Mystery books for 6-8 year olds.

Kids’ books about amazing Black women in history.

Adults

What to read if you loved Daisy Jones and the Six.

16 great international books for U.S. readers.

All the best romance novels on BookTok.

7 novels about immigrant mothers who defy societal expectations.

10 stories featuring haunted corridors and sinister spaces.

15 book recommendations from Chris Pine.

6 memoirs that go beyond memories.

8 books if you loved 1923.

On the Riot

8 of the best children’s books about airplanes.

10 YA books about libraries.

YA books with fat protagonists.

12 of the best books by Black authors that you probably have never heard of.

31 of the best Kindle Unlimited romance books in 2023.

Survival game horror novels to keep you tense until the very last page.

Nobel Prize winners you need to read.

10 celebrity memoirs from 2022 you may have missed.

What to read to learn more about the world and historical events.

The best-selling fantasy books of all time.

Famous authors who wrote franchise novels.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

three gray and white cats sitting on a stone wall next to several cacti

Surprise cat sighting! Blaine and I were visiting the cactus garden at Balboa Park, when I spotted these adorable strays! Apparently they’re known residents of the park because there were several trays of food laid out for them. Blaine had to keep me from tearing off into the cactus to reach the cats, which is probably the most on-brand sentence I’ve ever written in my life.

Okay, friends. I’ll catch you on Friday when I’m back in Illinois. (Sigh.)

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on

Categories
Check Your Shelf

James Patterson De-throned in UK Libraries

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. The weather here in L.A. got wetter before it got better, and right now, we’re staying at partly sunny with highs in the low 50s. At least it looks like there won’t be much rain for the second half of our trip in San Diego (fingers crossed), although I have to do better about bringing sunscreen with me…I went to Santa Monica Pier on Tuesday and my face got extremely crispy fried.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

With new model language, library e-bills are back.

Ray Bradbury’s personal collection will be displayed at his historic childhood library in Waukegan, IL.

Worth Reading

How the pandemic has reshaped libraries.

On speaking up for library workers.

Book Adaptations in the News

David Fincher sadly announced that there will not be any more seasons of Mindhunter.

Meanwhile, Warner Brothers has announced that there WILL be more Lord of the Rings movies.

The BBC has unveiled a two-part adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Murder is Easy.

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil will be developed into a musical.

Florence Welch of Florence + the Machine fame is writing music and lyrics for a new Broadway musical adaptation of The Great Gatsby.

Guillermo del Toro is directing an animated adaptation of Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Buried Giant.

Casting updates for Apples Never Fall and On Swift Horses.

Banned & Challenged Books

More politicians need to address book bans.

Here are the comics that Moms for Liberty and other book banners have deemed “inappropriate.”

Duval County Schools (FL) have reinstated multiple books about Hank Aaron and Roberto Clemente after they were reviewed and found to be within the guidelines of Florida’s new legislation.

As LGBTQ book challenges rise, some Louisiana librarians are scared to go to work.

The ACLU has sued Missouri over their book ban law that forced school libraries to remove hundreds of titles.

The real reason North Dakota is going after books and librarians.

Oklahoma is one step closer to implementing a state-wide book rating system.

Books & Authors in the News

After last week’s hubbub surrounding the newly edited versions of Roald Dahl’s books, the publisher announced that they will also be re-releasing the titles in their unedited versions. Meanwhile, Roald Dahl’s US, French, and Dutch publishers announced that they have no intentions of editing his books. And related: Roald Dahl can never be made nice.

Numbers & Trends

Julia Donaldson ends James Patterson’s reign as the most-borrowed author in UK libraries.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

The LA Times Book Prize finalists have been announced.

On the Riot

Who was Richard Scarry?

Barnes & Noble is overhauling its membership program and cutting its free educator program.

8 cozy video games that feel like reading a book.

small brown tabby cat on her back surrounded by a bunch of cat toys

Meet Nell! Nell belongs to my brother-in-law and sister-in-law, and she is just the dinkiest little kitty you can possibly imagine! She’s at least 11 years old but weighs under 7 pounds, and has the tiniest little toe beans! We used to see Nell a lot more when my BIL & SIL lived five minutes down the road, but she definitely still remembers us. Such a wee little baby!

Okay, all you cool cats and kittens. Enjoy the decent weather if you have it, and I’ll see you next week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.