Categories
Check Your Shelf

Underpaid and Overworked

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, which is being brought to you this week from Los Angeles! So far, the weather has been gray and rainy, and the day we flew into LAX, my husband and I spent FOUR AND A HALF HOURS waiting at the rental car place, which was the same amount of time that we had just spent on the plaine. I am fully convinced that if Dante were to write a modern version of Inferno, this would be one of the deepest circles of hell. By the time we got to our hotel, we ordered room service, and then collapsed and slept for, like, 12 hours. Not the best start to our vacation, but hopefully the rest should go smoother.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

HarperCollins employees are officially back at work.

A look at the gender and ethnicity pay gaps at HarperCollins.

Underpaid and overworked: a look at salaries and benefits in publishing.

A federal judge is ready to hear oral arguments in the copyright lawsuit filed by the Big Four publishers against the Internet Archive.

What the failed Simon & Schuster/Penguin Random House merger means for the book industry.

Authors have been warned to be on the lookout for scammers impersonating the Strand Bookstore.

The scifi magazine Clarkesworld has been overwhelmed with a recent flood of AI-generated stories. Plus, “the flood of ChatGPT crap” that’s about to hit the publishing industry.

New & Upcoming Titles

There’s going to be a newly published sequel to the original How the Grinch Stole Christmas.

Mona Awad announces a new novel, Rouge, which will be out in September.

Blackstone Publishing has acquired the rights to 8 early Michael Crichton novels that were written under the pseudonym John Lange.

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

February picks from Crime Reads (debuts, international fiction), Vulture.

March picks from Kirkus, The Root.

On the Riot

2023 queer romcoms sure to make you swoon.

Some of the best new novels about monsters.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Reading pathways for Sarah Beth Durst.

Whodunits, cozies, and more: a mystery sub-genre primer.

If you love this romcom, read this romance novel.

All Things Comics

On the Riot

11 of the best shonen manga to read in 2023.

Audiophilia

The 2023 Audie Award finalists have been announced.

6 February audiobook picks.

The shared experience of listening to audiobooks.

On the Riot

Scribd vs Audible – which is the best audiobook service?

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

14 Reese Witherspoon-recommended books that your book club will devour.

45 books about libraries and librarians to check out.

10 mystery book series that will keep amateur sleuths guessing.

17 books to understand the Black history of Latin America.

42 of the best vampire books to read right now.

9 books that will make you rethink your narratives about health and healing.

5 books about failed adventures in terraforming.

10 classic tales for fans of swashbuckling and historical intrigue.

Without shame: female writers who have written about female psychopaths.

5 cozy mysteries about characters who are starting over.

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

On the Riot

8 of the best children’s books about ADHD.

8 of the best middle grade books to read aloud.

9 essential YA nonfiction books about Black history.

20 must-read horror stories.

22 of the best fantasy books of all time.

Book suggestions if you’re craving ghost stories.

8 excellent Greek retellings.

11 books like Carrie Soto is Back.

25 of the best historical fiction books of the last 10 years.

8 Peruvian books in translation.

10 of the best essay collections.

10 books to help you explore slow and sustainable fashion.

Aromantic books to celebrate Aromantic Awareness Week.

8 of the best crime thrillers.

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.

a black and white cat and a black cat sitting separately on a gray couch

The hardest part of any vacation is leaving these two ding dongs at home, but we know that they’re getting lots of good care from their cat sitters.

All right, folks – I’m out! Catch you again on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading The Resemblance by Lauren Nossett.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

How to Talk About Book Bans

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. After today, the next few issues of CYS will be sent out to you from sunny California as I vacation for a week and a half! Like before, I’ll do a slightly pared down version of the newsletter, particularly in terms of banned book news, but I’ll make sure all of the important stuff is covered.

Libraries & Librarians

Cool Library Updates

The National Library Board of Singapore has launched a manga library.

Worth Reading

Librarians are finding that thousands of books published before 1964 are no longer protected by copyright law.

Book Adaptations in the News

Helen Mirren is playing Patricia Highsmith in an upcoming biopic thriller.

How to Train Your Dragon is getting a live-action adaptation for 2025.

A24 is adapting Patrick Radden Keefe’s The Snakehead as a limited series.

The upcoming sequel for I Am Legend will follow the events of the original movie’s alternate ending.

Adrian McKinty’s The Island is being adapted into a TV series.

Amazon has renewed The Peripheral for a second season.

Trailer for Shadow & Bone, Season 2.

New trailer for Daisy Jones and the Six.

Banned & Challenged Books

How to talk about book bans.

Marjorie Taylor Greene and George Santos have co-sponsored a bill that could restrict students’ access to LGBTQ books across the country.

Schools become a flashpoint for Republicans eyeing a future White House run.

As book bans and legislative attacks escalate, New Press is pushing back.

The campaign to sabotage Texas’s public schools.

An update on the Huntsville Public Library (TX), where the city privatized the library after controversy erupted over the Library’s displays.

Midland County (TX) leaders want to check books donated to the public library for outlawed titles and subjects.

Belton ISD (TX) trustees approved the removal of All Boys Aren’t Blue and Kiss Number 8 from the high school library.

DeSantis now says teachers are intentionally removing books in an effort to make him look bad. Dude, come on.

The sports world reacts to the ridiculous book ban in Duval County (FL) that has removed two books about baseball legends Hank Aaron and Roberto Clemente. Although this is just the tip of the iceberg, as more than 1 million books are now subject to review in the county based on DeSantis’ new laws, and the county is looking for parents and community members to participate in a review of the books and instructional materials used in the classroom.

People are pushing back against Pinellas County Schools (FL) removing The Bluest Eye.

Since the implementation of its opt-out policy for library materials at Flagler Schools (FL), only four students out of nearly 12,700 have restricted access.

Few of the books that were challenged last year in Indian River County (FL) schools are being checked out.

The Lafayette Parish Library (LA) may consider restricting teen access to sexually explicit books.

Livingston Parish (LA) library board members rejected a recent proposal to censor LGBTQ+ books. “[Trustees] deemed the effort an attempt to circumvent their policies and procedures, though the matter could continue indefinitely as conservative activists become familiar with the system.”

Meanwhile in the same parish, a council member admitted to hiring a private investigator to attempt to access online pornography using library computers. “The investigator’s findings are evidence that minors still have access to sexually explicit material on the internet, said Talbert, who asked parish library director Giovanni Tairov to address the issue.” I have THOUGHTS on internet filters in public libraries, but I won’t go into them here. Just know that this whole situation makes my blood boil.

A recent poll showed “massive” support for parents’ rights in New Hampshire, which…what does that even mean? I’m guessing that the poll did not indicate what lengths conservative right wing groups have gone to in the name of parents’ rights. And which parents even get to exercise their rights at all?

An op-ed about how being made “uncomfortable” isn’t a sufficient reason to pull books from classrooms. This was written in regards to the Selinsgrove Area School District (PA) removing Staying Fat for Sarah Byrnes from the 8th grade curriculum after several students said that the book made them uncomfortable.

Washington Township (PA) High School has removed The Bluest Eye from its English curriculum after a single complaint.

Kutztown School District (PA) was supposed to host a One Book, One School program featuring Alan Gratz’s book about climate change, Two Degrees. Until people complained about the book’s theme, that is.

Norwin School District (PA) delays its decision to remove the book Al Capone Does My Shirts from the 5th grade curriculum.

A social media post from a Telford Borough Council member (PA) suggested “that financing for the library would be in jeopardy ‘if they keep evangelizing for trans agenda and LGBTQ.’”

Central Bucks School District (PA) is considering the removal of 60 more books from its libraries.

A Maryland state review board ruled that Frederick County Public Schools can hold closed meetings to discuss challenged books without violating the state’s Open Meetings Act.

The Isle of Wight (VA) County School Board voted to prohibit elementary and middle school student access to “sexually explicit” materials, defined as “any “lewd exhibition of nudity,” or any image or description of “sexual excitement, sexual conduct, sadomasochistic abuse, coprophilia, urophilia, bestiality or fetishism.”

Amherst (VA) schools recently adopted an “opt-in” policy for sexually explicit materials, and people are rightly frustrated.

Madison County in Virginia is a “testing ground” for book banning.

Over 200 Alabama high school students staged a walkout in protest of school officials who ordered students to remove references to certain events from an upcoming Black History Month program, like, oh, you know…slavery and the Civil Rights Movement.

Hilliard City Schools (OH) is facing a lawsuit from a small group of parents, which would prohibit discussions of “sexual matter” with students, and would prohibit Hilliard teachers from wearing badges that show their support for LGBTQ+ students.

Portage (MI) school librarians give a presentation about how books are selected. Also included in the article is this nugget: “A citizen, who does not have a child in the district, made a complaint about the novel [Push], saying it was too graphic for students.”

Parents in Rapid River, Michigan are upset about the use of American Gods in a senior English class. The superintendent said that “the book has been removed from the classroom” and that there will be “a new school policy for screening literature and textbooks.”

Michigan’s queer librarians speak out about book bans, the Catholic-led “Hide the Pride” campaign, and providing comfort to LGBTQ+ youth.

The Brandywine (MI) school board has voted to halt all new book additions so that they can review the books already in the library.

An Indiana parent and failed school board candidate has created a document of potentially problematic titles in the Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp. libraries. Seriously, all of these failed board candidates need to find better hobbies. Also in the same library, the library director shared the results of a recent survey of the teen department, where the majority of respondents found the space to be welcoming and inclusive.

Indiana considers legislation that would strip legal defense for school libraries.

Attorneys have determined that Marathon County (WI) officials violated the First Amendment when they threatened to withhold public library funding if certain books weren’t removed.

A group of “male, book-banning candidates for the Baraboo School Board [WI] are running as a unit rather than as individuals. The money behind them has enabled them to mount quite an impressive unified campaign.”

In New London (WI) elementary schools, two juvenile horror novels are being restricted for younger readers, and some parents are pushing to have them removed outright.

The Iowa GOP House Government Oversight Committee is structuring its hearings in regards to banned books so that they only hear directly from parents who are in favor of banning.

Actually, it should be damn hard to ban a book in Iowa.

A new rule targeting Missouri libraries and allegedly pornographic content could go into effect with no public hearing.

The same grandmother who unsuccessfully tried to remove Sex is a Funny Word from the Keene Memorial Library (NE) is trying again with This Book is Gay.

Clark County Public Library (KY) has restricted access to Gender Queer so that patrons under 18 cannot check out the book without parental permission.

Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters is cracking down on inappropriate materials in school libraries by potentially downgrading a district’s accreditation status if it makes “pornographic or sexualized content” available to minors.

A South Dakota Senate committee has killed a bill that would have limited book access in school libraries.

Meanwhile, North Dakota has advanced two separate bills that would prohibit public libraries from displaying “explicit sexual material.”

This is a really gross op-ed from Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, describing the book Boy Toy by Barry Lyga: “Not only is this book included in Coeur d’Alene’s Teen collection, but the library staff had featured it on display. “Hey kids, pick me!” Eerily similar to stealthy tactics child groomers use.” Also worth mentioning that this person is not a resident of Coeur d’Alene, but thinks that she has taxpayer status because she belongs to a library network with a reciprocal relationship with Coeur d”Alene.

Idaho lawmakers unveiled another bill targeting sexually explicit materials in libraries, with the main difference being that libraries would be held to civil penalties, instead of criminal, if the library violates the terms of the law. But some are worried that this bill could also give insurance companies the final say on public library materials based on the likelihood that the library would attract a lawsuit, or could prevent libraries from being fully insured.

The Concerned Citizens of Meridian (ID) have filed a petition to eliminate the library district altogether.

The Orem Public Library (OR), and the City Council, have been accused by the Utah Library Association of removing and subsequently discontinuing heritage month displays.

Some Oceanside (CA) residents have proposed a ban on 11 school library books that reference LGBTQ topics, sexual content, swearing, and other issues. One resident also referred to the school board members as “groomers” for endorsing LGBTQ inclusivity.

Gender Queer and Fun Home will remain at Poway Unified School District (CA).

Let’s Talk About It is being used as a straw man to pummel public education in Alaska.

Why proposed laws targeting drag shows are proliferating in America.

Tennessee’s LGBTQ community rallies as the state pushes forward on banning public drag shows.

Fear of backlash encourages censorship.

The book that exposed anti-Black racism in the classroom.

Books & Authors in the News

Roald Dahl’s books are being sanitized in new editions, and yeah, a lot of people have issues with this.

Oprah selects Susan Cain’s Bittersweet as her next book club pick.

Twitter is criticizing Greta Thunberg’s upcoming book because it’s being printed as a physical book. “My head hurts thinking about all the trees that were killed to print these,” said one Twitter user.

Faleena Hopkins, a romance novelist who first made headlines with her registered trademark on the word “cocky” back in 2018, was arrested in Grand Teton National Park after leading officers on a 24-mile high speed chase, and is now listed as a missing person after being released from jail.

A Vermont author’s book becomes a bestseller 10 years after its release, thanks to his daughter’s TikTok account.

Numbers & Trends

The oldest nearly complete Hebrew Bible heads to auction, and is predicted to sell for $30-50 MILLION.

The best-selling books of the week.

Beyond book trends: what the book world really needs.

Award News

The 2023 PEN America Literary Awards finalists have been announced.

An introduction to the Nobel Prize in Literature.

On the Riot

Get your Scholastic Book Fair fix with these goods! (Seriously, I’m about to buy everything from the Etsy shop selling those Goosebumps earrings!)

6 gorgeous home library aesthetics and how to achieve them.

Sydney libraries celebrate WorldPride 2023.

Must-listen: bookish podcast episodes from non-bookish podcasts.

The enduring ableism of Lady Chatterly’s Lover.

How to hold onto your love of books when you read for work.

black and white cat sitting in a person's lap in front of a closed laptop

This morning, I was in a telehealth therapy appointment and had a bit of an emotional moment. Dini crawled into my lap, then put his paws on my shoulder and started licking my nose in the middle of the appointment, and my heart absolutely MELTED. I know he was just looking for attention at an inconvenient time like he always does, but it was exactly what I needed. This photo was taken right after therapy ended – just look how pleased he is with himself!

All right folks. I’ll see you next week from the West Coast!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

“Good For Her!” Horror Novels

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’ve got less than one week until I’m headed out to California for vacation! I don’t take many vacations before spring hits, so this feels extra luxurious. This is also the perfect opportunity to leave the Chicago cold behind, even though we’re only looking at temperatures in the 50s and 60s in southern California. Okay, time to get through this week.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The HarperCollins Union officially ratifies a new contract. Plus, what the hard-won HarperCollins union contract means for the future of books.

Simon & Schuster is up for sale again.

200 New York Times writers have called out the paper’s anti-trans bias.

BookTok is good, actually: On the undersung joys of a vast and multifarious platform.

Tor Publishing Group announces Bramble, a new romance imprint.

New & Upcoming Titles

George M. Johnson and Leah Johnson sign a seven-figure two-book deal.

Bridgerton’s Queen Charlotte is getting her own novel, co-written by Julia Quinn and Shonda Rhimes.

Amanda Gorman announces her second picture book.

Amy Chua (AKA “Tiger Mom”) is writing her first novel: The Golden Gate.

Nnedi Okorafor announces three new adult fantasy novellas.

Jeff Tweedy, the frontman of Wilco, is publishing a book about the music that changed his life: World Within a Song: Music That Changed My Life and Life That Changed My Music. It will be out in November. ​​

Bill Watterson (creator of Calvin & Hobbes) is publishing an illustrated fable for adults called The Mysteries, out on October 10th.

Here’s a preview of Emmett, by L.C. Rosen, a queer, genderbent spin on Jane Austen’s Emma.

Cover reveal for Shelley Parker-Chan’s He Who Drowned the World.

5 new poetry collections that combine verse and photography.

8 of the most buzzworthy books right now.

86 works of Canadian fiction to read in the first half of 2023.

25 new and forthcoming LGBTQIA+ romance books.

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

February picks from LAMBDA Literary, The Millions.

March picks from Barnes & Noble (adult, YA, children’s).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Up With the Sun – Thomas Mallon (New York Times, NPR, Washington Post)

Lives of the Wives: Five Literary Marriages – Carmela Ciuraru (New York Times, Washington Post)

Our Share of Night – Mariana Enriquez (New York Times, Washington Post)

My Last Innocent Year – Daisy Alpert Florin (The Millions, New York Times)

Palo Alto: A History of California, Capitalism, and the World – Malcolm Harris (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Don’t Fear the Reaper – Stephen Graham Jones (Gizmodo, Tor.com)

Hanging Out: The Radical Power of Killing Time – Sheila Liming (New York Times, Slate)

I Have Some Questions For You – Rebecca Makkai (Datebook, New York Times)

Couplets – Maggie Milner (New York Times, Washington Post)

Unscripted: The Epic Battle for a Media Empire and the Redstone Family Legacy – James B. Stewart & Rachel Abrams (New York Times, Washington Post)

The Climate Book – Greta Thunberg (NPR, Time)

RA/Genre Resources

Why everyone should read Louise Penny.

The great, always bizarre Florida crime fiction tradition.

A look at the ongoing (and increasing!) demand for romance fiction.

Why do so many journalists turn to careers in crime fiction?

How Bonnie Garmus’ Lessons in Chemistry became a runaway bestseller.

3 trans crime writers talk about the thrills and challenges of writing in the genre.

On the Riot

The 2023 Summer Scares winners are here!

New Black poetry books for 2023.

Cover reveal news for the week.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

All Things Comics

ALA’s Graphic Novels and Comics Round Table announces their 2022 Best Graphic Novels for Adults picks.

On the Riot

A reading list for Ant Man & the Wasp: Quantumania.

8 manga like Chainsaw Man.

Audiophilia

The February 2023 Earphones Award winners are here!

Audiobook narrators fear that their performances were used to train AI.

On the Riot

10 of Libro.fm’s most preordered audiobooks for Winter 2023.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Children’s books with main characters who wear glasses.

Children’s books about cuisine from around the world.

Kids’ books about legendary Black musicians.

10 great YA space operas.

30 of the best YA mystery books of all time.

Adults

Thrillers set in stunning locations.

Romance/Valentine’s Day picks from Buzzfeed, Esquire, LitHub, New York Times, Oprah Daily, The Root, Town & Country.

Books that are equally romantic and heartbreaking from British and Irish authors.

Butch memoirs to check out in honor of Hijab Butch Blues.

Scrumptious cozy mysteries to tempt your palate.

32 books that every woman in their 30s should read.

The 23 best cookbooks by Great British Baking Show contestants.

9 novels about finding purpose and identity through someone else.

8 novels about how work seeps into our personal lives.

Top 10 neglected books about the Spanish Civil War.

The best, creepiest houses in fiction.

8 books across genres on queer autistic experiences.

17 books that will change how you think about happiness and loss.

5 crime novels that deepen our understanding of collective trauma.

48 queer romances to read right now.

22 post-breakup books that are a balm for heartbreak.

Gripping zombie-ish reads for fans of The Last of Us.

40 books by Black Canadian authors to read.

Great Black autobiographies to add to your list.

Essential books about World War II and women.

8 action-packed novels about art heists.

20 books by Irish authors to add to your TBR.

Don’t mind your own business with these books that take you inside the characters’ brains.

On the Riot

8 cute and cuddly baby books about love.

Beyond Rosa and Harriet: Black history picture book biographies.

Celebrate Black love with these YA romances.

20 genre-defying science fiction books that broke the mold.

24 of the best history books of all time.

8 essential queer Black history books.

Books that will make you feel seen.

8 of the best slow-burn romances.

15 bookish romance novels featuring writers, editors, librarians, and more.

All the horror novels that scare the sh*t out of HorrorTok.

30 must-read SFF books by Black authors.

Cozy mysteries for Valentine’s Day.

Books about the Waco Siege on its 30th anniversary.

13 of the best “Good for her!” horror novels. (Bonus points if you read that in Lucille Bluth’s voice!)

8 more Affrilachian poetry collections for your TBR.

9 frustratingly good “friends to enemies to lovers” books.

20 must-read contemporary love stories.

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 upside down on its back on a bed

Dini knows how to turn it on. I picture him saying, “I’m cute and I know it…”

All right, friends, I’ll be back on Friday. Have a good one!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Library Closed Due to Unauthorized Owl

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Once again, February is proving to be the longest shortest month of the year. I don’t know how this happens, but February absolutely DRAGS for me. Maybe it’s the predicted snow storm after a solid few days of 50+ degree weather. Maybe it’s the fact that it’s slowly getting lighter outside, but not significantly enough to ward off the seasonal affective disorder. Whatever the case, these 28 days always seem to take the longest.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Colorado libraries contend with a series of methamphetamine contaminations.

An owl fell down the chimney chute at the McCain Library at Agnes Scott College (GA), causing the library to shut down for nearly a week. Best line ever: “They’ve since hired a professional falconer who left a door open and then tried to shoo the owl away with a really long stick. He even set up a special trap with a pigeon and a gerbil inside.”

Cool Library Updates

Actor Michael Ian Black competed on Celebrity Name That Tune, and listed the Mark Twain Library in Connecticut as his selected charity.

Worth Reading

Exploring trauma-informed librarianship.

Google’s AI chatbot makes a factual error in its first demo. “The mistake highlights the biggest problem of using AI chatbots to replace search engines — they make stuff up.”

A love letter to libraries, long overdue.

Book Adaptations in the News

Is that an I Know What You Did Last Summer revival I sense?

NK Jemisin’s The City We Became has been picked up for a series adaptation.

The Ripley series, based on Patricia Highsmith’s books, is moving from Showtime to Netflix.

Banned & Challenged Books

This is important: Republicans are likely going to elevate parental rights as a top issue for the 2024 presidential election.

Related: write your legislators about banned books right now with this template.

The most-banned picture books from 2021-2022.

Politics and school libraries: what shapes students’ access to controversial content.

Chicago-based publishing house Haymarket Books is offering free eBooks focused on Black history in response to DeSantis’ ban on AP African American Studies courses.

“Call the ‘woke-busters’”: DeSantis sends a volunteer army to snatch books from students’ hands.

A Florida librarian’s frontline view of the state’s “vetting” process for school books, and the titles being banned.

St. Johns County (FL) removes 23 books from library shelves after review.

Florida House Speaker Paul Renner wrote an official letter to the Hillsborough County School District after he submitted a challenge against This Book is Gay and the district elected to keep the book.

Sarasota County schools (FL) are keeping Stamped, but parental consent for middle schoolers will be required.

70 people showed up in the hopes of being appointed to the Flagler County District’s book banning committees (FL).

Clay County (FL) schools have received 216 library book challenges, all of which have been removed from shelves until a review is complete.

A group of Florida college students are planning a walkout at the end of February in opposition to the attacks on academic freedom, DEI, and LGBTQ+ students.

Louisiana libraries don’t need new state restrictions.

The RSU 24 (ME) school board will decide on the fate of Gender Queer and Queer: The Ultimate LGBTQ Guide for Teens in March.

An Old Rochester (MA) school board member has spoken out against sexually explicit books and bathroom access for transgender students.

Telford (PA) residents are debating library funding, primarily because the library has dared to offer LGBTQ books in their collection.

Selinsgrove Middle School (PA) will no longer use Staying Fat for Sarah Byrnes in the classroom after receiving a bunch of complaints.

Glen Ridge Public Library (NJ) votes to keep 6 LGBTQ+ books, including All Boys Aren’t Blue. This is especially significant because George M. Johnson’s mother and aunts spoke at the meeting in support of his book.

Book banning efforts in Madison County (VA) and elsewhere are a violation of parental rights.

Lynchburg City (VA) school board votes to keep an opt-out policy for “sexually explicit” books. While the existence of the policy isn’t good, this decision at least puts the onus on the parents to opt their children out of accessing specific books instead of making teachers and librarians do the legwork.

17 books in Nottoway County (VA) schools allegedly fall under state “explicit content” laws, including titles by Martin Luther King, Jr. and Shakespeare.

Beaufort County (SC) schools return nine challenged books to shelves.

The Missouri Secretary of State’s office revises its recently proposed library rule, and library directors say that although the rule is unnecessary, it does not propose the same changes that would have promoted and encouraged censorship.

Derrick Barnes receives overwhelming support after his author visits were canceled at three Alabama schools.

The Blount County Board of Education (TN) heard objections to multiple school library books from two women. “These are available in the public school libraries that we pay for with our tax dollars, and we want them out.”

Wilson County (TN) is still debating whether or not to remove The Perks of Being a Wallflower.

A number of failed school board and state rep candidates have formed a chapter of Moms for Liberty in Campbell County, Kentucky.

The Big Walnut Board of Education (OH) elects to keep Looking for Alaska on library shelves.

The National Coalition Against Censorship is demanding that Forest Hills Public Schools (MI) investigate whether their superintendent secretly ordered the removal of books in violation of school policy. There’s an audio recording of the superintendent instructing the assistant superintendent to “find where they are, pull ‘em out, get rid of ‘em.”

Mothers call for more parental say in restricting books in Iowa schools. Please note: “Some of the parents who spoke at the committee meeting did not fully go through the process available to prevent their children from accessing these books. Some of the parents challenged books in classes their children were not enrolled in.”

Iowa governor Kim Reynolds says that if one school removes a book, all schools should remove the book.

The South Dakota bill to remove “obscene” materials from libraries is officially dead in the water.

The Fremont (NE) city council has the power to override the public library’s decisions, including the library’s recent decision to retain Sex is a Funny Word.

The Colorado Civil Rights Division has determined that the High Plains Library District violated state anti-discrimination laws when they fired librarian Brooky Parks after she protested the cancellation of programs for BIPOC and LGBTQ youth.

Montrose Public Library (CO) patrons are upset that the library hosted a program for LGBTQ teens, and that they discussed the graphic novel, Flamer.

A Utah bill that would force all library employees to get background checks passes the state House committee.

Orange Unified School District (CA) has restored its digital library, which had suspended after parents complained about a select number of books available through the app.

LGBTQ books are being challenged in Oceanside (CA) schools.

Patrons in Dayton, Washington have challenged a Quebec author’s children’s book about sexual and gender diversity at the public library.

The Liberty Lake City Council (WA) is looking to limit the authority of the library board, primarily because the library decided to retain Gender Queer after a community challenge.

Trolls tried to disrupt a Drag Queen Story Hour at the Colchester Library in Essex County (UK), but hundreds of LGBTQ+ activists showed up in a fantastic counter protest.

Tanzania has banned Diary of a Wimpy Kid for being “immoral.”

Book selections in Russian stores have narrowed due to Russia’s anti-LGBTQ legislation and overall wartime restrictions.

Margaret Atwood says to “Go ahead” and ban The Handmaid’s Tale, but this is not a helpful response! You know what schools and libraries need? Tangible assistance against a very organized movement to censor and terrorize BIPOC and LGBTQ people! A lot of children rely on libraries and schools to access books, and saying “Go ahead, kids will get the book anyway” only proves that you sorely misunderstand what is happening.

Books & Authors in the News

Self-help author Dave Hollis (and former husband of self-help author Rachel Hollis), has died at 47.

NASA is sending an Ada Limón poem into space.

Experts have determined that poet Pablo Neruda actually died from poisoning 50 years ago, and not complications from prostate cancer as had been previously reported.

Numbers & Trends

The bestselling books of the week, according to all the lists.

Award News

Walter Mosely has been awarded the 2023 CWA Diamond Dagger Award.

ALA’s Rainbow Round Table has announced its Top 10 List for 2022.

The Southern Book Prize winners have been announced.

The Gotham Book Prize finalists have been announced.

The organizers of the Women’s Prize for Fiction announce a new women-only nonfiction prize as a way “to end the “old-fashioned” male domination of nonfiction.”

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

$55,000 in antiquarian books were stolen from a family bookstore in British Columbia.

On the Riot

How librarians can help teachers in ways you might not expect.

5 takes on a reading journal.

Hibernation reading.

The risks and rewards of giving annotated books as gifts.

a black and white kitten with its face very close to the camera

I finally got to meet my parents’ new kitten, Groucho! He was a little wary, but he let me brush him and love on him for about ten minutes before he went back under the bed. As you can probably tell, I think he’s going to be a curious little fella!

Well, that’s all I’ve got for this week. Catch you all next Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

What is Happening in Publishing?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Another Super Bowl (or Superb Owl?) has come and gone, which means that football season is finally over and baseball season is around the corner! And in other calendar-related news, this newsletter comes out on Valentine’s Day! I say that as if I actually have plans, but I have to work a full day and Blaine and I usually just use Valentine’s Day as an excuse to watch a horror movie. However, if candy shows up in the staff office, I definitely won’t say no…

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

HarperCollins and the HC union have struck a tentative agreement after nearly three months of striking.

Debut author Laura Warrell writes about publishing while Black.

Just what the heck is happening in publishing?

New & Upcoming Titles

Stephenie Meyer has announced two new Twilight books, although details are still in the works.

Kiley Reid’s second novel will be coming out in January 2024.

Barbra Streisand is publishing a memoir in November.

EK Johnston is writing a new Star Wars book.

Julie Andrews and her daughter are teaming up to write a new picture book: The Enchanted Symphony.

Matthew McConaughey is also writing a children’s book.

Cover reveal for Adam Sass’ upcoming queer YA horror novel that’s billed as “Scream meets Clueless.”

New and upcoming books by Black authors.

16 debut YA authors to keep your eyes on this year.

On the Riot

What do 10 years of the NYT’s YA best-seller lists say about YA?

YA authors writing adult fiction in 2023, and vice versa.

The most-anticipated travel books for 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

February picks for fantasy, romance, mysteries/thrillers, horror, nonfiction, LGBTQ+, children, YA

Reading pathways for E.L. Konigsburg.

How accurate is Goodreads’ “Readers Also Enjoyed” feature?

How to read more short story collections in 2023.

All Things Comics

Did you find yourself wishing you could read Scott Lang’s book Look Out for the Little Guy, as seen in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania? Well, now you can!

Amazon orders an animated adaptation for Scott Snyder’s super creepy 2014 graphic novel, Wytches.

Amazon is also producing a Spider-Man Noir live-action series.

On the Riot

8 new comics to read in February.

14 new manga releases for January – February 2023.

Comics and graphic novels for people who hate Valentine’s Day.

Audiophilia

Viola Davis becomes the latest EGOT winner with her Grammy win for her narration on Finding Me.

5 audiobooks on love.

On the Riot

Take a peek at this amazing Audible deal (3 free months!) which ends on February 20th.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

9 children’s books about firefighters.

Middle grade novels that bring art to life.

Can’t-miss YA books to read for Black History Month.

14 YA titles perfect to read ahead of Valentine’s Day.

11 YA books about djinn and genies.

Adults

5 LGBTQ climate fiction novels.

10 Afro-Latina writers to read right now.

14 queer romcoms to read for Valentine’s Day.

10 obsession thrillers to keep a close eye on.

On the Riot

9 steamy enemies-to-lovers romances.

An imperfect list of books like Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow.

25 of the best contemporary romance books.

8 gorgeous generational fiction novels by Asian authors.

10 tense survival romance novels.

8 steamy fantasy romance 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.

black and white cat standing near an open toilet tank, looking back at the camera

Here is Dini supervising Blaine on a VIP (Very Important Project). Our toilet handle broke, and Dini had to make sure everything was up to code.

Well, that’s it for me. I’ll see you again on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Bookish Roles of Mads Mikkelsen

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Not gonna lie…some days at work are better than others, and today was pretty tiring. Combine that with the sheer number of outrageous book banning headlines in this newsletter, and I may or may not have had to pour myself a drink when I came home. (Spoiler — I totally did.) So, just as a heads up, there are a lot of headlines here that will make you believe that we’re living in the worst timeline. Do what you have to do to get through this. (But please don’t drink while you’re at work.)

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Vermont State University is closing its physical libraries and will move to an “all-digital academic library system.”

The British Library is getting an enormous £500m extension.

Ukraine withdraws 19 million Russian and Soviet-era books from libraries.

Worth Reading

As libraries turn the page on bookmobiles, something is lost.

Book Adaptations in the News

Trevor Noah’s production company is adapting Kiese Laymon’s coming-of-age novel, Long Division.

Phoebe Waller-Bridge is developing Claudia Lux’s book Sign Here for Amazon.

The Three Women adaptation finds a new home at Starz.

Annette Bening is starring in the upcoming adaptation of Liane Moriarty’s Apples Never Fall.

The Time Traveler’s Wife gets a premiere date for its upcoming musical adaptation in London’s West End.

Mayfair Witches has been renewed for a second season.

Here’s the teaser trailer for the upcoming Great Expectations adaptation starring Olivia Colman.

Banned & Challenged Books

The book banners’ recruitment agenda.

Here’s how Moms for Liberty is lying about books.

Inside the College Board’s revised African American Studies curriculum.

Spring Branch ISD (TX) has banned and restricted the book, The Black Friend, On Being a Better White Person. The author, Frederick Joseph, said “It seems with the case of Spring Branch, they have not only judged, but they’ve also been jury and executioner as well for something that they’ve not even considered.”

Texas Congressman Chip Roy has introduced a new bill that would block federal funds for schools that “indoctrinate with critical race theory.”

Parents react to the empty classroom and library shelves in Duval County Public Schools (FL).

Students of the Douglas Anderson School of the Arts (FL) still want to put on the production of Indecent, even though it was canceled a month earlier, but they’re frightened of hateful attacks and still struggling to find a safe avenue.

The conservative group County Citizens Defending Freedom is challenging 15 books in the Polk County School system (FL), which is preparing to purchase 37,000 for two new media centers.

The Manatee County (FL) school board discussed the book vetting process.

From The Kite Runner to The Bluest Eye: Moms for Liberty is pressuring Broward Schools (FL) to remove books from school libraries.

The Louisiana attorney general releases a report on “sexually explicit” content in public libraries.

Leavitt Area High School (ME) elects to keep Gender Queer on shelves.

Nine Westchester (NY) school districts have been placed on the dangerous Turning Point USA’s School Board Watchlist, which they describe as “the only national grassroots initiative dedicated to protecting our children by exposing radical and false ideologies endorsed by school boards and pushed in the classroom. SBWL finds and exposes school board leadership that supports anti-American, radical, hateful, immoral, and racist teachings in their districts, such as Critical Race Theory, the 1619 Project, sexual/gender ideology, and more.”

Someone in the Central Bucks (PA) school administration is behind the district’s first book challenge.

A recent Methacton School District (PA) board meeting involved a parent who became so agitated, he had to be escorted out of the meeting by security, yelling “You have daughters! I will make sure you go to jail for giving smut to children. They will pass you around like (unintelligible). You’re all pedophiles!”

The district attorney in Lancaster County (PA) will not be pressing charges against the Hempfield School District after a small group of parents complained about explicit content in an even smaller number of library books.

The Penncrest (PA) School District’s main legal counsel has resigned after the school board voted on two recent policies that would restrict books and set limits on transgender athletes. I’m pretty sure that one of the signs of a sinking ship is when YOUR ATTORNEY RESIGNS.

Okay, this has just crossed into absurdity. The Hollidaysburg Area School Board (PA) has decided that “posters and stickers depicting ‘messages promoting tolerance, kindness, support and inclusion’ that are not explicitly part of approved district curriculum” cannot exceed the size of a standard letter-size piece of paper. Well, thank God that’s been settled.

A Bucks County (PA) school librarian was reportedly ordered to take down multiple posters with an Elie Wiesel quote because it violated the school’s policy on “neutrality.”

A Sparta (NJ) mom is upset about her middle schooler having access to The Upside of Unrequited.

A mom who hasn’t bothered to read the entirety of Gender Queer is demanding that the book be removed from Baltimore County Schools (MD).

Conservative parents want Maryland schools to ban two books, and a new school board member is receptive.

The Henrico (VA) school board votes to keep Monster on school shelves.

A newly introduced bill in the Virginia House would require an extraordinary amount of effort in terms of cataloging new materials and making the information available to parents.

Another newly introduced Virginia bill would require parental advisory labels to be placed on materials in both public and school libraries that contain “sexually explicit content,” as defined by state law.

And yet ANOTHER newly introduced Virginia bill would create a database for controversial school library books.

“A year after crowds turned out for Board of Education meetings to debate what Pitt County Schools [NC] students are assigned to read, few people have shown interest in serving on a committee that hears challenges to books.” Shocker.

The battle to remove Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You from a New Hanover County (NC) high school.

A newly proposed South Carolina bill would prohibit schools from teaching about slave owners, including George Washington.

The next round of book review committees are set to meet in Beaufort County, South Carolina.

A federal judge has ruled in favor of Mama Bears of Forsyth (GA), thereby allowing them to continue reading “profane” passages during board meetings.

The Fayetteville (AR) school board elects to keep And Tango Makes Three in school libraries.

Willard (MO) school board votes to ban Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, and suggests that the governor create a book rating system to restrict access. Not to mention that the parent responsible for the initial book challenge says that they have 23 additional titles they want removed.

Sumner (TN) school board voted to keep Ways to Make Sunshine in school libraries.

Tennessee state representative Susan Lynn sent a letter to the Wilson County school district, which recently elected to move The Perks of Being a Wallflower to the mature reading list. Lynn claims that the district is in violation of state law by not removing the book completely.

The Cardinal school board (OH) cancels the upcoming high school spring musical, citing “vulgarity.”

Parents on Patrol, a far-right group of book ban supporters, hosted a panel at a Pewaukee (WI) hotel about how schools are “sexually grooming” children by teaching them about gender identity and sexual orientation.

Inside the audacious new scheme to erase LGBTQ people from Michigan schools.

Nebraska’s recently proposed Parental Bill of Rights is sparking backlash, despite testimony that “Educators must be reined in from wasting precious school time from indoctrinating students from CRT, CSE or SEL.” Honestly, do these people even bother learning what these acronyms mean?

Major corporations are backing North Dakota House Majority Leader Mike Lefor, who sponsored a recent pro-censorship bill.

Apparently this is real life…this op-ed from the Jamestown Sun (ND) compares LGBTQ+ books to Ted Bundy, saying that that pornography caused Bundy to commit his heinous crimes, and that by providing LGBTQ books in public libraries, we may be financing the creation of more Ted Bundy’s.

The Campbell County Public Library’s board remains wary of rejoining the Wyoming Library Association.

Woodland Park School District (CO) has pulled course material from a high school American history class because they claimed it was “critical race theory.”

The Orem (UT) Public Library director is retiring amidst recent censorship attempts from city leadership.

And the former head of the Orem Library’s children department speaks out about how librarians will not be allowed to put up any posters or book displays in honor of Black History Month.

Orange Unified (CA) suspends its digital library after parents complain about a select number of books.

Public libraries in Dublin will not be removing LGBTQ+ books from the children’s section.

Ibram X. Kendi’s take on why books are banned.

A framework for resisting book bans.

The National Coalition Against Censorship has released a new resource for authors of banned or challenged books.

Books & Authors in the News

Best-selling thriller author Ted Bell has died at 76.

Looking at the backlash against Colleen Hoover.

Thomas F. Monteleone has been banned from the Horror Writers Association over recent racist and transphobic comments on social media.

Not surprisingly, Salman Rushdie will not be doing any promotional events for his new book.

Numbers & Trends

Fascinating romance novel trends in 2023.

Award News

The best LGBTQ+ YA and kids’ books of 2022, from ALA’s Rainbow Round Table.

YALSA announces the 2023 Alex Awards.

The 2023 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction longlist has been announced.

Pop Cultured

Michelle Obama is launching a new podcast on Audible on March 7th.

On the Riot

The best libraries you can get a card for from out-of-state.

What nonfiction do we study from the 1980s, ’90s, and ’00s?

The bookish life of Mads Mikkelsen. (Oh hell yeah!! I love me some Mads Mikkelsen!)

Is the Kindle Unlimited pricing worth it?

The unexpected gifts of reading.

Oof. Have you gotten through to the end? Is it the weekend yet? Well, here’s a photo of what I’m currently looking at: Gilbert and Dini pretending like they don’t actually want to be holding paws.

a black cat and a black and white cat sitting on a gray couch facing each other with their front paws stretched out and almost touching

Peace out, folks. I’ll be back on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Neo-Noir and Peculiar Microhistories

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I know a lot of areas out east have been hit with some really nasty subzero temperatures, and all I have to say is I’m sorry. We had single digit temps all last week in Chicagoland, and now we seem to pushed it over to our East Coast friends. Meanwhile, it’s finally above freezing here, and I’m just counting down the days until we visit California at the end of the month.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

HarperCollins is cutting 5% of its workforce in the middle of the workers strike.

Meanwhile, Hachette raised its starting salaries to $47,500.

Barnes & Noble saved itself by putting books first.

Publishing trends to watch for in 2023.

New & Upcoming Titles

Kerry Washington is publishing her first memoir in September.

Meghan Trainor is publishing a book about her experiences with pregnancy, which will come out in April.

Sneak peek of Melissa Broder’s upcoming book, Death Valley.

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

January picks from Washington Post.

February book picks from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Book Marks (SFF), Crime Reads, Gizmodo (SFF, horror), Kirkus, LA Times, New York Times, The Root, Shondaland, Town & Country.

Most anticipated for 2023 from Buzzfeed (thrillers), Elle.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Victory City – Salman Rushdie (Atlantic, Guardian, LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Love, Pamela – Pamela Anderson (LA Times, Washington Post)

Hell Bent – Leigh Bardugo (New York Times, Tor.com)

RA/Genre Resources

Women SFF writers of the 1980s: Dalkey to Devenport. (You can find links to previous installments in this article for even more recommendations.)

The enduring appeal of the teen detective.

On the Riot

The state of diversity in the publishing industry.

11 speculative short story collections to look forward to in 2023.

New SFF duologies coming out this year.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

25 romance novels for people who don’t like romance novels.

All Things Comics

We’re getting two new Sailor Moon films this year that will adapt the final arc of the manga.

HBO Max has canceled Pennyworth after three seasons.

On the Riot

New YA comics and graphic novels being published January – March, 2023.

Excellent bisexual comics.

Audiophilia

Penguin Random House Audio has acquired Playaway Products.

Audiobooks for Black History Month.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Exciting hockey books for kids.

Adults

What to read when you’re expecting.

25 books by Black authors you should read in your lifetime.

Black booksellers recommend 25 books to read during Black History Month and beyond.

Locus’ 2022 Recommended Reading List.

15 of the best Black romance books.

7 novels about women fighting against racism and classism.

7 stories about goblins and tricksters.

22 lighthearted cozy mysteries to settle down with.

10 fictional tales of historical icons.

On the Riot

8 books like Reminders of Him by Colleen Hoover.

8 unsettling mysteries where mothers go missing.

8 books about African mythology from around the continent.

9 books inspired by Phantom of the Opera.

8 mixed media horror and thriller novels.

8 books about the history and digital legacy of the Oregon Trail.

The best books of the 2020s.

8+ neo-noir books.

Peculiar microhistories.

8 books about country music.

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 sitting on cat tree

Okay, one more photo of Groucho because he’s so stinking cute! According to my mom, his bad breath is clearing up, and although he still likes to hide under things, he also likes being brushed and snuggled, and apparently likes playing with the loudest toys in the room at 2 AM. Can’t wait to meet this little doodle head!

That’s all I’ve got for now. I’ll pop back in on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently listening to How to Sell a Haunted House by Grady Hendrix.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Joy of Reading Challenges is Reading

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Lots of happy fun times at my library, where our HVAC has crapped out in the middle of single digit weather and has made our entire building smell like a gas leak. We BELIEVE the problem has been fixed, but we had to close for a day and a half, and I remembered exactly how much I hate working from home. (Almost as much as I hate our HVAC system.)

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The 2023 Andrew Carnegie Medal winners, RUSA Media Awards, and the Youth Media Award winners were announced at LibLearnX.

The New York Public Library has acquired the late Joan Didion’s archive.

Worth Reading

Before the current book banning wave, the FBI spied on people’s library activity.

Book Adaptations in the News

Nicole Kidman is starring in the HBO adaptation of Leila Slimani’s novel, The Perfect Nanny.

Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni are starring in the upcoming film adaptation of Colleen Hoover’s It Ends With Us.

Janice Hallet’s book The Twyford Code is being adapted into a series.

Kindred has been canceled at FX.

Peacock has canceled Vampire Academy after just one season.

Author Isaac Marion has teased a possible TV adaptation of Warm Bodies.

A new adaptation of Children of the Corn is coming to Shudder.

Here’s a first look at the adaptation of Naomi Alderman’s The Power.

The first trailer for Daisy Jones and the Six.

Banned & Challenged Books

How right-wing online groups stoked a moral panic about school libraries.

How the ACLU tracks anti-LGBTQ bills, and how they’re fighting back.

You’ve missed the plot: how book price increases contribute to ongoing censorship.

An open letter to Stephen King about his recent remarks regarding book banning.

A proposed Texas law would force school library books to carry content ratings.

Another Texas bill would ban book vendors from selling “obscene” materials to Texas schools.

The Arlington (TX) library board chair says that she was removed in order to please the anti-LGBTQ display policy “bullies.”

Willis ISD (TX) votes to keep Red, White, and Royal Blue on school shelves.

The Florida Board of Education just gave DeSantis’ “anti-woke” agenda a big boost with their vaguely worded training that critics worry will force educators to avoid books about race and LGBTQ people.

The Polk County (FL) School Board voted to purchase 37,000 books for new school libraries, which now puts into motion another 30 day period for the community to review and challenge books they deem unacceptable.

Pinellas (FL) schools have removed The Bluest Eye from the high school library. Chief academic officer Dan Evans told the school board, “We are erring on the side of caution, per the language of (new state) training.” And that right there is the purpose of this training – to preemptively frighten administrators into removing the books themselves.

Manatee County (FL) teachers say they’ve had to physically cover up or block access to their classroom bookshelves, but the Florida Freedom to Read Project has advocated to have all of the classroom libraries opened back up!

Lee County (FL) School District is developing a form that would allow parents to determine what materials their child could have access to.

Volusia County School Board (FL) is planning a workshop to discuss how books are selected for the libraries.

The National Coalition Against Censorship has demanded that the Hernando School District (FL) return 13 books by Ellen Hopkins to school libraries.

A Virginia bill passed out of committee that would set policies about what books could be offered or banned in public libraries.

Catawba (NC) Freedom Readers are pushing back against efforts to remove 24 challenged books.

Columbia (SC) schools are debating a proposal that would create a public review of school curriculum and prohibit schools from teaching “certain concepts.”

Horry County (SC) teachers, librarians, and parents are speaking out against Moms for Liberty, who are calling for an audit of every county school library, and have a list of 77 books that allegedly contain “vulgar” content.

The book review committee at Beaufort County (SC) schools voted to remove It Ends With Us.

Moms for Liberty is forming a new group in Boone County, Kentucky to remove “inappropriate” books, but don’t worry…they’re “not about banning books.”

Moms in Sumner County (TN) are fighting to keep books on school library shelves.

Hoover City Schools (AL) cancel an author visit from Derrick Barnes for Black History Month after a parent complained.

Republican legislators introduce new laws to crack down on drag shows, including this one in Arkansas, which would classify all drag shows as “adult-oriented business.”

Arkansas State Senator Dan Sullivan has filed a bill that would punish librarians with jail time or prison sentences for making “obscene materials” available to children. However, I have to give props to the article for including this sentence: “Dan Sullivan – always at the forefront of the far right’s playbook and no friend of libraries, the First Amendment or anything spicier than saltines.”

“Please trust the judgment of our educators:” the banned book debate continues in Forsyth (GA) schools.

The Brooklyn Public Library asked teens to write about how they’ve been impacted by book bans. Here’s what they had to say.

Westport (CT) Board of Education held an open forum, which was dominated by discussion of displaying banned books.

The Lebanon (CT) library will allow a magazine rack with painted LGBTQ flags to remain, along with a painted magazine rack next to it that reads “Jesus Loves You.”

A Rhode Island father is demanding an independent audit of the school district’s entire library system after fighting to have Gender Queer removed for over a year.

The Massachusetts chapter of the ACLU, and other civil rights groups, are urging state and local education officials to push back against coordinated censorship efforts. And not surprisingly, parents are upset that the ACLU would dare suggest that banning books is bad.

Glen Ridge (NJ) residents unite to stop a conservative group from banning six books from the public library.

The Central Bucks (PA) school board has ties to the conservative Christian law firm, Independence Law Center, which is the legal arm of a state branch of the Family Research Council, a designated extremist hate group. The school board has asked the ILC to review recent changes to their controversial library book policy.

The crusade to ban books in Lee’s Summit (MO) school libraries is as absurd as it is doomed.

How Rockwood (MO) parents mounted a campaign that ended three school diversity programs.

Multiple candidates for the Nixa (MO) school board are in favor of banning books.

Willard School District (MO) has banned Me and Earl and the Dying Girl.

Missouri legislators are considering new legislation to prohibit the teaching of CRT and require the state to develop a training program to teach American patriotism. I’m sorry…what the what?

Hamilton East Public Library (IN) received a challenge over Taye Diggs’ book Why?: A Conversation About Race.

The Sheboygan South High School (WI) principal has removed three LGBTQ books after complaints over sexual content.

Kiel (WI) residents rebuke far-right school officials who gained board control last year.

Sartell St. Stephen School District removed Him by Sarina Bowen. The group behind the removal was Kids Over Politics 748, and I think my eyes have rolled to the back of my head.

A group of Brandywine Community School alumni (MI) are pushing back against recent proposed changes from the school board. The board has also proposed a number of new oversight committees, including Library Inventory, Sex Education Advisory Board, Parent/Community Involvement, and Parent/Guardian Curriculum Transparency.

Some Milan (MI) school board members have received rape and death threats for allowing certain books to remain accessible in the school library. The fact that these people are against inappropriate books, but not inappropriate physical threats is more cognitive dissonance than I can deal with at the moment.

The Sault Ste. Marie (MI) public libraries are hosting a banned book reading challenge in honor of Freedom to Read Week.

Sex is a Funny Word will remain in the Keene Memorial Library (NE).

Dickinson Area Public Library (ND) has implemented new parental controls that would require children to have parental permission to check out materials. `

Nearly 20 people spoke at a recent Hayden Library (ID) board meeting in favor of removing inappropriate books.

Utah residents gather for a Read-In at the capitol to protest banning books.

Two books in Fallbrook Union High School District libraries (CA) are being challenged: Fun Home and Beyond Magenta.

The Homer (AK) library board upheld the director’s decision to keep 55 LGBTQ books in the children’s section.

The Waterloo Region District School Board (ON) wrote a sweeping open letter refuting claims that the board is facilitating child abuse.

Books & Authors in the News

Novelist Paul La Farge has died at age 52.

After threatening to sue Simon & Schuster last week over a different book, Trump has actually filed a lawsuit against S&S over the audio version of Bob Woodward’s The Trump Tapes.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week, according to all the lists.

The TikTok generation has embraced Jane Austen.

Award News

The National Book Critics Circle announced their finalists for the best books of 2022.

The Swansea International Dylan Thomas Prize longlist has been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A TikTok star who was functionally illiterate finds a community on BookTok.

On the Riot

How can libraries help you stick to your New Year’s resolutions?

The joy of reading challenges is reading: all about the participation trophies.

5 ways to make your reading life greener.

What literature do we study from the ’80s, ’90s, and 2000s?

black and white kitten laying on a bed

I have a new kitty to introduce! Meet Groucho, my parents’ newest addition to their menagerie! He is 7 months old and has terrible breath, which is apparently due to a case of gingivitis. But look how adorable he is!! He’s still pretty subdued, but we’re confident he’ll get his bearings soon, probably once his bad breath clears up.

That’s all I’ve got for this week, friends. May your libraries’ HVAC systems continue to function over the weekend.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Midwestern Noir and True Crime Exploitation

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I had a very Katie experience this weekend…I went to Half Price Books to sell a huge stack of books and bought six new ones. When I got home, I found a tote bag with a few books I had bought previously at Half Price Books…HALF of the books I had bought this weekend were duplicates. I swear…I need to start putting my books away ASAP, and I should probably catalog my books too.

Let’s talk about books that I probably haven’t already purchased.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

HarperCollins has agreed to enter mediation with the HC Union.

How BookTok influencers revamped Penguin Random House’s TikTok strategy.

Inside Book Twitter’s final (?) days.

Egyptian officials are offering loans to buy books as inflation soars.

New & Upcoming Titles

Arnold Schwarzenegger has signed a book deal with Penguin Press.

Jesmyn Ward is publishing a new book in October!!

Atlantic staff writer and 2022 Pulitzer Prize finalist Sophie Gilbert has sold rights to her upcoming book Girl on Girl: How Pop Culture Turned a Generation of Women Against Themselves. No publication date yet.

Paul McCartney’s unseen photos from the height of Beatlemania are going to be published in a new book coming out in June.

Here’s the cover reveal for Martha Wells’ upcoming Murderbots novel System Collapse.

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

The best nonfiction crime books of January.

February picks from Barnes & Noble, Epic Reads.

Winter 2023 picks from USA Today.

2023 picks from Crime Reads (historical crime/horror, horror).

Here are a couple most-anticipated 2023 horror reading lists.

Dark academia novels for teens coming out in 2023.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Love, Pamela – Pamela Anderson (Esquire, New York Times, NPR, USA Today)

This Other Eden – Paul Harding (LA Times, New York Times, NPR, Washington Post)

Call Me Anne – Anne Heche (AARP, People, USA Today)

Children of the State: Stories of Survival and Hope in the Juvenile Justice System – Jeff Hobbs (LA Times, New York Times, NPR)

After Sappho – Selby Wynn Schwartz (New York Times, NPR)

RA/Genre Resources

How do we define the “Great American Novel?”

On the Riot

When did YA paperbacks become $15.99?

What’s up with special edition hardcovers?

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

2023 science books to add to your TBR right now.

Reading pathway for Daphne du Maurier.

Is true crime exploitative?

A fun way to encourage readers to shop their shelves.

The best new book titles, according to Goodreads.

You don’t need to outgrow fandom.

All Things Comics

Eve Ewing becomes the first Black woman to write a main Black Panther comic series. However, the initial headline did not include the word “main,” and Nnedi Okorafor, the first Black woman to write a Black Panther (limited) series, called them out on Twitter.

On the Riot

The best new fantasy manga to start 2023.

Mythology in comics and the push for more diverse stories.

10 of the best romcom manga to fall in love with.

Audiophilia

On the Riot

11 of the best Audible originals.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

9 clever picture books for kids and their parents.

9 middle grade books to change your kids’ worldview.

Celebrate Black History Month with these children’s and YA picks.

10 essential books for teens by Indigenous authors.

Adults

8 brother’s best friend romance novels.

11 books you can read in a weekend.

10 puzzling mysteries to make you feel like an ace detective.

6 quality books that were years in the making.

35 best books about time travel.

Murder, mystery, and midwestern noir.

5 mysteries and thrillers about returning to your hometown.

The 50 best horror books to read.

On the Riot

12 transitional chapter books.

9 swoony YA romances to start your year with love.

Welcome to Scare Street: a neighborhood of horror novels.

12 portal fantasy books like Forspoken.

15 of the best queer SFF romance books.

What are the most popular YA mystery books on TikTok right now?

8 of the best books for protecting yourself online.

8 doorstopper books written by authors of color.

11 of the best bodyguard romances.

8 poetic books like Time is a Mother.

10 thought-provoking art history books.

Must-read sapphic historical fiction.

Books with non-human main characters (who are often cats).

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.

top-down view of a black cat sitting on an orange blanket

Even when you can’t see his face, you can tell how adorable and happy Gilbert is chilling with his hoomans!

That’s it for today, folks. I’ll drop into your inboxes again on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Oscar Noms and Other Awards

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. The Chicago area is getting a dose of winter this week, and while it’s definitely not extensive, I’m extremely grumpy about having to scrape off my car every morning. I did not authorize this!

Libraries & Librarians

Cool Library Updates

Little Free Library is launching the Indigenous Library Program, which will distribute book-sharing boxes to tribal lands and other Indigenous communities.

The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Library is distributing 20,000 free, refurbished laptops to eligible adults.

Book Adaptations in the News

The adaptation of Stephen King’s short story “The Boogeyman” has moved from Hulu to a theatrical release.

Henry James’ novella The Beast in the Jungle is getting a film adaptation.

Stephen Colbert is adapting The Chronicles of Amber (one of George RR Martin’s favorite books) into a TV series.

Outlander is ending after Season 8.

The Gossip Girl reboot on HBO will end after two seasons.

How do you adapt a book into a TV show?

Here’s the trailer for Dear Edward.

Banned & Challenged Books

A look at the recently proposed legislation to eliminate LGBTQ+ and “obscene” books. Plus, how to fight new obscenity laws targeting librarians.

Book bans are driving kids away from reading.

Students want new books. Thanks to restrictions, librarians can’t buy them.

McKinney ISD (TX) has changed its definition of “obscene,” making it MUCH easier to have books removed. Objectionable content no longer needs to be taken in the context of the work as a whole, so books can easily be removed due to controversial paragraphs, and challengers won’t have to indicate that they’ve read the book(s) in their entirety.

Conroe ISD (TX) is keeping The Perks of Being a Wallflower for the time being, but they’re considering changing library policies so that parents have to opt IN to allow their kids to check out certain books. The default library position would be to restrict access for EVERYONE.

Florida teachers have been told to remove “unvetted” books from their classroom libraries or risk felony prosecution.

DeSantis has rejected a College Board request to approve an African-American Studies course in his state on the grounds that the course violates state law.

These books and authors were the most challenged in Louisiana libraries.

In Rapides Parish (LA), the library board is seeking legal guidance on a proposed (and likely unconstitutional) amendment to the collection development policy. Only problem is that the legal counsel is coming from the attorney general who set up a public tip line for people to report inappropriate books in libraries. This doesn’t bode well.

A group of LGBTQ supporters came to protest a “Pastor Story Hour” that a right-wing pastor decided to hold at the Chelmsford Public Library (CT).

A new school board for Ocean City (NJ) has sparked concern for the LGBTQ community, since several of the new trustees are members of Moms for Liberty.

Ephrata Area Schools (PA) have placed a ridiculous burden on library staff in terms of ensuring that students don’t have access to any topics that haven’t been approved by their parents.

The Punxsutawney Area School Board (PA) has approved the high school curriculum guide, despite the fact that some of the trustees are concerned about CRT. The most ridiculous example was a trustee pushing back against the use of Devil in the White City: “Evans continued to say she also has concerns about a book in the reading list for AP English, “Devil in the White City.” Evans said though the book is based on a true story, there are ‘a lot of satanic messages’ in the book. ‘I read… just the description of the book, didn’t read the book, but I just don’t think that that’s anything our kids should be subjected to,’ Evans said.”

Norwin School District (PA) is facing a book challenge from a board member.

Frederick County Public Schools (MD) will delay the launch of a challenged book review committee due to an Open Meetings Act violation. The committee consists of 60 (!!!) people.

21 additional books have been removed from the Madison County (VA) high school library.

Isle of Wight County (VA) school board postponed a vote on a proposal that would ban “divisive concepts” due to a significant amount of pushback. For example…how the hell do you define “divisive concepts” in the first place?

Beaufort County Schools (SC) uphold the recent committee decisions to return the first of 6 challenged books to library shelves.

Moms for Liberty expand into Horry County (SC). “We’re just a group of parents that have decided that we want to have more of a say in our kids’ education.” This is such a pile of horse crap.

Walker County schools (GA) are hearing from parents who “are in no way requesting a ban” on multiple books.

The new board of the Crawford County Library (AR) is considering a proposal where they review all of the book purchases for the library.

A group of right-wing parents have made rape and death threats towards the Milan (MI) school board.

Portage Public Schools (MI) removed Push from the school library after receiving a complaint from someone who doesn’t even have students in the district.

Faribault Public Schools (MN) have brought on a new trustee who has ties to the anti-LGBTQ hate group MassResistance.

Fremont Public School administration (NE) have finished reviewing Sex is a Funny Word, but the decision hasn’t been released yet because the person who raised the challenge hasn’t received the written decision in the mail yet.

Owasso Public Schools (OK) have finished reviewing all 6,000 graphic novels, but flagged 17 for further review.

The Sheridan County School District 2 (WY) is listening to a couple of non-expert community members about why books need rating systems.

Books & Authors in the News

Trump has threatened to sue former prosecutor Mark Pomerantz and Simon & Schuster over Pomerantz’s upcoming tell-all memoir.

Meanwhile, the Manhattan District Attorney is concerned that Pomerantz’s book release could jeopardize his office’s continuing probe into Trump.

Katy ISD canceled a visit from Emma Straub because she dropped an F-bomb in a social media post. The kicker? This post was in regards to the Uvalde shooting, and parents thought that the swearing was the worst of the two problems.

Numbers & Trends

The bestselling books of the week, according to all the lists.

Award News

Here are the official Oscar nominations, including one for Nobel Prize-winning author Kazuo Ishiguro.

Related: Why are so few literary adaptations nominated for Oscars this year?

The 2023 PEN America literary award longlists have been released.

John Scalzi has won the 2023 Robert A. Heinlein Award.

The 2023 Edgar Award nominations are here!

The Bram Stoker Award preliminary ballot has been announced.

Pop Cultured

Meryl Streep joins the cast of Only Murders in the Building.

On the Riot

Promoting the benefits of reading for pleasure to new teachers.

The bookish life of Shonda Rhimes.

How easy is it to pirate books?

Where to buy cheap books.

black and white cat sitting on the edge of a white bath tub

Here’s Dini making sure we’re all showering and bathrooming properly. The work of a kitty project manager is never done!

Well, that’s all folks. I’ll be back in on Tuesday, so make sure to behave yourselves!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.