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Check Your Shelf

The Butler Did It

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Have you ever had a day, or even just a single incident where NOTHING seemed to go right? On Saturday, my car got a major flat while I was going 75 mph on the highway, and while I’m happy to report that the car is okay and everyone involved is okay, everything after that point just devolved into chaos, and my car ended up being towed by the highway patrol, and as of this newsletter writing, I can’t retrieve my car until the work week starts. My poor car has been towed three times in the last three years, and I don’t particularly care for that.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

How Barnes & Noble transformed its brand from corporate bully to loveable neighborhood bookstore.

The free market is tough on Australian writing. Does the country need a national publisher?

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Lunch has their Spring/Summer 2023 Buzz Book downloads available.

Um…Roxane Gay and Channing Tatum are co-writing a romance novel!!

Ken Follett is releasing a new novel in September.

Clay McLeod Chapman has another horror novel, What Kind of Mother, coming out in September 2022.

Author Carly Manes has written a children’s book about abortion.

Boris Johnson is writing a political memoir in a rumored 7-figure deal.

Molly Ringwald is writing a memoir about her time living and working in Paris in her 20s.

Here’s a first look at Uzma Jalaluddin’s latest book, Much Ado About Nada.

Cover reveal for Cassandra Clare’s adult fantasy debut, Sword Catcher.

Cover reveal for the upcoming YA horror anthology, Night of the Living Queers.

9 new romance novels to look forward to in 2023.

2023 picks from Entertainment Weekly, PopSugar (historical fiction), Tor.com (SFF).

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

January picks from Crime Reads (debut novels, international crime).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Fight Of His Life: Inside Joe Biden’s White House – Chris Whipple (New York Times, Washington Post)

Mr. Breakfast – Jonathan Carroll (Locus, Tor.com, Washington Post)

Tell Me I’m Worthless – Alison Rumfitt (Autostraddle)

RA/Genre Resources

Does historical accuracy matter in historical fiction?

A look at North Atlantic noir.

On the Riot

It’s not just the covers: other ways in which the U.S. and UK book worlds differ.

The best books of 2022, according to Reddit.

10 newly published historical mysteries, from the 1880s to the 1970s.

Most anticipated cookbooks for 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Behind the curtain: writing mysteries from different points of view.

When did the butler dunnit? The history of “the butler did it” trope.

All Things Comics

Spring 2023 comics & graphic novels.

Comixology staff are hit by Amazon’s recent layoffs.

Weird Al’s songs are featured in a new graphic novel, The Illustrated Al.

Blacula gets a new graphic novel.

The Cult of Dracula comic is getting a movie adaptation.

On the Riot

The 23 most influential comic books of all time.

9 of the best revenge manga.

Audiophilia

People are especially concerned about the Apple AI audiobook narrators because some of the AI narrators are actually pretty good.

Why some books should not be made into audiobooks.

The best romance audiobooks to fall in love with.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

9 novels about losing and finding yourself in work.

14 books for just about every New Year’s resolution.

5 cautionary tales about artificial intelligence.

The best literary novels with a helping of romance.

The best killer dolls and puppets in fiction.

On the Riot

8 of the best children’s books with complex monstrous characters.

9 YA books about fresh starts.

9 books to help you get your sh*t together in 2023.

The best of the weird west: 8 alternate history westerns.

8 really good SFF series that also grapple with racism.

Some of the best indie romance novels.

20 must-read cozy fantasy books.

Books for the recovering girlboss.

8 inspiring goal-setting books.

12 of the funniest books to kick off the new year.

13 thrilling queer gothic books.

8 horror novels with unreliable narrators.

8 memoirs about getting older.

9 cheerful books to chase away the winter blues.

25 of the best Kindle Unlimited books to read in 2023.

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 its back with its hind legs spread out

Here’s Dini giving us the business while he annihilates his favorite feather toy.

All right, folks. Hopefully I’ll have my car back by the time I sit down to write the next newsletter. Have a great week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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Check Your Shelf

The Return of the Book Ban Bills

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Are your coworkers as motivated by food as mine are? This afternoon, someone discovered an unopened bag of M&M’s left on the communal counter space in the staff office. Within 30 seconds, four or five additional people (including me) heard about the candy and dashed into the office to snag a handful. Sometimes, I feel like my coworkers and I are just one bad day away from roaming around the library going, “Snacks?!” “Snacks?!” “Snacks?!”

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

NYC mayor Eric Adams’ proposed budget cuts for libraries are receiving a lot of necessary pushback from the City Council.

Another Colorado library has closed due to methamphetamine contamination.

The Indianapolis Public Library board has appointed a temporary CEO while they continue their search for a permanent CEO. The community, meanwhile, continues to protest the board’s refusal to not appoint Nichelle Hayes as CEO.

Cool Library Updates

Libraries that host gender affirming closets can offer youth a space to explore their identities.

Book Adaptations in the News

Netflix scored series rights to They Both Die At the End.

Here’s a first look at Michelle Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan in American Born Chinese.

Trailer for Are You There God, It’s Me Margaret?

Banned & Challenged Books

Keep an eye on these future targets for book censors.

The Freedom to Read Advocacy Institute for High Schoolers are accepting applications from students. The four-week online training will help current high schoolers push back against book bans happening in their communities.

The Biden administration is testing a new legal theory that establishes book bans as discriminatory actions.

What book bans are doing to school library purchases.

The conservatives who attacked school boards in 2022 are going after libraries.

School Library Journal’s Scales on Censorship column explains how understanding terminology will help keep LGBTQ books on shelves, and why parents shouldn’t have to know what their kids read.

Several parents are protesting Fun Home in Jacksonville ISD (TX).

“Two women who filed a complaint in a criminal investigation of books in Granbury ISD (TX) libraries told NBC 5 Investigates they only submitted it at the suggestion of the deputy constable leading the investigation.” This is an area where we DEFINITELY don’t need police involvement.

And in Granbury ISD, “the books just keep disappearing.”

The Victoria City Council (TX) is considering new collection development policies for the public library’s juvenile and young adult collections. Specifically, the responsibility for acquiring juvenile titles (for readers 17 and under) would rest with the director, and cannot include “explicit images, illustrations, representations or written descriptions of sexual conduct.”

Clay County School District (FL) elects to remove five books from elementary school libraries and restrict them to only the junior high or high school libraries.

Florida lawmakers consider extending the Don’t Say Gay law up to sixth grade.

I’m going to use Kelly Jensen’s words here: Robert Judge, the President of the Lafayette Public Library Board of Control (LA) is an absolute ghoul. (Brief context: He posted a heartless comment on a grieving parent’s Facebook post, which talked about their child dying by suicide.)

In other Robert Judge news, he recently had Melanie Brevis, a member of Lafayette Citizens Against Censorship, removed from a board meeting, although the reason for the removal is not clear.

The Herman School Committee (ME) voted against the inclusion of a book rating system proposed by a group of parents.

Gender Queer and Queer: The Ultimate LGBTQ Guide for Teens will now be kept in the guidance counselor’s office at Charles M. Sumner Learning Campus (ME), and would require parental permission for students to access them. This is just as restrictive as removing the book entirely, considering how many students will likely not feel safe asking for permission to access these books.

The Ferguson Public Library (CT) has declared itself a book sanctuary.

The Crawford County School District (PA) has introduced a policy that would “prohibit any material with explicitly written, visual or visually implied depictions of sexual acts or simulations of such acts, as well as visual depictions of nudity with the exception of anatomical diagrams and classical works of art.”

The Central Bucks (PA) school board adopted a ridiculous policy that prevents district employees from advocating for or displaying items that reflect partisan, political, or social policy agendas.

Protestors clash over the drag queen story hour at the Canton branch of the Enoch Pratt Free Library (MD).

Wilkes County (NC) school officials receive mixed reactions from their decision to remove Looking for Alaska from school libraries. All this nonsense around a single sex scene that takes up a grand total of two pages.

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

This Missouri high school senior wrote an op-ed about banned books, saying that he wants to be challenged as a reader, and he wants to be treated as an adult.

Arkansas governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders bans the word “Latinx” on her first day in office. Glad to see real progress is being made here. /s

A proposed Arkansas bill would define any sort of drag performances as “adult-oriented businesses.”

More than 100 students at Big Walnut High School (OH) walked out in protest of a proposed book ban of over 20 titles.

Riverside (IL) trustees offer support to library officials, who blocked a recent ban request for Gender Queer.

Indiana lawmakers have revived a bill that would make librarians criminally liable for distributing material deemed harmful to minors. The bill’s supporters say that this would only target material deemed pornographic or obscene under state statute, but given how flexible the definition of “pornography” has become, it’s safe to say that this bill would likely be used to remove LGBTQ books and serve as an intimidation tactic for teachers and librarians.

The Hamilton East Public Library (IN) board voted to relocate the book Making a Baby from the children’s section to the adult section, which was challenged by a patron back in October.

Floyd County Library (IN) had a packed board meeting about the picture book Prince and Knight being used for a recent storytime event. No action has been taken.

The Coloma Board of Education (IN) responds to parents who are upset that seventh graders were gifted copies of Looking for Alaska. Some parents have even filed police reports, saying that the teacher involved was responsible for distribution of pornography to minors.

A newly introduced Nebraska bill would require school districts “to make learning materials available for public inspection and create a process for parents to object to books in the school library.”

The Keene Public Library (NE) has been unable to review Sex is a Funny Word because the person who checked the book out refuses to return the book.

Kearney Board of Education (NE) voted to keep four challenged books on library shelves, and they’ve voted to suspend their book challenge policy. As one trustee said, “This has become politicized, and we have better things to do.”

The Valley City Public Library board (ND) heard arguments for and against the removal of Let’s Talk About It, and apparently asked for a show of hands from members of the public to see who supported relocating the book and who supported the outright removal of the book. However, no final decision has been made yet.

North Dakota has two proposed bills that would make it a Class B misdemeanor “for any business establishment where minors can go, to offer books with images showing nudity or partial nudity.” And as bad as that is, neither bill includes any exclusions for public libraries.

Wyoming state representative Jeanette Ward is pushing to expand the definition of “child pornography” in an attempt to censor school libraries.

In additional student walkout news, hundreds of Temecula (CA) high school students walked out to protest a recent critical race theory ban.

The Bookshelf in Ontario had an incident with a man who tried to steal an armload of anti-racist books from the shelves, calling the store co-founder a racist for having them available in the first place.

Teaching banned books: Melissa by Alex Gino.

A banned book reading club guide for New Kid by Jerry Craft.

Why student voices should be central to school libraries.

I’ve seen this article making the rounds, and I absolutely hate the “both sides” narrative going on here.

Books & Authors in the News

The Library of Congress has named Meg Medina as the new National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature.

Hong Kong police arrest six people at a Lunar New Year shopping fair for selling a “seditious” book about a series of riots that occurred in Hong Kong in 2019 and 2020.

Numbers & Trends

Prince Harry’s memoir shattered records by selling more than 1.4 million copies in its first day.

These are the bestselling books of 2022.

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

Award News

The 2023 Philip K. Dick Award nominees have been announced.

Readers can help choose the best LGBTQ books of 2022.

Pop Cultured

Parks & Rec actress Retta is starring in a bookish crime drama on NBC called Murder By the Book, where she will play a big city Instagram book reviewer who becomes an amateur detective.

17 TV shows that are full of bonkers plot twists.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

These are some of the new words added to the Scrabble dictionary, so now you have some support when your opponent says you can’t play the word “jedi!”

On the Riot

The future of libraries.

Top tips for weeding when you have 100 other things to do.

How this Rioter survived the closure of their library.

The top 10 hardest words for Americans to pronounce.

“Read what’s there:” How this Rioter learned to avoid reading shortcuts.

black cat sitting on the arm of a couch next to several stacks of books

Here’s Gilbert supervising as I KonMari-ed my bookshelves the other day. (Actually, he’s just ticked that I took up the entire couch with my book sorting.)

Okay, friends, I’ll check in again next week. Have a relaxing weekend!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Dark Academia for Days

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. It’s playoff football season in my house, and by that I mean that there’s always has a football game on, even though my husband doesn’t have any emotional connection to the postseason teams, and I hate football in general. It’s great. I’ll just be sitting over here, counting down the days until baseball comes back.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

What you don’t know about the HarperCollins strike.

This Chicago bookstore owner is asking customers NOT to pull a stunt like this one: please don’t buy an enormous number of books with the intent of returning them all shortly after. That’s a really big financial hit for small business owners.

New & Upcoming Titles

Writers to watch this spring.

These are the big celebrity book club picks for January 2023.

The coloring book based on Colleen Hoover’s It Ends With Us will not be moving forward.

Anne Heche’s son gives a sneak peek of his mom’s posthumous memoir, which will be released on January 24th.

2023 middle grade and YA novels starring QTBIPOC.

62 books by women of color to read in 2023.

Most anticipated picks for 2023 from AARP, Autostraddle, Crime Reads, Essence, Goodreads (mysteries/thrillers), HipLatina, LitHub, The Millions, Oprah Daily, Vogue, Washington Post.

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

January picks from Riveted, Tor.com (sci fi, fantasy)

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Spare – Prince Harry (Bustle, Good Morning America, Guardian, Hollywood Reporter, New York Times, Time, USA Today, Variety, Vulture, Washington Post)

The Deluge – Stephen Markley (Esquire, LA Times, New York Times)

How to Sell a Haunted House – Grady Hendrix (Washington Post)

Age of Vice – Deepti Kapoor (Shondaland)

The Bandit Queens – Parini Shroff (New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

How to read Anne Rice’s Mayfair Witches series in order.

On the Riot

It’s Book Riot’s Most Anticipated list for 2023!

23 great books to read in 2023.

2023 LGBTQ books to add to your TBR.

8 indie queer books coming out this winter.

Most-anticipated mystery novels for 2023.

The most anticipated SFF books of 2023, according to Goodreads.

Upcoming lifestyle books for Winter 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Themes, tropes, and types of dark academia.

Why dark academia is perennially popular.

Dark academia and horror: a bloody perfect marriage.

Dark academia vs. chaotic academia – what’s the difference?

Why you should start reading regional American literature.

Do self–help books actually help?

All Things Comics

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever will be streaming on Disney+ on February 1st.

On the Riot

8 new middle grade graphic novels coming out this winter.

8 dark academia manga and manhwa.

Tropes in capes: evil clowns.

8 of the best K-Dramas that are based off manhwa and webtoons.

Audiophilia

10 of the best audiobooks coming out in January.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

YA novels with college settings.

Adults

10 excellent reads for your book club.

8 romance novels about weddings.

8 romances about marriages where the sparks reignite.

5 thrillers about secrets between spouses.

7 thrillers that explore the dark side of motherhood.

The best celebrity memoirs of all time.

On the Riot

7 picture books for little horror lovers.

8 of the best self-help books for kids.

YA books with queer parents.

9 self-help books that actually help.

8 of the best sci fi books about robots.

Dark academia reading right here! Dark academia by authors of color, YA fantasy dark academia, SFF dark academia.

12 of the coolest jobs in romance novels.

The most unique jobs in cozy mysteries.

13 cozy fantasy books to cuddle up with this winter.

12 books that feature murders across genres.

10 space horror books like the Dead Space remake.

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.

two dark cats sleeping in a circle on an orange blanket

How it started: Gilbert pestering Dini to get him to vacate the blanket so that Gilbert could take over.

How it ended: See above.

Welp, I’m out. Check back here on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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Check Your Shelf

The Inequity of Literary Awards

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m taking a couple days off next week, so what am I doing? Going to the Shedd Aquarium on free admission day! This is how you play hooky properly!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Library Journal has named the Brooklyn Library’s Books Unbanned team the Librarians of the Year. These were the librarians who offered free digital access to banned books to any teenager in the country.

The National Conference of African American Librarians will not hold its annual event in Indianapolis this year in response to the Indianapolis Public Library Board refusing to appoint Nichelle Hayes as the library director.

New Jersey governor Phil Murphy signs a law to make New Jersey the first state to require media literacy for K-12 students.

The Edmonton Public Library saw a significant increase in security concerns in 2022.

Worth Reading

America’s public libraries reflect the systematic failures and social inequality of our country.

Book Adaptations in the News

Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting, stars of the 1968 adaptation of Romeo & Juliet, have sued Paramount Pictures for more than $500 million over the underaged nude scene in the film.

The story of the husband-murdering author of “How to Murder Your Husband” is coming to Lifetime.

Season 3 of Truth Be Told (based on Kathleen Barber’s novel While You Were Sleeping) has a trailer.

Season 4 of You gets a trailer.

First look at the Bridgerton prequel, Queen Charlotte.

Here’s the trailer for Renfield.

Banned & Challenged Books

What anti-censorship groups are actively fighting book bans?

The Education Department logs a record number of discrimination complaints.

5 book ban trends to watch for in 2023.

How misinformation about Lawn Boy, a novel never meant for children, made it the second-most contested book in schools last year.

What book bans are doing to school library purchases.

Victoria City Council (TX) has tabled the library’s Advisory Board’s policy recommendations over wording disagreements. The policy in general says that the library will not purchase materials that “promotes gender dysphoria” and “encourages a child younger than 18 to consider elective procedures for gender transitioning.” Resident Cindy Herman said, “Supporting children who say they are transgender and going so far as to allow a child to consider gender reassignment surgery is to “help Satan reclaim this earth for his purposes.” YIKES ON BIKES.

Book ratings could be coming to Texas school libraries.

“Don’t Say Gay:” Florida schools remove library books with LGBTQ characters.

Douglas Anderson School For the Arts (FL) cancels its production of Indecent, which students say is because of the “Don’t Say Gay” bill.

Lake County Schools (FL) have banned And Tango Makes Three, A Day With Marlon Bundo, and In Our Mothers’ House.

Students allege that the Florida teacher who is pushing for book bans is openly racist and homophobic. Well, color me shocked!

The synopsis for this article says it all: “Starting Jan. 1, school media specialists across Florida faced a new requirement of needing to complete training on how to select books for their libraries before purchasing any new items. The state did not meet its deadline to provide the training. It did, however, publish a proposed rule and backing documents for public review and comment, leading to a future Board of Education vote. As you might imagine, the proposal has encountered some resistance.” AKA, everything is a hot mess.

The Polk County (FL) School Board gives an unnamed conservative group more time to review all of the books being added to two new school libraries. Because that’s what’s really important here.

The fight over library books in St. Tammany Parish (LA) escalates to include law enforcement.

The battle to keep LGBTQ+ books in Louisiana libraries.

Livingston Parish School Board (LA) unanimously passes new policy against critical race theory.

A group of parents in Hermon, Maine, are concerned about over 80 “sexually explicit” books in the school library, although they say it’s not about banning books.

Hempfield Area (PA) Schools are stuck on a proposed book procurement policy, as board members are divided on how to establish a standard of appropriateness.

Another Pennsylvania school district clamps down on reading rights.

Progressives are organizing to monitor Pennsylvania school boards in a pushback against book bans and “harmful” actions.

The book collections at Ohio County Schools (WV) draw questions from the public.

Macon County Library (NC) are considering changes to their complaint policy after an LGBTQ display sparked controversy last year. Namely, they’re looking at limiting complaints to members of the community who have an active library card in the system.

Gender Queer is under fire at the Clark County Public Library in Kentucky.

A proposed rule creates a wedge between libraries and Missouri Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft.

St. Cloud (MN) schools haven’t experienced a wave of book banning yet, but they also have a preemptive form that a teacher must complete any time they want to bring a new book into the curriculum, and THEN the book is reviewed by other teachers, administrators, and families.

This Patmos (MI) librarian has gone viral after ripping into trustees about the stress that she and her colleagues have been through over the last couple years. It’s heartbreaking, and very, very familiar: “Please understand, we broke. We are human. It was one threat too many. One accusation too many, and all we do is come in here to serve you day after day.”

Riverside Public Library (IL) pushes back on the attempt to ban Gender Queer.

The Keene Memorial Library (NE) has received an official complaint about the book Sex is a Funny Word.

Treasure Valley (ID) residents cite swearing, sex, and fictional characters being mad at their parents as some of the reasons why they want to remove titles from the teen section at the Meridian Library.

The State Library of Oregon reports an increasing number of organized book ban efforts across the state.

A perfectly inoffensive school library.

Maia Kobabe talks about how Gender Queer has helped struggling kids talk to their parents.

Books & Authors in the News

Indie romance author Susan Meachen appears to announce that she’s alive, two years after her daughter allegedly announced that Meachen had died by suicide.

Award-winning author Russell Banks has died at 82.

Toni Morrison’s rarely seen papers will be on display at Princeton.

Numbers & Trends

OverDrive digital circulation grew 10% in 2022, and they report that 129 libraries surpassed one million checkouts.

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

Award News

A look at the inequity of literary awards.

Here are the 2023 Golden Globe winners.

Here are the winners of the 2023 Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Awards.

Pop Cultured

Paramount+ snags a Dungeons and Dragons series.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Barnes & Noble is hosting the inaugural BookTok Festival.

Oprah Daily gives six tips for starting and maintaining a thriving book club.

On the Riot

New Year’s resolutions of a high school librarian.

Linguists name “-ussy” the word of the year.

6 readathons and reading challenges to start prepping for in 2023.

Try these resources to help you read more in 2023.

Why you should start book journaling.

black cat and black and white cat laying on an unmade bed

Two snuggly boys, enjoying being brothers! Or probably more like Dini was sleeping on the bed, and Gilbert decided he was going to go bother him.

Welp, that’s it for this week. I’ll be back on Tuesday. Peace out!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Catch Up on All the SPARE News

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m using that new year energy to tackle some apartment cleaning, and I’ve got a stack of short books to help me: The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning, and How to Keep House While Drowning. I’ve already cleared out a bunch of clothes for donation or recycling (thank you, Marie Kondo!) and I’m going to tackle shoes, accessories, and books later this week. If you know me at all, you know that this level of cleaning is a HUGE deal, so hopefully I can keep that momentum going! And maybe apply some of that momentum to my desk at work…

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

What it’s like to be a ghostwriter.

New & Upcoming Titles

January 6th titles are hitting the market.

11 YA books by South Asian authors to look for in 2023.

Most anticipated 2023 titles from BookPage (fiction, nonfiction, mystery/suspense, romance, SFF), Bustle, Buzzfeed (YA), Electric Lit (LGBTQ+), The Guardian (fiction, nonfiction), Kirkus, LitHub (general, SFF), PopSugar (mysteries/thrillers), Salon, Today, USA Today, Vulture.

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

January picks from Barnes & Noble, Crime Reads, Kirkus, New York Times, The Root, Shondaland, Town & Country.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Spare – Prince Harry (AARP, Bookseller, Bustle, The Guardian, New York Times, Parade, Slate, USA Today, Vanity Fair

The Age of Vice – Deepti Kapoor (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Sam – Allegra Goodman (New York Times, Washington Post)

On the Riot

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

2023 most anticipated picks for cozy mysteries, YA, horror.

January picks for mysteries/thrillers, romance, SFF, horror, nonfiction, children’s books, YA.

8 fabulous authors like Silvia Moreno-Garcia.

True crime vs. murder mysteries: mutually exclusive, or two sides of the same coin?

All Things Comics

Why Congressman Robert Garcia will be sworn in with an original Superman #1 comic.

On the Riot

8 new comics to read in January.

Audiophilia

Apple Books quietly launches AI-narrated audiobooks.

AudioFile’s January 2023 Earphones Award winners have been announced.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

Cozy romances to curl up with this winter.

Memoirs about the transformative power of hobbies.

8 memoirs by women about multicultural identity and belonging.

5 works of SFF that draw on Greek mythology.

8 self-help books that actually help.

Key titles by or about Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.

18 cookbooks that everyone should own.

13 books to read if you loved Knives Out.

6 SFF works to brighten gloomy days.

On the Riot

10 books to help you achieve your New Year’s resolution.

Books about hard topics to help you start the year off strong.

21 of the best travel books.

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 a bed with lots of clothes piled in the background

Yeah, all that closet cleaning I was talking about earlier? Dini was helping too. Notice the giant pile of clothes in the background…

Well, that’s all I’ve got for today. Let’s meet back on Friday, kay?

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Whodunnits to Watch After Seeing GLASS ONION

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. As of Tuesday this week, our new director has started at our library, which means I am no longer the interim director and am back to my regular role as Head of Circulation! I’m grateful to have had the learning opportunity, but it taught me a lot about what I value in my professional life, and right now, I think I value balance most of all. I’m very excited to work with our new director, and I’m looking forward to having more mental energy at home. I hope this new year brings all of you what you need most from your work lives.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Boulder’s main library is planning to gradually reopen following the discovery of high methamphetamine levels in the public bathroom air vents.

Cool Library Updates

The Otsego (MI) Library was transformed into Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory to help raise money to purchase new children’s materials.

A librarian’s dream helps turn a waiting area at Cook County Jail into an educational nook for children who are visiting people experiencing incarceration.

Worth Reading

Librarians are meeting younger readers where they are: TikTok.

Book Adaptations in the News

George RR Martin speaks about the impacted future of the Game of Thrones franchise at HBO Max.

Jinkies! Here’s the latest on the HBO MAX Velma series.

Here’s the first look at Season 7 of Outlander.

Banned & Challenged Books

Suggestions for your anti-censorship resolutions.

The absurd year in educational censorship.

Author Susan Kuklin writes about her book Beyond Magenta being targeted by book banners.

Another summary of the Llano County Library situation in Texas.

A Medina County (TX) resident presented a list of almost 1000 books that he wants the Uvalde Consolidated School District to remove. Not surprisingly, there are a LOT of books on the list that aren’t even part of the collection, because if you want to ban books, why bother doing your research ahead of time?

The Rapides Parish FREADom Fighters (LA) are opposing a proposal to prohibit content referencing sexual orientation and gender identity from the children’s collection at the public library.

Protestors and supporters gathered at a Drag Story Hour held at the Queens Public Library (NY) in Jackson Heights. Supporters outnumbered protesters, but there’s been an increase in threats and violence against the supporters in recent months.

A high school junior at Great Neck High School (NY) wrote a really excellent letter to the editor in support of Gender Queer.

Loudoun County Public Schools (VA) removed Fences from the 11th grade curriculum.

Ten more committees (!!!) begin reviewing challenged books at Beaufort County School District (SC).

When Nixa (MO) adults banned their books, these teens fought back by organizing.

The Wentzville School District (MO) returned 200 temporarily removed books to shelves, but 17 titles are still inaccessible.

Carroll High School (IA) elects to keep Red Hood and The Haters in the school library.

A group of moms in Fremont, Nebraska are protesting the presence of sex education and LGBTQ+ books for children and teens in the public library.

Valley City Barnes County Public Library (ND) will be holding a public hearing about the book Let’s Talk About It, which a group of challengers have been trying to remove since September.

Almost every book challenged at the Meridian Public Library (ID) is LGBTQ+ or is written by/features a person of color. Shocking.

This news article summary from Snohomish County (WA) says, “Whether Mukilteo high schoolers must read Harper Lee’s ‘To Kill A Mockingbird’ was just one of this year’s controversies over classroom literature,” but then the first line of the article says, “To set the record straight, the Mukilteo School District did not debate a ban of Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird in 2022.” The decision to update the curriculum is NOT equivalent to banning books, and equating the two is not accurate or nuanced journalism.

Books & Authors in the News

Suspected manuscript thief, Filippo Bernardini, is expected to plead guilty to wire fraud.

Numbers & Trends

The bestselling books of the week for December 28th and January 3rd, according to all the lists.

Award News

Year-end short speculative fiction roundup: an overview of awards eligibility season.

Pop Cultured

Two lists of whodunnits to watch after seeing Glass Onion!

Here’s a first look at True Detective Season 4.

The best crime thrillers you can stream right now.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Jenna Bush Hager unveils her Streaking With Jenna program for 2023. (That’s READING streaks, you weirdos!)

On the Riot

The worst-rated book-to-movie adaptations, according to Rotten Tomatoes.

A guide to bookish MacArthur fellows.

The worst book titles of all time.

On simplifying your reading trackers.

black and white cat sitting on the edge of a white bathtub

Dini wants to make sure we don’t require any assistance or supervision in the bathroom. We’ve told him countless times that we can dry off without his assistance, we know how to brush our teeth, and if we need another roll of toilet paper, we will ASK.

What a doodlehead.

All right, that’s all I’ve got for this week. Stay awesome, you punk-ass book jockeys.

(I may or may not be watching Parks and Rec all the way through for the first time…)

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Cozy Mystery Myth

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. It’s a new year!! While I don’t necessarily feel the drive to start a bunch of resolutions and self-care projects at this time of year, I am happy that I decided to kick 2023 off with a haircut that’s at least 3 months overdue. Goodbye, shoulder length hair and overgrown layers, hello slightly shorter hair and additional layers!

Since most places took a break over the last week, this newsletter is a bit shorter than normal, but that’s all right. Ease into your 2023 newsletter reading, I say. Or check out Book Riot’s most popular posts of 2022 if you’re looking for something else to keep you occupied!

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

Here’s a first look at E.M. Roy’s debut novel, Let the Woods Keep Our Bodies, which is being pitched as My Best Friend’s Exorcism meets Twin Peaks. SIGN. ME. UP.

Best of 2022 picks from Mashable (mental health), Mental Floss, NBC (LGBTQ+), and Wired.

Most anticipated January picks from Barnes & Noble (adult, kids/YA), New York Times, PopSugar (romance), Washington Post.

Most anticipated 2023 picks from Barnes & Noble (debut novels), Buzzfeed (YA), Kirkus, and Salon.

RA/Genre Resources

Louise Penny sets the record straight on the “cozy mysteries” myth.

On the Riot

What’s it like being an eBook developer?

The best backlist books that Rioters read in 2022.

The best nonfiction of 2022.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

December picks for SFF.

12 SFF and horror debuts to watch for in 2023.

Author readalikes for Brandon Sanderson.

Black romance has always been here.

In defense of pop culture references in books.

Book genres that don’t exist, but probably should!

All Things Comics

On the Riot

11 exciting comics coming in 2023.

This Rioter read some manga with the absolute weirdest titles.

Audiophilia

On the Riot

YA fantasy series with excellent audiobooks.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

The 25 all-time best book series for teens.

Adults

10 suspenseful reads that peer into suburbia’s dark side.

On the Riot

8 New Year’s books for children.

8 magical mystery books to get lost in.

Readalikes for your favorite TV shows and films.

Science fiction and fantasy books to hunker down with this winter.

Poetry books to inspire year-end reflection.

9 great Hindu mythology books.

10 books about California history.

8 books about fashion history.

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 camouflaged in a duffel bag with a black and white floral print

Dini loves camouflaging himself and then listening to us wander around the apartment wondering where he’s gotten to. My husband actually almost kicked the bag before he realized there was a little kitty head sticking out of the top!

All right, friends, that’s all I’ve got for this week. Stay cool, and remember to write 2023 on anything you have to date.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Book Ban Trauma

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Did everyone have a good holiday? I took two days after Christmas off for the first time in, like, forever, and it was much needed. Catching up on sleep, getting together with friends, doing a bit of cleaning around the apartment…very simple and very restorative. I’m ready to take on a new year!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

This is more tangentially related to libraries, but some universities are now restricting access to TikTok across campus.

Worth Reading

This is an older article from Library Journal, but it’s a reminder that burnout is still very much an issue in every library.

Book Adaptations in the News

Netflix has commissioned a second Fear Street trilogy.

A preview of the upcoming Luther movie.

Banned & Challenged Books

The very real trauma from book bans.

The books that have been banned in state prisons.

The chair of the Moms for Liberty, Tarrant County (TX) has separated from the national group over issues related to political affiliation and school choice issues.

Meet the Florida English teacher trying to ban 150 books from school libraries.

Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry: “Taxpayers should not subsidize the sexualization of our children.”

Newly-elected Maine State Representative Mike Soboleski argued against “inappropriate” books at a recent MSAD 58 school board meeting.

Kelly Jensen’s Body Talk is staying in the Wilton-Lyndeborough Cooperative Middle/High School (NH) library, but middle schoolers will need permission to check out the book.

10 books have been formally challenged at Old Rochester Regional School District (MA), including All Boys Aren’t Blue, Lawn Boy, and The Hate U Give. Basically a Top 10 list of the most banned books in the country.

Surprisingly, the Darien (CT) Board of Education did not have a formal challenge policy in place, so they’re exploring options now.

And neither did the Cranston Public School District (RI). The district has not received any complaints, but they wanted to have something in place. Again, I’m glad they’re taking preemptive action, but I’m really surprised there wasn’t already an existing policy.

The Blair County (PA) District Attorney’s found no evidence for criminal charges against the Hollisdayburg Area teacher who had a copy of Gender Queer out on her desk. SHOCKING.

Souderton Area (PA) residents argue gender identity and inappropriate books at a recent school board meeting.

Beaufort County (SC) School District elects to keep The Lovely Bones and Stamped on high school shelves, but they will pull the young readers edition of Stamped from the elementary schools.

Clark County Public Library (KY) has elected to restrict Gender Queer checkouts to patrons 18 years or older, unless a parent signs a permission slip.

Robertson County (TN) has removed Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me from all middle school libraries.

A Georgia parent is upset to find an “inappropriate” book at a private business.

The Crawford County Library System (AR) is moving all of the LGBTQ+ books from the children’s section, thanks to the efforts of a far-right religious group.

The state of the library wars happening in Jonesboro, Arkansas.

Lansing (KS) schools remove a social justice unit from high school English classes because of a single parent.

Gunnison County (CO) residents have made multiple attempts to get law enforcement involved with removing books from the public libraries. So far, all attempts have been unsuccessful.

A parent was upset that they’re being called hateful bigots and homophobic fascists for protesting “inappropriate” books in schools. I mean, just because they’re targeting the LGBTQ community and making comments that lead to a fake bomb threat against the Capo Unified School District..you’d think they were doing something bad! /s

Drag events faced at least 141 protests and significant threats in 2022.

How Gender Queer became America’s most banned book.

Ashley Hope Pérez: “Young people have a right to stories that help them learn.”

Books & Authors in the News

Biggest literary stories of 2022.

The BBC makes a case for why Don DelLillo is America’s greatest living writer.

Numbers & Trends

Best-selling books of the week.

Pop Cultured

The best international true crime podcasts for the winter.

On the Riot

4 simple ways to include board games and gaming in libraries.

Check out Book Riot’s 2023 Reading Log!

Who was George Orwell?

What this Rioter learned from reading through an award longlist for the first time.

6 questions to help you shape your reading practice.

black cat and a black and white cat laying on an orange blanket with their front paws crossed

The kitties keep being adorable together! And they keep sleeping on the orange blanket! Such sweet babies. I’ve spent some great quality time with these snuggle bugs this weekend.

Okay, everyone. I’ll see you next year! Let’s kiss 2022 goodbye!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Identity is Not a Genre

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m writing this on Christmas Eve, it’s very cold, and I’m eager to get the holiday festivities under way! Let’s do this.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The 2022 Publishers Weekly Publishing Industry Salary Survey results.

The pandemic still made its presence felt in publishing in 2022.

Barnes & Noble is expanding, and setting up new stores in former Amazon Book locations.

New & Upcoming Titles

Here’s the cover reveal for Alexis Hall’s upcoming novel, Mortal Follies, out June 2023.

Cassandra Clare is publishing an adult fantasy novel in October.

Aubrey Plaza and Dan Murphy have published a second picture book in their Christmas Witch series.

The ultimate Best Books of 2022 list.

Best of 2022 from Crime Reads (debut crime, true crime, YA), Electric Lit (poetry collections), Jezebel (celebrity memoirs), Kirkus (indie books), Rolling Stone (music books), Tor.com (YA SFF/horror), Town & Country.

Award-winning books of 2022.

15 of the best book covers of 2022.

Most anticipated books of 2023: Barnes & Noble, Buzzfeed (winter thrillers), Forbes (YA mysteries), Independent, Time.

Most anticipated YA for January.

On the Riot

Book Riot’s most popular posts in 2022.

Obama’s best books of the year.

Best of 2022: poetry collections, horror, YA.

New historical fiction coming out in 2023.

Identity is not a genre.

On reading books about Jewish joy.

All Things Comics

Black Adam 2 is not moving forward.

Patti Lupone has been added to the cast of Agatha: Coven of Chaos.

On the Riot

12 comics about obscure characters in Marvel Snap.

Audiophilia

The Top 10 audiobooks on Audible.com.

On the Riot

10 of the best audiobooks for kids.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

Must-read classic novels that everyone should read.

22 chilly SFF/horror reads.

8 great mystery series featuring librarians as amateur detectives.

Books about nature.

Cozy mysteries for fans of Only Murders in the Building.

9 awful meals from horror fiction.

Christmas horror books.

11 NYC-set novels.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

On the Riot

8 picture books to teach growth mindset.

Books that will make you question reality.

8 books to help you buy fewer books. (That’s how this works, right?)

Classic books that have gotten better with age.

Books featuring queer siblings.

8 mythology books for adults.

SFF books by unexpected writers.

10 books about rocks, minerals, gems, and crystals.

The best winter sports romances you can’t help but root for.

The best memoirs you’ve never heard of.

9 healing books about trauma.

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 sleeping against a woman's leg

This is me enjoying my snow day and reading a book on the couch with my boys keeping me warm. EXACTLY what I needed after a stressful 6 months in 2022!

Welp, that’s all I’ve got until Friday. I hope things start warming up where you are…these sub-zero temperatures are no bueno.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading The House Across the Lake by Riley Sager.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Read Through Burnout

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, where the entire Midwest is getting ready to hunker down against this oncoming snow storm. The one silver lining is that I have an opportunity to use my interim director powers for good and close the library. We’re already closing early on Thursday, and I’m keeping an eye on the forecast and local closures to make a decision about Friday. But wherever you are, I hope you’re safe and warm!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The Top 10 library stories of 2022 from Publishers Weekly.

Boulder, Colorado has closed its main library branch after “higher-than-acceptable” levels of methamphetamine were found in the air ducts in the public restrooms.

Book Adaptations in the News

There’s a Winnie-the-Pooh animated prequel in the works, but it’s not from Disney.

Peacock has tapped James Wan to executive produce a horror thriller series based on Robert McCammon’s 1988 novel Stinger.

Nick Cutter’s horror novel The Deep is being turned into a series at Amazon!

Hulu’s limited docuseries based on The 1619 Project gets a January release date.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

Banned & Challenged Books

How your book club can fight against censorship.

AI isn’t a threat to high school English classes. Censorship is.

A look at the year in book banning.

Librarians are facing harassment.

Publishers Weekly named “The Defenders” as the 2022 People of the Year – the teachers, librarians, authors, booksellers, publishers, and allies fighting censorship.

Facing the threat of far right violence, library workers seek safety in unionizing.

The Granbury ISD (TX) superintendent ordered school librarians to remove LGBTQ books, and now the federal government is investigating.

The Huntsville Public Library has been privatized following a controversial Pride Month display.

Carroll ISD (TX) changes its non-discrimination statement, eliminating gender, sexual orientation, and religion from the wording.

Keller ISD (TX) school board invited a religious leader who had been indicted on four counts of sexual assault to open a recent meeting.

Katy ISD (TX) students come together as censorship of LGBTQ+ voices ramps up.

Seventeen listed Cameron Samuels as an important voice of 2022 after they led a powerful movement against censorship in the Katy ISD.

The Abilene (TX) City Council is considering a resolution that will protect minors from obscene library materials.

Polk County (FL) School Board delayed the approval of 37,000 newly purchased books after residents complained they hadn’t had enough time to review all of the books before the scheduled vote, and they wondered how staff were able to adequately review the books as well. OH MY STARS, THAT’S NOT HOW PROFESSIONAL STAFF PURCHASES OR REVIEWS BOOKS! AT ALL! And the school board is catering to this nonsense!

Several books were removed from Lake County (FL) despite no formal challenges to these titles, because they allegedly violated Florida criminal code.

This Clay County (FL) resident has a list of over 3600 titles that he wants removed from school libraries, and says if the books aren’t removed, he will submit challenges for every book in order to overwhelm the system.

No parent objected to the 176 books ordered for the the Duval County (FL) School District’s “Essential Voices” collection, but the district kept them off the shelves anyway.

The Brevard County School Board (FL) wants books under challenge in the schools to be taken off library shelves and held behind the desk “like adult magazines.”

A Florida Department of Education workgroup is creating a training that all school librarians must use in selecting books, but Moms for Liberty say that the recommendations aren’t strong enough.

Gender Queer is being challenged in Maine School Administrative District 52.

A Maine parent is upset over “pornographic books” in the school district and the lack of a rating system for library books.

Neo-Nazis disrupted a drag event in Fall River, Massachusetts, but the organizers said that they won’t be discouraged.

A Ridgefield (CT) town hall employee was arrested for disorderly conduct after swatting a folder at a YouTuber who was performing a First Amendment audit, and now area towns are taking action to prevent similar occurrences.

A new school board member in Isle of Wight County (VA) proposed changes to a state-mandated policy that is supposed to protect against children being exposed to “sexually explicit” materials. He wants to expand it to include content deemed “inherently divisive.”

Moore County (NC) schools updated their book review policy so that only board members and parents or guardians of enrolled students can initiate a reconsideration process.

School administrators in Charlotte (NC) recently met with Moms for Liberty about modifying school policy.

These are the books that Charlotte-area residents want to ban.

Guilford County (NC) elects to keep Life is Funny in the high school library.

Beaufort County School District (SC) votes to return four books to library shelves: The Handmaid’s Tale, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, The Kite Runner, and Speak.

The “Mama Bears of Forsyth” (GA) return to school board meetings after temporarily being banned for misconduct.

“The mother of a Harlem Middle School [Evans, Georgia] student has filed a 323-page lawsuit against members of the school board, a teacher, and a principal over what she says is a violation of her parental rights and a book that she claims does not belong on the shelves of school libraries.” The book is Drama, but let me back up a second…a THREE HUNDRED AND TWENTY THREE PAGE lawsuit?? That’s longer than the book in question!

In St. Tammany Parish (LA), supporters are fighting to keep LGBTQ+ books on library shelves.

Rapides Parish (LA) Library Board is proposing a change to their collection development policy that would prohibit sexual content, as well as content regarding sexual orientation and gender identity, from the children’s and teen’s collections.

Some West Virginia lawmakers are interested in banning books. Just don’t call it a book ban.

“Tennessee’s textbook commission has wide new powers to determine which books students can and can’t access in public school libraries. But members say the panel doesn’t have enough resources to finish its most pressing new task: providing guidance to school leaders on how to comply with several recently enacted library laws.”

The Wilson County (TN) School Board voted to remove two books from school libraries: Tricks and Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts).

Missouri gets 10,000 public comments on a new library rule that has been labeled as “political censorship.”

The Patmos Library (MI) closed early due to staff safety concerns over a threatening social media post allegedly made by Republican 11th Congressional District Chair Shane Trejo, who said, “Time to shut the library by force.”

Marathon County (WI) Board retaliates against two library trustees who refused to remove a book from the shelves.

“They want to shut us down:” The threats that canceled a Drag Queen Bingo program at the Downer’s Grove (IL) Library and how the library handled it.

The Chicago Tribune named librarians and library workers of Illinois as “Chicagoans of the Year for Books.”

The Bartholomew County Library (IN) has drafted a community survey about library materials after several residents have advocated for the segregation or removal of certain teen books.

Kearney (NE) School Board denies two book ban requests for Crank and Empire of Storms.

Two Pierre (SD) parents are upset that the high school is using The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian in the classroom, saying “This is like handing kids an R-rated movie.” The superintendent later reminded parents that there’s always been a letter explaining parents can have their students opt out of reading the book if they so choose.

Libraries serve communities, not aggrieved parents. Challenged books have so much to teach Kansans.

The Motion Picture Association opposes Oklahoma’s proposed system for library book ratings.

In Greeley, Colorado, residents submitted 5400 forms that challenged 274 books in school libraries, and then caused the school board meeting to end early due to disruption and bad behavior from members of the public.

Some Cheyenne (WY) residents want to ban The 57 Bus, because as this piece states, it portrays LGBTQ+ youth as “fully human.”

The Crook County (OR) library board rejected the proposal to segregate LGBTQ books from the children’s section.

The owner of a vandalized taproom in Washington says that they believe their business was targeted ahead of a scheduled Drag Queen Story Time event.

Greater Essex County District School Board (Ontario) is pushing back against demands to list all of the books in the school library because it creates “a slippery slope.”

A group of Southern Manitoba parents are calling for libraries to remove “sexually explicit” books, or have their funding cut.

The evolution of the anti-CRT movement: a timeline.

“Parents first” school board bids should be a wake-up call.

Book banning is bad policy, so let’s make it bad politics.

Numbers & Trends

A fifth of American adults struggle to read. Why are we failing to teach them?

The most-borrowed books from the New York Public Library.

Award News

The 2023 William C. Morris Award finalists have been announced.

The shortlist for YALSA’s 2023 Award for Excellence in Nonfiction has been announced.

Pop Cultured

Harry and Meghan announce a new Netflix series, Live to Lead.

On the Riot

2023 YA book-to-movie adaptations to put on your radar.

Here are the books hitting the public domain in 2023.

How the bookish internet killed this Rioter’s reading life.

How to read through burnout.

a black cat and a black and white cat laying on an orange blanket with their heads close together

I’ll leave you with this picture of the boys snuggling! My two Christmas kitties, who really do love each other!

Okay, everyone. Have a great holiday, and stay warm!!! I’ll catch you on the flipside.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.