Categories
Check Your Shelf

You Don’t Deserve Books

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m delighted to announce that my ensemble for my friends’ Pride party tomorrow has come together! I found a Bianca del Rio T-shirt, and I managed to do a very passable rainbow eyeshadow look! (I know I’m coming across as an overly excitable cis-hetero woman for this Pride party, but I’m super pumped to see my friends and celebrate our wonderful selves!)

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The Washington Post tells staff it’s pivoting to AI. Although this isn’t specifically about libraries, it’s definitely relevant.

Cool Library Updates

A Wisconsin public library is waiving damage fees in exchange for photos of the pets behind the damage.

Worth Reading

What is library work?

Book Adaptations in the News

Here’s a first look at Tobias Santelmann as Harry Hole in the upcoming Netflix adaptation.

Neil Gaiman’s Coraline is being turned into a “dark spangly” stage musical.

Jessica Lange is starring in the film adaptation of The Year of Magical Thinking.

Casting update for The Sandman Season 2.

Trailer for Part 2 of Bridgerton Season 3.

Censorship News

Here’s where library workers are prohibited from their own professional organization.

Anti-LGBTQ censorship is endangering trans people behind bars.

Conservative commentator Stew Peters is calling for his supporters to burn books. “If we demand that the classroom bookcases and school library shelves be cleansed of filth and perversion and pedophilic materials, then we’re called a bunch of ‘book burners,'” Peters said. “Well guess what? That’s exactly what we are and that’s exactly what we’re going to do.”

The Digital Public Library of America announced a new “Banned Book of the Week” feature.

The authors of And Tango Makes Three have filed a lawsuit against Nassau County Public Schools (FL) for removing the book from library shelves. This is similar to the pending lawsuit they’ve filed against Escambia County schools.

Three Mount Joy Township (PA) residents (including an Elizabethtown school board member “spoke against the Elizabethtown Public Library ever hosting or promoting a Drag Queen Story Hour like the March event canceled at the Lancaster Public Library because of a bomb threat.”

Harford County School District (MD) is looking for residents who are interested in serving on the new Library Materials Reconsideration Committee.

Franklin County (VA) resident Keith Johnson is upset with the school’s recent policy change, which prohibits residents from submitting book challenges if they don’t have a student in the district. Johnson alone has submitted over a dozen book challenges.

“Lawmakers, school board members and advocacy groups called for changes to state laws governing obscenity and book selection criteria in public schools at a May 15 press conference held by the conservative nonprofit NC Values Coalition.”

“PFLAG of Southern Pines, a newly formed LGBTQ+ group, and Public School Advocates (PSA) recently filed an official Title IX complaint against Moore County Schools [NC] with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights.”

“The Cobb County School District [GA] has pulled another book from the shelves of its school libraries as Superintendent Chris Ragsdale continues to defend the book removal process against a civil rights complaint filed with the U.S. Department of Education.”

Despite the Alabama Public Library Service passing a set of draconian new rules catering to right-wing book banning demands, the state legislature still cut the APLS budget by 9%.

Two Limestone County residents petitioned the Alabama Public Library Service Board of Trustees to withhold state funding from the Athens-Limestone Public Library because they think the library is distributing pornographic materials to children.

The Autuga-Prattville Public Library made it onto MSNBC due to the pending lawsuit against the library’s anti-LGBTQ policy. “They’re trying to say gay without saying gay.”

A St. Charles City-County Library (MO) employee is suing a group of library harassers who “have put her in danger, damaged her reputation by falsely accusing her of sexually targeting children and interfered with her employment by making her the focus of ‘Homolak’s anti-transgender community engagement activities.’”

The Williamson County (TN) school board grapples with the fact that they’re in a no-win situation when it comes to banning books as dictated by state law.

“Daviess County [KY] Commissioner Janie Marksberry riled many of those in attendance at the Daviess County Public Library board meeting Wednesday when she spoke about the book Let’s Talk About It during open comments.” Apparently this book, which is written for teenage readers, is not appropriate for teenage readers, according to someone who is not a librarian or a trained youth media specialist.

A bomb squad was called to the Holland Library (OH) after a staff member found a suspicious item next to a book about explosives.

The Troy school board (OH) voted to remove two books from the district. Worth mentioning: “Board members indicated they had read the books or excerpts from them.” (Emphasis mine.)

“A Republican-led bill just introduced in the Ohio House would charge teachers and librarians with a felony offense for distributing material deemed ‘obscene.’”

The Illinois House has passed a bill designed to protect the safety of library workers after the string of bomb threats from last year.

The Orion School Board (IL) heard from students and teachers protesting the superintendent’s decision to remove Fun Home from a dual-credit course with the local community college. As one of the students said, the book may be meant for mature audiences, but so is the course.

(Paywalled): Library books once again take center stage at a recent Kearney Public School board meeting (NE).

“A new rubric Oklahoma is using to review K-12 school textbooks asks whether learning materials “degrade traditional roles of men and women,” promote “illegal lifestyles” or neglect the importance of religion in preserving American liberties.”

“Billings Public Schools [MT] librarians said this week it was ironic they were being recognized for the Pat Williams Intellectual Freedom Award from the Montana Library Association at the same time the school board was considering undercutting their work.”

Higley Unified School District (AZ) heard from a resident who was upset that the school was using Nineteen Minutes as one of several titles for an independent reading assignment. His primary focus was on the “extremely sexually explicit” content and not on the fact that the book is about a school shooting, which is a far more deadly threat to students than books.

A recall petition has been filed against City Councilor Steve Dillard over his call for age restrictions on books at the Seaside Public Library (OR).

A recent Huntington Beach (CA) city council meeting was heavily attended by residents protesting the potential privatization of the public library system.

A heated debate erupted at the Encinitas Union School District [CA] over the children’s book My Shadow is Pink, drawing activists from across the county.”

Books & Authors in the News

Caleb Carr, author of The Alienist, has died at 68.

Elin Hilderbrand announces her departure from her usual beach read fiction.

Numbers & Trends

Independent booksellers continued to expand in 2023.

Why are so many celebrities writing children’s books?

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

10 rules for reading.

On the Riot

2024 summer reading clubs for kids and teens.

The most popular shows and movies on Netflix are adapted from books.

Reese’s YA book club is back.

Which book tracking app is best?

If you don’t shelve your books by color, you don’t deserve books.

Every kid had the same school-issued planner. But…why? (Also, anyone who had these planners can undoubtedly smell the sour plastic from that photo. I certainly can.)

a black and white cat standing on a table in the middle of a bunch of groceries

Dini was very excited to help us unpack our Trader Joe’s groceries! Or as I told Blaine, “Dini is living his Trader Joe’s fantasy right now.”

All right, friends. Have a great weekend – I’ll see you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Ranking Stephen King

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m getting this newsletter out a little early so I can enjoy Memorial Day weekend! Hope yours was great!

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

New romance novels for a steamy summer.

Cover reveal for Finlay Donovan Digs Her Own Grave.

Cover reveal for Intermezzo by Sally Rooney.

20 new books that should be best-sellers.

Summer reads from Kirkus, NPR, Parade, Time, USA Today.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, Wall Street Journal.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Once Upon a Time: The Captivating Life of Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy – Elizabeth Beller (New York Times, Washington Post)

You Like it Darker: Stories – Stephen King (Star Tribune, USA Today)

Lies & Weddings – Kevin Kwan (New York Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

On the problem of comp titles.

All 77 of Stephen King’s books ranked.

How cozy mystery books combine crime with comfort.

Beyond the aesthetics of dark academia.

Get started reading Linda Lael Miller.

The essential Don DeLillo.

5 places to find classic sci-fi by women.

On the Riot

The best YA books coming out this summer, according to Goodreads.

10 of the best recent picture books.

New LGBTQ+ books out this week for adults and children/teens.

The best weekly BIPOC releases, plus 5 under-the-radar BIPOC titles for May.

The best new book releases to TBR.

Historical fantasy books for your book club.

The ultimate updated guide to YA short stories.

Why are elderly protagonists having a moment?

All Things Comics

7 graphic memoirs by Asian American authors.

14 cool Canadian illustrated books to read right now.

15 graphic novels for kids by Asian authors and illustrators.

On the Riot

Comics about taking a different life path.

Audiophilia

10 new audiobooks for spring 2024.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

The ultimate summer reading list for kids ages 6-8.

Adults

22 hockey romance books.

15 novels to celebrate the return of Bridgerton.

16 books by Asian Latinx authors to read for AAPI Heritage Month.

7 novels set on the internet.

25 essential Stephen King short stories.

5 of the best books about West African cities.

Studio Ghibli movie-to-book pairings.

On the Riot

8 fantasy books with forbidden romance.

8 books about intergenerational friendships.

8 terrifying short story collections.

The most unhinged fictional characters ever written.

’80s horror novels that aged badly, and a few ’80s horror novels that aged well.

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 Edelweiss has a new catalog dedicated to diverse titles, which is managed by Early Word Galley Chatter Vicki Nesting. Check it out!

a brown tabby cat and a black and white cat snuggling on a bed

Dini has resigned himself to his fate of being Jonesy’s butt pillow.

Well, that’s all I’ve got for today. Check back on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Oprah’s Book Club or Death?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. This has been a week of unexplained catalog problems at work, and let me just say I’m very grateful for the upcoming three-day weekend…it’ll keep me from yeeting a computer out of a window. (And because I know my boss reads this newsletter, let me just emphasize that I’m kidding and I promise that nothing unexplained will happen to the catalog computer while she’s out of the building!) 🙂

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

NYC library leaders rally against the recent multi-million dollar budget cuts.

Cool Library Updates

How libraries support cycling during National Bike Month.

Worth Reading

A look at the old-fashioned library at the heart of the AI boom.

Book Adaptations in the News

“Irresponsible Netflix execs summon ‘Willy Wonka reality show’ into existence.” The headline says it all.

Kiera Knightley is starring in the Netflix film adaptation of Ruth Ware’s The Woman in Cabin 10.

Red, White, and Royal Blue is getting a (film) sequel, with stars Nicholas Galitzine and Taylor Zakhar Perez set to return.

The Summer I Turned Pretty Season 3 has been delayed until 2025.

A new adaptation of Hamlet starring Riz Ahmed is in the works.

Amazon reveals the first look at Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross.

Trailer for It Ends With Us.

10 sci-fi, horror, and fantasy books to read ahead of their upcoming adaptations.

Censorship News

What do book challenge forms look like?

Public school textbooks are the latest target for book banners.

Why book bans are bad for mental health.

Here’s an article from Amarillo College’s online news center about the ended partnership between Storybridge and the Amarillo Independent School District (TX).

The long wait to restore the First Amendment in Llano County (TX) libraries.

I knew there was a catch…while the majority of the challenged books at Fort Worth ISD (TX) have been returned to shelves, questions still remain about how much access students will have to said books.

Granbury ISD (TX) school board member Courtney Gore ran for her seat on an extreme GOP platform, and now she’s saying that she was lied to, and there is no evidence of student indoctrination. Well, no shit, Sherlock, and maybe if more of these people would do some actual research on these conspiracy theories beforehand (like they’re always yelling at other people to do), we wouldn’t be in this position. Anyway, she’s formed a support group for people who have been alienated by the GOP’s far-right tactics, but I really wish she would put more energy into supporting intellectual freedom and fighting back against the book banning she had previously campaigned for, but I guess that’s too much to hope for.

The lawsuit against the Escambia County school district (FL) for banning And Tango Makes Three has a trial date scheduled for early 2025.

At the beginning of next school year, Clay County (FL) parents will sign an “online, hybrid opt-in/opt-out form and select one of five options to control what books will be accessible for their children: unlimited access, general access, limited access, no access or daily email alerts.” This sounds unnecessarily complicated. And what happens if a parent DOESN’T complete the form? Is their child automatically barred from accessing the library?

Pinellas County School Board (FL) member Stephanie Meyer (no, not that one) has challenged Invisible Monsters by Chuck Palahniuk.

A New Hampshire bill is moving forward that would allow parents to opt their children out of “ any ‘instruction or program of’ sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, or gender expression.”

Remember the Great Barrington (MA) teacher who threatened to file a lawsuit if the district and the town did not agree to mediation over her classroom being searched by police? Well, she filed a lawsuit.

(Paywalled): The South Western board president (PA) submitted a complaint against Flamer that ultimately led to it being banned at a Hanover-area middle school.

A federal appeals court ruled that Maryland parents can’t opt their children out of reading books with LGBTQ+ characters on the basis of religious rights.

Hanover County School Board (VA) has adopted a new policy for parents to indicate what level of access they’d like their children to have to classroom and library instructional materials. The one good thing about this is that it’s an opt-out system and if parents don’t submit the form, their children will automatically have full library access.

(Paywalled): Moore County School Board (NC) is facing a federal civil rights complaint after it ordered books featuring gay parents to be removed from elementary schools.

North Carolina parents push for a statewide ban on “explicit” books in schools.

The Alabama Public Library Service Board officially adopted the newly proposed rules that say libraries that do not restrict access to materials deemed sexually inappropriate by the APLSB could lose state funding. And now libraries must quickly restrict these “inappropriate” children’s books or risk $7 million in state funding. This is all kinds of bullshit.

Former Autauga-Prattville Public Library (AL) director Andrew Foster reached a settlement with the board over what he claimed was an unlawful termination.

Alabama’s bill that would have criminalized librarians for obscene comments has failed in the Senate.

“Three St. Tammany [LA] library board members removed after a years-long fight over book content are suing the parish council and one of its district representatives in an attempt to block their removal.“ Here’s a statement from the St. Tammany Library Alliance in support of the board members, and EveryLibrary has issued a statement as well.

Plaintiffs seek a permanent injunction of Arkansas’s blocked library obscenity law.

A group of time wasters in Daviess County (KY) have demanded a massive audit of the library’s materials, and now, months after the audit was completed, the group continues to take up a disproportionate amount of time at the monthly board meetings.

A surge in book challenges has Wisconsin school districts scrambling to keep pace.

A new Minnesota bill banning book bans has reached the governor’s desk.

Montana librarians made a silent but LOUD statement against the actions of the state library commission by refusing to show up for their annual meeting. This comes in response to the commission’s decision to sever ties with ALA, as well as the ridiculous hand-wringing over the implications of having a colorful organizational logo.

In related news, “Montana State Library Commissioner Carmen Cuthbertson on Friday compared the Montana Library Association to the Ku Klux Klan, claiming the organization sent an anonymous letter as part of boycotting a meeting.” Well alrighty then.

The Donnelly Public Library in Idaho is unable to comply with the new state legislation that requires libraries to relocate challenged or “inappropriate” materials to areas that are only accessible to adults, due to its tiny size. The library therefore announced that it will only be accessible to adult patrons 18 or older as of July 1, 2024, and all patrons will need to sign an agreement to use the library. I have no words.

Meanwhile, the Boise Public Library (ID) will be using the Miller Test to determine whether or not any books in the collection violate the new state legislation, which makes this whole farce completely pointless. If the book banners would just use the definition set by the Miller Test, WE WOULDN’T BE HAVING ARGUMENTS ABOUT PORNOGRAPHY IN LIBRARIES.

Breaking news: Uninformed Oregon resident April Bailey doesn’t understand how weeding or general collection development works.

The local chapter of Moms for Liberty reached a settlement Tuesday with Yolo County [CA] in its federal lawsuit alleging the shutdown of a contentious meeting at a Davis library last year violated the group’s civil rights.”

After announcing a ban on same-sex parenting books last week, the Western Sydney Council in Australia decided to overturn the ban.

Books & Authors in the News

How do authors get famous? By being picked for Oprah’s Book Club, or…dying.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

Caleb Azumah Nelson wins the Dylan Thomas Prize for Small Worlds.

Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck has won the 2024 International Booker Prize.

More than 200 authors have renewed their call for investment management firm Baillie Gifford, sponsor of the Baillie Gifford Prize for Nonfiction, to divest from fossil fuels, as well as “from companies that profit from Israeli apartheid, occupation and genocide.”

Pop Cultured

Only Murders in the Building gets a premiere date and a trailer.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Why do we still read books?

How “right” and “wrong” ways to be queer are changing fiction.

Inside Reese Witherspoon’s literary empire.

a brown tabby cat laying on its back and showing off its tummy

Well, that’s a tummy trap if I’ve ever seen one, but look at that face! He’s irresistible!!

Long weekend coming up! Hope the weather is good for everyone!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Polarizing Horror and Cannabis Cookbooks

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. The weather around these here Chicago parts has been GLORIOUS the last few days — it’s a shame we all have to be stuck inside working this week!

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

TikTok is going to start labeling AI-generated content as the technology becomes more universal.

In other TikTok news, TikTok creators have filed a lawsuit against the United States’ “sell or ban” law.

How TikTok is driving a book-buying renaissance.

New & Upcoming Titles

Next to Heaven is an anonymously written novel that was just picked up for a TV adaptation before publishing rights had been sold. (Except it’s not anonymous anymore — the author is James Frey.)

Ken Follett has moved to Hachette for his next novel, which will be released in 2025.

Winnie Dunn becomes the first Tongan-Australian author to publish a novel in Australia.

Former German Chancellor Angela Merkel is publishing a memoir in November.

Attica Locke is publishing the final book in her Highway 59 crime novel trilogy this summer!

Willie Nelson is publishing a cannabis cookbook.

Another lost story from Terry Pratchett has been found and will be included in the upcoming paperback edition of A Stroke of the Pen, out in September.

Roxane Gay’s Bad Feminist is being re-released with a pink cover in celebration of its 10th anniversary.

Cover reveal for Nalo Hopkinson’s Jamaica Ginger and Other Concoctions.

Here’s an excerpt from Stephen King’s upcoming short story collection, You Like it Darker.

And here’s a sneak peek at Grady Hendrix’s upcoming horror novel, Witchcraft for Wayward Girls, which is described as Rosemary’s Baby set in a home for unwed mothers in 1970s Florida. Sign me the fork up.

Gothic fiction coming out in 2024.

New fake-dating romance novels.

Weekly picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, New York Times, Parade.

May picks from People.

June picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, teens, children)

Summer picks from Atlantic, L.A. Times, Seattle Times.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

All Fours – Miranda July (Guardian, L.A. Times, New York Times, People, Washington Post)

Henry Henry – Allen Bratton (Guardian, New York Times)

Challenger: A True Story of Heroism and Disaster on the Edge of Space – Adam Higginbotham (New York Times, Washington Post)

What a Fool Believes – Michael McDonald (People, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

How to read the Bridgerton books in order (and how they differ from the show).

Charlie Jane Anders picks multiple new SFF releases in May and highlights a split in the world of genre fiction: cozy fantasy or dark science fiction?

There’s an increase in the number of astrology & tarot-themed romance novels.

On the literature of the small town.

On the Riot

10 new fantasy books by Asian and Pacific Islander authors.

The most-anticipated books of the summer, according to Goodreads.

Most-anticipated mysteries/thrillers and SFF/H of 2024, according to Goodreads.

The best BIPOC new releases.

7 must-read new LGBTQ+ books.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

New beach reads for your book club.

All Things Comics

Heartstopper Season 3 gets a new teaser trailer and a release date.

The 2024 Eisner Award nominees have been released.

Audiophilia

On the Riot

6 of the best free audiobook apps to curl up with.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

10 picture books with a touch of dark humor.

The ultimate summer reading list for kids ages 3-5.

10 excellent books for fifth-grade readers.

Adults

7 books about life in Japan before modern technology.

6 of the best queer mysteries.

Time travel books for people who don’t like science fiction.

Books featuring superstitions.

The best books to gift to high school graduates.

On the Riot

10 queer board books for baby’s first library.

10 moving and fantastical books like Miyazaki’s The Boy and the Heron.

8 of the most polarizing horror novels ever written. (Jack Ketchum’s The Girl Next Door always makes the list, which was so upsetting it legitimately made me question why I read horror in the first place. So, you know…be cautious with these books.)

8 cozy books about bakeries.

7 books for better mental health.

8 thought-provoking fantasy books.

8 books about mermaids.

Romance novels written by Asian North American writers.

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 Edelweiss has a new catalog dedicated to diverse titles, which is managed by Early Word Galley Chatter Vicki Nesting. Check it out!

a brown tabby cat looking adorably startled

This was Jonesy’s expression when Blaine told him we were taking him to the vet this week.

Well, that’s all I have for now. Be back on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Strange Lives of Book Husbands

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. My husband sent me this TikTok and all I can say is please…please…don’t be late to work on the first day of summer reading.

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Inside libraries’ battle for better eBook access.

Book Adaptations in the News

Universal Television has acquired the rights to Jana Monroe’s memoir, Hearts of Darkness: Serial Killers, The Behavioral Science Unit, And My Life As a Woman In The FBI.

Alice Sadie Celine will be adapted for film.

The Maze Runner is getting a reboot.

Andy Serkis is directing and starring in the latest Lord of the Rings project: The Hunt for Gollum.

First look at The Lady in the Lake.

Here’s the trailer for the film adaptation of Wicked.

And here’s the trailer for The Rings of Power Season 2.

Censorship News

How to prepare for Pride Month in libraries this year.

OK, Groomer: a reporter’s dispatch from the trenches of the gender and sexuality wars in schools across the US portends a perilous future for LGBTQ teens.

Here’s who is behind the battle of the school book fairs.

The long history of censorship in prisons.

Fort Worth ISD (TX) released a list of books returning to library shelves after a nine-month review. (This may be paywalled.)

Montgomery County (TX) libraries are dealing with a group of book banning activists that call themselves “Two Moms and Some Books.”

The Cy-Fair ISD school board (TX) removes mentions of vaccines, climate change, and cultural diversity from textbooks. (This may be paywalled.)

A new coalition of Christian nationalist groups is mobilizing congregations to take over Texas school boards.

The Hernando County School Board (FL) voted to permanently remove 20 of 21 challenged titles, overturning the decisions made by 13 different committees to retain the books.

Stratford (CT) school librarians face unemployment as the town weighs budget cuts.

North Hunterdon-Voorhees Regional High School District (NJ) voted to retain Let’s Talk About It.

Five of the six books challenged in the Transylvania County School District (PA) will remain on shelves. (The sixth book is still being reviewed.)

Warwick School District (PA) is discussing changes to the school’s book challenge policy.

A member of the New Hanover County School Board (NC) wrote an opinion piece about the activism being promoted in statewide “Battle of the Books” programs.

A proposed budget would eliminate all school librarian positions in Franklin County (NC), and yes, this is 100% tied to censorship efforts.

The state of book bans: South Carolina is poised to get worse.

The National Women’s Law Center filed two civil rights complaints against Georgia and Florida school districts for censoring inclusive books.

Librarians and advocates sue to block restrictive new Alabama library policies.

EveryLibrary supports the plaintiffs in the Autauga-Prattville Lawsuit against discriminatory library policies. Meanwhile, the interim director has pulled 60 books for review based on a list from a right-wing book ban group, but don’t worry!! The interim director says that the books haven’t actually been removed from the library – just taken out of the catalog. (This same director also refused to talk to the Alabama Political Reporter because she considers them “fake news.” Real great leader they’ve got over there).

A Huntsville (AL) librarian speaks out on a bill that could penalize librarians.

The Arkansas State Library Board on Friday voted down two motions to withhold state funding from libraries suing the state until litigation is concluded.

The New Orleans Public Library made changes to their youth library cards in response to new legislation that requires libraries to have a procedure in place to prevent kids from checking out potentially inappropriate materials. Parents now have to re-up their kids’ library cards as a result of this new policy, which means a ton of kids are going to lose library access because their parents aren’t able to get them to the library to renew the cards.

The Enid Public Library board (OK) has banned Pride displays this year, marking the third year of battles over LGBTQ displays.

Colorado lawmakers have passed an anti-book ban bill that now sits on the governor’s desk.

Garfield County (CO) library board appointments drew a crowd of protestors after county commissioners took over the selection process.

“Wyoming’s largest school district is considering a library book procurement policy for controversial sexually themed materials that, if passed, would likely be the strictest in the state.” This is Laramie County School District No. 1.

“The Larsen-Sant Public Library in Preston [ID] will temporarily restrict public access to its building starting Monday in response to a new law that opens libraries to lawsuits if minors access inappropriate content on the shelves.”

Related: Library officials in Idaho say that the new state law about harmful material is “vague and difficult to implement.” As it was designed to be.

The Ketchikan School Board (AK) voted to retain Red Hood by Elena Arnold.

(Paywalled): “Copycat” book bans: How US activists are impacting Australian libraries.

“A Sydney council has voted to place a blanket ban on same-sex parenting books from local libraries in a move the New South Wales government warns could be a breach of the state’s Anti-Discrimination Act.”

Books & Authors in the News

Nobel Prize-winning author Alice Munro has died at 92.

Writers who have withdrawn support from PEN America for the organization’s response to the war in Gaza organized their own event: Freedom to Write for Palestine. Related: what’s wrong with PEN America and why we need it to survive.

Colson Whitehead pulls out as a commencement speaker at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, which he said is due to the school’s leadership decision to use police force to disperse a group of students protesting the crisis in Palestine.

Colleen Hoover is a wildly successful author, so why has she stopped writing?

Numbers & Trends

The most-read books on Goodreads last week.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

The CWA Daggers shortlists have been announced.

Barnes & Noble reveals their Children’s & Young Adult Book winners.

The 2024 Locus Awards finalists have been released.

Pop Cultured

Michelle Yeoh is starring in Amazon’s Blade Runner 2049 sequel series.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

TikTok and the National Literacy Trust (NLT) are partnering to bring 20 bookshelves to 11 UK areas. “The partnership entails TikTok paying for books that will be selected by NLT youth volunteers, and placed in areas that have high foot traffic, like around youth clubs and community centers.”

CNN does a deep dive into the concept of the “beach read.”

Against the objectification of books.

The strange lives of “book husbands.”

a brown tabby cat showing its tummy to a woman, who looks scared to pet the tummy

I know Jonesy’s tummy is a trap, but when he rolls over and looks this adorable, I can’t help myself!

Okay, friends. It’s the weekend! Have a good one, and I’ll be back on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

AAPI Heritage Month Reads

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I was frustrated to learn this week that Publishers Weekly has recently implemented a paywall that limits non-subscribers to 5 free articles/reviews per month. I have access to the print version of PW at work, but I rely heavily on their online access to put together these newsletters, so this is going to be a pain in the ass moving forward. (As library folks, I imagine many of you are in the same boat as well.)

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

OpenAI, “mass scraper of copyrighted work,” claims copyright over the logo used by the ChatGPT subreddit. Oh, how the turn tables.

How TikTok Shop ads turned an obscure, inaccurate book about herbal remedies into a bestseller.

The book publishing industry is in crisis, so why is it so hard to talk about the labor that goes into making books?

New & Upcoming Titles

Here’s a peek at Whoopi Goldberg’s new memoir, Bits and Pieces: My Mother, My Brother, and Me.

Kenny G is publishing a memoir this fall.

Priscilla Presley is publishing a new memoir.

We’re getting a new horror novel published posthumously from George A. Romero, and co-written with Daniel Kraus.

Neil Gorsuch is publishing a memoir this summer.

Here’s a new anthology of psychological horror stories, edited (of course) by Ellen Datlow. I WANT.

A look at Alina Grabowski’s novel Women and Children First, which Vogue describes as “a mystery for people who don’t think they like mysteries.”

And here’s a first look at the long-lost novel from Peter Beagle, which is coming out this month.

Cover reveal for Trang Thanh Tran’s latest YA horror novel, They Bloom at Night.

Cover reveal for Ann Hood’s The Stolen Child.

10 new mysteries and thrillers coming out in May.

20 of the most addictive books of 2024 (so far).

Here are the big book club picks for May.

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

May picks from Crime Reads (international crime fiction), People, Reactor (fantasy).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Coming Home – Brittney Griner (New York Times, Time, USA Today, Washington Post)

Rebel Girl: My Life as a Feminist Punk – Kathleen Hanna (Time, Washington Post)

Long Island – Colm Toíbín (New York Times, NPR)

RA/Genre Resources

Against the term “Latin American literature.”

Why we love time travel stories.

On the Riot

New YA books by Asian American and Pacific Islander authors.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

The best new BIPOC books out last week.

5 new LGBTQ YA and children’s books and 7 new queer books for adults released last week.

12 book club picks for May 2024.

New book club books to celebrate AAPI Heritage Month.

All Things Comics

On the Riot

Horror comics to give you the chills.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

20 books for kids that celebrate mothers and caregivers.

Adults

116 (!) books to read for Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month.

The best books to read for Mother’s Day.

Spicy, sports-themed romance novels to read if you’re obsessed with Challengers.

5 novels to transport you to wild worlds.

9 books featuring fascinating mother-daughter relationships.

7 books to expand your view of the world.

7 heart-wrenching Chinese family sagas.

8 of the greatest campus novels ever written.

6 books featuring killer women.

20 romance novels for fans of Bridgerton.

8 books inspired by Asian mythology.

On the Riot

9 of the best memoirs to read.

10 of the best spy novels to keep you turning the pages.

12 immersive romantic adventure stories to take you away.

10 excellent epic fantasy debuts.

The most popular histories and biographies of the last 10 years.

8 of the best translated historical fiction novels.

7 unforgettable Indigenous historical fiction 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 Edelweiss has a new catalog dedicated to diverse titles, which is managed by Early Word Galley Chatter Vicki Nesting. Check it out!

a brown tabby cat and a black and white cat sitting in separate cardboard boxes

Look at these two knuckleheads!! They were very excited when the new cat tree we ordered came with not one but TWO boxes for them to sit in! For a few short minutes, there was no fighting and no shenanigans. Just peaceful co-existence.

All right, friends. I’ll be back on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Fyre Festival of Books

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’ve been invited to a Pride party by a couple of friends who recently moved back to the area, and I have NO idea what I’m going to wear! My first thought was to get a Drag Race T-shirt that says “Because reading is what?! FUNDAMENTAL!” so that I can wear it to work, but a party thrown by friends I haven’t seen in a long time seems to call for something a little more creative. I’ll have to think on it.

Looking for a thoughtful Mother’s Day gift? Go beyond the tried and true flowers and chocolate and give the gift of reading with Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists are standing by to help your mom find her next favorite read, delivered right to her inbox or doorstep. And with gifts starting at just $18, there’s something for any budget! Head to mytbr.co/gift to send the gift of reading to the book nerd in your life!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The 2024 Library Systems Report has been released.

Democratic Utah gubernatorial candidate Brian King has selected University of Utah Associate Librarian Rebekah Cummings as his running mate.

Hoopla partners with Pokémon to offer new BingePass offerings.

Rare editions of Pushkin are vanishing from libraries around Europe.

Cool Library Updates

More than 400 self-service kiosks will be added to Georgia public libraries to help residents update their social services benefits for free.

Book Adaptations in the News

Siân Heder, director of Coda, will be directing the adaptation of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow.

Shōgun director Jonathan Van Tulleken is adapting Andrew Michael Hurley’s novel The Loney for TV.

Bridgerton creator Chris Van Dusen is developing a series adaptation of Girl Abroad by Elle Kennedy.

Colleen Hoover’s Verity is being adapted for film by Amazon MGM.

Hulu’s adaptation of Mexican Gothic is no longer moving forward.

An update on Greta Gerwig’s adaptation of The Chronicles of Narnia.

Here’s the trailer for Queenie.

The literary film & TV to stream in May.

Censorship News

Book Riot’s very own intellectual freedom advocate, Kelly Jensen, has been named one of Library Journal’s 2024 Movers & Shakers!!

Are librarians criminals? These bills would make them so.

Book banners take the fight to public libraries.

You know the sh*t has hit the fan when John Oliver talks about the battle against public libraries on Last Week Tonight.

Asian American authors face growing book bans, threats, and challenges.

A look at the book banning history of Robert Cormier’s The Chocolate War.

Cypress-Fairbanks ISD (TX) cut 50 school librarian positions, which were made via email sent after business hours, which I think is very representative of the current lack of respect towards librarians.

A look at how the Florida DOE’s confusing memo from October 2023 led to school districts removing hundreds of books in fear of being out of compliance with the state law.

A handful of parents are upset that the Duval School District (FL) maintains a relationship with the Jacksonville Public Library because the public library offers eBook access via Libby, which, to these people, is a way to “clandestinely” provide access to inappropriate materials.

A federal judge has ruled that the First Amendment lawsuit against the Escambia County School Board (FL) for removing And Tango Makes Three may proceed. However, allegations against state education officials and leaders of the Lake County School District in the same lawsuit were dismissed.

In December, Great Barrington (MA) police searched an 8th-grade teacher’s classroom looking for a copy of Gender Queer, and now the teacher has said that if the town and the school district refuse mediation, she will file a lawsuit.

New York State Education Commissioner Betty Rosa determined that a number of challenged books in the Clyde-Savannah Junior-Senior High School Library will stay. “Rosa wrote that the petitioners did not show that the school board’s determination to retain the books was unlawful. She wrote that ‘petitioners have otherwise failed to demonstrate that the challenged books here lack literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Indeed petitioners do not even allege that they have read the books in question.’”

(Paywalled): “Emails obtained by The York Dispatch [PA] document secret meetings and behind-the-scenes coordination between school board members who’ve pushed book bans and anti-LGBTQ+ policies and the political action committee that helped elect them.”

Spartanburg County School District (SC) removes dozens of books under their strict new content policy, including The Perks of Being a Wallflower and The Handmaid’s Tale.

“County libraries would have to restrict children’s access to sexual books under a budget directive approved by the South Carolina Senate and opposed by librarians as overstepping local control.” Conservatives are always in favor of small government, except when they’re not.

“About 80 speakers showed up Tuesday to voice their opinion on Gov. Kay Ivey’s proposed changes to the Alabama Public Library Service administrative code that would require new policies for libraries to receive state aid.” Spoiler alert: few people support the governor’s proposals.

The Louisiana House Committee on Municipal, Parochial and Cultural Affairs shelved two library bills, one of which would have criminalized librarians for using public funds on ALA memberships and trainings.

The Campbell County Public Library (WY) voted to keep Identical in the recently created new adult section because the board decided that it was inappropriate for teens. (The ACLU is investigating whether this can be considered a First Amendment violation.) One of the trustees was quoted as saying, “‘What about the kids that don’t have these problems and they end up coming across this book and get subjected to these things?’…‘What about protecting them?’” Great way of saying that there’s only one group of students you care about supporting.

“So far, more than 60% of Laramie County School District 1 [WY] parents and guardians have opted to give their children, regardless of grade level, open access to all books in their school library.” And I’d be willing to bet that most of the remaining 40% of parents are simply unaware that they need to “opt in” in order for their children to access the library.

The Fremont County Commission (WY) threatened to take over the public library board if the library didn’t finalize their board review policy, install internet filters in the children’s department, and cease “inappropriate behaviors.” But a former Wyoming AG says that the county commission can’t actually do that.

Jordan School District (UT) officials canceled an assignment from a high school class that involved a student essay published in the New York Times about being trans. The essay didn’t contain any content that would have required its removal per state law, but the school removed it anyway. Once again, it’s not about sexual content — it’s about disapproval of trans people and pushing a conservative agenda on students.

Research presented at the Oregon Library Association conference shows that the language used to challenge books has become significantly more violent.

“Parents of children at Mountainview Elementary School in the Saugus Union School District [CA] posted on social media they saw members of the PTA hiding the books and asking to have them removed from the book fair, allegedly contending they were not age-appropriate for elementary school children.” The books in question were The Insiders by Mark Oshiro and Fighting Words by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley.

“A petition launched by a group of Niagara-on-the-Lake [Ontario] residents is calling on the town to enforce what they say are the library’s own policies to be ‘neutral’ when selecting books for its shelves.” Except the petition is in response to the library board firing the CEO in late March, and after reading the article, I’m still not sure what the end goal of this petition is supposed to be.

Books & Authors in the News

PEN America has canceled its 2024 World Voices Festival amid further fallout over the organization’s response to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

Kristi Noem’s upcoming book already has some factual issues. And apparently, Amazon is “killing mean reviews” of Noem’s book.

Oprah picks Long Island by Colm Tóibín as her latest book club pick.

Numbers & Trends

Gen Z and millennials love reading books, but being a “reader” means something more.

More than a quarter of YA readers are over 28 years old.

An increasing number of kids no longer read for fun by third or fourth grade.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

The 2024 Pulitzer Prize winners were announced.

The Edgar Award winners have been announced! And I want to do a shoutout for the winner of the Mary Higgins Clark Award, Play the Fool by Lina Chern, because I found out last week that she’s the sister of one of my coworkers! What a small, small world!

Pop Cultured

Sean Connery wrote an unmade James Bond movie featuring robot sharks. And now I’m legally, morally, and spiritually obligated to quote Dr. Evil: “You know, I have one simple request, and that is to have sharks with frickin’ laser beams attached to their heads!”

Sony is going to try remaking Clue for film and TV.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Not really sure where this news should go, but a recent reader conference in Denver has been dubbed “the Fyre Festival of books,” and apparently descended into chaos, ending in reports of injury and violence (which the conference organizer referred to as “bumpy bumps”) and a social media apology from Rebecca Yarros.

Reese’s Book Club has partnered with…Taco Bell?

a black cat and a brown tabby cat sitting in front of a window

If Jonesy could speak English, I imagine he’d be saying, “WHAT?? WE’RE NOT DOIN NOTHIN!”

All right friends. Have a good weekend, and I’ll be back on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Why Bother Writing Books?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’ve recently discovered the scrapbooking corner of TikTok, which has reignited my hyperfixation with junk journals. I think junk journaling is the perfect blend of Katie-interests – it’s an easy form of creative expression, but it’s also an excuse to create an elaborate organization system for my magazine clippings and ephemera! So…that’s how I spent my weekend.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Why bother writing books?: Honest thoughts on the future of publishing.

AI is contentious among writers. So why are some feeding it their own writing?

Authors stand to lose so much from a potential TikTok ban.

New & Upcoming Titles

Rutgers University history professor David Greenberg is publishing a biography of John Lewis.

T.J. Newman has signed a two-book deal with Little, Brown.

Jill Santopolo will be publishing a sequel to The Light We Lost.

Wednesday is getting a YA novelization.

Yellowjackets actress Nicole Maines is publishing a memoir.

Cover reveal for Alan Moore’s novel, The Great When.

Cover reveal for Josh Brolin’s upcoming memoir, From Under the Truck.

Here’s a sneak peek at Rainbow Rowell’s upcoming novel, Slow Dance.

15 indie press books to read this spring.

The recent popularity of pop culture cookbooks.

Weekly picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, Parade, Wall Street Journal.

May picks from Alta, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kirkus, New York Times, People, Time, Washington Post.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Real Americans – Rachel Khong (Datebook, New York Times, NPR, Time, Washington Post)

The Ministry of Time – Kaliane Bradley (Guardian, Washington Post)

Rebel Girl: My Life as a Feminist Punk – Kathleen Hanna (LA Times, New York Times)

Disability Intimacy: Essays on Love, Care, and Desire – Alice Wong (ed) (LA Times, People)

The Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War – Erik Larson (New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

The New York Times is taking a page out of NPR’s book and has created a resource that compiles all of their best-reviewed fiction and nonfiction since 2000.

Edgar Award nominees gather for a round table discussion on the state of the crime novel.

Why Australia makes such a good setting for thrillers.

The essential Joan Didion.

The anti-romance novel reader’s guide to romance novels.

Exploring diverse representation of women in historical mysteries.

Cookbooks have always been political, whether readers knew it or not.

On the Riot

The best weekly releases to TBR.

New May releases for mysteries/thrillers, romance, SFF, horror, nonfiction, children’s books.

The best book club books out in May.

All Things Comics

On the Riot

8 of the best graphic novels and comics out in May 2024.

Audiophilia

“Audible will begin testing a new feature that recommends audiobook titles based on users’ Prime Video viewing activity.”

The best audiobooks of April.

The May 2024 Earphones Award winners have been announced.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

The best books for young birdwatchers.

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

10 authentic middle grade books about autism.

Adults

5 SFF mysteries you won’t be able to put down.

10 books to read after you finish watching Shōgun.

Strange, sad books about evil mothers.

Fiction about true crime.

The best fiction and nonfiction by Asian and Asian American authors.

Crime novels with a sense of place and manners.

5 of the best books about eating.

What to read after watching Fallout.

33 books for every type of mom.

On the Riot

9 memorable Mother’s Day books for kids.

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 Edelweiss has a new catalog dedicated to diverse titles, which is managed by Early Word Galley Chatter Vicki Nesting. Check it out!

a close up of a brown tabby cat with the tip of its tongue sticking out

This is typically how I look by the end of the work week.

Well, that’s it for today. I’ll be back on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Fighting Satan’s Influence in the Public Library

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m compiling this newsletter on May 1st, which is also the 25th anniversary of Spongebob (talk about feeling old)! My sister and I have already engaged in a lengthy debate about the ranked episodes in the article, and boy do I have some THOUGHTS.

Looking for a thoughtful Mother’s Day gift? Go beyond the tried and true flowers and chocolate and give the gift of reading with Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists are standing by to help your mom find her next favorite read, delivered right to her inbox or doorstep. And with gifts starting at just $18, there’s something for any budget! Head to mytbr.co/gift to send the gift of reading to the book nerd in your life!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The FCC voted to restore net neutrality rules.

Cool Library Updates

The Milwaukee Public Library has been nominated for a Peabody Award for its work on social media.

USA Today has a profile on Mychal Threets.

Book Adaptations in the News

Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian is being adapted for film.

Elliot Page’s production company is adapting Eliot Schrefer’s YA sci-fi novel, The Darkness Outside Us.

Censorship News

How to fight book bans in 2024.

A middle school banned book club makes good trouble on a national scale.

Amarillo ISD (TX) recently canceled their partnership with Storybridge, a program that provides free access to children’s books for families in low-income areas. The reason? A parent complained because one of the books given away featured a family with two dads, so the district ended the program.

Fort Worth ISD (TX) is returning some banned books to library shelves after over 100 books were initially pulled by the district for review. How many are being returned? Unclear. And amidst these challenges and school district budget cuts, eight Fort Worth ISD schools will lose their full-time librarians.

A college student at the University of Florida challenged two books in Alachua County (FL) schools, but the district needs to determine if this student meets the residency requirements for filing a challenge in the first place.

The Cumberland Valley School Board (PA) voted to reinstate Maulik Pancholy’s author visit, which was canceled after parents and trustees complained about the author’s “lifestyle.” (Pancholy is gay.) My friends in reading, it is 2024. Why is this even still a thing?

Maryland’s Freedom to Read Act was signed into law. “The act requires local school officials to manage library programs and not exclude or remove materials “because of partisan, ideological, or religious disapproval.” Meanwhile, Carroll County commissioners want to withhold funding for the public library because the staff supported the Freedom to Read Act.

The Rockingham County School Board (VA) apparently has two different review policies depending on whether or not the book is being challenged for sexually explicit content.

Cobb County School District (GA) removed four more books for containing “lewd, vulgar and sexually graphic content.”

Georgia is stopping a bookstore from sending books to prisons.

“The Alabama House approved HB385 Thursday, which would allow for the prosecution of librarians who fail to remove the challenged materials in a timely manner.” They also approved HB130, which would prohibit teachers from teaching about gender ideology in 6th – 8th grades.

Twenty-six books have been banned this year in Rutherford County Schools (TN).

A group of right-wing Catholics showed up to pray the rosary over offensive books at the Mercer County (OH) Public Library.

“The school district’s plan to offer an optional class for some first graders at Schavey Road Elementary School on the use of pronouns by individuals drew backlash, enough that by Friday the district had reversed course and canceled the plan announced to parents in an April 11 letter.” This is in Michigan, and again, the chief word here is optional.

Dragon Ball Z has been challenged at the Eau Claire School District (WI) for nudity and sexualized content.

A pastor vows to fight Satan’s influence at the local library. (This is part of the ongoing coverage in Metropolis, IL.)

A school board member in the Anoka-Hennepin School District (MN) is threatening a budget standoff if the district doesn’t scrap its plans for programs aimed at racial and gender equity. This is apparently considered the “spreading of divisive, one-sided views.”

“American Booksellers for Free Expression (ABFE), the free expression initiative of the American Booksellers Association, has filed an amicus brief in support of two lawsuits that challenge parts of Iowa’s “Don’t Say Gay” and book banning law.”

The Campbell County Public Library (WY) will allow two of its staff members to attend an online ALA course, despite the library cutting ties with ALA over a year ago. Yes, this is what counts as news now.

Colorado lawmakers make a second attempt at curbing book bans in public libraries.

“The law states that any parents or child, whether they’re a resident of Idaho or not, can complain about a book they deem to be inappropriate for their child’s age group…After receiving the complaint the library has 30 days to relocate that book to an adults-only area, if not they will have a monetary penalty.” This is the legislation that Idaho governor Brad Little recently signed, where apparently anyone can issue a challenge and libraries are forced to comply.

The Washoe County Library (NV) “rejects book bans pushed by conservative activists.”

Seaside Public Library (OR) is dealing with city councilors who are eager to ban books and who offer solutions like allowing parents to restrict their kids from entire sections of the library. I’m guessing that none of them have thought about how a restriction like that would be enforced.

“California lawmakers recently voted down a bill requiring school boards to ban books with “harmful material” from libraries and classrooms, legislation that would have given parents the ability to sue those that did not comply.”

Books & Authors in the News

Author Paul Auster has died at 77.

Dracula Daily starts again on May 3rd.

Numbers & Trends

Farshore and HarperCollins Children’s Books released a report on children’s reading habits and trends.

The most-read books on Goodreads this week.

The best-selling books of the week.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Fall in love with Charlotte’s (NC) romance book store on wheels.

On the Riot

Adaptation roundup for May 2024.

a white cat jammed between a window pane and the window screen

In celebration of my parents’ new cat having full reign of the house, I present this photo of Oliver, who managed to cram himself in between the window pane and the screen. My mom thought for a second he had somehow snuck outside.

Well, I’m off to watch some Spongebob. Hope everyone has a good weekend!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Small Town, Big Crime

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Last night as I was falling asleep, my brain reminded me in a very forceful way that a major election year is upon us. Obviously, this isn’t something I had actually forgotten, and November is still six months away, so I was very confused as to why my brain picked that moment to startle me awake. Hopefully, this isn’t an omen of how the next six months are going to go.

Looking to elevate your reading life? Tailored Book Recommendations is here to help with handpicked recommendations. Tell the Bibliologists at Tailored Book Recommendations about what you love and what you don’t. You can get your recommendations via email or receive hardcovers or paperbacks in the mail. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Plans start at just $18! Subscribe today.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Rebel Wilson’s memoir is being redacted in the UK for statements made in regards to actor Sacha Baron Cohen.

Children’s publishers are embracing the Taylor Swift factor.

One person says that no one buys books anymore, and another says “Au contraire!”

A look at how a possible TikTok ban could devastate online communities, including BookTok.

AI and the end of the human writer.

New & Upcoming Titles

Farrah Rochon is publishing a new book that tells the untold origin story of the five muses from Disney’s Hercules! I AM HERE FOR THIS!

Jake Tapper has sold the rights to his upcoming thriller, The Terrorist Detectives.

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

May picks from People.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Finish What We Started: The MAGA Movement’s Ground War to End Democracy – Isaac Arnsdorf (New York Times)

Real Americans – Rachel Khong (LA Times)

Somehow: Thoughts on Love – Anne Lamott (New York Times)

The Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War – Erik Larson (Washington Post)

The Age of Magical Overthinking: Notes on Modern Irrationality – Amanda Montell (Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

Why we’re all swooning for romance books.

8 Jude Deveraux books to knock your socks off.

On the Riot

The most popular nonfiction books of 2024 so far, according to Goodreads.

The best & buzziest LGBTQ fantasy books of 2024.

24 of the best book covers of 2024, so far.

8 must-read spring 2024 new releases in translation.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

10 TikTok book reviewers you should be following.

Recent romantasy and other romance books for your book club.

All Things Comics

R. L. Stine is publishing a YA graphic novel series with BOOM! Studios: The Graveyard Club.

Frank Miller strikes a partnership with Abrams ComicArts.

And in more ComicArts news, ComicArts is launching a new manga imprint.

Post Malone is partnering with Vault Comics to create an all-new IP universe based on an original story by Malone.

How comic books are becoming more accessible.

Audiophilia

On the Riot

10 of the best Spotify audiobooks.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

8 baseball books for kids that hit a grand slam.

Adults

Reading recommendations based on your favorite Taylor Swift era.

What to read next: Earth Day edition.

The best romance novels of all time.

8 novels about returning to the places we leave behind.

7 genre-smashing horror novels in translation.

8 books that explore generational conflict through genre.

7 books about fictional technologies with world-altering consequences.

9 books about invisible disabilities.

5 novels about hauntings.

Small town, big crime.

10 great books about books.

On the Riot

8 children’s books about rocks.

8 grim and gruesome medical horror books.

Empowering LGBTQ+ self-improvement and wellness books.

Listen to The Tortured Poets Department, then read these books.

8 sci-noir books that blend genres.

10 of the slowest slow-burn romances ever written.

Books on pregnancy and parenting for first-time parents.

9 of the best queer cozy mysteries.

12 of the best romancifi books to read when you’re tired of romantasy.

9 must-read historical fantasy books.

8 mystery novels about reporters and journalists solving crimes.

Historical spy 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 Edelweiss has a new catalog dedicated to diverse titles, which is managed by Early Word Galley Chatter Vicki Nesting. Check it out!

a brown tabby cat with three of its paws up by its head

Blaine calls this “couch yoga.” I call it “If you’re not careful, you’re going to get stuck like that!”

All right, that’s all I have for today. Catch you on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.