Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book: The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson

Welcome to Read This Book, a weekly newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!

This week’s picks is one of my favorite books of 2020–The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson! To say that this book might be the favorite of the year is no exaggeration–I loved every bit of it!

Content warning: domestic abuse

Cara lives in the future, where walled cities are home to the wealthy and privileged, and communities just outside consist mainly of people of color who struggle to make ends meet in a world vastly affected by climate change. Cara is one of the lucky ones–she’s got a job with the corporation that has perfected multiverse travel, and she works as a traverser. She’s one of the most valuable traversers, in fact, because you can’t travel to worlds where your counterpart is alive, and thanks to her rough upbringing, most of Cara’s doppelgängers are dead. She just needs to keep her head down for four more years and she can apply for citizenship in the city. Cara passes time by flirting with her unavailable handler, Dell, and helping out her family outside the city the best she can. But when she’s sent on a routine mission to a new world where her doppelgänger has recently been murdered, Cara discovers that she’s a pawn in a vast conspiracy–and she has to decide what she’ll do about it.

Cara is the kind of character I love to read–tough but emotionally vulnerable, resourceful but grappling with a secret past that could undo everything in the space of a breath. While the beginning does feel like a bit of a big info-dump, if you stick with it for thirty pages, you begin to get a sense for what a creative, complicated, and vivid world Johnson has created. The social and economical stratifications aren’t so far removed from our own world, and if Cara comes across as hardened, it’s because she grew up in a tough world. You also won’t have to wait very long for the twists to start hitting–Cara is much more complicated than she first appears, and readers will want to pay attention as tiny reveals change your entire understanding of Cara and her world(s). And they never stop, either–chapter after chapter, new twists and surprise developments keep you on your toes. Some of them you’ll see coming, some of them will take you by surprise, but they never stop thrilling, even up until the very end of the book.

I also love that Cara is casually queer in a way where her sexuality isn’t really a big deal, but it does play an important role in the book. Her yearning for Dell, a privileged woman she can’t have, is a huge source of angst, and also symbolic of all the things that Cara wants but can’t have. It also provides wonderful tension as the reader is left to wonder just how much Dell understands about Cara and her secrets. While I won’t say how that pans out, I can tell you that this is not a tragic queer story!

I could go on for pages about why I love this book, but suffice to say it’s one that I know I’ll want to re-read at some point in the future, for enjoyment and also to just marvel at how Johnson put such a complicated story together. I’ve not read this level of plotting since Leigh Bardugo’s Six of Crows and Ninth House, and honestly, it’s thrilling to know that you’re reading a complicated story masterfully executed!

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, All the Books, and Twitter.

If someone forwarded this newsletter to you, click here to subscribe.

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Book Radar

Channing Tatum Wrote a Picture Book and More Book Radar!

Hey there, book nerds! Happy September! I hope your week so far is great, and that you’re reading something excellent. I’m excited for all the new books hitting shelves this month, but a little concerned about my ability to actually read them all. I’m ever the optimist, though!

I’ve got tons of news and excitement, and some new book love below! Here we go!

Trivia question: In what year was the first New York Review of Books published?

Deals and Squeals

I am so thrilled to see Amazon is adapting Kacen Callender’s Felix Ever After into a TV series.

I forgot to mention it earlier this week, but John Green’s next book is coming next year and it’s a work of nonfiction!

Nic Cage is voicing the dragon in the adaptation of Eoin Colfer’s High Fire.

In the category of “awwwwww” Channing Tatum has written a picture book! The One and Only Sparkella will be out next May.

The next LibrariesTransform pick has been chosen!

The Three-Body Problem is being adapted into a Netflix TV series by the same duo who brought Game of Thrones to the small screen.

Emma Roberts has signed a deal with Hulu to adapt books for the streaming service, and her first pick is Tell Me Lies by Carola Lovering.

Johnny Depp is filing to delay the defamation trial that’s ongoing against his ex-wife, so he can continue filming the third Fantastic Beasts movie in London.

Alyssa Cole talks with the New York Times about her switch from romance to the thriller genre.

Riot Recommendations

At Book Riot, I’m a cohost with Liberty on All the Books!, plus I write a handful of newsletters including the weekly Read This Book newsletter, cohost the Insiders Read Harder podcast, and write content for the site. I’m always drowning in books, so here’s what’s on my radar this week!

Want to read: When No One is Watching by Alyssa Cole

I just got my copy of Alyssa Cole’s new thriller earlier this week and I am so excited to dive in! When Jamie, our resident mystery expert and Unusual Suspects newsletter writer, says it’s one of the best mystery/thrillers she’s read all year, I pay attention! This is the story of Sydney, a Black woman who lives in Brooklyn and is mad when a local history tour guide offers tours of her neighborhood, but doesn’t acknowledge the contributions of its Black residents. She offers her own counter-tours, and even takes on a research assistant in Theo, a white man, but when she begins noticing that her Black neighbors aren’t just moving to the suburbs, but disappearing, they are on to a chilling case.

Books I’ve Acquired This Week:

Transcendant Kingdom by Yan Gyasi

Premeditated Myrtle by Elizabeth C. Bunce (I love Bunce’s YA novels, and this middle grade book looks so fun!)

A Rogue of One’s Own by Evie Dunmore

Trivia answer: 1963

That’s it for me, book nerds! I leave you with this photo of a sticker that reads “Let’s Taco Bout Books,” which delights me to no end. Do you collect bookish stickers or other swag? You can buy this one here.

Happy reading!

Tirzah

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Kidlit Deals for September 2, 2020

Hey there, kidlit pals! Happy September! I know most of you are all back to school and no matter what that looks like for you, I hope you’re staying healthy and safe and wearing your masks! If you’re looking for something to make the school year a little sweeter, grab some of these amazing kidlit book deals! They’re perfect for independent reading and read alouds alike!

As always, prices may change. Snag these deals while they last!

Read a classic! Mr. Popper’s Penguins by Florence and Richard Atwater is just $1.

a volcano smokes and giant eyes look out from behind it. in the foreground, a teenage boy swims under a wave, pulling a fuzzy obscured figure behind him.Any Rick Riordan Presents fans in the house? The Storm Runner by J.C. Cervantes is $2. And so is Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky by Kwame Mbalia!

The Great Gilly Hopkins by Katherine Paterson is $4.

The award-winning masterpiece Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson is just $3, and so is her Newbery Honor book Feathers.

Grab My Father’s Dragon, another classic by Ruth Stiles Gannett, for just $4

Black Brother, Black Brother by Jewell Parker Rhodes, a book about two Black brothers with different skin tones, is $3.

The Stars Beneath Our Feet by David Barclay Moore is about grief and Legos, and it’s only $2.

Grab Restart by Gordon Korman for $4.

For the upper middle grade reader edging into YA, grab The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner for just $3!

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for September’s Giant List of New Books!

Hey there, book nerds! I hope you’re ready to read, because September is going to be packed with new releases! Aside from being the biggest release season of the year, September also boasts FIVE Tuesdays, and even includes a bunch of bumped releases from the spring. Those TBR piles are going to be towering!

This week, I’m especially excited to pick up A Rogue of One’s Own by Evie Dunmore, Mad & Bad by Bea Koch, and Before the Ever After by Jacqueline Woodson. But there’s so much more to get excited about, as well–here we go!

cover of A Rogue of One's Own by Evie DunmoreA Rogue of One’s Own by Evie Dunmore

All the Devils Are Here by Louise Penny

Before the Ever After by Jacqueline Woodson

Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas

Daddy: Stories by Emma Cline

Gold Wings Rising by Alex London

Don’t Turn Out the Lights edited by Jonathan Maberry

His Only Wife by Peace Adzo Medie

Mad & Bad: The Real Heroines of the Regency by Bea Koch

Never Look Back by Lilliam Rivera

No Vacancy by Tziporah Cohen

Punching the Air by Ibi Zoboi and Yusef Salaam

Recommended for You by Laura Silverman

The Book of Hidden Wonders by Polly Crosby

Road Out of Winter by Allison Stine

The 2084 Report by James Lawrence Powell

The Art of Drag by Jake Hall and Sophie Birkin

The Last Story of Mina Lee by Nancy Jooyoun Kim

The Lying Life of Adults by Elena Ferrante

The Silver Arrow by Lev Grossman

The Tsarina’s Lost Treasure by Gerald Easter and Mara Vorhees

This Old Dog by Martha Brockenbrough and Gabriel Alborozo

When No One is Watching by Alyssa Cole

Anxious People by Fredrik Backman

Before She Was Helen by Caroline B. Cooney

Coffee Days, Whiskey Nights by Cyrus Parker

Just Us by Claudia Rankin

Good Blood by Julian Guthrie

One by One by Ruth Ware

Prime Deceptions by Valerie Valdes

The Cat I Never Named by Amra Sabic-El-Rayess

The Dare Sisters by Jess Rinker

The Invention of Sound by Chuck Palahniuk

The Folk Singers and the Bureau by Aaron J. Leonard

What Are You Going Through by Sigrid Nunez

Vanguard by Martha S. Jones

Agent Sonya by Ben Macintyre

Each of Us a Desert by Mark Oshiro

Grown cover imageGrown by Tiffany D. Jackson

If Then by Jill Lepore

Homeland Elegies by Ayad Akhtar

More Than a Woman by Caitlin Moran

My Life in the Fish Tank by Barbara Dee

The Awkward Black Man by Walter Mosely

The Evening and the Morning by Ken Follett

The VanderBeekers: Lost and Found by Karina Yan Glaser

Three Keys by Kelly Yang

Watch Over Me by Nina LaCour

The Killings at Kingfisher Hill by Sophia Hannah

To Sleep in a Sea of Stars by Christopher Paolini

And Now She’s Gone by Rachel Howzell Hall

How to Fly by Barbara Kingsolver

Early Departures by Justin A. Reynolds

Miss Meteor by Tehlor Kay Mejia and Anna-Marie McLemore

The Book of Two Ways by Jodi Picoult

The Left-Handed Booksellers of London by Garth Nix

The Silvered Serpents by Roshani Chokshi

Tools of Engagement by Tessa Bailey

Total Meditation by Deepak Chopra

Vampires Never Get Old edited by Zoraida Cordova and Natalie C. Parker

Well Played by Jen DeLuca

White Fox by Sara Faring

A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik

Furia by Yamile Saied Mendez

Jack by Marilynne Robinson

Just Like You by Nick Hornby

Skyhunter by Marie Lu

Sleep Donation by Karen Russell

The Talented Miss Farwell by Emily Gray Tedrowe

Ties That Tether by Jane Igharo

Whale Day by Billy Collins

Yay, you made it to the bottom of the list! Happy reading!
Tirzah

Categories
Book Radar

So Many Book to Screen Adaptations and More Book Radar!

Hey there, book nerds! I hope you had a fantastic weekend. The weather is cooling off in the Midwest and I spent a delightful couple of days reading, prepping for fall, and getting crafty all at a high of 68 degrees! I am here for it.

As you get ready to dive into a new week (and a new month!), remember to wear a mask, keep hydrated, and don’t forget your book!

Trivia question: Which famous American novel had the working title Baa! Baa! Black Sheep?

Squeals and Deals

Get a load of this fantastic trailer for the Enola Holmes movie adaptation! It’ll be on Netflix September 23.

Beverly Jenkins’ Bring on the Blessings novels are in development to become a TV show called Hopetown and we can’t wait!

The trailer for the movie adaptation of I’m Thinking of Ending Things has landed. It’ll be on Netflix later this week!

Some bookstores have learned that the first printing of Michael Cohen’s tell-all will be released to Amazon first, which is worrying to many indie bookstores.

The first book to star a Sikh character published by a major publisher has just been released. Fauja Singh Keeps Going is about the oldest person to ever run a marathon!

Michael Crichton’s Sphere is being adapted into a TV show for HBO by a Westworld producer.

Get a load of this amazing preorder campaign for Leigh Bardugo’s The Lives of Saints and the collector’s edition of Shadow and Bone.

We’re getting a sequel to Hollow Kingdom by Kira Jane Buxton!

Riot Recommendations

At Book Riot, I’m a cohost with Liberty on All the Books!, plus I write a handful of newsletters including the weekly Read This Book newsletter, cohost the Insiders Read Harder podcast, and write content for the site. I’m always drowning in books, so here’s what’s on my radar this week!

speaking of summerMust read: Speaking of Summer by Kalisha Buckhanon

I had this book on my TBR for a year before finally diving in this previous week. It’s about Autumn Spencer, a Black woman living in New York City who is alarmed when one night her twin sister Summer walks to the roof of their building and disappears completely. Months later, the police still haven’t located her, people seemed to have forgotten her, and Autumn finds herself at a loss for what to do next. I went into this novel expecting a mystery, but instead you get a deep character dive about Autumn, her childhood and her relationships, and the months leading up to that fateful night on the roof. The audiobook narrator for this one, Karen Chilton, was excellent, and I was totally absorbed into the sometimes convoluted but always fascinating storyline.

What I’m reading this week:

A Rogue of One’s Own by Evie Dunmore

The Wrong End of the Table: A Mostly Comic Memoir of a Muslim Arab American Woman Just Trying to Fit In by Ayser Salman

When No One is Watching by Alyssa Cole

Trivia answer: Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell

I leave you with a photo of the Halloween themed face masks I made this weekend while listening to my audiobook. I never thought I’d reach the point where making seasonal face masks would excite me, but here we are!

Happy reading!

Tirzah

Categories
Today In Books

Printers Working Hard to Keep Up With Fall Releases: Today in Books

Printers Confirm: Capacity For Trade Titles Tight

Fall is traditionally a big season in book publishing, and thanks to COVID-19 the printers who supply publishing’s books are running at capacity to keep up with demand. Although they say that they are outsourcing some work, they are planning to stay on schedule and deliver books as promised to publishers.

Stowe Prize in Place

The Harriet Beecher Stowe Center has awarded their 2020 Stowe Prize to Albert Woodfox, whose memoir Solitary is about his four decades spent in solitary confinement for a crime he didn’t commit. You can watch the broadcast of the author in conversation, and then even submit your questions for Woodfox to answer.

HBO Is Adapting Michael Crichton’s Trippy Novel Sphere

Get ready for a new adaptation of Sphere, this time as a TV series! The book is about a team of scientists who are called in when the Navy discovers a spacecraft on the bottom of the ocean. What they find inside  is terrifying. Westworld producer Denise Thé will be the showrunner.

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book: The Things She’s Seen by Ambelin and Ezekiel Kwaymullina

Welcome to Read This Book, a weekly newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!

The Things She's Seen cover imageThis week’s pick is a powerful novel from Australia–The Things She’s Seen by Ambelin and Ezekiel Kwaymullina!

Content warning: assault, death, depictions of grief

Published as Catching Teller Crow in Australia, this is a YA novel about Aboriginal teen Beth Teller, who is a ghost. She died before the book begins in a car accident, and now she lingers on Earth, visible only to her grieving dad. Beth can’t stand to witness how he pushes away their beloved extended family, and so she encourages him to go back to work and take on a case. Her father is a police officer, and he reluctantly accepts a job overseeing the investigation of a fire in a small town that claimed the lives of two people–one the police has been able to identify, and one who remains a mystery. Beth is eager to be useful and is happy to see her father take interest in something again, but when they discover a young woman, Isobel Catching, who is able to see Beth, Beth learns that this case might have a profound effect on her own ability to move on.

For a book that’s under 200 pages, this novel packs a surprisingly powerful punch. It has so many intriguing and unsettling elements, and the small Australian town setting really comes alive as Beth and her father attempt to unravel its secrets. I loved that this book really showcases the relationship between Beth and her father, as they come to terms with this new reality and learn that even though Beth is dead, their relationship is still intact, just different. The book actually weaves back and forth from Beth and Isobel’s perspectives, and Isobel’s chapters are haunting and lyrical as they draw the reader–and Beth–closer and closer to the terrible truth about the crime. But it’s only in confronting the causes for the fire and the consequences it has on the community that Beth finds the key to moving to the next plane of existence–a transition as joyous as it is heartrending for those left behind.

This novel has some of the most beautiful and sensitive writing when it comes to describing the despicable things that some people do to one another, and even though it explores a terrible crime, it prioritizes and values the voices of those directly affected, ensuring that justice is served. I’m of the opinion that some of the best YA books come from the Australian market, and this book just further proves my theory!

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, All the Books, and Twitter.

If someone forwarded this newsletter to you, click here to subscribe.

Categories
Book Radar

Marley Dias Has a Netflix Show and More Book Radar!

Hi there, book nerds! I hope you’re making it through the week all right! We’ve seen a resurgence of summer heat in Michigan that makes it hard to believe that next week is September, but I am so ready for cool breezes and fall leaves.

Here’s this week’s round up of book news and excitement! Stay safe out there in the big world, and keep wearing those masks!

Trivia question: What kind of sandwich does Charles Wallace make Mrs. Murry in the first chapter of A Wrinkle in Time?

Deals and Squeals:

mexican gothicSilvia Moreno-Garcia talks about what she hopes to see in the Mexican Gothic limited series adaptation at Hulu.

Noughts + Crosses by Malorie Blackman has been made into a TV series by BBC, and it’ll be available in the U.S. through Peacock TV!

Audible users will now have the opportunity to access Audible’s exclusive content for just $7.95 per month.

A new series starring Batman as a Black man is in the works!

Check out the trailer for Bookmarks: Celebrating Black Voices, a new Netflix show from Marley Dias!

Courtney Milan has a new romance hitting shelves in September!

New book deal alert: Ayana Grey’s Beasts of Prey looks amazing!

Riot Recommendations

At Book Riot, I’m a cohost with Liberty on All the Books!, plus I write a handful of newsletters including the weekly Read This Book newsletter, cohost the Insiders Read Harder podcast, and write content for the site. I’m always drowning in books, so here’s what’s on my radar this week!

cover of A Rogue of One's Own by Evie DunmoreWant to Read: A Rogue of One’s Own by Evie Dunmore

Last fall I listened to Bringing Down the Duke because everyone was talking about it and I fell so hard and fast for the characters in the League of Extraordinary Women series. The series is set in 1870s England, and it follows a group of fierce feminists fighting for their rights and for love. Book two is out next week, and I’m so excited to read about Lady Lucie, who must go head to head with Lord Ballentine if she’s to secure a London publishing house to promote the suffragists’ cause! Elizabeth Jasicki narrates both books in the series and I can’t wait!

Book Acquired This Week: 

You Have a Match by Emma Lord

Stalking Jack the Ripper by Kerri Maniscalco

Seafire by Natalie C. Parker

Trivia answer: Liverwurst and cream cheese. Yum?

I leave you with my most triumphant acquisition as of late: the limoncello flavored La Croix! It’s my new favorite but I’m already worried that I won’t ever be able to find it again, it’s been so scarce! I would love to know what your favorite La Croix flavor is (and what you’re reading!), so hit me up on social media!

Happy reading!

Tirzah

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Kidlit Deals for August 26, 2020

Hey kidlit, pals! I hope you’re doing well this final week of August, whether you’re enjoying the last bits of summer or navigating in person or virtual school! I’ve got a nice load of fantastic book deals to help you relax–everything from historical fiction to award-winning fantasy. Let’s dive in!

As always, prices change without notice, so get these deals while they’re hot!

One of my all-time favorites and Newbery Honor book Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine is just $2.

Speaking of modern classics, Because of Winn Dixie by Kate DiCamillo is just $3.

Want a great short story, or ten? Flying Lessons and Other Stories, edited by Ellen Oh, has some amazing stories by some of the top voices in kidlit, and it’s only $2.

The Miscalculations of Lightning Girl by Stacey McAnulty is $2.

The War That Saved My Life by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley is also just $2, which is an amazing price for such a wonderful book.

Harriet the Spy by Louise Fitzhugh, which is in the works to become a new animated series, is just $2.

The multiple award-winning book One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams-Garcia is under $5, as are the sequels P.S. Be Eleven and Gone Crazy in Alabama!

The Story of Ruby Bridges by Robert Cole can be yours for just $4. This is a great book to pick up ahead of Ruby Bridges’s own children’s book release This Is Your Time, out in November.

Loser by Jerry Spinelli (author of Stargirl) is just $4.

Carl Hiaasen’s Hoot is just $2. Buy it, read it, watch the movie for a fun family activity!

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time For New Books!

Welcome to your weekly round of new books! This is the last week of an abnormally packed August full of new books, and it’s so hard to narrow it down to just a few picks! I’m really excited to get my hands on a copy of Kind of a Big Deal by Shannon Hale, Killer Kung Pao by Vivien Chien (love the Noodle Shop Mysteries!), and Sitting Pretty by Rebekah Taussig.

Make sure you catch this week’s episode of All the Books! with Liberty and Patricia! They discuss The Great Offshore Grounds, Don’t Tell Me to Relax, and more!

Now onto some new releases!

Winter Counts cover imageWinter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden

I am so pumped for this mystery/thriller, which stars Virgil, who lives on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Virgil works as a kind of last resort for justice in his community–when something goes wrong and the American legal system or the tribal council can’t get justice, people come to him. And when heroin begins entering the reservation, Virgil has his work cut out for him. He investigates the source of the heroin, uncovering secrets that force him to reckon with his identity and his place in his community.

Darius the Great Deserves Better by Adib Khorram

In this sequel to Darius the Great is Not Okay, we find Darius back home in the U.S., playing soccer, dating his first boyfriend, and keeping up a long distance friendship with Sohrab. But when both of Darius’s grandmothers arrive in town and his new internship at a tea shop doesn’t go quite as planned, plus Sohrab begins ghosting him and his dad is away on business, Darius’s life begins to scramble once again. And he has to decide if he wants to accept it, or that he deserves better.

Beowulf: A New Translation by Maria Dahvana Headley

Can you believe it is 2020 and this is the first time that Beowulf has been translated into English by a woman? Maria Dahvana Headley, who is a fantastic writer in her own right, has breathed new life into this old tale with her new verse translation about ambitious men, a woman seeking vengeance for her child, and monsters that walk among us. I haven’t read Beowulf since college, but I can’t wait for this new translation, which promises to give readers new context and nuance to one of our oldest surviving tales.

Happy reading!
Tirzah