Categories
Check Your Shelf

Adam Driver, Romance Hero Inspiration

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m writing this newsletter before the long weekend, so I am eagerly anticipating a chill weekend of doing nothing. Except maybe some reading! I just discovered that digital scrapbooking is an excellent activity to pair with audiobooks, and my free time productivity has increased exponentially.

Attention librarians, booksellers, and book nerds! You can apply to become a Bibliologist for Tailored Book Recommendations and get paid for your bookish knowledge! TBR is a subscription-based book recommendation service where customers receive three hand-picked recommendations per quarter that are tailored to their specific reading likes and dislikes. Of special interest: bibliologists who can recommend across several genres, and mystery expertise is a plus. Click here to read more and fill out an application.

And don’t forget during the month of September, all new free subscribers to The Deep Dive will be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler plus 5 mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive. No payment method required!

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Weekly has a bunch of big indie titles for Fall 2023.

20 indie books to read this fall.

New indie books recommended by booksellers.

Melissa de la Cruz has a cover reveal for Beyond the Isle of the Lost, a prequel adventure to the Descendants series.

The best and most anticipated books of 2023 (so far).

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub.

September picks from Kirkus, The Millions, New York Times.

Fall picks from AARP, Associated Press, CBC (nonfiction), Kirkus (nonfiction), LA Times, Parade (celebrity titles), Tor.com (indie speculative fiction), The Week.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Fraud – Zadie Smith (Guardian, LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Happiness Falls – Angie Kim (Good Morning America, LA Times)

Terrace Story – Hilary Leichter (New York Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

The fanfic-to-romance pipeline goes mainstream.

Related: How Adam Driver ended up as the inspiration for many new romance novel heroes. I will happily jump on this bandwagon!

The strange, secretive world of North Korean science fiction.

In praise of the short novel.

On the Riot

If you want to work in publishing, consider an indie press.

8 upcoming nonfiction books to get you excited about fall.

New weekly releases to TBR.

How this reader became a horror convert.

All Things Comics

On the Riot

9 magic school graphic novels for kids and teens.

The most unique comic book stores across the US.

Audiophilia

The best audiobooks for August.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Children’s books that promote a growth mindset.

Adults

9 books about women’s loneliness.

10 books for Taylor Swift’s ten eras.

11 books about misunderstood women in history and mythology.

10 books about solitary living.

Legal thrillers for fans of Suits.

On the Riot

The best picture books for building classroom community.

The best YA books for back-to-school.

Must-read historical romance set in the 20th century.

9 historical romance novels for newbies.

10 of the best horror and mystery novels set in the woods.

8 fantasy novels with “no rules, just vibes” magic systems.

Compulsively consumable short story and essay collections.

The 20 most influential fantasy books of the last 10 years.

8 of the best fantasy royalty.

9 great Dutch books in translation.

20 must-read paranormal romances.

Level Up (Library Reads)

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

a black cat wrapped in a gray sweatshirt with just its head sticking out of th top

This is Gilbert in his happiest environment – wrapped in a blanket so that only his head is visible. He looks rather nonchalant here, but I assure you he was purring up a storm. A happier kitty I’ve never seen!

Hope everyone had a great weekend. See you on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter

Categories
Check Your Shelf

“A Small Number of People Who Are Very Loud”

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. This last week, my husband and I went to see Jurassic Park for its 30th anniversary, with the score performed live by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. HOLY CATS, it was incredible! I’ve seen that movie over 50 times, and yet I was so engrossed that I forgot at times there was an entire symphony playing.

Attention librarians, booksellers, and book nerds! You can apply to become a Bibliologist for Tailored Book Recommendations and get paid for your bookish knowledge! TBR is a subscription-based book recommendation service where customers receive three hand-picked recommendations per quarter that are tailored to their specific reading likes and dislikes. Of special interest: bibliologists who can recommend across several genres, and mystery expertise is a plus. Click here to read more and fill out an application.

Plus, a Deep Dive update! During the month of September, all new free subscribers to The Deep Dive will be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler plus 5 mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive. No payment method required!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

ALA is encouraging libraries to participate in National Voter Registration Day on September 19, 2023.

The Allen County Public Library (IN) reported an unprecedented (positive!) response to their recent community-wide strategic planning survey.

Cool Library Updates

Sal McCloskey, daughter of beloved children’s author Robert McCloskey, drew a crowd of 225 people at the Curtis Memorial Library in Maine as she read her father’s book, Blueberries for Sal.

Worth Reading

A buying guide to current eReaders.

Book Adaptations in the News

Jana Monroe, a former FBI agent and author of the upcoming memoir Hearts of Darkness: Serial Killers, The Behavioral Science Unit and My Life as a Woman in the FBI, will have her latest book packaged for TV.

Dune: Part 2 has been delayed until 2024 amidst the ongoing strikes.

Trailer for The Marsh King’s Daughter.

Trailer for Love at First Sight, which is based on the book The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E. Smith.

Censorship News

Library bomb threats continue to increase.

More about the string of bomb threats that have happened to libraries across the country in the last couple of weeks.

The first app to “help” libraries and schools with book bans has arrived, but it’s not what it seems.

“Don’t stand by as books are banned; stand up for libraries.”

In the age of book bans, how independent bookstores can change the world for the better.

ShopQueer.co has launched a fundraiser to purchase a Rainbow Book Bus, “a loud, proud, and very queer bookmobile, bringing queer joy, stories, and community to the towns that need it the most.” They’re almost at 90% of their $150,000 goal!

A banned books bingo card for book clubs.

Texas is leaving the American Library Association.

Book debate gets heated at a Fort Worth ISD (TX) board meeting. Plus, what are the 100+ books that have been removed from Fort Worth ISD? (Paywalled)

“The national debate over books has come to West Texas. And librarians are stuck in the middle.”

Starting this year, Katy ISD (TX) parents will be notified whenever their child checks out a library book.

“It’s an irony of the book banning movement that the people who want to remove books from school libraries can’t stop themselves from reading aloud what they describe as “pornography” in crowded school board meetings, often with children present.” This is in Round Rock ISD (TX).

Paywalled: The Granbury ISD (TX) board has censured the trustee accused of sneaking into the school library to review books.

“In images taken from school district videos, parent Bruce Friedman, left, addresses the Clay County School Board on Aug. 4, 2022, and teacher Vicki Baggett, right, speaks to the Escambia County School Board on May 16, 2023. Together, the two advocates submitted more than 600 book complaints over the last year, accounting for more than half the statewide total.” TWO PEOPLE. TWO.

“The Escambia County School Board on Monday urged a federal judge to toss out a lawsuit filed by authors, a publishing company, parents and a non-profit organization challenging the removal or restriction of books in school libraries.” I bet they have.

How Florida’s Clay County became the book ban heartland of the US.

Paywalled: Some of the next titles Moms for Liberty will be targeting next. (A really bad article to be paywalled, honestly.)

These are the 43 books that have been removed from Manatee County (FL) schools this year.

Cobb County Schools (GA) have removed Flamer and Me and Earl and the Dying Girl.

Paywalled: “Book ban hits Louisiana libraries with This Book is Gay.”

“Frustrated with the slow pace that has kept dozens of books — mostly those with LGBTQ+ themes — sequestered from the rest of the collection, one patron submitted three more book challenges to titles she described as anti-transgender.” This is at the St. Tammany Parish Library (LA), where the board is also discussing policy changes that would allow them to toss challenges submitted under false names, or challenges from patrons who had not read the material in question.

22 challenges to Maine school library books have been filed since 2022. Some of the noteworthy points in the article: about a third of the people who filed challenges admitted to not reading the book in its entirety, at least two people reported using the M4L website BookLooks to support their challenge, and only the RSU 56 district has actually removed a challenged book. (It was Gender Queer.)

Galway (NY) school board overwhelmingly voted against banning The 57 Bus and Ink Knows No Borders: Poems of the Immigrant and Refugee Experience.

Two teenagers in Orchard Park (NY) have created a group known as Students Protecting Education, which will help teach other students how to speak out on educational issues, such as book banning.

Librarian Sharon Coronado, who works at the Ligonier Valley Library (PA), says that when it comes to book bans, “It’s a small number of people who are very loud.”

Hempfield Area School Board (PA) is establishing new guidelines that require schools to post lists of books to be purchased, and then parents have up to 30 days to submit a form and potentially challenge any of the books from being purchased.

The Oxford Area High School board (PA) voted to override a committee’s recommendation to keep four challenged books in the high school library. The Hate U Give will stay, but the other three books (The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Lucky, and The Bluest Eye) will either be entirely removed, or relocated to a restricted area. Why have an advisory committee if you’re going to ignore their recommendations??

The Erie County Council (PA) unanimously passed a resolution against library censorship.

“More than 110 novels and plays – a mix of classic and contemporary literature including several best-sellers and award-winners – are included in Prince William County Schools’ [VA] division-wide “sexually explicit” list of library books and instructional materials.”

An update on the situation at the Samuels Public Library (VA), where the Clean Up Samuels group asked county supervisors to cut funding to the library until it removed books that they found objectionable.

Paywalled: How North Carolina’s new Parents’ Bill of Rights will lead to more book bans across the state.

“‘We already have a district policy to vet books,’ Jean Foster, one of the 28 people who spoke out Monday, said. ‘Trust our educators and administrators to do their jobs. Stop wasting the limited time and resources we have, and get on with the business that our district needs from this board instead of pandering to the agenda of a small minority comprised mostly of the members of a known hate group.’” MORE. OF. THIS.

After a five-hour board meeting, the Catawba County School Board (NC) has removed Out of Darkness from high school libraries. This happened after a sitting board member challenged Out of Darkness and Beyond Magenta, a review committee recommended that the board retain both books, the board member appealed that decision, and the board ultimately decided to remove Out of Darkness. (Beyond Magenta was allowed to stay.)

Inside the 44 books challenged at the Prattville Public Library (AL).

Children under 15 need parental permission to check out anything from the Foley Public Library (AL), and there are 24 books currently under review. Also, this is yet another article that centers its reporting around the book banners – can we stop pretending that their platforms are valid?

Dothan Houston County Library (AL) confirms that there is no “sexually explicit” content in the children’s section. Now what I really want to see is a second part to that statement, saying that libraries have NEVER put sexually explicit content in the children’s collections, and that this entire argument is nonsense and not worth engaging with.

“The Ozark Dale County Library [AL] pulled all young adult LGBTQ+ books from the shelves to review them after a complaint from Ozark Mayor Mark Blankenship. The books have been returned to the shelves, but the library is now planning a community meeting to hear from the public and discuss what actions will be taken in the future.”

A group of people who filed book challenges at the Mobile Public Library [AL] have withdrawn the challenges after admitting they had not actually read the books in question.

Columbia-Marion County Public Library (MS) have removed the Heartstopper series for review, with all available copies currently being stored in the director’s office. The article also includes this line about a board meeting on August 9th, which we need to see more of. “During the Aug. 9 hearing, the residents who showed up to speak against the books described them as “pornography”—a claim the Columbian-Progress report did not correct.”

Paywalled: Wilson County Schools (TN) have removed six books since April 2022. Almost two dozen books have been selected for review.

The Rutherford County Board (TN), which oversees all public libraries in the county, voted to remove four books from shelves.

The Anderson County Library Board (TN) approved a tiered library card system to restrict checkouts for minors.

The Knox County Schools Policy Committee (TN) is considering revisions to their book challenge policy.

The Williamson County School Board (TN) is being sued by a group of parents over the decision to keep “obscene” materials on school library shelves.

“Daviess County Public Library Director Erin Waller has reviewed nearly 70 of the 248 titles deemed “inappropriate for developing minds” by the Daviess County Citizens for Decency (DCC4D) group. Waller said she recommends the ones she’s reviewed so far remain in their respective sections” This is in response to the Daviess County Citizens for Decency conducting and releasing an audit of the library’s teen and children’s collections. Waller has also altered the status of all 248 titles to “In repair” or “Being reviewed” so they can’t be checked out during the review process. But WHY is the library engaging with this group?? Have the Citizens for Decency filed official challenges on these books, or is it standard procedure to just let anyone demand on a whim that the library review hundreds of books?

Troy (OH) school board members remove Beyond Magenta from all school libraries, and move Magical Boy from the middle school to the high school.

“Until the full school board votes on this specific topic, there will continue to be a hold on adding any sexually explicit material, but many asked for the definition of what is sexually explicit.” This is at the Brandywine School District (MI), where the board has not yet figured out how to handle books that may be considered “inappropriate.”

“A group of anonymous Iron River [WI] residents is trying to build support in the community to ban what it calls books “promoting gender ideology” from the local library.” Look, if you’re going to ban books, you should have the guts to identify yourself.

Paywalled: Book banners in Marathon County, Wisconsin want the public library to rate the books available to minors.

The Vernon Area Library (IL) received a bomb threat. This is the latest in a string of bomb threats sent to public libraries in northeastern Illinois. I live about 15 minutes from this library.

Paywalled: Empire of Storms is being reviewed by the board at Brainerd Public Schools (MN).

Friday Night Lights has been returned to school libraries in Mason City, Iowa, where the school district had used AI to remove books that may have violated the new state law.

It cost the Grand Forks School Board (ND) almost $11,000 to review six books that were challenged in the district.

Keene Memorial Library (NE) has approved a tiered library card system “of age-specific library cards that allow parents to control what their children can check out.”

A Tulsa elementary school has been targeted by bomb threats twice because of a librarian’s social media post, and the state superintendent has made the situation worse by labeling the video “an example of a ‘woke agenda,’” except he used a modified version of the video created by Libs of TikTok. A state superintendent who doesn’t care that an elementary school has been targeted by bomb threats, and actively spreads the message of a social media account known for targeting teachers and librarians with violence.

Douglas County Libraries (CO) elects to keep all four challenged books on the shelf.

“Library books explained to county commission after complaints by a small group of far-right activists.” This is in Washoe County (NV) and I feel like the headline, intentionally or unintentionally, conveys the ridiculousness of these discussions.

“Pahrump [NV] library trustees declined to make any changes to the public’s book collection on Monday after its director reported that none of the libraries she had surveyed over the past month had censored or banned any youth books about race, gender or sexuality.” Yay?

The FBI is investigating a series of bomb threats made against the Yolo County Library (CA). “Investigators believe there is a connection between the bomb threats and a controversial meeting held at the Mary L. Stephens Library, the Davis branch, days before the first threat.”

After canceling their Social Justice Book Club, the Klamath County Library (OR) has replaced the program with a book club called Real Reads, which will cover similar topics. The primary difference is that a library staff member will not lead the discussion, as commissioners “have expressed concern about taxpayer-funded staff being involved in political discussions in the role of moderators.”

“Did you read the editorial and think that could never happen here? Think again.” A resident of Fort Vancouver (WA) wrote a letter to the editor reporting on what’s happening at the local board meetings. We need more people (and letters) like this.

The Anchorage Assembly (AK) has rejected the mayor’s latest library board picks. One of the assembly members said, “‘They’re essentially pushing the same agenda: to attack our public libraries and schools, and to further a hateful and discriminatory agenda, specifically against LGBTQ youth and adults…But also more broadly against freedom of speech … such as book banning, banning programming such as the drag queen story hour from the public library.’”

Books & Authors in the News

Stephen King, Zadie Smith, and Michael Pollan are among thousands of writers whose copyrighted works are being used to train large language models.

Michael Oher talks about his new book and the controversy surrounding The Blind Side.

The author of the American Girl book The Care and Keeping of You looks back at the book on its 25th anniversary. “I wrote [this book] for girls. This wasn’t the future I imagined for them.”

Numbers & Trends

“Girl” trends and the repackaging of womanhood.

The bestselling books of the week.

Plus, which authors have tried to buy their way onto the New York Times Bestsellers list?

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

Award News

The Pulitzers look to open books and arts prizes to noncitizens.

In Memoriam by Alice Winn wins the 2023 Waterstones Debut Fiction Prize.

The winners of the inaugural TikTok Book Awards have been announced.

The 2023 Kirkus Prize finalists have been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

This literature clock publishes a quote every minute, but each quote directly references that specific time.

On the Riot

The 10 best librarian characters in TV and film.

A brief history of book dedications.

What this Rioter wishes they could tell their younger reading self.

How reading books about books helped this Rioter bust out of their reading slump.

Why Shakespeare isn’t fancy.

a black, brown, and white dog with a red bandanna laying on the floor

Is that…a dog picture?? Yep. In recognition of all the stress our staff have been dealing with, from nearby bomb threats to massive changes at work, our director brought in a couple therapy dogs as a surprise for staff. Sadie (pictured here) was just the most chill dog I’ve ever met, and she LOVED being able to nap on the floor and get belly rubs for an hour!

All right, friends. I’m done for the week. Enjoy the holiday weekend if you’re in the US, and I’ll check in again on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

What’s Happening With Books and AI?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’ve realized over the last week or so that we’ve received a lot of positive comments from our patrons – not just casual “I love the library!” statements, but patrons seeking us out to tell us how much they’ve enjoyed a particular initiative or program. Our fall newsletter has a Banned Books Week theme, and a patron called to tell us how much they appreciated it, and how much the right to read means to them. Another patron came to the desk to tell us that our summer story times at the local farmer’s market were fantastic. I know not every library is in a supportive community, but I hope all of you are on the receiving end of a nice compliment from a parent or a patron this week.

Make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index, which has been keeping velocireaders in the know about all the latest books since 2017! Subscribe today!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

How some marketing execs use well-placed ellipses to turn critical rants into apparently rave reviews.

Related: book publicity – what works and what doesn’t.

Understanding AI and how it works.

How AI’s carbon emissions are about to become a problem.

New & Upcoming Titles

Stacey Abrams is re-releasing her espionage romantic thriller, The Art of Desire, which was originally written under her Selena Montgomery pseudonym.

Michael Wolff, author of Fire and Fury, is publishing a book about Fox News this fall, called The Fall: The End of Fox News and the Murdoch Dynasty.

Cover reveal for Noah Medlock’s debut horror novel, A Botanical Daughter, described as “Mexican Gothic meets The Lie Tree by way of Oscar Wilde and Mary Shelley.”

Here’s a first look at the upcoming book Amy Winehouse: In Her Own Words.

The 6 best romance novels of the summer.

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

The best debut crime novels of August.

September picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, teens, kids), The Root.

Fall picks from AARP (celebrity memoirs), CBC (poetry), Kirkus (fiction), Vulture.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Happiness Falls – Angie Kim (New York Times, Washington Post)

The Bee Sting – Paul Murray (New Yorker, Washington Post)

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

RA/Genre Resources

Why queer adults love (and need) queer YA media.

Plus: “Heartstopper, Red, White & Royal Blue, and Bottoms lead a new surge of LGBTQ content.”

Why readers are hungry for Colleen Hoover.

Understanding Elon Musk through romance novel tropes. (I’m not kidding. That’s what the headline says.)

A crime thriller author talks about the big serial killer myth they’d like to debunk.

On the Riot

What is happening with books and AI?

“AI will never be good enough to replace real authors” is the wrong conversation.

Why the hockey BookTok controversy screams toxicity.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

What is a “dad book?”

What does it mean if a character is “morally gray?”

What murder mysteries get wrong about bail.

Attention librarians, book sellers, and book nerds! Apply to become a Bibliologist for Tailored Book Recommendations and get paid for your bookish knowledge! TBR is a subscription based book recommendation service where customers receive three hand-picked recommendations per quarter that are tailored to their specific reading likes and dislikes. Our bibliologists pull on collected decades of experience to find the right books to surprise and delight our customers.

Think you have what it takes to recommend books with the best of them? We’re especially interested in those good at recommending across several genres; mystery expertise is a plus. Click here to read more and fill out an application.

All Things Comics

Jeff Smith, creator of the Bone series, cancels his book tour following a cardiac event.

10 page-to-screen graphic novels & comics to enjoy.

On the Riot

What we (don’t) talk about when we talk about adult graphic nonfiction books.

Reading pathways for Gabriel Bá and Fábio Moon.

Audiophilia

Hear actor Adam Scott read a short story from the anthology, From a Certain Point of View: Return of the Jedi.

Disney’s Frozen podcast marks the company’s first foray into audio-first storytelling.

10 must-listen audiobooks for September.

Where do audiobooks come from?

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Evocative books by Afro-Latine authors to read with your child.

15 book recs for fans of We Were Liars.

Adults

A climate change reading list.

5 SFF books with superpowered characters.

7 books about reckoning with intergenerational trauma.

The top 10 female spies in fiction.

Tor.com and USA Today have reading recommendations for fans of Heartstopper.

5 fast-paced African urban fantasy books.

Powerful female characters in crime fiction.

A reading list of comeback stories.

5 book recommendations from Harlan Coben.

6 book club reads with themes tied to current events.

On the Riot

12 books to encourage kids to go outside.

Young adult authors who made their adult fiction debuts.

The best quietly sad, contemplative books for when you’re trying to feel something.

11 romance novels featuring romances between celebrities and regular people.

10 terrific transhumanist sci-fi books.

12 of the best opposites attract romance novels.

9 terrifying road trip horror novels

23 must-read military historical fiction novels.

20 award-winning historical fiction books.

10 fever dream books that will have you checking your temperature.

10 books on healthcare inequity and misogyny in medicine.

A back-to-school-inspired reading list for adults.

Level Up (Library Reads)

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

a black and white cat sitting in front of an open window with its tail curled over a stack of books

Dini keeps watch on the outside and stands guard over our books.

Well, that’s all I have for today. By the time I check in again, it will be September! *insert shocked emoji here* Have a great week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

AI and Educational Intimidation

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. All of my co-workers and I are trying to get through the week without worrying about bomb threats. I’ll have a link in the Censorship News section, but five libraries in the Chicago area and northern suburbs received false bomb threats within the last week. No culprit or motive has been determined yet, but at this point, all of the censorship news and violence towards libraries feels very intertwined.

Need a distraction from the news? Check out Book Riot’s New Release Index, which has been keeping velocireaders in the know about all the latest books since 2017! Subscribe today!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association issued a statement in support of the recent wildfires in Maui.

The Lafayette Parish Library board just voted to terminate director Danny Gillane, although there are now reports that the board may have violated open meetings law in their executive session.

A judge approved the final injunction in the copyright case between publishers and the Internet Archive. Meanwhile, music labels have sued the Internet Archive for copyright infringement over digitized vinyl records.

A federal judge has ruled that AI art can’t be copyrighted.

Book Adaptations in the News

Here’s the trailer for The Other Black Girl.

And here’s the first teaser for the new Percy Jackson series.

10 books you didn’t know were getting adapted.

Censorship News

Districts are turning to AI to ban books.

A new PEN America report shows a surge in “educational intimidation” bills.

Who, or what, is fueling conflict at the public school board level?

Here’s a look at the 400+ books that banners are eager to pull in Texas.

Fort Worth ISD (TX) libraries will be closed to students for two weeks as over 100 books are reviewed.

San Antonio ISD (TX) budget cuts have left 30 certified librarians in a district of 45,000 students.

Midland County Library (TX) commissioners voted to relocate “obscene” library books, and have terminated their ALA membership.

(Paywalled) A Taylor Public Library (TX) advisory board has recommended moving Gender Queer from the teen section.

Katy ISD (TX) is reviewing dozens of books, including Captain Underpants, which is the most eye-rolling controversial book. I can’t think of a book MORE appropriate for kids than Captain Underpants. And don’t forget, last week, Katy ISD school board members voted to give themselves more power to ban books.

Klein ISD (TX) has been removing contentious books through “weeding,” which, as we all know, is not the purpose of actual weeding.

Miami-Dade School District (FL) removed the book Daddy’s Roommate, even though no formal challenge was made.

Books banned in other states fuel Vermont lieutenant governor’s reading tour.

People Kill People, It Ends With Us, All Boys Aren’t Blue, Jesus Land: A Memoir, and Red Hood will be removed from the Clyde-Savannah Central School District (NY).

“‘We’re not infringing on any freedom of speech,’ said Garman. ‘They have access to these books. These books are not banned. A banned book is a book that you cannot have access to and can’t find it anywhere. You can find these books anywhere.’” I don’t need to explain why this is a load of horse shit, but I’m going to anyway: 1) This definition is just flat-out incorrect. 2) There are plenty of First Amendment laws and court cases that absolutely disagree with this statement. And 3) This person is just ignoring the fact that the goal is to remove these titles from schools, public libraries, AND commercial booksellers in some cases. Will this person consider themselves a book banner at that point? [PA]

The Pennridge (PA) school board is forced to answer questions about the district’s recent “weeding” project.

Telford (PA) residents voice support for the Indian Valley Public Library, where two council members have attempted to defund the library over allegedly inappropriate books.

Carroll County Schools (MD) have removed 53 books while they undergo review, which, of course, is still censorship.

Spotsylvania Schools (VA) are accepting book donations from Brave Books for school libraries. Brave Books is the conservative, Christian-based company that sponsored Kirk Cameron’s nationwide push to offer Christian storytimes at public libraries.

As the situation at the Samuels Public Library (VA) continues to unfold, it looks as though one of the county supervisors submitted multiple complaints and book challenges on behalf of the “Clean Up Samuels” campaign. Also, this is a good example of a reporter digging into the hypocrisy, lies, and misdirection of a local official who absolutely wants to ban books but doesn’t want to be publicly labeled a “book banner.”

Teens will be able to continue using the Botetourt Public Library (VA) without parental supervision.

The Charlotte (NC) school board could approve a plan that gives parents the power to review all textbooks in person.

New Hanover County Schools (NC) will make a final decision about Stamped next month.

13 books that are banned in North Carolina prisons.

A panel of retired educators has rejected an Atlanta school district’s recommendation to fire an elementary school teacher who read My Shadow is Purple to her 5th grade class.

Georgia has made it easier for parents to challenge school library books, but almost no one has done so. Again, this is proof that it’s only a tiny group of people calling for book bans. The majority of citizens don’t want this!

Level funding of the Autauga-Prattville Public Library (AL) enrages book banners.

Craighead County Jonesboro Public Library (AR) is making it so that only library cardholders can submit a book challenge.

Amid a months-long fight over censorship, the Saline County (AR) board voted 11-2 to cut the power of the library board and give County Judge Matt Brumley the power to hire and fire librarians. If this sounds like a fascist takeover, that’s because it is.

A Catholic school outside of Kansas City, Missouri, has expelled a straight-A student after his mother opposed the school’s LGBTQ book ban.

The director of the Anderson Public Library (KY) says she started carrying a gun after receiving threatening phone calls about the library’s Pride display.

“The Daviess County Citizens for Decency (DCC4D) group said it completed an audit of books in the teen and juvenile sections of the Daviess County Public Library [KY] and “uncovered a combined 248 titles that are inappropriate for developing minds.” The DCPL board told Owensboro Times it is reviewing the list, and we will follow that process.” Maybe I’m reading this incorrectly, but it sure sounds like a community group is dictating the actions of a public library, and folks, that’s not how this game is played.

“Noblesville [IN] school board members voted Tuesday to appoint an English teacher to the Hamilton East Public Library Board, removing a fellow school board member from the library board: the president who was behind a push to remove “inappropriate” books from young adult sections.”

The Michigan Department of Civil Rights is asking for an opinion from the attorney general on whether banning LGBTQ books constitutes a form of discrimination.

The West Bend (WI) superintendent is recommending that The 57 Bus and The Kite Runner be removed as optional reading selections from the curriculum.

5 libraries in Lake County (IL) and the northern Chicago suburbs received bomb threats via their ChatReference services. My library was not one of them, but we are smack dab in the middle of that area, and pretty much every library district around us is on high alert. Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias condemned the recent threats.

St. Charles County (MN) passed a resolution scolding the public library for promoting “political agendas” and seeking to limit employees’ online political speech. The uproar started back in May “after a mother saw a [library] worker with a goatee, makeup, nail polish and earrings.”

The Alta Library (IA) is still struggling with how to comply with the state’s new book banning law, as the law only applies to school libraries, but Alta serves as the local school library and the local public library.

Although not directly tied to banned books or schools and libraries, this news item is definitely still relevant: “A police raid on a rural Kansas newspaper is unconscionable and un-American.” The raid may also have directly contributed to the death of 98-year-old newspaper co-owner Joan Meyer.

North Dakota librarians breathe a sigh of relief as the new state legislation against “obscene” materials has little effect on public libraries.

“Gov. Mark Gordon, State Library Division Director Patricia Bach and State Librarian Jamie Markus sent a letter to the American Library Association on Aug. 14 expressing worry that the organization “has become politicized” and calling on the group to open discussions with Wyoming to address the concern.”

More about the firing of former Campbell County Public Library (WY) director Terri Lesley.

The Douglas County (CO) library board is considering banning four LGBTQ+ books.

The Utah Parents United group is sharing videos on how to pressure your child’s teachers over book bans.

Calls for an LGBTQ book ban at the Rio Rancho Public Library (NM) seemingly backfire.

As book bans rage nationwide, a Washington library could be the first in the nation to close.

Books & Authors in the News

Stephen King writes in The Atlantic about how his books were used to train AI.

Dead authors like Stieg Larsson, Agatha Christie, and Vince Flynn keep churning out books. Shouldn’t they be allowed to rest in peace?

Hank Green says that he is in complete remission after receiving a cancer diagnosis three months ago.

Numbers & Trends

BookTok helped book sales soar, but how long will that last?

The best-selling books of the week.

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

Award News

The 2023 American Book Award winners have been announced.

Venomous Lumpsucker by Ned Beauman wins the 2023 Arthur C. Clarke Award.

The 2023 Splatterpunk Awards have been announced.

On the Riot

Join the Maui relief effort readathon!

What are story windows?

This Rioter reflects on how well their old favorites hold up.

a black and white cat enjoying scritches around its ear

Dini just wants you to know how much he enjoys his head scritches.

All right, friends. Stay safe, and hopefully you don’t have too hot of a weekend. I’ll see you on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Proliferation of AI

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Over the weekend, my husband and I got to partake in a new tradition with his parents known as Vinyl Night. They invite people over for dinner and drinks, everyone brings a few favorite records, and we each pick a side to play. It was a really chill evening, and a lot of fun if you have family or friends who are into vinyl! We had Ray Charles, Pink Floyd, Fleetwood Mac, Tom Petty, the Isley Brothers, and the Foo Fighters going that night, and we’re already strategizing about which vinyl we want to bring next time!

Now to bring it back to books, make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index, which has been keeping velocireaders in the know about all the latest books since 2017! Subscribe today!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Authors and booksellers urge the Justice Department to investigate Amazon’s domination of the book market.

Fiction authors fear the rise of AI, but also see it as a story to tell. Novelists also remain fascinated by the pandemic, unsurprisingly.

Publishing scammers are using AI to scale their grifts.

A discussion of abridged books.

New & Upcoming Titles

Stephen King says he may continue the Talisman series following the death of his co-author Peter Straub.

Tana French answers questions about her next book, The Hunter.

Kate DiCamillo reveals the cover of her upcoming middle grade novel, Ferris.

Emily Henry has the cover reveal for her upcoming book, Funny Story.

Kellye Garrett has the cover reveal for her upcoming thriller, Missing White Woman.

Another cover reveal! This time for Abby Jimenez’s Just For the Summer.

Copies of the published Oppenheimer screenplay are selling out on Amazon.

Here’s a first look at Karan Feder’s upcoming book, Barbie Takes the Catwalk: A Style Icon’s History in Fashion.

150 of the most anticipated books for fall.

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

August picks from Crime Reads (international crime fiction).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Wifedom: Mrs. Orwell’s Invisible Life – Anna Funder (Guardian, Washington Post)

The Invisible Hour – Alice Hoffman (Shondaland, Washington Post)

Thin Skin: Essays – Jenn Shapland (LA Times, Shondaland)

The Fraud – Zadie Smith (Guardian, Vogue)

Learned by Heart – Emma Donoghue (Washington Post)

Necessary Trouble: Growing Up at Midcentury – Drew Gilpin Faust (New York Times)

Evergreen – Naomi Hirahara (NPR)

RA/Genre Resources

How women authors are redefining the hip-hop books canon.

Influencer noir and the dark side of fame.

The essential Ursula K. Le Guin.

On the Riot

New summer releases for Women in Translation Month.

Goodreads users’ most anticipated books for fall.

12 queer books from the first half of 2023 you may have missed.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

How accurate is climate fiction?

All Things Comics

Aubrey Plaza may be playing the role of Kathryn Hahn’s ex in Agatha: Coven of Chaos. (And my husband’s interest in the show just suddenly rose!)

A look at the spike in video game/graphic novel tie-ins.

Why Marjane Satrapi is done with comics, but never with art or the revolution.

13 YA scifi graphic novels.

On the Riot

Middle grade graphic novels that dive deep.

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

Audiophilia

A new role for Werner Herzog: the voice of AI poetry.

AI is coming for your audiobooks. You’re right to be worried.

3 gritty new crime fiction audiobooks.

16 mystery audiobook listens for every mystery lover.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Spanish and bilingual board books.

Adults

5 books about vampires.

10 books about the search for truth.

5 mysteries for performing arts lovers.

27 of the best beach reads.

Picks for Women in Translation Month.

10 novels about mad scientists.

5 fascinating retellings of Norse mythology.

7 books about how marriage really works.

8 unforgettable books about missing persons.

The best books to help you find work-life balance.

Feel-good readalikes for fans of Red, White, and Royal Blue.

A reading list to prepare you for the alien invasion.

20 books like The Only Murders in the Building.

6 eye-opening books about AI.

6 lovely books recommended by Emily Henry.

On the Riot

The 20 most influential picture books of all time.

9 of the most unique magic systems in YA fantasy.

20 must-read books about books.

10 pen pal romance novels.

8 nonfiction books about feelings and emotions to help you process.

Books where ghosts help solve a mystery.

Sci-fi books about a dying Earth.

Feminist sci-fi dystopian novels.

20th century books and movies retold.

4 books per season for all you seasonal readers out there.

A year of books: one book for each month.

8 psychopomps across mythology and literature. (You’ll have to click on the link to find out what a “psychopomp” is.)

8 queer baking and cooking romance novels for foodies.

Level Up (Library Reads)

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

a black cat asleep with its head thrown back into the corner of a couch

Gilbert is either the sassiest sleeping cat I’ve ever seen, or he’s just DONE with the week. Either way, I’m feeling it.

Well, that’s it for me. Back again on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

I Got 99 Problems, But a Library Card Ain’t One

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am currently riding the high of a fantastic walk-off win by the Chicago Cubs, and it’s a good thing, because that’s what’s currently getting me through the slog of book banning updates in this newsletter. You have been warned.

In better news, make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index, which has been keeping velocireaders in the know about all the latest books since 2017! It’s new books for days! Subscribe today — you won’t be able to read them all, but it’s fun to try. 

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

EveryLibrary and Book Riot are partnering to launch a Parent Perceptions Survey on public libraries and current issues.

Lahaina Public Library stands damaged among the wreckage of Maui’s fires.

Cool Library Updates

How library cards became the hottest Jay-Z merch.

C-Span and the Library of Congress are teaming up for a new series called Books That Shaped America.

Book Adaptations in the News

Prince Harry and Meghan’s production company will be adapting Meet Me By the Lake for film.

Here’s a first look at The Fall of the House of Usher.

Trailer for The Changeling.

Censorship News

Was Brave Books’ storytime takeover even successful?

Emily Drabinski talks about the backlash surrounding her tweet about being a “Marxist lesbian.”

The battle over books comes at a steep cost for librarians and teachers.

We Need Diverse Books will award up to $5,000 in diverse titles to schools and libraries in battleground states where book banning is raging. (Three of them are in Florida.)

Penguin Random House announces a new resource to combat banned books.

In self-censorship news, PEN America released a report on literary backlash, online outrage, and the language of harm.

Here’s an interview with Democracy Forward and their strategies for combatting future book bans.

I’m paywalled from this article, but Katy ISD (TX) school board members now have even more power to decide what students can and can’t read.

Citizens Defending Freedom is challenging over 100 books in Fort Worth ISD (TX).

Former Texas state lawmaker Matt Krause who released that 850 title list of inappropriate books “never thought [his] effort would grow so large.” Why are we giving article space to someone who sees book banning as a career highlight?

“A high school assistant principal and a school board president of a rural Texas town have blasted a far-right, anti-LGBTQ+ board trustee for lying her way into a school library in order to pursue her never-ending “crusade against supposed smut in school libraries.” This is at Gransbury ISD.

A look at how the book banning target is expanding from schools to public libraries in Florida.

The libraries in Escambia County (FL) public schools are not closed…they’re just more empty. Meanwhile, in Orange County, school librarians have to inspect “over a million books” to comply with state law.

Experts warn more AP classes could be banned in Florida.

Lee County Schools (FL) aren’t sure what to do if a parent doesn’t make a decision about their student’s library access.

Clay County School District (FL) has pulled 22 books from shelves in response to the challenges filed by Bruce Friedman, who has made it his life’s mission to ban as many books as possible from the district.

Martin County Schools (FL) have removed 90 books prior to the beginning of the new school year.

Confusion over the new state law leads to the alleged closure of Escambia County (FL) school libraries.

(Paywalled) Concerns over sexual content in Shakespeare have led some Florida schools to pull Shakespeare from the curriculum, or only teach excerpts, which are by their nature devoid of context.

New York legislators are introducing several anti-book ban bills in their next legislative session.

Punxsutawney (PA) School Board Director Deneen “Didi” Evans responds to a proposed policy giving parents expanded power to opt their children out of library books: “’I think this form is great, a step in the right direction, but I really think we as a board should go vote to remove these books that aren’t age-appropriate, and books with sexually explicit material.'”

A small group of Wood County (WV) patrons are raising a fuss about Let’s Talk About It and This Book is Gay.

Why Montgomery County (MD) parents are clashing with schools over the book Pride Puppy and other LGBTQ+ titles. (I’m not a betting person, but I bet I can guess why without even reading the article.)

Parents in Spotsylvania County (VA) want the choice to opt their children out of sexually explicit content in school library books, and then get upset when the school asks them to make that choice.

Hanover County (VA) teachers “will soon have to provide a list of all books in their classrooms and research backing those choices up, according to a revised version of the school division’s new book policy.” They have a list of approved sources that their research has to come from, and Book Looks is on that list. Plus, in the original version of the policy, teachers weren’t given an opportunity to argue their case for keeping “sexually explicit” material in their classroom, to give you an idea of how little the board values the expertise of teachers. `

Fauquier County’s (VA) high schools have posted lists of “sexually explicit” books in response to a recent state law and school policy change.

“Supervisor, who requested 2 books be removed from library, says no one wants to ban books.” It’s always the book banners who say “No one wants to ban books, isn’t it?” I appreciate this headline very much. It’s referring to the Samuels Public Library in Virginia, where the director has recently resigned in response to all of this book banning nonsense.

A New Hanover County (NC) resident quoted the Bible and invoked Jesus in order to explain why Stamped should not remain on library shelves.

The Iredell-Statesville School District (NC) continues to be a hot mess. A couple choice quotes from this article: “Why does a committee have to read a 300-page book and then discuss whether it is appropriate, [Vice Chairman Mike Kubiniec] asked, when the highlighted passages that describe sexually explicit behaviors could be reviewed and a decision made?” and “Board member Brian Sloan offered a simple suggestion. ‘If there is one word that a kid can’t speak, then I don’t think it should be inside a school library.’” Y’all, I can’t even.

The Fixer will be returned to Beaufort County (SC) School District shelves.

Alabama is trying to cut ties with ALA.

The Marion County (MS) public library has removed Heartstopper while it addresses a pending challenge.

(Paywalled) In Arkansas, Jennifer Meeks, the wife of a state representative, went on Facebook to talk about how she removed LGBTQ+ and Pride-related titles from Little Free Libraries in Conway and replaced them with other “less objectionable” materials. But according to the headline, her husband has denied these claims, despite his wife’s Facebook post.

Michigan legislators are working on their own set of anti-book ban bills.

The Patmos Library (MI) is going to try to get their funding approved a third time. Their compromise to the bigots who were willing to defund the library over only four books is to add “content descriptions” to the covers of all 90,000 books in their collection. “The labels would be copied from book descriptions from the Library of Congress or book-selling websites like Amazon. The labels won’t include anything written by the staff or the library board. While not offering warnings, those descriptions could provide clues to parents about content some may find objectionable for their children.” AKA information that parents could look up ON THEIR OWN. Or just read the back of the damn book! What a spectacular waste of library time and resources!

John Green calls Hamilton County’s (IN) decision to remove The Fault in Our Stars from the teen section at Hamilton East Public Library “ludicrous.” “It is about teenagers and I wrote it for teenagers. Teenagers are not harmed by reading TFIOS.”

Paywalled: One of the Hamilton East trustees may lose his seat, and while there aren’t any specific details, he has not agreed with the board’s book banning efforts.

“A group protesting “inappropriate” books in Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp. libraries [IN] took over the public comment section of Monday night’s school board meeting, taking advantage of a new policy that allows the public to talk about any subject, whether or not it is on the agenda.”

Talcott Library (IL) patrons are arguing that This Book is Gay is emotionally damaging to young children. One person said, “If I came across this at that age, it would be emotionally terrible for young children. These types of books make easy targets for young predators.” You know what’s damaging? Active shooter drills and our elected leaders not giving a flying crap about children dying at school. You know what’s not damaging? Reading about LGBTQ+ people.

The Illinois book ban legislation is great for schools and libraries but overlooks censorship in prisons.

Urbandale schools (IA) allegedly have hit pause on removing books referencing gender identity and sexual orientation.

Legislators aren’t telling you what the Iowa book ban law really says.

Mason City Community School District (IA) is using ChatGPT to help them remove sexually explicit titles.

Grand Forks School Board (ND) will not be removing six challenged books.

“After 130 days of waiting on an open records request regarding alleged pornography in schools, the Oklahoma State Department of Education said they do not maintain such a list.” Quelle surprise.

Academy School District 20 in Colorado Springs has returned Push and Identical to library shelves, primarily because the school removed them without receiving an official challenge or following any established protocol.

There’s a legal case happening in Colorado, where the law is currently being interpreted to provide anonymity for people who submit book challenges, under the guise of patron privacy. This article explains why that’s a bad interpretation for democracy, and you can bet that the results of this case will have implications in other states as well.

Lander Valley High School (WY) lost a librarian “due to what he described as a climate of discrimination against LGBTQ+ students and the censorship of educators.”

Natrona County School District (WY) implements an opt in/opt out policy for library materials,

The Campbell County Public Library (WY) board showed cowardice in firing the director.

Vancouver Public Library has fielded 17 book challenges and one challenge to a CD in the last year and a half, although none of the items were removed.

“The Australian Christian Lobby has launched a new initiative encouraging their followers to scour their local libraries for books that they think might be suitable for complaints to authorities. Those who are quick to submit suggestions on books to be banned can win prizes.” Y’all………

Books & Authors in the News

Revisiting Michael Lewis’ The Blind Side in the wake of Michael Oher’s lawsuit that says he was never legally adopted by the Tuohy family, and was cheated out of millions of dollars from the movie.

Robbie Robertson’s 2017 memoir hits the best-seller lists following his death last week.

Meanwhile, Jennette McCurdy’s memoir has spent the last year on the NYT’s Bestseller list.

Viola Fletcher, survivor of the Tulsa Massacre, is the oldest woman to release a memoir at 109.

Numbers & Trends

Reports find that YouTube is more popular for book discovery purposes than TikTok for readers between 14 and 25 years old.

Germany’s new KulturPass gave €200 to registered 18-year-olds to spend on “cultural products, events, and services.” In the last two months, books have overwhelmingly made up the majority of purchases.

The books that lost publishers the most money.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A reading guide for adults who don’t read.

Why reading books can improve your brain health.

On learning to read generously.

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

On the Riot

The importance of book-centered spaces as third places.

How well does How to Eat Fried Worms hold up on its 50th birthday?

Bookstores with fantastic websites for browsing.

A history of chain letters.

How and where to learn bookbinding.

a black and white cat sitting on a round table

Dini supervising my husband while he makes dinner. Blaine texted me saying Dini kept chirping at his feet while he got dinner in the Crock Pot, and then said “He’s so excited for this dinner…I almost feel bad he can’t eat any of it!”

Well, that’s all folks. I’ll pop back in on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Hockey Romance Fans Sent to the Penalty Box

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I finally got to see the Barbie movie last weekend in its entirety, and like everyone else on the internet, I’m obsessed with the dance party scene. I need someone in my life to get married or throw a super extra Halloween party this year so I have a reason to find a Barbie costume and learn the choreography. (Do you think anyone will give me side-eye if I come to work dressed as Weird Barbie this year?)

Anyway, make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index, which has been keeping velocireaders in the know about all the latest books since 2017! Subscribe today — you won’t be able to read them all, but it’s fun to try! 

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Simon & Schuster has been sold to the private equity firm KKR, but there are a number of industry insiders who are concerned about the deal.

Jane Friedman talks about seeing a bunch of AI-generated books with her name show up on Amazon and Goodreads.

The New York Times looks at the flood of shoddy travel guides that have shown up on Amazon recently.

New & Upcoming Titles

Brooke Shields announces a new book about the empowerment of middle age.

Robert Downey Jr. has a book about sustainable food habits coming out in 2024.

Questlove is writing Hip-Hop is History in honor of rap’s 50th anniversary.

Megan Fox has a poetry collection coming out in November, and it’s already an Amazon best-seller.

There will be a YA version of American Prometheus by Martin Sherwin and Kai Bird.

YA authors talk about their new “romantasy” books.

Here’s a first look at Kerry Washington’s upcoming memoir.

And here’s a first look at Cassandra Clare’s first adult fantasy novel, Sword Catcher.

Spotlight on new books about surviving toxic religion.

Some of the best new romantic suspense novels of 2023.

2023’s new campus fiction and dark academia novels.

The best historical fiction of 2023 so far.

11 cookbooks for fall.

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

August book picks from Good Morning America, The Guardian (thrillers).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store – James McBride (New York Times, Slate, Washington Post)

Liquid Snakes – Stephen Kearse (LA Times, New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

Hockey romance novels are in the news. Here’s why they’re so popular, but there’s also a bonkers story involving TikTok, an actual player for the Seattle Kraken, and rampant boundary crossing.

The authors helping “sad girl lit” grow up.

All of Stephen King’s books in publication order.

On the Riot

12 hot book club picks for August.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Reading pathways for Barbara Kingsolver.

Science fiction is inherently rebellious. Why don’t some of its fans agree?

All Things Comics

5 of the summer’s best and most daring graphic novels.

On the Riot

8 queer historical comics.

The most underrated comics according to Goodreads.

8 graphic novels like Nimona.

Audiophilia

Jeff Daniels is releasing an audio-exclusive memoir next month on Audible.

An audiobook roundup of mothers, daughters, and memoirs.

On the Riot

9 of the best video game and audiobook pairings.

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

7 books that will make you put down your phone.

11 modern retellings of classic stories.

9 LGBTQ+ books every queer writer should read.

Great books starring women over 40.

7 must-read Nigerian horror novels.

10 best-selling books by Latinas from the last decade.

7 wellness books you need on your shelf.

9 novellas for our current age of distraction.

6 difficult women who live on in fiction.

The great reluctant detectives of crime fiction.

Thrillers about parents protecting their child.

5 surprisingly devoted SFF couples.

7 novels about girlbosses and the dark side of social media.

Fiction and nonfiction about the dark side of the Jazz Age.

11 horror novels to read before the end of the year.

On the Riot

9 YA novels from the current horror renaissance.

Books if you’re missing XO, Kitty.

Queer royal romance for fans of Red, White, and Royal Blue.

9 body horror novels by women about losing control.

10 books for fans of Criminal Minds.

10 of the best puzzle mysteries.

Travel memoirs that aren’t by the usual white dudes.

8 overrated literary classics, and 8 books to read instead.

12 beautiful books about the saddest stories.

Level Up (Library Reads)

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

a black cat and a black and white cat sleeping in a cat bed with their heads shoved together

This photo may be a little hard to see, but Gilbert decided to infiltrate Dini’s sleeping space, and they fell asleep like that. But where does one cat end and the other one begin??

All right, friends. That’s all I have for today. See you on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Octavia Butler Avenue

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I realized when I was putting this newsletter together that most of the library news this week was related to censorship and book banning. If that’s not a commentary on the state of our profession, I don’t know what is.

In better news, make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index, which has been keeping velocireaders in the know about all the latest books since 2017! It’s new books for days! Subscribe today — you won’t be able to read them all, but it’s fun to try. 

Book Adaptations in the News

Dan Ackerman, editor-in-chief of Gizmodo and author of The Tetris Effect, is suing Apple and the Tetris Company for adapting his book into the recent film, Tetris.

Everything we know about the Red, White, and Royal Blue movie.

Censorship News

The return of child-free libraries.

A teacher talks about their experience with putting an LGBTQ+ book on a reading list and then having someone file a police report.

Fed up and filing suit for intellectual freedom.

Why intellectual freedom advocates need more people to show up to their school and library board meetings.

U.S. Senators Kevin Cramer, Marco Rubio, and Mike Braun have demanded that the Institute of Museum and Library Services investigate ALA’s “active religious discrimination” against Brave Books.

Follett is asking publishers to help rate their own books in order to be in compliance with Texas’ new state law, but publishers are rightfully concerned, saying that this would make them complicit with censorship.

Grappling with the new state law, fearful Florida teachers are getting rid of a ton of books, most of them featuring books depicting underrepresented characters.

Thankfully, Clay County Schools (FL) have determined that Arthur’s Birthday did not damage any souls, and can remain on school shelves.

Florida education commissioner Manny Diaz Jr. clarifies that high schools can offer AP Psychology. Of course, he made this clarification literally hours before schools reopened for the new school year, so nothing like giving teachers a heads-up, huh?

Lake County (FL) schools have reversed their ban on And Tango Makes Three.

Amanda Jones has filed the first legal brief in her appeal of the ongoing defamation suit.

A look at how the teen council at the Brooklyn Public Library is helping to combat book bans nationwide.

The Glenside Public Library (PA) is promoting books that Central Bucks residents are trying to ban in the school district.

Botetourt County (VA) debates age restrictions in their library. Under consideration: not allowing patrons under 18 to check out any adult materials, and not allowing anyone under 18 to be in the library without a parent or guardian present, although 16 and 17 year olds could potentially be in the library by themselves with written permission from a parent. YIKES ON BIKES, people!

The Wake school board (NC) approves a new book challenge policy.

Wilmington (NC) school board members are hearing complaints about Stamped being available to students. One attendee at a recent board meeting told the trustees that “[they] were elected to restore conservative values to protect [their] children and parental rights.” Also, other people in favor of getting rid of Stamped say that they’re advocating for the book’s “removal,” not a “ban,” which IS THE SAME THING OH MY LORD WHY ARE WE EVEN HAVING THIS CONVERSATION??

Two teachers at Hilton Head Island Middle School (SC) talk about how a single parent, David Cook, has harassed them and made them feel physically unsafe. Staff and administrators have advised the teachers to move to different areas of the building when Cook is present due to his in-person and online harassment, and Cook has posted social media messages such as “If you’re in support of giving sexually explicit material to children, it’s important to remember……Dead Pedophiles Don’t Re-Offend.” As of right now, he is still allowed on school property. (This is also the man who threw a bag of chicken feed at a recent school board meeting.)

(Paywalled). Meanwhile, in the same county (Beaufort), a fourth book has been removed, while five titles have been returned.

A new Mississippi law blocks online access for minors in public schools and libraries. The onus is on the vendors, not the libraries, to verify that the material is “appropriate,” but libraries are still tasked with figuring out how to restrict access in order to comply with the state law.

I can’t succinctly summarize the nonsense happening at the Hamilton East Public Library (IN) board meeting, so just read the article, and pay attention to the ridiculous review process the staff have to undergo to determine what books need to be moved to the “adult” collection.

The Coronado Public Library (CA) now has a new pre-storytime procedure that displays selected books at least 15 minutes before they’re read. This was due to a group of people objecting to The Rainbow Parade being read at a storytime during Pride Month.

Temecula Valley Unified School District (CA) is being sued over Resolution 21, which their board passed last year. It bans teaching “critical race theory,” and the group filing the lawsuit says that the resolution violates California’s censorship and anti-discrimination statutes.

Books & Authors in the News

The fiction analytics site Prosecraft has been shut down after tremendous author backlash. Benji Smith, the creator, used the full text of over 25,000 published books to feed his analytics project, all of which was taken without authors’ consent.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

The best-selling science fiction books of all time.

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

There is now an Octavia Butler Avenue in Lake Forest Park, Washington.

Reading rewards that work.

101 best websites for writers.

On the Riot

What is the Writers in Residence juvenile detention program?

Book award categories we wish existed.

How (and why) to read academic journals for fun.

Why we need Indigenous languages in children’s books.

Why readers should care about the WGA strike.

black and white cat perched on the back of a gray couch with its paws hanging over the back

Here’s Dini being a happy little helper on Sunday. Actually, he may have just been waiting for a snack, or supervising one of us on the treadmill. But he sure looks like he’s doing important work!

Well, that’s all folks. I’ll pop back in on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Essential GenX Reading List

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. *record scratch* Yeah, that’s me. You’re probably wondering how I got into this situation. Well, my husband and I were at the Cubs game on Saturday, and the people behind me decided to create the longest cup snake I’ve ever seen…so impressive that we ended up on the Atlanta broadcast. Cup snakes are a Wrigley Field bleacher tradition, and as Blaine pointed out, “You don’t choose the cup snake – the cup snake chooses you.” (Also, Cubs won!)

On a more topical note, make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index, which has been keeping velocireaders in the know about all the latest books since 2017! Subscribe today — you won’t be able to read them all, but it’s fun to try! 

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The bidding for Simon & Schuster draws to a close.

Is TikTok going to ruin the book industry?

AI’s inroads in publishing touch off fear and creativity.

The art of telling forbidden stories in China.

The editor and fighter behind many of the most beloved children’s books of all time: Ursula Nordstrom.

New & Upcoming Titles

Emily Henry has a new book coming out next spring!

12 celebrities from Barbra Streisand to Sly Stone who have books coming out.

Rachel Maddow is writing a book about right-wing extremism in the U.S., including a plot to overthrow the government at the start of WWII.

Paul Reubens was working on a memoir when he passed away, and some are hoping it will be published posthumously.

Here’s the delightful cover of Billy Dee Williams’s upcoming memoir, What Have We Here?

10 noteworthy nonfiction debuts to watch for this fall.

The 23 best debut novels of 2023 (so far).

30 horror novels to watch for this year.

76 new mystery books that will have you on the edge of your seat.

112 new books to add to your reading list this year.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, USA Today.

August picks from Barnes & Noble, LitHub (SFF), New York Times, The Root, Town & Country.

Fall picks from Bustle.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

A Pocketful of Happiness – Richard E. Grant (Atlantic, LA Times, New York Times, People)

Witness: Stories – Jamel Brinkley (Guardian, LA Times, New York Times)

Waiting To Be Arrested At Night: A Uyghur Poet’s Memoir of China’s Genocide – Tahir Hamut Izgil, tr. by Joshua L. Freeman (New York Times, Time, Washington Post)

Time’s Mouth – Edan Lepucki (Datebook, New York Times, Shondaland)

Tom Lake – Ann Patchett (Datebook, New York Times)

Kala – Colin Walsh (Washington Post)

Whalefall – Daniel Kraus (New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

How to find the right online book club for you.

How translated fiction captured a new generation of readers. ​

All of Daniel Silva’s books in order.

On the Riot

Barbie, books, and publishing for young readers.

The best new weekly book picks.

August picks for mystery/thrillers, horror, SFF, romance, nonfiction, YA, children’s.

All Things Comics

Hyperion Avenue is debuting a new Marvel crime series! These will be novels rather than graphic novels, and they’ll feature writing from S.A. Cosby, Lisa Jewell, and Alex Segura to kick things off.

Heart-stopping books to pick up after finishing season 2 of Heartstopper.

12 fantasy YA graphic novels to escape into.

Here’s the trailer for season 2 of Loki.

On the Riot

August picks for graphic novels/comics and manga.

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

Audiophilia

The August 2023 Earphones Award winners are announced.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

7 books that use fairy tales to reveal the strangeness of the real world.

10 books about chosen families.

5 classic science fiction stories about letting AI do all the work.

A reading list where the animal companions steal the show.

5 gripping SFF narratives composed of interlinked short stories.

Unlikely investigative teams in crime fiction.

25 books about being Black in Canada.

8 books every hip-hop feminist should read.

8 books about friendship with wealth disparities.

75 essential books for Gen Xers.

10 must-read cat-and-mouse thrillers.

On the Riot

Books about going viral on social media.

23 of the swooniest romantasy books.

8 novels that go behind the scenes in the entertainment industry.

8 coming of age books that take place in adulthood.

Mindf*ck books that leave you wondering WTF just happened.

8 award-winning literary fiction novels you’ve probably never heard of.

9 of the best recent epic fantasy series.

Level Up (Library Reads)

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

black cat waiting in the shadows of a hallway

Is that a death omen? Or just Gilbert waiting for us to feed him? Is there really a difference?

All right friends, that’s all I have for right now. I’ll be back on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

ME AND EARL and the Book Banning Girls

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Summer reading is winding down, but we have at least three new projects/initiatives that are planned for the first week of September, so I haven’t felt any of that post-summer reading relief yet!

Make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index, which has been keeping velocireaders in the know about all the latest books since 2017! It’s new books for days! Subscribe today — you won’t be able to read them all, but it’s fun to try. 

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

An overdue library book was returned 119 YEARS (!!!) late.

Cool Library Updates Worth Reading

Making trouble that matters.

Libraries must rethink who and how they recruit to the field.

Book Adaptations in the News

Daniel Kraus’s upcoming novel, Whalefall, has already been snagged for a film adaptation.

Censorship News

Libraries are under attack because they’re anti-fascist.

Age-restricted library cards aren’t a solution: they’re a liability.

A report from the 2023 San Diego Comic-Con on post-pandemic censorship in libraries.

City leaders have rightly criticized the Houston ISD superintendent Mike Miles over his plans to turn most of the school libraries into detention centers. Meanwhile, ALA and the American Association of School Librarians have each issued statements opposing this decision.

Montgomery County (TX) libraries are limiting teen access to LGBTQ+ books and increasing the number of materials with politically conservative themes as a “counterbalance.” Holy hell, that’s not how libraries work!

Moore Memorial Public Library (TX) has drafted a pretty solid new book challenge policy.

Jesse Andrews on “Me and Earl” and the book-banning girls in Tallahassee.

More about the ban on Arthur’s Birthday in Clay County (FL) schools…apparently Bruce Friedman thinks the book could “damage souls.” I give up. This is too much internet for one day.

Lake County Schools (FL) have reinstated access to And Tango Makes Three.

Someone filed an appeal in Polk County Schools (FL) over Assassination Classroom being returned to the shelves.

A look at the book challenges that were reported in Massachusetts this last school year. None of the books should be a surprise.

North Smithfield High School (RI) has removed an elective class on Gothic literature and fairy tales because parents didn’t like that the class used the book The Virgin Suicides.

Yancey County Public Library (NC) considered withdrawing from the larger regional library consortium because another library had Pride displays. The resolution did not pass, thanks to the community’s support.

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (NC) continue to deal with the repercussions of giving Moms for Liberty a sense of legitimacy.

Wake County schools (NC) have a new book challenge policy.

New Hanover County (NC) Board of Education will have an appeal hearing on whether or not to ban Stamped.

A federal judge has blocked Arkansas’s new library materials law from taking effect.

Saline County Public Library (AR) may be under the jurisdiction of the county judge soon.

A look at how St. Charles County (MO) libraries are creating new library card classifications to comply with state law.

The Perks of Being a Wallflower will stay in Sumner County Schools (TN), although the school may end up revising its obscene materials policy as a result of this decision.

Athens County Public Library (OH) patrons showed up to support the library, which refused to alter its Pride Month displays or programming.

The Michigan Library Association has launched a new “Right to Read” campaign to counter the book banning efforts happening in the state.

Metropolitan School District of Steuben County (IN) is requiring school librarians to be the co-parents that the book banners claim they don’t want: “Any titles that were on the list have been pulled to a section that requires the media specialist to hand that book to the child and they have a conversation and check appropriateness for the child and the age of the material.”

A middle school in Kimberly, Wisconsin, is facing backlash for their digital collection, which includes This Book is Gay.

Book challenges in the Dakota County (MN) library system drew big crowds to a recent committee meeting.

Mankato Area Public Schools (MN) upheld the decision to retain March by John Lewis as part of a high school English lesson on racism, AKA an age-appropriate book used to talk about an age-appropriate subject.

The Urbandale School District (IA) just made a list of 374 books that need to be pulled from classrooms, thanks to the new state law. Jodi Picoult has thoughts about this.

The Campbell County (WY) Public Library board and director are at odds over the library’s book weeding policy — the board wants library staff to weed books with “egregious” sexual content. Update: the board voted to fire the director, and were met with a group of attendees giving the trustees the finger in response. It’s a funny image, but the actions of this board are extremely scary.

Academy District 20 (CO) has returned several books to shelves after a community member objected to their removal and then challenged the Bible on the same grounds. The district’s legal counsel says that the schools will follow their policy for removing titles moving forward, which they should have done in the first place.

Grangeville-Centennial Library (ID) will not be reclassifying a group of YA novels as adult titles

Boundary County Library (ID) is creating a “new adult” section of the library, which is different than the section for their “young adult” books. I don’t foresee any confusion whatsoever.

Temecula School District (CA) has decided to adapt the social studies curriculum they’ve been fighting against, but they still don’t plan to acknowledge Harvey Milk. And the board president has said, “I’ve already instructed the superintendent, if books come from shipping and receiving, to say ‘No,’ and we’ll ship them right back,” in response to Governor Newsom saying that the state will purchase the textbooks and “fine them [the board] for their incompetence.”

Two San Diego residents tried to “Hide the Pride” at their local library. It backfired.

Residents speak out against creating a book rating system at the Timberland Regional Library (WA).

Paywalled: Dayton Public Library is relocating multiple YA books to other areas of the library. It is also at risk of losing funding.

Books & Authors in the News

Singer, author, and activist Sinéad O’Connor has died at 56.

How Supreme Court justices make millions from book deals.

Killers of the Flower Moon tops the bestseller lists ahead of the upcoming movie adaptation.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

Award News

The 2023 Booker Prize longlist has been announced.

The longlist for the 2023 First Novel Prize from the Center for Fiction has been released.

The Emmy Awards have been postponed due to the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes.

Pop Cultured

Actor Paul Reubens, best known for playing Pee-Wee Herman, has died at 70.

5 TV shows to watch if you like Only Murders in the Building.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

The gamification of reading is changing how we approach books.

Washington Post editor Michael Dirda shares his 29 rules for reading.

On the Riot

13 fantasy books that should be adapted for the big screen.

What’s it like to be a disabled writer?

Should Book Twitter switch to Book Tumblr?

The bookish lives of Harry Belafonte and Zendaya.

The use of tarot in fiction.

No more writers as protagonists!

black and white cat with a skeptical raised eyebrow

Dini gets newsletter honors this week, because Monday was his third Gotcha Day! As you can tell from this very skeptical photo, he is overjoyed to be a part of the family.

All right folks. Have a good weekend and I’ll catch you again on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.