Categories
Check Your Shelf

Gentle Self-Help and Desertpunk

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I have to admit, I’m writing this newsletter on a bit of a cranky note…my husband and I had plans for a Barbenheimer weekend, and Oppenheimer went fine, but our theater ended up canceling our Barbie showing about 30 minutes in because the projector wouldn’t stop skipping! We got free passes, and we should be able to go next Sunday, but dammit, I was really looking forward to this! So now I have to spend another week of avoiding Barbie spoilers. Le sigh.

On a more enjoyable note, if you haven’t already, 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! 

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

UPS and Teamsters Union avoid a strike with a historic deal.

HarperCollins is closing the YA imprint, Inkyard Press.

A new startup proposes an influencer-driven publishing company.

Goodreads is right to divide opinions, but wrong to boil them down. Plus: the wrath of Goodreads.

New & Upcoming Titles

Kim Sherwood announces a new James Bond novel.

Here’s a preview of Jada Pinkett Smith’s memoir, Worthy.

Here’s the cover reveal for Trevor Noah’s upcoming illustrated book, Into the Uncut Grass.

And here’s the cover reveal for the latest book from Gillian Flynn’s imprint: One of the Good Guys by Araminta Hall.

12 new books to get you to the end of the summer and beyond.

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

The best international crime fiction for July.

August picks from Barnes & Noble (general, teens, kids), Epic Reads, Kirkus, New York Times, The Root.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Tom Lake – Ann Patchett (The Guardian, LA Times)

The Exorcist Legacy: 50 Years of Fear – Nat Segaloff (Entertainment Weekly, LA Times)

Family Lore – Elizabeth Acevedo (Datebook, Time)

American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer – Kai Bird & Martin J. Sherwin (The Atlantic)

Somebody’s Fool – Richard Russo (New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

The current explosion of time travel novels goes beyond science fiction and fantasy.

Where to start with Haruki Murakami.

The past, present, and future of crime fiction in India.

On the Riot

10 new thrilling and deliciously dark romance books.

The best new Korean literature in translation.

Recent poetry releases to add to your collections.

The best books that Rioters read in April – June 2023.

The best new weekly book releases.

Reading pathways for Aya de León.

In a wave of Greek mythology retellings, where are the Greek writers?

Sand, sand, and more sand. Is it Anakin Skywalker’s worst nightmare? No, it’s desertpunk!

The importance of non-sexual intimacy in romance novels.

All Things Comics

Here’s a recap of the news from the 2023 San Diego Comic-Con.

And here are the winners of the 2023 Eisner Awards.

The sequel to My Favorite Thing is Monsters has a release date!

Here’s a preview of Jamie Lee Curtis’ upcoming graphic novel, Mother Nature.

Trailers for One Piece and Heartstopper, Season 2.

On the Riot

The best comics Rioters read from April – June 2023.

Why comics are the ultimate reading slump-buster and restart.

8 of the best manga adaptations.

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

Children/Teens

YA nonfiction books about the universe.

14 YA mystery series to keep you up at night.

YA romance novels like Red, White, and Royal Blue.

Adults

5 SF novels about going on vacation.

Books to read after watching Oppenheimer, from Barnes & Noble and Town & Country.

8 books to turn to when life gets overwhelming.

7 books for the lifelong learner.

5 books that would be in Barbie’s Dreamhouse.

Top 10 books by neglected female thinkers.

Greta Gerwig’s 10 favorite books.

5 SF stories of science unimpeded by safety concerns.

21 cozy fall books to help you get ready for the season.

What to read if you have Beyoncé and her Renaissance tour on the brain.

9 gothic horror novels to spend your summer reading.

10 books if you enjoy generation-spanning sci-fi epics like Foundation.

8 prolific authors to check out ASAP.

10 sun-soaked mysteries and thrillers.

On the Riot

8 chapter books for second graders to expand their horizons.

Classic YA books that make you feel seen.

8 heartfelt YA books featuring characters with anxiety.

10 horror books about dolls.

25 of the best romance book series.

Adult versions of your favorite childhood fantasy novels.

20 must-read baseball romances.

9 of the best gentle self-help books.

8 books about whistleblowers.

9 atmospheric mystery novels to help you explore the world.

8 road trip 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 and white cat and a black cat sharing a cat bed and looking up at the camera

The boys are in a snuggly phase again! Or at least, Dini is just tolerating Gilbert as he tries to steal his napping spot. But they’re so cute when they’re like this!!

Okay, that’s all I have for today. Hopefully by this time next week I’ll have seen the Barbie movie in its entirety!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Jay-Z Finances Anti Book Ban Initiatives

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. The big excitement in the Horner household this week is that we just ordered a semi-collapsable treadmill, and now neither of us will have an excuse for not getting some exercise. Honestly though, we’re both trying to improve our stamina a bit before we visit Colorado again in September — we want to spend more time hiking and enjoying the scenery, and less time trying to catch our breath!

Don’t forget to check out Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition, where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world, and talks to authors including S.A. Cosby, Khaled Hosseini, and Sarah Bakewell. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

UC Berkeley will keep its anthropology library…sort of.

Salt Lake City librarians are pushing to unionize.

Cool Library Updates

Boston locals are fundraising for the city’s first nonprofit library created by and for LGBTQ+ folks.

NYC libraries are giving away 15,000 books this summer.

Barack Obama is making heartwarming cameos in library TikTok videos.

Book Adaptations in the News

The release date for Force of Nature: The Dry 2 has been postponed due to the ongoing actors’ strike.

George R.R. Martin says his HBO deal has been suspended due to the Hollywood strikes as well.

Here’s a first look at the Pet Sematary sequel, Pet Sematary: Bloodlines.

Trailer for A Haunting in Venice, which is based on Agatha Christie’s Hallowe’en Party.

Censorship News

How to own a news cycle.

Rep. Lauren Boebert promoted an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act that would ban the purchase of “pornographic books” for military schools, despite not having a solid definition of what constitutes a pornographic book, and the fact that schools don’t buy pornographic materials.

Before Book Looks, there was Common Sense Media.

The Digital Public Library of America announces the launch of the Banned Books Club, which shows readers the books that have been banned in their area, and lets them read the digital versions for free.

How book banning campaigns have changed the lives and education of librarians: they now need to learn how to plan for safety and legal protection.

Librarians have started an open letter of support for ALA President Emily Drabinski, who the Montana State Library Commission cited as the primary reason why they were cutting ties with ALA.

Fort Worth (TX) schools are removing three books: Gender Queer, Flamer, and Wait, What? A Comic Book Guide to Relationships, Bodies, and Growing Up.

Houston ISD (TX) is eliminating school librarians and converting many of the school libraries into disciplinary centers at New Education System schools. I’m not making this up.

Two Texas bookstores and three national bookseller associations have filed a lawsuit against Texas House Bill 900, which requires private booksellers to rate books on “appropriateness” for young readers.

Florida’s “removed book” list is coming. Schools plan to use it.

Two more calls to ban the Bible in response to other book bans — one in Leon County, Florida, and the other in Palm Beach, Florida.

In other Leon County news, they are keeping I Am Billie Jean King on school library shelves.

Right-wing bigots are trying to ban Arthur’s Birthday from Clay County (FL) school libraries because…well, it’s not totally clear why. But it’s probably the work of Bruce Friedman, who has submitted nearly all of the challenges in the Clay County school district thus far.

Paywalled: Miami educators are enraged by Florida’s Black history standards.

Oconee County (GA) has a Moms for Liberty group targeting the public library with book challenges.

Let’s break down some numbers in regard to the St. Tammany Parish Library’s (LA) ongoing book challenges. Each challenge costs the library system about $400 and dozens of staff hours. In the 11 months since receiving its first challenge, the library has only worked its way through 11 challenged titles. They have over 150 (!!!) challenged books to review at this time. At this rate, they’re looking at an estimated total of $60,000, 5400 additional staff hours (if we’re optimistic and calculate 36 additional hours per challenge), and it’ll take them 12.5 years to get through everything at this rate. And that’s only if no additional challenges are submitted, which is highly unlikely. What a spectacular waste of time and money.

This Book is Gay will stay in Brookfield (CT) schools.

This New York librarian talks about what it’s been like being called a “groomer” and a “pedophile” on social media.

Jay-Z helps finance anti book ban initiatives in New York.

Cedar Grove Public Library (NJ) is restricting access to Gender Queer.

What happened when students led fights to reverse book bans at Central York High School (PA).

Telford Borough Councilman (PA) Robert Jacobus continues his crusade to defund the Indian Valley Public Library.

Paywalled: 39 books have been challenged in Carroll County Public Schools (MD).

Samuels Library (VA) issues a ruling on the location of three challenged books, and also rolled out two new library card types that restrict access for kids and teens and prevent access to digital media.

Williamsburg-James City County Schools (VA) have changed their book challenge policy, saying that parents can still submit a complaint through appropriate channels, but “no library resources should be restricted or removed from the library as a result of the concern or complaint.”

Hanover County (VA) residents are concerned about possible book bans after two pro-book banners are appointed to the library board.

The Appomattox County (VA) Board of Supervisors are poised to reinstate a library board member that they removed last month. One of the supervisors made the request to reinstate the board member, saying that “he had voted to remove library board members due to his own beliefs, and not the law of Virginia.” Yeah…that’s not good.

Virginia: Public libraries are the latest front in a culture war battle over books.

Iredell-Statesville Schools (NC) have removed or relocated over 250 (!!!) books after complaints.

Moore County (NC) Board of Education member Philip Holmes wants to remove several “vulgar” books from the schools.

Paywalled: A single parent was able to get 12 books removed from Horry County Schools (SC).

York County (SC) voted to shrink the library board from 10 trustees to 7, making it easier for board members to push their potential book banning agendas.

Ta-Nehisi Coates attended a Lexington-Richland 5 school board meeting (SC) in support of a high school teacher who was told to stop using his book Between the World and Me in her AP English class.

Alabama Senator Chris Elliott proposed removing $5 million in funding from the Alabama Department of Archives and History because they hosted a one-hour lecture on LGBTQ+ history. The bill failed, but he said he will continue to pursue other measures next year.

A group of Prattville (AL) library challengers are recruiting people to help ban books, as well as negatively review books so that their language aligns with state anti-obscenity laws.

In response to the new state law, the Springdale Public Library (AR) will require all children 12 and younger to have a parent with them at all times while using the library, while children 13-14 must have an adult physically present in the building in order to use the library. I know most libraries have policies regarding the ages of unsupervised children, but I think we can all agree this is extremely restrictive.

A Fayetteville (AR) federal judge will be issuing a preliminary ruling soon on the constitutionality of the new state law targeting libraries and booksellers.

The Crawford County Library (AR) preps for two federal lawsuits.

Jay Ashcroft is the latest politician to admonish the ALA and threaten to cut state ties — this time in Missouri.

Elizabethtown Independent Schools (KY) are getting “visitors” at the school board meetings “sharing book concerns” with the trustees. It sounds almost wholesome, doesn’t it?

Marathon County Public Library (WI) will retain Let’s Talk About It, and will not be creating a book rating system for their collection.

The West Bend School (WI) review committee voted unanimously to keep The 57 Bus.

Keene Memorial Library (NE) is also implementing new restricted age category library cards. Teens will be unable to borrow any materials from the adult section, which means that all nonfiction books are off-limits for research papers, along with any classic novels that they may need to read for school. This is such a short-sighted policy.

A Tulsa (OK) school board member is getting their undies in a bundle because an organization that partners with the school district to provide tutoring and mentoring students for students posted an LGBTQ booklist on Instagram during Pride Month.

59% of Utahns oppose local school boards removing books from classrooms and libraries.

Claim: A Washoe County (NV) resident claimed that Lawn Boy was being read out loud to students in Washoe County Schools. Reality: “The school district reports it could find no evidence of Evison’s Lawn Boy being read to students.”

Temecula Valley Unified School District (CA) recently banned an elementary school social studies textbook because it mentioned Harvey Milk. California governor Gavin Newsome will now purchase copies of the book for students in the district and then “bill the district and fine them for violating state law.”

Lewis County Board of Commissioners (WA) contacted the Timberland Regional Library about developing a policy around creating a rating system for the children’s collection, which is NOT how library policy should be developed!

The Columbia County Rural Library (WA) heard from several people who want certain books relocated from the children’s section, with one person suggesting that “some of the offending books could be kept off the shelves and shipped to patrons who wished to check them out.” That’s…that’s not how libraries work!

6 LGBTQ-themed YA books have gone missing from the Tri-Valley Community Library (AK).

Business owners in Winkler, Manitoba, are pushing to defund libraries over “pornographic” books.

When precocious readers want mature books: it’s your call, parents.

The book ban backlash has arrived just in time to mobilize voters.

Books & Authors in the News

If you’ve read Robert Kolker’s 2013 true crime book The Lost Girls: An Unsolved American Mystery, they may have finally solved the mystery: a suspect has recently been arrested in the Gilgo Beach serial killings.

The Roald Dahl Museum has issued a statement addressing the author’s antisemitism.

Numbers & Trends

These are the most-assigned novels by women in U.S. colleges.

The bestselling books of the week.

Delighting velocireaders since 2017, Book Riot’s New Release Index will keep you in the know about all the latest books. Start your 14-day free trial today.

Award News

The inaugural TikTok Book Awards shortlist has been announced.

Javier Zamora: “It’s time for the Pulitzer Prize for Literature to accept noncitizens.”

Drew Barrymore is hosting this year’s National Book Awards, with Oprah Winfrey delivering remarks as well.

The finalists for the World Fantasy Awards and the British Fantasy Awards have been announced.

Pop Cultured

Not sure where this news should actually go, but Twitter has now been rebranded as “X.” I, for one, will not be referring to it as “X.”

On the Riot

Why you should run a 10 day reading challenge at your school.

How Good Omens gave this reader hope as a trans college student.

This Rioter reflects on their reading eras, the books they loved, and the books they only pretended to love.

Does tracking reading make it less enjoyable?

Which Kindle should you buy?

black cat laying on its back with its paws curled against its chest

I’m not sure, but I think Gilbert turned into a sea otter!

All right, folks, have a great weekend, and hopefully it’s not unbearably hot where you are. I’ll see you again on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Age of the Feminist AMERICAN PSYCHO

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am still in mild recovery from last Friday, when I attended a friend’s wedding and danced a little too enthusiastically. Blaine and I left a little after 9:30, and by the time we got home, I was ready to collapse face-first on the couch. Socializing is hard, y’all. Has it always been this hard?

Don’t forget to check out Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition, where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world, and interviews authors such as S.A. Cosby, Khaled Hosseini, Sarah Bakewell, and Yahdon Israel. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Publishers and Ingram prepare for a possible UPS strike.

Penguin Random House and IPG both lay off staff.

“There’s an industry-wide mental health crisis:” authors and publishers on why the book sector needs to change.

Why generative AI won’t disrupt books.

New & Upcoming Titles

Barack Obama releases his 2023 summer reading list.

Cover reveal for Patrick Rothfuss’ return to the Kingkiller Chronicles: The Narrow Road Between Desires.

Marianne Williamson delays the release of her book, The Mystic Jesus: The Mind of Love, saying that “it might confuse the market” as she pursues a 2024 Democratic presidential campaign.

Snoop Dogg and fellow rapper E-40 are collaborating on a cookbook called Goon With the Spoon.

The buzziest books of 2023 so far.

30 SFF titles to look forward to in 2023.

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

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Crook Manifesto – Colson Whitehead (AARP, LitHub, Minnesota Star Tribune, NPR, Seattle Times, Vox, Washington Post)

Silver Nitrate – Silvia Moreno-Garcia (LA Times, New York Times, NPR, USA Today, Washington Post)

No One Prayed Over Their Graves – Khaled Khalifa (New York Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

“Does it really matter who wrote it?”: The rise of ghostwritten celebrity fiction.

The forgotten greats of science fiction.

The age of the “feminist American Psycho” has arrived.

How to read all of Michael Connelly’s Lincoln Lawyer books in order.

Why the music memoir is booming.

On the Riot

New sapphic romances for summer.

8 new science books you don’t want to miss.

3 2023 YA novels with punny titles.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

An A-Z alphabet of science fiction and fantasy authors of color.

10 of the best (and worst) fantasy tropes.

What is “second chance” romance?

20 horror books for people who don’t like horror.

All Things Comics

American Psycho is getting a comic adaptation.

Jim Henson’s Labyrinth is getting a graphic novel adaptation as well.

The Marvels star Iman Vellani is writing a new Ms. Marvel comic.

Cover reveal for Gene Luen Yang and LeUyen Pham’s upcoming graphic novel, Lunar New Year Love Story.

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 gets a Disney+ release date.

How we fell head over heels for graphic lit.

10 graphic novels for kids by Asian authors and illustrators.

On the Riot

These romance manhwa need to be on your TBR.

Delighting velocireaders since 2017, Book Riot’s New Release Index will keep you in the know about all the latest books. Start your 14-day free trial today.

Audiophilia

SAG-AFTRA members on strike are still able to work on audiobook productions.

New fiction audiobooks perfect for summer listening.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

15 YA romance workplace romances.

13 YA fantasy stories that will make you ugly cry.

11 YA mysteries and thrillers set on campus.

Adults

12 of the best books like The Summer I Turned Pretty.

Books to read if you loved The Barbie Movie, from Barnes & Noble and USA Today.

The best summer reads of all time, according to NPR staff.

Readers pick the best tech books of all time.

7 crime books featuring special events going off the rails.

12 Canadian romance books to swoon over this summer.

Time travel stories that explore what it means to be human.

5 books that depict life in the Middle East.

The 50 best mysteries of all time.

Science fiction books that deal with cults and radical fanatics.

8 divine novels inspired by mythology.

10 epic books under 250 pages.

Books to celebrate “Feral Girl Summer” all year long.

On the Riot

Picture books that provide a twist on traditional fairy tales.

9 great chapter books for 4th graders.

10 classic children’s books that you may have forgotten featured disabled characters.

YA books about teens in film.

8 disabled and chronically ill poets to read for Disability Pride Month.

8 anti-beach reads for readers who hate “summery books.”

10 of the best historical science fiction books.

10 books about rock stars.

Magical cozy mysteries to enliven your bookshelf.

Books about women’s soccer to read during the FIFA Women’s World Cup.

Books with awful taste, but great execution.

8 excellent books to help commemorate summer.

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 squeezing into the same cat bed

So, the cats haven’t used this cat bed in about a year. Tonight, Dini decided to give it another try, and Gilbert realized he needed to sleep in that bed RIGHT AWAY. So he squeezed himself in next to Dini; mild fighting ensued, and the two managed to share for about 10 minutes before Gilbert jumped out.

Alrighty, friends. I’ll check in again on Friday. Have a good week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Obama’s Letter to Librarians

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. The next few weekends are going to be very busy (wedding! Cubs game! work! movies!) so I’m looking for times in the schedule where I can carve out some alone time. These are all things I’m looking forward to (well, except for work), but my inner introvert is going “WHY DID YOU SCHEDULE ALL OF THIS??”

Don’t forget to check out Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition, where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world, and talks to authors including S.A. Cosby, Khaled Hosseini, and Sarah Bakewell. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Libraries & Librarians

Cool Library Updates

Jay-Z announced a new exhibition at the Brooklyn Public Library.

Worth Reading

Glencoe Public Library (IL) tackles the public need for libraries.

Book Adaptations in the News

It Ends With Us gets a 2024 release date.

Fifth Season has purchased film rights to Shelley Read’s debut, Go As a River.

Here’s a first look at the Hulu adaptation of The Other Black Girl.

Here’s the first trailer for Wonka.

Trailer for Wheel of Time, Season 2.

Censorship News

Here’s Barack Obama’s letter to librarians, thanking us for protecting the right to read.

The impact of book bans on authors.

Paywalled: Montgomery County (TX) will restrict teen access to LGBTQ books, and will add books with conservative themes (not sure what that means).

A new Florida law says that parents can appeal to a state magistrate if school boards don’t rule in their favor re: book bans.

Leon County (FL) schools have pulled five books from library shelves, thanks to challenges submitted by Moms for Liberty.

Hernando County (FL) school board heard from an upset pastor about the book Marvin Redpost: Is He a Girl? at a recent meeting.

A Columbia County (GA) judge sided with the school district, saying “a parent’s opt-out of the school’s sexual education program does not require schools to keep materials related to sexuality out of the hands of her child.”

Brookfield (CT) school board is debating whether or not to remove a digital copy of This Book is Gay, which has only been checked out twice.

Old Lyme Public Library (CT) will keep two age-appropriate sex-ed books in the teen section.

Massachusetts legislators propose multiple anti-book ban bills.

A Massachusetts senator is trying to step in and stop a proposed book ban in Ludlow Schools.

The Indian Valley Public Library (PA) will not be defunded over what one council member called “inappropriate library materials.”

Members of the public are apparently an acceptable stand-in for professional school librarians in the Hempfield Area School District (PA).

These are the first seven books being considered for removal at Samuels Library (VA).

The book banning and censorship debate shifts to Hanover (VA) public libraries.

I’m paywalled from this article about a recently proposed North Carolina bill that would significantly increase parents’ ability to sue school boards and have superintendents removed, but here’s a non-paywalled op-ed that explains exactly why this is such a horrifying proposition.

In New Hanover County (NC), Stamped was challenged in the school districts, then approved, and now that decision is being appealed.

Moms for Liberty continue to push for Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools (NC) to ban books throughout the district.

The Iredell-Statesville (NC) school district has made it official practice to remove books while they are being reviewed.

Yancey County (NC) Board of Commissioners tried to pass a motion to take control of the public library, which many residents believed was in retaliation for a recent Pride month display. Thankfully, the motion did not pass.

Pickens County schools (SC) returned Stamped to high school library shelves, but students can only check it out with parental consent.

Beaufort County School District (SC) may bar the chicken-feed-throwing member of the public from attending any future meetings.

Oconee County Library (SC) voted to relocate Flamer from the teen section to the adult section.

There’s a petition circulating to fire an Athens Public Library (TN) staff member for putting up a Pride Month display.

Paywalled: Nixa (MO) school board will be reviewing Unpregnant.

An Ohio bill would ban and criminalize drag queens at story time events and other events geared toward children.

Big Walnut School District (OH) is reviewing 24 challenged books.

Friends of the Caro Library (MI) are helping to raise money to protect a group of board members that are being pushed for recall. The local bigots are apparently upset that these trustees won’t ban books on demand.

The new slate of conservative Brandywine (MI) school trustees have made their presence known…since January, the board has formed an “Explicit Book Review Committee” that has stopped the library from purchasing new materials and has also removed 30 books from library shelves.

Bartholomew County Public Library (IN) audited their teen section after receiving numerous requests to relocate the LGBTQ books. Not only did they decide that the books will be staying where they are, but they found that only 10-15% of their teen collection is written by LGBTQ authors, and library staff will focus on diversifying their future purchases.

The 57 Bus is currently an elective book in a high school English class at West Bend High School (WI), but a complainer who doesn’t have any kids in the school thinks it should be removed completely. This person also said that the book won’t stop LGBTQ students from being bullied, but it might encourage kids to use gender pronouns and identify with the “attractive” LGBTQ lifestyle. Keep in mind, this is a nonfiction book about a nonbinary student being set on fire while riding a bus. Is this the “attractive” LGBTQ lifestyle that this person is referring to?

As a side note, the same parent is also trying to get The Kite Runner removed from the same high school.

PFLAG will be holding an informational meeting in Waukesha (WI) about book banning in the school district, where 23 books have been censored or banned since 2021.

Iowa’s public libraries are becoming “the next grounds for the oncoming civil rights movement.”

A group of people at the Yankton (SD) Public Library board meeting spoke in favor of the library’s recent Pride display.

Once again, St. Marys (KS) officials have threatened to terminate the lease with the library because of LGBTQ books. From the article intro: “Gerard Kleinsmith says he hates the idea of censorship. He just wants to pull the lease for the city’s public library because he doesn’t like books about transgender people.”

Enid Public Library (OK) will allow an LGBTQ+ history display in October.

The numbers reveal more about the state of book banning in Greeley-Evans schools (CO). Specifically: “The number of people filing complaints and appeals on books in Greeley-Evans schools represents less than 1% of the total number of voters who participated in a District 6 ballot issue late last year.”

Moms for Liberty wants the Billings Public Library (MT) to visibly label LGBTQ+ books, even though libraries have definitively moved away from that practice.

Far-right Idaho legislators urged libraries to cut ties with ALA because of ALA President Emily Drabinsky’s previous tweet self-identifying as a “Marxist lesbian.”

At a recent Washoe (NV) County Commission meeting, several public commenters called for an investigation after commissioners selected a retired realtor as a new library trustee, rather than a right-wing bigot who has advocated against the library and its popular drag queen story hour. The County Commissioners were hoping to appoint a new board at a previous meeting, but were unable to due to the level of public comment.

Elk Grove Unified School District (CA) is facing public backlash over The Bluest Eye.

Clovis City (CA) Councilwoman Diane Pearce took to Facebook to warn people about LGBTQ books in the library. Why is the presence of LGBTQ books in the library being treated like such a groundbreaking revelation? I mean, I know why, but for crying out loud, the insanity of all this performative hysteria is ridiculous. Also…very tired of news outlets posting headlines like “Do LGBTQ kids books belong in the library?” like it’s up for debate.

These are the five books that people have challenged over the last five years at the Huntington Beach Public Library (CA).

Let’s Talk About It will be moved from the teen section to the adult section at the Ketchikan Public Library (AK). One of the councilors who voted against moving the book said, “[T]he city council is somehow going to become the arbiter of what’s appropriate for the books in our library. That is not our role. That is the role of the librarians.”

Winkler City Council (Manitoba) passed a resolution that would appoint several of their members to the library board “to exert influence as members of the SCRL Board of Directors to create a policy, whereby graphically sexually explicit books be moved from the children’s section to another section of the library as appropriate.”

Queer people and authors are being pushed out of one of the last remaining public spaces: the library.

Books & Authors in the News

Thousands of authors have come together to urge AI companies to honor copyrights.

Book sales, a lure for money, and more takeaways from the AP investigation into Supreme Court ethics.

Numbers & Trends

Here are the best-selling books of the week, and the best-selling books of 2023 so far.

Delighting velocireaders since 2017, Book Riot’s New Release Index will keep you in the know about all the latest books. Start your 14-day free trial today.

Award News

The Emmy nominations have been announced, and the NYPL has a reading list based on the nominations.

The Booker Prize ceremony has been pushed back until November.

The Shirley Jackson Awards have been announced.

The 2023 CWA Dagger Award winners have been announced.

The shortlists for the Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction and the Waterstones Debut Fiction Prize have been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Over 100 people were trapped for several hours in Agatha Christie’s former house, after a storm knocked down a tree and blocked the road to the property.

On the Riot

How to survive and thrive at a book fair.

12 reasons to shelve your books in rainbow order.

black and white cat laying in a large basket

Guest appearance from Groucho! My parents say Groucho is getting more and more comfortable being out when people come over, and he loves playing with his new kitty friends.

All right, that’s all for today – catch you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Best Books of 2023 (So Far)

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Like the rest of the world, I am preparing for the release of Barbenheimer this weekend, although I won’t have a chance to see either movie until the weekend after. If you’re planning to try, however, I definitely agree with the advice to start with Oppenheimer and finish on a high note with Barbie!

Don’t forget to check out Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world, and interviews authors such as S.A. Cosby, Khaled Hosseini, Sarah Bakewell, and Yahdon Israel. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

How scammers are using Amazon and Amazon trademarks to rip off writers.

Maureen Johnson tweeted about an unnamed “Very Famous” author who is held up in contract negotiation with a major publisher because the publisher wants to train AI using their work.

Related: AP strikes a news-sharing and tech deal with OpenAI.

The anti-ownership ebook economy: how publishers and platforms have reshaped the way we read in the digital age.

The art of translation.

The “merch-ification” of book publishing.

How a TikTok video made this author’s book an Amazon best-seller.

New & Upcoming Titles

Tommy Orange has a new book coming out in 2024.

Nnedi Okorafor just sold her latest novel, The Africanfuturist, to HarperCollins for a whopping SEVEN FIGURE deal.

Monkeypaw Productions (AKA Jordan Peele’s production company) is releasing its first anthology: Out There Screaming: An Anthology of New Black Horror, edited by Jordan Peele himself! It comes out in October.

Former Trump aide and January 6th witness Cassidy Hutchinson announces a book deal.

Barbara Kingsolver is publishing her first children’s book.

Britney Spears announces an October 2023 release date for her memoir, The Woman in Me.

There’s a new biography of The Eagles, which the band reportedly did not approve: Life in the Fast Lane: The Eagles’ Reckless Ride Down the Rock & Roll Highway by Mick Wall.

LitHub and The Millions both released their Most Anticipated lists for the second half of 2023.

The best books of 2023 (so far) from Town & Country (celeb memoirs) and Vox.

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

July picks from Amazon, Ebony, The Guardian (crime thrillers), Kirkus, Tor.com (fantasy, sci-fi, horror/genre-bending)

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

After the Funeral and Other Stories – Tessa Hadley (The Guardian, Washington Post)

Nothing Special – Nicole Flattery (New York Times, Washington Post)

The Parrot and the Igloo: Climate and the Science of Denial – David Lipsky (LA Times, New York Times)

The Vegan – Andrew Lipstein (NPR, Washington Post)

The Militia House – John Milas (LA Times, New York Times)

When Crack Was King: A People’s History of a Misunderstood Era – Donovan X. Ramsey (New York Times, NPR)

Crook Manifesto – Colson Whitehead (The Guardian, New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

Armed to the teeth: healing through horror.

A brief history of New England noir.

Why adults should read children’s books.

On the Riot

On posthumous editing: should books be edited for contemporary audiences?

Anatomy of a book cover.

Dear romance publishers: please give us more hardcovers.

The best books of 2023 so far.

10 of the best mysteries and thrillers of 2023 so far.

The best weekly new releases.

12 book club picks for July 2023.

Why it’s worth diving into old-school romances.

All Things Comics

The upcoming animated film, The White Tower, is based on the graphic novel adaptation of Robert Jordan’s The Wheel of Time series.

14 books if you loved Nimona.

On the Riot

12 comics and graphic novels with great disability representation.

8 manga like Tokyo Revengers.

Delighting velocireaders since 2017, Book Riot’s New Release Index will keep you in the know about all the latest books. Start your 14-day free trial today.

Audiophilia

The July 2023 Earphones Award winners are announced.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

YA romances and SFF novels featuring disabled protagonists.

Diverse YA romance novels.

Adults

7 books by veterans that depict the bleak truth of serving in the U.S. military.

Books that go beyond a “beach read.”

The 8 best gothic books of all time.

The 56 most erotic books you will ever read.

5 books that honor self-truth and identity.

10 of the best horror novels to read in the summer sun.

5 masterpieces of the uncanny, marvelous, and strange.

5 books that capture 40 years of high finance culture.

5 tales of aquatic horror.

Books to read while you wait for the Barbie movie.

5 books with bad guys you love to root for.

10 brilliantly unexpected Jane Austen homages.

7 thrillers featuring threatened friendships.

24 mansion-style mysteries you’ll love if you’re a fan of Clue.

On the Riot

9 children’s biography books for budding historians.

8 YA books with summer vibes.

20 must-read works of historical fiction set in Mexico.

8 fantasy books where magic is deadly.

9 anti-hustle books for when you’ve changed your mind about the grind.

12 of the best hidden-identity romance novels.

9 sci-fi and fantasy books with disabled main characters.

20 of the best vampire books of all time.

Award-winning memoirs you probably have never heard of.

The best 100 books of all time, according to Reader’s Digest.

9 great books about Queen.

The best werewolves in books.

20 books about how to live your best life.

12 queer fake dating books to fall for.

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 portrait-style photo of a black and white cat sitting in a window

Dini has a bright future as a kitty model. Such a pretty boy!

Well, that’s all I’ve got for today. Let’s check in again on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Hoopla and Libby Banned for Kids in Mississippi

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. We just had some legit tornados touch down in the Chicago area this afternoon/evening, and while there’s obvious concern for the people who were injured or lost their homes, there’s also an unintentionally hilarious photo making the rounds on Twitter. If you can’t see the photo, it’s an image of a funnel cloud forming near Elgin (a Chicago-area suburb), but the foreground is of a very crowded Portillo’s drive-thru line. It is perhaps the most Chicago thing I’ve ever seen, and if you’re from the Chicago area (or have eaten at Portillo’s), you probably understand.

Don’t forget to check out Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world, and talks to authors including S.A. Cosby, Khaled Hosseini, and Sarah Bakewell. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The governing board of the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions is seeking an advisory referendum from its members about the IFLA’s recent decision to host the 2024 World Library and Information Congress in Dubai, despite the dangers presented to LGBTQ+ attendees, and the restrictions around holding LGBTQ+-related discussions as part of this conference.

ALA has issued a resolution stating their strong objections to IFLA hosting their conference in Dubai.

Flagler County (FL) Library’s budget, hours and staffing have shrunk, while the county population has increased by 25%.

Cool Library Updates

Queens Public Library celebrates the 50th anniversary of hip-hop with special edition library cards.

Worth Reading

Are law librarians’ jobs at risk from the rise of generative AI?

Book Adaptations in the News

Greta Gerwig will direct the upcoming Netflix adaptation of The Chronicles of Narnia.

Censorship News

How Moms for Liberty teaches its members to spin the media.

Can even a short K-12 library book ban lead to a civil rights violation? This legal firm says yes.

Library event cancelations, changes, and support for Pride Month 2023.

The most banned books in the U.S. are not new books.

From The New York Times: It’s getting hard to stage a school play without political drama.

Why parents are trying to ban so many picture books.

Book bans aren’t actually about books.

Book vendors are not happy about the new Texas legislation requiring them to rate sexual content in school materials.

A group of Klein ISD (TX) residents are upset that a high school teacher assigned The Bluest Eye as part of an elective dual-credit course offered in conjunction with a local community college.

Orange County (FL) schools have removed books by John Milton and Toni Morrison, and Shakespeare has been restricted under DeSantis’ rules.

Paywalled: Santa Rosa County (FL) have removed 10 out of 14 titles in the first round of reviews for a list of 65 challenged books.

Hernando County (FL) schools removed Marvin Redpost: Is He a Girl? from one of their elementary schools because of “gender identity” issues.

Leon County School Board (FL) recommends keeping a children’s biography of Billie Jean King in the school library.

Paywalled: More than 400 residents in Old Lyme (CT) signed a letter in support of the library and its collections after the library received two challenges to age-appropriate sex ed books for teens.

Lower Cape May Regional School District (NJ) will not ban Gender Queer.

Following Illinois’ example, Pennsylvania has introduced a new bill to ban book bans.

Moms for Liberty came to Philadelphia, where they were met by a sea of counter-protesters having a dance party outside of the M4L conference.

A Cocalico School board member (PA) is upset over “pornographic” books in school libraries (in this case, Blankets and the graphic novel adaptation of The Handmaid’s Tale).

Montgomery County Public Schools (MD) issued a statement reaffirming their decision to not allow parents to opt their children out of LGBTQ+ stories used in school. This is a really solid example to follow.

Samuels Library (VA) trustees defend the collection, staff, and review process. (What a refreshing thought!)

Well, here’s a new one. A Beaufort County (SC) resident threw bags of chicken feed at a recent school board meeting because the trustees were “too chicken” to ban books. The board has voted to retain most of the 97 books that were challenged back in October.

Parents of Chapin High School (SC) students say that a teacher needs to be fired for teaching “critical race theory.”

Hoopla and Overdrive/Libby have been banned for all school and public library patrons under the age of 18 in Mississippi. The first sentence of the article says it best: “Despite the age of consent in Mississippi being 16, no one under the age of 18 will have access to digital materials made available through public and school libraries without explicit parental/guardian permission.”

This letter to the editor from Garland County (AR) has an interesting suggestion: since book challenges are considered public information, any challenges submitted to the library should be forwarded to the local newspaper.

Paywalled: A new tactic we’ll probably start to see more of is on display in Murfreesboro, Tennessee: citing public decency standards in city ordinances in order to ban books.

Indiana residents are getting their undies in a bundle over a group of books by Ellen Hopkins in Evansville Vanderburgh Schools…half a dozen of her titles have been banned or restricted within the last couple of years, even though they’ve been in the school library for a lot longer.

A Chaska (MN) boutique received community support for a recent drag queen storytime event, after an initial wave of backlash.

Wilmette (IL) Library patrons sing loud and proud in response to a protester at a recent Pride event.

An Elmhurst (IL) bigot is upset that the local paper referred to him as a conservative, saying that they never refer to his opponents as “progressives.” Except the paper showed that they absolutely have. (Also, we really need to stop referring to these people as “activists.”)

Fellow Rioter Tirzah Price talks about what it’s like being the director of an Iowa public library that shares its collection with the local school district, which is required by law to remove inappropriate books for students. (Bottom line: the public library isn’t going to remove books from the collection.)

The former director of the Sterling Library (KS) claims that the board fired her and her assistant because of their unwillingness to take down a rainbow infinity flag from a display about diversity.

The Douglas County (CO) Library board will vote on the fate of several challenged LGBTQ books. Despite the challenges, however, most of the residents who showed up to the meeting were in favor of retaining the books.

A parent has challenged the Bible in the Academy 20 school district in Colorado Springs.

An ImagineIF Libraries (MT) trustee wants to remove provisions in the library’s Fair Treatment policy that expressly resist censorship. (Insert “This is fine” meme here.)

A new lawsuit challenges Montana’s statewide ban on drag performances.

The Montana State Library Commission voted to withdraw its membership from ALA. The Montana Library Association (not the same group) has issued a statement condemning the decision.

This second-generation Utah school librarian is taking a step back after 10 years in the profession. This is such a sad read, knowing that this librarian’s story is reflective of so many librarians and teachers who are leaving the work that they love because of harassment and lack of administrative support.

These articles really need to stop pretending like the “porn in libraries” is a legitimate concern or framing. This is in Idaho, where a resident was so upset about the presence of two books by Sarah J. Maas that she bypassed the library’s policies and went right to the city council since the library trustees already indicated they weren’t interested in her hysterics.

A Portales (NM) teacher says that she was forced out of her job after a couple of students complained about the use of The Hate U Give in class.

The Rancho Peñasquitos Library (NM) revives their Pride display after protesters removed most of the books.

Paywalled: The uncertain fate of the Dayton Memorial Library (WA) looms after a recent board meeting.

A warning that if the U.S. continues along this censorious pathway, they could end up in the same position as Poland, where it’s illegal to talk about Poland’s complicity in the Holocaust.

The Canadian Federation of Library Associations has published the results from their 2022 Intellectual Freedom Survey, including the five most banned or challenged books last year.

Hundreds march in solidarity with Cork, Ireland library staff members, who have faced harassment from far-right protesters over the library’s inclusion of LGBTQ+ books.

Books & Authors in the News

Mona Awad and Paul Tremblay have filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging that their copyrighted books were used to train ChatGPT without their consent.

A new article shows that Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s staff have often prodded the public institutions that have hosted her as a speaker to purchase her books.

Milan Kundera, the author of The Unbearable Lightness of Being, has died at 94.

Numbers & Trends

How TikTok made a ’00s dating advice book a best-seller.

The highest-rated book in each country, mapped.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

Booksellers have launched the new Cercador Prize for Translation.

The 2023 Hugo Award finalists have been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

“Goodreads now only permitting reviews from people who haven’t read the book.” (Don’t worry — this is from The Onion.)

Delighting velocireaders since 2017, Book Riot’s New Release Index will keep you in the know about all the latest books. Start your 14-day free trial today.

On the Riot

Who was Tessa Kelso? A feminist history of the librarian pioneer.

How to find library bookshelves.

Why all of this Rioter’s book clubs have imploded.

How to find discounted children’s books. ​​

What are “living books” and how do you use them?

a black cat standing underneath a kitchen table, looking at the camera and waiting for food

I shared this photo of Gilbert on Facebook, and kept him updated about how many likes and comments he was getting! I mentioned he was 17, and people responded with “What a classy gentleman!” and “Sweet old grandpa kitty!” I detect no lies here.

All right friends, I hope everyone’s safe from the tornados, and let’s try to save our Portillo’s runs for when there’s better weather, okay?

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

New Tana French!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I had a belated birthday celebration with my family, and as part of my gift, my mom wrapped up a jar of pickles. The last couple of times I’d been at my parents’ house, my mom had pickles out, and I went to town on them because we can’t get the good kind at our grocery store. My husband HATES pickles, so he was absolutely perplexed at how excited I was over a jar of gherkins.

Don’t forget to check out Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world, and interviews authors such as S.A. Cosby, Khaled Hosseini, Sarah Bakewell, and Yahdon Israel. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The USA Today Booklist is back!

ByteDance, the owner of TikTok, is launching a publishing company.

A look at how AI could end up writing best-selling novels.

How “review bombing” can tank a book before it’s even published.

Plus, why Goodreads has no incentive to deal with trolls, spam, and harassment.

How hard could it be to translate a picture book?

New & Upcoming Titles

The Millions has their giant book preview for the second half of 2023.

STOP THE PRESSES: TANA FRENCH HAS A NEW BOOK COMING IN 2024!!!!

Alyssa Cole also has a new thriller coming out!!

Viola Ford Fletcher, the oldest living survivor of the Tulsa Race Massacre, is publishing a memoir.

Dame Judi Dench is publishing a book about the Shakespearean roles she’s played in her career, called Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent.

Former New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern is writing a book about leadership.

Keep an eye on this dystopian thriller by Soyoung Park, which is described as “Squid Game meets the Hunger Games.”

Here’s the (gorgeous!!) cover reveal for Amina Akhtar’s latest book, Almost Surely Dead.

And here’s the cover reveal (and an excerpt!) from Stephen Graham Jones’ conclusion to the Indian Lake trilogy: The Angel of Indian Lake.

Cover reveal and excerpt for Stacy Willingham’s upcoming thriller, Only If You’re Lucky.

Cover reveal for Jada Pinkett Smith’s upcoming memoir, Worthy.

Cover reveal for Cadwell Turnbull’s We Are the Crisis, the sequel to No Gods, No Monsters.

Debut authors to watch this fall.

10 great new vacation reads.

The best crime novels of the year (so far).

Summer reading picks from Essence, The Guardian, The Millions (poetry), PBS.

July picks from Barnes & Noble, Epic Reads, Goodreads (YA), Kirkus, New York Times.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Art Thief: A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession – Michael Finkel (Crime Reads, New York Times)

A Thread of Violence: A Story of Truth, Invention, and Murder – Mark O’Connell (New York Times, Slate)

The Imposters – Tom Rachman (LA Times, New York Times)

Little Monsters – Adrienne Brodeur (Washington Post)

The Memory of Animals – Claire Fuller (Washington Post)

The Rachel Incident – Caroline O’Donoghue (New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

Why Lessons in Chemistry is the biggest debut novel of the past year.

Colleen Hoover’s 26 books in chronological order.

The appeal behind four popular mystery tropes.

Be aware of these harmful tropes and stereotypes in LGBTQ+ fiction.

Is 2023 the year of the “slim read?”

What happened to all the sports books?

A look at how Cat Sebastian writes her queer historical romances.

On the Riot

New YA books being published this summer.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

July picks for mysteries & thrillers, SFF, horror, romance, nonfiction, YA, children’s.

Why you should read reviews AFTER you’ve read the book.

From fan fiction to TikTok: long live the microgenre.

The advantages and pitfalls of illustrated romance covers.

What is a romcom, exactly?

What is Regency romance?

Welcome to the Stone(punk) Age.

Australian noir and the best Australian crime fiction.

Why are dystopian books so white?

The 50 best book covers of 2022.

Delighting velocireaders since 2017, Book Riot’s New Release Index will keep you in the know about all the latest books. Start your 14-day free trail today.

All Things Comics

Fall 2023 YA comics & graphic novels announcements.

Penguin Random House launches a new pop-comics imprint.

Tokyopop launches a new romance manga label with four new titles.

Apparently the adaptation of Nimona has been so popular that Amazon SOLD OUT last week!

Here’s the trailer for Heartstopper, Season 2.

On the Riot

New horror manga and manhwa to check out in 2023.

July releases for comics/graphic novels and manga.

8 excellent LGBTQ+ nonfiction manga.

Books and comics for fans of Adventure Time.

Discover the foundation of manga art styles.

How to create haunted spaces in comics.

Audiophilia

9 of the best audiobooks about American history.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

The best chapter books to read as a family.

11 Jenny Han books to read if you loved XO, Kitty.

8 mystery books for teens.

23 romances to live out your romcom dreams.

Adults

13 queer regency romances.

7 novels about questionable geniuses and false saviors.

The best stories about storytelling.

Top 10 summer love stories.

6 hip hop books that chronicle the genre.

Books about reimagined family.

15 delightful romances set in bookstores and libraries.

On the Riot

8 of the best potty training books.

10 engaging chapter books for third graders.

9 of the best monster girls in YA.

A 20th century queer lit reading list. ​​

11 books in translation from East Africa.

8 books about the relationship between humans and animals.

Strange and obscure fairy tales.

Fast-paced reads to make you neglect life.

The 20 most-famous books of all time.

10 summer camp horror novels to keep you up past lights out.

20 genre-defying fantasy books.

10 lively Irish romance novels.

8 magical Peter Pan retellings.

28 of the best queer fantasy books.

8 of the best action-packed romance novels.

The best vampires in literature.

20 must-read fiction and nonfiction books about the disability experience.

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.

the top half of a black and white cat's head peeking over the edge of a basket

Dini is like Santa…he’s always watching.

Well, that’s all I’ve got for today. Let’s check in again on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

How to Find Weirdly Specific Books

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, where the day I am writing (7/5) is my 34th birthday! This has actually been my most existential birthday so far, probably because it feels like COVID erased years 31-33 for me, so now I’m staring my mid-30s in the face, wondering what the hell happened with all that missing time.

So while I go figure that out, please enjoy this slightly shorter newsletter.

What do S.A. Cosby, Khaled Hosseini, Sarah Bakewell, and Yahdon Israel have in common? They’ve been guests on Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

NYC libraries appear to have been spared from the proposed $36 million budget cuts.

OCLC is introducing AI-generated book recommendations in World Cat.

Worth Reading

Why kids deserve queer-friendly libraries.

How libraries have evolved to serve remote workers.

Book Adaptations in the News

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo has a director.

Here are trailers for Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, Dune, Part 2, and The Summer I Turned Pretty, Season 2.

Censorship News

Library Journal published this editorial regarding ongoing legal action against censorship, but it includes this quote at the very end from Nate Coulter, the director of the Central Arkansas Library System: “Libraries need to be doing the work of advocacy,…inviting the most vocal critics in to see the difference between the children’s and young adult collections, introducing them to the people who work there, asking them to explain what they don’t like and what they consider a threat to their values.” Maybe there are people who could be swayed by reason, but the most vocal critics are not operating based on reason and have shown no interest in basic facts, let alone reasonable discussion. And introducing these people to library employees is going to put a target on your most vulnerable staff…don’t forget that these “vocal critics” have harassed staff and sent death threats. This isn’t the high school debate team.

A censorship language primer.

First Amendment advocates are weighing in and asking the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals to uphold a 2022 lower court decision blocking Florida’s controversial Stop W.O.K.E. Act from taking effect.

Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards signs a controversial law, which restricts minors’ access to “sexually explicit” material in libraries.

How Christian groups helped parents pull books from multiple Pennsylvania school libraries.

Historians criticize the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia for renting out space to Moms for Liberty; however, PEN America says that we can’t allow ourselves to use censorious tactics against censors, no matter how repugnant their actions are.

The Central Arkansas Library System has collected $25,000 in private donations to fund their lawsuit against the state.

North Dakota public libraries are still figuring out next steps after the passage of House Bill 1205, which requires libraries to remove or relocate “explicit sexual material” from children’s collections.

How did librarians become such improbable targets?

Numbers & Trends

Childhood reading habits can boost brain and mental health in teens.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

The 2023 Locus Awards have been announced.

NK Jemisin and John Carpenter have been inducted into the Museum of Pop Culture’s SFF Hall of Fame. (Side note: if you get a chance to visit MoPop in Seattle, I highly recommend it!)

Pop Cultured

40 of the best psychological thrillers to stream now.

Delighting velocireaders since 2017, Book Riot’s New Release Index will keep you in the know about all the latest books. Start your 14-day free trail today.

On the Riot

The bookish life of Idris Elba.

How to find weirdly specific books online.

black cat standing on the hem of a dark green formal dress

Here’s Dini inspecting a dress I just bought for a friend’s wedding. I now have to store the dress on the top shelf of my closet because he was having way too much fun playing with the fabric.

All right friends, that’s all I have for this week. Let’s see what this 34th trip around the sun brings! Have a good weekend!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Are We Afraid of Reading?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I think we need to kick off this newsletter on a lighter note, so please enjoy this recent photo/thirst trap from Illinois’ brand new Secretary of State (and State Librarian), Alexi Giannoulias, at a local Pride parade. This is the same person who helped spearhead Illinois’ recent book ban legislation, so needless to say he’s making himself VERY popular with the IL library crowd! (And he has a very good PR team.)

Don’t forget you can subscribe to The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, delivered to your inbox! Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com

Libraries & Librarians

Cool Library Updates

The Los Angeles County Library is developing a program to give access to all of their ebooks to students and residents across the state.

Salt Lake City’s social worker at the downtown library has already helped thousands of people.

Worth Reading

The world’s digital memory is at risk.

Book Adaptations in the News

Blumhouse TV snags the rights to Clémence Michallon’s novel The Quiet Tenant.

Lashana Lynch joins Eddie Redmayne for the cast of The Day of the Jackal.

Censorship News

70 years of the Library Bill of Rights.

ALA is distributing $1 million “to support and expand intellectual freedom initiatives” across the country.

Unpacking the 2023 legislation of concern for libraries and education.

LGBTQ+ librarians are trying to keep vital books accessible to queer youth, despite the bans.

The Tyler Public Library (TX) is considering moving two YA titles (All Boys Aren’t Blue and Out of Darkness) to the adult section.

The Miami-Dade School Board (FL) gets an earful from the public about book restrictions.

St. Tammany Library Board (LA) is working through 156 (!!!) titles still in the review queue after a year of nearly nonstop complaints. This is utter nonsense.

A Georgia teacher was fired for reading a children’s book about acceptance in class.

The Dover (NH) city council denounces “unconstitutional” attempts to ban books from libraries.

Ludlow (MA) school board declined to vote on a policy that would potentially remove dozens of library books.

Massachusetts State Rep. Jim Atkins has filed a bill to ban book bans in libraries.

Felix Ever After and Push will remain in Old Rochester Regional school libraries (MA).

Guilford Schools (CT) have received five book challenges, which will be reviewed in September. From the article: “In all five requests Scarpellino recommended that parents should determine what age group these five books should be recommended for and asked for the board to go on record regarding the appropriateness of the books for children.” You know who’s not trained to make that decision? PARENTS. You know who is trained to make that decision? LIBRARIANS.

Wantagh High School (NY) is debating whether or not to retain Fun Home.

Two previously banned books have been reinstated in Central York (PA) school libraries; however, their new policy requires the district to create a book rating system.

A West Shores School (PA) parent is demanding that the district remove two books from the collection. Except that neither of the books are in the district to begin with.

Parents in the Mannheim Township school district (PA) are upset that their children have access to school resources “without parental oversight.” Apparently schools are supposed to be parents, except when parents don’t want them to be parents.

A Frederick County Public Schools (MD) committee has delayed the release of their decision regarding 35 challenged books because the committee cannot come to a consensus on four of them.

Blue Ridge Library (VA) is dealing with an active protestor claiming that the library distributes porn to minors. He has targeted other political officials before, and has been sued for defamation, so he sounds like a real piece of work.

Front Royal, Virginia has a new group that formed in support of the Samuels Library, and in response to the county Board of Supervisors withholding a majority of the library’s budget appropriation.

Parents in Appomattox County (VA) raised an absolute stink over a Pride & acceptance display in the children’s department: “During that Tuesday night board meeting, Carter said parents wanted the library to be shut down, for the library board to be fired, and to pull all local funding from it. Falling River District Board member John Hinkle made a motion to fire the entire library board.” The same board member said, “This community is kind of the heart of the Bible Belt, and we need to do what’s right.”

A former Charlotte (NC) charter school teacher is suing the school, saying that they had been given permission to use Dear Martin in the classroom, but was then fired for using the book after a group of parents complained.

A new Wake County (NC) policy would limit how often book challenges can be filed, and would allow students to serve on a book challenge review panel, which should be standard for ALL schools, tbh.

After a Greenville County (SC) library director told the manager of the Travelers Rest Library to take down a Pride display, the manager refused.

Horry County Schools (SC) have banned 13 books this year, and have restricted access to other materials as well.

Spartanburg Public Library (SC) heard from a number of residents about LGBTQ+ books in the children’s section.

Current status of book reviews in Beaufort County Schools (SC).

A York County (SC) council member wants to remove books from the children’s section AND reduce the size of the library board from 10 to 7 members.

North Shelby Library Board (AR) heard complaints from parents about an LGBTQ display in the children’s department, and voted to keep the display exactly where it is, with no modifications.

The current status of book bans happening in the Saline County Library (AR), where county officials have threatened to take control of the library board.

Crawford County (AR) approved a $60,000 appropriation for anticipated legal costs related to pending library lawsuits.

Williamson County Schools (TN) are keeping five challenged books on the shelves. One of the books was challenged by a member of the Florida Citizens Alliance, who does not have any connection to the district whatsoever.

The Ferndale Area District Library (MI) were hit by a “Hide the Pride” campaign, but received a ton of communal support in replacing their missing LGBTQ+ books.

A proposed bill in Wisconsin would overturn current legislation “that provides protection for employees of public, private, and tribal schools from prosecution of an obscene materials violation,” and undoubtedly pave the way for censorship across the state.

West Bend Schools (WI) will retain four challenged books.

The Christian County Library (MO) has refused to create a book and material rating system. ““I keep going back to one word, ‘implement,’” said Board President Matthew Suarez during the meeting. “We would not be implementing a rating system, we would be creating one … That is something not within the capacity of our current library, nor within our budget to hire the staff for reading those materials.”

Nixa (MO) School District voted to ban or otherwise restrict access to six books at a recent board meeting.

(Paywalled) Springfield-Green County Public Library (MO) has fielded 23 materials challenges over the last 5 years.

Over 350 people attended a St. Charles County (MO) library board meeting to fight over the appropriateness of an LGBTQ+ staff member’s attire at the children’s desk. This is just horrifying and I can’t imagine how that must feel to have your very existence debated and argued against for the sake of scoring some political points.

Remember last year, when the Oklahoma teacher received national attention for providing a QR code to the Brooklyn Library’s free ebook program? The Assistant Attorney General has ruled that the Oklahoma State Department of Education “failed to prove” that the teacher violated state laws, but her license may be revoked by the state Board of Education anyway.

A Fremont County (WY) school board member decided to survey people about which books should be pulled from the district, asking questions such as “‘Do you believe that schools should teach and present ‘controversial issues’ to students such as but not limited to: critical race theory, Black Lives Matter, LGBTQ+, artificial intelligence, religion, fracking, cloning, human trafficking, and gun control?’” and “‘Do you believe that prohibiting certain books in the school library is the same as book banning?’” Frankly, I would LOVE to take that survey. Why yes, I DO think schools should teach these topics, and YES, prohibiting books in a school library IS the same as book banning! Thank you for asking!

The Natrona County School District (WY) has elected to keep Tricks in the school library, but it requires parental permission to check out.

Lander Schools (WY) have implemented a new challenge policy that would immediately remove a challenged book from the shelves, which is NOT how these processes are supposed to work!

The state of book bans in Utah.

North Idaho’s Community Library Network has a new chair and a new far-right majority, so expect additional book banning news coming from this area soon. The new trustees specifically campaigned on keeping explicit books out of the children’s and teen’s sections.

The Boundary County Library (ID) will decide next month on the fate of Me and Earl and the Dying Girl.

A majority of Huntington Beach City Council (CA) members voted in support of a proposal to find ways to restrict children’s access to sexually explicit books in public libraries. Please note that this is the city council voting on this, and not the library board.

Bonita Unified School District (CA) voted to retain a number of challenged books. From the article: “‘We need to not have these [books] in a school library,’ said Tami Brown-Gedigian on May 3 after reading excerpts from Kuklin’s book. ‘It’s fine, go to a public library if you want to read that stuff, this is a free country. But don’t push this on my kids.’” Yeah, because book bans aren’t happening in public libraries at all…

Anchorage Public Library (AK) rejects three board nominees from the mayor, who has a history of promoting censorship.

Numbers & Trends

The bestselling books of the week.

Subscribe to First Edition for interviews, lists, rankings, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books.

Award News

The Shirley Jackson Award nominees have been announced.

For the first time, the Yoto Carnegie medal for children’s books went to a book in translation.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Everyone likes reading, so why are we so afraid of it?

John Lewis gets his own Forever stamp.

Hasan Minhaj asked Barack Obama if he truly curated his own end-of-the-year lists. (Spoiler: yes, he does.)

On the Riot

The path to becoming a school librarian.

How to get free books for your school library (and use them to host a book fair).

Library displays to try in your elementary school library.

How books are used to perpetuate the prison industrial complex.

Lesser-known queer literary icons.

The bookish life of Molly Ringwald.

a black cat resting its head on a person's leg, after leaving a small drool spot on the fabric

Gilbert looks like he’s just DONE with a lot of things right now. He doesn’t even care that he left a drool spot on Blaine’s pant leg.

All right friends. Enjoy the early holiday weekend! I’ll check in again next week.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

It’s Turtles All the Way Down

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Over the weekend, I had the opportunity meet up with a bunch of co-workers from a previous job — many of whom I hadn’t seen in over four years. COVID played a big part in that, but we had also gone through some very traumatic shared work experiences prior to 2020, and this get-together ended up being extremely cathartic. That being said, that was a lot of intense socializing over the course of an evening, and I think my introverted self is still recovering!

But before we do, here’s your regular reminder about The Deep Dive, a biweekly newsletter to inform and inspire readers, delivered to your inbox! Your first read (The Power Reader’s Guide to Reading Logs & Trackers) is on the house. Check out all the details and choose your membership level at bookriot.substack.com.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Black women are being erased in publishing.

AI and media companies negotiate landmark deals over news content.

TikTok partners with Hello Sunshine to bring unique and underrepresented stories to life.

Why did several big New York publishers reject Richard North Patterson’s new novel?

New & Upcoming Titles

Here’s the cover reveal for BTS’s upcoming book.

A previously unpublished Maurice Sendak book is being released in February.

12 new and emerging LGBTQ+ writers to read for Pride Month.

20 best LGBTQ+ books of 2023, so far.

Latinx horror and crime fiction to check out in 2023.

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

June picks from Crime Reads (debuts).

July picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, teens, children).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Quiet Tenant – Clémence Michallon (Crime Reads, New York Times)

Holding Pattern – Jennie Xie (New York Times, NPR)

Built from the Fire: The Epic Story of Tulsa’s Greenwood District, America’s Black Wall Street – Victor Luckerson (Washington Post)

The Rachel Incident – Caroline O’Donoghue (Washington Post)

The Only One Left – Riley Sager (USA Today)

To Name the Bigger Lie: A Memoir in Two Stories – Sarah Viren (Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

Reframing the west: new fiction makes room for voices long denied.

How Cormac McCarthy used crime fiction tropes to write masterpieces.

On millennial aging and nostalgia in thrillers.

Fabio says men in modern romances are too “soft” and “woke,” but readers disagree. (Okay, Fabio…)

On the Riot

15 of the best new cozy mysteries coming out in the second half of 2023.

The best new vacation reads to pack for your next trip.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

9 great shows and films paired with equally great books.

What’s oceanpunk?

Tok dirty to me: the best of #SmutTok.

What mystery novels get wrong about the courtroom.

All Things Comics

Marvel and Random House Worlds announce a “What If…?” adult novel series.

Here’s the trailer for the Netflix adaptation of One Piece.

On the Riot

8 recently published political graphic nonfiction and memoirs.

Subscribe to First Edition for interviews, lists, rankings, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books.

Audiophilia

Listening to books is more passive than reading them. That might be a good thing.

10 nonfiction audiobooks for young listeners.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

6 LGBTQ+ kids’ books we need now more than ever.

10 outstanding STEM picture books for kids.

12 YA retellings of Brothers Grimm stories that are bound to enchant.

Adults

12 books to read for Juneteenth.

All the way down: 5 of the best turtles and tortoises in fantasy.

50 of the greatest summer novels of all time.

20 of the sexiest books ever written.

15 Canadian books to read for World Refugee Day.

23 of the best books like Yellowstone.

9 books that will actually make you laugh.

10 essential short stories by trans authors.

8 commonly overlooked titles.

5 thrillers that unravel in wooded isolation.

25 of the most influential works of postwar queer literature.

On the Riot

8 children’s books about frogs.

A-Z queer YA recommendations for Pride.

Big d(addy) energy: 10 single dad romances.

10 horror novel series to keep you up at night.

15 fantastic feminist romance novels.

15 BDSM romance novels to keep you tied up.

10 books based on Queen’s debut album.

11 queer books under 250 pages.

11 fantastical Beauty and the Beast retellings.

8 beautiful books of queer science and nature writing.

Near-future dystopias that will change your perspective.

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 and white cat with long white whiskers looking up past the camera

Okay, I know Dini has been in the newsletter for a few issues in a row now, but I just can’t handle how adorable his little toofs are! This was taken as I was trying to go somewhere over the weekend, but he kept running downstairs and parking himself in front of the door so I couldn’t leave. He’s a very persistent little Doodle.

All right, friends. Let’s meet back on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.