Categories
Check Your Shelf

Solving a Problem That Doesn’t Actually Exist

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. The weather here over the last few days has been absolutely glorious and if we weren’t so perpetually short-staffed, I may have been tempted to pull a Ferris Bueller. I also desperately wish we had a better outdoor space for our apartment so I could sit outside with a glass of wine and enjoy the temperature. But our patio is covered in spiders and our lawn chairs are so weather beaten and grimy that I’m afraid to sit in them…maybe we can get those replaced before the end of summer this year.

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

News Updates

A San Francisco library has started turning off its WiFi after closing to prevent people without housing from using it.

Cool Library Updates

The Westport Public Library (CT) created, recorded, and released the first-ever entirely library-produced vinyl album!

Homebound services expand for growing families.

Book Adaptations in the News

The Her Majesty’s Royal Coven series by Juno Dawson is getting a TV adaptation.

Mike Flanagan gives an update on the anticipated Dark Tower TV adaptation.

The upcoming Season 3 adaptation of The Witcher will be a “much more direct adaptation of the book.”

First look at the adaptation of Red, White, and Royal Blue.

Everything we know so far about the adaptation of It Ends With Us by Colleen Hoover.

Here’s the trailer for Netflix’s adaptation of Nimona.

Censorship News

Librarians strike back against comic bans, and ALA has developed new initiatives to help with the fight.

As more schools target Maus, Art Spiegelman’s fears are deepening.

How much have book bans impacted author visits?

The American Booksellers for Free Expression and the Texas Freedom Network have issued a statements against Greg Abbott signing HB900 into law.

The Llano County lawsuit has some lawyers and publishers concerned about existing legal precedents, and whether or not a federal appeals court could chip away at long-standing protections.

The authors of And Tango Makes Three, along with a group of students, have sued the Lake County School District (FL) for restricting access to the book, along with 40 other titles, in an attempt to comply with the “Don’t Say Gay” law.

The Hernando County School Board (FL) heard comments from a resident complaining about Rupi Kaur’s poetry collections, saying “We are not going to stop until all these books are removed, and our schools are safe for our children to go to the library again.” But they’re not banning books, right?

Paywalled: Sebastian River High School (FL) is imagining what the library will look like when the challenges filed by Moms for Liberty empty the shelves.

When do we start talking about the fact that banning the Bible is not an effective strategy for fighting book bans?

Maine will not be implementing book ratings on school library titles.

The parent who filed an official challenge and subsequent appeal against three LGBTQ+ titles in the Staples High School (MA) library has officially withdrawn the appeal. The books will remain on the shelves.

Ludlow Schools (MA) continue to debate a new book-banning policy that the board has justified because similar versions of the policy are already in place in certain Pennsylvania school districts. Yeah, keep reading below for reasons WHY we shouldn’t be taking a leaf out of some of these Pennsylvania schools’ playbooks.

A pro-book banning resident spoke at a recent Central York (PA) school board meeting, saying “It’s un-American. These library resources promote diversity, equity, and inclusion for social and emotional indoctrination.

The Hempfield School Board (PA) has started laying the groundwork to review and potentially remove books deemed “sexually explicit or inappropriate,” without any concrete definitions for these terms, of course.

Why this resident in the Pennridge School District (PA) is suing the schools: they have been quietly checking out all copies of contentious or challenged books for the ENTIRE year so that no students could access them.

The people who are complaining about Let’s Talk About It being available at the Parkersburg-Wood County Public Library (WV) are also upset that it’s available at the public library as well. But I thought it wasn’t book banning because the books were still available at the public library??

This letter in response to a proposed book review policy for the Calvert County Board of Education (MD), saying that the policy is “a ‘solution in search of a problem’.”

Hanover County (VA) approves a new library policy giving the school board the sole discretion and authority to remove any books from a school library with a majority vote. They then unanimously voted to remove 19 books.

The Spotsylvania (VA) Smith Station Elementary School board is apparently in charge of determining whether or not to allow specific book donations. Also worth reminding folks that the board president advocated for burning books he doesn’t agree with.

75% of the funding is being withheld from the Samuels Public Library (VA) because a book banning group has claimed that the library is distributing pornography.

A school board candidate for United 4 SCASD (PA) was caught on security camera entering the high school without permission to take photos of books in the school library.

A middle school teacher in Charlotte, North Carolina was fired for teaching Dear Martin in his honors 7th grade classroom.

Moms for Liberty filed 189 challenges in Wake County (NC) in a week. All of them were rejected.

Fontana Regional Library (NC) voted to move Let’s Talk About It from the teen section to the adult section, essentially hiding the book from its intended audience.

PEN America issued a statement about the “outrageous government censorship” behind the removal of Between the World and Me from the AP Language test in South Carolina.

The Greenville County (SC) library committee has advanced a proposal to restrict access to transgender-themed materials. They also decided to make a series of proposed changes to the larger collection policy, which one of the trustees described as “seeking to solve a problem that doesn’t really exist.”

York County Public Library (SC) will not be relocating any of the books that residents were up in arms about.

Daviess County (KY) saw a small handful of protestors outside the building recently in opposition to the library’s Pride-themed programming, but they were quickly met by a much larger group of library supporters.

“Ohio’s proposed ‘Parents’ Bill of Rights’ would require public schools to let parents know about sexuality content materials, give parents a chance to review them, and give parents the option to request alternative instruction.” May we remind everyone that parents have always had the ability to request alternate assignments for their children, and these complaints are designed so that parents don’t have to actually do the work to make that happen.

The Dayton Metro Library (OH) recently passed a resolution designating the library as a book sanctuary.

Ferndale Public Library in Michigan was hit by a “Hide the Pride” campaign.

Complaints continue at the Caro Public Library (MI) over age-appropriate sex-ed books. However, I appreciate this comment from the library director, “It’s really not an issue of content. It’s topics. And the topic is written for those age ranges.”

School library workers in Indiana are struggling to do their jobs with the new “obscene” book banning law.

Trempealeau Middle School (WI) is debating whether or not to remove the nonfiction book Queer Ducks (And Other Animals).

(Paywalled) The Oak Creek (WI) schools are considering a ban on safe space signs. I give up.

Elmhurst Public Schools (IL) is being bombarded with angry comments from residents, including a failed school board candidate, which is a recurring theme in a lot of these stories.

After receiving threats over their drag queen programming last year, the Downers Grove Public Library (IL) is now hosting the traveling LGBTQ+ Legacy Wall exhibit.

Rochester Public Library (MN) adopted a resolution that condemns censorship and book banning in all forms, and specifically focuses on LGBTQ+ materials.

The Austin Public Library (MN) is hosting a repeat of a 2019 drag queen story time program, but only now is it getting community complaints.

Iowa school librarians await guidance from the Iowa Library Association over the new law that bans certain materials from schools.

PEN America is urging Missouri schools to keep Maus on the shelves.

Omaha Public Library (NE) removed several book lists geared towards the children’s and teen’s Summer Reading Challenge, after parents believed that the books were considered required reading for all summer reading participants. The book lists have since been restored, but it seems like this could have been solved by telling the confused patrons, “No, these are not required titles” without removing the lists at all…

I’m paywalled from this article, but apparently Gardner Edgerton schools (KS) removed a number of books, but when a student filed a challenge against the Bible, the Board denied the challenge without going through the review process.

A library trustee with the ImagineIF Library (MT) has been appointed to the Montana State Library Commission, which is noteworthy because prior to her appointment as a trustee, she filed an official challenge against Gender Queer.

The Campbell County Public Library Board (WY) just passed a new collection policy which puts the ultimate responsibility for selecting appropriate materials with the library director. The director said it best: “I do feel caught between the policy and the reality of the First Amendment.” One of the trustees said, “today’s culture is rewiring children’s ‘moral and spiritual character,’ and that the new policy is designed to combat that.” BUT THAT’S NOT THE POINT OF A PUBLIC LIBRARY.

Laramie County School District (WY) continues to hear complaints from parents, who are arguing that the district has not done enough “to prevent the ‘sexualization’ of children.” Look, it’s you all that are making this weird. I’M JUST SAYING.

The Greeley-Evans Schools (CO) will retain Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close and The Kite Runner.

Utah lawmakers are pushing back against the Davis School District’s decision to retain The Freedom Writer’s Diary — they say it violates “bright line” provisions of state law, which could make district officials “accessory to distribution of pornography to minors.”

Related: “Utah Republicans defend book removal law while protesting the district that banned the Bible.”

This article out of Rio Rancho (NM) casually tosses out that “others” have classified the conservative group MassResistance as a hate group, without mentioning that it was the highly-credible SPLC who issued that designation.

Sacramento Public Library (CA) has created a sanctuary library called the Lavender Library.

Superintendent Jodi McClay has been fired from the Temecula Valley Unified School District (CA) after people raised a stink over Harvey Milk being mentioned in a history lesson for elementary students.

In this week’s issue of “Fake Outrage Over Fake Problems,” a parent complained that the Monterey County Public Library’s (CA) summer reading club logo has a rainbow-colored background. “The rainbow colors have predominantly been used recently as representing the LGBTQ community and their Pride flag…WHAT does that even have to do with summer reading, especially for the children?” I’ve got news for this parent…rainbow colors are everywhere, independent of the Pride flag, and it’s going to get REAL tiring, REAL fast to be this upset over nothing. (Like, when they see an actual rainbow outside, do they write a strongly worded letter to the sky? I have questions.)

The Orem Public Library (UT) may be facing a lawsuit over their banning of Pride and heritage month book displays.

The parents’ rights movement has taken over at the Greater Essex County District schools (ON).

Books & Authors in the News

Best-selling mystery author Carol Higgins Clark has died at 66.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling 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

Barbara Kingsolver wins the Women’s Prize for Fiction for the second time with Demon Copperhead.

The Bram Stoker Awards have been announced!

On the Riot

Ways high school librarians can foster critical thinking.

The most-requested LGBTQ+ books in classroom libraries, and how to help on DonorsChoose.

Who is Nora Roberts?

How to focus on reading with ADHD.

black and white cat peering over the edge of a basket in a closet

Here we have the elusive Houdini in one of his favorite hiding spots — my husband’s T-shirt basket — where he can watch the world go by and remain unnoticed.

All right friends, I’m keeping my fingers crossed for continued nice weather this weekend. Maybe I’ll even get to go outside and enjoy it! Catch you all on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Daylight Horror and Atompunk

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Last week, my in-laws were over at our place, and my mother-in-law and my husband’s aunt were having a ton of fun browsing through my books…except they kept asking, “Oh, how did you like this book?” and I had to keep telling them “I haven’t read that one yet.” I think over half of the books I own are unread. I told them that I like to surround myself with possibilities, which sounds WAY better than “I’ve had the attention span of a goldfish since the pandemic started and can barely focus on anything anymore.” But it was a good reminder that I still have a ton of great books on my shelves just waiting to be discovered!

Don’t forget 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

HarperCollins and the private equity firm KKR are allegedly looking to purchase Simon & Schuster.

UK authors face an ethical dilemma as Russia offers huge sums for escapist fiction.

AI writing proves that the human author is very much alive.

New & Upcoming Titles

Rainbow Rowell announced a new book.

Goodreads announces its readers’ top new mysteries for the first half of 2023.

11 new romance novels to TBR.

Esquire’s 20 best LGBTQ+ books of the year so far.

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

June picks from Vanity Fair.

Summer picks from AARP (nonfiction), Star Tribune.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

I Am Homeless If This Is Not My Home – Lorrie Moore (Guardian, L.A. Times, New York Times)

Reproduction – Louisa Hall (L.A. Times, Washington Post)

To Name the Bigger Lie: A Memoir in Two Stories – Sarah Viren (New York Times, NPR)

RA/Genre Resources

The Ripped Bodice’s annual summer romance Bingo card is up!

A complete guide to Reese Witherspoon’s Hello Sunshine book club picks.

Why are we so drawn to rule-breaking characters in fiction?

On the Riot

Will AI threaten publishing jobs?

The most popular books on Goodreads so far this year.

All of the June 2023 celebrity book club picks.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Elliot Page does not owe you a legible timeline: on the beauty of nonlinear queer and trans storytelling.

Reading pathways for Alexis Hall.

What’s daylight horror?

And what the heck is atompunk?

Dystopian novels may feel #TooReal, but how accurate are they really? /

“I solved the whole mystery and it only took me the whole book to do it!”

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

All Things Comics

Influential Marvel illustrator John Romita Sr. has died at 93.

Scarlett Johansson confirms that a top secret Marvel project is still moving forward.

On the Riot

The rise of Korean webtoons.

Why do we like dystopian comics?

The timeless appeal of Lois Lane.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

16 YA romance books to fuel your celebrity crush daydreams.

Adults

12 books about mermaids, sirens, and sea gods.

Novels inspired by other art forms.

7 books about friendship in your 20s.

8 stories within stories.

Women-centered thrillers for fans of Colleen Hoover’s Verity.

10 books about missing persons.

5 works about intelligent beings who are their own worst enemies.

3 pivotal, villainous heroines in contemporary literature.

Unlikely friendships in crime fiction.

35 best books about time travel.

25 stories that define Korea’s dramatic history.

10 “romantasy” books to spice up your TBR.

10 historical fiction novels that span the 19th century.

On the Riot

10 sunshine-filled books about summer for toddlers.

9 enchanting books like The Little Mermaid.

14 swoony bisexual YA romances.

8 of the best F/F friends to lovers romances.

8 philosophical books to make you think.

20+ books every gay-straight alliance should have.

8 Korean romance novels for K-pop and K-drama fans.

Messy sapphic novels for fans of The Ultimatum: Queer Love.

10 riveting books about white-collar crime.

8 award-winning queer books you’ve probably never heard of.

Books to help you get outdoors.

10 nonfiction books by trans, nonbinary, and drag performer authors to educate and entertain.

20 must-read historical fiction novels set in India.

Buon viaggio with books set in Italy.

22 must-read celebrity memoirs that spill ALL the tea.

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 curled up on its side next to a person wearing a gray shirt and blue jeans

It was stiff competition this week for which cat would get featured in the newsletter…both Gilbert and Dini have been extra cute the last few days. I like to think they’re keeping a running total of how many times they’ve made the newsletter. This is Dini helping me do…something on my computer last week. Whatever it was, though, was not nearly as important as paying attention to how snuggly he was being.

Well, that’s all I’ve got for today. Let’s trudge on through the week and check back in on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Illinois Bans Book Bans!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. This week feels like it’s been death by a thousand tiny cuts…no one thing has been particularly stressful, but the number of small things I have to do this week is getting a little ridiculous. I am very much looking forward to the weekend.

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

News Updates

New York City sues the architects of a newly built Queens library over a lack of accessibility and non-compliance with the ADA.

Cool Library Updates

Governor Pritzker has created a statewide partnership with Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library!

The Boston Public Library announces a $1 million gift to expand the library’s LGBTQ+ programming and collections.

Worth Reading

Are public computers becoming obsolete in the library?

Book Adaptations in the News

Ruth Ware’s most recent novel, Zero Days, has been acquired for a series adaptation.

Perry Mason has been canceled after 2 seasons on HBO.

Rob Savage, director of the recent Stephen King adaptation The Boogeyman, says that he’d like to try his hand at directing another SK story: The Langoliers.

Here’s the trailer for Good Omens, Season 2.

Censorship News

The White House announces a new position with the Department of Education to help combat book bans.

Shiny Happy People is a must-watch to understand today’s book ban movement.

As conservatives target schools, LGBTQ+ kids and students of color feel less safe.

In the field: school librarians share their battles with book banning.

Texas governor Greg Abbott has officially signed the legislation banning “sexually explicit” books in school libraries.

HarperCollins and Scholastic have backed the ongoing lawsuit filed by Llano County (TX) patrons.

Seminole County Public Schools (FL) “is offering to reprint this year’s Lyman High School yearbook and remove two pages for parents upset about LGBTQ+ content, prompting criticism that the district isn’t standing up to bigotry. The pages highlight the school’s LGBTQ+ community and provide definitions of terms such as genderfluid and pansexual.” WOW. Way to fail your LGBTQ+ students, Seminole County. Let’s just pretend they don’t exist because a group of angry parents don’t believe they have a right to exist.

Brevard Public Schools (FL) have removed three poetry collections by Rupi Kaur, and by policy, the decision cannot be appealed for eight years.

A report on some of the many reasons why teachers are leaving Florida schools.

Georgia residents are getting a limited chance to comment on a proposed vote to remove “woke” words from K-12 lesson plans. (Please, someone…what the hell does that even mean?)

I’m paywalled, but St. Tammany Parish Library (LA) has returned four books that had previously been sequestered behind the desk.

Louisiana lawmakers approve a bill that would limit sexually explicit materials to minors in libraries, although several amendments are currently being debated.

There was a recent protest over a drag queen story hour in Waterville, Maine despite support from the mayor. “Mayor Jay Coelho of Waterville openly supported the drag queen story hour, asserting the importance of everyone being able to read to children if they so choose. He stressed the necessity of equality in society, noting that many of the protestors were not even local residents.” (Emphasis mine, because this is such a boringly predictable theme in these types of stories.)

(Paywalled) Starting this fall, Hermon High School (ME) students will need parental permission to read or check out books containing sexual content.

A proposal in Amherst, Pelham and Amherst-Pelham Regional schools (NH) would limit book challenges to actual residents of the district.

A recent bid to withhold funding from the Joshua Hyde Public Library (MA) over a Zoom-based drag queen story time program has failed.

How MassResistance (a SPLC-designated hate group, mind you) fueled the book burning fervor at Ludlow Schools (MA).

The Essex Public Library (CT) has restored their Pride displays after an unknown patron recently removed 20 books.

Newtown (CT) school board voted unanimously to retain Flamer and Blankets.

Westerly Town Council (RI) rejects a resolution backing a proposed library obscenity bill.

The 11 books being challenged at Roxbury High School (NJ).

Nazareth and Parkland school districts (PA) have both received lists of books that a group of parents wants removed from the libraries, but both districts say nothing has been removed from the shelves, and no policies have been implemented that would restrict a student’s ability to access them.

The Pennridge (PA) School Board will be working with Vermilion Education at an upcoming meeting. Vermilion’s services were previously rejected by the Sarasota School Board in Florida, after a trustee and Moms for Liberty co-founder orchestrated the push to work with Vermilion. Their website includes this little nugget on their Missions & Principles page: “Citizen control over education via their representatives on the school board is what makes public education public.”

Punxsutawney (PA) School Board heard from multiple people both in favor and against banning books. I particularly like this point that one of the attendees made: “Focusing on isolated paragraphs or sentences doesn’t show the true meaning of a book, and using someone else’s explanation of a book is just parroting rather than forming a conclusion.”

Manheim Township High School (PA) administrators are recommending that the school retain Identical by Ellen Hopkins.

Parents in Wicomico County (MD) are getting their undies in a twist over “obscene materials” in the schools. “What are these obscene materials?” Apparently not even the parents know, because nowhere does the article point to specific titles.

Protestors coverage on Montgomery County Public School (MD) headquarters in response to a recently revised policy, which says that the school will NOT give parents prior notice when reading LGBTQ+ inclusive books in school, and families will not be allowed to opt their students out of participating.

The Samuels Public Library (VA) faced a number of funding critics during a recent budget proposal meeting.

Catawba County (NC) schools discussed changes to their book challenge procedure, and set hearing dates for three challenged books. It’s remarkable how much this language implies that it’s the books themselves that have done something wrong.

This article from Wake County, North Carolina argues that students shouldn’t be allowed to serve on book review committees because they might be exposed to “vile nonsense.” Yet another way to prove to students that the adults in charge of their education don’t give a lick about their rights.

Beaufort County (SC) School Board has voted to uphold the recommendations that seven challenged books be returned to school library shelves.

In Saline County, Arkansas, the county judge just gave himself oversight of the library board, and by extension, management and operations of the library as well. Nope, no problems here.

Whitehall (MI) parents are challenging three books currently available in the district.

Residents have filed a petition to recall members of the Caro Public Library (MI) Board who disagree with recent book banning attempts.

Menomonee Falls (WI) residents are worried about the fate of their library after three board members were ousted and the budget was cut by $250,000.

The West End School Board (WI) has a couple of trustees that are interested in having books pulled from the school libraries.

Illinois has officially banned book bans!

The Sioux City West High School (IA) valedictorian used his graduation speech to advocate for LGBTQ rights.

Iowa’s new legislation that opens the door for more book bans ALSO protects the names of parents who request the removal of books or other educational materials from a school district. In other words, this information will not be considered a public record subject to disclosure.

Mid-Continent Public Library (MO) has removed LGBTQ Pride displays for kids and teens in order to comply with Missouri’s new library rules.

Great Falls Library (MT) passed its mill levy by just over 600 votes, allowing the library to clear its fiscal shortfall, add 12 full-time employees, and increase building and materials budgets. This also came amongst greater local election scrutiny.

Idaho Falls Public Library is making all parents re-register their children for library cards, so that the library can enact a new policy preventing children from accessing different types of materials. You know what they could do instead? They could make parents opt in to a program like this. Or, even more radically, not restrict access at all because they’re a public library and shouldn’t be restricting access in the first place.

Back in March, the Ada Community Library Board voted to remove six books, but the vote was held illegally, so now the books are back on the shelves.

People are upset that the Lander Valley High School (WY) library includes the book Let’s Talk About It.

Amongst the other information in this article about ongoing debates re: book bans in Laramie County School District No. 1 (WY): only 41 parents (out of thousands) have elected to opt their children out of certain library books.

Douglas County (CO) bigots have been declaring victory on their social media against the public library and several challenged books, except it’s not true.

I’m paywalled, but the ginormous book review committee at the Greeley-Evans School District (CO) is recommending that the schools retain two challenged books.

At the May board meeting for the Garfield County Public Libraries District (CO), a member of the public expressed concern that a member of one branch’s staff “appeared to be transgender.” This is the stuff that makes me sick to my stomach, and it just goes to show that this nonsense has never been about the books at all. It’s been about controlling, ostracizing, and attacking people who don’t conform to one particular set of cultural norms.

Arizona governor Katie Hobbs vetoes a bill that is allegedly to prevent the filming of sex acts on public property, but which Hobbs says is a “thinly veiled effort to ban books.

Rio Rancho Public Libraries (NM) have refused to pull a number of books despite pressure from local right-wingers. From the article: “‘We’re not parents right? We’re librarians. So we’re not here to control anyone’s access. You as a parent are responsible for checking what your children read and keeping an eye out on that.’”

“Temecula’s (CA) conservative school board majority has blocked a history textbook because its supporting materials mention slain gay rights leader Harvey Milk.”

Western Placer Unified School District (CA) will make a decision later in June about whether or not The Hate U Give should remain in the curriculum.

The Liberty Lake City Council (WA) failed to override a mayoral veto on their proposal that would have given the council final say over library policies. Say it with me now…WOMP WOMP.

Tips for parents who insist that all conversations about gender should happen at home: how to talk to your young children about gender.

Books & Authors in the News

Literary titan Cormac McCarthy has passed away at 89.

Best-selling romance author Julia Garwood has passed away at 78.

Elizabeth Gilbert has announced that she’s pausing the publication of her upcoming book The Snow Forest after intense backlash from her Ukranian readers because the book is set in Russia. Pundits have since weighed in on the decision.

New incriminating details have emerged in the case against the Utah mom and picture book author, who has been charged with the murder of her husband.

Debut author Sarah Steusek posted a TikTok going after a Goodreads reviewer who left her book a one-star rating, and now she’s been dropped by her publisher.

Writers are now raising doubts about the veracity of an eight-year-old book about Tennessee Williams, Follies of God: Tennessee Williams and the Women of the Fog.

Numbers & Trends

Despite book bans, LGBTQ+ fiction sales are soaring.

Want a living wage? You won’t find it working at most indie bookstores.

The best-selling 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 2023 Lambda Literary Awards have been announced.

The 2023 Tony Awards were announced last weekend.

The 2023 Arthur C. Clarke Award shortlist has been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Elizabeth Banks is starting a book club exclusively for drinking wine.

On the Riot

Have some Pride in the Library goodies to cheer you up. 🙂 I myself am aiming for the Libraries Are a Safe Space T-shirt and the Libraries Are for Everyone tank top.

The literary life of Elliot Page.

How does Bookworm Reads compare to Goodreads or Storygraph?

Who was Randolph Caldecott?

black and white cat standing in a doorway with a plastic shopping bag stuck around its middle

Well, there was no question about which photo was going in this newsletter. Blaine heard a rustling noise and thought Dini had gotten into something in the kitchen. Nope. Instead, he had gotten his chonky butt stuck in a plastic bag handle and was just wandering around with the bag trailing behind him, like “What? That’s always been there.”

Okay friends, we made it to Friday!! Have a great weekend and I’ll pop back in next week.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Be Gay, Do Crimes

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I had a harrowing experience this weekend that a lot of people who wear women’s clothes can probably relate to. I was at the store, trying on a shirt in the dressing room when I realized that…I was stuck. The fabric had no give, it was tight across my shoulders to begin with, and I couldn’t reach around enough to pull the shirt off, or wiggle my arms out of the sleeves. I’m not kidding when I say I struggled to get that shirt off for over five minutes, wondering if I’d have to call a salesperson to help, call my husband to drive over and rescue me, or just stay where I was until I died. Thankfully, I managed to slowly and painfully extricate myself from the shirt, but it was a mildly traumatizing experience I don’t wish to replicate any time soon.

Don’t forget 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

Amazon and the Big Five publishers have filed a motion to dismiss another eBook price-fixing lawsuit.

Fieldstone and Knopf have dropped the Audubon name from their bird field guides, citing the controversy over John James Audubon’s history as “an enslaver, white supremacist, and eugenics practitioner.”

AI is about to turn the publishing world upside down.

New & Upcoming Titles

David Sedaris is publishing his first children’s book in February 2024.

Michael Caine (yes, THAT Michael Caine) is publishing his debut thriller in November.

Director Noah Baumbach is publishing a memoir.

Elizabeth Gilbert has a new novel coming out next year.

10 new nonfiction books to broaden your summer reading.

Here are the big June 2023 book club picks.

57 new mystery and thriller books you won’t be able to put down.

5 new books by LGBTQ+ authors.

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

June picks from Amazon, Crime Reads (psychological thrillers), Ebony, LitHub (poetry, SFF), Tor.com (sci-fi)

Summer 2023 picks from Autostraddle, Chicago Tribune, Kirkus, LitHub, New York Times (fiction, nonfiction)

Best books of 2023 so far from Barnes & Noble, BookPage, Elle (memoirs), Vulture (overall picks, comedy)

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Pageboy – Elliot Page (Entertainment Weekly, LA Times, New York Times, People, Time, USA Today, Washington Post)

All the Sinners Bleed – S.A. Cosby (LA Times, Washington Post)

The Dissident – Paul Goldberg (New York Times, Washington Post)

Battle of Ink and Ice: A Sensational Story of News Barons, North Pole Explorers, and the Making of Modern Media – Darrell Hartman (New York Times, Wall Street Journal)

Lady Tan’s Circle of Women – Lisa See (LA Times, New York Times)

Fire Weather: A True Story From a Hotter World – John Vaillant (New York Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

Why are we so obsessed with missing persons stories?

On the Riot

8 of the best children’s books coming out this summer.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

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

How this reader came back changed to speculative fiction books.

Who recommended better books — a professional book nerd or ChatGPT?

All Things Comics

Ibram X. Kendi is adapting Stamped From the Beginning as a graphic novel.

On the Riot

June new releases for comics/graphic novels and manga.

Audiophilia

The June 2023 Earphones Award winners have been announced.

Celebrate trans pride with these four audiobooks.

On the Riot

8 of Libro.fm’s most preordered books of Summer 2023.

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

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Must-read children’s books to celebrate Juneteenth.

Friendship-filled picture books to read for National Best Friends Day.

Adults

A super-sized list of Juneteenth reads for the whole family.

Pride reading lists from Boston Public Library, Parade, SF Chronicle, Tor.com.

A dystopian mystery reading list.

A reading list about motherhood and adoption.

7 books that feature rock music.

A reading list of linked stories.

10 Sapphic love stories.

7 books about people feeling out of place.

7 novels about falling in love across borders.

10 thrillers featuring horses.

30 must-read books for Canada’s National Indigenous History Month.

15 Stephen King novels to read after seeing The Boogeyman.

6 books that feel like puzzles.

Celeb memoirs that are worth the hype.

5 standalone SFF novels.

On the Riot

10 funny books for preschoolers.

8 great dystopian books for middle schoolers.

3 YA books with meta titles.

8 nonfiction books about swimming.

Travel the world in 122 cookbooks.

20 must-read LGBTQ+ crime novels.

8 fabulous romance novels featuring doctors and other healthcare workers.

10 books set at the beach.

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 sniffing the drain in an empty bathtub

The other day, we caught Gilbert sniffing around the tub and licking up the leftover water from my husband’s shower. Two things of note: 1) Gilbert NEVER jumps in the shower, and 2) I had already refilled his water bowl earlier in the day! He had plenty of fresh water to partake in, but no, he wanted the shower leftovers. Safe to assume Gilbert won’t be getting an invite to join MENSA any time soon…

Okay, that’s all for now, folks. I’ll pop in again on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Libraries Prepare For More Nonsense

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. The big news in my neck of the woods is that a BEAR (yes, a BEAR) was spotted near a highly-trafficked shopping center about 20 minutes from where I work. They haven’t been able to locate the bear as of Wednesday evening, and no one has a clue where it came from or how it ended up here. This also isn’t the first odd animal to show up in the area over the years…we’ve also had a cougar, a bison, and an alligator make an appearance.

Anyway, 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

This nonprofit is making book fairs accessible to underserved students.

California is partnering with Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library to provide free books to children ages 0-5, regardless of income.

Worth Reading

Confessions of a bad librarian.

What happens when libraries stop sharing wifi?

Book Adaptations in the News

Lessons in Chemistry gets an October release date.

Cormac McCarthy is writing the film adaptation of his novel, Blood Meridian.

There’s going to be a limited TV adaptation of The Constant Gardener.

Censorship News

Moms for Liberty has officially been designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Public libraries need to prepare: Kirk Cameron and the publisher Brave Books are planning a host of public library events on August 5th, and they’re calling on supporters to “pray, sing, and read BRAVE Books and other books of virtue.”

Libraries also need to prepare for another “Hide the Pride” campaign.

Unfurling the book banner lies.

PEN America is tracking educational gag orders.

About half of Republicans oppose book bans.

Drag story hour is controversial, but important. And here’s what a drag story hour ACTUALLY looks like.

Texas bans civics lessons involving student interactions with elected officials.

Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker asked the public library to remove an LGBTQ-themed reading challenge from the Mayor’s Summer Reading Challenge after city officials received complaints. Seriously, how spineless can these elected officials get?

The Association of American Publishers (AAP), Penguin Random House, Candlewick Press, Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins Publishers, Macmillan Publishers, Scholastic Inc., and Simon & Schuster have filed an amicus brief supporting the patrons of the Llano County Library System (TX) in Little vs. Llano County.

Hernando County School Board (FL) banned The Sun and Her Flowers at a marathon eight hour meeting. “The board expected a larger than normal crowd after a school board member reported a teacher to the state for showing a fifth-grade class a Disney movie with a gay character.” Over 600 people attended the meeting.

Orange County (FL) develops a new book challenge policy in line with DeSantis’ new law.

Amanda Gorman appeared on CBS Mornings to talk about her poem being banned in a Miami Lakes (FL) school.

The Livingston (NJ) Township Council has unanimously adopted a resolution affirming the township’s support of the public library and the freedom of all readers to select their own materials.

Two Newtown, Connecticut school board members resign amidst an ongoing book ban controversy.

The Ludlow (MA) School Committee is considering a controversial proposal that was inspired by a similar policy from the Central Bucks School District in Pennsylvania, which is hardly the school district you want to emulate when it comes to addressing challenged books…the ACLU has taken legal action against the district twice in less than a year.

The Virginia Beach School Board has created a proposal that would create a list of “lewd” books in the middle and high schools so that parents can opt their children out.

“The First Amendment prohibits Congress from restricting the right of the press and of individuals to write and speak freely. That has nothing to do with local public libraries where making decisions to exclude or include books is the right of library staff, directors, and boards.” Yeah, that’s…not how the First Amendment works. (From Front Royal, Virginia).

Spotsylvania County (VA) Schools removed 14 different titles over the course of the school year, amounting to a total of 108 individual books.

The Hanover County School Board (VA) isn’t trying to remove 17 books from the district…they’re just “cleaning things up a bit.”

Sold is under fire in Berkeley County (SC) schools.

A growing number of Prattville (AL) residents are pressuring the library to remove LGBTQ books.

ALA’s legal branch, the Freedom to Read Foundation, has joined the coalition of publishers, authors, librarians, and readers in filing a lawsuit against Arkansas Act 372.

Crawford County (AR) faces a federal civil rights lawsuit after relocating the LGBTQ children’s books in the libraries.

“Who gets to decide what can be read by the public? Whose moral code, or level of discomfort with ideas gets to rule everyone else?”

The story of book challenges happening at the Caro Area Public Library (MI).

There has been “mass confusion” after the new Missouri state rule takes effect, which threatens state library funding over “obscene books.”

Beavercreek Schools in Ohio is dealing with a trio of book challenges, while Bellbrook Schools has a challenge lodged against a biology textbook.

Local bigots in Fremont, Nebraska have decided that since they can’t get books removed from the library, they’re going to pressure the library to create new collection development policies that cater to their worldview.

A group in Cheyenne, Wyoming has formed to fight book bans in school libraries.

The Wyoming library board that proposed allowing patrons to assign trigger warnings to books has decided to postpone that vote.

Dozens of citizens attended a recent Douglas County (CO) library board meeting, with attendees in favor of retaining LGBTQ materials outnumbering the opposition 2-1.

The Butte-Silver Bow Public Library (MT) cancels a scheduled trans speaker for fear of punishment under the state’s new anti-drag law. And this is the point of the law all along — it was never “just” about drag.

The Davis School District (UT) has officially banned the Bible after receiving a challenge from a parent, and the Book of Mormon is under review.

Students are rallying behind the Temecula Valley High (CA) drama teacher who assigned Angels in America and is now facing community backlash.

The Roseville High School (CA) student paper is reporting on censorship attempts in the school.

Someone burned a Pride flag at a North Hollywood K-5 school and left it outside the classroom window of a teacher who is trans. The teacher has been removed from the school for their physical safety. This is just abhorrent.

Ketchikan, Alaska city officials will decide whether or not the public library should move a couple of YA nonfiction books to a new location. Please note that these are not librarians making the decision. City officials.

The Mat-Su School Board (AK) received over 300 applicants to sit on a new review committee, but rather than using a random lottery selection (the original plan), each member of the school board will get to hand-pick one person to review over 50 challenged titles. This does not bode well.

Books & Authors in the News

Ada Limón has written a poem that will be engraved on a spacecraft and sent to Europa as part of a mission to uncover information about potential extraterrestrial life. And your name can be included along with the poem!

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

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

On the Riot

11+ things that U.S. public libraries offer that you might not know about.

A ranking of fictional cats.

How this reader is retraining their shrinking attention span.

Why do we tell stories?

black cat sleeping with a blue and orange plush toy shaped like a monster

Here’s Gilbert snuggling with his favorite toy. Granted, Blaine put it up by his head while he was sleeping, but he reached his paw out and pulled the toy in closer. This cat is so precious, I can’t stand it!

All right, everyone. It’s the weekend. Try to do something nice for yourself, and everyone on the East Coast, I hope you all stay safe from the wildfire fallout!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

SUCCESSION Readalikes and Spooky Nonfiction

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Well, this weekend came and went, as did all of my intentions of doing something semi-productive. However, one thing I DID do was pull a weird muscle under my rib cage. Was it from using the foam roller too much to stretch my back? Or from slouching while I played video games? Did I sleep in a wonky position? Or is it the universe reminding me that I’m a month away from my 34th birthday and all aches and pains are just going to get worse from this point forward?

But you know what’s not painful? (Sorry, bad segue…) 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

The fierce debate over rewriting children’s classics.

What happens when AI reads a book?

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Weekly has their Fall 2023 Adult announcements out.

Did you hear the rumor that Donna Tartt is releasing a new novel? (Well, hopefully you didn’t, because it’s actually not true.)

You know what is true, though? Mary Trump and E. Jean Carroll are collaborating on a “politics-free” romance novel.

Salman Rushdie is writing a book about his attack last year.

Kellye Garrett has finished writing her latest book, Missing White Woman.

Cover reveal for Alex Michaelides’ upcoming novel, The Fury.

Cover reveal for Gretchen Felker-Martin’s Cuckoo.

Summer picks from AARP, Crime Reads, Datebook, New York Times, NPR, Shondaland, Time, USA Today (suspense), Vulture, Washington Post.

The best royal romances to read this summer.

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

June picks from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Crime Reads, Epic Reads, Kirkus, LA Times, The Millions, New York Times, Washington Post.

Best books of 2023 so far from PopSugar, Time.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Open Throat – Henry Hoke (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Kairos – Jenny Erpenbeck (New York Times, Washington Post)

Lesbian Love Story: A Memoir in Archives – Amelia Possanza (Autostraddle, Shondaland)

Burn it Down: Power, Complicity, and a Call For Change in Hollywood – Maureen Ryan (Deadline, Vanity Fair, Vulture)

RA/Genre Resources

Where to start with Kazuo Ishiguro’s works.

6 favorite authors writing in new or unexpected genres.

On the Riot

How queer-owned bookstores are celebrating Pride Month.

9 authors whose TikTok popularity helped them get published.

10 of the best sci-fi books for Summer 2023.

25 best horror novels of 2023.

Recent horror and thrillers written by authors of color.

8 excellent new cozy books to curl up with this summer.

The best new weekly book releases to TBR.

Sci-fi reads for every mood.

We need more close platonic male friendships in fiction.

All Things Comics

Dark Horse Comics is releasing a deluxe edition of Neil Gaiman’s entire Norse Mythology.

On the Riot

20 award-winning graphic novels for your TBR.

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

Audiophilia

The 2023 Golden Voice Award winners have been announced.

True buckaroo Mara Wilson is narrating the audio version of Chuck Tingle’s first traditionally published novel, Camp Damascus.

6 great audiobooks to listen to this month.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

13 enchanting mermaid books for kids.

28 sweet picture books that celebrate fatherhood.

Adults

5 SFF road trip stories to fuel your wanderlust.

Reading lists for fans of Succession from Esquire and Vulture.

15 contemporary books by Latina authors that have become classics.

4 SF novels set in future versions of San Francisco.

The best unhinged books to read while smiling on the beach. (Now that’s my kind of beach read!)

8 books set in Hawai’i by local authors.

8 historical fiction books set in Colonial America.

10 sinister small-town thrillers.

On the Riot

8 middle grade magical realism novels.

8 YA fantasy books you won’t be able to put down.

The best books you’ve never heard of from the 2000’s.

14 grumpy/sunshine romance books to make your day.

9 beautiful nonfiction books by trans and nonbinary Asian authors.

24 must-read nonfiction books for horror fans.

12 true crime classics.

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.

close up photo of a black and white cat with a dorky expression

Dini wanted to tell all of you that Sunday June 4th was National Hug Your Cat Day. But don’t worry if you forgot to acknowledge it…belated kitty hugs are still acceptable.

As Porky Pig used to say, that’s all folks! I’ll check back in again on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Most Under-Rated Books on Goodreads

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m trying to celebrate the little wins during the day, and today I’m celebrating the fact that after nearly a year and a half, my husband and I have FINALLY put up our small photo gallery wall in the living room! We’ve literally had a bunch of empty frames hanging above our couch for over a year, but we picked our photos, placed our Shutterfly order, and the photos arrived today! I can finally cross that off of my eternal to-do list.

Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from the wide world of bookish professionals? Do you want to know more about the world of scratch & sniff publishing? (Yes, really!) 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

News Updates

A look at how the Uvalde Library (TX) has helped a community heal.

Book Adaptations in the News

A look at the adaptation of The Burning Girls, based on the C.J. Tudor novel.

Hasan Minaj joins the It Ends With Us adaptation.

Netflix cancels its adaptation of The Selection.

Censorship News

When do we move from advocacy to preparation?

The publishing community should more actively oppose book bans.

Texas legislators have sent a new bill to Greg Abbott’s desk, which would remove “sexually explicit books” from school libraries, and would require vendors to rate titles with sexual content before selling them to school districts, among other provisions.

Ron DeSantis and the cost of anti-trans and anti-Black book bans.

“The [Florida] state Board of Education is slated next week to consider a new rule that would lead to Florida’s education commissioner publishing an annual list of library books and instructional materials that people have objected to, carrying out part of a controversial 2022 law.” This will only lead to more banned books.

The Upside of Unrequited will remain on Flagler school shelves (FL). From the article: “The committee had trouble matching listed objections with actual passages of explicit content or depictions glorifying drinking or drugs, strongly suggesting that those filing the challenges had not read the book.”

Brevard (FL) school board revisits its book review policy, specifically whether or not anonymous challenges should be accepted.

The Florida mother behind the ban on Amanda Gorman’s inaugural poem has ties to the Proud Boys.

Moms for Liberty have a list of 65 books that they are “in utter shock” about finding in Santa Rosa Schools (FL).

Florida’s State Education Department has rejected two new Holocaust-focused textbooks, and forced another textbook to alter a passage about the Hebrew Bible in order to meet state approval. All thanks to our old nemesis, CRT. /s

Broward County (FL) libraries are issuing “I Read Banned Books” library cards, and a Republican lawmaker is threatening the county with financial retaliation from the state.

An Orange County (FL) parent is trying to get Assassination Classroom removed from the schools because another parent in a different county brought the book to her attention.

Osceola County Schools (FL) will be keeping Assassination Classroom, but they have also quietly removed multiple books from school libraries without explanation.

Columbia County Library (GA) has queer books, making local bigots mad. (Paywalled)

Louisiana legislators have advanced a bill that would restrict children and teen access to “sexually explicit” books in the public library.

Why are schools in Maine keeping Gender Queer on shelves, despite so many challenges?

A Lake Luzerne Public Library (NY) trustee took exception to a proposed resolution against book bans: “I know that book bans, generally, historically have talked about things like, ‘1984,’ they talked about things, like American classics. We’re not having that conversation anymore,” he said. “If you go over to the young adult section, there are books that promote Critical Race Theory. There are books that promote a homosexual lifestyle. They promote it.” Once again, NO ONE who supports book bans has come out on the correct side of history. This is not something to be proud of.

York County Public Library (NY) adopts a good book challenge policy, which requires complainants to have read the book in its entirety, limits the number of challenges one person can submit at once, and prohibits copying text from other complaints. Look, if you’re going to be a bigot, you have to do the work.

The Roxbury school board (NJ) voted not to temporarily pull a group of challenged books from the shelf while they await review.

The state of book challenges in Connecticut.

Attleboro (MA) parents are trying to get multiple books removed from the middle and high school libraries.

The ACLU has pushed back against a proposed policy at the Ludlow School District (MA), which would impose a wide range of restrictions on education materials and would likely restrict access to LGBTQ books.

Four new books have been challenged at Central Bucks School (PA), bringing the total up to 65.

A Council Rock (PA) school board member said “We aren’t banning books,” but then said that he could convene a policy committee meeting to discuss the possibility of banning books if a majority of the board wanted to.

Three families have sued Montgomery County Public Schools (MD) for having LGBTQ books in the official school curriculum.

After discussing a proposed book review policy change, which would immediately remove any books under review for being “vulgar” or “obscene,” Hanover County Schools (VA) received a list of approximately 100 books that an unnamed organization wants removed from shelves, along with a note saying this is “just a beginning.” Proof that these types of policies only embolden the bigots.

Wake County Schools (NC) have officially banned “pervasively vulgar” books, and no one still knows what that actually means.

Seventeen plaintiffs plan to challenge Arkansas’ library obscenity law.

Free speech advocates in Arkansas have raised enough money to put up two new billboards in response to the recent billboard stating that the public library is distributing pornography.

Missouri libraries are now required to adopt a new obscene material policy in order to receive state funding.

A Kalamazoo County school (MI) has banned Gender Queer. (Paywalled.)

Caro Area District Library (MI) is facing challenges to several age appropriate sex-ed books. Several people in the community have joined a Facebook group called Watchdogs: Eyes on Caro Library and are petitioning to have the books moved to the adult section.

The Peter White Public Library (MI) elects to keep This Book is Gay.

Hudsonville Public Schools (MI) removes Jughead from the high school library. The complaining parent objected to its “lack of educational suitability and pervasive vulgarity,” and said that the school’s ILS doesn’t provide enough information for parents to quickly determine if a book is considered “mature” or not. Also worth mentioning that the review committee voted 7-0 to retain the book, but the school board voted 4-3 to remove it. What’s the point of forming a review committee if you’re not going to listen to them?

The Brandywine School Board (MI) talked about the “porn addiction pandemic” at a recent board meeting. Specifically, this information comes from a YouTube video made by the right wing group, Family Watch International, and should not be considered credible or actionable information.

More information from the middle school teacher in Illinois who resigned after a parent complained about This Book is Gay being made available to her students.

Iowa governor Kim Reynolds signs a broad education law, which orders schools to remove books that contain “sex acts”, and restricts teaching about LGBTQ topics.

Papillon La Vista School District (NE) is reviewing multiple challenges to school library books. All of the complaints have come from community members who don’t have children in the schools.

Minot Public Library (ND) elects to retain Calvin and Two Boys Kissing.

The decision to keep The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian in the Greeley-Evans School District (CO) has been appealed.

Among other changes, Park County School District (WY) will implement a 1-5 rating scale for books in the school library, but only if the books have been challenged. I’m also not sure how exactly the scale is supposed to operate.

Boundary County Library (ID) has its first reconsideration meeting regarding several books by Ellen Hopkins.

A Temecula (CA) mother is upset that her high school daughter had to read a “sexually explicit” play (Angels in America) in drama class.

The Liberty Lake (WA) mayor vetoed an ordinance that would have given the City Council sole authority over public library policies.

“The fear I speak of is being used to try and systematically erase a community just trying to live,” he said. “This has nothing to do with books. It’s just one of the main tools in their playbook, and I encourage you all to denounce this call to action and send a strong statement to those behind it.” (Wenatchee, WA)

Brandon School Division (Manitoba) will not be removing LGBTQ books.

Books & Authors in the News

A new Winnie the Pooh book teaches Texas students to “run, hide, fight” in a shooting. This is one of the most ghastly things I’ve ever heard.

A children’s book by Langston Hughes resurfaces after decades in obscurity.

Award News

The data behind literary prizes.

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

Pop Cultured

The bookish influences in Succession.

Recommended reading for the characters of Yellowjackets.

On the Riot

Pizza Hut’s Camp Book It! and 2023-2024 Book It! programs are now open and enrolling.

Why this reader isn’t leaving Goodreads reviews in 2023.

Plus, 16 of the most under-rated books on Goodreads.

How this reader healed their relationship with self-help books.

10 of the best bookish conversation starters.

Here’s what you need to solve every NYT crossword puzzle.

black and white cat stretched out on its side next to a person wearing jeans.

Dini may look like he’s being extra cuddly here, but when I see this photo, I just see an overly-dramatic cat looking for a fainting couch. He has such a hard life.

Well, that’s all I’ve got for this week, folks. I’ll check in again on Tuesday. Solidarity and positive thoughts to everyone who has summer reading programs starting this weekend!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Surprisingly Sympathetic Supervillains

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I hope everyone had a good Memorial Day weekend. I thoroughly relished the library being closed for two days, which meant two days where I was guaranteed to not be on-call to deal with any staff shortages or desk shift coverage. It’s the little things…

Here’s a reminder that if you’re looking for a new podcast, we’ve got one! First Edition includes interviews, lists, rankings, retrospectives, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books. You can subscribe to First Edition on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or your podcatcher of choice.

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

Knopf is publishing a new novel by Gabriel García Márquez.

Here’s an update on Britney Spears’ upcoming tell-all memoir.

A month-by-month guide to the biggest mysteries of the summer.

The best baseball books of the season.

Entertainment Weekly grades the 8 best romance novels of the season.

The best nonfiction true crime books for Spring 2023.

48 new fantasy books to add to your TBR.

The best historical fiction of 2023.

The best new LGBTQ+ YA books to read in 2023.

10 new feel-good novels.

Summer reading picks from The Atlantic, LitHub (fiction, nonfiction), USA Today, Vogue, Washington Post.

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

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Late Americans – Brandon Taylor (New York Times, Slate, Vanity Fair, Vox)

Good Night, Irene – Luis Alberto Urrea (LA Times, New York Times, NPR, Washington Post)

Women We Buried, Women We Burned – Rachel Louise Snyder (New York Times, Washington Post)

On Women – Susan Sontag (Guardian, Washington Post)

On the Riot

8 new magical realism and fabulism books.

15 excellent short story collections by Asian authors in 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

What exactly is the appeal of dystopian fiction?

Tales of a fiction reader falling in love with nonfiction.

In literature, who is allowed to be redeemed?

All Things Comics

On the Riot

8 comics about Asian immigrants for AAPI Heritage Month.

9 amazing graphic novels from AAPI artists and writers.

Middle grade comics for Dungeons & Dragons fans of any age.

Approaching tough novels through their graphic adaptations.

Audiophilia

Andy Serkis is narrating an audio version of The Silmarillion, out in June.

The best full-cast audiobooks to listen to.

On the Riot

9 recent audiobooks narrated by the author you’ll definitely want to listen to.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

The best YA books for every teenage girl in your life.

18 heartbreaking, angsty YA romances.

Adults

7 books set in Mumbai.

20 fascinating books about fraternities and sororities.

13 summer romances that will turn up the heat.

8 books centered around fractured families and relationships.

6 thrillers in which the house hides a sinister past.

5 surprisingly sympathetic supervillains.

28 erotic romances that will make you hella thirsty.

8 historical fiction books set in the theater world.

10 literary beach reads to activate your vacation mode.

On the Riot

Children’s books about the moon.

11 YA low fantasy novels.

8 delightfully fluffy romances.

8 gorgeous Greek mythology romance books.

10 extreme horror books you can’t look away from.

10 books for getting people back into reading.

The best mermaids in literature.

The top 30 book recommendations from TikTok in 2023.

13 hockey romances to read in time for the NHL playoffs.

Set sail with these SFF pirate books.

The best-selling horror novels of all time.

The best road trip nonfiction to get you in the mood for summer.

Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s The Deep Dive to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox.

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 with a pink plastic fidget toy on its head, like a crown

I got a set of new fidget toys and decided that they would make the perfect hat for Gilbert. He wasn’t thrilled, but let me take this slightly blurry photo.

All right, friends, I’ll check in again on Friday. Don’t forget about Book Riot’s First Edition podcast, with bookish interviews, lists, rankings, retrospectives, recommendations, and much more! Subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or your podcatcher of choice.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

A Tiny Group of People Causing A Whole Mess of Trouble

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I knew it was coming, but Ron DeSantis officially announcing his presidential campaign today has me feeling pretty pissed off, and I imagine a lot of you are feeling the same way. But we’re fighting the good fight, and this isn’t something I’m willing to give up on. We’re all exhausted and angry and scared, but I hope we all keep fighting. I’m right there with you.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Bringing librarians back: a Minneapolis district aims to reinstate a licensed librarian at each school.

Someone returned a library book to the Saint Helena Library in California that was nearly 100 years overdue.

Cool Library Updates

Why Boston is turning bus stops into digital pop-up libraries.

Worth Reading

Between the stacks: A day in the life of a library.

Book Adaptations in the News

Hollywood faces a larger work stoppage as actors threaten to strike alongside writers.

Megan Abbott’s Beware the Woman is being turned into a film, and when the WGA strike ends, she’ll be writing the script!

Josh Hutcherson and Liev Schreiber are starring in an adaptation of Ernest Hemingway’s Across the River and Into the Trees.

Thora Birch is making her directorial debut with the adaptation of Elmore Leonard’s Mr. Paradise.

Netflix cancels Lockwood & Co. after one season.

Trailer for Killers of the Flower Moon. Plus, Chief Standing Bear, leader of the Osage Nation, says that Martin Scorcese and Leonardo DiCaprio have “restored trust” with their work on this movie.

Trailer for The Color Purple has been released.

Trailer for Outlander, Season 7.

Censorship News

School librarians face a new penalty in the banned-book wars: prison.

The Washington Post published an analysis of book challenges across the country and found that the majority of challenges were filed by just 11 people. ACROSS THE COUNTRY. So if you still needed proof that only a tiny percentage of the population is in favor of book banning…here it is.

The Republican plan to take over school boards may be backfiring.

The Department of Education has delivered a potentially crucial finding in the fight against book bans. This comes after their investigation into the removal of books in Forsyth County (GA) schools, many of which featured Black and LGBTQ characters.

A Connecticut bill would fund sanctuary libraries.

Waco ISD (TX) has fielded a number of challenges and emails regarding “inappropriate” books in the Waco ISD libraries. Several board members said they don’t think these are coming from Waco ISD parents. Quelle surprise.

The ACLU wrote a letter to the Mansfield ISD (TX) about their recent anti-trans book policy, but the school appears to be going forward with the policy anyway.

Keller ISD mom Laney Hawes claims that the district’s book policy is causing school librarians to pull books not based on their content, but solely on the assigned reading level. “I have a fourth grader who’s reading at a sixth, seventh, potentially even eighth-grade reading level, and now, we have this policy that’s come down that says, well, those books can’t actually be in his school anymore.”

Laurie Halse Anderson speaks out about Florida schools banning Speak.

Amanda Gorman’s inaugural poem has been banned in the Miami-Dade (FL) school district following a single complaint, along with three other books.

Osceola County (FL) parents are pushing to have Assassination Classroom removed from high school libraries, saying it’s too violent. You know what’s too violent? All of the real life shootings happening in schools every week. Books aren’t the problem here.

Flagler County Schools (FL) removed two books after parents complained, without following their formal review process.

What will it take for media outlets to stop centering Moms for Liberty in their articles??

Moms for Liberty claims that there are at least 28 books in the Santa Rosa School District (FL) that contain sexually explicit or “culturally indoctrinating” language.

Ouachita Parish Library (LA) is waiting to hear back from the attorney general about what to do with two challenged books, so in the interim, they’ve put the books behind the desk and are restricting checkout to patrons over 18. Also worth mentioning that the attorney general, Jeff Landry, created a tip line last year for people to report inappropriate library books to the state.

Forsyth County Schools (GA) now requires parental permission for students to check out The Handsome Girl and Her Beautiful Boy.

Columbia County Board of Commissioners (GA) heard from multiple residents concerned about the locations of multiple books in the public library. (Paywalled).

Massachusetts librarians are under attack amid a record number of book challenges and complaints.

Here’s a wild policy: Coelho Middle School in Massachusetts is not removing any challenged books, but they are restricting 5th and 6th grade access to the YA section, UNLESS the student can name a specific title they’re looking for, at which point school staff would contact the parent or guardian for approval.

Ludlow Public Schools (MA) wants to limit pornographic books in the school libraries. Mission accomplished, because NO PUBLIC SCHOOL PROVIDES PORNOGRAPHY TO STUDENTS.

Titles for teens are being challenged across the state in Connecticut.

Newtown Board of Education (CT) is deadlocked on whether or not to retain the graphic novel, Flamer. A 2019 Newtown alum spoke at a recent board meeting in support of LGBTQ books, and said “I thought we we’re better than this even though honestly I think that might not be true.”

Democratic lawmakers in New Jersey have introduced new legislation similar to Illinois’ recent legislation, which withholds funding from any public school or library that removes books based on “partisan or doctrinal disapproval.”

Central York (PA) Board Policy Committee added language to their book policy that states “Students have access to ALL library books/library materials,” but that parents can contact school staff to enact limitations on what their child can check out. Plus, Central York high schoolers are protesting their district’s book bans (again).

Central Bucks Schools (PA) have pulled This Book is Gay and Gender Queer from school shelves.

Fauquier County Schools (VA) are requiring every school library to publish a list of books in the collection that contain “sexually explicit” content, so that parents can email the librarian to have certain books marked as “off limits” for their student. What does “sexually explicit” actually mean in this context? No one knows!

A Catholic church in Front Royal, Virginia is working to get over 100 books pulled from the Samuels Public Library. (Yeah, that whole revelation from the Washington Post article about how 11 people are responsible for over 50% of the total book challenge requests across the country? This definitely fits.)

A North Carolina pastor wants It’s Perfectly Normal removed from Asheville schools, saying that the book is pornographic.

Wake County (NC) schools have implemented a new policy that prohibits “pervasively vulgar” books from being read aloud or included in library classrooms. What’s considered “pervasively vulgar” is apparently up to interpretation.

Dorchester Schools (SC) will retain Stamped.

Beaufort County Schools (SC) are returning seven books to library shelves, although one book (Identical by Ellen Hopkins) will be sent back through the review process due to a tie vote from the book review committee.

Crawford County Library Board (AR) is looking to create a new public comment policy after an increasing number of people have spoken at recent meetings.

Saline County (AR) Republicans paid to put up a billboard that reads “Stop X-Rated Library Books,” along with the library’s website. Charming.

A survey of book banning across Tennessee.

Galesburg-Augusta Community Schools (MI) has banned Gender Queer.

A group of speakers attended a recent Zeeland Public Schools Board of Education (MI) meeting, saying that the schools should implement a rating system for books, as well as require parental consent for specific titles. (Here’s why that’s not a good idea.)

A group of Heyworth (IL) parents reportedly called the police after a middle school teacher hosted a “book tasting” event for her students that included This Book is Gay. The teacher was placed on administrative leave and has since resigned, saying “The notion that I was putting children in danger because of books — I didn’t feel safe. I knew I couldn’t go back.”

Kalona Public Library (IA) will keep Gender Queer.

Tricks will remain in the Carroll Community School District (IA).

This Book is Gay is returned to Iowa City high schools.

Nixa schools (MO) will decide at their June board meeting whether or not to ban seven challenged books.

A whole load of nonsense in regards to Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters and the controversial email he sent to state legislators last month about inappropriate books in public schools.

Academy School District 20 in Colorado Springs has removed three books that a conservative group said met the legal definition of obscenity, without following any kind of a removal procedure. The conservative group wrote a letter, saying “Many parent groups have taken a very public approach to escalate this issue and are reading sexually explicit excerpts during their Board of Education comments. We are reaching out directly to you in hopes of a better solution. Given the Revised Statute, removal of these books should be less controversial and not subject to hours of debate during school board meetings.” WOW, Colorado Springs. Just WOW.

Montana becomes the first state to specifically ban drag performers from reading to children at public schools and libraries.

Boundary County Library (ID) is holding its first reconsideration meeting in regards to four challenged books.

Book banners take over an Idaho library board after a disgraceful campaign.

Corvallis-Benton County Library (OR) elects to keep 5 challenged books.

Liberty Lakes (OR) has passed a law that gives the city council the final say on public library book bans. Not, you know…the librarians.

Western Placer Unified School District (CA) will retain The Hate U Give as part of the 9th grade curriculum.

A group of bigots is looking to get all LGBTQ+ books removed from Brandon Schools in Manitoba.

Books & Authors in the News

Hank Green announces that he has been diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

British novelist Martin Amis has died at 73.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s The Deep Dive to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox.

Award News

Georgi Gospodinov’s Time Shelter wins the International Booker Prize.

TikTok is launching its own book awards.

An honor to be nominated: a guide to the major book awards.

Pop Cultured

Only Murders in the Building Season 3 will premiere in August.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

30 great book podcasts to enhance your reading life.

On the Riot

How this reader finally let go of their grudge against Charlotte Brontë.

Why are more and more brands creating virtual book clubs?

How should we feel about Barnes & Noble now?

Merging collections: how to move in with another book lover.

black and white cat sitting on an office desk and staring into space

Blaine sent me this picture today with the caption “The Dark Doodles watches over his city.” Think we can get Christopher Nolan to film the trilogy?

Welp, that’s all for me today. Keep fighting the good fight, but take some time to enjoy the long weekend. Don’t forget, BookRiot.com has a new podcast called First Edition, with bookish interviews, lists, rankings, retrospectives, recommendations, and much more! Subscribe to First Edition on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or your podcatcher of choice.

I’ll catch you again on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Working For the Family and Working in the Afterlife

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I don’t know if I’m ashamed or proud to announce that I still haven’t unpacked my suitcase from last week…maybe I can split the difference and just say I’m unsurprised. I mean, I’ve unpacked the essential things, like dirty clothes and shampoo, but the rest of my stuff is just hanging out in suitcase limbo. Tune in next week to see if the situation has changed!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

If you weren’t already aware, New Leaf Literary & Media is facing a huge amount of backlash for how they dropped several authors from the agency.

Former Public Enemy member, Chuck D, launches a book and an imprint at the U.S. Book Show.

Pearson is taking legal action over use of its intellectual property to train AI models.

Not even NYT bestsellers are safe from AI-generated cover art.

New & Upcoming Titles

Tor Books signs Amal El-Mohtar to a four-book deal.

Willie Nelson is publishing a new book.

Johnny Cash’s lyrics are going to be collected in book form for the first time.

Walter Isaacson’s biography of Elon Musk is scheduled for a mid-September release.

Patrick Rothfuss has a new novella coming out in November.

Cover reveal for Heather Fawcett’s next book in the Emily Wilde series, Emily Wilde’s Map of the Otherlands.

New LGBTQ+ YA books to read for 2023.

5 new memoirs to put on your radar this year.

The best recent crime thrillers.

5 new fantasy novels that invigorate old tropes.

14 highly anticipated books for this summer.

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

June picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, kids)

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Yellowface – R.F. Kuang (Bustle, New York Times, NPR, The Rumpus, Shondaland, Washington Post)

Quietly Hostile – Samantha Irby (NPR, Shondaland)

Close to Home – Michael McGee (New York Times, Washington Post)

Life B: Overcoming Double Depression – Bethanne Patrick (LA Times. Washington Post)

Berlin – Bea Setton (New York Post, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

Here are the big book club picks for May 2023.

Men talk about loving romance novels, including baseball superstar Bryce Harper.

Medical mysteries are the new true crime.

The essential Neil Gaiman.

On the Riot

8 new fiction books exploring mental health issues.

New and upcoming nonfiction and poetry by AAPI authors.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

8 of the best books by Isabel Allende.

What is a marriage of convenience in romances?

A brief introduction to social horror.

An introduction to “weird queer” literature.

All Things Comics

The Eisner Award nominees have been announced.

Chiwetel Ejiofor joins the cast of Venom 3.

Archie Comics is introducing its first trans character.

5 innovative ways to use graphic novels as teaching tools.

On the Riot

12 of the best cozy manga that feel like warm hugs.

The longest-running comic strips of all time.

Audiophilia

Roxane Gay, Carrie Brownstein, Jane Lynch, and more are starring in the Audible adaptation of Dykes to Watch Out For.

New mystery & thriller audiobook picks that focus on cold cases.

The work of the audiobook.

On the Riot

20 must-read short stories on audio.

Looking for fascinating stories, informed takes, useful advice, and more from experts in the world of books and reading? Subscribe to Book Riot’s The Deep Dive to get exclusive content delivered to your inbox.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

Humorous mysteries to pick up this summer.

Top 10 strangest alien invasion novels.

8 fantasy books about working in the afterlife.

25 best fantasy books of all time.

13 Asian Latinx writers you should know for AAPI Heritage Month.

10 novels about the drama of working for the family business.

9 mermaid romance books that make a splash.

8 thrillers set over the course of three days or less.

11 biker romances to rev your engines.

10 grand estate mysteries that’ll invite you in.

On the Riot

8 picture books to celebrate AAPI Heritage Month.

8 heartwarming children’s books about respect.

10 books about disability for kids and teens.

12 teen books that prove nothing is off limits for YA.

YA books about AI.

9 classic horror novels, old and new.

12 disaster girl novels to make you feel better about your own life choices.

10 contemporary romance recommendations for straight men.

10 existential horror novels to make you question everything.

Visit with these Appalachian memoirs.

24 life-changing healing books.

10 middle-aged protagonists in SFF.

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.

snowy mountain in the background, with a large red sandstone rock formation in the foreground

I’m missing the altitude of Colorado, so here’s one of the best photos I took on vacation. If you have an opportunity to visit Garden of the Gods, please take advantage of that — it’s free to visit, and it’s spellbindingly gorgeous.

Don’t forget, Book Riot has a new podcast called First Edition, with bookish interviews, lists, rankings, retrospectives, recommendations, and much more! Subscribe to First Edition on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or your podcatcher of choice.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.