Categories
Check Your Shelf

Read and Let Read

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Readjusting to work after vacation is just the Absolute Worst (TM). I didn’t even get a chance to check my email until I had been at work for about 4 hours today. So while I wrangle my to-do list into shape, let’s jump into the newsletter.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

A ransomware attack against the Dallas Public Library sent notices to patrons telling them to keep overdue books.

Cool Library Updates

High-tech library benches that provide wifi can help bridge the digital divide.

Worth Reading

On school shootings and difficult collection development.

How this librarian takes to the streets of Alberta to fight fentanyl-related overdoses.

It’s okay for libraries to be loud!

How library book requests can be a way to curb impulse shopping.

Book Adaptations in the News

Patricia Highsmith is getting a biopic starring Shailene Woodley and Cara Delevingne.

Benedict Cumberbatch is slated to star in the adaptation of Max Porter’s Grief Is The Thing With Feathers.

25 books being adapted for film and TV in 2023 and 2024.

Censorship News

How to prepare library pride displays.

Moms for Liberty and other groups are targeting professional library conferences and attendees.

The Louisiana Senate approved a bill that would “require libraries to create a card system so parents could prevent their children from checking out books deemed inappropriate. Libraries would also have to adopt policy language to limit minors’ access to material that describes ‘sexual conduct’.”

PEN American and Penguin Random House, along with a small group of authors and parents, have filed a federal lawsuit against the Escambia County School District (FL) for the unconstitutional removal of books from school libraries.

Two Florida moms are at the center of the fight against book banning.

Several Rhode Island legislators are trying to tighten the state’s obscenity laws and impose prison sentences on librarians who don’t comply.

A large number of people showed up at the Danvers Library (MA) to support a makeup program for teens hosted by a local drag queen.

A group of middle schoolers in the Hempfield School District (PA) staged a walkout to protest the district’s new book policy, which would lay the groundwork for potentially removing books considered “sexually explicit” or otherwise inappropriate for students.

Hamilton County school district (TN) decided to cancel a Mother’s Day lesson because Moms for Liberty said that the selected books promoted the “homosexual agenda.” One of the books, Mother Bruce, is about a male bear who adopts a gaggle of goslings because they think he’s their mother. Seriously??

This writer is not in favor of the new Illinois legislation that fights back against book bans, saying that it will just further undermine libraries.

Klamath County commissioners (OR) have canceled a library-sponsored social justice book club.

Hong Kong public libraries have pulled nine books related to the Tiananmen Square crackdown, in light of the approaching 34th anniversary.

Salman Rushdie has a message for book banners.

Books & Authors in the News

Jennette McCurdy is starting an Instagram book club.

Plus, 12 May book club picks from online book clubs.

Why Bigolas Dickolas is the best of Book Twitter.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

TikTok users report reading 50% more because of BookTok.

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

The 58th annual Nebula Award winners have been announced!

On the Riot

How to get involved with your local library.

5 recent vlog adaptations of books.

Overused words in book blurbs.

How about we just read and let read?

black cat licking a person's wrist, with its paw wrapped around the person's arm

This is Gilbert less than two hours after we got home from the airport. He’s laying directly on my arm with his paw wrapped around my wrist, and he’s giving my wrist a thorough cleaning. Do you think he missed us?

All right, friends. Enjoy the weekend, and get outside if you have some nice weather! 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.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Books to Make You Dust Off Your Bike

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am thankful that the rain has mostly held off in Colorado Springs, although it’s been really cloudy and Pikes Peak has been hidden from view more often than it’s been visible. But we’ve made the best of it, and it’s been a great trip. Still haven’t seen a bear, but we’ve seen a TON of deer, and my husband is so bemused at how my mom and my sister and I all shout “OH HELLO FRIENDS!!” every time we drive past another group of deer.

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

The mystery book that a ton of Taylor Swift fans thought was a TS memoir is actually a memoir by BTS.

Former Washington Post editor Martin Baron has a book coming out called Collision of Power: Trump, Bezos, and the Washington Post.

A posthumous Loretta Lynn book has been announced.

Here’s the cover reveal for Rachel Hawkins’ next book.

10 of the most addictive books of 2023 so far.

Spring picks from Esquire.

Summer picks from Entertainment Weekly, LA Times.

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

May picks from Crime Reads (psychological thrillers), Town & Country.

RA/Genre Resources

10 books for first-time literary fiction readers.

On the Riot

10 of the best fantasy books for Summer 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Why are algorithms still so bad at recommending books?

Reading pathway for Gigi Pandian.

A guide to Kazuo Ishiguro’s books.

The benefits of romance book clubs.

Dark academia authors to lure you into the shadows.

All Things Comics

Marvel halts production on Blade due to the writer’s strike.

New YA graphic novels coming in 2023.

On the Riot

10 new manga releases for May 2023.

8 comics and graphic novels to read if you need a lighthearted pick-me-up.

Cuddle up with these cozy fantasy graphic novels and comics.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

12 YA mysteries and thrillers to read this summer.

Adults

A reading list of terrible mothers in horror.

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

Whodunnits with a killer twist.

Top 10 novels about motherhood.

7 books that will make you want to dust off your bike.

9 books illustrating Agatha Christie’s enduring legacy.

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.

On the Riot

10 books about disability for kids and teens.

12 stellar YA novels about found families set in space.

YA books about Japanese American imprisonment.

35 must-read nonfiction books by AAPI authors.

11 terrifying works of horror by AAPI authors.

10 fantasy books where math is magic.

20 must-read dragon books.

The best F/F historical romance novels and novellas.

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

8 books about characters with chronic pain.

25 must-read morbid nonfiction books.

8 summer mystery books to heat up your TBR.

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 sitting on a jacket draped over a black couch

Here’s a photo of Dini the day before we left for Colorado. He’s sitting on some of Blaine’s clothes, presumably in an attempt to keep us from leaving. I mean, how do you leave that adorable face?

Well, that’s all I’ve got. I’ll be back on Friday, at which point I will be back in boring Illinois again. (Ugh. I miss Colorado already.) 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.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Bookish Life of Pedro “Internet Daddy” Pascal

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. We arrived in Colorado Springs today (Wednesday), but I can’t quite tell how I feel because traffic was bad, the weather was worse, and by the time we got to Colorado Springs, Pikes Peak was completely obscured by fog. We’re used to plentiful sunshine, but this week looks like it’s going to be full of clouds and rain…send good weather vibes!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The deputy director for the Anchorage Public Library has resigned after ProPublica and the Anchorage Daily News documented her history of racist and transphobic comments to staff and on social media.

OverDrive marks 20 years of eBook lending.

Cool Library Updates

How to host a repair event at your library.

Worth Reading

Providing sexual and reproductive health information in a public library.

5 simple rules for navigating a national conference.

Book Adaptations in the News

All of the movies and TV shows affected by the WGA strike.

Taika Waititi is in talks to direct the adaptation of Klara and the Sun.

Tom Hiddleston and Mark Hamill are slated to star in an adaptation of the Stephen King short story “The Life of Chuck,” with Mike Flanagan set to direct.

We’re also getting an adaptation of Stephen King’s short story “The Monkey,” produced by James Wan.

Casting update for Hamnet.

Trailer for The Dry 2 (AKA Force of Nature).

Censorship News

How to support your library in the wake of rising fascism.

A look at the current slate of 2023 “right to read” bills.

Library funding becomes the “nuclear option” as the battle over books escalates.

Chelsea Handler tells Florida to get its shit together.

Social studies textbook publishers are censoring topics to comply with Florida law.

Illinois to become the first state to ban book bans.

Not surprisingly, most Michigan residents support and trust their local libraries and dislike book banning.

Boise librarian Erin Downey talks about the next steps in the library debate in Idaho.

California governor Gavin Newsome writes a love letter to librarians: “And yet, despite your indispensable contributions — or perhaps because of them — you have become the target of unjust attacks across the nation. Idealogues and demagogues are attacking you for championing diversity, inclusion, and equity — for making sure our children and all people belong. You are facing censorship, battling record numbers of book bans and challenges, as you defend free access to literary works, especially those written by authors who are often targeted: LGBTQ+ writers, writers of color, and those daring to challenge the status quo. It is more important than ever that we have your back and that we ensure and expand access to public libraries and defend your essential role in preserving freedom.”

Books & Authors in the News

Steven Tyler’s lawyer says that his memoir cannot be used against him in a pending lawsuit that alleges sexual assault.

The court sides with Elizabeth Warren in her dispute over RFK Jr’s antivax book.

This Utah mom wrote a children’s book about grief after her husband’s death last year. Now she’s been charged with his murder.

Everyone’s talking about a mystery nonfiction book that will be released over the summer, and a lot of people think it’s a Taylor Swift memoir.

How Ann Patchett became a microcelebrity on TikTok.

Numbers & Trends

The most-read YA books in college and university classes.

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

The 2023 Pulitzer Prize winners have been announced.

The Anthony Award nominees have been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

This newly discovered butterfly species has been named after Sauron.

On the Riot

The bookish life of Pedro “Internet Daddy” Pascal.

Learning how to read slowly.

black and white cat glaring at the camera while a black cat eats out of a food bowl behind it

My friend did us a HUGE favor by feeding the boys the first night we were gone and she sent us this picture. Dini is clearly thrilled that she’s interrupting his dinner time.

All right, friends. I’ll catch you again on Tuesday! 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.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently listening to Devolution by Max Brooks.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

May Picks and Cozy Fantasy

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. The final stages of vacation planning always have me freaking out about how much stuff I have to pack, buy, and clean. And since my in-laws are helping out with cat-sitting, we’re a little more paranoid about making sure the apartment is in good order. But at least it’s not like I have a ton of stuff to get done at work in the next two days…(This is a lie. I have way too much stuff to get done.)

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Supreme Court justices Sonia Sotomayor and Neil Gorsuch did not recuse themselves from court cases that involved Penguin Random House, which published books for both justices over the last decade.

TikTok’s owner may launch a publishing company.

May 4th is designated as the first National Black Authors Day.

New & Upcoming Titles

Cover reveal for the upcoming ecothriller, The Tusks of Extinction by Ray Nayler, which is described as “Jurassic Park meets Hummingbird Salamander.”

Keep an eye on Carson Faust’s debut novel, When the Living Haunt the Dead, described as a Native American southern gothic.

Upcoming queer poetry books to add to your TBR.

Best books of 2023 (so far) from PopSugar, Vulture.

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

May picks from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Crime Reads, Gizmodo, LA Times, Lambda Literary, New York Times, Time, Tor.com (SF, fantasy, horror/genre bending)

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Don’t Call Me Home: A Memoir – Alexandra Auder (Shondaland, Vogue, Washington Post)

The Making of Another Motion Picture Masterpiece – Tom Hanks (Guardian, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post)

The Story of Art Without Men – Katy Hessel (LA Times, New York Times)

Shy – Max Porter (New York Times, NPR)

Gone to the Wolves – John Wray (LA Times, NPR)

On the Riot

40 of the most-anticipated beach reads of 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

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

What is (or isn’t?) literary fiction?

Let’s stop asking romance books to have moral instruction.

Genre blends we need more of.

What counts as cozy fantasy?

10 of the best magic systems in fantasy.

Fantasy books for people who don’t like fantasy.

All Things Comics

IDW Media is cutting its workforce by 40% and will delist from the New York Stock Exchange.

Sweet Tooth will end with Season 3.

Legendary horror manga creator Junji ito hopes to create a manga that’s so creatively creepy, AI tools can’t match it.

On the Riot

The best new comics and graphic novels for May 2023.

10 books like Guardians of the Galaxy.

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.

Audiophilia

Bob Woodward and Simon & Schuster will move to dismiss Trump’s lawsuit against the audio version of The Trump Tapes: The Historical Record. The lawsuit claims that the book violates Trump’s copyright interests.

The May 2023 Earphones Award winners are announced.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Asian-inspired SFF for teens.

11 YA books about fae that will enchant you.

19 YA romance novels with Asian characters.

17 teen books about forbidden love.

Adults

AAPI Heritage Month reads from NYPL, Seattle Times.

Understanding the Vietnam War with books by these Vietnam authors.

Coronation and royalty reading lists from Entertainment Weekly, New York Times, Washington Post.

Gothic fantasies to add to your TBR.

9 books about immigrants to the Middle East.

Top 10 books about being poor in America.

30 true crime books to read right now.

8 SFF books written in verse.

20 of the best music memoirs.

8 books to make you cry.

8 quietly creepy books for fans of Shirley Jackson.

7 books with dark, edgy storytelling.

On the Riot

8 pitch-perfect novels about music talent contests.

Crafting a reading list for Jewish American Heritage Month.

10 sweeping fantasy books like Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom.

8 summer mystery books to heat up your TBR.

90s timeslip YA novels.

13 books about Walt Disney and the Disney Parks.

8 books about exercise for all bodies.

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 showing its tummy against a blue background

Here’s Dini looking all lazy and floofy and chonky. It is *insert Chris Traeger voice* LITERALLY impossible not to snuggle him when he’s showing off his belly like that.

Okie dokie friends. The next newsletter will be coming to you from the heart of Colorado Springs! Super excited!!

Don’t forget, BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal 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.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Warning: This Newsletter is Full of Book-Banning Nonsense

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I had the wonderful privilege of hauling both my cats to the vet yesterday, and I am delighted to report that Gilbert has not lost any weight, and Dini has not gained any weight, both of which I was worried about. But they are both very healthy boys!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Here is the 2023 Library Systems Report.

The Movement of Rank and File Educators showed up in New York City to protest a gala where Mayor Eric Adams was being celebrated, despite his recent proposed budget cuts to public libraries and education.

UC Berkeley students occupy the anthropology library, hoping to save it from closure.

Cool Library Updates

Austin Public Library has launched a pilot program for enhanced library cards, which feature the user’s photograph and can be used as acceptable photo ID at many locations.

LibraryTok is helping libraries write their next chapter.

Worth Reading

Seattle libraries are transitioning into social work to help tackle mental health and drug use in their communities.

This tablet transforms images into tactile displays for people with visual impairments.

Authors talk about the importance of public libraries.

Please eat in the library.

Book Adaptations in the News

Buckle up, folks: How to Sell a Haunted House by Grady Hendrix is being adapted as a film, and if it’s anything like the book, this is going to be a gleeful nightmarish romp that will stomp all over your emotions. I CAN’T WAIT.

Jodi Picoult and Jennifer Finney Boylan’s novel Mad Honey gets a series adaptation.

Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian will be adapted into a feature film.

Julia Hart will direct the adaptation of My Lovely Wife.

Gabrielle Union will star in the series adaptation of Pretty Little Wife.

Prepare yourselves for Christopher Robin, an R-rated comedic reimagining of Winnie the Pooh.

Season 2 of The Summer I Turned Pretty will come out this summer.

Red, White, and Royal Blue gets a premiere date.

First footage from the new Wicked adaptation.

First trailers for A Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, Dune, Part 2, A Haunting in Venice, and Killers of the Flower Moon.

10 screen adaptations much, much worse than the books they’re based on.

Censorship News

CBS’ book-banning segment irresponsibly whitewashed the extremist “parental rights” group Moms for Liberty.

The College Board will revise its AP African American Studies course.

The next generation United Daughters of the Confederacy.

Lake Travis ISD (TX) has a new digital book challenge form on their website.

Spring Branch ISD (TX) canceled a field trip to a performance of James and the Giant Peach, citing “age appropriateness.” Although the school has not gone into more detail, some people speculate it’s because a parent expressed concern at a recent board meeting about “the actors playing multiple roles that were both male and female, saying it’s drag.” I just can’t with the utter ridiculousness of this.

Florida’s book ban frenzy targets Nora Roberts, and she’s not happy.

Disney files a First Amendment lawsuit against DeSantis for his attempt to take over Disney World.

The Northwest Regional Library (FL) opened a book sanctuary.

Escambia County (FL) has created a default opt-in system where parents have to explicitly give permission for their kids to read controversial books. Except for the books that have already been banned of course. And if a parent wants to prohibit certain topics, they can specify that in the form for the library staff to decipher. It’s presented in a way that’s positive for parents (parents have more control over their kids’ reading materials!), but think about the library staff who now have to decide if a book is forbidden under a particular parent’s parameters. Or think about how few parents have actually used these setups in the past. (And don’t forget – the default option is to RESTRICT student access to books.) It’s such a bad system.

The FlaglerLive website (FL) published a review and recommendation that Damsel by Elana K. Arnold is not appropriate for high school students. “The following review by Dr. Stephen Playe and Ann Playe is presented as a guide,” but who even are these people, and why are they being treated as more knowledgeable than the teachers and school staff who are actually tasked with reviewing the book in an official capacity?

“Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry has declined to weigh in on the constitutionality of an amendment to the Rapides Parish Library’s collection development policy, as requested in January.” The policy in question reads: “[Children and teen] collections shall not include materials containing obscenity, sexual content (including content regarding sexual orientation and gender identity), or any other material that is unsuitable for the children and teen collections.” So to recap, he has no problem setting up a reporting line against teachers and librarians, but won’t weigh in on a censorious policy in his state.

The St. Tammany Library Board (LA) has approved a policy change that would prevent books from being removed from shelves when multiple challenges are filed for the same title.

The recommendation for RSU 14 (RE) to retain Gender Queer is being appealed.

Souhegan Cooperative School Board (NH) is preparing to hear a challenge against Gender Queer.

A New Jersey high school librarian is filing a lawsuit against several residents who labeled her a “child predator” when she refused to pull Gender Queer.

West Morris Regional Schools (NJ) will keep Fun Home in high school English classrooms, but it will no longer be required reading.

The Bernards School District (NJ) board rejected a proposed sociology textbook because “some members [of the committee] thought references to the protest group Antifa and the Michael Brown incident were unbalanced, and faulty studies and incorrect facts were presented.” Reminder: school board trustees are usually not trained educators, so why are they allowed to override the people who are?

School board members in Hempsfield, Pennsylvania “voted unanimously to begin a 30-day review of regulations to challenge books in district libraries. Anything with sexual content, ethnic intimidation, or other mature topics will be reviewed.” What the hell does “ethnic intimidation” even mean??

Several Strasburg (PA) parents are upset that their students bought LGBTQ+ themed items at a recent book fair, because this is clearly the school’s fault. Maybe sometime we can have a discussion about what the concept of “parental rights” actually entails, because a lot of people seem to think it means snapping their fingers and having the schools and libraries do all the work when the parents are upset.

Tom Hilterman from North Middleton Township in Pennsylvania thinks that Flamer and Let’s Talk About It are “not just unhealthy, but unsafe and destructive,” and should be removed from the Bosler Public Library. Who is Tom Hilterman? No clue, but apparently he knows better about collection development than the library staff.

New York senator Rachel May introduces the Freedom to Read Act, which would require school districts “to ensure school libraries provide students with access to an array of age-appropriate materials.”

Ballston Spa Central School District (NY) votes to retain Gender Queer.

Blankets and Flamer are being challenged in Sandy Hook, Connecticut.

The ACLU has urged the Spotsylvania School Board (VA) to override the superintendent’s book removals.

One parent in Patrick County (VA) got a story removed from her son’s 3rd grade reading curriculum because she said it gave him nightmares. In a further conversation, this parent has complained about the presence of multiple other books in schools in libraries, except the titles she’s referring to aren’t available in the district.

The Union County School Board (NC) is getting ready to vote on a policy revision that would severely limit the content of classroom displays: “Classroom displays shall be limited to materials which represent the United States, the State of North Carolina, the school name and mascot, and/or are related to tie directly to the curriculum.” The policy addition is so vague that it means absolutely nothing, which means that virtually everything could be restricted.

The Perks of Being a Wallflower will stay in Catawba County (NC).

The Dorchester School District (SC) has updated their policy so that only parents and legal guardians of students can challenge materials, or as Kelly Jensen phrases it, “not just anyone with access to Moms For Liberty’s BookLooks site and too much time on their hands.”

Beaufort County Schools (SC) have reinstated ten challenged books, although some of them are now age-restricted.

“By July 1, as a result of a new state law, local Kentucky school boards must adopt a policy to address complaints submitted by parents alleging that material, a program or an event is harmful to minors.” Specifically, the law requires that schools ensure that a student whose parent has filed a complaint does not have access to the material in question.

Blount County Public Library (TN) refused to ban two challenged books, but have relocated Gender Queer from the teen section to the adult section.

Williamson County Schools (TN) decided to delay their vote on removing multiple books from the library.

Missouri librarian calls on libraries to make a stand against state censorship and budget cuts.

Seckman High School (MO) joins the list of schools where kids can experience a real school shooting, but can’t read about a fictional school shooting. (Nineteen Minutes has recently been removed.)

“The Secretary of the Alabama Department of Early Childhood Education (ADECE) has resigned after a pre-K educator resource book was pulled by the state that “contained a woke agenda.” The book in question is the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) Developmentally Appropriate Practice Book, 4th Edition, and according to the governor’s office, the book contains material “that focused on ideas for teachers such as there being a “larger systemic force that perpetuate systems of White privilege,” that “the United States is built on systemic and structural racism,” and that it should be taught to pre-K students that “LGBTQIA+ need to hear and see messages that promote equality, dignity and worth,” and other “equally disturbing concepts.”

A Michigan resident takes umbrage with a recent article about the attempt to ban Gender Queer from the Deckerville Public Library.

The Brandywine (MI) school board found 30 allegedly inappropriate books in the school library, and now 7th through 10th graders won’t have access to the books at all.

Books about riots, murder, and terrorism are slated to be removed from the teen section at the Hamilton East Public Library (IN), where the library has spent over $300,000 in taxpayer money to review the books in the teen collection.

A new Indiana bill could make book banning in schools easier.

“Fitzgerald said he’s not sure what specific books some in the community are concerned about and that no one filed any kind of complaint prior to the meeting. Fitzgerald, who emphasized that there are clear adult and children’s sections in the library, said the Salem Community Library [WI] is independent of outside influences and is not interested in prohibiting or censoring materials some may find controversial.”

Illinois’ landmark legislation to prevent book bans has been approved by the General Assembly, and will likely be signed into law by Governor Pritzker.

Elmhurst School District (IL) hears from parents who are upset that American Street by Ibi Zoboi is included in the high school curriculum.

Grinnell-Newburg (IA) community schools are getting complaints over The Glass Castle, but the students are getting fed up with the adults. One student said he “he ‘once aspired to live in this Grinnell community,’ but due to a variety of reasons — including racial discrimination and this attempt to change the learning curriculum — he no longer sees living in Grinnell as a current possibility.”

The Carroll High School (IA) review committee has recommended that the board retain Tricks.

Plattsmouth High School (NE) students protest the book banning happening in their school. They say 52 books are being challenged and many more have already been removed.

Approximately 300 people gathered in front of the Salida Regional Library in Colorado as part of a planned “Rosary Rally” to oppose LGBTQ books in the library.

A “drag queen” children’s book draws objections during a Douglas County (CO) library board meeting. I have two unrelated thoughts about this article. One, the feature photo does a great job of illustrating the pointless outrage that book banners love to exhibit, and Greg Francisco looks like he’s doing his best Jim Carrey impersonation. Two, I have absolutely had it up to here with the “both sides” type of writing that we get from these articles. Exhibit A: “Speaker suggests burning LGBTQ material, but others voice defense of books.” Because these are two equal points of view that deserve to be compared like this. To the journalists, I say you need to improve your skills, and fast, and to Greg Francisco, I say you need to find a better hobby.

Lander Valley High School (WY) drew criticism from the school board chair for the library’s banned book display, who said that some of the title selections were from the “woke left.” Which does not carry any sort of substantial meaning, but whatever.

Campbell County (WY) library board is considering allowing patrons to put warning stickers on books that they think other readers need to be alerted about. Literally, there would be no set standards, no vetting process, NOTHING. Patrons would just be able to put trigger warning stickers on any books that THEY deem appropriate. Like…what the actual eff?!

Ada Community Library (ID) tried to remove six books deemed “harmful to minors”. But PLOT TWIST: they violated the Open Meetings Act and so they have to reinstate the books. Isn’t it funny how so much of this book banning nonsense tries to happen behind closed doors? Probably because they know the community would be opposed to book banning attempts, and that’s just way too inconvenient to deal with.

School administrators in Rancho Santa Fe, California, have responded to criticism from the public that they removed several LGBTQ+ books from a book fair, along with LGBTQ+ positive stickers that some of the teachers displayed in their classrooms. The school board president sent an official communication that said “The two rumors being circulated allege that the Board has banned books and also that the Board stands against the LGTBQIA community. Both of these rumors are blatantly false.” But a school board member had already confirmed that the books were removed, and a teacher was told to remove her LGBTQ+ positive images & lanyard. Sooooo…way to go, school board.

Murietta Valley School District (CA) has rejected an 11th-grade social studies textbook after some trustees said it contains elements of critical race theory and critical statements about Trump.

Several right-wing protestors were removed from the Sherman Oaks Martin Pollard Branch Library (CA) for disrupting a drag queen story time program.

Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District (CA) decided not to remove Persepolis from classrooms, but then the trustees decided to give themselves the final say on all books used in the classroom. Again, these trustees are not educators. As the op-ed states, “This approach turns every mundane choice into a hot-button political issue. It will dumb down students’ reading material by assuring that educators propose only the least-controversial books – lest it set off controversy at a board meeting.”

Canby Public Schools (OR) are in the process of forming review committees in order to respond to the 36 books that were banned thanks to the work of two parents.

Seattle Public Library joins the Brooklyn Public Library’s Books Unbanned initiative, which provides free eBook access to students across the country.

Let’s Talk About It is being challenged at the Anchorage Public Library (AK), by someone who used to work for the mayor, no less.

Mat-Su Schools (AK) have a lengthy list of books that have been pulled from library shelves on their website.

The fight for the American public library.

Okay, these banned book goods aren’t exactly a recommended strategy when it comes to fighting censorship, but I own a “Ban Bigots Not Books” tee shirt and I love it.

Books & Authors in the News

A previously unseen Gabriel Garcia Marquez novel will be published across Latin America in 2024.

Oprah picks The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese as her next book club pick.

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.

Numbers & Trends

James Patterson sells his 100 millionth book.

What are the actual reading trends for Gen Z?

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

The 2023 Edgar Awards have been announced!

US Poet Laureate Ada Limón has been appointed to an historic two-year second term.

The LA Times Book Prize winners have been announced.

The 2023 Women’s Prize shortlist has been announced.

A new award seeks out debut writing from unpublished authors over 50.

Why we need more prizes for women and nonbinary authors.

On the Riot

Why study library science?

Why teens need their own library space.

12 of the best summer reading programs of 2023.

How school librarians can survive the fourth quarter.

When children’s book authors don’t like children’s books.

black cat sitting on an orange blanket

Here’s Gilbert recovering after his ordeal at the vet. And I do mean an ordeal – we had to poke him out from under the couch with a broom, chase him around the apartment, and corner him on the couch in order to get him into his carrier. He hissed at us a lot, but thankfully he has the memory of a goldfish and forgave us very quickly.

Welp, that’s all I have for this week. I’m out till Tuesday. Don’t forget, BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal 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.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

What’s Up Lit?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. In just over a week, I’ll be back in Colorado Springs for the first time in a decade, and this trip is very much needed. With the exception of one trip to Disney World, Colorado Springs was the only vacation spot my family ever visited when I was a kid, so it has a very, very special place in my heart. It’s the kind of place where I want to get up early, stay up late, and do all the hiking while I’m awake because I don’t want to miss a single moment!

Psst! We have a new podcast called First Edition for you to check out! BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world. Interviews, lists, rankings, retrospectives, recommendations, and much more, featuring people who know and love books. Subscribe to First Edition on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or your podcatcher of choice.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Starting salaries at the big publishers are up 23%.

The biggest twist in the new mystery story written by AI is that it’s actually pretty good.

New & Upcoming Titles

Melissa DeRosa, former Secretary to the Governer for Andrew Cuomo, is publishing a tell-all memoir this fall.

Amy Winehouse’s journal entries will be published in a new book.

T. Kingfisher is publishing a novella sequel to What Moves the Dead.

Matthew Perry says that he’ll remove his insult towards Keanu Reeves in future editions of his book.

Meghan Trainor talks about her new pregnancy book, Dear Future Mama.

Sir Patrick Stewart shares the cover of his upcoming memoir.

The best and most anticipated books of 2023, so far.

The best horror novels of 2023.

15 of the hottest romance novels coming this spring.

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

May picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, teens, kids), Epic Reads, Kirkus

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Monsters: A Fan’s Dilemma – Claire Dederer (Electric Literature, Esquire, LA Times, New York Times, Time)

Honey, Baby, Mine: A Mother and Daughter Talk Life, Death, Love (and Banana Pudding) – Laura Dern & Diane Ladd (Parade, People, Washington Post)

Small Mercies – Dennis Lehane (LA Times, New York Times, Shondaland)

Chain-Gang All-Stars – Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah (New York Times, Vulture)

The Skin and Its Girl – Sarah Cypher (NPR, Shondaland)

Momfluenced: Inside the Maddening, Picture-Perfect World of Mommy Influencer Culture – Sara Petersen (Shondaland, Wired)

Soul Boom: Why We Need a Spiritual Revolution – Rainn Wilson (Shondaland, USA Today)

RA/Genre Resources

Why Judy Blume’s taboo-breaking books get teenagers like no others.

The state of the crime novel, part 2: a roundtable discussion with the Edgar nominees.

On the Riot

10 of the best new books in translation for Spring 2023.

25 of the best romance books for Summer 2023.

9 recent middle grade mysteries.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Reading pathways for Frances Hardinge.

What is fast burn romance?

What is a reverse harem romance?

Fighting for Appalachian Literature’s bright future.

What murder mysteries get right (and wrong) about wills.

Anatomy of a parlor room mystery scene.

Why the British love “up lit.”

All Things Comics

Are manga sales evening out?

That being said, manga’s overall success hasn’t trickled down to freelance authors and illustrators.

On the Riot

15 new YA comics and graphic novels coming out this spring.

The most influential manga of all time.

Who is Junji Ito? An introduction to the master of horror manga.

Audiophilia

7 of the best audiobooks for April.

On the Riot

How audiobooks saved this Rioter’s reading.

Don’t miss out on these 28 free audiobooks from SYNC.

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

Children/Teens

Picture books for kids about Palestine.

Modern middle grade reads for fans of Judy Blume.

16 childhood friends-to-lovers YA books to live vicariously through.

Adults

Cozy SFF books for spring.

8 books that demand to be read outside.

10 eco-fiction novels worth celebrating.

16 books you’ll want to devour after Firefly Lane.

5 great suspense novels set in the entertainment world.

5 books to gift for Mother’s Day.

8 novels spotlighting Middle Eastern American women.

A Vietnam War reading list, 50 years on.

A sapphic reading list for every mood.

5 great novels inspired by real-life crimes.

On the Riot

Picture books to encourage diverse thinking.

8 captivating books like The Magic Tree House series.

Scifi romance books.

8 of the best Frankenstein retellings.

20 must-read historical horror novels.

10 engrossing found family fantasy and alternative history books.

Expand your bookshelf with readalikes for The Expanse.

Wedding mysteries and thrillers.

Like that bestselling novel? Read this nonfiction book.

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 sitting on an office chair with a green and white crocheted blanket

Another near-perfect picture of an absolutely perfect kitty. Gilbert was keeping my husband company this afternoon, and by that, I mean he was following him from room to room and yelling at him for snuggles.

All right friends, I’ll catch you on Friday. Stay awesome!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

When a Book Ban Is Not a Ban

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am very excited because next Friday, I get to go to my first library conference since 2020! This is also noteworthy because our previous professional development budget was so tiny that it hadn’t been feasible for staff to attend any conferences without an outside grant, but our new director increased our budget line for the new fiscal year, and she plans to continue increasing it to give staff more opportunities. A reminder that budgets are a direct reflection of an organization’s priorities.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

ALA has issued their 2023 State of America’s Libraries Report.

NYC libraries stave off the most recent proposed budget cuts, but there are still $36 million in previously proposed cuts on the table.

The Indianapolis Library board has appointed Gregory Hill as the permanent CEO, even though he never applied to, or formally interviewed for, the position.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal (Washington) introduced a resolution expressing support for all library staff, “recognizing the need for funding commensurate with the broad scope of social services and community supports provided by libraries, preserving the right of all citizens to freely access information and resources in their communities, supporting a strong union voice for library workers, and defending the civil rights of library staff.”

The House introduced new legislation under the Prison Libraries Act, which would “authorize $60,000,000 over six years for state prisons to build capacity amongst their populations by providing library services and resources.”

Cool Library Updates

Dolly Parton has been awarded a lifetime honorary membership with ALA.

Worth Reading

Why don’t library programs require a professional ethics course?

Why we need sensory storytimes.

Book Adaptations in the News

A Twilight TV series has been announced.

Lord of the Flies will be adapted for TV for the first time.

AMC is producing a new Anne Rice series.

Bret Easton Ellis’ recent novel, The Shards, is being adapted for TV by HBO.

Kennedy Ryan’s Before I Let Go is being adapted for TV by Peacock.

Casting update for It Ends With Us.

Alma Katsu announced that Red London has been optioned for a TV series! ​​

Dear Edward has been canceled at Apple+ after just one season.

First trailer for Lessons in Chemistry.

Trailer for City on Fire.

Censorship News

A look at the newest PEN America report on the state of book banning in the U.S. (Spoiler: it ain’t good.)

Are literary agents seeing changes in publishing with an increase in book bans?

How parents can fight book bans at their kids’ school libraries.

The Texas House approved House Bill 900, which is supposed to keep sexually explicit materials out of school libraries, but a lot of experts worry that the language is so vague that it could easily restrict books that are not inappropriate.

Ramona Blue will remain on library shelves in Conroe ISD (TX).

Arlington (TX) city manager defends the library director, as residents are upset that the library chose to retain three challenged graphic novels.

Flagler County Schools (FL) will retain Crank by Ellen Hopkins.

Manatee County (FL) Commissioner James Satcher suggested that the board should end the county library’s affiliation with ALA, saying that the organization was too “woke.”

“Volusia County (FL) council members have taken the first step toward what at least one of them hopes is giving the council power to monitor children’s books in the public library system and remove or restrict controversial titles from the shelves.”

Florida’s expansion of “Don’t Say Gay” could release a flood of book bans.

Florida education officials voted to ban classroom instruction on gender identity and sexual orientation in all public school grades.

Pinellas County (FL) returns The Bluest Eye to high school shelves.

Ouachita Parish Public Library Board (LA) quietly removed two books from the shelves and limited access to patrons 18 and older.

Forsyth County Schools (GA) voted to retain Endlessly Ever After.

Leavitt Area High School (ME) removed Let’s Talk About It.

Attendees at a recent Board of Education meeting in Newton, Connecticut spoke in favor of retaining Flamer and From the Desk of Zoe Washington. ”God forbid kids gain some empathy when they are allowed to read and discuss with their peers a fact of American society,” one attendee was quoted as saying.

All Boys Aren’t Blue is being challenged in Greenville Schools (NY).

Ballston Spa Central School District (NY) is anticipated to keep Gender Queer in the high school library.

Staples High School (CT) voted unanimously to retain Flamer, Gender Queer, and This Book is Gay.

Some Westborough Public Library (MA) users are pushing to have the library defunded over the presence of an age-appropriate, scientifically accurate book about vaginas geared towards middle schoolers.

Wake County School Board (NC) is considering a change to their policies that prohibits “pervasively vulgar” materials, but no one on the board can quite determine what that means, and the Board attorney Jonathan Blumberg “said no state law or case law that he knows of has defined ‘pervasively vulgar.’” So that’s not worrisome at all.

A right-wing Christian nationalist group in North Carolina is threatening to sue the Burke County School District if they don’t remove a list of books that the group has deemed to be pornographic.

Heartstopper, Volume 2 was removed from a Scholastic Book Fair in Spartanburg County, South Carolina.

Anderson County (TN) mayor Terry Frank has gotten Sheriff Russell Barker involved in trying to remove Gender Queer and Let’s Talk About It from the public library. Barker has said that the books don’t meet the legal definition of obscenity, but that he plans to file challenges to the books himself because he considers them inappropriate for minors, even though the books aren’t shelved in the children’s section. He says that the library’s restrictions are too weak, that the books should be removed or restricted, but that they also have to be careful about censorship. Pardon me, but my head is absolutely spinning with this nonsense.

“Arkansas’ attorney general said on Friday that a law creating a new offense for “furnishing a harmful item to a minor” does not apply to e-books and audiobooks despite concerns from the head of the Central Arkansas Library system over whether thousands of items in digital libraries remain vulnerable to scrutiny under the rule.” Yeah, I wouldn’t trust the AG’s word on any of this.

Republicans in Saline County (AR) join the book banning club. “Book banning is all the rage in Arkansas lately, and allowing kids to learn about people who are different from them is suddenly quite charged. Clutch your pearls, lest there be a book about worms getting married or a rainbow magnet visible on the fridge in a goofy book about cleaning.”

Cumberland County Schools (AR) have removed Push.

Fayetteville School District (AR) has also banned Push, along with Sex is a Funny Word, and several other books are still under review.

This Prattville (AL) mother is convinced that no one in their town wants LGBTQ books in the children’s section. Also, can we PLEASE, for the love of all that is good and decent, stop framing these debates as though book banners are community martyrs?? “A group of concerned moms in Prattville is struggling to get several LGBTQ+ books aimed at children removed from the toddler and children’s section of the Prattville library.”

How librarians fought back against a proposed ordinance in Cass County, Michigan that would have implemented criminal charges against library staff for distributing sexually explicit books to minors.

Caro Area Public Library (MI) will keep Gender Queer.

However, Gender Queer may be removed from Galesburg-Augusta School District (MI).

Students will need their parents’ permission to borrow Looking for Alaska in the Belding School District library (MI).

Iowa City Schools have pulled This Book is Gay for review, following several other Iowa schools that removed the book after it was featured on the Libs of TikTok Twitter account.

Let’s unpack the mental gymnastics around this definition of book banning from a Mason City (IA) resident, shall we? “This is not book banning. Book banning would mean adults can’t read this book. This is talking about public schools and not having those books in the public school libraries, I mean if you want to have that book, go out and buy that book on amazon [sic] for your child.”

Kalona Public Library (IA) is holding off on discussions about Gender Queer after receiving a flood of last-minute requests for its removal. Almost as if this was a coordinated attack…

Fremont Public Library (NE) board voted to move This Book is Gay from the teen section to the adult section.

“North Dakota’s governor vetoed a bill Wednesday that would have required librarians under threat of criminal penalty to screen sexually explicit materials from children, but signed another barring explicit materials from the children’s sections of local and school libraries.”

Greeley Schools (CO) will retain The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian after a 22-person (!!!!!) committee recommended that it be retained. This is the first of 15 challenged books to be reviewed.

A group of bigots in Rio Rancho (NM) are pushing to have several LGBTQ books removed from the adult section, calling them predatory and inappropriate for children, because children aren’t prohibited from accessing the books.

“The Ada Community Library board violated Idaho Open Meeting Law at its March board meeting when the trustees voted to remove six books from the library’s collection without noting an action item on the agenda.”

Public outcry doesn’t change the Canby School District’s (OR) decision to remove 36 books from library shelves.

The Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District Trustees (CA) want to decide which books get put into school libraries, despite having absolutely zero professional experience or education in that area.

“The Matanuska-Susitna Borough School District (AK) is in the midst of reevaluating books available at libraries and school book fairs including the removal of any volumes deemed “sexually explicit” under state statute.”

A resident of Winkler, Manitoba says that the public library is distributing “child pornography” and should be defunded.

A third of UK librarians report that they have been asked to censor or remove books.

60 years ago, a Florida man asked the state legislature to ban The Three Little Pigs…the more things change, the more things stay the same.

America’s book bans have already come for prisons.

Books & Authors in the News

Award-winning author Lydia Davis refuses to sell her latest book on Amazon.

Penguin Random House is altering “unacceptable prose” in P.G. Wodehouse’s Jeeves & Wooster books.

A fanfiction author wants credit for inventing the Tolkien spinoff, The Rings of Power.

Jessica Chastain explains why she’s refusing to sign copies of The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo.

Numbers & Trends

A new study indicates that children are reading more, but their enjoyment and comprehension are on the decline.

The best-selling books of the week.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

Pop Cultured

EGOT-winning actor, singer, and activist Harry Belafonte has died at 96.

Netflix is ending its DVD-by-mail service, although tbh I thought this had already been ended a LONG time ago.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A man who once modeled for romance novels is sentenced to prison for his role in the January 6th insurrection. WELL OKAY THEN.

Michelle Obama surprising fans at the bookstore is gloriously wholesome viewing.

On the Riot

Homeschoolers and libraries are a match made in heaven.

How school libraries can make the most out of ChatGPT.

The most memorable libraries in fiction.

A review of the Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret adaptation.

The history of the Malleus Maleficarum.

A history of Frog and Toad.

black and white cat laying on a blue bedspread and a flannel Cubs blanket

This newsletter, the kitty spotlight goes to my parents’ newest cat, Groucho! Groucho is a shy little bean and has spent a lot of time hiding under the guest bed, but my parents say that he’s gotten so brave over the last few weeks! He now roams the rest of the house on a regular basis, he plays and interacts with the other cats very well, and he’s even taken to crawling into my parents’ laps while they watch TV! And just look at that precious face!

All right, that’s all I have in me for this week. Don’t forget, you can check out Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, for fascinating stories, informed takes, and more from a variety of bookish experts! Choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

LGBTQ from A to Z

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I should be getting geared up to go on vacation (we leave on May 10th for Colorado!), but April feels eternal and I have a feeling my to-do list is going to sneak up on me before I know it.

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

Memoir news and updates for Malala Yousafzai, Serena Williams, Britney Spears, Johnny Marr, and Liz Cheney.

105 new mysteries and thrillers by authors of color.

8 new mysteries to die for.

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

April picks from Vulture.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny, and Murder – David Grann (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Greek Lesson – Han Kang (LA Times, NPR, Washington Post)

My Cousin Maria Schneider: A Memoir – Vanessa Schneider (New York Times, Shondaland, Washington Post)

The Last Animal – Ramona Ausubel (LA Times, NPR)

RA/Genre Resources

The real reason Judy Blume is still relevant today.

On the Riot

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

What the heck is biopunk?

Why escapist reads are more popular than ever.

All Things Comics

Disney+ is adding several Spider-Man movies to the streaming service.

First look at Colin Farrell in The Penguin spinoff series.

Sneak preview of My Favorite Thing Is Monsters, Part 2!

Manga’s popularity continues to skyrocket.

On the Riot

The best-selling comics of all time.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Teen books for fans of Percy Jackson.

12 YA cozy fantasy books with cottagecore vibes.

Adults

Reading recommendations for AAPI Heritage Month.

10 suspenseful Indigenous stories.

9 harrowing books about shipwrecks.

10 wistful books to fit your coastal aesthetic this summer.

96 mystery/thriller recommendations by mood and setting.

9 steamy novels featuring bisexual romances.

5 space books to send a chill down your spine.

Earth Day reads to inform and inspire action.

7 books about women fighting for survival.

13 powerful memoirs by Latina authors.

7 novels overgrown with plants.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

On the Riot

8 YA “lost heir” fantasy books.

10 books that bring together romance and cozy mysteries.

10 of the best scifi robots from books.

9 dystopian stories that are just too damn real.

9 nonfiction books about nature.

10 books that celebrate mundanity and the everyday.

20 dark academia romance novels to swoon over.

8 of the best LGBTQ-inclusive books about pregnancy and parenting.

8 popular science books about animals for the zoologically inclined.

Celebrate our national parks with these books.

10 satisfyingly sinister novels about secret societies.

LGBTQ book recs from A-Z.

Lighthearted post apocalyptic books to brighten up the end of the world.

8 disabled poets to add to your TBR.

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 staring at the underside of a couch tipped on its side

The cats have torn up the underside of our couch, resulting in a lot of long strings that Gilbert loves to chew on. Blaine decided to flip the couch over and trim the strings away, and Dini was right there to supervise!

All right friends. Let’s meet back on Friday — same Bat Time, same Bat Channel. Don’t forget, you can check out Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, for fascinating stories, informed takes, and more from a variety of bookish experts! Choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

This Book Does Not Violate Library Policy

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’ll make this intro brief because I have a cat sitting in my lap who is making it very hard to type. And no, moving the cat is not an option.

So let’s do libraries.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

There was a fatal shooting at the Rudisill Regional Library on Tuesday in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The Mamaroneck Public Library (NY) may be forced to close its doors in June after a probe into financial irregularities uncovered a $1.4 million shortfall due to embezzlement from the Library’s long time business manager.

Tracie D. Hall, ALA’s Executive Director, has been named one of Time’s 100 Most Influential People of 2023.

Worth Reading

The ruling that threatens the future of libraries.

The future of libraries involves affordable housing.

Book Adaptations in the News

A writer’s strike may grind Hollywood to a halt. What you need to know.

Don Cheadle’s production company is adapting Lamar Giles’ YA near-future thriller, The Getaway.

Billy Porter will play James Baldwin in an upcoming biopic.

Olivia Wilde will adapt Jennifer Egan’s A Visit From the Goon Squad and The Candy House for TV.

Mona Awad’s Rouge will get a film adaptation.

Netflix has a premiere date for All the Light We Cannot See.

Harvey Keitel joins the cast of The Tattooist of Auschwitz.

Casting update for the HBO Max It prequel series.

Trailers for Saint X, The Last Thing He Told Me, and The Sympathizer.

22 (more) adaptations better than the books they’re based on.

Censorship News

How to get involved with your local library.

Beyond book bans.

The people we need to reach are not online.

If at first you don’t succeed, defund the public library.

Llano County (TX) library supporters declare victory as county officials decide to keep the library district open. (For now.)

The Texas Senate passes a school library bill meant to keep “harmful” materials off library shelves. Texas is also having a hard time filling school librarian positions. (Insert shocked Pikachu face)

A St. Lucie County (FL) resident has lost her appeal to have 16 books removed from school libraries. The woman in question is nearly 70 and apparently does not have any children in the district. Methinks she needs to find a less bigoted hobby.

Hernando County (FL) Republican Party Committeewoman Mary Mazzuco spoke at a recent school board meeting to complain about two “inappropriate” books still being on library shelves and said she would be taking both of the books to DeSantis. “If the governor has instructed us to remove certain books from the schools, why is it that I have two books?…I believe there is a $5000 fine for the media specialist who would have allowed those books to be there. Ultimately you all have had to make sure that these books are removed, and apparently, you’re not doing that. I don’t understand why these books are still in the schools.” But DeSantis isn’t banning books, amirite??

A Flagler County (FL) school board member thinks that the district libraries are too big and should be shrunk down to be used for other purposes.

Two Pinellas (FL) men are trying to challenge specific titles in the schools in order to prove a point about the slippery slope of book banning. But seriously, trying to expose the hypocrisy of book banners isn’t an effective solution. The hypocrisy is either besides the point, or is the point entirely. We need direct action.

Brevard County (FL) Public Schools will not allow the media specialists to vote when books are challenged in the district because they’re worried about bias. They’re apparently not concerned about bias from any other people serving on the committee, but let’s worry about bias from the experts.

Conservatives are trying to pull Assassination Classroom from Florida libraries because it talks about school shootings. Once again for the people in the back: IT’S NOT THE BOOKS THAT ARE ENDANGERING STUDENTS.

The MSAD 6 School Board (ME) have revised their book challenge policy to remove books from the shelves once a complaint has been filed. In other words, exactly the opposite of what schools should do with challenged books.

A recent board meeting at the Rockwell Falls Public Library (NY) was commandeered by opponents to an upcoming drag queen story time. “Seven people came in favor of the event. The rest were deeply opposed, saying it could lead their children to become gay or transgender and ruin their innocence by exposing them to sexuality.”

Look, I’m getting really tired of the “both sides” types of headlines that subconsciously imply that book banners and people who don’t want books banned are on level playing fields. This is in Brookfield, Connecticut where a group of bigots are trying to remove Fun Home and This Book is Gay from the school libraries.

Suffield (CT) First Selectman Colin Moll took it upon himself to remove the book What Are Your Words?: A Book About Pronouns from display at the Kent Memorial Library because he received one complaint.

This is absolutely deranged. A Pennsylvania Moms for Liberty leader allegedly hacked into a murder victim’s Facebook page in order to harass people who oppose Moms for Liberty’s agenda.

Central Bucks (PA) will not ban Lawn Boy.

The Montgomery County School District (MD) is halting its opt-out option for a list of LGBTQ+ centric titles, but a local member of Moms for Liberty says that forcing children to interact with books from this list goes against some people’s family and religious values.

A Blount County (TN) school board member walked out of a meeting where a member of the public insisted on reading an explicit passage from The Bluest Eye.

The Tennessee House approved a bill that would target publishers for sending “sexually explicit” books to schools.

A Windsor C-1 School District (MO) parent complained about some students being assigned The Hate U Give, so district staff said students could read the book if their parents are okay with it.

The Missouri Senate has restored funding for public libraries to the state budget.

Farmington School Board (AR) is restricting access to Tricks and All Boys Aren’t Blue for students 17 or older.

Macon County (NC) commissioners decided to stay in the Fontana Regional Library System, even though some people were upset that you could request inappropriate books via interlibrary loan.

Beaufort County Schools (SC) are implementing an opt-out system for parents who don’t want their children to access particular books.

36 books were pulled from Canby Public Schools (OH) after two parents complained.

A Sheridan Public School Board (WV) trustee is of the opinion that books will start to make their way into elementary school libraries that will sexualize K-5th graders.

Residents in Algoma Township (MI) received flyers urging them to vote to withdraw from the Kent District Library, saying that their taxes were supporting drag queen story time. Except the library had never hosted a drag queen story time.

The news about the defunding of the Patmos Library in Jamestown Michigan is old news, but this quote at the end of the article is very indicative of how things are currently trending in the library world: “If they can’t ban the book, will they burn the whole place down?” Call me a pessimist, but I’m very afraid it won’t be long until we’re going to see this play out very literally.

The Patmos Library is also considering giving parents and trustees more control over what information minors can access in the library.

A Deckerville Public Library (MI) patron suggested that someone should check out Gender Queer, pay for it, and then destroy it at home to keep it out of the library. Um…do they not realize that libraries often replace copies of lost or billed popular items?

Indiana’s book ban bill fails to make it out of committee.

“A Wisconsin elementary school teacher has been placed on leave after she revealed on social media that administrators canceled a first-grade performance of Miley Cyrus and Dolly Parton’s song ‘Rainbowland’ because the district considers rainbows ‘controversial.’” Great look, Wisconsin.

Illinois librarians weigh in on the proposed state legislation that would withdraw funding from public and school libraries found to be in violation of ALA’s censorship guidelines.

Sioux City (IA) schools removed This Book is Gay. The Board President said “It did not go through our normal review process when it was originally ordered and placed on the shelf. Our policy was violated at that time. We stand by our process and decisions,” but the National Coalition Against Censorship said, “This response ignores our complaint that the district did not stand by their process.”

Moms for Liberty in Johnson County, Kansas are sending mass text messages asking for assistance with removing “pornographic and sexual content from our schools!”

The Dickinson Area Public Library (ND) put up a display advocating for patrons to contact legislators to vote against the state’s current proposed book ban bills, and residents are upset that a public library is advocating for books not to be banned.

Montrose Public Library (CO) will decide whether Flamer and Gender Queer should remain on shelves.

The Los Alamos Library (NM) confirmed that If You’re a Drag Queen and You Know It was purchased appropriately and did not violate library policy. AKA the book will remain on library shelves.

Some of the LGBTQ+ students in the Alpine School District (UT) are pushing back against a recent ruling that removed all Pride flags from the schools.

The co-founder of Idaho Parents for Educational Choice wrote an op-ed calling for certain books to be removed from the Idaho Falls Public Library.

Pahrump Community Library trustees (NV) will develop a plan to relocate questionable titles (aka LGBTQ+ titles) in the children’s department. This plan comes after one of the trustees got a single email criticizing the presence of LGBTQ+ titles in the children’s collection.

Placentia-Yorba Linda (CA) trustees will decide if Persepolis should remain a part of the high school curriculum.

The Sunol Glen School Board (CA) now has a new policy on what trustees can say in meetings, thanks to a recent meeting where a trustee complained during a meeting about the depiction of anal sex in Gender Queer…except there isn’t a passage that depicts anal sex in Gender Queer. We’re living in a timeline where everything’s made up and the points don’t matter.

After soliciting input, Ketchikan Public Library (AK) will keep Let’s Talk About It in the collection.

Amplification or suppression? Maggie Tokuda-Hall calls out edits proposed by Scholastic to her author’s note, which referenced racism and the Japanese American internment camps during WWII. Scholastic, meanwhile, has offered a tepid apology.

Books & Authors in the News

Best-selling mystery author Anne Perry has died at 84.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week according to all the lists.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

Award News

Kimberly Unger wins the 2023 Philip K. Dick Award for The Extractionist.

The 2023 International Booker Prize shortlist has been announced.

Pop Cultured

For anyone keeping up with Theranos/Bad Blood updates, Elizabeth Holmes will begin her 11-year prison sentence at the end of the month.

There are three new Star Wars movies currently in the works.

Plus, here’s the first trailer for Ahsoka.

On the Riot

Why Roald Dahl does not deserve a second chance.

Book terms we hate.

What will the bookstore of the future look like?

In search of bookish hangovers.

Should you buy that book?

black cat and black and white cat snuggling together on an orange blanket

The boys don’t often snuggle together on my lap, but when they do, it’s just TOO PRECIOUS FOR WORDS. Seriously, if you haven’t had more than one cat in your lap at a time, you haven’t lived.

All right, that’s all I have in me for this week. Don’t forget, you can check out Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, for fascinating stories, informed takes, and more from a variety of bookish experts! Choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Multi-Generational Mischief and Existential Anxiety

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I have a T-shirt that says “Ban Bigots, Not Books,” and I wear it a lot when I’m not at work. This weekend, I got my first compliment on my shirt out in the wild (from the cashier at Potbelly, of all places), and it made my day way more than I expected it to. Just a teeny tiny reminder that not all is bad.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Hachette released its most recent yearly diversity report.

Gillian Flynn wants to use her imprint to open the door for more “off-kilter” books.

Are celebrity publishing imprints the new celebrity vodka?

New & Upcoming Titles

Brittney Griner will be writing a memoir.

Salman Rushdie will be writing a book about his attack last year.

Cover reveal for Beth O’Leary’s upcoming romance novel, The Wakeup Call.

Cover reveal for Jesmyn Ward’s new book, Let Us Descend.

Cover reveal for Jesse Q. Sutanto’s upcoming YA novel, Didn’t See That Coming.

12 poetry collections by Latina poets coming out in 2023.

10 new thrillers you won’t be able to put down.

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

April picks from Crime Reads (psychological thrillers), Ebony, The Root.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Life and Other Love Songs – Anissa Gray (New York Times, Shondaland)

This Isn’t Going to End Well: The True Story of a Man I Thought I Knew – Daniel Wallace (New York Times, Washington Post)

The Last Animal – Ramona Ausubel (Washington Post)

Nine Black Robes: Inside the Supreme Court’s Drive to the Right and Its Historic Consequences – Joan Biskupic (New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

The essential Gabriel García Márquez.

On the Riot

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

A roundup of all the April picks from your favorite celebrity book clubs.

A deep dive into the world of Gail Gibbons.

A love letter to Oliver Jeffers’ books.

8 incredible authors like R.F. Kuang.

4 different styles of mystery novels from around the world.

What exactly is dieselpunk?

How this reader finally got themselves into historical fiction.

If your favorite gif/meme was a book. (Fun display idea??)

All Things Comics

A look at The Marvels trailer.

On the Riot

10 new manga adaptations to look forward to in 2023.

22 of the best graphic novels of all time.

20 must-read YA comics for new and seasoned fans of the format.

9 fun manga with talking animals.

Audiophilia

11 great children’s audiobooks for National Poetry Month.

On the Riot

10 of Libro.fm’s most-preordered audiobooks for spring 2023.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

13 contemporary Latina poets to read for National Poetry Month.

A reading list of multi-generational mischief.

7 short story collections set in American cities.

5 speculative novels set in worlds full of books.

7 historical novels with mysteries at their center.

Top 10 espionage novels that center women’s stories.

5 books filled with existential anxiety.

Top 10 badly behaved biographies.

Epistolary novels to celebrate National Letter Writing Month.

55 enemies-to-lovers romance novels.

9 romcoms to add some joy to your romance-reading life.

110 essential Los Angeles books.

10 unique murder mysteries for a bloody good time.

Do you need help finding your next great read? Subscribe to Tailored Book Recommendations for really great reads year-round.

On the Riot

8 romantic queer YA books to add to your TBR.

YA romances that take inspiration from classic romcom movies.

20 must-read Indigenous historical fiction books set in North America.

8 of the best French novels that accurately represent Francophone culture.

Horror retellings to scare you all over again.

If you like this prose book, try this poetry collection.

11 of the best nonfiction books about basketball.

Fabulous books by RuPaul’s Drag Race contestants and winners.

Adult versions of your favorite childhood books.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and 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 laying on its side, on a stair, with its back to the camera

This is Dini getting limbered up right before I came home with groceries. He must have been a little too limbered up because as I was handing the grocery bags to Blaine through the open door, Dini decided he was going to trot onto the porch to see what all this “outdoors” stuff was all about. Thankfully he didn’t get more than a couple steps out the door, but I almost had a heart attack as I scooped up his chonky butt and told him that the outside was no place for Dinis! So we’re going to have to keep a closer eye on the door next time I bring home groceries.

That’s all I have for today, folks. Don’t forget, you can check out Book Riot’s newest newsletter, The Deep Dive, for fascinating stories, informed takes, and more from a variety of bookish experts! Choose your membership level today at bookriot.substack.com

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.