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Check Your Shelf

Book Ban Trauma

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Did everyone have a good holiday? I took two days after Christmas off for the first time in, like, forever, and it was much needed. Catching up on sleep, getting together with friends, doing a bit of cleaning around the apartment…very simple and very restorative. I’m ready to take on a new year!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

This is more tangentially related to libraries, but some universities are now restricting access to TikTok across campus.

Worth Reading

This is an older article from Library Journal, but it’s a reminder that burnout is still very much an issue in every library.

Book Adaptations in the News

Netflix has commissioned a second Fear Street trilogy.

A preview of the upcoming Luther movie.

Banned & Challenged Books

The very real trauma from book bans.

The books that have been banned in state prisons.

The chair of the Moms for Liberty, Tarrant County (TX) has separated from the national group over issues related to political affiliation and school choice issues.

Meet the Florida English teacher trying to ban 150 books from school libraries.

Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry: “Taxpayers should not subsidize the sexualization of our children.”

Newly-elected Maine State Representative Mike Soboleski argued against “inappropriate” books at a recent MSAD 58 school board meeting.

Kelly Jensen’s Body Talk is staying in the Wilton-Lyndeborough Cooperative Middle/High School (NH) library, but middle schoolers will need permission to check out the book.

10 books have been formally challenged at Old Rochester Regional School District (MA), including All Boys Aren’t Blue, Lawn Boy, and The Hate U Give. Basically a Top 10 list of the most banned books in the country.

Surprisingly, the Darien (CT) Board of Education did not have a formal challenge policy in place, so they’re exploring options now.

And neither did the Cranston Public School District (RI). The district has not received any complaints, but they wanted to have something in place. Again, I’m glad they’re taking preemptive action, but I’m really surprised there wasn’t already an existing policy.

The Blair County (PA) District Attorney’s found no evidence for criminal charges against the Hollisdayburg Area teacher who had a copy of Gender Queer out on her desk. SHOCKING.

Souderton Area (PA) residents argue gender identity and inappropriate books at a recent school board meeting.

Beaufort County (SC) School District elects to keep The Lovely Bones and Stamped on high school shelves, but they will pull the young readers edition of Stamped from the elementary schools.

Clark County Public Library (KY) has elected to restrict Gender Queer checkouts to patrons 18 years or older, unless a parent signs a permission slip.

Robertson County (TN) has removed Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me from all middle school libraries.

A Georgia parent is upset to find an “inappropriate” book at a private business.

The Crawford County Library System (AR) is moving all of the LGBTQ+ books from the children’s section, thanks to the efforts of a far-right religious group.

The state of the library wars happening in Jonesboro, Arkansas.

Lansing (KS) schools remove a social justice unit from high school English classes because of a single parent.

Gunnison County (CO) residents have made multiple attempts to get law enforcement involved with removing books from the public libraries. So far, all attempts have been unsuccessful.

A parent was upset that they’re being called hateful bigots and homophobic fascists for protesting “inappropriate” books in schools. I mean, just because they’re targeting the LGBTQ community and making comments that lead to a fake bomb threat against the Capo Unified School District..you’d think they were doing something bad! /s

Drag events faced at least 141 protests and significant threats in 2022.

How Gender Queer became America’s most banned book.

Ashley Hope Pérez: “Young people have a right to stories that help them learn.”

Books & Authors in the News

Biggest literary stories of 2022.

The BBC makes a case for why Don DelLillo is America’s greatest living writer.

Numbers & Trends

Best-selling books of the week.

Pop Cultured

The best international true crime podcasts for the winter.

On the Riot

4 simple ways to include board games and gaming in libraries.

Check out Book Riot’s 2023 Reading Log!

Who was George Orwell?

What this Rioter learned from reading through an award longlist for the first time.

6 questions to help you shape your reading practice.

black cat and a black and white cat laying on an orange blanket with their front paws crossed

The kitties keep being adorable together! And they keep sleeping on the orange blanket! Such sweet babies. I’ve spent some great quality time with these snuggle bugs this weekend.

Okay, everyone. I’ll see you next year! Let’s kiss 2022 goodbye!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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Check Your Shelf

Identity is Not a Genre

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m writing this on Christmas Eve, it’s very cold, and I’m eager to get the holiday festivities under way! Let’s do this.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The 2022 Publishers Weekly Publishing Industry Salary Survey results.

The pandemic still made its presence felt in publishing in 2022.

Barnes & Noble is expanding, and setting up new stores in former Amazon Book locations.

New & Upcoming Titles

Here’s the cover reveal for Alexis Hall’s upcoming novel, Mortal Follies, out June 2023.

Cassandra Clare is publishing an adult fantasy novel in October.

Aubrey Plaza and Dan Murphy have published a second picture book in their Christmas Witch series.

The ultimate Best Books of 2022 list.

Best of 2022 from Crime Reads (debut crime, true crime, YA), Electric Lit (poetry collections), Jezebel (celebrity memoirs), Kirkus (indie books), Rolling Stone (music books), Tor.com (YA SFF/horror), Town & Country.

Award-winning books of 2022.

15 of the best book covers of 2022.

Most anticipated books of 2023: Barnes & Noble, Buzzfeed (winter thrillers), Forbes (YA mysteries), Independent, Time.

Most anticipated YA for January.

On the Riot

Book Riot’s most popular posts in 2022.

Obama’s best books of the year.

Best of 2022: poetry collections, horror, YA.

New historical fiction coming out in 2023.

Identity is not a genre.

On reading books about Jewish joy.

All Things Comics

Black Adam 2 is not moving forward.

Patti Lupone has been added to the cast of Agatha: Coven of Chaos.

On the Riot

12 comics about obscure characters in Marvel Snap.

Audiophilia

The Top 10 audiobooks on Audible.com.

On the Riot

10 of the best audiobooks for kids.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

Must-read classic novels that everyone should read.

22 chilly SFF/horror reads.

8 great mystery series featuring librarians as amateur detectives.

Books about nature.

Cozy mysteries for fans of Only Murders in the Building.

9 awful meals from horror fiction.

Christmas horror books.

11 NYC-set novels.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

On the Riot

8 picture books to teach growth mindset.

Books that will make you question reality.

8 books to help you buy fewer books. (That’s how this works, right?)

Classic books that have gotten better with age.

Books featuring queer siblings.

8 mythology books for adults.

SFF books by unexpected writers.

10 books about rocks, minerals, gems, and crystals.

The best winter sports romances you can’t help but root for.

The best memoirs you’ve never heard of.

9 healing books about trauma.

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 as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

a black and white cat and a black cat sleeping against a woman's leg

This is me enjoying my snow day and reading a book on the couch with my boys keeping me warm. EXACTLY what I needed after a stressful 6 months in 2022!

Welp, that’s all I’ve got until Friday. I hope things start warming up where you are…these sub-zero temperatures are no bueno.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading The House Across the Lake by Riley Sager.

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Check Your Shelf

Read Through Burnout

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, where the entire Midwest is getting ready to hunker down against this oncoming snow storm. The one silver lining is that I have an opportunity to use my interim director powers for good and close the library. We’re already closing early on Thursday, and I’m keeping an eye on the forecast and local closures to make a decision about Friday. But wherever you are, I hope you’re safe and warm!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The Top 10 library stories of 2022 from Publishers Weekly.

Boulder, Colorado has closed its main library branch after “higher-than-acceptable” levels of methamphetamine were found in the air ducts in the public restrooms.

Book Adaptations in the News

There’s a Winnie-the-Pooh animated prequel in the works, but it’s not from Disney.

Peacock has tapped James Wan to executive produce a horror thriller series based on Robert McCammon’s 1988 novel Stinger.

Nick Cutter’s horror novel The Deep is being turned into a series at Amazon!

Hulu’s limited docuseries based on The 1619 Project gets a January release date.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

Banned & Challenged Books

How your book club can fight against censorship.

AI isn’t a threat to high school English classes. Censorship is.

A look at the year in book banning.

Librarians are facing harassment.

Publishers Weekly named “The Defenders” as the 2022 People of the Year – the teachers, librarians, authors, booksellers, publishers, and allies fighting censorship.

Facing the threat of far right violence, library workers seek safety in unionizing.

The Granbury ISD (TX) superintendent ordered school librarians to remove LGBTQ books, and now the federal government is investigating.

The Huntsville Public Library has been privatized following a controversial Pride Month display.

Carroll ISD (TX) changes its non-discrimination statement, eliminating gender, sexual orientation, and religion from the wording.

Keller ISD (TX) school board invited a religious leader who had been indicted on four counts of sexual assault to open a recent meeting.

Katy ISD (TX) students come together as censorship of LGBTQ+ voices ramps up.

Seventeen listed Cameron Samuels as an important voice of 2022 after they led a powerful movement against censorship in the Katy ISD.

The Abilene (TX) City Council is considering a resolution that will protect minors from obscene library materials.

Polk County (FL) School Board delayed the approval of 37,000 newly purchased books after residents complained they hadn’t had enough time to review all of the books before the scheduled vote, and they wondered how staff were able to adequately review the books as well. OH MY STARS, THAT’S NOT HOW PROFESSIONAL STAFF PURCHASES OR REVIEWS BOOKS! AT ALL! And the school board is catering to this nonsense!

Several books were removed from Lake County (FL) despite no formal challenges to these titles, because they allegedly violated Florida criminal code.

This Clay County (FL) resident has a list of over 3600 titles that he wants removed from school libraries, and says if the books aren’t removed, he will submit challenges for every book in order to overwhelm the system.

No parent objected to the 176 books ordered for the the Duval County (FL) School District’s “Essential Voices” collection, but the district kept them off the shelves anyway.

The Brevard County School Board (FL) wants books under challenge in the schools to be taken off library shelves and held behind the desk “like adult magazines.”

A Florida Department of Education workgroup is creating a training that all school librarians must use in selecting books, but Moms for Liberty say that the recommendations aren’t strong enough.

Gender Queer is being challenged in Maine School Administrative District 52.

A Maine parent is upset over “pornographic books” in the school district and the lack of a rating system for library books.

Neo-Nazis disrupted a drag event in Fall River, Massachusetts, but the organizers said that they won’t be discouraged.

A Ridgefield (CT) town hall employee was arrested for disorderly conduct after swatting a folder at a YouTuber who was performing a First Amendment audit, and now area towns are taking action to prevent similar occurrences.

A new school board member in Isle of Wight County (VA) proposed changes to a state-mandated policy that is supposed to protect against children being exposed to “sexually explicit” materials. He wants to expand it to include content deemed “inherently divisive.”

Moore County (NC) schools updated their book review policy so that only board members and parents or guardians of enrolled students can initiate a reconsideration process.

School administrators in Charlotte (NC) recently met with Moms for Liberty about modifying school policy.

These are the books that Charlotte-area residents want to ban.

Guilford County (NC) elects to keep Life is Funny in the high school library.

Beaufort County School District (SC) votes to return four books to library shelves: The Handmaid’s Tale, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, The Kite Runner, and Speak.

The “Mama Bears of Forsyth” (GA) return to school board meetings after temporarily being banned for misconduct.

“The mother of a Harlem Middle School [Evans, Georgia] student has filed a 323-page lawsuit against members of the school board, a teacher, and a principal over what she says is a violation of her parental rights and a book that she claims does not belong on the shelves of school libraries.” The book is Drama, but let me back up a second…a THREE HUNDRED AND TWENTY THREE PAGE lawsuit?? That’s longer than the book in question!

In St. Tammany Parish (LA), supporters are fighting to keep LGBTQ+ books on library shelves.

Rapides Parish (LA) Library Board is proposing a change to their collection development policy that would prohibit sexual content, as well as content regarding sexual orientation and gender identity, from the children’s and teen’s collections.

Some West Virginia lawmakers are interested in banning books. Just don’t call it a book ban.

“Tennessee’s textbook commission has wide new powers to determine which books students can and can’t access in public school libraries. But members say the panel doesn’t have enough resources to finish its most pressing new task: providing guidance to school leaders on how to comply with several recently enacted library laws.”

The Wilson County (TN) School Board voted to remove two books from school libraries: Tricks and Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts).

Missouri gets 10,000 public comments on a new library rule that has been labeled as “political censorship.”

The Patmos Library (MI) closed early due to staff safety concerns over a threatening social media post allegedly made by Republican 11th Congressional District Chair Shane Trejo, who said, “Time to shut the library by force.”

Marathon County (WI) Board retaliates against two library trustees who refused to remove a book from the shelves.

“They want to shut us down:” The threats that canceled a Drag Queen Bingo program at the Downer’s Grove (IL) Library and how the library handled it.

The Chicago Tribune named librarians and library workers of Illinois as “Chicagoans of the Year for Books.”

The Bartholomew County Library (IN) has drafted a community survey about library materials after several residents have advocated for the segregation or removal of certain teen books.

Kearney (NE) School Board denies two book ban requests for Crank and Empire of Storms.

Two Pierre (SD) parents are upset that the high school is using The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian in the classroom, saying “This is like handing kids an R-rated movie.” The superintendent later reminded parents that there’s always been a letter explaining parents can have their students opt out of reading the book if they so choose.

Libraries serve communities, not aggrieved parents. Challenged books have so much to teach Kansans.

The Motion Picture Association opposes Oklahoma’s proposed system for library book ratings.

In Greeley, Colorado, residents submitted 5400 forms that challenged 274 books in school libraries, and then caused the school board meeting to end early due to disruption and bad behavior from members of the public.

Some Cheyenne (WY) residents want to ban The 57 Bus, because as this piece states, it portrays LGBTQ+ youth as “fully human.”

The Crook County (OR) library board rejected the proposal to segregate LGBTQ books from the children’s section.

The owner of a vandalized taproom in Washington says that they believe their business was targeted ahead of a scheduled Drag Queen Story Time event.

Greater Essex County District School Board (Ontario) is pushing back against demands to list all of the books in the school library because it creates “a slippery slope.”

A group of Southern Manitoba parents are calling for libraries to remove “sexually explicit” books, or have their funding cut.

The evolution of the anti-CRT movement: a timeline.

“Parents first” school board bids should be a wake-up call.

Book banning is bad policy, so let’s make it bad politics.

Numbers & Trends

A fifth of American adults struggle to read. Why are we failing to teach them?

The most-borrowed books from the New York Public Library.

Award News

The 2023 William C. Morris Award finalists have been announced.

The shortlist for YALSA’s 2023 Award for Excellence in Nonfiction has been announced.

Pop Cultured

Harry and Meghan announce a new Netflix series, Live to Lead.

On the Riot

2023 YA book-to-movie adaptations to put on your radar.

Here are the books hitting the public domain in 2023.

How the bookish internet killed this Rioter’s reading life.

How to read through burnout.

a black cat and a black and white cat laying on an orange blanket with their heads close together

I’ll leave you with this picture of the boys snuggling! My two Christmas kitties, who really do love each other!

Okay, everyone. Have a great holiday, and stay warm!!! I’ll catch you on the flipside.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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Check Your Shelf

Best-Sellers on Hiatus

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I can hardly believe I’m typing this on a Friday, because it seems like just a few hours ago I was trudging through a never-ending Friday of ridiculous emails and long desk shifts. And now it’s back to the grind for a whole solid week before Christmas. Thankfully I was able to snag a couple extra days off, but now I just have to plow through the week. Okay, buck up, let’s do this!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

USA Today has placed its best-seller list on hiatus after the presiding editor was laid off.

Authors co-host a rally at HarperCollins headquarters in support of striking HC workers.

A product design manager used an AI-powered chatbot to write and illustrate a children’s book, which he’s now selling on Amazon. Naturally, this raises lots of ethical questions.

Amazon is ending print textbook rentals.

How Jenna Bush Hager is becoming publishing’s new best friend.

New & Upcoming Titles

Akwaeke Emezi announces their next romance novel, Son of the Morning.

Cover reveal for Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s upcoming novel, Silver Nitrate, which hits shelves in July!

Here’s the cover reveal for Christina Lauren’s upcoming book, True Love Experiment.

27 new recommended food books, from cookbooks to memoirs.

New LGBTQ+ YA books.

15 books by Black authors to read this winter.

Best of 2022: AARP (cookbooks), Atlantic, BBC, Crime Reads (psychological suspense, critical nonfiction/biography, gothic fiction, traditional mysteries, historical fiction), Hip Latina, Kirkus (YA), Library Journal, LitHub (essays), New York Times (critics picks), New Yorker, Salon, Vanity Fair, Vulture (fantasy, horror, comedy), Wall Street Journal.

103 of the best book covers of 2022.

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

December picks from Vulture.

RA/Genre Resources

Why romance novels are the biggest they’ve been in a decade.

How to read Louise Penny’s Inspector Gamache series in order.

Why read literary biographies?

On the Riot

Best books of 2022: romance, LGBTQ+, SFF.

New weekly releases to TBR.

Reading pathway for Sulari Gentill.

Why horror is such a hard genre to crack.

Nonfiction subgenre primer.

Why you should recommend books that you didn’t like reading.

Should Goodreads users be able to review books before they’re published?

All Things Comics

Patty Jenkins’ Wonder Woman 3 is not moving forward as the new DC studio heads prepare their multi year plan.

In other DC news, Henry Cavill says he will not return as Superman.

Best comic books of 2022.

10 of the best crime thriller comics.

On the Riot

12 best graphic novels and comics of 2022.

Audiophilia

Best science fiction and fantasy audiobooks of 2022.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

13 YA books with sequels coming out in 2023.

6 YA books for fans of Colleen Hoover.

24 YA books featuring high-stakes heists.

Adults

5 speculative fiction books featuring tarot.

42 Christmas books to keep you cozy.

5 thrillers about choices and forked paths.

50 of the best horror books of all time.

8 queer fantasy romance books to love.

On the Riot

8 joke books for kids.

YA books for readers who don’t like YA books.

Fun books to read during Hanukkah.

8 unputdownable books about podcasts.

8 books about book clubs.

7 books about codependency to help you better understand the condition.

8 engrossing books with multiple timelines.

8 horror novels about creepy kids.

25 of the best nonfiction books of all time.

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 as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black and white cat laying on an orange blanket, looking upside down at the camera

My husband sent me this photo as he was trying to take a nap, but Dini insisted that it was snuggle time. I mean, how can you say no to that sweet face?? Needless to say, there was no nap time for my husband.

Welp, that’s all I’ve got. I’ll check in on Friday, after we’ve pushed through this last week before the holidays. We got this!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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Check Your Shelf

When Living it Up Meant Looking It Up

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am exhausted and very much disliking the gray December gloom that has descended on the Chicago area, but I have one thing giving me joy right now, and that is the trailer for the movie 65, which has space action — Adam Driver saving a child and fighting off dinosaurs. It’s Aliens plus Jurassic Park plus Adam Driver, and I am LIVING FOR IT. The universe recognized what I needed right now, and I hope that trailer brings a little joy to some of you as well.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

NYC libraries say that Eric Adams’ proposed budget cuts “may push us over the edge.”

The first Washington state library for incarcerated youth is set to open in January.

Worth Reading

What’s more important for the town of McFarland, California? A library or a police station?

Public libraries need partnerships.

Meet the warrior librarians of Ukraine.

Book Adaptations in the News

We Were Liars is being adapted as a series at Amazon.

Don Winslow’s The Border is being adapted as an FX series.

Mike Flanagan’s The Midnight Club is not being renewed for a second season, so he wrote this blog post to show what WOULD have happened in Season 2.

However, in better Mike Flanagan news, he’s been tapped to do an adaptation of Stephen King’s Dark Tower series! Here’s hoping it’s better than the most recent film adaptation.

Reese Witherspoon is reprising her role as Tracy Flick (from 1999’s Election) in the adaptation of Tracy Flick Can’t Win.

Season 2 of Shadow and Bone will be released on Netflix on March 16th.

Season 3 trailer for Jack Ryan.

New trailer for The Pale Blue Eye.

Banned & Challenged Books

What is mis-, dis-, and mal-information?

Kirk Cameron attempts to capitalize on the banned book nonsense by pitching his faith-centered children’s book for public library storytime, and then complaining that fifty libraries have denied his request.

League City Council (TX) passed a resolution to restrict public library content to minors, even though a large majority of the 63 speakers in attendance spoke against the resolution.

A new billboard has gone up in Texas, urging residents to “Ban censorship, not books.”

New York parents have formed a counter organization called Defense of Democracy to push back against Moms for Liberty and other similar groups.

A Hollidaysburg (PA) high school senior was heckled while speaking out against the push to remove Gender Queer at a recent board meeting, and broke down in tears. Just absolutely horrendous behavior from adults who should be ashamed and embarrassed of how they behaved, but obviously won’t be.

Nearly 1,000 people have applied to join a Frederick County Public Schools committee that will review 35 books to decide if they should be removed or not. I just love seeing the expertise of teachers and librarians devalued by opening these decisions to the entire community. /s

Three school board candidates in Catawba County (NC) were just sworn in. These candidates have challenged multiple books in the school libraries, and one of them has admitted she had not read the books that she was moving to ban, but she wanted to make it easier to remove them from school libraries anyway.

The Greenville County (SC) Library System board elected to move the parenting section farther away from the children’s section, and what I appreciate is that the article mentions that this move is based on an “erroneous claim,” and was decided with little discussion.

The Missouri ACLU and a group of students are suing the Independence school district for banning Cats vs. Robots. The book was banned because it features a nonbinary character.

The St. Clair (MO) district pulled The Hate U Give from library shelves. The superintendent said the book “contains significant profanity and violence, and can be read as having an anti-law enforcement agenda. The book does not lend itself to our written curriculum and is not seen as essential to the district’s educational mission.”

Salem-South Lyon (MI) library board votes to keep 16 challenged books.

Marathon County Public Library (WI) elects to keep the books Making a Baby and You Be You! The Kid’s Guide to Gender, Sexuality and Family, saying that the educational value outweighed the concerns over sexually explicit material.

Southwest Valley School District (IA) upholds the use of Warriors Don’t Cry in its high school English curriculum.

After contentious debate, St. Marys (KS) city commissioners unanimously voted to renew the library’s lease without restriction through December 2023.

Can we please stop calling Moms for Liberty “advocates?” And stop featuring them as the primary photo for these articles? These so-called “advocates” are searching for “pornographic material” being used in District 11 in Colorado Springs, which often translates to “LGBTQ-inclusive.” Never mind the fact that there was a deadly shooting at a LGBTQ club in Colorado Springs less than a month ago.

Kalispell Public Schools (MT) decide to keep Drama on library shelves.

Washington County (UT) School District removes 14 additional books from libraries after being found in violation of the Sensitive Materials in Schools bill. However, it’s only a small group of parents across the state who are working to ban books in school libraries.

A Cody, Wyoming resident is upset that the high school elected to keep If I Was Your Girl by Meredith Russo, and is upset with the reasoning that the book is not pornographic, and is instrumental in “helping students learn to be empathetic and compassionate towards those who are different than themselves.”

Crook County Library (OR) is facing pressure to label LGBTQ books and remove them from the children’s section. However, the director explains exactly why this is a bad idea.

The San Juan Capistrano Sheriff’s Department investigated anti-LGBTQ bomb threats made against the Capo Unified School District. This came after a Fox News report of a teacher at the school who allegedly had sexually explicit material in their classroom.

A resident introduced a motion for the Greater Essex County District School Board (ON) to publish a list of all new books being introduced into schools. “Ultimately, none of the other trustees supported the motion.”

Russian stores pull LGBTQ-themed books as Putin signs an expanded “gay propaganda” ban.

Books & Authors in the News

In news that should surprise no one, one of Trump’s political committees bought $48,000 worth of books from Donald Jr.’s publishing company.

Numbers & Trends

These were the most-read books on Goodreads in 2022.

The best-selling books of the week.

A very serious 2023 bookish trend forecast.

Award News

Here are the 2023 Golden Globe nominees.

Noor Naga wins the 2022 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize for If an Egyptian Cannot Speak English.

The 2022 Goodreads Choice Awards have been announced.

The 2022 Kids’ Book Choice Awards have been announced.

Pop Cultured

Continuing with the Theranos/Bad Blood updates, Sunny Balwani was sentenced to nearly 13 years for his role in the Theranos fraud.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

How the pandemic affected our approach to reading and interpretation of books.

On the Riot

Getting crafty in the library.

When living it up meant looking it up: this Rioter’s ode to the reference books of yore.

2023 adaptations to get excited about.

John Lewis and Tomie dePaola will be featured on USPS stamps in 2023.

Are books about the pandemic cathartic or stressful? (I vote stressful.)

For a month, this reader started reading their books at the end. (I honestly can’t even comprehend this level of chaos, but to each their own.)

Easy bookish holiday traditions to start this holiday season.

Books we wish we could re-read for the first time.

portrait-style photo of a black cat laying on an orange blanket looking into the distance

I can’t handle how perfect this photo is of Gilbert. Honestly, one of the best ones we’ve ever taken. Behold Gilbert in all of his regal, angelic, sweet-faced glory!

Okay, everyone. I’m out. Check in again next week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently listening to Hokolua Road by Elizabeth Hand.

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Check Your Shelf

Read Harder 2023!!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. As usual, the holiday season is starting to blow past in a whirlwind of work and general procrastination. I’m going to try to slow things down a little this week, but at least we got our tree up tonight!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

HarperCollins addresses the stalled union negotiations and the union responds.

And here’s a look at life on the front lines of the HarperCollins strike.

The murky path to becoming a New York Times best-seller.

The companies that are killing creativity.

A new study in the UK shows that writers’ earnings have plummeted, with women and authors of color being hit the hardest.

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Weekly has their most-anticipated adult titles for Spring 2023.

Ben Mezrich is already writing a book about Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover.

St. Martin’s Press bought world English rights to Rachel Kapelke-Dale’s novel The Fortune Seller, which is billed as “Yellowjackets meets The Talented Mr. Ripley.”

Del Rey has purchased world English rights (for six figures!) for Molly X. Chang’s To Gaze upon Wicked Gods and two other books in a planned trilogy.

Here’s the cover reveal for Elliot Page’s upcoming memoir, Pageboy.

Here’s a preview of former FBI director James Comey’s debut crime novel.

Gorgeous cover reveal for historical horror novel The Others of Edenwell by Verity Holloway.

And the cover reveal for A Likeable Woman by May Cobb.

9 new holiday romances to make you holly and jolly.

Best books of 2022 from Amazon, Buzzfeed, Chicago Tribune, Crime Reads (general, espionage), Entertainment Weekly (romances), Guardian (general, mystery/thrillers), Kirkus (middle grade), LA Times (fiction, nonfiction), Library Reads, LitHub, New York Times (crime fiction, historical fiction, poetry, romance, SFF, thrillers, true crime) NPR, Oprah Daily, Slate, Sun Sentinel (mysteries), Time (nonfiction), Vulture, Washington Post (mysteries, humorous romances).

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

December picks from Buzzfeed, Gizmodo (SFF), Lambda Literary, Shondaland, Tor.com (fantasy, horror/genre-bending).

The most anticipated YA novels of 2023.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Screaming on the Inside: The Unsustainability of American Motherhood – Jessica Grose (LA Times, New York Times, The Rumpus)

How Far the Light Reaches: A Life in Ten Sea Creatures – Sabrina Imbler (The Guardian, Shondaland, Washington Post)

A Dangerous Business – Jane Smiley (NPR, Shondaland, Washington Post)

Cursed Bunny – Bora Chung (New York Times, Tor.com)

The McCartney Legacy: Volume 1: 1969 – 73 – Allan Kozinn & Adrian Sinclair (Datebook, New York Times)

A World of Curiosities – Louise Penny (The Guardian, Washington Post)

On the Riot

Here’s Book Riot’s best books of 2022!

The best historical fiction of 2022.

And here’s Book Riot’s Read Harder Challenge for 2023!

The best new baking cookbooks to gift.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

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

8 authors like Hilary Mantel.

Who was Nora Ephron?

How dice helped this reader tame their TBR.

All Things Comics

James Gunn has issued his first public statement about the future of DC Studios.

The best middle grade graphic novels of 2022.

On the Riot

8 new manga, graphic novels, and comics released this December.

Writerly lessons found in graphic novels and nonfiction.

Audiophilia

Best audiobooks of 2022 from AudioFile, New York Times, Slate.

AudioFile announces the December Earphones award winners.

16 audiobooks that offer life (and language) lessons.

On the Riot

20 of the best audiobooks of all time.

The best audiobook thrillers to listen to this winter.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

8 schemers and opportunists in literature.

4 atmospheric thrillers with unexpected settings.

8 books meant to unsettle the reader.

A reading list centered around Kingston, Jamaica.

12 romance novels by Latinas to gift your book-loving friends.

5 character-driven mystery novels from European authors.

7 novels that use mystery to examine race.

The best books featuring women in STEM.

On the Riot

Books this Rioter is giving as gifts for the kids in their life.

8 books about birthdays for kids.

21 of the best award-winning sci-fi books.

8 dark academic mystery novels.

9 books in translation from Indonesia.

9 unforgettable prose books written by poets.

8 books for board gamers.

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 as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black cat laying on a gray plaid pillow with its front paw stretched out

Before you ask, yes, that’s an optical illusion. Gilbert’s leg is not actually that long and bendy. But he does look rather fancy sitting there, doesn’t he?

All right, friends and neighbors – that’s it for today. Catch you on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Remembering Bob McGrath and Christine McVie

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, where I’m doing everything I can to ward off the wave of illnesses sweeping through my coworkers and their families. Masking…it’s not just for COVID!

Libraries & Librarians

Worth Reading

Christmas trees don’t belong in libraries.

Genrify your catalog, not your collection.

How to make the most of in-person conferences.

Book Adaptations in the News

Guillermo del Toro still wants to make an adaptation of Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness.

David Baldacci’s Atlee Pine series is being adapted as a series for Amazon.

New streaming service ITVX is adapting The Confessions of Frannie Langton as a series.

Brett Goldstein wants to make Muppets Pride & Prejudice, with him as Mr. Darcy. I would watch this.

Kevin Wilson’s short story “Grand Stand-In” is being adapted as a TV series.

Take a look at the poster for Knock at the Cabin, which is based on the Paul Tremblay novel The Cabin at the End of the World.

Here’s a first look at the adaptation of Daisy Jones and the Six.

Banned & Challenged Books

The culture war designation is journalistic negligence.

Frisco ISD (TX) board votes to permanently remove five books from library shelves.

Llano County (TX) has paid an attorney more than $25,000 for representation in its pending censorship lawsuit.

Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry has set up an online tip line for parents to report librarians, teachers, and administrators for providing graphic sexual content to minors.

Bow High School (NH) says that Gender Queer is appropriate for the school library. What I find noteworthy is that the principal initially saw how parents could have a concern, but then read the book himself, and realized that the images were appropriate when taken in the context of the whole story.

Darien (CT) school board says that Julian is a Mermaid is appropriate for use in the second grade curriculum.

Donegal School District (PA) librarian quits over guidelines limiting student access to library books.

After 10 months of debate, the Hempfield Area School Board (PA) decides that the best use of their time is to enact stricter book procurement policies, because it’s “a harder standard to challenge and remove a book than it is to stop the book from coming in in the first place.”

The Gettysburg Area School District (PA) is considering enacting a similar policy to the nearby Littlestown Area School District, where students are required to obtain parental approval before checking out books on the American Library Association (ALA) top 100 most challenged list. That is…not the purpose of that list.

Warwick (PA) Parents for Change criticized the school district’s definition of gender and inappropriate library books. One of the attendees at a recent meeting said, “I’m trying to advocate for reality, and if reality comports with Christianity, then, yeah, you can say that I am advocating for a Christian worldview,” and then said Christian principles were being replaced with “wokeanity.” I can’t make this up.

Akron (PA) residents are angered over proposed cuts to the Ephrata Public Library.

Pittsburgh School District unanimously passes a resolution against a bill barring Critical Race Theory.

Loudoun County School Board (VA) recently adopted a new policy that requires advance parental notification of any classroom materials that are deemed to have sexually explicit content.

Pickens School Board (SC) ignored recommendations from two review committees and voted to restrict access to Dear Martin.

A Michigan businessman and his wife donated $100,000 to the Patmos Library to help it stay open, even though they had no ties to the community and had never visited the library before.

Waseca-Le Sueur Library System (MN) has had a challenge to It’s Perfectly Normal.

Marathon County Public Library (WI) voted unanimously to retain two challenged books in the juvenile nonfiction section.

Here’s a recap of a recent library board meeting in Lincolnwood, IL. Lincolnwood declined to remove LGBTQ books from the children’s section.

And here’s a YouTube video of a recent Glenbard Township High School Board (IL) meeting, where a number of people spoke out against “pornography” in the school libraries. This is my husband’s alma mater.

An official in Illinois’ DuPage County GOP and the leader of Illinois Parents Involved in Education has a history of racist social media posts and ties to extremist hate groups. Shocking.

The Dallas Center-Grimes School Board is considering a new plan to handle book ban requests from community members; specifically, they’re looking to revoke the voting rights of the students serving on the reconsideration committee. Naturally, the students are ticked.

How it only took one parent to get all of the graphic novels removed from an Oklahoma school library.

Natrona County School District elects to keep Gender Queer and Trans Bodies, Trans Selves in the library, but they will require a parent’s permission for a student to check them out.

These are the 22 books removed from the Alpine School District (UT).

How expanded parental access to learning materials is impacting Arizona schools and libraries.

A parent’s effort to recall three Salem-Keizer School Board (OR) has failed due to a lack of signatures.

The Proud Boys keep showing up at LGBTQ events.

Books & Authors in the News

After a debut author took to Twitter to describe her lackluster debut book signing, big-name authors like Neil Gaiman, Stephen King, and Margaret Atwood responded with reassurance and commiseration.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

LeVar Burton is receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award at the inaugural Children’s & Family Emmys.

The Story of Art Without Men by Katy Hessel is the Waterstones Book of the Year.

Pop Cultured

Bob McGrath, the longtime star of Sesame Street, has died at 90.

And Christine McVie of Fleetwood Mac fame has died at 79. This one hurts…I liked her music even more than Stevie Nicks’s.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

“Goblin mode” is the Oxford Word of the Year.

The joy of reading slowly.

On the Riot

Places to look for library lessons.

The controversy of The Rabbits’ Wedding by Garth Williams.

Meet your heroes: a case for reading author biographies.

How cataloging their books taught this Rioter to slow down.

black and white cat sitting in front of a mail organizer

Here’s Dini. While I was at work, he apparently wanted to inform me I still have a lot of mail on the wall to go through. I’LL GET TO IT LATER, DINI.

All right, that’s it for this week. I’ll see you on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently listening to Hidden Pictures by Jason Rekulak.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Read Yourself Smarter

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. We had our mini golf event on Saturday, and y’all, we had over FIVE HUNDRED people attend! For perspective, our town is a little over 5,000 people, so literally a tenth of the population stopped by on Saturday to play mini golf! We’re pretty sure this is a record for attendance at an in-house event, and we basically tripled our attendance from our first mini golf event four years ago! We are gobsmacked, very pleased, and extremely exhausted. My knees may never be the same from all of the final crafting and mad dashing to set everything up.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

More than 150 literary agents have signed a letter to support the HarperCollins workers’ strike. And Maine author Monica Wood has refused to work on her upcoming novel in support of the strike.

More US booksellers are expanding their Spanish-language offerings.

This teen has established their own brick-and-mortar bookstore in Los Angeles!

New & Upcoming Titles

Here’s a preview of Chloe Gong’s adult epic fantasy debut, Immortal Longings.

And here’s a first look at RuPaul’s Drag Race winner Sasha Velour’s memoir, The Big Reveal.

Isabel Cañas is coming out with a new horror novel called Vampires of El Norte. And just look at that cover!!

Ron DeSantis is publishing a book amid heavy speculation about a 2024 presidential campaign.

Celebrate Indigenous literature with these 13 new books by Native writers.

All of the mysteries and thrillers that came out in 2022.

Best books of 2022 from Book Page, Esquire (horror), Kirkus (picture books), NYPL, New York Times (Top 10, Notable Books), NPR, Oprah Daily, and School Library Journal.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub, The Millions, and USA Today.

Best debut crime fiction of November, and the best international crime fiction of November and December.

December picks from AV Club, Book Marks (SFF), Crime Reads, Gizmodo (SFF), New York Times, Popsugar, and The Root.

30 must-read books for Winter 2023.

Most anticipated YA books of 2023.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

A Heart That Works – Rob Delaney (New York Times, Shondaland, USA Today, Washington Post)

Butts: A Backstory – Heather Radke (Time, Washington Post)

A Dangerous Business – Jane Smiley (Datebook, LA Times)

On the Riot

20 must-read picture books of 2022.

Best book covers of 2022.

The best weekly new releases to TBR.

New York Times Bestseller List vs. the Best Books of 2022 – how do the two lists compare?

7 book review podcasts for discovering new books.

A new boom of horror from Latin America.

Why is Santa Claus erotica suddenly so popular?

Do main characters need to be likable?

The joy of seeing yourself in literature.

All Things Comics

Disney expands its partnership with Japan’s Kodansha to release more anime originals.

13 of the best DC comics with great LGBTQ+ representation.

On the Riot

6 winter and Christmas manga to read this holiday season.

14 of the most influential superhero comics.

Comics and graphic novels to read when you’re under the weather.

Audiophilia

AudioFile picks their best audiobooks of 2022.

15 audiobooks to listen to while driving.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Adults

222 of the best books of all time.

10 informative books to help you understand what’s happening in Iran.

5 SFF books about crashed spaceships.

36 cozy and feel-good fantasy and sci-fi books.

15 great reads to honor Native American History Month.

7 books that will make you smarter.

7 genre-defying books by women of color.

Romances for crime fiction fans, and vice versa.

5 SF works about sitting out WWIII.

7 books set in Indiana.

11 mysteries and thrillers that are just so. much. fun.

8 Hanukkah romance novels to light you up.

20 of the best cozy mysteries to curl up with right now.

11 fake relationship romance books.

On the Riot

10 charming holiday and Christmas books for toddlers.

8 excellent YA novels for fans of West Wing.

10 Little Red Riding Hood retellings for all ages.

Queer road trip novels to get you craving a vacation.

10 workplace horror novels.

8 Chinese mythology books.

Unexpected and compelling Biblical retellings.

8 Christmas cozy mysteries for a bloody good holiday.

Holiday mystery books that are not about Christmas.

Grumpy/sunshine duo books for fans of Wednesday and Enid.

8 thoughtful books about monks and monastic life.

8 fantasy novels with word-based or book-based magic systems.

Full meta jacket: 10 nonfiction books about the stories behind books.

Get smarter with these 25 popular science 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 as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black and white cat laying on an orange blanket with its head tilted

LOOK HOW CUTE DINI IS. BASK IN HIS ADORABLENESS.

Ahem. All right, that’s all I’ve got for today. I’ll be back on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

A Dramatic Child Gets Her First Library Card

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Good news! I have a whole tooth again! My new dentist’s office is able to 3D print a crown while you wait, and the whole appointment took a total of two hours. I walked in with half a tooth, and walked out fully toothed. Very impressed!

Libraries & Librarians

Cool Library Updates

Reference behind bars: providing service to the incarcerated.

Book Adaptations in the News

Tess Gunty’s award-winning debut novel, Rabbit Hutch, will be adapted for TV.

Brandy will be reprising her role as Cinderella in the upcoming Descendants’ movie, The Pocketwatch.

Casting updates for A Little Life, Percy Jackson.

Banned & Challenged Books

Correction: I realized I made an error in last Friday’s newsletter: the Owassa School District is in Oklahoma, not Idaho.

Book rating systems are not a solution.

We Need Diverse Books launches a new campaign, #BooksSaveLives, to address the onslaught of censorship.

ACLU of Texas is launching civil rights investigations into policies implemented by Frisco and Keller schools that negatively impact LGBTQ students.

The Akron (PA) borough council is moving to cut funding for the public library, citing financial concerns and concerns over whether the library aligns with the community’s conservative values. I don’t think I need to tell you that that’s not the role of the public library.

Hempfield Area School District (PA) resumes its debate over book policies.

LGBTQ+ books are under fire at the Parkersburg Public Library (WV).

The Epilogue Bookstore and Coffee Shop in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, has started a free library for queer literature.

Salvage the Bones is being challenged in Guilford County schools (NC).

Beaufort County (SC) schools used a local GOP politician’s list to remove books from libraries. Not surprisingly, the politician’s list came directly from Moms for Liberty.

Spartanburg (SC) Public Libraries have removed an undisclosed number of books, and have moved others to restricted areas, but the titles and reasons behind the moves are not mentioned.

There’s dispute over Tennessee’s new textbook law, with some parents saying that the Tennessee Textbook and Instructional Materials Quality Commission has a responsibility to specify exactly what constitutes age appropriate materials, but the Chair said that the Commission is only there to provide guidance, not strict rules or regulations.

Library officials say that the book banning situation in Missouri is “state-sanctioned censorship.”

Willard School Board (MO) votes to keep How It All Blew Up by Arvin Ahmadi in middle and high school libraries, but students at both schools will need parental permission to check it out. Guess what? IT’S STILL CENSORSHIP.

The Patmos (MI) Library will likely close in September 2024 after its two failed millage votes.

A group of Van Meter (IA) parents filed a petition to remove any LGBTQ+ content from the curriculum.

The Carroll Community School District Board of Education (IA) voted to keep Sold by Patricia McCormick in the high school library.

The ACLU urges the St. Marys City Commission (KS) to drop its censorship fight and continue to fund the library. The book at the center of this debate is Melissa, and author Alex Gino spoke out: “It hurts my heart. The implication is that my existence is so monstrous that it should be withheld from children. And what happens is, you end up with adults like me, who didn’t have good role models or good reflections of people like them growing up, and the road does not change who you are, but it makes the road much more painful. And it makes the road a lot more dangerous.”

A look at the book banning movement happening in Oak City, Utah.

Orem Library (UT) removed all of its children’s book displays after Pride Month.

Homer (AK) library board delays a decision on moving over 50 LGBTQ+ books from the children’s section to the adult section.

Kapaa Public Library (HI) faces a challenge to Let’s Talk About It.

Silent censorship of books is an attack on knowledge and open discourse.

How to support LGBTQ+ members in your community.

How to combat LGBTQ book bans in schools.

Books & Authors in the News

Ellen Wittlinger, author of queer YA novels in the ’90s and ’00s, has died.

Simon & Schuster admits that the $600 hand-signed copies of Bob Dylan’s new book, The Philosophy of Modern Song, were NOT actually hand-signed, but were signed using “autopen.” People are now being offered immediate refunds. Bob Dylan has also offered a public apology.

Do authors really use autopen frequently?

Why TikTok is obsessed with this 92 year old murder mystery novel.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

Pop Cultured

I can’t believe I forgot to put this in last week, but Elizabeth Holmes was sentenced to 11 years in prison for Theranos fraud.

Rian Johnson says he’s in the early stages of working on Knives Out 3.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Merriam-Webster announces its Word of the Year.

10 tips for discussion at your book club, especially if you didn’t like the book.

On the Riot

Up all night: a dramatic child gets her first library card.

How to join a TikTok book club.

Why book blogs still matter in an age of TikTok.

A history of the Chicken Soup for the Soul story collections.

Why is writing stuck in the paper age?

black cat resting its head on a person's leg

Poor Gilbert…he’s all tuckered out after a vet visit. Good news: diabetes isn’t acting up (our primary concern), and his bloodwork is very good, especially for such an old kitty. Not as good news: he’s developed a moderate heart murmur, so we’re going to take him to a kitty cardiologist. But overall he got a decent bill of health, and now he just wants all the snuggles.

Well, that’s all I’ve got for this week. I’ll check in again on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading Hide by Kiersten White.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

THE WHITE GUY DIES FIRST

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Just when I was thinking this might be an uneventful week, I realize that I’ve likely broken one of my back teeth, and now I need to see if I can get an emergency dentist appointment sometime this week. Thank goodness it doesn’t hurt, but teeth stuff wigs me out, and the sooner I can get this taken care of, the better. Blech.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The Penguin Random House/Simon & Schuster merger is dead in the water. Plus, what happens when publishing houses merge?

Inside Amazon’s struggle to deal with an antisemitic film.

BookTok’s racial bias.

New & Upcoming Titles

Joe Ide’s IQ series is set to continue in 2023.

Tor Teen announces a new YA horror anthology called The White Guy Dies First, featuring a collection of stories where…you guessed it…the white guy dies first.

Miranda Lambert is publishing a cookbook.

Tananarive Due did a cover reveal for her upcoming horror novel, The Reformatory. WANT WANT WANT WANT OMG WANT.

Paul Tremblay shares the cover reveal of his upcoming story collection, The Beast You Are.

Here’s the cover reveal and an exclusive excerpt for Samantha Downing’s upcoming thriller, A Twisted Love Story.

Take a look at the cover reveal for Britney S. Lewis’ YA novel The Dark Place, which combines the “emotional resonance of John Green and the surrealist horror imagery of Jordan Peele.”

New York Times100 Notable Books for 2022.

Kirkus shares their best nonfiction picks for 2022, including biographies, memoirs, U.S. history, world history, nature & environment, current affairs, science & medicine, and more!

Best books of 2022 from the New York Public Library.

10 best romance novels of 2022.

Best music books of 2022.

Most anticipated YA books to read in December.

RA/Genre Resources

How romance novels saved this reader who was going through intense emotional struggles.

On the Riot

2023 YA book title earworms. (Click through with caution!)

New holiday romcom books to warm your heart.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

9 classic types of sci-fi plots.

What makes a good mystery series?

Why are magic users often oppressed in fantasy novels?

All Things Comics

Blade finds a new director and a new writer.

On the Riot

15 short graphic novels for when you just don’t have time to read.

Cozy graphic novels to snuggle up with.

9 iyashikei manga to heal weary hearts.

Audiophilia

The 18 best audiobooks and podcasts of 2022.

On the Riot

20 must-listen audiobooks with Indigenous narrators.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Forest-set YA fantasy novels.

Adults

Quick reads to help you reach your reading goals.

6 haunting Native American horror novels.

5 of the best contemporary mystery books.

Turn up the heat with spicy romances!

8 closed door romance novels to make you swoon.

16 delightful holiday romances to make you feel merry and bright.

42 cold weather mysteries and snowy suspense novels.

6 immersive historical fiction sagas.

Want to read books from this newsletter? You can, for free! Get three free audiobooks with a trial to Audiobooks.com. Claim your 3 free audiobooks now!

On the Riot

The best unexpected board books to gift.

The best baby Christmas books.

YA books that take place in a single day.

The most popular UK YA books, as chosen by students.

8 traveling horror novels.

8 queer vampire books.

8 enchanting books about Hades and Persephone.

A reading list about coffee.

9 macabre medical mystery books.

25+ of the best craft books.

8 human migration books to broaden your horizons.

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 as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

black cat with food crumbs below its eye and caught in its whiskers

I texted this photo to my husband and said “Good grief.” He texted back, “Why good grief? He has an eye goober.” To which I responded, “That’s not an eye goober. That’s food.” And if I was able to share a larger version of the photo, you would see that he also has food caught in his whiskers. We can’t take this old fart anywhere!

All right friends, hopefully by the time Friday’s newsletter comes out, I’ll have a whole tooth again. Chew carefully this week, and I’ll catch you later!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently listening to The Good Girls: An Ordinary Killing by Sonia Faleiro.