Categories
Check Your Shelf

Tilda Swinton as Libraries

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. How is it that the first two weeks of the new year have felt like such an eternity? I feel like I’m just on autopilot at the moment, and every once in a while I break out of my daze and go “HOW IS IT STILL ONLY THE FIRST HALF OF JANUARY??” Anyone else feeling like this?

However, a fun little story that I’ll share happened last week when I took a phone call from someone asking about our library’s passport services. When I got off the phone, my boss had seen the caller ID, and informed me that I had been on the phone for 10 minutes with one of the city’s biggest pro athletes, and I had absolutely no idea! (I won’t name names, but needless to say he plays for a sport that I don’t follow, so I didn’t automatically register the name. Also, who expects a famous athlete to contact their local library?)


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

A director hire could cost the ImagineIF Library in Montana state accreditation and funding, as their top candidate does not have a master’s degree.

Patience and fortitude are needed as dozens of NYC libraries close due to COVID-related staff shortages.

The South Central Correctional Facility in Tennessee rejected a donated copy of a Malcolm X biography, which had been requested by someone in the prison.

The Chicago Public Library will make Narcan available at 14 city branches in areas heavily affected by drug overdoses.

Library staff at the Baltimore County Library and the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh have voted to unionize.

Public libraries are seeing an uptick in First Amendment audits.

Cool Library Updates

The Orland Park (IL) Public Library starts a book club for adults with developmental disabilities.

The Norwalk, Connecticut library went fines free and erased over $281,000 in existing late fines.

Public libraries partner with pro sports teams and local athletes to promote youth wellness.

This Alabama family started a Little Free Antiracist Library to promote racial justice and the importance of diverse reading.

Worth Reading

Public libraries aren’t essential services. (And it’s time for people to stop insisting that they are, while refusing to adequately fund services or pay staff.)

What’s lost when we obscure labor.

Tilda Swinton as libraries.

Book Adaptations in the News

Despite her lack of formal acting training, student Aria Mia Loberti has been cast as Marie-Laure in All the Light We Cannot See. Loberti is registered blind, and disability rights advocates have applauded the casting decision. Mark Ruffalo and Hugh Laurie have also been cast.

Ottessa Moshfegh’s novel Eileen is being adapted as a film, starring Anne Hathaway and Thomasin McKenzie.

FX is adapting Octavia Butler’s Kindred as a series.

Wes Anderson is adapting Roald Dahl’s The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Six More for Netflix.

Casting updates for Manhunt and Renfield.

Banned & Challenged Books

Lamar ISD (TX) has removed seven books from library shelves following parent complaints: Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, Forever For a Year, Jack of Hearts, All Boys Aren’t Blue, The Breakaways, The Nerdy and the Dirty, and Lawn Boy.

The National Coalition Against Censorship expresses concerns over the extensive book review happening at the North East ISD in Texas.

Oklahoma lawmakers favor school board control in book complaints.

The Teton (WY) Library adopts a new anti-censorship policy.

Students speak against removing controversial books from Casper (WY) school libraries.

Community members spoke out against the Pennridge School District’s (PA) recent decision to remove the book Heather Has Two Mommies.

The book battle continues at the Pitt County School District (NC) over appropriate reading materials for middle schoolers. The books in question are Forged by Fire, Darkness Before Dawn, and All American Boys. I have to give props to District Media Specialist Meredith Hill for her responses as to why these books should remain on library shelves.

Gender Queer may return to the Wake County Public Library’s shelves.

A Mississippi State Auditor is endorsing proposed CRT legislation, calling anti-racism materials “a cancer to our society.”

Pella (IA) city leaders discuss removing Gender Queer from the public library.

The National Coalition Against Censorship offers its support to the Community High School District in Downers Grove, IL, where recent book challenges have drawn support from members of the Proud Boys.

Join the #FReadom letter writing campaign to combat censorship.

These LGBTQ and antiracist books are being review bombed by book banners.

A look at the push to remove LGBTQ books and online materials from school libraries, and the harm it will cause for marginalized students.

Books & Authors in the News

Arizona Congressman Ruben Gallego’s memoir is being corrected post-publication. The correction is for an inaccurate criticism of a journalist’s report from when Gallego was serving in the Marines.

Maya Angelou will be the first Black woman featured on the US quarter!

Numbers & Trends

Nearly 1 in 3 Americans are reading eBooks.

However, Americans read fewer books in 2021 than any of the past 30 years.

2021 book trends show the power of BookTok and the rise of audiobooks.

Award News

Joelle Taylor wins the TS Eliot poetry prize.

The 2022 Philip K. Dick Award finalists have been announced.

Pop Cultured

Elizabeth Holmes has officially been found guilty on four of 11 federal charges. If any of your patrons are obsessed with the trial, you may find some of these suggestions helpful to suggest for further reading/watching/listening.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A Jack Kerouac museum is on the road to reality in Lowell, Massachusetts.

On the Riot

New Year’s resolutions for school librarians.

Keep it old school with library due date card goods.

What to do when a teen tells you they hate reading.

Is reader’s block a real thing?

How to start an intentional book collection.

Tl;dr: potentially useful recaps of popular self-help books of the last decade.

What this reader learned from keeping a reading journal in 2021.

What surprised this reader when they joined a read-along.

22 new bookish podcasts to listen to in 2022.

So what exactly is Wordle, and how do you play?

How to be a book fairy.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


Black cat wrapped in a blanket, meowing

Well, you made it to the end. As a reward, here is a photo of my cranky 15-year-old cat Gilbert, wrapped up like a burrito in his favorite blanket. He’s meowing to tell you how incredibly happy he is to have so much attention! (I’m dead serious…he loves being swaddled and hugged, and the grumpier he looks, the happier he actually is!)

Take care of yourselves this weekend, and remember to drink water and moisturize! I’ll see you all next week.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Pining Romances and Body Horror

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I have an obsessively labeled and organized collection of digital and scanned photos, and as I was adding some new photos taken over the last couple of years, I realized I have an obnoxiously large number of photos of my cats. I know spending the majority of the last two years at home accounts for some of this, but…let’s be real here…I think I have a problem.

Anyway, I don’t want to hoard all of these riches to myself, and a lot of the other editors have already shared photos of their pets, so all of you lovely subscribers who make it to the end of the newsletter will get to know Gilbert and Houdini very well!


Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Weekly announces its Spring 2022 adult picks. Brb, making sure all of my Baker & Taylor carts are updated.

Scholastic launches a new illustrated biography series.

Ali Hazelwood announces her next “STEMinist” romance novel, Love on the Brain.

Colson Whitehead confirmed on Twitter that Ray Carney, the main character from Harlem Shuffle, will return in 2023.

Here’s a first look at Kendare Blake’s upcoming Buffy novel.

William Shatner sold an essay collection, Boldly Go, which is set for Fall 2022.

The best books of 2021, according to book podcasters.

All of USA Today‘s 4-star reviews of 2021.

Weekly book picks from Bustle, Crime Reads, The Millions, New York Times, and USA Today.

January picks from Barnes & Noble, Crime Reads, Entertainment Weekly, Epic Reads (YA), Good Morning America, New York Times, Shondaland, Town & Country.

Most anticipated 2022 reads from Autostraddle, AV Club, Crime Reads, Epic Reads (YA fantasy), Gizmodo (SFF), LitHub (general, SFF), OprahDaily, PopSugar (mystery/thrillers, romance), Tor Nightfire (horror), USA Today, Vulture.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The School for Good Mothers – Jessamine Chan (Entertainment Weekly, OprahDaily, Washington Post)

Anthem – Noah Hawley (Esquire, New York Times, USA Today)

Fiona & Jane – Jean Chen Ho (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Olga Dies Dreaming – Xochitl Gonzalez (LA Times, Washington Post)

On the Riot

The best weekly releases to TBR.

15 must-read January children’s book releases.

The ultimate guide to new Winter 2022 YA books: January – March.

12 YA fantasy books to anticipate in 2022.

10 of the most exciting 2022 debuts to preorder now.

24 must-read 2022 books in translation.

2022 historical fiction to add to your reading list right now.

25 of the best book club books for 2022 reading.

In defense of recommending books you haven’t read yet.

In defense of the “fast burn romance.”

The coming out narrative: we deserve more.

Why are we obsessed with cult books? (FYI, not books about cults — books that have reached “cult status”)

Contemporary poets are demystifying the poetry genre.

Genres of literature popular in languages other than English.

All Things Comics

Japanese filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda will adapt the popular comic Maiko in Kyoto: From the Maiko House for a limited Netflix series.

Betty White’s life is being celebrated in a new biographical comic book.

On the Riot

YA comics and graphic novels coming out January – March 2022.

New Year’s resolutions for comic book readers.

The best completed manga series to read from start to finish.

14 of the best travel comics to help you escape winter.

The most popular manga for high school students.

Audiophilia

The audiobook market is expected to reach $19.39 billion by 2027. That’s…a lot of audiobooks.

The January 2022 Earphone Award winners have been announced.

4 audiobooks about starting over.

On the Riot

The value of listening to poetry on audio.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Word-centric picture books.

Adults

8 genre-bending books by Asian American women.

8 unique picks for a book club ready to branch out.

18 fake-dating romance novels.

Arctic Circle crime fiction.

8 ghost stories in which the dead don’t go quietly.

21 sad books to read when you need a good cry.

20 books about the past and future of cities.

30 books about (and inspired by) Greek mythology.

8 novels about surviving in the wilderness.

On the Riot

10 indestructible books for babies.

Books to boost young readers’ cultural literacy.

15 YA books like From Blood and Ash.

Queer books from 2021 you might have missed.

Books about missing and murdered people of color that deserve more attention.

The 20 most influential romance novels of the last 100 years.

12 of the best romances with mutual pining.

Reality show romances.

13 skin-crawling body horror books.

9 books that celebrate librarians.

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 created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


a photo of a black and white cat who appears to be smiling

You made it! And now, meet Houdini! He’s 4 years old, 12.5 pounds of solid cat bulk, and he loves head scritches. Head scritches make him smile and show off his toofs, like he’s doing here. He hopes you have a good rest of the week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Year in Censorship

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I kinda want to hunker down under a solid table and wait until this latest COVID surge subsides. The number of people in my life who have tested positive continues to climb, and to give an idea of what the work situation is like, my coworker had to tell someone to put on a mask, while she was putting up additional signage that said “Keep your mask on.” I just don’t even know anymore, y’all.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

New York Governor Kathy Hochul vetoes the state’s library eBook bill.

An armed man was arrested for trespassing while protesting a library program for LGBTQ kids at the Post Falls Library in Idaho.

The Fulton County Library in Pennsylvania was denied $3,000 in additional funding because it agreed to host a LGBTQ support group, which two commissioners considered a “hate group.” So the community raised over $40,000 for the library.

Cool Library Updates

Modified remote learning lets Lakota students gather in makeshift libraries during COVID.

Libby is partnering with the accessibility platform Fable in order to become more accessible for people with disabilities.

Worth Reading

Texas bigots demand a safe space from reality in public libraries.

Libraries enlist states in a fight over eBook rules.

Libraries should be a place of acceptance.

Book Adaptations in the News

Bridgerton Season 2 is coming back to Netflix on March 25th!

Amazon is adapting the viral fantasy novel The Atlas Six as a TV series.

Sony has purchased the rights to Gabino Iglesias’ The Devil Takes You Home.

AMC Studios snags the rights to Rebecca Roanhorse’s Black Sun.

Jessica Chastain’s production company is adapting Jessamine Chan’s The School For Good Mothers as a series.

Erik Larson’s audiobook No One Goes Alone is being adapted as a feature film.

Keanu Reeves is in talks to star in The Devil in the White City.

Was 2021 the end of “unfilmable” fiction?

Must-read books coming to a screen near you in 2022.

Banned & Challenged Books

The year in censorship.

As book challenges reach unprecedented levels across the country, the American Federation of Teachers is launching a campaign to put one million diverse books in students’ hands.

Edha Gupta fought against her school’s book ban and created a more equitable education system.

Author Kelly Yang looks to rally fellow authors, publishers, and the public in the battle against censorship.

Yanking books from school libraries: what the Supreme Court has said, and why it’s murky.

These are the books most challenged in Texas school districts.

The Victoria Public Library Board (TX) has voted to keep all 21 contested titles on library shelves!

Round Rock and Leander ISDs (TX) faced the loss in millions of funding over the County’s disapproval of how these school districts have handled recent book challenges, with one commissioner saying, “I think we send a clear message to school districts that we’re not okay with sharing our tax dollars with people who put smut in the room.” However, funding ended up being approved by the County, with a few stipulations around the completion of an ongoing book review process.

Meanwhile, Leander ISD has removed 11 books and a graphic novel from its optional book club curriculum, although the books are still available in school libraries. 8 additional books have been reinstated to the book club curriculum.

Katy ISD (TX) parents continue to demand that local officials take action to remove “obscene materials” from schools. Meanwhile, the school district has created an online portal for parents’ concerns over library books.

Texas state officials are investigating Keller ISD over complaints of “sexually explicit” books in the school.

Eastlake High School in El Paso is under fire for assigning The Perks of Being a Wallflower to freshmen.

The Canutillo ISD (TX) released their report recommending that Gender Queer be kept in high school libraries.

The Llano County Library (TX) is temporarily closing in order to review the content of its children’s collections.

All Boys Aren’t Blue has been pulled from a Clay County (FL) school library after a parent complained.

Citrus County (FL) officials will discuss library display policies after receiving complaints about an LGBTQ-themed display at the public library.

The Central Kitsap District in Washington has returned Gender Queer to library shelves, thanks to their new board president.

The Walla Walla School District (WA) has formed a committee to review four challenged titles, including Gender Queer, The Bluest Eye, The Hate U Give, and All Boys Aren’t Blue.

The Post Falls (ID) community speaks out against censorship of LGBTQ materials at a Post Falls library meeting.

The superintendent of Washington County schools (UT) cast the deciding vote in removing The Hate U Give and Out of Darkness from school libraries.

Natrona County (WY) parents challenge Gender Queer, Monday’s Not Coming, and several books by Ellen Hopkins.

The Campbell County Public Library Board (WY) abruptly voted to adjourn a meeting after a resident challenged the library’s decision to keep The Babysitters Coven by Kate Williams in the teen section.

“Everyone is welcome:” Wyoming communities respond to the statewide controversy over LGBTQ-themed books.

The Wake County (NC) ban of Gender Queer may be unconstitutional.

Ayden Middle School in North Carolina is facing challenges to several books in the curriculum, including Forged by Fire and Darkness Before Dawn by Sharon Draper, as well as All American Boys by Jason Reynolds.

South Carolina education leaders finish their review of school library book processes, and reiterated that material selection should stay at the local level, as opposed to the state.

Bedford County (VA) school officials address the local push to remove books from the county school libraries.

Loudoun County (VA) school panel votes to keep Lawn Boy on school shelves, causing at least one parent to complain that the district was “stacking the deck” in terms of who was selected to serve on the panel.

Fox News has jumped into the Fairfax County (VA) fight to have certain books removed from school libraries for supposedly containing pedophilia.

A Shelton (CT) Board of Education member expressed concern over The Glass Castle being a required title for high school freshmen.

Westerly High in Rhode Island is seeing a concentrated effort to have Gender Queer removed from the school library.

The Pennridge School District in Pennsylvania sent a district-wide email before Christmas break to elementary school administrators, ordering the removal of books discussing gender identity.

The Rockwood School District (MO) elects to keep six challenged titles on library shelves: All Boys Aren’t Blue, Crank, Gender Queer, Looking For Alaska, The Haters, and Where I End and You Begin.

A newly introduced Oklahoma state bill would allow parents to seek up to $10,000 for each day a book is kept in their child’s school library after it was nominated for removal.

Another newly introduced Oklahoma bill would allow parents to submit a written request for a book’s removal, and if the book was not removed within 30 days, the employee tasked with the removal would be dismissed.

The Osseo School Board (MN) votes to keep Born a Crime on the shelves.

Two West Michigan school districts are facing pushes to remove books with transgender and same-sex content, specifically My Footprints by Bao Phi and Melissa by Alex Gino.

The Holmen School Board (WI) votes to keep It’s Perfectly Normal on middle school shelves.

Why did Parkway Schools (OH) ban Between the World and Me?

After a committee voted to keep controversial books on the shelf, an Urbandale (IA) parent plans to sue the school district.

The Pella Public Library (IA) elects to keep Gender Queer on its shelves, so parents take to the city council to protest the decision and the library’s book review process.

The Johnston Community School District (IA) elects to keep The Hate U Give and The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian as part of the school curriculum. Meanwhile, a parent left a recent school board meeting after racist and homophobic slurs were used.

An Iowa librarian appeals to her colleagues to defend books on LGBTQ people and racism.

Iowa governor Kim Reynolds supports legislation that addresses “controversial books” in schools.

Lindbergh High School (MO) officials have elected to keep The Handmaid’s Tale and Gender Queer in school libraries. The Handmaid’s Tale will also be kept as an Honors English II reading choice.

A concerned parent in La Grange (IL) calls for the Lyons Township High School board to remove “pornographic” content from its libraries, but is astonished that anyone would refer to her as a “book banner.”

Start banning controversial library books and soon you will be left with none.

Those who would ban books think certain students have no value.

As parents protest critical race theory in schools, students fight racist behavior in schools.

Book banning isn’t about protecting children; it’s about political posturing.

Books & Authors in the News

Literary powerhouse Joan Didion has died at 87.

Cultural icon, actress, and author Betty White has died at 99, just a few weeks shy of her 100th birthday.

Michael Cohen sues the US government and Donald Trump for revoking his home confinement in alleged retaliation for publishing a book.

If you’ve been following the online discussion about the junior PRH staffer who allegedly derailed the publication of a new Norman Mailer collection, here’s a contextual look at what actually happened (and no, Norman Mailer didn’t actually get canceled).

And just to clear up any confusion, if you read about a Patricia Cornwall who was removed from a flight for refusing to wear a mask, it was not bestselling author Patricia Cornwell, who has had to clear up the confusion more than once.

Booker Prize-winning New Zealand author, Keri Hulme, dies at 74.

The mystery of the anonymous fantasy author taking over BookTok.

Numbers & Trends

Here are the most popular library books in US libraries in 2021. Or if you want more specific data, here is the New York Public Library’s top checkouts of 2021. (AND, NYPL even has readalikes for their top checkouts!)

OverDrive reported more than half a billion digital library loans in 2021!

A rare first-edition of The Incredible Hulk sells for $490,000.

Award News

The 2021 Hugo Awards have been announced.

Caleb Azumah Nelson wins the Costa First Novel Award for his book Open Water.

New York Times readers pick the best book of the last 125 years.

A new survey says that the Booker is the most important literary prize in the world. Worth mentioning: the survey was sponsored by an “unnamed international book prize.”

Pop Cultured

Reading Rainbow Live announces the theme and cast for its first episode.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

The FBI have arrested a man accused of stealing unpublished manuscripts.

Over a thousand books from Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s private collection are being auctioned.

The Romance Writers of America sees even more leadership turnover.

This New York City bookstore sells books AND pickles!!! (My husband would hate this store, but I think it’s heaven.)

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

On the Riot

How to run a book award in your school library.

8 of the most unique Little Free Libraries.

Searching for my ideal number of library books.

52 weekly challenges to up your reading life in 2022.

An English major’s guide to relearning how to read for pleasure.

Why it’s okay if you didn’t read this year (and what to do about it).

BookTube vs. BookTok: which account should you start?

Scribd alternatives: 8 eBook/audiobook subscription services to try.

How to protect your books from bugs. (shudder)

What’s the big deal with NFTs?


Let’s hope for a better week next week, shall we? Mask up, and get your boosters. I’ll see you on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

To Review, or Not to Review…That Is the Question

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Well…it’s been a few weeks, hasn’t it? I’m torn between good things like my library officially going fines-free (this was the good news I alluded to in my newsletters last month), and terrible things like *gestures to the window.* I’m boosted and taking as many precautions as I can against COVID, but over the last week, it seems like everyone I know has tested positive, and all of these people were vaccinated. (No one I was in close contact with, but still — it’s alarming.) Plus I still have a few family members who aren’t vaccinated, and let’s just say the worry game is real right now.

So whatever you have to do to take care of YOU right now, please do so. Hunker down if you can. Wear your mask. Block out the world if you need to.

And if books bring you comfort, keep reading. Heck, it doesn’t even have to be work related — just find yourself a new book that makes you feel excited! (I won’t tell…)


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Authors win $7.8 million in a default judgment against the KISS library, an overseas eBook piracy operation.

African authors took the literary world by storm in 2021.

New & Upcoming Titles

Publisher’s Weekly looks at the battle of the Beatles books that came out late last year. (And because I have awesome people in my life who know me extremely well, I ended up getting both of these for Christmas!)

Here’s a book to put on your 2022 radar: The Death I Gave Him by Em X. Liu, “a queer, locked-room sci-fi mystery inspired by Shakespeare’s Hamlet, which will be published in September.

Here’s a first look at Ingrid Rojas Contreras’ memoir, The Man Who Could Move Clouds, which comes out in July.

January picks from Barnes & Noble for adults and kids/teens.

Best books of 2021 from Buzzfeed, Crime Reads (psychological thrillers, horror, speculative mysteries & thrillers), LA Times, New Yorker (cookbooks), People (children’s books), and San Francisco Chronicle.

LitHub created “The Ultimate Best Books of 2021” list, which collates the results from 49 other lists.

But if you really want to get your Best Books jam on, this is the final word in best book lists roundups every year.

Kirkus shared their 100 favorite Indie books of 2021, including:
Best Thrillers and Mysteries
Best Romance
Best Fiction & Literature
Best Nonfiction
Best Biography and Memoir
Best Children’s Books
Best YA and Middle Grade Fiction
Best Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Paranormal Fiction
Best Historical Fiction
Best Short Story Collections
Best Poetry Collections

Most anticipated 2022 books from Barnes & Noble (debuts), Electric Lit (LGBTQ), Epic Reads (YA debuts), Goodreads, USA Today, and Vogue.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

A Marvellous Light – Freya Marske (NPR)

All Her Little Secrets – Wanda M. Morris (NPR)

To Paradise – Hanya Yanagihara (The Atlantic)

RA/Genre Resources

A look at “impact narratives,” a long-running genre about threats from space.

On the Riot

Check out the 2022 Book Riot Reading Log!

Why we feel the need to share what we read.

One reader’s adventure in speed reading vs. slow reading.

The benefits of reviewing every book you read. On the flip side, we also have the joy of not reviewing a book. Which side are you on?

All Things Comics

Indie comics publishing house Dark Horse Media has been acquired by the Embracer Group, a Swedish video game development company.

Michael Keaton joins the cast of Batgirl on HBO.

The 10 best comics of 2021.

On the Riot

New 2022 manga to put on your radar.

11 of the best comic book podcasts.

Love that queer book? Read this queer comic!

8 great horror manga to creep you out.

You will never understand comics (and that’s okay).

Audiophilia

Dolly Parton will headline the audiobook cast for her upcoming collaboration with James Patterson.

9 great audiobooks to listen to during your holiday travels.

On the Riot

8 audiobooks longlisted for the PEN America Awards.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

26 short YA books when all you want is a quick read.

12 YA books to inspire you to go after your goals.

Adults

8 emotionally fulfilling novels for fans of The Midnight Library.

16 African romance novels bound to keep you warm this winter.

15 books by trans, genderqueer, and non-binary authors.

10 rom-com readalikes for fans of Emily in Paris.

On the Riot

14 award-winning children’s books of 2021.

20 of the best picture books you’ve never heard of.

15 middle grade books for autistic tweens and teens.

Essential YA nonfiction: a guide to reading widely.

Be gay, do crimes: YA mysteries/thrillers starring LGBTQ+ characters.

20 of the most influential historical fiction books of all time.

8 magical New Year’s Eve romances.

14 must-read Japanese books available in English translation.

10 showstopper books for K-drama fans.

8 books like The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.

9 great books about building habits.

Must-read under-the-radar mysteries of 2021.

Romances you may have missed.

The best SFF series of 2021.

17 historical mystery 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 created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


Stay well, everyone. See you on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently listening to Take it Back by Kia Abdullah.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Catch These Previews of 2022 Titles

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Because of how the calendar falls, this will be my last newsletter for the year! (I know, I’m still in denial that 2021 is that close to the end.) I know better than to make predictions for what 2022 will look like, but I’m going to try and enjoy the last week and a half as much as I can. (And in order to do that, I’m going to try and keep my Twitter usage to a minimum.) I encourage everyone else to do the same!

And with that, let’s make this last 2021 newsletter a good one.


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Penguin Random House fires back at the DoJ’s effort to stop its Simon & Schuster purchase. Meanwhile, an August 1st trial date has been set for the DoJ case against PRH.

Politics and Prose bookstore employees move to unionize.

John Legend and his entertainment team will publish books at Zando.

The publishing world is finally embracing Black cookbooks.

New & Upcoming Titles

Elizabeth Olsen and her husband Robbie Arnett are writing a kids’ book about self-care.

Lockdown inspired Patricia Cornwell to bring back Kay Scarpetta.

Alanis Morissette, Diablo Cody, and YA author Eric Smith help adapt the Jagged Little Pill musical into a YA novel.

Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen has a book deal.

Sloane Crosley is set to release two new books.

Here’s a first look at Karen M. McManus’ latest dark campus thriller, Nothing More to Tell, which comes out in August.

First look at Alice Feeney’s upcoming thriller, Daisy Darker, out in August.

Cover reveal for Norman Reedus’s debut novel, The Ravaged.

Holly Black reveals the cover for her debut adult fantasy novel, Book of Night.

Here’s a first look at Marlon James’ upcoming novel, Moon Witch, Spider King.

Read the first excerpt from Jennifer Egan’s The Candy House, a companion novel to A Visit From the Goon Squad.

And here’s an excerpt from one of my most-anticipated novels of 2022: Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin.

Barack Obama shares his favorite books, movies, and music from 2021.

Weekly book picks from USA Today.

Best books of 2021 from Autostraddle, Book Page (reader’s choice), Booklist, Crime Reads (debuts, historical mysteries, espionage, international crime novels, noir fiction), Electric Lit (poetry, short story collections, nonfiction, novels), Entertainment Weekly (romance), The Guardian (nonfiction, cozy mysteries), LitHub (fiction, mystery/crime fiction, nonfiction), New York Times (critic’s choice, cookbooks), New Yorker, People, Popsugar, Sun Sentinel (mysteries), Time (fiction), Tor.com, and Vulture.

Kirkus lists its 100 favorite YA books of 2021, along with a ton of other best-of YA lists, including best fiction, best mysteries/thrillers, best fantasy & science fiction, best romance, best nonfiction, best graphic novels, best historical fiction, and best biography & memoir.

Best book covers of 2021.

Most anticipated 2022 titles from Bustle, Buzzfeed (mysteries/thrillers), Epic Reads (YA), Time, and Tor.com.

15 books by Latinx authors coming out in 2022 that you need to put on your radar.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Fortune Men – Nadifa Mohamed (New York Times, Oprah Daily, Washington Post)

Bright Burning Things – Lisa Harding (Shondaland, Washington Post)

All About Me! My Remarkable Life in Show Business – Mel Brooks (Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

5 reasons why the holidays are the perfect time to read some romance.

On the Riot

The best weekly releases to TBR.

20 must-read picture books from 2021.

Best children’s books of 2021.

December is for comfort reading.

How to set the mood for reading every genre.

On tearjerkers and tragedies: the importance of a good story.

How does Asian historical fiction depict the pain of women?

Genres to read to expand your culinary horizons.

World War II stories and the proliferation of historical fiction.

All Things Comics

Leigh Bardugo announces the first-ever Grishaverse graphic novel: Demon in the Wood, a prequel to Darkling.

Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples preview Saga’s return.

The 10 best YA comics, ranked.

On the Riot

BTS releases a teaser trailer for their new webcomic/webnovel.

2022 comics and graphic novels to add to your TBR.

Comics about the Middle East.

The best story arcs from manga’s golden age.

9 manga like Attack on Titan for when you’ve finished the series.

Audiophilia

Mara Wilson will be narrating the audio version of One For All by Lillie Lainoff.

Best audiobooks of 2021 from Audiobooks.com and Slate.

An audio gift guide for every reader/listener.

Should celebrities narrate their audiobooks?

On the Riot

10 great audiobooks for families.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

5 YA SFF novels where compassion is strength.

Feel-good YA novels for the holiday season.

Adults

7 books to read to honor bell hooks’s legacy.

5 Indigenous authors to read right now.

7 daring epistolary novels that push literary boundaries.

10 romances to read after finishing The Hating Game.

Titles that are trending on BookTok right now.

32 spellbinding books about witches.

14 books set in the 1980’s.

10 books to read while waiting for Station Eleven.

On the Riot

Count on us: 16 inspiring math books for kids.

12 romantic Korean YA novels you don’t want to miss.

8 seriously creepy and unsettling book covers.

12 diverse holiday romance books to enjoy the winter season.

10 queer fantasy romances to warm your cold, cold heart.

Bundle up with these snowed-in romances.

8 queer readalikes for your favorite love stories.

10 absolutely gripping books to read in the new year.

10 thrillers set in space, where no one can hear you scream.

20 of the best award-winning horror novels.

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 created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


Peace out, everyone. Catch you in ’22!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Remembering Anne Rice and bell hooks

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am happy to report that the big decision I alluded to in last Friday’s newsletter has ended up being a positive one, and though I’m still unable to report on the specifics, I would just like to spread a general sense of relief and good cheer. I feel like good cheer has been hard to come by recently, so I’m leaning into this as much as I can!

So let’s library!


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The Association of American Publishers sues to block the recent Maryland and New York library eBook laws.

Publishers Weekly‘s Top 10 library stories of 2021.

Cool Library Updates

The Charlotte Mecklenburg Library in North Carolina will begin distributing 20,000 free, refurbished laptops to Mecklenburg County adults who do not have their own home computers.

The Library of Congress announced its 2021 additions to the National Film Registry.

Worth Reading

The American prison system’s war on reading.

Is my little library contributing to the gentrification of my Black neighborhood?

Book Adaptations in the News

Wattpad partners with ViacomCBS to adapt stories to streaming.

Henry Golding is starring in a series adaptation of Dean Koontz’s Nameless series.

Sophie Kinsella’s YA novel Finding Audrey is being developed into a film.

The team behind Gossip Girl is adapting the Sweet Valley High books.

Catherine Raven’s Fox & I: An Uncommon Friendship has been optioned for film.

Michelle Zauner’s memoir Crying in H Mart will be adapted for film as well.

A couple casting updates for Mike Flanagan’s adaptation of The Fall of the House of Usher, including regular collaborators Kate Siegel, Henry Thomas, and Rahul Kohli, and new-to-the-Flanagan-crew actors Mark Hamill and Frank Langella.

Banned & Challenged Books

School Library Journal has started a library censorship tips hotline.

How your library can support comprehensive sex education and fight censorship.

Over 600 authors, publishers, and organizations came together to condemn the ongoing book ban attempts.

The School Library Systems Association of New York State issued a statement on the recent censorship attempts.

Kansas and Missouri lawmakers slam school boards as curricula fights head to statehouses.

Kirkwood, MO parents raise concerns about the books made available to students, including The Handmaid’s Tale, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Looking for Alaska, and Crank. However, one parent in opposition to removing the books had this fantastic quote: “I have watched with growing concern how the insidious combination of fear enmeshed with inaccurate information can be to a community, and how it motivates people to revert back to toddler-like behavior.”

Georgia GOP leader backs “obscenity” legislation that echoes what she once opposed.

Hamilton County (TN) School Board chair proposes a committee to review students’ books, which receives bipartisan support.

Manawa (WI) School District voted unanimously to keep Looking For Alaska in the school library.

Controversial Flagler (FL) school board member Jill Woolbright applauds the superintendent’s decision to keep All Boys Aren’t Blue off school shelves.

Keller ISD (TX) appeared to violate its own policies by removing several books from library shelves without a formal review process, including Panic, Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts), Infinity Reaper (Infinity Cycle 2), Flamer, L8r, g8r, and Gender Queer.

Katy ISD (TX) asks parents to report concerns on “pervasively vulgar” library books.

The division over LGBTQ+ books and websites continues at Katy ISD.

A look at the books that Leander ISD (TX) has banned from school libraries.

The fate of 21 contested books at the Victoria Public Library (TX) will be decided on December 15th.

“I am appalled:” Locals react to North East ISD (TX) removing over 400 books from library shelves for review. The school district also plans to remove or relocate 75 titles.

Finally, a victory! Gender Queer has been returned to Canutillo (TX) High School library shelves.

A commentary on what happened when Spring Branch ISD (TX) banned The Breakaways for the presence of a trans character, but elected to keep Drama by Raina Telgemeier on the shelves, despite the story containing LGBTQ content as well.

A new, more restrictive critical race theory law is now in effect for Texas schools.

This is a shakedown: Texas has a book banning problem.

A new ebook from Utah Library Advocates tackles the book censorship issue in schools.

Gender Queer has been pulled from Ankeny (IA) school libraries.

The Iowa Library Association shares concerns about efforts to remove books from libraries.

With the help of a school board member’s husband, parents in Laramie County, Wyoming push back against mask mandates and school library books.

The Spotsylvania (VA) Sheriff’s Office and fire department will maintain a presence at the December 13th School Board meeting in response to a local book burning event that was posted, and then removed from, Facebook.

A North Dakota school superintendent slams critical race theory and calls to teach “Christian heritage.”

A score of local librarians and parents arrived in full force to the York (ME) town School Committee meeting to oppose an attempt to have It’s Perfectly Normal removed from the middle school library.

The Paradise Valley School Governing Board (AZ) unanimously votes to end their contract with a high school principal following controversy over the book So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed being used for an AP English reading assignment.

Some parents and community activists are calling for criminal charges to be filed against the Wake County (NC) School System for distributing inappropriate books. The books in question are Gender Queer, All Boys Aren’t Blue, Melissa, and Lawn Boy. Gender Queer has been pulled from the Wake County Public Libraries as well.

Meanwhile, a Black mother in North Carolina reported that her daughter checked out the book A Redneck Night Before Christmas from her school library, which included Santa carrying a toy sack with a Confederate flag on the side. Several of these Confederate flags were also covered up with Post-It notes.

What it’s like to have your book banned by the school board.

Black parents say that the movement to ban critical race theory is ruining their children’s educations.

What’s one more deadly school shooting when the real danger to kids is a book?

An authoritarian push to ban books and punish teachers.

What do masks, library books, critical race theory, and transgender rights all have in common?

The hate we give: A plea for help and recognition is instead held down.

Censoring books is another form of minority erasure.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Books & Authors in the News

Anne Rice, legendary author of Interview With the Vampire, has died at age 80.

Trailblazing Black feminist author bell hooks has died at age 69.

Andrew Cuomo has been forced to forfeit the earnings from his pandemic memoir, American Crisis. The total is an estimated $5.1 million.

“Alice Sebold’s Lucky and the problem with memoirs with happy endings.”

Award News

Meet the winners of the 2021 Goodreads Choice Awards!

Patrick Radden Keefe, author of Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty, has chosen to donate the £10,000 he won as a shortlisted author for the McKinsey Book of the Year Award, since McKinsey advised the Sacklers and Purdue on how to “turbocharge” sales of Oxycontin, and paid $600 million to settle lawsuits over their role in the opioid crisis.

The 2022 PEN America longlists have been announced.

The Golden Globe nominees have been announced, although the awards will not be televised due to the ongoing controversies surrounding the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.

Pop Cultured

Kristen Bell is starring in a new Netflix psychological suspense parody series called The Woman in the House Across the Street from the Girl in the Window.

Everything you need to know about Season 2 of Only Murders in the Building.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A portion of the Gilgamesh tablet has been returned to Iraq.

On the Riot

How to evaluate news sites and spot fake news.

10 great middle grade books coming to the screen soon.

Being an author: expectations vs. reality.

Do great artists steal?

An inconsistent grading of way too many Beanie Baby tag poems.


Did you like that last item? I wanted to end on a bit of a happy note, and as a former Beanie Baby collector, I very much appreciate the attention paid to these types of details. Have yourselves a good weekend, everyone, and I’ll catch you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

It’s a Best-Of Bonanza!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. We’re deep into holiday gift buying in the Horner household, so whenever a new package shows up, there’s an intricate conversation of “Wait, who ordered this?” “Is this gift for you? Wait, don’t look!” “Oh, no, that’s for your sister. Where are we keeping her gifts?” “No, don’t put it there! Those are the gifts for YOUR sister!” Considering our apartment is too small to actually host a holiday get-together, we end up with a ton of wrapped gifts under the tree come Christmas.

So…books, then?


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Bookstores are dying. Barnes & Noble’s pricing policy may explain why.

Crowdfunding offers the UK’s independent booksellers a pandemic lifeline.

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Weekly released its Adult Spring 2022 announcements.

A feminist retelling of 1984 has been approved by George Orwell’s estate.

Werner Herzog is publishing his first novel next year.

Minnie Driver announces a new essay collection, Managing Expectations, which will be released May 2022.

Award-winning Swedish author Karin Smirnoff will write three new sequels to Stieg Larsson’s Millennium trilogy.

Janelle Monáe announces a collection of short stories based on the “Afrofuturistic world” of Dirty Computer.

Oooh, we’re getting an in-depth history of all of the Ghostbusters movies in 2022! Here’s the cover!

Paul Tremblay is coming out with a new novel in 2022 called The Pallbearers Club (on my birthday, no less!), and released the cover image!

Here’s a cover reveal and excerpt from Ruth Ware’s upcoming mystery, The It Girl.

And here’s a cover reveal for Josh Malerman’s upcoming novel, Daphne.

Another cover reveal? Sure, why not? Here’s the cover for Christina Lauren’s Something Wilder, on sale in May 2022.

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

December picks from Bustle, PopSugar (mysteries & thrillers).

19 of the best new winter reads.

Book club picks for the holiday season.

Best books of 2021 from AARP, BookPage (romance), CBC (Canadian fiction), Crime Reads (general, true crime), Entertainment Weekly, Esquire, The Guardian (general, chosen by guest authors), Kirkus (middle grade), Library Journal, Minneapolis Star Tribune, New York Times (mysteries, thrillers, science fiction/fantasy, historical fiction, art books), Slate, and USA Today.

Entertainment Weekly also has a guide to the biggest and buzziest books of 2021.

The 101 best book covers of 2021.

Brightly has the most anticipated picture books, middle grade/chapter books, and YA books of 2022.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Call Us What We Carry: Poems – Amanda Gorman (New York Times, NPR, Oprah Daily, Time, USA Today, Washington Post)

Sex Cult Nun: Breaking Away From the Children of God, A Wild, Radical Religious Cult – Faith Jones (NPR, Washington Post)

Silenced No More: Surviving My Journey to Hell and Back – Sarah Ransome (New York Times, Washington Post)

Learwife – J.R. Thorp (New York Times, Washington Post)

Beasts of a Little Land – Juhea Kim (USA Today)

RA/Genre Resources

How Afrofuturism can help the world mend.

What accounts for the lasting appeal of Dune?

A look at the new generation of African crime writers.

On the Riot

It’s Book Riot’s Best Books of 2021 list!

And our Read Harder Challenge for 2022 is here!

10 of the most interesting reads of 2021.

The best weekly releases to TBR.

11 must-read December children’s book releases.

It’s okay if you don’t want to read the classics!

Why romance will never stop retelling Cinderella and Beauty and the Beast.

Retellings keep the classics relevant.

Why retellings of classics from authors of color and queer authors matter.

Facts about the horror genre that might surprise you.

All Things Comics

George Perez, legendary comic book artist, has been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.

A Shang-Chi sequel is in the works.

The best comics of November 2021.

Here’s a trailer for Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.

On the Riot

A love letter to Saga, take 2.

The 8 best superhero comic holiday specials.

8 graphic memoirs by trans authors.

17 of the best web novels for your serial fiction fix.

Audiophilia

10 best audiobooks of December.

On the Riot

7 audiobooks performed by celebrities.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

20 classic & new classic children’s books that every kid should read.

17 book recommendations for fans of Shatter Me.

13 YA books that explore the world of dark academia.

Adults

200 books that shaped 200 years of literature.

The 50 best books of literary journalism of the 21st century.

39 mental wellness must-reads.

13 books for every hard-to-please person on your list.

Readalikes for House of Gucci.

7 mysteries with fun-loving characters.

Cozy Christmas mysteries.

18 books for the crime & thriller lover on your holiday list.

Romances for K-Drama fans.

18 holiday romance novels.

5 SFF books with twisty curses.

8 books that capture the essence of Tennessee.

On the Riot

Must-read diverse board books.

Dark retellings of children’s classics.

15 delightful art books for kids.

YA books to get cozy with this winter.

20 must-read queer holiday romances for Hallmark movie fans.

10 of the best books about Kwanzaa to read this holiday season.

The best gender-flipped retellings.

Romance novels that diversify the classics.

Retellings of Asian myths, epics, and folklore.

10 great books about crimes gone wrong.

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 created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


Well, that’s it for me. Catch you on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Return of Hayao Miyazaki

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. You know that feeling where there’s going to be a big decision made in a few days time that will impact you significantly but you have no control over? That’s going to be me at work over the next few days. (Don’t worry — my job’s not at risk, but it’s still going to be an extremely impactful decision.) So…I’m going to be stocking up on antacids for the next few days, but in the meantime, here’s this Friday’s newsletter. (And you may want to stock up on antacids yourself before getting to the Banned & Challenged Books section. Just a suggestion…)


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Protestors target teen library patrons attending a library-sponsored LGBTQ program at the Post Falls Library in Idaho. Because making vulnerable teens feel unsafe is definitely a good use of a person’s time.

Cool Library Updates

Malcolm X’s former prison cell is being turned into a library for incarcerated people.

The Indianapolis Public Library has hired a full time social worker to help connect its most vulnerable citizens with resources.

The story behind how Library Cats came to the rescue of L.A.’s kitties.

Worth Reading

Why police shouldn’t be in libraries, and how to help change that.

Book Adaptations in the News

The film adaptation of Lucky has been canceled following the news of Anthony Broadwater’s overturned conviction.

Hayao Miyazaki comes out of retirement for one more film: an adaptation of the 1937 novel How Do You Live by Genzaburo Yoshino.

Netflix is adapting David Nicholls’ One Day.

Anne Rice’s Lives of the Mayfair Witches gets a series greenlight at AMC.

Stan Lee’s horror universe will get a screen adaptation.

Laverne Cox joins the cast of Uglies.

Here’s the first trailer for the new animated Harriet the Spy TV show.

Banned & Challenged Books

Authors of color speak out against efforts to ban books about race.

The National Coalition Against Censorship condemns political attacks against books in schools.

Governor Abbott targets LGBTQ+ books as pornography. Texas librarians say he’s wrong.

Leander ISD (TX) has removed the following books from its high school libraries, and will not allow these titles to be selected for student book clubs either: Brave Face, The Handmaid’s Tale: The Graphic Novel, In the Dream House, None of the Above, The Nowhere Girls, Out of Darkness, Red at the Bone, The Lottery: The Graphic Adaptation, Shout, V for Vendetta, and Y: The Last Man Book One. The school district is also only NOW requesting that any concerns with instructional materials should follow the regular reconsideration process. Gee, that’s convenient.

High school students in Keller ISD (TX) must receive parental permission in order to check out Out of Darkness.

The North East ISD (TX) has pulled over 400 books for review based on Republican lawmaker Matt Krause’s list of 850 “inappropriate” books.

ALA’s OIF shares a blog post about the Krause banned book list, which contains the phrase “It is asinine to me…that one should be legally exempt from feeling guilt.”

Flathead County (MT) library director resigns amid board meddling and controversy over challenged books.

Manawa, AK has received a challenge to the book Looking For Alaska.

Lindbergh and Mehlville are the latest districts in the St. Louis area to receive challenges to multiple books.

Conservative parents are trying to ban books in Kansas City schools. Students won’t let them. (And it just kills me that again and again, the burden of enacting change is falling on students.)

The Utah State Board of Education is working to issue a new rule on how school libraries choose and review content.

Canyons School District (UT) is reviewing proposed changes to its book review policy. Among the policy features: parents can only challenge a book at a school where their child attends, they can only challenge a maximum of two books, and the book stays on the shelf during the deliberation process.

“Removing books limits our growth,” a student tells the Canyons School Board.

The Campbell County (UT) Public Library board has rejected three more appeals to remove specific titles from their library: Meena by Sine Van Wol, Mary Wears What She Wants by Keith Negley, and The V-Word: True Stories about First-Time Sex.

Moms for Liberty strikes in Hernando County, Florida, protesting against Looking for Alaska, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian, and two books by Alex Gino.

Moms for Liberty also targets Indian River County, Florida with a list of over 80 books in schools allegedly containing “pornography” and “critical race theory“.

The Tennessee Education Department declined to investigate the first complaint filed under its new anti-CRT bill, not surprisingly filed by a chapter of the Moms for Liberty, who protested several books adapted for young readers about Martin Luther King, the Civil Rights Movement, and Ruby Bridges.

Georgia schools are targeted in a battle over library books and online content.

The York School Department (ME) received a request to remove the book It’s Perfectly Normal: Changing Bodies, Growing Up, Sex, and Sexual Health from someone who does not have a child in the school district.

The Harrisonburg City Public School District (VA) has been asked to return Gender Queer to the library shelves until a formal review can be conducted; however, the book is currently checked out by a parent who refuses to return the book to the schools.

Fairfax County (VA) parents demand that the school board resign after they returned Lawn Boy and Gender Queer to library shelves.

In other Fairfax news, the Fairfax County Public Library removed a display that placed the Bible alongside copies of Lawn Boy and Gender Queer, along with a number of troll dolls.

Phoenix high school removes So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed by Jon Ronson from an AP English reading list.

The struggle to define critical race theory divides an Orange County school district.

Children’s books on gender identity spark conflict in the Solana Beach School District (CA).

IL State Representative Sam Yingling is fighting to keep Gender Queer on school library shelves.

Two Iowa state senators have voiced support for charging school officials with felonies for having “obscene” books on school bookshelves.

Iowa librarians and advocates push back on calls to remove LGBTQ books from school libraries.

The North Hunterdon (NJ) book ban controversy enters another chapter.

Legislators slam diversity efforts in Kansas schools and label them as “critical race theory.”

Ray Bradbury told librarians to “stand firm” against book bans.

The new white flight: banning books that reveal uncomfortable truths.

Say it again for the people in the back: Sexual content in books does not equal pornography.

Books & Authors in the News

HarperCollins pulls Chris Cuomo’s upcoming book following his firing from CNN.

Numbers & Trends

Penguin Random House has created a new campaign called Find Your Light which looks to analyze trends in the publishing world from the previous year.

The 2021 numbers look good for the US book trade.

Do millions of social media followers translate into book sales?

Award News

Kirstin Valdez Quade wins the 2021 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize.

Pop Cultured

What to read, watch, and listen to after marathoning Get Back. (I’m still making my way through, because each episode is the length of a LotR movie, but holy cow is it fascinating.)

Reading Rainbow is coming back in 2022!

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

This Black-owned bookstore is delivering books on horseback!

11 literary podcasts you should definitely listen to.

On the Riot

Why library staff don’t (or shouldn’t) comment on your library checkouts.

5 tips to make your book fair run smoothly.

Why is Agatha Christie the best-selling author of all time?

10 public domain books to be on the lookout for in 2022.

Best book covers of 2021.

A behind-the-scenes look at judging for a children’s book award.

Level up your reading: become a literary magazine volunteer reader.

5 ways to support booksellers this holiday season.

Not every picture book needs to be a board book!

A history of zines.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


Did we make it through? Did anyone get left behind? (Send smoke signals if you’re lost in the Banned Books Wilderness and we’ll send someone back for you!) In the meantime, enjoy your weekend everyone, and try to put some good back into the world. I’ll see you next week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

2022 Book Releases as Reddit Posts

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Before I started putting this newsletter together, I started reflecting on my reading life over the last couple years, and realized that while my reading track record has been absolute crap, my TV watching has absolutely skyrocketed. I’ve watched The IT Crowd, The Great British Baking Show, The Good Place (more than once), Killing Eve, What We Do In the Shadows, about half of Gravity Falls, and a bunch of other shows that I’ve already seen a billion times. Maybe my reading resolution for 2022 is to replace some of that TV-watching time with book time?


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Trump allies launch the Winning Team Publishing house with an eye to upend the book industry.

What happened to Amazon’s bookstore?

New & Upcoming Titles

Anchor unveils its inaugural hardcover list.

Serena Williams’ first children’s book is coming out in September 2022.

Little, Brown purchases the rights to Nathan Harris’ sophomore novel, The Rose of Jericho.

Adam Silvera announces that he’s expanding the universe first created in They Both Die At the End with two new books!

Here’s a first look at Stephen Graham Jones’ upcoming book Don’t Fear the Reaper.

Sarah Gailey announces their next book, Just Like Home, and that cover is giving me life!

Indie speculative fiction picks for November 2021.

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

December picks from Crime Reads, LA Times, LitHub (nonfiction), The Millions, New York Times, Shondaland, Tor.com (SF), and Washington Post.

23 must-read books for winter 2022.

Best books of 2021 from Book Page, Brightly (picture books, middle grade, YA), Chicago Tribune, Kirkus (picture books), New York Public Library, School Library Journal (audiobooks, graphic novels, nonfiction, YA), Time, and Vogue.

Kirkus also has a bunch of specific Best Picture Books of 2021 lists, including:
Picture Book Biographies
Books About Crossing Borders
Funniest Picture Books
Books About Celebrating Family
Books For Starting Conversations
Wordless Picture Books
Board Books

50 notable African books of 2021.

Here are BookTok’s most anticipated books of 2022.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

All About Me! My Remarkable Life in Show Business – Mel Brooks (The Guardian, New York Times, New Yorker)

Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone – Diana Gabaldon (Parade, Washington Post)

Sex Cult Nun: Breaking Away From the Children of God, a Wild, Radical, Religious Cult – Faith Jones (Salon, USA Today)

Small Things Like These – Claire Keegan (LA Times, New York Times)

RA/Genre Resources

4 types of literary horror that hold up.

8 emerging horror authors who are changing the face of the genre.

An exploration of Tasmanian crime fiction.

On the Riot

Is YA leading diversity in publishing?

8 YA thrillers to enjoy this fall.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

The best December YA releases to add to your TBR.

2022 book releases as Reddit posts.

Trouble in Romancelandia: online censorship of romance and erotica.

The main categories of magic systems.

All Things Comics

10 must-read Marvel comics for Christmas.

On the Riot

The best picture books for adults to comfort and delight in.

10 perfect holiday gifts for manga fans.

Audiophilia

AudioFile’s Best Audiobooks of 2021.

Here are the December 2021 Earphones Award Winners.

Indigenous audiobook narrators you should definitely be listening to.

7 audiobooks for the youngest listeners.

On the Riot

8 audiobooks narrated by Natalie Naudus.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

10 YA books with the academic rivals-to-lovers trope.

25 YA SFF books by Black authors.

20 YA feminist books to read while you’re dismantling the patriarchy.

Adults

The best (old) books that LitHub contributors read in 2021.

51 most-read books of the 2021 Goodreads reading challenge.

25 of the best self-help books to help you get 2022 off on the right foot.

34 books to read before they become TV shows in 2022.

Books that show how Mexicans have fought for a better California for 171 years.

40 best dystopian novels of all time.

22 of the best mystery books you won’t be able to put down.

Sexy psychological thrillers.

Great ominous beach settings in fiction.

7 social horror books.

15 books recommended by TikTokers.

5 sapphic winter holiday romances.

5 SFF books about road trips.

On the Riot

15 helpful books for young environmentalists.

25 of the best winter books for kids.

9 middle grade modern adaptations to cozy up with.

9 chilling middle grade horror anthologies.

15 YA fantasy books featuring amazing love triangles.

12 books in translation from Central Africa.

15 must-read dystopian romance novels.

10 books about unsolved mysteries.

8 horror novels about demons.

10 LGBTQ mystery 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 created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


Catch you on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

And the Word of the Year Is…

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, where you can hear the sighs of a thousand beleaguered library employees. I wish I had more cheerful intros for some of these newsletters, but after sorting through so many articles about book banning, my cheer has been depleted. Grab yourself something tasty to eat or drink while you read this newsletter, and let’s jump in.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

After the Denton Public Library (TX) canceled a book reading on the Trans Day of Remembrance, a mother of a trans boy took action and organized her own reading.

An overdue book was returned anonymously to the Boise Public Library 111 years past the due date.

Cool Library Updates

Jacksonville Public Library permanently eliminates overdue fees.

The Chicago Tool Library is planning a move after growing so fast that it’s run out of space for donations.

Worth Reading

Health departments are relying on libraries to distribute COVID testing kits.

A former inmate advocates for access to libraries in prison.

Book Adaptations in the News

Jo Nesbo’s dark corporate thriller Headhunters is being turned into a TV series.

The Infamous Frankie Lorde books by Brittany Geragotelis are getting a live-action film adaptation.

Banned & Challenged Books

ALA releases a statement on book censorship, as does the New York Library Association and the Kansas City Public Library.

ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom has tracked 155 censorship incidents since June 1st.

School libraries and controversial books: tips from the front lines.

A New Hampshire conservative group offers $500 for catching a teacher breaking the state’s recent Critical Race Theory law.

Wayne Township (CT) parents are pushing to remove Gender Queer from school shelves.

Riverbend High School (VA) students hold a protest against removing library books.

Harrisonburg City Public Schools (VA) superintendent Michael Richards pulls Gender Queer from high school shelves after receiving complaints from parents, even though the parents did not follow established protocol.

Schools across St. Louis face more attempts to remove books from library shelves.

Utah governor Spencer Cox says Utahns should “pump the brakes” over banning books in schools.

Canyons School District (UT) says its book review process is “problematic.”

Meanwhile, the ACLU of Utah issues a statement on book banning and censorship.

Educators in Utah urge parents not to call the police over “harmful” books in school libraries.

The DuBois Area School District (PA) says that it will make The Hate U Give available to middle school students with parental permission.

Johnston (IA) parents file a complaint to remove The Hate U Give and The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian.

Meanwhile, multiple Johnston activist groups are planning a protest against three newly elected board members, all of whom signed a pledge to “defeat toxic, CRT-inspired curriculum & restore honest, patriotic education.”

Muscatine (IA) parents discuss book banning at a recent school board meeting.

An Urbandale (IA) school committee will review the book Hey Kiddo in response to parental complaints.

A LaGrange (IL) resident read explicit passages from Monday’s Not Coming and All Boys Aren’t Blue at a recent high school board.

Proud Boys join the effort to ban Gender Queer in Downers Grove (IL) schools.

Central Kitsap School District (WA) officials are re-examining their decision to remove Gender Queer from library shelves.

The proposed book ban in McAllen, Texas will silence the LGBTQ+ community and authors, advocates say.

Texas education board chair discusses the ongoing fight over library books.

Georgia schools may soon face renewed challenges to “obscene” library materials in 2022.

The principal of Horizon High School in Phoenix is on leave amid controversy over the book So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed by Jon Ronson, which was assigned in an AP English class.

An Ohio small business owner launches a new banned book subscription series.

The Toronto school board lost the plot and misguidedly rejected these books.

Hong Kong public libraries purge 29 titles about the Tiananmen Massacre from the shelves.

What people miss in the conversation about banned books.

Critical race theory debates are drowning out learning experiences for students.

Here are the books parents want to ban in schools right now.

Libraries, and the books in them, must reflect the diversity of thought and values in their communities.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Books & Authors in the News

Stephen Sondheim, titan of the American musical, has died at 91.

(TW: rape) The rape conviction of Anthony Broadwater, who spent 16 years in prison for the 1982 rape of author Alice Sebold, was overturned on Monday. Sebold wrote about her attack and the subsequent legal proceedings in her memoir, Lucky, which is now being pulled from publication following Broadwater’s exoneration.

Former Trump Defense Secretary Mark Esper sues the Pentagon for blocking portions of his memoir.

Authors back Sally Rooney’s boycott of an Israeli publisher.

Award News

Barack Obama received his third Grammy nomination for Best Spoken Word Album. Here are the rest of the Grammy nominations.

The 2021 Costa Book Awards shortlists have been announced.

The New York Times wants readers to vote for the best book published in the last 125 years.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Reese Witherspoon’s book club opens its first pop-up bookstore in LA.

Tolkien’s estate has blocked a new “JRR Token” cryptocurrency on infringement of trademark rights.

Merriam-Webster’s word of the year is “vaccine.”

On the Riot

A librarian shares how to actually do your own research.

This former Carnegie library is for sale, and could be yours!

How to add a new book to Goodreads.

Booksloth review: is it worth ditching Goodreads?

What to do when you read a critical review of a book you loved, and it actually makes some good points?

How to set up your own mini reading intensive.

Mary Shelley’s former London apartment is for sale.

13 fun and creative book storage ideas.


Ugh. Did you wade through all of the book banning news again? Give yourself a gold star and take care of yourself this weekend! I’ll see you next week.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.