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Check Your Shelf

I’d Like a Double Bacon Cheeseburger With a Side of Maya Angelou

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. WE MADE IT. The inauguration proceeded normally, and there was joy, laughter, the best types of historical moments, Lady Gaga, and an unbelievable poetry reading. I wore pearls, a blazer, and my Nevertheless, She Persisted t-shirt to work from home today, and yes, I may have busted out my last mini bottle of prosecco at 11 in the morning so that I could toast my TV and weep into my glass. To paraphrase something I’ve seen on social media a LOT this week, I am overjoyed that the last four years are over, and saddened that the last four years happened at all.

It’s a new day, and a new administration. Let’s library.

One small note: Some of you may have received Tuesday’s newsletter on Thursday instead. No change is being made to the schedule, it was just a bloop!


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

A member of the New Orleans Public Library Board of Directors accused the library director of spreading misinformation about a recent attempt to significantly cut library funding.

The Big 10 libraries commit to managing their separate collections as a single collection, allowing individual libraries to focus on more distinctive collections and services.

BiblioBoard and Publishers Weekly‘s BookLife launch a new library ebook program for self-published authors.

YALSA names the 2021 Best Fiction for Young Adults.

These were the top ebook checkouts from the Austin Public Library in 2020.

Cool Library Updates

The Boston Public Library announces its new Repairing America initiative.

Bearded dragons make great library pets! (I agree! I’m not a big fan of reptiles, but here are a couple photos of me with my previous library’s resident dragon, Lizzie.)

Worth Reading

Are anti-racism book challenges on the rise?

Book Adaptations in the News

Netflix and Ibram X. Kendi are teaming up to adapt his anti-racism books.

The creators of You are adapting another Caroline Kepnes novel for TV.

Tessa Thompson’s new production company is producing an adaptation of Nnedi Okorafor’s Who Fears Death?

Amazon Studios is adapting Rachel Givney’s novel Jane in Love for film.

Keegan-Michael Key is starring in the upcoming adaptation of Stephen Mack Jones’ August Snow PI series.

The adaptation of Jennifer Mathieu’s YA novel Moxie is hitting Netflix on March 3rd.

Here’s the trailer for To All the Boys: Always and Forever, which will be the final film in the To All the Boys trilogy on Netflix. The Kissing Booth will also finish up on Netflix this year.

Trailer for Eleanor Catton’s The Luminaries.


Books & Authors in the News

David Weber is out of the hospital after being treated for COVID.


Numbers & Trends

Self-improvement books did very well at the beginning of the year.

This Tintin comic book art breaks auction record for most expensive comic book art at $3.1 million dollars.


Award News

PEN International awards the 2021 Award for Freedom of Expression to Tsitsi Dangarembga’s This Mournable Body.

Sisters in Crime unveil a new award for emerging LGBTQIA+ crime writers.


Pop Cultured

No Time to Die is moving its release date again from Easter weekend to sometime in the fall of this year.


Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

The Epilogue Kitchen in Salem, Oregon allows customers to add anti-racist books to their takeout orders.

The Brooklyn Book Bodega looks to fill Brooklyn with “100 book homes.”

Maya Angelou is the latest addition to the Barbie line of Inspiring Women dolls. Take a look at this doll, because it is GORGEOUS!

Ursula K. LeGuin gets her own postage stamp in 2021.

James Baldwin’s record collection is now a massive 478-track Spotify playlist!


On the Riot

I lost my dream job: keeping library vibes alive in hard times.

What alternatives are there to Goodreads?

What’s a radical bookstore?

How to handle fictional character deaths with kids. (Honestly, I think a lot of us adult readers could use some tips too…)


Alright, friends. The work is far from over, but please take a moment to let some of the weight from the last four years roll off your shoulders this weekend. I’ll leave you with the Mumford & Sons song I quoted on my sign at the Women’s March four years ago: “Didn’t they say that only love would win in the end?” Breathe, hydrate, and moisturize. And I’ll see you next week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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Check Your Shelf

Most Anticipated Books of 2021

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I know that libraries are supposed to be nonpartisan, but as a private citizen, let me just say that I will be very, very excited to see a certain high-ranking member of the federal government move out of his residence this week. Fingers crossed that we don’t have any more shenanigans, riots, coups, insurrections, or assassination attempts.


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The state of Connecticut is investigating Amazon’s ebook distribution and pricing.

Publishing industry members unite to block Trump administration book deals.

Powell’s responds to protests over Andy Ngo’s book.

Sourcebooks donated $200,000 from its 2021 Ruth Bader Ginsburg wall calendar to different organizations that RBG championed during her lifetime.

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Weekly posts its adult book announcements for Spring 2021.

Sally Rooney is publishing a new novel this fall.

Senator Amy Klobuchar has a new book coming out: Antitrust: Taking on Monopoly Power From the Gilded Age to the Digital Age.

Duchess Sarah Ferguson is publishing her first novel.

Billie Eilish announced an upcoming photobook with a narrated companion audiobook component.

Weekly book picks from Bustle, Buzz Feed, Crime Reads, LitHub, The Millions, New York Times, Shelf Awareness, and USA Today.

January picks from Amazon (mysteries, SFF, bio/memoir), Bitch Media, BookPage (cozy mysteries), O: Oprah Magazine, Pop Sugar (mysteries, romance, YA), and Tor.com (fantasy, science fiction, YA SFF).

Best SFF books of 2020.

Most Anticipated Books of 2021

Most anticipated picks from Amazon (true crime), Buzz Feed (two separate lists), Chicago Tribune, Electric Lit (poetry), Elle, Entertainment Weekly, Kirkus Reviews, The Millions, Nightfire (horror), NPR (poetry), Parade, and Tor.com.

Keep an eye on these authors this spring.

R.O. Kwon shares 43 books by women of color to read in 2021.

Upcoming YA books by Black authors that you need to read.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

That Old Country Music: Stories – Kevin Barry (New York Times, NPR)

The Crooked Path to Abolition: Abraham Lincoln and the Antislavery Constitution – James Oakes (New York Times, USA Today)

Aftershocks – Nadia Owusu (New York Times, NPR)

Yellow Wife – Sadeqa Johnson (Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

The rise of apocalyptic and climate fiction.

California crime writers discuss police, fires, pandemic, proposition politics, and the future of crime fiction.

Where to start with Octavia Butler’s books.

On the Riot

It’s our most-anticipated books of 2021!

24 must-read 2021 books in translation.

A history of anti-racist literature.

A study in detective duos.

Why locked room murder mysteries are the bomb.

Reading pathways for Cassandra Clare.


All Things Comics

YALSA picks its 2021 Great Graphic Novels for Teens.

On the Riot

9 graphic memoirs and true stories by women.

A reading list to pair with Wonder Woman: 1984.


Audiophilia

Best new mysteries to try on audio.

On the Riot

8 of the best audiobooks narrated by Nancy Wu.

Best earphones for audiobooks. (Based on personal experience, I’m going to guess that my current earbuds are NOT on this list…)


Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

10 series for fans of Dav Pilkey.

Adults

6 books to understand this precarious political moment.

18 #OwnVoices books to help you better understand disability and chronic illness.

17 money management books.

7 Caribbean books to add to your TBR.

12 historical novels to read based on your pandemic hobby.

10 of the best books by the late Eric Jerome Dickey.

6 disorienting reads for a very disorienting time.

On the Riot

10 books like Mulan for kids.

8 memorable middle grade books about grief.

3 YA books for fans of Bridgerton.

6 informative books for queer teenagers.

15 books by and about the Bidens (including Major and Champ!)

Books by and about Madame Vice President-elect Kamala Harris for readers of all ages.

Read Harder: a book set in the Midwest, a children’s book that centers a disabled character but not their disability, a book of nature poetry, a historical fiction novel with a POC or LGBTQ+ protagonist.

Learn your historia with these 20 books about Mexican history.

10 books to help you get through Dry January.

The best books about World War I.

The best personal-growth books for becoming your best self.

Best beach reads, for those of you already looking ahead to summer.

9 diverse romantic comedies to leave you smiling.

Books to read while you wait for Season 2 of Russian Doll.

10 books that take place in a desolate landscape.

15 books about family secrets.

Pottery books for beginners.

12 of the best machine learning books for beginners.


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 all on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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Check Your Shelf

Will the West Hollywood Library Become the Ruth Bader Ginsburg Library?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I feel like Sebastian in The Little Mermaid right now: “The human world…is a mess.”


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The insurrection in DC forced the Library of Congress to evacuate and the DC Public Library to close early. Meanwhile, ALA issues a tepid response to the insurrection that makes mention of property destruction and looting but somehow fails to mention white supremacy.

UNISON, the largest union in the UK, calls for UK libraries to stay completely closed to protect library workers.

Baltimore will pay almost $200,000 to female Enoch Pratt Free Library employees following a federal discrimination lawsuit.

The Indianapolis Public Library goes fine free.

The West Hollywood City Council approved a measure to rename the West Hollywood Library after the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

OverDrive reports a surge in digital library lending in 2020.

Amazon quietly shut down its Kindle Owners’ Lending Library feature, although they did report that a new feature will be taking its place.

Cool Library Updates

This traveling pop-up library exclusively offers books written by Black women.

Baltimore County Library is fundraising for a first-of-its-kind vehicle to bring free legal services to communities.

The NYPL just unrolled a Dial-a-Story service where you can call and hear a librarian read a children’s book in English, Spanish, or Mandarin.

How to take advantage of passive reader’s advisory strategies with your curbside services.

The unexpected joys of Little Free Libraries.

Worth Reading

Meet the Southern librarians fighting for racial justice and truth-telling.

A call to action for academic librarians.

Food, shelter, and the public library.

Where fantasy meets reality: the magic of libraries.


Book Adaptations in the News

Netflix is doing a second adaptation of The Lincoln Lawyer as a series.

Lashana Lynch is reported to play Miss Honey in the upcoming Matilda reboot.

Casting update for The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight.

Tiffany Haddish will star in an upcoming adaptation of Landscape With Invisible Hand by M.T. Anderson.

Clancy Brown will play the villain in the upcoming Dexter revival.

Casting update for the reboot of I Know What You Did Last Summer.

Film rights for Richard Powers’ upcoming novel Bewilderment have been picked up.

Trailer for the adaptation of Cherry by Nico Walker.


Books & Authors in the News

Best-selling author Eric Jerome Dickey has died at age 59.

A Virginia couple has filed to overturn a lower court’s decision not to remove The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo from a high school curriculum.

Powell’s Books closed early on Monday and Tuesday following protests regarding its announcement that it would still sell Andy Ngo’s upcoming book Unmasked: Inside Antifa’s Radical Plan to Destroy Democracy online.

Harry Turtledove reported on Twitter that fellow scifi author David Weber is in the hospital with COVID.

These authors talked about what it was like to release a book during a pandemic.

Also, please stop comparing things to 1984.


Numbers & Trends

Not surprisingly, A Promised Land was the best-selling book of 2020. And if you’re curious, these were the 40 best-selling books of 2020, according to the New York Times Best Seller List.

Bridgerton broke Netflix records in December by bringing in 63 million viewers.


Award News

The 2020 Costa Book Awards have been announced.

Here’s the 2021 Canada Reads longlist.


Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

If you need healing in the new year (and let’s be real – I think all of us do at this point), there’s a new Philadelphia-based hotline that offers free hopeful poetry from Philadelphia-connected poets to anyone who calls. Read more here on hope and support in the Philly book scene.

Good Housekeeping and Duchess Camilla Parker Bowles have both launched new book clubs.

MTV Books is getting a relaunch.

The Royal Mint released a commemorative £2 coin in honor of H.G. Wells, but fans have already spotted several errors in the design.


On the Riot

If you ever wanted to own a former community library, well, your time has come!

Little Free Libraries across all seven continents.

Unusual libraries from around the world.

A very brief history of reading.

Analyzing Tumblr’s year in review in books.

Help manage your 2021 TBR with these reading apps.

Bullet journal supplies for book lovers in 2021. Plus Rioter’s favorite 2021 planners.

Using neuroscience to explain reading slumps.


That’s it for me this week. Fingers crossed nothing monumental or history-making occurs over the weekend. Wishing you nothing but bountiful snuggles from your favorite furry companions.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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Check Your Shelf

Josh Hawley’s Upcoming Book is Canceled, Collection Developers Everywhere Sigh in Relief

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m starting off this week in a fog of anger, fear, and frustration, and it just boggles my mind that everyone in the US is just expected to continue working and going about their business after everything that’s happened. I wasn’t onsite at my library after the attack at the Capitol, but I can only imagine the types of patron questions we might be getting this week.


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Simon & Schuster has canceled Senator Josh Hawley’s upcoming book following the deadly insurrection at the Capitol on January 6th.

Publishers Weekly launches a new virtual US book trade fair in May.

Indie bookshops in the UK and Ireland defy COVID to record their highest numbers in seven years.

The Guardian posted its annual literary calendar, with dates for big book releases, adaptations, literary festivals, award ceremonies, and more.

New & Upcoming Titles

Ausma Zehanat Khan announces a new crime series!

I don’t usually feature cover reveals on here, but I took one look at the cover of Bethany C. Morrow’s upcoming spin on Little Women, called So Many Beginnings, and I HAD to share it! This is so unbelievably gorgeous!!

Lil Nax X put out a social media post asking fans to buy his children’s book C is For Country, and well, it worked!

Weekly book picks from Buzz Feed, Crime Reads, New York Times, Publishers Weekly, Shelf Awareness, and USA Today.

January book picks from Amazon, Bustle, Crime Reads (psychological suspense), Good Morning America, io9 (SFF), Lambda Literary, and Town & Country.

The Best Books of 2020 are still trickling in from Bustle (romance), Elle, Locus (speculative fiction in translation), NYPL (baseball), Publishers Weekly, and The Rumpus.

Best 2020 books by women of color.

Most anticipated books of 2021 from Amazon (SFF, true crime), Autostraddle (LGBTQ & feminist picks), Bookmarks (SFF), Buzz Feed (fantasy, LGBTQ YA), Cosmopolitan (YA), Crime Reads, Electric Lit (debuts, books by women of color), Entertainment Weekly, Epic Reads (YA), Essence, Kirkus, Lit Hub, Nerdist, Riveted Lit (YA), Seattle Times, Star Tribune, and Vulture.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Prophets – Robert Jones, Jr. (New York Times, USA Today, Washington Post)

Outlawed – Anna North (NPR, USA Today, Washington Post)

The Liar’s Dictionary – Eley Williams (New York Times, NPR)

Black Buck – Mateo Askaripour (Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

The best way to read John le Carré’s George Smiley books.

On the Riot

10 YA books from January 2021 to put on your TBR, plus more upcoming YA picks for this winter.

Why James Baldwin should be considered required reading.

Reading picks from the new weird genre.

A guide to the Bridgerton books.

Readalikes for Haruki Murakami.


All Things Comics

On the Riot

The best comics that Rioters read October – December 2020.


Audiophilia

Library Journal picks the best audiobooks of 2020.

AudioFile announces the winners of the January Earphone Awards.

5 audiobooks for new beginnings.

On the Riot

6 audiobooks to help you out of your post-holiday reading slump.


Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

150+ kids books by/for/about Latinx people coming out in 2021.

9 chapter books for fourth graders.

Adults

NYPL put together reading recommendations for the 2021 Read Harder Challenge!

10 crime novels now in the public domain.

Books that find joy in everyday life.

5 recent books with superpowered characters.

12 self-improvement books so good, you’ll want to read them twice.

5 books on climate change.

On the Riot

The best books Rioters read from October – December.

Read Harder: A book by or about a non-Western leader, an #OwnVoices YA book with a Black main character that isn’t about Black pain, an #OwnVoices book about disability, a memoir by a Latinx author, and a realistic YA book not set in the US, UK, or Canada.

The most recommended books from Get Booked in 2020.

5 fiction books to make you really mad about capitalism.

What to read after marathoning Bridgerton on Netflix.

What to read after you’ve been let down by Cyberpunk 2077.

6 Black indie SFF authors you should be reading.

10 nonfiction books on friendship for adults.

The most popular books on TikTok.

A reading list to pair with Wonder Woman: 1984.

The Rory Gilmore reading list.


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.

Not quite sure how to close the newsletter this week, other than take care of yourselves, and don’t worry if work feels like the absolute last thing you can do right now. I’ll catch you on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading These Women by Ivy Pochoda.

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Check Your Shelf

If You Need a Break From Insurrection Updates, Here’s Some News About Libraries

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m writing this newsletter as more information pours in about Wednesday’s armed insurrection in Washington DC, and I’m struggling so hard to focus on anything library or work-related right now, and I imagine everyone else is as well. So, here’s a list of library-related news articles that can hopefully act as a distraction for you. If not, they’ll be here when you’re ready to focus on literally anything else.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

First Lady Dr. Jill Biden will be speaking at the 2021 ALA virtual Midwinter Meeting.

Many of you have probably seen this already, but NetGalley announced that they were hacked on December 23rd.

Cool Library Updates

The American Indian Library Association announces their Read Native 2021 challenge.

Milwaukee’s “Book Fairy” has donated thousands of books to Little Free Libraries.

These were the most borrowed books of 2020 in New York City.

Worth Reading

Why soaring ebook checkouts are worrying libraries. And as an interesting companion piece, a look at ebook licensing for school libraries.

Ways to get kids more excited about reading.


Book Adaptations in the News

A producer working on the Netflix adaptation of The Three-Body Problem was poisoned in an alleged murder plot. ** insert spit take here **

Netflix settled with the Conan Doyle estate over their lawsuit against the Enola Holmes movie.

Samuel L. Jackson is starring in Apple+ TV’s adaptation of Walter Mosley’s The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey.

Lydia Millet’s A Children’s Bible is being turned into a limited series.

His Only Wife by Peace Adzo Medie is going to get an adaptation.

On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous is getting a film adaptation.

Frances McDormand is producing and starring in the adaptation of Women Talking by Miriam Toews.

Blumhouse Productions is developing a sequel to The Exorcist. I have…well, I have some feelings about this.

Casting update for the Game of Thrones prequel.

JJ Abrams’ Bad Robot Productions has optioned the rights to Burn by Patrick Ness.

Charlie Mackesy forms his own production company and teams up with Bad Robot to adapt an animated short of his award-winning book, The Boy, the Mole, the Fox, and the Horse.

Noomi Rapace will star in a gender-swapped film adaptation of Hamlet.

Jennifer Lopez is producing and starring in an adaptation of Isabella Maldonado’s book, The Cipher.

There’s going to be a Little House On the Prairie reboot.

The Flight Attendant has been renewed for a second season with HBO Max.

His Dark Materials gets a third and final season at HBO.

Locke and Key gets another two seasons with Netflix.

Here are trailers for the Netflix adaptations of Shadow and Bone and The White Tiger.


Books & Authors in the News

A Black teenager was expelled from his elite private high school after his mother complained about his English class reading the play “Fences” by August Wilson.

Multiple authors across different franchises have said that they haven’t received any royalty money after Disney acquired multiple properties in 2012.

Shirley Jackson’s son uncovered an unpublished short story by his mother called “Adventure on a Bad Night.” The story has been published in The Strand Magazine.

Roxane Gay is starting a book club in 2021!

February 18th has been named Toni Morrison Day in Ohio.

Take a peek at all of the books that are now officially in the public domain.


Numbers & Trends

Publishers say that “the Trump bubble is already starting to deflate.”

OverDrive gives us a look at the top ebooks and digital audiobooks borrowed from public libraries in 2020.

Will we see an increase in illustrated novels in the future?


Award News

All of the award-winning novels of 2020.

Here are the longlists for the 2021 PEN America Literary Awards.


Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

The Teen Reader Society, a new nonprofit organization, will donate free books to children who were directly affected by the West Coast wildfires.

“I’ve never felt less festive”: the art of writing Christmas novels, 365 days a year.

Debunking the myth of “real reading.”

It’s okay if you didn’t read this year.


On the Riot

A social media strategy for libraries.

A Little Free Library walking tour of this writer’s neighborhood.

6 historical libraries that were tragically destroyed.

25 book-to-movie adaptations to look forward to in 2021.

A collection of different 2021 reading challenges from across the Internet.

Book Riot contributors talk about their biggest bookish achievements in 2020.

This Book Riot contributor talks about working at an Illinois Barnes & Noble. As a frequent shopper at multiple Barnes & Nobles in Illinois, I appreciate this.

My Goodreads TBR is my biography.

Music to listen to while reading.

How and why to spring clean your digital book clutter.


Solidarity to anyone in or near DC who has had a much more immediate experience of this week’s chaos. Stay hydrated, everyone.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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Check Your Shelf

Best January Titles to Purchase For Your Library

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, and welcome to a brand new year! I hope everyone had a safe and relaxing holiday. I did my best to bring some positive energy into 2021 by syncing up the drum solo from “In the Air Tonight” to play at exactly midnight on New Year’s, so…hope it helps!

I’m not thrilled about going back to a regular work schedule, but c’est la vie. Let’s take a look at what we missed over the last couple weeks.


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Edelweiss announced the launch of Edelweiss BookFest, a virtual event scheduled to take place at the beginning of June. This is supposed to temporarily fill the gap left behind by Book Expo.

A look at the bizarre phishing scam within the publishing industry, which targets unpublished manuscripts.

Here’s a recap of the turbulent publishing protests in 2020.

Are publishing diversity efforts starting to kick in?

Business was actually good for publishers in 2020.

The weirdest book news from 2020.

New & Upcoming Titles

8 books from 2020 that best captured the mood of the year.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads and Shelf Awareness.

January picks from Barnes & Noble, Entertainment Weekly, Epic Reads (YA), New York Times, Time, and Washington Post.

Best Books of 2020

Best books of 2020 from The Atlantic, Bustle, CBS News, HuffPost, and Vogue.

Crime Reads picks the best traditional mysteries, historical mysteries, and international mysteries of 2020.

Best romance novels.

Children’s publishers share their favorite books of 2020.

Best indie books.

Best cookbooks.

Best foodie fiction.

Best Canadian books.

From Lambda Literary staff: the books that helped them manage 2020.

LitHub and indie booksellers recommend the best under-the-radar books of the year.

And finally…everything you need to know about 2020’s biggest and best reads.

Most Anticipated Books of 2021

Most anticipated books of 2021 from AARP (nonfiction), Amazon (mysteries & thrillers), Barnes & Noble, Book Marks (books in translation), Bustle, Datebook, The Guardian (fiction and nonfiction), Pop Sugar, Seattle Times, Time, and Vogue.

What to read in 2021, based on your favorite books of 2020.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Prophets – Robert Jones Jr. (Entertainment Weekly, LA Times)

Bedeviled: A Shadow History of Demons in Science – Jimena Canales (Washington Post)

The Wrong Family – Tarryn Fisher (USA Today)

Nick – Michael Farris Smith (Washington Post)

On the Riot

10 under-the-radar fantasy & science fiction books from 2020.

Reading pathways for Jay Kristoff.

Why queer holiday stories are necessary.

This reader has conflicting feelings about reading what everyone else is reading (and I imagine that a lot of librarians feel the same way from time to time).


All Things Comics

10 best comics of 2020.

On the Riot

10 queer comics and manga that made 2020 bearable.


Audiophilia

23 audiobooks that were really popular in 2020.

Best audiobooks of the year.

12 best-selling audiobooks across genres.

On the Riot

8 of the best poetry audiobooks performed by their authors.


Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

18 YA mystery books like One of Us is Lying.

Adults

Writers recommend books that Joe Biden should read.

Angela Davis and other radical reading suggestions for 2021.

8 novels about female superheroes.

On the Riot

14 of the best books about unions, organizing, and American labor.

8 books to pair with your favorite gentle reality TV shows.

5 short books to help you finish that Goodreads reading challenge (or start your new one).

Read Harder: a book with a cover you don’t like, a romance by a trans and/or nonbinary author, a work of investigative nonfiction by an author of color, and a food memoir by an author of color.

15 weed books that illuminate, demystify, and celebrate cannabis.

6+ books to teach you about Judaism.

10 books on architecture for non-architects.


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.


Use that new year energy to stay hydrated and moisturized! I’ll catch you all on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently Muppet-arming about Solutions and Other Problems by Allie Brosh. (So mother-forking funny!!)

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Check Your Shelf

Say Good Riddance to 2020 and Hello to 2021

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. This is going to be the last issue of Check Your Shelf until after the New Year, so I’m just going to say GOOD RIDDANCE 2020, YOU WILL NOT BE MISSED. And since this hasn’t been my greatest year in terms of reading and books, I’ve done a lot of reflecting on the little (non-bookish) things that got me through this year. So here’s a shoutout to all of the episodes of Mystery Science Theater 3000 and Rifftrax that I watched over and over, the True Facts guy on YouTube who kept me entertained while I struggled through basic household chores, and the Chicken Lemon Orzo soup at Corner Bakery when I needed to eat but couldn’t fathom making anything for myself. Also, here’s possibly the cutest photo we’ve taken of Houdini to date.

So now, let’s talk books!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Publisher’s Weekly names “The Book Business Worker” as its 2020 Person of the Year.

Jay-Z’s Roc Nation launches a new publishing imprint with Random House.

A look at some of the biggest publishing news stories in 2020.

New & Upcoming Titles

Colson Whitehead’s next book, Harlem Shuffle, will be a heist novel!

Elizabeth Warren’s new book, Persist, will be out in April of next year.

Titan Books is publishing an anthology of stories inspired by Shirley Jackson, which will include submissions from horror authors like Paul Tremblay and Josh Malerman.

New books about artificial intelligence.

9 new poetry collections that highlight the diversity of Latinx identity.

Some of the best recent sci-fi and fantasy novels in translation.

Weekly book picks from Booklist Reader, Bustle, Crime Reads, New York Times, and Shelf Awareness.

Best books of December from Bitch Media (feminist picks), and Tor.com (horror/genre bending novels).

Most anticipated books of 2021 from Amazon, BuzzFeed (historical fiction), Epic Reads, The Rumpus, and USA Today.

Best Books of 2021

The ULTIMATE Best Books List of 2020.

Best books of 2020 from the Asian American Writer’s Workshop, AV Club, Book Marks, (fiction and nonfiction), BookPage, BuzzFeed, The Guardian, Jezebel, Lit Hub, Town & Country, USA Today, Vox, Vulture, and Wired.

Best book covers of 2020.

Best mystery & crime books from Book Marks and Crime Reads (noir fiction, debuts, gothic fiction, psychological thrillers, true crime, and espionage fiction).

Best romance novels.

Best YA novels.

Best books by indie presses.

Best books in translation.

Best queer books.

Best poetry.

Best comedy books.

Best cookbooks.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

A Certain Hunger – Chelsea G. Summers (LA Times, Washington Post)

Red Hands – Christopher Golden (Washington Post)

Worked Over: How Round-the-Clock Work is Killing the American Dream – Jamie K. McCallum (Washington Post)

Stakes is High: Life After the American Dream – Mychal Denzel Smith (Washington Post)

Expedition Deep Ocean: The First Descent to the Bottom of All Five Oceans – Josh Young (Washington Post)

On the Riot

13 great Fall 2020 books in translation.

Best positive thinking books of 2020.

Dark mood reading that’s working for this reader.

All Things Comics

Kent State: Four Dead in Ohio by Derf Backderf is named the best graphic novel of the year by Publishers Weekly critics.

Best-reviewed graphic literature of 2020 from Book Marks.

Audiophilia

Best audiobooks of 2020 from Slate and Washington Post.

5 family mystery audiobooks to share.

Great holiday audiobooks for young readers.

8 audiobooks you’ll love as much as their adaptations.

Audiobooks with animal narrators.

On the Riot

8 of the best audiobooks narrated by Emily Woo Zeller.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

8 interactive books to entertain your restless young reader.

14 YA releases to catch up on before their sequels drop in 2021.

The ultimate cozy YA books for cold winter days.

Adults

22 authors on the books that gave them hope in 2020.

USA Today contributors list the books that got them through this year.

23 modern SFF twists on classic stories.

5 books about the world after the end of the world.

11 dark academia books.

On the Riot

15 great English/Spanish books for kids.

Barack Obama’s favorite books of 2020.

Read Harder: A SFF anthology written by a person of color, a middle grade mystery, a fat-positive romance, a work of fanfiction, a genre novel by an Indigenous, First Nations, or Native American author.

8 gritty thrillers to keep you turning the pages.

11 of the best holiday horror novels.

15 books like Taylor Swift’s Evermore for your winter reading list.

15 of the best historical fiction series.

10 space books to read so the Galactic Federation will talk to us.

8 intergenerational family sagas to dig into this winter.

5 memoirs in verse by amazing women writers.

8 books about magical and mysterious libraries.

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.

I have to believe that 2021 will be better than this year. Stay safe and healthy this holiday, and I will see you all in January!

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Enough Adaptation News to Tide You Over Till 2021

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Let’s get right to it, because this newsletter is virtually exploding with adaptation news.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

A board meeting for the Lincoln Parish Public Library turned into a heated debate as parents expressed concern about the library including books with LGBTQ+ themes in the children’s section.

Worth Reading

The impact of COVID-19 on academic libraries.

Dreaming about the ideal library.

Book Adaptations in the News

Scott Frank, co-creator of The Queen’s Gambit, is working on three new projects involving book adaptations.

The Diary of a Wimpy Kid series will be adapted for Disney+.

Rebecca F. Kuang’s fantasy series beginning with The Poppy War is going to be adapted for TV.

Kid Cudi is producing and starring in the adaptation of Brandon Taylor’s novel, Real Life.

Julia Roberts is starring in a limited series based on the forthcoming book The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura Dave.

HBO is looking at a True Blood reboot.

Apple is reportedly looking at an adaptation of Blake Crouch’s thriller, Dark Matter.

Megan Abbott’s Dare Me is coming to Netflix on December 29th.

Amazon is developing an unscripted docuseries and a scripted series based on Jessica Simpson’s memoir Open Book.

Range Media and CrichtonSun are partnering to develop several adaptations based on Michael Crichton’s work.

Elizabeth Acevedo’s Clap When You Land is getting a TV adaptation.

A four-part BBC series based on Kate Atkinson’s Life After Life is in the works.

Netflix UK is going to adapt Stuart Turton’s The 7 ½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, which is actually titled The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle in Britain.

UK producer Arrow Media has optioned both Chasing Cosby: The Downfall of America’s Dad by Nicole Weisensee Egan and The Girl: A Life in the Shadow of Roman Polanski by Samantha Geimer. Both will reportedly be turned into documentary series.

Hulu renewed The Handmaid’s Tale for a fifth season.

Trailers for Clarice, A Discovery of Witches Season 2, Nomadland, and Bridgerton.


Books & Authors in the News

A conservative youth group will offer Burbank students free copies of the five books that were recently challenged as required reading materials in the school district.

Literary giant John le Carré has passed away at age 89.

Douglas Stuart has partnered with the Streetreads initiative to donate 300 copies of Shuggie Bain to people experiencing homelessness in Edinburgh.


Numbers & Trends

The most popular & purchased books of 2020 by Amazon customers.

What – and how – people were reading during the pandemic, according to the CEO of OverDrive.

The most popular romantic novels from the last six decades.


Award News

The winners of the Children’s and Teen Choice Book Award have been announced.


Pop Cultured

Yeah, Disney just announced a LOT of new upcoming projects.


Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A multi-million dollar book heist from 2017 has been solved.


On the Riot

YA book adaptations due out next year.

Saddle Up & Read improves kids’ literacy, one farm trip at a time.

11 ideas to tackle as 2021 reading goals.

Why this reader is joining Instagram book clubs.

How reading helps this writer with writer’s block.


That’s all for me, folks. Stay fed, hydrated, and moisturized!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Best Books of 2020 to Keep You Occupied Until 2021

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Last week during a down moment in a Zoom meeting, I looked to the side and said something to one of my cats, who was in the chair next to me. When I looked back at the screen, a coworker was looking at me strangely, and I realized that she couldn’t see the cat, and was slightly puzzled as to why I had just called her “Doodlebug.” So…that was my week last week. Let’s hope for a better one.

Also, here’s a video of said Doodlebug exploring the wonders of the Christmas tree for the first time.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The Tattered Cover bookstore in Denver was recently announced as the largest Black-owned bookstore in the country, but that messaging has met with a lot of criticism from Black booksellers.

Will the latest publishing mega-merger kill off small presses and literary diversity?

Just how white is the publishing industry?

New & Upcoming Titles

Bob Woodward is publishing another book about the Trump presidency.

Rachel Howzell Hall has a new book coming out!

Helene Wecker announces a sequel to The Golem and the Jinni, called The Hidden Palace, which comes out in June.

Zoraida Cordova’s debut adult novel, The Inheritance of Orquidea Divinia, will be released next year.

Seanan McGuire will have four more books coming from Tordotcom.

Kellyanne Conway has reportedly received a multi-million dollar deal for an upcoming memoir.

Melania Trump’s White House memoir may be a coffee table book.

5 recent books about the climate crisis.

November romance picks.

Weekly book picks from Booklist Reader, BuzzFeed, Crime Reads, New York Times, Shelf Awareness, and USA Today.

December picks from Amazon (mystery/thriller, biography/memoir), BookPage (mystery/thriller, romance), and Tor.com (fantasy, science fiction, YA SFF).

Most-anticipated books for 2021 from AARP, O: Oprah Magazine (general picks, romance), and Tor.com (SFF).

Best Books of 2020

Best books of the year from Electric Lit, Entertainment Weekly, LA Times, LitHub, People, Slate, Vanity Fair, Vulture, and Wall Street Journal.

Best books of 2020, as selected by a panel of guest authors for The Guardian.

Best overlooked books of 2020.

Best crime novel picks (Crime Reads, New York Times, and Wall Street Journal)

Best historical fiction from the New York Times.

Best science fiction, fantasy, and horror (LitHub, Wall Street Journal)

Best short story collections (Bookmarks, Chicago Review of Books, Electric Lit)

Best LGBTQ books (New York Public Library, Shondaland)

Best nonfiction picks from Bookmarks (biographies/memoirs, poetry collections), Electric Lit, Kirkus (general nonfiction, biographies, memoirs, music), LitHub (essay collections), Smithsonian Magazine (history, travel, food), Wall Street Journal (political), and Wired (science).

Best children’s books from Read Brightly, Smithsonian Magazine, and Wall Street Journal.

Best YA fiction, and best speculative YA fiction (BuzzFeed, Tor.com)

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Purpose of Power: How To Come Together When We Fall Apart – Alicia Garza (Washington Post)

Crosshairs – Catherine Hernandez (USA Today)

Bag Man: The Wild Crimes, Audacious Cover-Up and Spectacular Downfall of a Brazen Crook in the White House – Rachel Maddow & Michael Yarvitz (New York Times)

The Blade Between – Sam J. Miller (NPR)

On the Riot

The best books you’ve never heard of: Winter 2020.

6 strategies for recommending books to friends so they’ll actually read them.

Reading pathways for Holly Black.

All Things Comics

Ava DuVernay is adapting DC’s Naomi for the CW.

Best graphic novels of 2020.

Best new comics for December 2020.

Why are so many comics creators going to Kickstarter instead of publishers?

On the Riot

15 graphic novels for the middle grade reader on your shopping list.

Audiophilia

Audible’s 10 best audiobooks of 2020.

AudioFile has more best-of lists for 2020: fiction; romance; mystery & suspense; scifi, fantasy, & horror; kids & family; and young adult.

12 reasons to gift audiobooks.

On the Riot

6 summer audiobooks for readers in the southern hemisphere.

18 of the best horror audiobooks to extend the haunting season.

Balancing audiobooks and podcasts during quarantine.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Best Jewish children’s books of 2020.

Adults

Bill Gates picks 5 books for a lousy year.

10 books that will connect you in a socially distant year.

23 discussion-ready books for your next book club meeting.

8 fat-positive queer books.

14 cozy holiday romances.

6 mysteries that prove you really can’t go home again.

9 books about Krampus and other holiday horrors.

18 books to read at home over holiday break.

16 books about Princess Diana that pull back the curtain.

5 books about the horror of winter.

On the Riot

10 inclusive children’s holiday books for the most wonderful storytimes of the year.

13 fantastic books about East Asian American kids.

10 middle grade books teens want you to read right now.

10 excellent short stories for high school students.

5 YA books about teens who travel (when you can’t).

Read Harder suggestions: a LGBTQ+ history book, a non-European novel in translation, a book about anti-racism, a book you’ve been intimidated to read.

15 books about Appalachia to read instead of Hillbilly Elegy.

10 books like The House in the Cerulean Sea.

25 must-read books about Buddhism.

Women writing about women: must-read memoirs, biographies, and autobiographies.

11 of the best books about artificial intelligence.

7 books to get you through unemployment.

5 food novels by Southeast Asian women writers.

5 books for an introduction to disability history in the US.

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.

Let’s keep stumbling towards the new year, everyone. Stay hydrated and moisturized!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Drag Queen Story Hour Helps Children Grow

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Is anyone else counting down till December 22nd, when the days start getting longer again? I’m almost more excited for extra daylight than I am for Christmas, and I think that just about sums up 2020 for me.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Amazon Publishing is reportedly in talks to offer ebook access to public libraries.

Allegheny County Jail has reversed its policy banning book delivery to its incarcerated population. For a deeper look, check out this article about the hidden history of the Allegheny County Jail Library.

A look at how Chicago-area libraries have decided whether to stay open or close their doors to the public.

The investigation into the Douglas County Library’s public statement supporting Black Lives Matter has revealed that no library policies were violated.

A Louisiana library has pulled the LGBTQ books from its children’s section.

Cool Library Updates

This Georgia library set up a drive-through food pantry that helped 370 families.

The Canadian government has provided $34.5 million in net zero carbon funding to the facility that will house Library and Archives Canada, as well as the Ottawa Public Library.

How drag queen story hour is helping children grow during the pandemic.

The Books to Go program in West Ottawa Public Schools has helped students stay connected with their school libraries.

Worth Reading

Funding and book borrowing are on the decline at UK libraries.

Librarians will miss BookExpo.

Library books: a small antidote to a life of perpetual dissatisfaction.


Book Adaptations in the News

Memorial Drive: A Daughter’s Memoir by Natasha Trethewey is being developed as a drama series for Sony.

Shuggie Bain will likely be developed into a TV series.

The Other Passenger by Louise Candlish will be developed into a film.

Ring Shout by P. Djéli Clark is being turned into a series.

Hulu has a Hardy Boys reboot series that you can stream now.

Showtime has already snagged screen rights to journalist John Heilemann’s upcoming book about Joe Biden’s campaigns.

Trailer for Season 3 of American Gods.


Books & Authors in the News

Jason Reynolds is awesome. On Giving Tuesday, he bought up all of his books from Washington D.C. bookstores and told readers to go pick them up for free.

Pulitzer-winning novelist Alison Lurie has died at age 94.

Roald Dahl’s family has apologized for his anti-Semitism, thirty years after his death.


Numbers & Trends

Publishers are seeing sales spikes for chess books following the success of The Queen’s Gambit.

Not surprisingly, in-house sales for bookstores are down, but online sales are WAY up.


Award News

The 2020 Goodreads Choice Awards winners have been announced.

The Science Fiction Writers of America have named Nalo Hopkinson as the 37th Damon Knight Grand Master.

Raven Leilani wins the Center for Fiction’s 2020 First Novel Prize for Luster.

Attica Locke wins the Staunch Book Prize for Heaven, My Home.

Barnes & Noble selects World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments by Aimee Nezhukumatathil and Fumi Nakamura as their 2020 Book of the Year.

The Literary Review has canceled its annual Bad Sex in Fiction award, saying that people have been through too many bad things this year.


Pop Cultured

Warner Brothers will release all of their 2021 movies in theaters and on HBO Max simultaneously.

Universal is planning a new monster movie in the Van Helsing universe.

New trailer for Wonder Woman: 1984.


Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A campaign is underway to purchase J.R.R. Tolkien’s house and turn it into a museum, and the coolest part is that the campaign has been backed by Lord of the Rings actors Ian McKellan, Martin Freeman, and John Rhys-Davies!

A look at how book clubs have adapted during the pandemic.

Is it worse to steal books from a library or a bookstore? (PSST: DON’T STEAL BOOKS!)


On the Riot

It’s the 2021 Read Harder Challenge!! Plus our annual 2021 Reading Log!

The most popular under-the-radar books in US libraries from July to September.

The benefits of community reading programs.

A look at morality clauses within the literature and entertainment industries.

The pandemic tanked this person’s reading habits. (Don’t worry, it tanked mine too.)


Well, that’s a wrap folks. Stay warm, and keep your hands well-moisturized! The frequent hand washing and the winter weather have turned me into a lizard.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.