Categories
Check Your Shelf

Read Harder 2024!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I did an early Christmas with my immediate family, and I ended up dropping an accidental book recommendation (The Hunger by Alma Katsu) to my mom and my sister, neither of whom read horror. But when I casually mentioned a book “about something supernatural stalking the Donner Party,” both of them went, “Wait, what??” So that was a fun little gift I got to give! And maybe a gift I can give to some of you too…read the book, it’s awesome!

Are you looking for the perfect gift for that bookish special someone in your life this holiday season? Tailored Book Recommendations is here to help! Here at TBR, we pair our customers with a professional book nerd (aka bibliologist) who just gets them. They fill out a survey and then sit back and relax as we pick books just for them. We’ve got three levels — recs-only, paperback, and hardcover — and you can gift a full year or one time, so there are options for every budget! Get all the details at mybtro.com/gift

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

A roundup of the biggest book and publishing news stories from 2023.

A new group of authors allege that Meta used copyrighted books for AI training, despite its own lawyers’ warnings.

James Patterson has awarded $500 holiday bonuses to 600 indie bookstore employees across the country.

New & Upcoming Titles

Tiffany Haddish has a new “tell-all” book coming in 2024.

Jeffrey Deaver is coming out with a new series in 2024.

Olivia Dade has a new paranormal rom-com coming out in 2024, ZomRomCom, which is described as The Last of Us meets My Roommate is a Vampire.

Sophie Hannah has been tapped to write the next Hercule Poirot novel. ​​

Best books of 2023 from Autostraddle, CBC (fiction, nonfiction), Crime Reads (debut novels, espionage), Esquire (horror), Kirkus (YA), New York Times (cookbooks), Time (fiction, nonfiction), Tor.com, Vanity Fair, Washington Post (staff picks).

The best book covers of 2023.

Weekly picks from LitHub, New York Times.

December picks from People.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Alice Sadie Celine – Sarah Blakely-Cartwright (Star Tribune)

How to Be a Renaissance Woman: The Untold History of Beauty and Female Creativity – Jill Burke (Washington Post)

Oath and Honor: A Memoir and a Warning – Liz Cheney (Washington Post)

Airplane Mode: An Irreverent History of Travel – Shahnaz Habib (New York Times)

Prophet Song – Paul Lynch (NPR)

Let Us Descend – Jesmyn Ward (Guardian)

RA/Genre Resources

Amazon is rolling out a new feature that puts every book you’ve ever purchased on the site — whether it’s digital, physical, or audiobook — into a single searchable hub, which will also provide you with personalized recommendations.

Where to start with David Drake.

What makes a novel unique: on retellings and plagiarism.

A renaissance of gay literature marks a turning point for publishing.

On the Riot

It’s Book Riot’s Read Harder 2024 challenge!

36 exciting new book releases for 2024.

The best self-help books of 2024.

The best microhistories of 2023.

The best cute romances of 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Where to start with Tracey Livesay.

A case for all points of view.

Tips and tricks for doing a reading year-in-review.

What murder mysteries get wrong about gardens and poisonous plants.

All Things Comics

Twenty years after its publication, Joe Sacco’s graphic nonfiction book Palestine, has been rushed back into print due to demand.

Audiophilia

The final report for the 2023 Audiobook Survey from Library Journal, School Library Journal, and the Audio Publishers Association.

Remember what Spotify did to the music industry? Books are next.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

The most anticipated 2024 releases for picture books, middle grade/chapter books, and YA books.

16 YA books with Black male protagonists.

Adults

27 of the best etiquette books to read.

16 cozy fantasy novels.

15 high-flying fantasy novels with dragons.

15 books about pirates.

7 books that will make you rethink your relationship to nature.

10 novels by BIPOC Norwegian writers.

A NYC reading list that captures the city’s many sides.

5 SFF books set in the American South.

6 novels to read if you love Hallmark holiday movies.

Cozy holiday rom-coms to warm your heart.

6 mystery novels where everyone’s a suspect.

What to read next: Japanese literature edition.

On the Riot

8 of the best winter romances.

20 must-read historical fiction books set in Korea.

8 awesome book recs for Totally Killer ’80s slasher film fans.

10 cozy sci-fi books to give you hope for the future.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate as well that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

a black and white cat pawing at a lit Christmas tree

Guest photo from my parents’ house, where Groucho is having fun with his first Christmas tree. We’ll see how long it stays standing…

All right, friends, I’ll see you on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Never Call It A Book Ban

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I was in quarantine all last weekend, but I did get to come out of the bedroom (masked) to watch Adam Driver’s fourth hosting stint on SNL, and what a highlight it was! The Internet has been losing it over his skit as a baby on an airplane, but my personal favorite was the Midwestern dad in a passive-aggressive standoff at Christmas dinner. You’ll never hear (or say) “Beep beep” the same way again.

The holidays have arrived, and so has our new paperback level at TBR! If you (or a reader you know) are just over-carrying around bulky hardcovers or are looking for a more budget-friendly option, we’ve got you. Check out all the offerings at mybtro.com/gift, and give personalized reading recommendations customized for any and every reader.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Connecticut officials aim for first-in-the-nation action to address eBook costs.

An audit of the Multnomah County Library system (OR) showed that nearly 75% of frontline library staff feel unsafe at work.

Book Adaptations in the News

Killers of the Flower Moon isn’t for an Indigenous audience. It’s for the wolves.

The new trailer for Dune, Part 2 has just dropped.

Censorship News

Manufacturing problems with school and library books to cash in on solutions.

(Paywalled): The two new members of the Corpus Christi (TX) library board are affiliated with right-wing book banning groups.

The Graham City Council (TX) is considering whether or not to overturn the library board’s decision to retain We Need to Talk About Vaginas: An IMPORTANT Book About Vulvas, Periods, Puberty and Sex!, because a group of pastors complained to the city council.

Alachua County Schools (FL) have 13 active book challenges that were submitted by three parents in the district.

The review committee in Brevard County schools (FL) has recommended that Sold be restricted to high schoolers only.

Broward County Schools (FL) will retain the Bible.

“The New Hampshire Department of Education is heightening its scrutiny of books in libraries and classrooms, as schools continue to face pressure to remove titles that have LGBTQ+ characters or deal with mature or difficult sexual themes.” Yeah, not a good look, New Hampshire.

The newly appointed Central Bucks Board of School Directors, Karen Smith, was sworn into office Monday using a stack of banned books. [PA]

Residents in Worcester County (MD) are up in arms about the book All Boys Aren’t Blue.

A month after Hanover Public Schools (VA) removed 75 books from school libraries, the district is now reviewing two new titles: Valiant Ladies and the Bible.

Moore County Schools and Catawba County Schools (NC) will decide on the fate of their currently challenged books in 2024.

Berkeley County Schools (SC) spent thousands of dollars to purchase copies of several challenged books for a committee to review, and now the committee has been disbanded.

Beaufort County (SC) has finished reviewing all 97 challenged books and has removed five: Beautiful, The Haters, Nineteen Minutes, It Ends With Us, and Forever For a Year.

“Effingham County Commissioners [GA] and Live Oak Public Libraries officials met Monday night to discuss the content of certain books available in the libraries that, said one commissioner, could be ‘damaging to our children.’” Because the county commissioners are more knowledgeable than library employees.

Alabama governor Kay Ivey has proposed new rules that would restrict where libraries can shelve certain books, along with requiring advance approval to recommend, display, or promote material to children. Holy crap.

Last week, I shared a news item that the Foley Public Library (AL) relocated 11 books from the YA section to the adult section. Turns out that all 11 of those books were challenged by just one parent.

1819 News, a right-wing media group in Alabama, has taken it upon themselves to review books in the Orange Beach City school district that they think need to be removed. And the superintendent seems to be just fine with this.

“‘We are not book banners. We just want to have some kind of policy that can either label these books, segregate these books, have parental opt-out options, or in the event that some of them are too graphic—be removed from the schools.’” This is an actual quote from the Chair of the Knox County (TN) chapter of Moms for Liberty.

Wilson County Schools (TN) decided to keep Water for Elephants and The Lovely Bones on high school library shelves.

Sumner County Schools (TN) will retain the graphic novel Hey Kiddo. The parent who challenged the book said that it contained inappropriate language and premarital sex, but the review committee found no depictions of sex in the book.

A group of Iron River (WI) library patrons voiced their support for library employees and urged the board to respect the Constitution. There’s one current board member who has spoken out publicly against LGBTQ+ books available at the library.

The Brown County Library (WI) moved Let’s Talk About It from the teen section (where it belongs) to the adult section.

The Brainerd School Board (MN) will hear an appeal to their decision to retain Empire of Storms.

Superintendent Ryan Walters introduces new non-woke guidelines for Oklahoma libraries, and removes information literacy guidelines put out by ALA.

“‘In a state with the highest rate of domestic violence in the nation and a sexual assault rate that’s 45% higher than the national average, there are going to be students that live this experience and could benefit from seeing themselves represented in literature,’ said a parent.” This was at a recent Union school board meeting in Oklahoma in response to the book Lucky.

A conservative LGBTQ+ group in El Paso County (CO) supports the removal of “obscene” books from school libraries.

Laramie County School District 1 (WY) passed a controversial book policy despite public opposition.

“Dismissing words of caution from Community Library Network directors, a fellow trustee and without advice from library network legal counsel, the board majority unanimously approved drafts of its updated Materials Selection Policy and a new Materials Withdrawal and Reconsideration Policy during a special meeting Thursday at the Post Falls Library.” [ID]

After a failed first attempt to take control of the public library earlier in the year, the Liberty Lake City Council passed an ordinance that would give them some control over the library board’s policies.

“A conservative activist who teaches parents how to get books removed from school libraries has won her first major victory at a right-leaning Southern California school board, setting the district up for a fresh legal battle with the state.” And the first part of her advice to parents is to never use the term “book ban.”

A San Diego parent is “frustrated” that his 14-year-old was assigned The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian in class, even though the district says that parents can talk to the teacher to work out an alternate assignment for the student if they so choose. It doesn’t seem like this parent so chose.

Books & Authors in the News

Renowned producer, TV writer, and author Norman Lear has died at 101.

Best-selling author Tim Dorsey died earlier this month at 62.

Debut author Cait Corrain lost a book deal after she was accused of review-bombing other authors on Goodreads.

Numbers & Trends

Jane Austen’s annotated copy of Curiosities of Literature is up for auction and is expected to fetch up to $150,000.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

The Goodreads Choice Award winners have been announced.

Tyriek White wins the Center for Fiction’s 2023 First Novel Prize for We Are a Haunting.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Books as What We Do in the Shadows quotes. This is a thing of beauty.

On the Riot

How to build seasonal rereading rituals.

black and white cat squished up against a person's leg

Here’s Dini visiting me in Spaceship Quarantine. He absolutely refused to let me close the bedroom door, and honestly, how could you not feel better with such a squishy boy next to you??

All right, friends. It’s the weekend. Let’s get some rest and stay healthy!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Best Books of 2023

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Remember that bout of sniffles I mentioned in my last newsletter and how I hoped it wasn’t going to develop into anything too annoying? Welp, I tested positive for COVID the next day, so needless to say, it’s been very annoying. Thankfully, I only had one bad day where I felt like crap, but I still had to quarantine in the bedroom for five days. If you’ve seen The IT Crowd, this has been my husband’s reaction every time I come out to grab a drink. Mask up and get your boosters, people!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

6 non-obvious book publishing trends from 2023.

New & Upcoming Titles

Publishers Weekly has shared their Spring 2024 Adult Books Preview.

Cover reveal for Brandon Sanderson’s upcoming standalone novel, The Sunlit Man.

How to navigate this year’s “glut” of celebrity memoirs.

The best book covers of 2023.

Best books of 2023 from The Atlantic, CBC, Crime Reads, Economist, Electric Lit (fiction, nonfiction), Goodreads (staff picks), Guardian (politics), Kirkus (middle grade), LA Times, Library Journal, LitHub, New York Times (romance, SFF, thrillers, poetry, children’s books), Smithsonian, Time (nonfiction), Vogue, Vulture. (general, memoirs, comedy)

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

December/Winter 2023 picks from AARP, Bustle, Datebook, LitHub (SFF), Shondaland.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Oath and Honor: A Memoir and a Warning – Liz Cheney (The Hill, People)

Welcome Home, Stranger – Kate Christensen (Datebook, New York Times)

Rebecca, Not Becky – Catherine Wigginton Greene (Shondaland, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

It’s time to read Claire Keegan.

The enduring appeal of murder and mystery.

Where to start with Stephen King’s books.

On the Riot

The best-reviewed fiction of 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

11 new December book club picks.

Should historical fiction have modern sensibilities or stick to its time?

Where to start with Octavia Butler.

All Things Comics

Best graphic novels of 2023 from Guardian, Kirkus (middle grade).

On the Riot

The 12 best comic book holiday specials.

Audiophilia

The best audiobooks of 2023.

December audiobook picks from AudioFile, Washington Post.

On the Riot

The most popular audiobooks of 2023, according to Libro.fm.

The holidays have arrived, and so has our new paperback level at TBR! If you (or a reader you know) are just over-carrying around bulky hardcovers or are looking for a more budget-friendly option, we’ve got you. Check out all the offerings at mybtro.com/gift, and give personalized reading recommendations customized for any and every reader.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Children’s books that show kids the goodness in the world.

Adults

25 classic winter books to read by the fire.

5 books to read about Sandra Day O’Connor.

14 books to get you in the winter holiday spirit.

A supernatural survival horror reading list.

The 10 best Star Wars books of all time.

On the Riot

12 of the most prolific children’s authors of all time.

10 of the most polarizing fantasy books ever written.

20 must-read queer historical fantasy books.

The best classic books that are actually worth a read.

If you enjoy the podcast Ologies, read these books.

8 romance novels with no third-act breakup.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate as well that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

a black cat behind a laptop peering over the top of the screen

I tried to keep the cats out of Spaceship Quarantine, but Dini really wanted to join my RuPaul’s Drag Race marathon.

All right friends. Stay COVID free! I’ll see you on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Conservatives Boycott Froot Loops

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Well, cold and flu season has arrived, including for yours truly. I only started feeling crummy earlier tonight, but I’ve also been around people who have come down with colds within the last 48 hours…fingers crossed this doesn’t end up being too annoying.

It’s happening, readers — we’re bringing paperbacks! Whether you (or a reader you know and love) hate carrying around bulky hardcovers, you’re on a budget, you want a wider range of recommendations or all of the above, you can now get a paperback subscription from TBR, curated just for you by one of our Bibliologists. The holidays are here, and we’ve got three different levels for gifting (to yourself or others) to suit every budget. Get all the details at mytbr.co.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Montana will no longer require directors to have a master’s degree at the eight largest libraries in the state despite a four-to-one ratio of public comments opposing the change.

The Stanley Milner Library has an in-house nurse to support people in crisis in downtown Edmonton.

The Ottawa Public Library is seeking $3 million in security to address an increase in dangerous incidents and assaults against their staff.

Cool Library Updates

Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library has officially launched in Illinois!

St. Louis Public Library is hosting a free Taylor Swift fan convention. They are braver than I am.

Mapping Colorado: Libraries supporting their communities.

Worth Reading

How American librarians helped defeat the Nazis.

Censorship News

Most parents trust, respect, and feel safe with librarians.

Congress has introduced the Fight Book Bans Act. And here’s a look at every current book ban lawsuit.

Conservatives are boycotting Froot Loops for creating a library of diverse children’s books online. Yes, that is a real sentence I had to type in 2023.

The city of Corpus Christie (TX) appointed 5 new members to the public library board, one of whom appears to be pro-book banning.

A controversial proposed library book policy just cost the League City (TX) city attorney their job.

Florida’s attorney general just issued a legal brief, saying that school districts have a First Amendment right to remove any books they choose and that “public school libraries are ‘a forum for government speech,…not a ‘forum for free expression.’” Wow.

(Paywalled): Brevard County (FL) Schools will review 31 challenged books this month.

The Southern Poverty Law Center just threatened a potential lawsuit against the Charlotte County School District (FL) over their LGBTQ+ book bans.

RSU 56 (ME) is currently the only district in the state to have banned Gender Queer, and they’re now considering a policy that would ban all books with sexually explicit material.

Connecticut librarians are looking for legislative help as they face harassment tied to book bans.

Lancaster County (PA) schools are reportedly considering a switch from Scholastic Book Fairs to the “pro-God, pro-America” SkyTree Book Fairs.

Catawba County (NC) schools have removed A Court of Thorns and Roses, citing three primary reasons: “[T]he book contains objectionable content that was not required to convey the story’s central themes, the book lacks literary merit compared to other high school reading material, and the book is part of the same series that was previously removed.”

School District Five of Lexington and Richland Counties (SC) has returned A Court of Mist and Fury to school library shelves after a months-long review process.

The Marietta (GA) school board is planning to hear another appeal against their decision to ban a book. This time, the book is Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, but the last time a book banning decision was appealed (Flamer), the board decided to remove the book anyway.

The Foley Public Library (AL) has moved 11 challenged books out of the YA and children’s sections due to “objectionable content.”

The Central Arkansas Library System hosted a panel discussion on book bans and the future of libraries.

The Public Library of Steubenville and Jefferson County (OH) has been dealing with LGBTQ+ book controversy for over a year and has recently moved to limit public comment at their board meetings.

The Banned Book Nook bookstore in Wilmington, Ohio, is pushing back against book banning efforts in the state.

The Brandywine Community School Board (MI) may implement their own book rating system.

An op-ed on the recently proposed Wisconsin legislation that would require libraries to inform parents about the items their children check out: “Don’t force librarians into the role of Big Brother.”

After NBC 5 Investigates first reported in October on the rise of book banning in the Chicago area over the last three years, the number has continued to climb.

The St. Cloud Library System (MN) has received challenges to 8 individual titles in the last year, with some books receiving multiple challenges.

Penguin Random House files a lawsuit against the state of Iowa over their recently passed book banning legislation. Note that this is separate from the lawsuit filed against Iowa from last week’s newsletter.

“Republican leaders are calling for a prosecutor to enforce obscenity laws to remove hundreds of books from schools in the Colorado Springs area.”

The New Mexico State Board of Education is appealing the decision made by Las Cruces Public Schools to retain Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts) in the school library. Nothing to see here…

Banning Angels in America in Temecula (CA).

“‘How often did you say you visited the library prior to this book?’ asked Action News Reporter Kate Nemarich. ‘Oh, I visited the library years ago. I haven’t been to the library in years, but all of those questions and those answers they’re meaningless,’ said Steve Brandau, Fresno County [CA] Supervisor. This is one of the people who voted for the Parents Matter Act, which creates a panel of parents and guardians who will review all current and future children’s books to be placed in county libraries. In other words, people who have no public library, youth services, or collection development experience will decide what books libraries can add to their collections. I see no problem with this at all.

The Wasilla City Council (AK) heard from the library director about how they select books for the children and teen collections. Among the choice quotes from the article: “Treesh maintained the library would temporarily mark books from the young adult section as those of the adult section until there is more consideration from the city on the matter.”

The Jake Epp Public Library (Manitoba) has decided to forego general best practices and will sticker all children’s books that contain LGBTQ+ content because the Christian books are already stickered.

Books & Authors in the News

Sandra Day O’Connor, the first woman to serve on the Supreme Court, has died at 93.

Numbers & Trends

Less than half of American adults reported reading at least one book for pleasure in the last year.

Award News

Impossible Creatures by Katherine Rundell has won the 2023 Waterstones Book of the Year award.

Freedom Reads, the National Book Foundation, and the Center for Justice have just launched the first major US book prize to be judged exclusively by incarcerated people.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Oxford Languages has selected “rizz” as their Word of the Year. If you’re like me and aren’t up on all the Gen Z slang, “rizz” is short (?) for “charisma” and apparently started seeing a lot more use after Tom Holland used it in an interview this summer.

On the Riot

How Dungeons & Dragons can help members of the neurodivergent community.

8 video essays about books that will change your perspective.

Secrets of the mega book series of the ’80s and ’90s.

Authors and bookish accounts to follow on Bluesky.

When eye-reading just isn’t working.

a black and white cat peering over the edge of a bed with its paw sticking out

Photo courtesy of my mom, who said Groucho was waving “Hi” to everyone!

Groucho hopes you all have a good weekend. I’ll see you on Tuesday, hopefully, a little less sniffly than I am now.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Should We Abolish Literary Genres?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. It’s the first week of December, but I already feel like my schedule has been overbooked. In addition to work stuff, I think I have something planned for just about every weekend in December, and January’s starting to look the same way. Sometimes, the introvert inside me wonders why the heck I keep saying “Yes” to plans…

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Publishers launch a weeklong #ReadPalestine campaign.

How a book publishing “mistake” reignited the UK’s royal racism furor, plus the author’s response after the Dutch version of Endgame was temporarily pulled from shelves.

These women represent the future of the book publishing industry.

On the rise and fall of Borders Books.

How Norway became a literary powerhouse.

New & Upcoming Titles

Rebecca Yarros says it’s going to be a minute before the third book in the Empyrean series comes out. She has also signed a two-book deal for two standalone contemporary romance novels.

The Umbrella Academy is getting a prequel companion novel in June 2024.

Patricia Cornwell talks about listening to actual 911 calls about Bigfoot for her latest book, Unnatural Death.

Here’s a first look at Liz Cheney’s upcoming book, Oath and Honor.

Here’s the cover reveal for Karen McManus’ Such Charming Liars.

And here’s the cover reveal for Tessa Bailey’s The Au Pair Affair.

5 books that deserved more buzz this year.

The New York Times recommends new thrillers, romances, and mysteries.

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub.

November picks from The Guardian (thrillers).

December picks from AARP, Amazon, LA Times, New York Times.

Best books of 2023 from Brightly (middle grade/chapter books, YA), Electric Lit (poetry, short story collections), Esquire, Kirkus (picture books), New Yorker, School Library Journal (nonfiction, YA), Shelf Awareness (adult), Vanity Fair (short books), Wall Street Journal.

Most anticipated books of 2024 from Good Housekeeping, Off the Shelf.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Prophet Song – Paul Lynch (Guardian, New York Times, Washington Post)

The Mystery Guest – Nita Prose (NPR, Shondaland, Washington Post)

Endgame: Inside the Royal Family and the Monarchy’s Fight for Survival – Omid Scobie (New York Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

Should we abolish literary genres?

When Britney and Pamela and Paris tell all: “Memoir writing offers women defined by their images a space to speak. But we’re seldom satisfied with what they give us.”

Agatha Christie’s most romantic murder mysteries.

Where to start with the work of the late A.S. Byatt.

The essential Larry McMurtry.

Is the campus novel dead?

The case for never reading the book jacket.

On the Riot

What not to say to bookstore employees.

8 recent dark academia and deadly game books to TBR.

12 must-read new books by Native authors.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

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

The best SFF of 2022 and 2023, crunched.

All Things Comics

School Library Journal lists their best juvenile graphic novels of the year.

On the Riot

December picks for graphic novels/comics.

Manga and manhwa like Nano Machine.

It’s happening, readers — we’re bringing paperbacks! Whether you (or a reader you know and love) hate carrying around bulky hardcovers, you’re on a budget, you want a wider range of recommendations or all of the above, you can now get a paperback subscription from TBR, curated just for you by one of our Bibliologists. The holidays are here, and we’ve got three different levels for gifting (to yourself or others) to suit every budget. Get all the details at mytbr.co.

Audiophilia

AudioFile’s best audiobooks of 2023.

The best audiobooks to gift.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Kids’ books that don’t ignore the dark side of life.

Beautiful children’s books for the aspiring artist.

Adults

10 books about protecting our oceans from the climate crisis.

10 comfort reads to snuggle up with on a cold day.

8 books that explore the power dynamics of love triangles.

25 of the best holiday books.

5 Norse fiction books from indie publishers.

7 great cozy mysteries set in the fall.

10 memoirs and essay collections by Black women.

7 books about authorship hoaxes.

48 cold weather mysteries for thrills and chills.

11 holiday romances to make your spirits bright.

12 bodyguard romances to heat up your TBR.

6 character-driven novels to keep you company.

On the Riot

Children’s books to read for the December holidays (that aren’t Christmas).

9 of the best YA books to read if you loved The Hunger Games.

9 fantastic books set in the 1980s.

8 wickedly funny books like Assistant to the Villain.

8 of the best baby books for new parents.

The 25 best Christmas books of all time.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate as well that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

two black cats laying next to each other with their front paws touching

Are Dini and Gilbert holding paws?? Yes! Did we push their paws together to get this photo opportunity? Also yes.

All right, friends. Back on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

When Is a Book Ban Not a Book Ban?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. We’ve got snow on the ground in Chicago land. It’s less than an inch, and a lot of it melted today, but the cold weather is definitely here, and no one’s happy about it.

Are you looking for the perfect gift for that bookish special someone in your life this holiday season? Tailored Book Recommendations is here to help! Here at TBR, we pair our customers with a professional book nerd (aka bibliologist) who just gets them. They fill out a survey and then sit back and relax as we pick books just for them. We’ve got three levels — recs-only, paperback, and hardcover — and you can gift a full year or one time, so there are options for every budget! Get all the details at mybtro.com/gift

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Partisan bickering amongst Pennsylvania legislators has led to a delay in already-approved funds for public libraries.

The New York Public Library is facing significant graffiti cleanup costs following several weeks of protests in the city.

A new bylaw will allow some Montreal libraries to fine and remove patrons with poor personal hygiene. “People will be fined between $350 and $1,000 for a first offense, $2,000 for a second offense, and $3,000 for subsequent violations.” This is absolutely horrendous.

Gaza authorities say that the Gaza Public Library has been destroyed by Israeli strikes.

Cool Library Updates

The Houston Public Library has launched a self-service book kiosk at Hobby Airport.

Book Adaptations in the News

Talia Hibbert’s Ravenwood series has been optioned for TV.

Paul Greengrass is adapting and directing TJ Newman’s Drowning: The Rescue Of Flight 1421 for Warner Brothers.

Censorship News

When is a book ban not a book ban? The rebrand of a national pastime.

Most parents rank librarians as trustworthy in the latest survey from Book Riot and the EveryLibrary Institute.

What is SkyTree Book Fairs? A “new” Scholastic competitor.

In the battle over books, who gets to decide what’s “age-appropriate” in libraries? Who indeed…

Moms for Liberty reported more than $2 million in revenue in 2022.

Across the US, Catholic groups are often behind LGBTQ book banning efforts.

PEN America joins 16 other organizations in filing an amicus brief over the Texas READER Act.

(May be paywalled): Conroe ISD (TX) is modeling its book policy after the controversial policy approved by Katy ISD.

More out of Conroe ISD, and this one is bonkers: This “mystery” 20-year-old woman spoke at a recent board meeting about how her exposure to a “single kiss” in a Scholastic book led to a debilitating addiction to porn, which she cited as a reason for the district to ban Drama, get rid of Scholastic books, and end their participation in the Scholastic book fairs. Turns out that this woman is an employee of Brave Books, which, if you read the previous link about SkyTree Book Fairs, you’d know that there is a strong connection between the two, so there’s a very obvious monetary motivation here to push the district away from Scholastic.

The Alachua County School District (FL) has removed Gender Queer from library shelves, despite questions about the complaint’s validity — there are some who believe that the woman who submitted the challenge is not a legal resident of the county.

Hernando County School Board (FL) removed three of the six books that were recently challenged. They are keeping And Tango Makes Three, The Family Book, and Julian Is a Mermaid, and removing Thirteen Reasons Why, The Handmaid’s Tale, and This Day in June.

Pasco County (FL) residents are demanding that the schools sever ties with the American Library Association because the affiliation goes against their Christian beliefs.

The Rockwell Public Library (NY) has been closed since September when the director and all but one staff member resigned simultaneously in response to public harassment over a drag queen story hour. Three other board members quit, which left the board without a quorum and unable to function. At the board’s most recent meeting, the Sheriff had to be called after the meeting turned violent and punches were thrown.

Heartstopper is being challenged in front of the Ocean City School Board (NJ) because it was available for purchase at a school book fair.

The Fluvana County High School (VA) received two dozen book challenges from a would-be school board candidate back in October, and they’ve finally begun the review process. The problem is that these books were removed from the shelves shortly after receiving the challenges, meaning they’ve been out of circulation for over a month.

Spotsylvania School District (VA) has decided to use Kirk Cameron’s new book fair.

Here is the full 75-title list of books removed by the Hanover School District (VA) — paywall broken courtesy of Kelly Jensen.

What happened after the Yancey County Public Library (NC) put up a Pride display in June. (I’ll summarize — most of the initial comments they got were supportive, but a few bigoted residents and politicians got involved and raised an enormous stink.)

Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools’s (NC) superintendent has decided to ban Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts) despite the review committee’s decision to keep it. Why even bother having a review committee if you’re just going to override their decisions?

Catawba County Schools (NC) are requiring students to have parental permission in order to borrow Lolita or Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close.

Despite parents’ efforts to get Flamer returned to school library shelves, the Marietta School District (GA) has permanently banned the book

“More than 11,000 Pulaski County (AR) students are unable to access online educational materials through their local public library as a legal precaution, according to school district administrators, in light of the statewide debate over what content children should be able to access in libraries.”

Former Arkansas Senator Jason Rapert has been appointed to the state’s library board by Sarah Huckabee-Sanders. The article doesn’t give much information about his thoughts regarding library policy and governance, but if he was appointed by Huckabee-Sanders, then I think that gives all of us an idea of what he’ll be in favor of.

Conservative issues stall after backlash in St. Charles County (MO), including a proposal to remove a requirement for diverse materials and classroom libraries in the Wentzville School District.

Meanwhile, in St. Charles County, “an internal review committee has determined that the controversial book Bang Like a Porn Star: Sex Tips From the Pros should be removed from the St. Charles City-County Library system — just not right away.” They’re waiting until the holds list clears out. The library CEO said that the book was purchased because “‘it was the only item readily available at the time about sexuality and sexual health for gay men.’” Also worth noting that this book was purchased five years ago, but the controversy is only showing up now.

“New restrictions could be coming to the Rutherford County Library System [TN]. County officials are looking to pass stricter rules on funds provided to their local libraries, along with an age-restrictive checkout policy. The new policy debate comes as the county and city of Murfreesboro have been embroiled in controversy and legal wrangling over what constitutes community decency.”

Maryville High School (TN) will retain The Perks of Being a Wallflower, even after the decision to keep the book was appealed.

The right-wing group “Save My America” is fighting to remove Making a Baby from the children’s section at the Pickaway County Public Library (OH).

The Hamilton East Public Library (IN) has thankfully agreed to end their book review and relocation policy after wasting an inordinate amount of staff time and tax dollars.

A proposed Republican bill in Wisconsin would require libraries to notify parents about the books their kids check out.

A Menomonee Falls School Board (WI) member doesn’t believe the district followed its own book banning policy, and she wants all 33 books put back on the shelves.

This newspaper’s editorial board published a piece criticizing the Lake Crystal Wellcome Memorial School District’s (MN) practice of removing challenged books from library shelves before they’ve undergone an official review.

Lambda Legal and the ACLU of Iowa have filed a federal lawsuit to block key provisions of the state’s recent book banning legislation.

Oklahoma Moms for Liberty are continuing to challenge elementary school textbooks — now they claim that the math textbooks contain inappropriate “social-emotional learning concepts.”

Garfield County (CO) commissioners suggest that the library’s refusal to ban books could have consequences. Know what that sounds like? Intimidation and fascism.

A Billings (MT) parent is criticizing the school district for having Assassination Classroom on the library shelves.

The Community Library Network in Idaho discussed a policy modification that would allow the library to evaluate books “in part” rather than in their entirety, which goes against all professional and legal standards for evaluating materials for content. This will give book banners free rein to continue cherry-picking passages from books they don’t like as evidence for why these books should be banned.

The Chino Valley School District (CA) has enacted a book-banning policy that would allow books and teaching materials to be pulled due to “‘sexually obscene’ content, or even political material.”

A quirk in Washington state law may give the Liberty Lake City Council an opportunity to try and have city trustees take over library governance again after the proposal was defeated earlier.

Tracking banned books in Canada.

Books & Authors in the News

A 2017 state law in Arkansas requires academics and writers to sign a pledge that they will not participate in anti-Israel boycotts in order to receive a speaker’s fee for their presentations and engagements. Author Nathan Thrall recently refused.

A group of nonfiction authors have filed a lawsuit against Microsoft and OpenAI for copyright infringement.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

The best-selling indie books of the year.

Almost one million children in the UK don’t own a book.

Award News

The 2023 Booker Prize winner has been announced.

Related: A Booker judge admits that it’s nearly impossible to read ALL the books.

1700 Canadian writers are asking the Scotiabank Giller Prize to drop charges against a group of pro-Palestinian protestors who disrupted the recent awards ceremony.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

In the age of AI, Merriam-Webster’s word of the year is “authentic.”

Anthony Burgess, author of A Clockwork Orange, was also a composer, and now a newly-discovered string quartet composition from Burgess will have a premiere.

On the Riot

10 reading volunteer opportunities.

What to do when you hate your own book club pick.

How to cure a reading slump.

A beginner’s guide to Tolkien studies and commentary.

A dive into pop culture cookbooks.

two black cats laying back-to-back on an unmade bed

Nothing but brotherly love in the Horner household! Look at these snurgly boys!!

Okay, friends. I’m going to grab a warm pair of slippers and hiss at the freezing temperatures outside. I hope you have warmer weather or at least can tolerate cold weather better than me. See you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Swords, Smooches, and Whimsigoth

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Since I put these newsletters together based on stuff from the previous week, this issue is pretty short. But never fear — we’ll be back up to full speed next week!

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Publishers Weekly posted their industry salary survey for 2023.

Thoughts on how to diversify the publishing industry.

New & Upcoming Titles

Here’s the cover reveal for Laura Hankin’s One Star Romance, which was inspired by the time she had to walk down the aisle at a friend’s wedding with a guy who had given her book a 1-star review on Goodreads.

Best books of the year from Kirkus (nonfiction), New York Public Library, New York Times, NPR.

December YA picks from Epic Reads.

RA/Genre Resources

Black romance authors and editors share their passion for love stories.

An interview with Nora Roberts about her impact on romance publishing.

The mainstreaming of historical fiction.

Tess Gerritsen’s neighbors are retired spies, so she wrote about it.

On the Riot

Authors with their own publishing imprints (and what books to read from them).

The best queer books of the year.

Queer YA from 2023 you may have missed

The best books you’ve never heard of, fall 2023 edition.

The best book covers of 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

The best and worst tropes in murder mysteries.

The very grungiest of sci-fi.

9 whimsigoth books to charm your bookshelf.

All Things Comics

On the Riot

The best graphic novels by speculative fiction authors.

The best manga inspired by mythology.

Audiophilia

On the Riot

Project Gutenberg produced 5,000 AI audiobooks, but how do they sound?

Indulge your inner book nerd and join a community of like-minded readers looking to expand their knowledge and their TBR. Subscribe to The Deep Dive, where Book Riot’s editorial staff draws from their collective expertise to bring you compelling stories, informed takes, tips, hacks, and more. Find out why the bestseller list is broken, analyze some anticipated books, and explore the great wide world of books and publishing. Get a free subscription for weekly content delivered to your inbox, or upgrade to paid-for bonus content and community features.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

The best books by Kate DiCamillo.

Adults

10 books to read if you loved Lessons in Chemistry.

6 books that may change how you think about mental illness.

The best cozy crime to read.

On the Riot

8 astronomically great books about space and astrophysics.

Swords and smooches: 8 high fantasy romance novels.

20 of the best books on AI to stay current with industry trends.

9 horror books with romance at the heart.

8 of the best reverse harem books.

20 must-read dark fairy tales.

10 romance books like Part of Your World.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate as well that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

a black and white cat peeking out from an overturned Amazon box

The holiday shopping has begun, and Dini is having a blast with all of the new boxes to inspect!

All right, friends. Have a good, fast week, and I’ll see you on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Where Are the Book Sanctuaries?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. As I am writing this newsletter before Thanksgiving, I’d like to give a few library-related things I’m thankful for. I’m thankful to have a fantastic new director who is committed to not only solving problems in an expedient manner but also fighting to give our entire staff proper pay after decades of being listed as one of the lowest-paying libraries in the area. I’m thankful that I was given an opportunity earlier this month to share my unfiltered concerns about pay and staffing with the entire library board and that we seem to be moving toward positive changes. I’m thankful that we have a community of people who are proactive about supporting our staff and our library. We had people send wonderful letters of support during Banned Books Week, and a couple people sought out our director to thank her personally for speaking out about the importance of intellectual freedom and the library being a welcoming place for the LGBTQ+ community.

There has been a tremendous amount of stress and change at my library in this last year, but I believe we’re fighting toward a positive future, and we’re working to fix the systemic problems that have led us to this point. (And I’m thankful that I am no longer the interim director!)

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

NYC Mayor Eric Adams announces budget cuts to all public library systems in the city, meaning that most libraries will need to end their Sunday library hours.

Meanwhile, the Philadelphia Free Library has resumed Saturday hours at some branches.

The British Library confirmed that it was the target of a recent ransomware attack.

Cool Library Updates

How book nerds and a dancing accountant made the library cool. (This is about the Milwaukee Public Library.)

Worth Reading

More Americans report getting their news from TikTok.

Stories of solo librarianship.

Book Adaptations in the News

Netflix is finalizing the details for Greta Gerwig’s adaptation of The Chronicles of Narnia.

Shadow and Bone has been canceled after two seasons with Netflix, and the Six of Crows spinoff has been canceled.

Censorship News

School and public librarians describe on-the-job harassment.

Where are the book sanctuaries?

These are the right-wing ideologues taking over Texas school boards.

Texas is pushing some textbook publishers to remove or alter material that portrays the fossil fuel industry in a negative light.

(Paywalled) Hillsborough County (FL) removed a Little Free Library with a rainbow on the side because people threw a hissy fit. I would also like to point out that the book banners’ line about “kids can still get these books elsewhere” is bullshit because here was a way for kids to find access to books outside of their school library, and now it’s been removed.

Hernando County School District (FL) will decide the fate of six challenged books. “All six have been challenged in other parts of the state and the country, though staff members of Moms for Liberty have said in the past that they are not seeking to ban books but remove students’ access to them in the schools. They still can get the books in question at Amazon, bookstores, and public libraries, Moms for Liberty officials said.” See the above news item from Hillsborough County, and say with me now…This. Is. Bullshit.

Though Santa Rosa (FL) book ban clashes continue, few parents are actually limiting their children’s access to library books.

Plant High School (FL) will retain Blankets, following the recommendation from the reconsideration panel. Way to Plant, Ann! (High fives to anyone who got that Arrested Development reference.)

Schools in Freehold, New Jersey, removed digital access to the book Flor Fights Back, a children’s book about the Stonewall Riots. Parents complained about the LGBTQ+ content, and the superintendent had it removed without forming a reconsideration committee.

The Pine-Richland School District (PA) has opted to continue with their current book policy until the next school board takes over. Unfortunately, the next board has three new trustees who made removing books an explicit part of their campaigns.

The Quarryville Public Library (PA) saw a large crowd of attendees at its first board meeting since the township cut its annual $1000 donation to the library over the presence of LGBTQ materials. This is also the same library where Olympic figure skater Johnny Weir pledged to cover the $1000 donation because of the importance of having LGBTQ books accessible to the community. From the article: “‘We’re simply collecting them,’ [district consultant Ed] Miller said after the meeting. ‘When we collect them, we’re acknowledging that there are individuals in those communities who have an interest in that topic.’”

Spotsylvania County (VA) school board is holding off on implementing a new policy that would essentially remove books whenever a parent complained. However, signs point to the incoming board being unlikely to move the policy further.

Johnston County Board of Education (NC) has officially banned all materials on gender identity from the district’s elementary schools.

A new proposal that would give the South Carolina Board of Education control over the materials held in individual school libraries is gaining momentum.

The superintendent of the Cobb County School District (GA) has asked the Georgia General Assembly to consider developing a book rating system akin to movie ratings to determine what’s appropriate to have on library shelves.

The Alabama Public Library Service Board voted unanimously to delay a vote to disassociate from ALA.

Three members of the Prattville Library Board (AL) have left their positions amidst a large number of book challenges.

Patty Hector, the Saline County (AR) library director who was fired earlier this year after the county judge was given power over library matters, is now running for a position on that same court.

“Journalists Robert Samuels and Toluse Olorunnipa, authors of the Pulitzer Prize-winning book His Name Is George Floyd, are still unclear why they were told they couldn’t read from their book or talk about systemic racism to a room full of high school students in Memphis.” The school district has denied that any restrictions were placed on the authors.

Carmel Clay School Board members (IN) clash over proposed updates to the school’s book reconsideration policy.

The Hamilton East Public Library (IN) director is leaving her position, thanks to the Library board’s policy of moving teen books that have been deemed not “age appropriate.” Honestly, so many library employees are simply unable to do their damn jobs with all of this nonsense.

Wisconsin Democrats propose a new state law to help limit book bans. “Under the draft bill, anyone complaining to a school district or public library about books must reside in the school district or community served by the library, submit written statements showing they’ve read the book entirely and detailing the reasons for their complaint, and include signatures of at least 5% of the residents in the school district or the community served by the library.” (Emphasis mine.) I really, really like this last bit because when I was dealing with a book challenge during my first month as interim director last year, the person making the challenge told me that if he had been able to show the contested picture book to everyone in the community, they would have been appalled. Everyone in HIS circle was appalled, but we have a very strong community of library supporters, and if he had had to go around collecting signatures in order to submit his request, I think his efforts would have lost some steam.

A surge of book removal requests is turning Nebraska libraries into cultural battlegrounds.

Plattsmouth Public Schools (NE) reviewed 52 challenged books and voted to remove Triangles by Ellen Hopkins.

Omaha Public Schools will retain All Boys Aren’t Blue and Tricks.

The St. Mary’s Public Library (KS) director talks about how she had to compromise intellectual freedom by removing all of the LGBTQ children’s books in order to renew the library’s lease. This isn’t a position I’d wish on anyone, and I can’t pretend to know what it’s like to face that decision, but I firmly believe that catering to bigots is a very slippery slope, and they won’t hesitate to hold the library’s leasing situation hostage again. How many times will this library have to “compromise?” The decision also communicates that LGBTQ folks aren’t considered a true part of the community and do not have a safe space at that library, so who is the library actually serving? The word “compromise” is doing double duty here because I see a lot of things that are being compromised.

Meanwhile, the St. Marys mayor, who was previously involved in an attempt to ban LGBTQ books from the public library, lost his bid for school board. Womp womp.

“Garfield County [CO] commissioners released a statement on Monday, saying it legally must leave the decision of proposed graphic novel restrictions to the Garfield County Libraries Board of Trustees.”

“A local organization’s request to pull a sexual assault survivor’s memoir from the shelves of Union High School’s [OK] library received a chilly reception from several Union parents at Monday night’s school board meeting.” This is in regard to Lucky by Alice Sebold.

The Moms for Liberty Oklahoma chapter is pushing to remove Scholastic Book Fairs from all Oklahoma schools.

Utah legislators are considering a proposal that would make it easier to ban books.

West Ada School District (ID) initially voted to retain Nowhere Girls, but then the decision was appealed, and the trustees changed their votes.

The ACLU of Alaska, six parents, and two students have filed a lawsuit against the Mat-Su School District for removing 56 books that the plaintiffs say were improperly banned.

Alaska Attorney General Treg Taylor provides guidance to librarians regarding “obscene materials,” specifically emphasizing “the responsibility of librarians and educators in ensuring their collections do not violate” local, state, or federal laws and implying that there will be legal consequences for teachers and librarians who do not comply.

Ontario’s Waterloo Catholic District School Board has restricted access to 4 LGBTQ+ books by shelving them in the “Pro” (“Professional”) section. Pro shelves “at board schools are used primarily by teachers, though students will have access to the titles provided they first consult a teacher who will provide them with the “Catholic context” for the titles.”

Books & Authors in the News

Author AS Byatt has died at 87.

Former First Lady and author Rosalynn Carter has died at 96.

Mexican novelist Valeria Luiselli will be the next author to contribute a manuscript to the Future Library, which locks away unpublished manuscripts until 2114.

Over 2000 poets and authors are boycotting the Poetry Foundation, which recently shelved a review of a poetry collection that engages with “anti-Zionist politics.” The magazine wanted to appear neutral in regard to the Israel-Gaza conflict, but a lot of people saw this as the censoring of anti-Zionist Jewish authors.

Numbers & Trends

Lil’ Kim says her memoir’s presales are “surpassing the Bible.”

The best-selling books of the week.

We’re here to enrich your reading life! Get to know the world of books and publishing better with a subscription to The Deep Dive, Book Riot’s staff-written publication delivered directly to your inbox. Find a guide to reading logs and trackers, hear about why the bestseller list is broken, analyze some anticipated books, and more from our familiar in-house experts. Get a free subscription for weekly content delivered to your inbox, or upgrade to paid-for bonus content and community features connecting you to like-minded readers.

Award News

The National Book Award winners have been announced.

What’s so controversial about the National Book Awards?

John Vaillant wins the Baillie Gifford Prize for Fire Weather: A True Story from a Hotter World.

Plus, the Baillie Gifford Prize shows an average 857% gain in unit sales for winning titles.

The Goodreads Choice Awards removed categories for Children’s & Middle Grade, Poetry, and Graphic Novels, and added “Romantasy” as a new category.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Scrabble’s new tournament list adds words that lexicographers say aren’t actually words at all, and more alarmingly, have reinstated over 100 words that were designated as slurs and removed in 2020. From a top-ranked Scrabble player: “’Nobody was asking to reinstate half of the slurs. Nobody.’”

A book club started discussing Finnegan’s Wake each month in 1995, and they only just now finished.

On the Riot

It’s time for Kindles to natively support EPUB file formats.

How to create an immersive Pride & Prejudice reading experience.

No more computers as magical shortcuts.

When to start reading to babies.

a black cat sitting on an unmade blue and gray comforter

You see an unmade bed, but Gilbert sees a blanket nest. He’s been spending a lot of time sleeping on our bed recently, and I’ve never seen him so happy! He loves blankets and being burritoed and making nests for himself.

All right, friends. I hope everyone had a good Thanksgiving and that you were able to take a little time off this week! (I have to work on Friday, but I was able to take Wednesday off.) See you next week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Vibes Like A24

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. So last week, I was trying to come up with Two Truths and a Lie for a staff icebreaker activity, and thanks to some crowdsourcing from my family, I came up with my three statements: 1) I have seen Paul McCartney in concert more times than any other artist, 2) I knew my ABCs forwards and backwards by the time I was 2, and 3) I’ve met the mother of an Olympic gold medalist. (Answer is at the end of the newsletter!)

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Entangled Publishing had some “frustrating misprint” issues with the first print run of Rebecca Yarros’ highly anticipated Iron Flame, the sequel to Fourth Wing.

Not surprisingly, AI companies are warning that paying for copyrighted data will hurt their bottom line. Meanwhile, writers and publishers weigh in on how to cope with the rise of AI.

New & Upcoming Titles

John le Carré’s son is writing a new George Smiley novel.

The best books of 2023 from Amazon, Harper’s Bazaar, Kirkus (fiction), Time, Vulture, Washington Post (Top 10, fiction, nonfiction, mystery, romance, SFF, poetry)

The 10 best feel-good books of 2023.

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

November picks for Tor.com (YA SFF/horror).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Day – Michael Cunningham (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Art Monsters: Unruly Bodies in Feminist Art – Lauren Elkin (Vogue, Washington Post)

UFO: The Inside Story of the U.S. Government’s Search for Alien Life Here—and Out There – Garrett M. Graff (LA Times, Vanity Fair)

Eyeliner: A Cultural History – Zahra Hankir (New York Times, NPR)

The Money Kings: The Epic Story of the Jewish Immigrants Who Transformed Wall Street and Shaped Modern America – Daniel Schulman (New York Times, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

Why privilege has always been at the heart of the whodunnit.

The African artists driving a cultural renaissance.

Genre juggernaut: measuring romance.

On the Riot

It’s Book Riot’s Best Books of 2023! And the best BIPOC books of 2023!

10 of the best disability books of 2023.

10 of the best Appalachian books of 2023.

20 of the best picture books of the year.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Please stop with the sexist “reverse” tropes in romance.

Triggers, trauma, and true crime.

Our fascination with Greek mythology.

All Things Comics

Amazon is merging Comixology with the Kindle app.

The Washington Post selects the 10 best graphic novels of 2023.

Five Norse-inspired graphic novels and comics.

On the Riot

Stories so nice, they told them twice: 8 comics based on classic books.

8 quietly reflective graphic novels.

Why comic books are like soap operas, or how this Rioter learned to love continuity.

Audiophilia

Audible has a bunch of curated Best of 2023 lists for all of your audio-listening needs.

On the Riot

The best-selling audiobooks of 2023.

We’re here to enrich your reading life! Get to know the world of books and publishing better with a subscription to The Deep Dive, Book Riot’s staff-written publication delivered directly to your inbox. Find a guide to reading logs and trackers, hear about why the bestseller list is broken, analyze some anticipated books, and more from our familiar in-house experts. Get a free subscription for weekly content delivered to your inbox, or upgrade to paid-for bonus content and community features connecting you to like-minded readers.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

17 YA books with vibes similar to A24 movies.

YA books about being one of the only BIPOC students in a mostly white school.

Adults

Books for fans of The Crown.

40 books to understand Palestine.

Thrillers featuring natural disasters.

7 therapists recommend books that will make your relationship stronger.

7 novels about characters driven by cravings.

On the Riot

Picture books that tell the truth about the first Thanksgiving.

19 books by Native writers for kids of all ages.

YA books about cooking and baking.

8 absurdist fiction books.

Lighthearted murder mysteries for the faint of heart.

10 insta-love romance books that prove love at first sight is real.

The threat is in these book titles.

8 books about psychological safety.

Scary stories in small towns and big cities.

11 Palestinian fiction reads.

10 poetry books about mental health.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word has created a database of upcoming diverse titles to nominate as well that includes information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

a black and white cat half-laying on a person's lap

Why does Dini look like he’s hanging onto a piece of Titanic wreckage for dear life?

Okay, friends, you made it to the end. And the lie from the beginning of the newsletter was…1. I’ve seen Paul McCartney 3x in concert, but the top award goes to Mumford & Sons (6 times!), and I’m very much hoping to make it 7 next year if they’ll just announce a tour already! But yes, I knew my ABC’s forwards AND backwards by the time I was 2 (still do!), and I met the mother of Evan Lysacek, the 2010 US Olympic gold medalist in men’s figure skating, at a wedding. (My MIL introduced us.) Sadly, Evan Lysacek was not at the wedding, but his mother was very nice and she said she was going to tell him she met one of his fans!

Peace out, everyone, and if you celebrate, I hope you have a peaceful Thanksgiving.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Queer in a Time of Book Banning

Welcome to Check Your Shelf, where it has been a WEEK. To put it bluntly, we’ve been in crisis mode at work for a long time, and on Tuesday, one of my fellow managers and I had an opportunity to address the library trustees about the impact this staffing crisis has had on the employees, and we didn’t pull any punches. There is a lot of change happening, and a lot more change still to come, but I think our statements had a positive impact.

Indulge your inner book nerd and join a community of like-minded readers looking to expand their knowledge and their TBR. Subscribe to The Deep Dive, where Book Riot’s editorial staff draws from their collective expertise to bring you compelling stories, informed takes, tips, hacks, and more. Find out why the bestseller list is broken, analyze some anticipated books, and explore the great wide world of books and publishing. Get a free subscription for weekly content delivered to your inbox, or upgrade to paid-for bonus content and community features.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Leslie Burger has been appointed the Interim Executive Director of ALA, following Tracie D. Hall’s departure earlier this year.

Worth Reading

Here’s what students miss out on when their schools don’t have librarians.

Sacred space: why libraries are essential to incarcerated writers.

Why we need public libraries now more than ever.

7 surprising ways the public library can save you money.

Book Adaptations in the News

It’s not a book adaptation, but Michael Connelly’s Wonderland Murders and the Secret History of Hollywood podcast is getting a docuseries adaptation at MGM+.

What’s going on with Enola Holmes, season 3.

Season 2 of House of the Dragon will premiere early next summer.

Censorship News

Kelly Jensen talks about having her own book banned in retaliation for her reporting on censorship issues.

Queer in a time of book banning: a library worker’s story.

How much does the book banning crusade cost American taxpayers?

Kirk Cameron launches his own book fair in response to Scholastic, saying that his program will provide children’s books without pornography. The link is from Fox News, although I typically try not to link to them.

Censorship in prisons is part of slavery’s legacy.

Innocence, here and abroad: taboos about what can and can’t be shown in picture books around the world.

Librarians who have been fired due to their refusal to ban books are turning to the EEOC for assistance.

Book bans and the librarians who won’t be hushed.

Election updates: Election Night 2023 library wrap-up; Liberal and moderate candidates take control of school boards in contentious races across the US; Republicans suffer crushing defeat in “transgender battle;” Moms for Liberty-backed school board candidates overwhelmingly lose in elections.

Booksellers and publishers urge the appeals court to uphold the block on the contentious Texas book rating legislation.

P!nk and PEN America have teamed up to give away 2,000 banned books at her Florida concerts.

This Florida high school librarian explains how the ongoing fight against censorship drove her to quit a job that she loved.

Steve Martin has a snappy comeback for the Collier County Public School district (FL) for banning his novel, Shopgirl, which is cute, I guess, but Collier County schools have removed 313 books from their school libraries, and that’s not getting nearly as much attention.

Students in New Haven, Connecticut, rally for the right to read.

Five new candidates were elected to the Pine-Richland School District (PA), and four of them are in support of book bans.

Inside the knock-down, drag-out fight over the soul of a Pennsylvania school district (Central Bucks).

(Paywalled): Carroll County School District’s (MD) assistant superintendent reverses a committee’s decision to retain five challenged titles.

(Paywalled): The Lexington-Richmond Five School District (SC) will retain A Court of Mist and Fury.

Parents in Marietta, Georgia, are fighting to get Flamer back on school library shelves.

Farmington School District (AR) will keep Kingdom of Ash.

Boyle County Schools (KY) removed over 100 library books in response to their interpretation of a new state law restricting how human sexuality is taught or mentioned in the classroom. However, the law didn’t actually apply to library materials, and now the district has to put the books back on the shelves.

The Okemos School District (MI) has canceled their planned Scholastic Book Fairs this fall over Scholastic’s initial plan to segregate “diverse” books in a separate collection. “We will revisit the use of Scholastic Book Fairs when they share their new plan.”

Iowa’s proposed rules on banning books in schools are out. Here’s what to know.

A Fresno County (CA) supervisor introduces a proposal that would give parents more control over the books in the children’s section at the library. “He made it clear the legislation would not ban any of the books, it would just remove them from the children’s section.” THAT’S STILL CENSORSHIP!

(Paywalled): 18 LGBTQ+ books were challenged at Helix Character School in Oregon, but all will remain on the shelves.

“Dozens, if not hundreds, of library boards throughout America have faced growing scrutiny in recent years and become embroiled in censorship debates. Seemingly overnight, people in cities throughout the country have tried to ban certain books in the name of protecting children. Others have argued book bans are un-American and an infringement on freedom of speech.” This is about city council drama in Liberty Lake (WA) that stems from an attempt to get Gender Queer removed from the library last year, but I am so damn sick of news outlets giving the “both sides” treatment to censorship issues.

Sitka High School (AK) students introduce a resolution to their school board in strong opposition to book banning.

Books & Authors in the News

A judge has dismissed part of the AI copyright lawsuit filed by a group of authors.

All Seasons Press sues Mark Meadows over alleged lies in his memoir, The Chief’s Chief.

Numbers & Trends

Has it ever been harder to make a living as an author?

10 books trending on TikTok right now.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

Two sponsors withdrew from the National Book Awards ceremony after learning that some of the authors involved were planning to make a political statement about the Israel-Gaza conflict. This was the official update/response from the National Book Awards.

Barnes & Noble has named The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store as their 2023 Book of the Year.

ALA has announced the finalists for the 2024 Andrew Carnegie Medals.

Voting for the Goodreads Choice Awards has opened up.

Pop Cultured

25 of the best serial killer shows for you to stream immediately.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

What this parent reads to their child when the world is on fire.

A history of Ángela Ruiz Robles and her Mechanical Encyclopedia, which people consider to be a precursor to the modern ereader.

On the Riot

What’s new in the world of reading research?

How to create a Fellowship of the Traveling Book.

This Rioter is trying desperately to read anything that’s not a book.

a closeup photo of a black and white cat sticking its tongue out

No words, just vibes.

Well, that’s all I have for today, friends. I’m going to take a nap and hopefully wake up a bit more refreshed next week. See you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.