Categories
Check Your Shelf

What’s the Future of Books?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. We have our annual staff in-service coming up on Friday, and we’re doing Two Truths and a Lie for our obligatory icebreaker activity. As I was trying to come up with mine, I realized that I talk a lot and have already given away most of my interesting factoids! (Did you know that I have a Beatles-themed tattoo that I got in Liverpool on my honeymoon? Or that I’m related to Rutherford B. Hayes on my mom’s side of the family? Or that I saw Cubs legend Ryne Sandberg on my lunch break a few months ago? My coworkers do!)

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The Wall Street Journal has dropped its bestseller lists.

The Authors Guild has called on the US Copyright Office to require consent and compensation for AI training.

What happens to illustrators when robots can draw robots?

How TikTok has transformed romance publishing.

What’s the future of books?

New & Upcoming Titles

Stephen King has a new story collection coming in May, and it includes a prequel to Cujo! Entertainment Weekly has an exclusive excerpt from that story.

HarperCollins has signed a global deal for the next book from Pope Francis.

There’s a new sci-fi trilogy coming from writing duo James S.A. Corey.

Kensington Books has acquired world rights to TikTok star Harley Laroux’s debut novel, Her Soul to Take.

Here are the highlights from Barbra Streisand’s 970-page memoir if you don’t have the time to read the whole thing.

Publishers Weekly has a roundup of all the November 2023 book club picks.

The New York Times and the NYPL have selected the best-illustrated children’s books of 2023.

The best novels of 2023, according to Oprah Daily.

The best new celebrity memoirs of 2023 (so far).

Weekly book picks from Crime Reads, LitHub.

November picks from Tor.com (fantasy).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

My Name is Barbra – Barbra Streisand (Entertainment Weekly, LA Times, New York Times, NPR, People, Time, USA Today)

The Future – Naomi Alderman (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Class: A Memoir of Motherhood, Hunger, and Higher Education – Stephanie Land (New York Times, Seattle Times, Shondaland)

Correction: Parole, Prison, and the Possibility of Change – Ben Austen (New York Times, Washington Post)

Again and Again – Jonathan Evison (New York Times, Washington Post)

Pretty Boys are Poisonous – Megan Fox (Entertainment Weekly, People)

RA/Genre Resources

How Rebecca Yarros’ novels became a romantasy BookTok phenomenon.

Oprah Daily looks at Jesmyn Ward’s body of work.

We Need Diverse Books launches a new website dedicated to Indigenous children’s literature/

The Ripped Bodice and Free Period Press have teamed up to create a checklist of 50 romance novels to help you explore the genre. You can purchase a print copy of the list, or you can explore all of the titles here for free.

This reader has had enough of “Sad Bad Girl” novels and sensationalized trauma, but they want complex stories about women.

On the Riot

The 10 best indie publishing companies to follow to find your next read.

Is ghostwriting ruining literature?

42 new winter holiday romances to read before 2023 ends.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

14 new November book club picks.

The impact of The Hunger Games, 15 years since its publication.

All Things Comics

Here’s a first look at Netflix’s live-action adaptation of Avatar: The Last Airbender.

On the Riot

13 new manga releases for November.

9 manga and graphic novels for fans of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow.

Middle grade cozy fantasy comics and graphic novels.

Audiophilia

Spotify makes audiobooks available to their Premium subscribers.

Here are the November 2023 Earphones Award winners.

On the Riot

10 audiobooks for Nonfiction November.

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

Barnes & Noble lists 11 of their favorite picture books.

16 YA fantasy mysteries to cozy up with.

Adults

6 great mystery novels set in hotels.

15 books to read after you finish Class by Stephanie Land.

5 SFF novels about autocrats and absolute power.

Wilderness thrillers featuring fearless women.

5 big nonfiction books from small presses.

8 books that explain how the world works.

Must-read romances for fans of Emily Henry.

Scottish detective series to read right now.

10 spy novels that will sneak up on you.

On the Riot

8 delightful Diwali books for kids to explore.

Picture books for shy kids.

12 Indigenous memoirs for Nonfiction November and Indigenous Peoples’ Month.

The best books about finding yourself.

Just kiss already! 8 oblivious-to-lovers romances.

10 heartwrenching relationship-in-crisis romance novels.

The best high fantasy books for magical escapes.

Cozy fantasy books about books.

The best LGBTQ-inclusive relationship books.

13 queer mermaid books.

10 books like Killers of the Flower Moon.

The 20 most influential mystery novels of the last 10 years.

8 fantastic Doctor Who books to get ready for the 60th anniversary specials.

12 thrilling heist books.

Level Up (Library Reads)

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

black and white cat stretched out next to a person's leg with its front paws pulled up to its chin

Dini was extra snuggly last week, and he really piled on the cute by pulling his paws up to his chin! When he gets like this, I resign myself to the fact that he’ll probably stay there for at least an hour.

Okie dokie, I’ll be back on Friday! Have a good week!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Moms for Liberty Lose Big at the Polls

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m injecting some much-needed humor into my evenings by re-watching the TV version of What We Do In the Shadows. For those of you who’ve seen it, the episode in Season 2 where the vampires are trying to avoid the email curse from Bloody Mary always gives me strong “patron computer assistance” vibes.

Power up your reading life with thoughtful writing on books and publishing, courtesy of The Deep Dive. Over at our Substack publication, you’ll find timely stories, informed takes, and useful advice from our in-house experts. We’re here to share our expertise and perspective, drawing from our backgrounds as booksellers, librarians, educators, authors, editors, and publishing professionals. Find out why the bestseller list is broken, analyze some anticipated books, and then get a free subscription for weekly content delivered to your inbox. You can also upgrade to paid-for bonus content and community features connecting you to like-minded readers.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The Nashville Public Library is considering its interim director for the permanent position.

Worth Reading

(Paywalled): LibraryTok flips the script on public libraries and their relevance to Gen Z.

Book Adaptations in the News

The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo is getting a series adaptation with Amazon.

AMC picks up Nautilus, a reimagining of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.

A24 is developing the TikTok-famous self-published Magnolia Parks novels into a TV series.

Censorship News

Most people don’t know how librarians select collection materials, so what do they think of book bans?

Here’s some news to make you smile: Parental rights activists, especially Moms for Liberty, lost big in their elections Tuesday night.

Two wins for public libraries this week at the polls.

The public library trustees in Graham, Texas, are arguing over what to do about the book We Need to Talk About Vaginas: An IMPORTANT Book About Vulvas, Periods, Puberty and Sex!, which, as we’ve mentioned before, is written by a reproductive endocrinologist and geared towards 11-14 year old readers. But again, it’s the adults who are making puberty a controversial and sexual topic.

A Tyler (TX) resident wrote a letter to the editor in response to a previous letter encouraging people to oppose book bans, which she said had “misleading information.” “I don’t know if this it [sic] due to blissful ignorance, naivety or is intentionally meant to give out bad information.” There’s someone in this conversation suffering from “blissful ignorance,” but I don’t think it was the person calling for an opposition to book bans…

Public libraries ponder Florida’s rule against the American Library Association.

LaBelle (FL) City Commissioner Hugo Vargas expressed displeasure with the public library’s Banned Books Week display. When he was told that middle school children could check certain books out with parental permission, he said, “‘There are people who don’t pay attention to what their children are doing.’” So, none of this is really about parental rights…it’s about the ability of one specific group of parents to impose their beliefs on an entire community.

“Two Florida members of the right-wing Moms for Liberty group called police on a pair of school librarians over a book in a bestselling young adult fantasy series.” This is in Santa Rosa County, and the book is Storm and Fury by Jennifer L. Armentrout. Truly, I don’t know if they genuinely believe that these books are pornographic or if they’re just that committed to the party line.

An update from last week’s news item: “With no comment at all from board members, the Hernando County [FL] School Board on Oct. 24 unanimously approved the removal of the books “It’s So Amazing” and “The Perks of Being a Wallflower.”

Dover School Board (NH) unanimously rejected an effort to remove Boy Toy from the school library.

(Paywalled): “A Downington [PA] school board candidate pretended to be the ‘Society for College Medicine’ to challenge books.” I am so ticked this article is paywalled.

A Pennsylvania public library had funding cut because of LGBTQ+ books, and then Olympic figure skater Johnny Weir stepped in.

(Paywalled): Catawba County (NC) parents have options for restricting student access to books.

The Moore County (NC) Board of Education has tabled a vote on 9 challenged books until their December meeting.

Charlotte-Mecklenburg (NC) voted to remove A Court of Frost and Starlight, saying it was too mature for high school students and “lacked educational value.”

(Paywalled): Horry County (SC) school district voted to ban an LGBTQ+ history book for kids, as well as limit access to titles by Toni Morrison and Ta-Nehisi Coates.

More on the recent decision made by the Alabama Public Library Service to sever ties with the American Library Association. It’s definitely due to pressure from funding cuts, but this quote from a member of Read Freely Alabama really hits the nail on the head: “’As much as we have empathy for the situation she found herself in, we do wish we had some stronger leadership,’ Hayden said.” Librarians and Read Freely Alabama react to the recent APLS memo, and an Alabama librarian wrote to the Alabama Library Association, saying that residents “have been betrayed by the very professionals meant to protect their rights.”

An interview with the recently fired Saline County (AR) Library Director, who was fired after refusing to relocate three challenged items. Namely, she regrets nothing. “‘I would rather be fired for supporting the First Amendment than sued for violating it.’” This is real leadership.

“Starting Jan. 1, 2024, the Rutherford County Library System [TN] will implement a new library card policy that will make it harder for minors to check out books not meant for their age group.”

Citizens for Ashland Library [OH] Accountability have distributed a flyer urging residents to vote no against the library levy. “‘It’s time to inform the library that the voices of concerned citizens who feel strongly about protecting childhood innocence and local accountability matter. Vote no on Nov. 7.’” (But it was all for naught…voters approved the library levy by almost 2,000 votes!)

Voters pass the Cincinnati & Hamilton County Public Library tax levy. This isn’t directly related to censorship, but at this point, library levy elections all feel related.

A Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp. (IN) school board member has suggested that the school libraries start labeling “controversial” books in the collection. “The policy defines a controversial issue as ‘a topic on which opposing points of view have been promulgated by responsible opinion and/or likely to arouse both support and opposition in the community,’” which, of course, would be a perfectly objective and reasonable metric to use. /s

The question of book banning continues in the Kenosha School District (WI).

Before running for a spot on her school board, West Des Moines (IA) resident Teri Patrick joined a group of people two years ago, calling for the school district to be investigated for distributing child pornography.

The Wyoming Department of Education has released guidance for school districts looking to revise their library book policies.

The Campbell County Public Library (WY) has appointed a new director after unceremoniously firing the previous director earlier in the year for not removing a set of challenged books from the collection. However, the new director has also had experience dealing with book challenges, and earlier this year, he refused to remove LGBTQ books from the children’s collection at his last library. So…we’ll see how this plays out.

Garfield County (CO) residents rallied against the controversial American Birthright social studies standards being implemented in the school district…and won.

Escondido Union School District (CA) just removed Looking For Alaska and This Book is Gay after a parent complained.

Elk Grove Unified School District Trustees Anthony Perez and Carmine Forcina continue to push for censorship in the school libraries.

Students at Mat-Su Career and Tech High School in Wasilla, Alaska, walked out in protest of a recent slate of school board decisions, including book bans.

The history and rise of book bans in Ireland.

Books & Authors in the News

LitHub wrote an open letter to the 92nd Street Y in New York City about its decision to cancel its event with Viet Thanh Nguyen, apparently because of Nguyen’s criticisms of Israel.

A number of Jewish authors have signed an open letter pushing back on the belief that criticism of Israel is antisemitic.

Rupi Kaur declined an invitation to the White House for a Diwali event, citing the administration’s “support of the current atrocities against Palestinians.”

An academic researcher has uncovered a new body of work that they believe was written by Louisa May Alcott using a pseudonym.

Stephen King gives a tour of his personal library.

Numbers & Trends

Britney Spears’ memoir has already sold over 1 million copies!

A new study from the National Endowment for the Arts shows a “worrying” drop in reading participation amongst adults.

The best-selling books of the week.

ALA has released a report on how Gen Z and Millennials use their public libraries and identify through media use.

Award News

Barnes & Noble has released its finalists for the 2023 Book of the Year.

The 2023 Ignyte Awards winners have been announced.

The 2023 Diverse Book Award winners have been announced.

Here’s the shortlist for the 2023 Waterstones Book of the Year awards.

What 35 years of data can tell us about the National Book Awards.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

A love letter to the paperback.

On the Riot

The 16 books most commonly stolen from high school libraries.

The bookish life of boygenius.

a black and white cat and a black cat peeking over the edge of a basket

I spy with my little eye two kitty goobers in a basket!

All right, friends. Let’s recharge this weekend. I’ll be back on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Monster Romance and Mesopunk

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I realized that I have a special kind of girl math when it comes to Daylight Savings Time, although honestly, it works for any gender. So we set the clocks back last weekend, which means that we’re only a month and a half away from the shortest day of the year. By the time we reach December 21st, the days start getting longer! Huzzah! And yes, I really do use this logic to get me through the winter.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The Simon & Schuster sale to KKR has officially been completed.

Amazon has filed a lawsuit against 20 individuals who have scammed artists by falsely claiming an affiliation with Amazon Publishing and Kindle Direct Publishing.

Unionized workers at Scholastic staged a one-day walkout over wages.

Goodreads has asked its users to help combat “review bombing.”

Do writers really need to get on BookTok?

On translating Infinite Jest into Farsi.

New & Upcoming Titles

Paul Tremblay shared a teaser video for his upcoming novel, Horror Movie, which comes out in June!

5 new YA ghost stories to haunt you.

9 new books to keep you up on Halloween.

The New York Times recommends four new romance novels.

The most popular romance novels of 2023.

New paranormal romances to bewitch you.

Barnes & Noble have short lists of 2023 releases for fans of literary fiction, high school whodunnits, nonfiction about nature, deep reads, romantasy, showstopping picture books, books in translation, cocktail recipes, nonfiction about the 1%, and family sagas.

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

November picks from AARP, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kirkus, LA Times, LitHub (SFF), New York Times, Time, Town & Country, Washington Post.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Reformatory – Tananarive Due (NPR, USA Today, Washington Post)

The Vulnerables – Sigrid Nunez (Datebook, New York Times, Washington Post)

Baumgartner – Paul Auster (Guardian, LA Times)

Fierce Ambition: The Life and Legend of War Correspondent Maggie Higgins – Jennet Conant (New York Times, Washington Post)

Blood Sex Magic: Everyday Magic for the Modern Mystic – Bri Luna (LA Times, Shondaland)

RA/Genre Resources

How podcasts are helping books reach larger audiences.

On the Riot

8 new and upcoming cookbooks to inspire your fall cooking.

New books in translation for fall 2023.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

November picks for mystery/thrillers, SFF, romance, horror, nonfiction, YA, children’s.

The Horror Writers Association and partners announce their 2024 Summer Scares spokesperson, timeline, and more!

10 authors like Elin Hilderbrand.

Where to get started with monster romance.

The uprising of mesopunk books.

The joys of reading author catalogs in publication order.

In defense of didactic literature.

An exploration of all the writing cults in fiction.

All Things Comics

An original Spider-Man comic book in good condition may be sold for $35K.

The biggest show on Netflix right now is based on a comic that you can’t buy.

How this artist helped transform Elena Ferrante’s My Brilliant Friend into a graphic novel.

On the Riot

Why do kids love Garfield so much?

6 tentacle manga to thrill and titillate.

Power up your reading life with thoughtful writing on books and publishing, courtesy of The Deep Dive. Over at our Substack publication, you’ll find timely stories, informed takes, and useful advice from our in-house experts. We’re here to share our expertise and perspective, drawing from our backgrounds as booksellers, librarians, educators, authors, editors, and publishing professionals. Find out why the bestseller list is broken, analyze some anticipated books, and then get a free subscription for weekly content delivered to your inbox. You can also upgrade to paid-for bonus content and community features connecting you to like-minded readers.

Audiophilia

Kindle Direct Publishing will beta test AI-narrated audiobooks.

How publishers pair celebrity narrators with audiobooks.

November audio picks from AudioFile and Vulture.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Books that kids love and recommend.

Kids’ books about Día de los Muertos.

11 YA books with dual timelines that you’ll absolutely love.

Epic Reads has released their 2023 holiday gift guide, along with more extensive gift guides for coming-of-age books, SFF, mystery/thriller/horror, and romance.

Adults

Books for Native American Heritage Month.

Barack Obama shares his reading list for learning about the rise of artificial intelligence.

13 eerily good books to read for Halloween and beyond.

7 spooky short story collections by Latina writers.

Scary-ass books by Black authors.

18 nonfiction books for fans of Madonna, memoirs, or cultural histories.

TikTok wants you to read these 34 books ASAP.

Modern African books based on mythology.

10 horror romance books to send shivers down your spine.

10 intense psychological thrillers that will mess with your head.

6 endlessly fun page-turners recommended by Janet Evanovich.

On the Riot

20 funny picture books for kids to erupt in giggles.

Children’s books that will keep the Halloween spirit alive all year long.

8 fantasy novels where the characters reincarnate.

Influential BIPOC authors you may not have heard of.

Stop, you’re killing me! 21 must-read serial killer thrillers.

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 loafing in a large cat bed

Blaine accidentally left a super-plush robe out on the couch, so Dini obviously decided it was his. In order to rescue the robe, Blaine proposed a trade and relocated the cat bed, so now Dini has a new favorite spot.

All right, friends, I’ll be back on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

School Board Candidates Endorsed by Moms for Liberty

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I’m trying to put this newsletter together without interruption, but Gilbert’s sitting next to me on the couch and doing his best to lick a hole through the nearest throw pillow. I can’t tell if he’s actually trying to lick the pillow, or if he just thinks he’s licking his foot, but I have to keep reaching over to redirect him. He’s always been a pillow-licker though…

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.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Philadelphia students navigate school without access to school libraries.

Publishers look to make edits to Massachusetts’ eBook access bill.

Cool Library Updates

The San Francisco Public Library launched a new free music streaming service that spotlights local musicians.

The British Library is making the entire collection of Geoffrey Chaucer’s manuscripts available in digital format. ​​

Worth Reading

Digitizing books can spur demand for physical copies.

Book Adaptations in the News

Amazon is developing a series adaptation of The Fourth Wing.

Multiple buyers have already placed bids for the adaptation rights to Britney Spears’ memoir.

Taron Egerton will star in a film adaptation of Jordan Harper’s She Rides Shotgun.

Here’s the trailer for Stamped From the Beginning.

Censorship News

Here’s a list of every school board candidate endorsed by Moms for Liberty in several states.

They may not be the most targeted books, but they’re still banned.

Ending censorship applies to prison too.

A new study by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and George Mason University found that banning a book in one state often led to circulation increases for that book in states that did not ban it.

This is how you can protect your local library. (Come for the public library support, and stay for the awesome professional resource that is Ask a Manager!)

The Art of War and Amy Schumer’s memoir are among the many books banned in U.S. prisons. Here’s why.

School librarians from across the nation speak about mounting pressures.

Conroe ISD (TX) is on the verge of implementing a book ban that mirrors the new policy recently approved at Katy ISD.

The Abilene City Council (TX) approved a “controversial” statue design for the Adamson-Spalding Storybook Garden. The controversy? The statue depicts the two main characters from Itty Bitty Kitty Corn, a picture book about a kitten who dresses like its unicorn friend, which residents say is an encouragement of the “transgender lifestyle.” Yes, grown adults who seemingly have families, drive cars, and pay bills are upset about a kitten and a unicorn from a children’s picture book.

Florida joins the list of conservative states severing ties with the American Library Association.

The Tampa Bay Times covered the recent American Association of School Librarians conference, including the Right to Read rally, which was held indoors due to safety concerns.

Miami-Dade (FL) students now need a parent’s permission to attend the school book fair.

“Thirty-thousand children could face new restrictions on what they can borrow from Hillsborough County libraries [FL] under expanded parental controls to begin early next year.”

The Volusia County School District (FL) has put the Bible back on the shelves after it was challenged for “sexually explicit content.”

Hernando County Schools (FL) have recommended that It’s So Amazing: A Book about Eggs, Sperm, Birth, Babies, and Families and The Perks of Being a Wallflower be removed from school libraries after a local member of Moms for Liberty challenged the titles. From a MfL member quoted in the article: “Moms for Liberty is not in the business of banning books…For the parents who want their children to have access to age inappropriate material, they can visit the county libraries, Amazon, eBay and other stores.” Sure, let’s just forget the fact that Moms for Liberty are targeting public libraries just as much as school libraries and that many families can’t afford to purchase books for their children anyway.

The Woolwich Central School board (ME) unanimously rejected a request from a parent to remove It’s Perfectly Normal, saying it was too sexual for students. Again, I point out that if adults consider books about puberty too sexual, that says way more about them than it does about the library that carries the book.

Southington High School (CT) parents are upset about their children having to read Native Son in English classes.

The East Hampton City Council (MA) has issued a resolution to oppose book bans and other attempts to limit information at the public library.

A bigoted pastor has found himself on the receiving end of a one-year ban from Clyde-Savannah Central School District property (NY) for his conduct at a recent board meeting, so he gets a non-critical write-up in the local paper about his collaboration with Moms for Liberty.

The Pennsylvania Senate has passed its “explicit content” legislation despite heated debate over whether or not the legislation supports book bans. The bill now heads to the Democratic-majority House.

The courts have sided with a Pennsylvania parent, who won an open records lawsuit against the Pennridge School District, which he contends has been secretly banning books and having staff check out contentious books to keep them off the shelves during the review process.

Nazareth Area School Board (PA) will decide soon whether or not to ban Push.

“A handful of community members in the Pine-Richland School District [PA] pleaded with school directors Monday evening to remove books from school libraries they deemed to be sexually explicit and obscene.” Words matter, and using words like “pleaded” to describe these demands is not a good choice.

(Paywalled): Catawba County Schools (NC) have read 24 contested titles, but the challenges aren’t over.

Anatomy of a communication mess: Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools (NC) banned Banned Books Week activities, then reversed the ban on Banned Books Week. However, they did decide to keep Nineteen Minutes and Sold in the school libraries, so yay?

South Carolina state superintendent Ellen Weaver wants the state, not local school districts, to control which books and educational materials are purchased for school libraries. So much for small government, amirite? (Semi-paywalled – I had to answer three questions to get 48 hours of free access to this article.)

Moms for Liberty is upset that the Horry County School District (SC) only restricted access to Monday’s Not Coming, and didn’t remove the book entirely from the library.

Greenville County Library Board (SC) slightly loosens its draconian display policy, but only slightly. From the article: “‘We seem to be the only ones that we can find that has gone to this particular level of policy,’ said trustee William Pinkston.” You’re so close to getting it, Trustee Pinkston! So close!

“The Lexington-Richland 5 school board [SC] voted Monday to deny a request that committee members get a three-week extension to finish its review of the book,” so it’s possible that some committee members may vote on a recommendation for the book without having read it in its entirety.

Berkeley County School District (SC) will provide recommendations for 10 of the 93 books that were challenged by a single parent.

Alabama State Library director Nancy Pack has caved to the governor’s demands and ended the state’s ALA membership.

Alabama libraries battle extremists. Will lawmakers do the same?

Residents at a recent Athens-Limestone County Library (AL) board meeting called for the library to rewrite its policies regarding sexual content in library materials.

The Cullman Library Board (AL) has declined to move three challenged LGBTQ+ titles.

The Arkansas Library Association’s president declined an invitation to a legislative hearing, as the ArLA is participating in a lawsuit against the state. In response, an Arkansas State senator has said that the state will withhold funding from the ArLA, except the ArLA doesn’t receive state funding and never has. Will these people learn to at least research their threats before making them?

The Iberia Parish School District (LA) has removed Gender Queer for review and possibly two additional LGBTQ+ titles? It’s hard to tell from the article. But a parent challenged all three titles in an email titled “Library Scavenger Hunt,” and wrote, “‘I’m sure many other parent (sic) will find this unacceptable. We are not only making it accessible to MINORS but now rewarding/promoting it with this sick scavenger hunt…This is absolutely unacceptable.’” It’s unclear what they mean by “library scavenger hunt” though.

The St. Tammany (LA) library board rescinded a policy that segregated over 150 challenged titles that were pending review.

The Daviess County Public Library (KY) moved three books from the Young Adult to the Adult section, but the director says the decision had nothing to do with the recent “audit” made by the Daviess County Citizens for Decency.

A local Michigan group called Parents and Taxpayers Against Pornography in Rockford Public Schools filed a lawsuit against the district for having books with sexual content in school libraries, but the lawsuit has been dismissed.

Kenosha Unified School District (WI) has removed four books this year: This Book is Gay, Gender Queer, Let’s Talk About It, and All Boys Aren’t Blue.

District 300 has reversed its decision to cancel Hampshire High School’s (IL) spring musical production of The Prom.

A group of parents and students led a silent protest at a recent Cheyenne School Board (WY) meeting against a proposed policy that would require parents to opt-in to give their students access to specific titles. The current policy allows parents to opt-out if they want to restrict access.

Garfield County Libraries (CO) hosted a Freedom to Read rally in response to a patron who wanted several manga titles to either be separated from the rest of the collection or removed altogether.

The Will Rogers Public Library Board (OK) has decided to retain My Footprints.

The Salt Lake City Tribune has created a database of titles banned in Utah.

The Chino Valley School Board (CA) continues to debate a potential policy change that would allow books with “sexually graphic content” to be removed from school libraries.

Visalia Unified Board of Education (CA) heard from several disgruntled residents who were upset that the school chose not to ban 13 challenged titles.

Books & Authors in the News

The Taylor and Travis fan fiction that’s tearing TikTok apart.

In other Taylor Swift/TikTok news, there’s a theory bouncing around that Taylor Swift is the person behind the pseudonym Elly Conway, whose espionage novel is coming out in January and has already been snagged for a movie adaptation. However, Vanity Fair investigated and concluded that T. Swift is not Elly Conway.

Stephen King wrote an op-ed for the New York Times on gun control after the deadly mass shooting in Maine last week.

Mario Vargas Llosa says that his latest novel will be his last.

George R.R. Martin is still working on Winds of Winter.

Numbers & Trends

What are the book-owning and book-reading habits of Americans?

The bestselling books of the week.

Award News

The 2023 World Fantasy Award winners have been announced.

The Berry Pickers by Amanda Peters is the winner of the 2023 Barnes & Noble Discover Prize.

Pop Cultured

The 10 best detective movies of all time, ranked.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

The long legacy of book clubs.

On the Riot

The best eReaders of 2023.

What works in book clubs and what doesn’t.

Why does Frankenstein endure in pop culture?

a black and white cat looking upside down at the camera

Dini’s figured out that he’s doubly cute when he looks at us upside down like this! Don’t you just want to give him all the scritches and kisses??

All right, friends, it’s the weekend! I’ll see you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Literary It-Girls

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. As always, Halloween season has sped by faster than I’d like. I know I can read horror novels and watch scary movies all year, but there’s something special when the entire month is dedicated to all things dark, demented, and disturbing. Now all of the streaming horror movie collections are going to be replaced by movies with cozy Thanksgiving vibes, but I’m not ready to let go of the spooky stuff just yet!

Don’t forget, whether you’re looking for romance, creepy reads, modern classics, or escapist reads, TBR can help you find the perfect books for your fall reading, with options curated to your specific reading tastes.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

The makings of a literary it-girl.

New & Upcoming Titles

Publisher’s Weekly has released their list of the Best Books of the Year!

Tor has acquired three more novels from Seanan McGuire to continue and complete the Alchemical Journeys series.

Chuck Tingle has a new book coming out in July 2024.

Tom Selleck is publishing a memoir, which will be released in May 2024.

20 recent SFF books that will blow your mind.

19 new historical romances to make you swoon.

40 Canadian books to read this fall.

The best new fantasy and historical fiction of the year.

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

The best debut crime novels of October.

Barnes & Noble’s November/December picks for adults, teens, and children.

November picks from Epic Reads.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Opposable Thumbs: How Siskel & Ebert Changed Movies Forever – Matt Singer (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

The Woman in Me – Britney Spears (New York Times, USA Today, Variety)

Organ Meats – K-Ming Chang (New York Times, Shondaland)

The Reformatory – Tananarive Due (LA Times, New York Times)

Ours Was the Shining Future: The Story of the American Dream – David Leonhardt (New York Times, Washington Post)

Julia – Sandra Newman (New York Times, Washington Post)

America Fantastica – Tim O’Brien (Esquire, New York Times)

Let Us Descend – Jesmyn Ward (Guardian, NPR)

RA/Genre Resources

A roundtable discussion on Indigenous horror.

On the Riot

10 great nonfiction books from 2023 that you might have missed.

Recent BIPOC horror and thrillers to give you goosebumps.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

The social significance of ghost stories.

All Things Comics

On the Riot

Yes, graphic novels can (and do!) win literary awards!

What are poetry comics?

8 witchy graphic novels to spellbind you.

Audiophilia

Michelle Obama will narrate the digital audio version of Where the Wild Things Are.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

15 dark forest YA books that will keep you up all night in the best way.

Adults

Romance novels featuring protagonists with disabilities.

6 books to get you started with Black horror.

5 indie mysteries that really rock.

34 Halloween books to get you in a spooky mood.

Book suggestions for an evening of spooky reading.

Thrilling retellings of classic horror and gothic tales.

The books that explain California.

16 spooky novellas by women and nonbinary authors.

15 of the best fall books for a cozy season.

On the Riot

9 of the best autumn read-aloud picture books.

YA authors who have made their mark with poetry, too.

9 epic sci-fi books set on generation ships.

20 of TikTok’s favorite nonfiction books.

Fantasy books with a classic magic system.

8 titles to satisfy your pop culture cravings.

20 must-read historical fiction books set in France.

8 of the best English-language and US debuts.

Genre-blending horror novels you need to read.

10 of the best queer books on Kindle Unlimited in 2023.

24 African poets you need to read.

9 books about cities to read for World Cities Day.

8 cozy books for autumn reading.

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 hiding its face with its paws while stretched out in a person's lap

Dini absolutely conked out in my lap the other night, all stretched out like a 13-pound sausage link. Every time he does this, I resign myself to the fact that I’ll get nothing done while he’s in my lap…but he’s too cute to move!

All right, friends. Have a safe and scary Halloween! I’ll be back on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Censorship Happens Behind Paywalls

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. As is often the case, most of the library news is happening in the “Censorship” section of the newsletter. And unfortunately, I’m finding an increasing number of paywalled articles. It’s important for us to see how much of this information is kept from the general public, and it’s important to still point to the schools and libraries where censorship is happening, even if we can’t read the full details. Democracy dies in darkness.

On a less bleak note, it’s time to curl up with a great book, and TBR can help you find the perfect books for your fall reading, with options curated to your specific reading tastes!

Libraries & Librarians

Worth Reading

The Wall Street Journal says that libraries are the new front line in the American mental health crisis. It’s paywalled if you’re not a subscriber.

Book Adaptations in the News

Lucy Foley’s The Guest List is being adapted for a limited series for Hulu.

Here’s the official trailer for Eileen.

14 new and upcoming book-to-screen adaptations.

Censorship News

Are gatekeepers giving up the fight against book bans?

Scholastic says they’ll walk back their separate diversity collection for book fairs.

A comprehensive guide to all of the public libraries offering free access to banned books.

PEN America released a new report showing the staggering number of books that are banned in U.S. prisons.

Penguin Random House launches a writing award for high school students to combat book bans.

Here is the video of the “Protecting Kids: Combatting Graphic, Explicit Content in School Libraries” committee hearing, if you can stomach it. And here’s a written summary if you can’t stomach the video. Not surprisingly, the invited chapter chair from Moms for Liberty takes umbrage with the use of the word “banned.” Because that’s never what’s happening, is it?

Fran Lebowitz wants you to thank your librarian. “These people are like the backbone of democracy. They are so important. They were very important in my childhood, very important to me. No one should get near telling them what to do.”

(Paywalled) Plano ISD (TX) is refining its book selection process as sexual content still makes it onto library shelves. Stop. Legitimizing. Claims. Of. Sexual. Content. In. Libraries.

(Paywalled): As group voices concerns, Tyler Public Library (TX) remains committed to serving diverse populations.

Conroe ISD (TX) will vote on removing “sexually explicit” books at their November board meeting.

Lubbock (TX) book bans and those standing against them.

(Paywalled): The Lafayette Parish Library (LA) has canceled their community reading program because it was too hard to find a book that everyone agreed on. Look, any communal book club will tell you that finding a book that everyone agrees on is flat-out impossible, and that’s not the point of a community reading program anyway! They’ve also apparently moved multiple books on puberty to the adult section, according to the headline, because adulthood is clearly when puberty happens.

Moms for Liberty launches its first New York City chapter in Queens.

Suffield (CT) residents came to a recent Library Commission meeting to talk about the fact that a picture book about pronouns was removed from a display about kindness, a decision that was at the heart of the library director’s recent resignation.

Pennsylvania State Senator Ryan Aument has voiced support for a bill that would limit sexually explicit materials in schools and would require parents to opt their children into full library access. “Aument said this is not a book ban or discriminatory toward minorities.” Well, it must be true, then!

(Paywalled): Several books have been added to a “mature reading list” in Wilson County (PA) school libraries.

“The new school resource policy posted on the district’s website Friday morning would allow any student or their parents to challenge the use of literary and resource materials within the Blackhawk School District [PA]. Included in the policy are updates to the resource guidelines at the libraries and a new provision prohibiting content that is not ‘neutral.'”

“The Nazareth Area School District [PA] may have to spend more than $100,000 in taxpayer funds to review 23 books if Northampton County Moms for Liberty members and those connected with the group move ahead with requests to get all of those books banned.”

A Moms for Liberty chair’s son raised concerns over an LGBTQ+ book in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and some think it’s a setup.

(Paywalled): Carroll School Board (MD) has officially banned three titles and is requiring parental permission for four others.

(Paywalled): Harford County (MD) School Board, teachers, and community members address concerns over curriculum and books.

The Samuels Public Library (VA) spent almost $100,000 responding to book challenges from a group that wanted to have 141 titles removed or 0.04% of the Library’s total collection. Yes, this is a second news story about a library having to spend a hundred grand to battle a group of organized bigots. And that’s the point with these people – they WANT schools and libraries to incur enormous costs so that it becomes cheaper to just remove the books without argument.

“Republican Siobhan Dunnavant wants her Democratic opponent, Schuyler VanValkenburg, to retract a new ad that blames her for book bans in Virginia schools — threatening potential legal action if he keeps them on the air.” Honestly, I say more of these types of political ads. Bigots know that book banning is unpopular, and they don’t want their voters to know they support it. But the best way to combat these claims is to NOT BAN BOOKS. Radical, I know, but maybe give it a shot?

Pender County Schools (NC) are restricting access to A Court of Mist and Fury and Thirteen Reasons Why after a board member read passages aloud at a recent meeting.

Pickens County Schools (SC) face an uphill legal battle in their attempts to remove Stamped from the school libraries.

Rather than stand up to bigotry, the Greenville County Library System (SC) voted to remove all library displays unless they concern “paid holidays observed by both Greenville County Government and the Greenville County Library System” because themed displays are apparently a “liability for the library and are not a library necessity.” Honestly, if I worked there, I’d be job hunting immediately.

The ban on Flamer is being appealed in Marietta County, Georgia.

Alabama senators are considering legislative action to ban books.

“Read Freely Alabama, a group against book removals in Alabama public libraries, is expressing concern over Alabama Public Library Service Board Member John Wahl, who also serves as Chairman of the Alabama Republican Party. The group argues that Wahl’s participation in a roundtable discussion next month hosted by Clean Up Alabama is a conflict of interest.”

The Cullman County Public Library board (AL) opts not to remove three challenged books.

“Fairhope [AL] residents continue to push Fairhope City Council to withdraw funding for the Fairhope Public Library and have books removed, moved or sequestered,” despite the fact that the City Council has literally zero control over the library’s collections.

Last week, I posted about how, in Wilson County, Tennessee, a resident submitted a public records request to see who was behind the county-wide book bans. Most of the banners did not have any children or grandchildren registered in the school district, but the one parent who did is also the chapter chair of Wilson County Moms for Liberty. “Price told News 2 that she has not read all of the books she has challenged but has read excerpts.” SHOCKING.

Boyle County Schools (KY) has banned over 100 books, citing an anti-LGBTQ+ law, but state education officials disagree.

If you’re in Central Ohio or know people who are, pay attention to the school board races and know who you’re voting for!

The Brandywine Community School Board (MI) is trying to define what constitutes too much violence in the school library books, while leaked emails show that a trustee was contacting a local conservative news site about a recent diverse book grant that teachers received over the summer.

Hampshire High School (IL) has canceled its production of The Prom musical due to “safety concerns.”

Menomonee Falls School District (WI) has removed over 30 titles from the high school library.

(Paywalled): Sold by Patricia McCormick will remain in an Alexandria, Minnesota middle school, but students must get parental permission to access it.

How the “sex-act” has become a potent weapon for book banners in Iowa.

The Hampton Public Library received a 12% funding cut from the county. The County Chairman said all libraries received funding cuts this year, but the library director said she expects that it’s at least partly because of the library’s recent decision to retain 8 challenged books.

The Des Moines Register has sent out public records requests to every school district in Iowa to see which books have been removed under the state’s new legislation.

Nearly 70 books may be removed from Iowa City Community Schools under the new legislation.

“Fire-breathing lesbians” and “Satan-worshipping SOB’s:” the private chat logs of a Christian conservative school district group. This is in Colorado Springs.

Textbook publishers withdraw from Oklahoma as the fight over classroom content continues.

Mayfield High School (NM) will keep Jack of Hearts (and Other Parts) in the school library.

The Lewis County Commissioners (WA) want the Timberland Regional Library to implement a book rating system despite not having any authority, financial or otherwise, over the Library. This is absolute nonsense.

The Canby School District (OR) heard complaints about 36 books but ended up banning Lolita.

Dayton (OR) schools will keep five challenged books on the shelves.

Huntington Beach (CA) City Council has approved a policy that will restrict minors’ access to books with sexual content in public libraries. “The proposal was spearheaded by Councilmember Gracey Van Der Mark, who has made it her political mission to root out content she feels is inappropriate for minors and give parents more control over their kids’ choices of what to read. ‘This is actually how I got involved in politics,’ Van Der Mark told LAist. The first-time council member said years ago, she had found links to ‘pornography’ in materials given to students at her local middle school and that some books recommended by the state education department were ‘sexually explicit’ and ‘very inappropriate for children.’ This same Councilmember also reportedly distributed a horrifyingly antisemitic and anti-LGBTQ flyer to a handful of neighborhoods back in June.

“The Chino Valley Unified school board [CA] will discuss a possible revision to the Library Media Centers policy that instructs schools to pull a book off shelves in libraries and classrooms if a parent submits a formal complaint alleging the book contains sexually explicit content,” which if you’ll recall, is illegal under the new California law that prohibits book bans in schools.

(Paywalled): A North County (CA) school district quietly pulled books and shut down libraries after a parent complained. Its policy dictates otherwise. I’m really ticked this one is behind a paywall.

Books & Authors in the News

Oprah picks Jesmyn Ward’s Let Us Descend for her 103rd book club pick.

Numbers & Trends

The bestselling books of the week.

Award News

The Hugo Awards have been announced.

On the Riot

What are the Friends of the Library, and how can you get involved?

6 of the most radical librarians in history.

The best bookish Halloween costume ideas for 2023.

8 of the most shocking first lines in fiction.

a black cat and a black and white cat sitting on a pile of clean white towels

Gilbert and Dini had to make sure that our freshly laundered white towels were up to code. Here they are, taking a break from their long afternoon of supervising.

All right, friends, it’s the weekend! I’ll see you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

It Was All a Dream

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Send lots of thoughts for a calm and boring work week – our director is taking the week off and she’s designated me as the point person while she’s gone. Fingers crossed for no staff illnesses, no irate patrons, and no building crises.

Don’t forget, whether you’re looking for romance, creepy reads, modern classics, or escapist reads, TBR can help you find the perfect books for your fall reading, with options curated to your specific reading tastes.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Denver’s Tattered Cover Bookstore files for bankruptcy.

Barnes & Noble sets itself free.

New & Upcoming Titles

Prep your hold lists…Erik Larson has a new book coming out in 2024.

Knopf is publishing Gabriel García Márquez’s lost novel, Until August, in March 2024.

Tiffany D. Jackson has two new books coming out! Her first YA fantasy novel for Marvel will come out in 2024, and her next YA thriller will come out in 2025.

Serena Williams has signed a two-book deal with Random House.

First look at Christina Lauren’s upcoming novel, The Paradise Problem.

51 of the year’s coziest mysteries.

25 of the best books of 2023, so far.

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

October picks from Crime Reads (psychological thrillers).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

The Woman In Me – Britney Spears (Entertainment Weekly, Good Morning America, New York Times, Parade, People, Vulture, Washington Post)

Tremor – Teju Cole (Guardian, LA Times, New York Times, Vulture)

Romney: A Reckoning – McKay Coppins (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

Vengeance Is Mine – Marie NDiaye (New York Times, Washington Post)

Let Us Descend – Jesmyn Ward (Datebook, New York Times, Washington Post)

I Love Russia: Reporting From a Lost Country – Elena Kostyuchenko (Guardian, New York Times)

Worthy – Jada Pinkett Smith (USA Today, Washington Post)

If You Would Have Told Me – John Stamos (New York Times, People)

RA/Genre Resources

A look at how romance novel covers have transformed over the last several years.

On the Riot

How Simon & Schuster’s sale to KKR could affect the company.

What would an author-centered publishing company look like?

10 of the best books coming out this winter.

14 new October book club picks.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

Copaganda in romance novels.

The use of enchanted forests in fantasy novels.

A look at the “it was all a dream” trope.

All Things Comics

The vibes at New York Comic Con this year were weird.

Abrams and IDW are developing a series of books and comics tied to the Monster High franchise.

How early graphic novels create lifelong readers.

On the Riot

10 comics to read before playing Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 game.

27 of the best-selling manga of all time.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

12 beautifully illustrated nonfiction picture books to get lost in.

11 delicious picture books about apples.

Adults

25 of the best books about witches.

Modern books that provide a contemporary spin on Jane Austen.

5 horror novels set in seemingly idyllic small towns.

8 queer historical fiction books set around the world.

24 underrated books that everyone should read.

5 historical mysteries that feature unconventional and unforgettable women.

6 books about women working together.

6 thrilling books that blend folklore and horror.

The best light gothic romance novels.

5 cozy mystery series to satisfy your wanderlust.

12 stellar sci-fi romances.

13 cookbooks you need this fall.

10 historical fiction reads that span the 16th century. ​​

8 emotional books that cut deep.

On the Riot

8 of the best children’s books about mental health.

Cozy witch books to curl up with this fall.

8 twisty thrillers that fictionalize real events.

26 of the best witch books.

9 of the best Halloween mystery novels for some serious spooky season sleuthing.

8 fantasy novels that are impossible to adapt to the screen.

9 short stories to get you ready for Halloween.

8 spooky books you have to read this season.

8 books to read after listening to the podcast Empire.

Not your typical monster books.

10 of the coolest lit fic books around.

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.

portrait mode of a black and white cat in a sunny window

Do you think Dini knows how adorable he is?

One week till Halloween, friends. Get some good scary books and movies in! I’ll be back on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

The Scholastic Book Fair Fallout

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I have my next COVID vaccine scheduled for Saturday afternoon, and even though I’ve yet to experience any negative side effects from the vaccine, I’m still clearing my schedule (and the couch) for the weekend. We’ve had a couple people at work come down with COVID in the last month, and I have no desire to repeat my experiences from last year.

Anyway, in lighter news, autumn is here, which means it’s time to curl up with a great read! Whether it’s romance, creepy reads, modern classics, or escapist reads you crave, TBR can help you find the perfect books for your fall reading, with options curated to your specific reading tastes.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Montana State Library Commission votes to eliminate the master’s degree requirement for large library directors.

Cool Library Updates

L.A. Libraries are supporting the next generation of Latino authors.

The adult education classes at the Saginaw Public Library (TX) have received such great word-of-mouth marketing that they have a waitlist of over 40 patrons.

A closer look at the Brooklyn Public Library’s Jay-Z exhibit.

Book Adaptations in the News

Jessica Knoll’s latest novel, Bright Young Women, is getting a TV adaptation.

Martin Scorcese and Leonardo DiCaprio will team up again for another David Grann adaptation — this time, it’s for The Wager.

The Hunting Wives by May Cobb gets a Starz greenlight.

Roku Channel acquired The Spiderwick Chronicles after it was canceled at Disney+.

Censorship News

Parents who believe librarians should be prosecuted for library materials: what else do they think?

Scholastic released an extremely spineless statement about their choice to make diverse books optional in their school book fair selections. And now librarians are seeking other alternatives for book fairs, while PEN America has urged Scholastic to explore other options than…you know…outright censorship.

There was another federal-level committee hearing on Thursday, October 19, about books in school libraries. Although this newsletter was published before any significant reports from the hearing were released, the name of the hearing was “Protecting Kids: Combating Graphic, Explicit Content in School Libraries,” which should tell you everything you need to know.

Two national parties consider resolutions in support of the right to read in American libraries.

The appeal in the Texas book rating case has been delayed by three weeks.

(Paywalled) Katy ISD (TX) halts all library book purchases, and new books are put into storage.

A transgender student, her crusading mother, and an English teacher caught in the middle. (Texas).

Plano ISD (TX) Superintendent Therese Williams has apparently bought into the idea that school libraries contain sexually explicit materials, and she has called on the district to review its relevant policies.

Banned Books USA announces a new initiative to provide free access to banned books for Florida residents and educators. However, a lack of physical books isn’t the problem, and it doesn’t do anything to address the strategies that the bigots ARE using, which is focusing on policy and legislation to achieve their ends.

Daytona Beach (FL) residents are concerned that a city-sponsored book fair will offer access to banned books.

Nearly 80 titles have been pulled from Charlotte County (FL) public school libraries for review.

Seminole County (FL) schools pulled 31 books, not because they were challenged directly, but because other schools had pulled them.

“Faith-affiliated groups have employed citizens to read excerpts from ‘sexually explicit books’ at this week’s St. Tammany Parish School Board meeting, shifting book restriction efforts from the parish’s public library scene to its public school district.”

“Schools in the Bonny Eagle School District [ME] have begun taking steps to ensure that underage students are not accessing age-inappropriate material in the school library without parental consent.” Stop framing news articles as if this is a reasonable action for schools and libraries to take!!

“High school novel stirs controversy among Three Village [NY] parents.” Here, let me rewrite this headline for you: “Three Village parents manufacture outrage and controversy over age-appropriate book.” The book in question is The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian.

A New Jersey librarian shares a trick for educators fighting book censorship: the book resume.

Is Pennridge (PA) secretly banning books? Pay for a subscription to find out! (This article is paywalled.)

(Paywalled) Two LGBTQ+ books have been removed from Central Bucks School (PA) for “violating policy.”

Wood County (WV) Library is updating their collection development policy to include the following updates for challenging materials: All challenges must come from active cardholders. Challenges are limited to two titles at a time, and both must be submitted separately. ALSO! “The library will make an announcement when titles are challenged to enable public input.” This is pretty damn solid.

The challenged books in Carroll County (MD) are largely written by women and feature LGBTQ+ characters.

23 additional books have been removed from Spotsylvania (VA) school libraries, where one of the board trustees has publicly called for sexually explicit books to be burned. He’s now the board chair.

Catawba County (NC) schools will be restricting access to A Court of Thorns and Roses in the high school libraries and will be removing A Court of Mist and Fury altogether.

At the Burke County (NC) Board of Education meeting, book banners literally bussed in people to complain about a number of books in school libraries. You know, the tactic that right-wingers love to accuse liberals of doing?

I’m just going to borrow Kelly Jensen’s wording from her censorship roundup because I can’t top this: “From the photo caption, without the photo, I want you to guess what the person looks like: ‘Retired teacher Shirley Redford of Newport speaks in support of the Parents’ Bill of Rights recently adopted by the NC General Assembly and encourages Board of Education members and administrators to ensure age-appropriate books are used in county public schools and media centers.’ If your guess was older, white, and wearing a bedazzled ‘USA’ bracelet, then you know all you need to on this story (NC).”

The South Carolina Department of Education has drafted a proposal for a new regulation that would give the state, not local school boards, authority over school and classroom library materials.

Alabama governor Kay Ivey wants to implement statewide legislation that ties funding to book policies, but in this case, she wants the policies to restrict library access, and libraries can lose funding if they…you know…offer information access to everyone.

A Saline County (AR) judge has fired the county library director after she refused to remove books from the children’s section. Please remember that this is the same area where officials gave the county judge power over library staffing, budget, and operations back in August, and several people expressed concerns that this would lead to the director being fired.

A Wilson County (TN) resident put in a public records request to see who has been behind the growing number of book challenges. Although the news outlet had not obtained a copy of the request by the time the article was published, the resident who initially requested the information said that all of the book challenges, with one exception, are coming from people who don’t have children or grandchildren in the school system. Quelle surprise.

The Northern Kentucky chapter of Moms for Liberty showed up at the state library association to protest ALA president Emily Drabinsky for being a Marxist lesbian.

The Clean Up Ida Rupp (OH) group is pushing for the library to remove “sexually explicit” books from the teen section and is now asking voters to reject the library’s upcoming levy.

A former Michigan teacher posted a TikTok about banned books, and now the school that she hasn’t worked at since 2021 has received threats thanks to “Libs of TikTok.”

The Caro Area District Library (MI) board has denied appeals to relocate three sex-ed books.

“The Great Falls City Commission [MI] voted 3-2 to appoint an anti-library levy applicant to the Great Falls Public Library board.” They’re just saying the quiet parts out loud now, aren’t they?

A Marathon County (WI) supervisor has proposed pulling the library system’s funding because he doesn’t approve of some of the books. Not surprisingly, an attorney had already determined back in January that this would be illegal and not a great look for the county.

The ACLU has condemned the Yorkville School Board (IL) for removing Just Mercy from classrooms.

(Paywalled) A library grant tied to Illinois’ anti-book ban law raises red flags for the Huntley District 158 school board.

A group of Muslim parents have threatened to remove their children from DaVinci Academy (MN) if the school does not remove a number of picture books that feature LGBTQ characters.

Book ban attempts are on the rise in Minnesota schools.

After the Pella Public Library (IA) refused to remove Gender Queer, the city council now wants to have more control over library policies and decisions and wants to reduce the influence of the existing library board to that of an advisory committee with no formal power. Residents will have a chance to vote on this proposed change in November.

A grim look at how the recent Iowa state legislation has negatively impacted the school districts that share space and collections with the public library.

A Colorado court ruled that if requests for reconsideration forms are FOIAed, they cannot include information about the people or groups who submitted the form.

“Colorado libraries face increasing requests to remove or limit access to books and programming.”

Hundreds of people turned out for a Cherry Creek School board meeting (CO), the vast majority of whom came to support the schools and to stand against the “politicized misinformation” spread by the Colorado Parent Advocacy Network.

A federal judge has extended the injunction against Montana’s Drag Story Hour ban. “The judge chided state defendants for promoting the idea that exposure to LGBTQ+ individuals is harmful to children.”

Visalia Unified School District (CA) will retain 13 challenged books.

Books & Authors in the News

Nobel Prize-winning poet Louise Glück has died at 80.

Actress and author Suzanne Somers has died at 76.

Numbers & Trends

Library Journal has published the results of their annual Placements and Salaries Survey.

The best-selling books of the week.

Washington Irving’s final published manuscript goes on sale.

Award News

LeVar Burton has replaced Drew Barrymore as the 2023 National Book Awards host.

The winners of the 2023 Kirkus Prize have been announced.

The longlists for the 2024 Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction & Nonfiction have been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

How the humble paperback helped win World War II.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

On the Riot

The joys of checking cookbooks out from the library.

Great Halloween activities for your school library.

How working in a library healed this Rioter’s inner child.

For $150,000, you could own a former Carnegie library! (But it needs work.)

The bookish life of Mandy Patinkin.

How to read through a reading slump.

Why does reading to ambient sound make reading better?

black cat standing in front of a computer screen that shows a Zoom meeting in progress

Gilbert didn’t like that I was Zooming in for our monthly board meeting because I wasn’t paying sufficient attention to him. (Also, please ignore the bald patches above his eyes. He has allergies and likes to scratch his face on literally everything in front of him.)

All right, friends, it’s the weekend! I’ll see you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Witch Fiction Isn’t Going Anywhere

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I just learned that an article I wrote for Public Libraries magazine a couple of years ago was used as an MLIS reading assignment! Talk about a career achievement I never expected to unlock!

Don’t forget, whether you’re looking for romance, creepy reads, modern classics, or escapist reads, TBR can help you find the perfect books for your fall reading, with options curated to your specific reading tastes.

Collection Development Corner

New & Upcoming Titles

Salman Rushdie is writing a memoir about his attack last year.

TJ Klune is publishing a sequel to The House in the Cerulean Sea.

Casey McQuiston announces her next book, The Pairing.

James Patterson is finishing a partially written manuscript by the late Michael Crichton.

George Stephanopoulos is writing a new book about the White House Situation Room, out May 2024.

Hugh Jackman is writing a memoir.

Here’s a first look at Gregory Maguire’s final Wicked book, The Witch of Maracoor.

14 pop culture memoirs and biographies coming out this fall.

The 30 must-read YA books for the rest of 2023.

Barnes & Noble has released its picks for Best Books of 2023.

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

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Down the Drain – Julia Fox (Bustle, Elle, People, USA Today)

Madonna: A Rebel Life – Mary Gabriel (Atlantic, New York Times, Town & Country, USA Today)

Blackouts – Justin Torres (New York Times, Shondaland, Washington Post)

The Upside-Down World: Meetings with the Dutch Masters – Benjamin Moser (New York Times, Washington Post)

The Dictionary People: The Unsung Heroes Who Created the Oxford English Dictionary – Sarah Ogilvie (New York Times, Washington Post)

How to Say Babylon: A Memoir – Safiya Sinclair (Guardian, NPR)

My Name is Barbra – Barbra Streisand (Entertainment Weekly, Vanity Fair)

Family Meal – Bryan Washington (Datebook, Washington Post)

RA/Genre Resources

How Jesmyn Ward is reimagining Southern literature.

On the Riot

Indie publishers with extensive BIPOC and queer catalogs.

The best horror novels of the past 3 years, according to Goodreads users.

10 great 2023 mysteries you may have missed.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

10 romance authors like Abby Jimenez to make you swoon.

Decades: a journey of African American romance.

Why witch fiction isn’t going anywhere.

Where would fiction be without women?

All Things Comics

Dr. Seuss comes to comics in a new graphic novel series.

Comic book upstart Ghost Machine seeks to shake up the industry.

7 new comics for fans of horror — just in time for Halloween!

Literary graphic novels to add to your library.

On the Riot

The Center of Jewish History opens a Jewish comics experience.

New YA graphic novels and comics hitting shelves this fall.

8 comic book cover art collections to please your eyes.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Audiophilia

The Society of Authors in the UK is “deeply concerned” about Spotify’s new audiobook streaming provision.

Michelle Williams is narrating the audio version of Britney Spears’ memoir.

10 new audiobooks for fall 2023.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

15 high society YA novels similar to Bridgerton.

Adults

25 of the best vampire books of all time.

5 underrated horror books.

10 spooky page-turners to knock your socks off.

The 100 greatest film books of all time.

Bewitching romance books for a spooky season.

9 demonic thrillers to lose yourself in this October.

And here are some more possession thrillers!

Classic SF set on ocean planets.

8 South Asian novels about falling in love.

10 of the best historical romance mystery novels.

6 sports romance novels to root for.

8 literary reads with a touch of mystery.

On the Riot

8 of the best Indigenous middle grade novels.

20 must-read adult novels from YA authors.

20 must-read vampire books in 5 genres.

9 SF books that mix in medieval elements.

Nonfiction about witches, ghosts, and other odd creatures.

10 dark and twisted fairy tale retellings.

25 of the best cowboy romance novels.

8 horror reads to make your skin crawl.

10 fantastic Haitian books in translation.

Adult versions of your favorite childhood horror novels.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen 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 an open backpack

Here, we see Dini training for his new career as a TSA agent. And no, it has nothing to do with the strings on the face masks spilling out of the front pouch!

All right, friends. I’ll be back on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

What Not to Say to Public Librarians

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. I am excitedly planning my Weird Barbie costume — I found the perfect secondhand dress (thank you, ThredUp!), and now I just need some fabric paint and some obnoxiously patterned leggings to go with it.

Autumn is here, which means it’s time to curl up with a great read! Whether it’s romance, creepy reads, modern classics, or escapist reads you crave, TBR can help you find the perfect books for your fall reading, with options curated to your specific reading tastes.

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Tracie D. Hall has unexpectedly resigned as ALA’s executive director, effective October 6th.

Cool Library Updates

“Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias on Thursday announced his office is awarding $420,000 in grants to state prison libraries, marking the first time that reading centers for inmates have received significant public dollars in years.”

Worth Reading

“The U.S. library system, once the best in the world, faces death by a thousand cuts.”

The Urban Libraries Council shared this new leadership brief about “practical and responsible” applications of generative AI for library systems.

Book Adaptations in the News

Here’s the trailer for All the Light We Cannot See.

Censorship News

The emotional and financial toll of book bans.

What’s behind the national surge in book bans? A low-tech website tied to Moms for Liberty. Someone is taking a critical look at BookLooks, and not just covering it as if it were a reputable resource.

The Supreme Court is increasingly putting Christians’ First Amendment rights ahead of others’ dignity and rights to equal protection.

The most dangerous idea in a library: empathy.

We must challenge the subtle censorship of books as much as the brazen.

Not satisfied with schools, book banners are now targeting adults’ right to read.

“Banned books, banned people.”

Scholastic is under fire for allowing schools to opt out of “diverse books” for their book fairs.

Banning books doesn’t stop puberty.

Laurie Halse Anderson donates $100K of her 2023 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award prize money to fight book bans.

School culture wars have pushed students to form banned book clubs and anti-censorship groups.

Plus, what do the kids have to say about book bans?

A Black History “Underground Railroad” forms across the U.S. after an increase in book bans.

Book bans in Texas spread as the new state law takes effect.

The people behind the suspicious app BookmarkED are also behind a number of Texas book bans, and one of them is a school administrator.

Children and parents begin an uphill battle fighting back against book bans in Florida.

The Volusia School Board (FL) tells Moms for Liberty they need to file formal book challenges. Of course, the school’s policy requires the books to be removed from the shelves within five days of a challenge being submitted until the review process is complete, but at least the school is telling M4L they can’t just circumvent policy?

The Alachua County (FL) school district removed Beyond Magenta after a parent challenged it.

A Florida school librarian writes firsthand about the confusion happening in schools due to the state’s new legislation and mandates.

(Paywalled) Connecticut library director resigns due to alleged political pressure over LGBTQ+ inclusion.

The Rochester (MA) Board of Trustees voted to remove a Little Free Diverse Library from the Plumb Library property due to “confusion surrounding the ownership and control of the Little Free Diverse Library.”

Samuels Public Library (VA) has its funding restored with its LGBTQ policies unchanged. “Under the new arrangement, Samuels agreed to include a member of the county supervisors on its executive committee, a subset of the 15-member board of trustees, which has always included a representative from the county board. The library trustees also agreed to consider candidates suggested by the county supervisors when seeking to appoint new library board members.”

What it’s like to be a Fairfax County [VA] librarian in an era of banned books.

(Paywalled) North Carolina State Education Board says it won’t hear appeals on school book challenges.

Advocates and school board members question the validity of a single parent’s 93 book challenges. “‘I feel that it’s unreasonable to have one parent be the voice of 38,000 students,’ Berkeley County School Board [SC] member Dr. Crystal Wigfall said.”

Alabama governor Kay Ivey continues to argue with the state’s Public Library Service Director, Dr. Nancy Pack, and has proposed new amendments for Alabama public libraries to receive state funding.

Huntsville-Madison County Public Library (AL) mistakenly flagged the picture book Read Me a Story, Stella as a potentially inappropriate story because the author’s last name is “Gay.” I’m not making this up.

Public libraries, readers, and writers react to Missouri’s new rule targeting young library patrons.

“After LGBTQ library fight, a Michigan town tries something new: compromise.” OKAY. First off, I hate this headline — it implies that book-banning fights can be solved by coming together with bigots. Secondly, the “compromise” that the library reached with the community is that the library will post labels inside each book with copy-and-pasted summary information pulled from Amazon or the Library of Congress. These are freely accessible websites that patrons could visit themselves to learn more about the book. Or, you know, they could just read the damn plot summary on the back of the book. But instead, the library is being made to spend a huge amount of staff time on a meaningless task because the book banners can’t stand the thought of doing their own research. I hope that the Patmos Library can stay open, and I’m happy that no books have been removed or restricted, but the whole debacle is ridiculous.

John Green talks to Indy fans about banned books access and other things close to his heart.

Indiana’s controversial new law, which bans “harmful materials” from schools and libraries and could lead to the criminal prosecution of teachers and librarians, is set to take effect on January 1, 2024.

As bomb threats increase, the Chicago Public Library must do more to protect their workers.

And an update on the bomb threat situation: police arrested a suspect earlier this week.

Chicago-area schools and libraries have received a record number of book challenges within the last three years — over 300!

How specific book-ban requests entered the Genoa-Kingston School District (IL) from the inside. Specifically, the school board president has been requesting for years that multiple books be removed from the shelf. Also, this is a good article because NBC 5 Investigates is actually doing their journalistic duty and questioning the board president about his actions, not just reporting neutrally.

Iowa’s recent legislation has prompted some people to post disclaimers on Little Free Libraries.

The Andover Public Library (KS) has paused their social media presence after receiving threats during Banned Books Week. From the director: “You know, it was actually some good discourse but then it kind of turned into name calling and the library started receiving images of woodchippers, threats to destroy the books in our library. I thought it had gone too far. Staff were feeling uncomfortable.”

State Superintendent Ryan Walters asked for tips on inappropriate materials in Oklahoma schools. What he got were “subscriptions to LGBTQ+ news, song lyrics and part of the script of the Bee Movie.” This is high-quality trolling, and I approve!

“Boise-area library patrons oppose ‘normalizing’ LGBTQ+ lifestyles, records show.” I absolutely detest this framing. It centers the book banners as though they speak for the entire community, and it’s not until the second half of the article that they quote someone about the importance of having these types of stories in the library. One book banner is even quoted comparing LGBTQ+ books being labeled in the library to labeling food items for people with allergies.

The Escondido Union School District (CA) “has temporarily closed its school libraries after a book ‘containing sexually explicit material’ was found in one of its campus libraries.” The title is not listed. Also, why the hell are we treating this situation like black mold or a carbon monoxide leak?

Learning at Temecula Valley Unified (CA) suffers as censorship fears rise.

We all need this limited edition T-shirt of Levar Burton instructing you to read banned books.

Books & Authors in the News

Indian authorities have charged novelist Arundhati Roy with offenses related to provocative speech based on public comments she made over 13 years ago.

Best-selling Swedish thriller author Camilla Läckberg has been accused of using a ghostwriter.

Reflecting on the 20th anniversary of The Kite Runner.

Numbers & Trends

The best-selling books of the week.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Award News

Norwegian author Jon Fosse receives the Nobel Prize for Literature.

The 2023 Baillie Gifford Prize for Nonfiction shortlist has been released.

Kirkus has released the fiction finalists for the 2023 Kirkus Prize.

20 books getting major awards buzz.

Pop Cultured

Only Murders in the Building has been renewed for a fourth season.

On the Riot

What not to say to public librarians. (In fact, I’ll add one of my own: “Can you help me put these eardrops in?” Yes, that is something a patron asked one of my co-workers, and guess which manager got to have a talk with this patron? Me.)

Why this Rioter’s library’s circulating zine collection absolutely rocks.

8 frightfully fun Halloween reading activities for students.

John Steinbeck’s collection of letters, journals, and manuscripts will be auctioned off at the end of the month.

The National Book Awards: a retrospective.

At what age should we stop reading aloud to each other? (Never!)

a black and white cat in the middle of rolling around on its side

Please enjoy this slightly blurry photo of Dini as he flung himself across my lap for snuggles.

All right, that’s all I’ve got for this week. I’ll see you on Tuesday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.