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Copper is Building the Instagram for Book Lovers: Today in Books

Nashville Library Debuts “I Read Banned Books” Cards

The Nashville public library has debuted new library cards that celebrate banned books amid attempts to censor literature throughout the state of Tennessee. The bright yellow library cards say “I Read Banned Books,” and are available to all Nashville public library patrons. In a news release about the campaign, Nashville public library director Kent Oliver said, “This campaign is our way of bringing our community together in our shared Freedom to Read, which is essential to sustaining our democracy.” There are only 5,000 limited-edition cards available, and the Nashville public library hopes to distribute all of them by the end of May.

Copper is Building “the Instagram for Book Lovers”

New phone app Copper wants to build an online community around books, connecting authors and fans through in-app discussions and live events. Copper CEO Allison Trowbridge said, “You have Twitch for the gamers, and Etsy for the crafters, and Spotify and SoundCloud for the musicians. Authors have never had a platform that’s built around their needs, and helping them reach an audience and do it in a way that’s authentic and engaging and can scale, but also creates depth in the relationships.” Copper allows authors to host FaceTime-like discussions with readers and engage in text-based forum discussions with fans. Currently, there is only a free version of the app, but later this year Trowbridge hopes to release a premium version with more features.

Oprah Daily Reveals the Cover of Ian McEwan’s Upcoming Novel

Booker Prize-winning British writer Ian McEwan has a new novel coming out later this year, and Oprah Daily has an exclusive cover reveal. “The boy’s awkward and studious pose, his half-concealed face, his exposed nape, those short pants we were made to wear at school back in the 1950s—all speak to a tender vulnerability,” McEwan said of the cover of his new novel Lessons. “The nonrepresentational color and especially the boy’s formless but unreally brilliant shadow suggest a future self that will be pursued by memories of a piano lesson that profoundly altered the course of his life. Young Roland was 11, at boarding school, 2,000 miles away from home. His teacher, a young woman, touched him physically and mentally and set in motion something wild and mad. All this at a time when the world seemed about to destroy itself.” Knopf will publish Lessons on September 13th of this year.

What is Short Story Month and Why is it in May?

A look at the story behind May becoming short story month and some excellent short reads to celebrate.

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Remember Getting Free Pizza When You Read in the Summer? It’s Back: Today in Books

Zoraida Córdova to Publish Modern Reimagining of The Little Mermaid

Zoraida Córdova has announced that she will be writing the 3rd book in the Meant to Be romance line. The book, entitled Kiss the Girl, is a modern reimagining of The Little Mermaid. Córdova wrote on Instagram, “I can’t say more than it’s a modern LITTLE MERMAID reimagining. This is a DREAM. I remember living in Ecuador and my grandmother, who had left to the US, sent me the VHS for my 3rd birthday. I watched it on repeat. Rewinding, singing, dreaming. I hope I gave her voice justice.” The previous two books in the romance line are If the Shoe Fits by Julie Murphy (a modern reimagining of Cinderella) and By the Book by Jasmine Guillory (a modern reimagining of Beauty and the Beast).

The Bookshelf is Partnering with Paulie’s Pizza for Summer Reading by the Slice

Remember when you were a kid and you got a free pizza when you read in the summer? Well, it’s back. If you’re a kid in Georgia, that is. The Bookshelf in Thomasville, GA, is partnering with Paulie’s Pizza to bring you Summer Reading by the Slice! Each time kids finish a book, they can bring a special tracking bookmark to the bookstore so a staff member can sticker it. Once kids have read three books for the month, they can take their bookmark to Paulie’s for a free slice of pizza. This program is available for kids through the 12th grade.

Lucy Maud Montgomery’s The Blue Castle Film Adaptation in the Works

Cinegryphon Entertainment will be adapting Lucy Maud Montgomery’s The Blue Castle into a feature film. Unlike Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables, The Blue Castle, first published in 1926, has never been adapted into a film or TV series. The Blue Castle is the story of a young woman named Valancy Stirling, who lives in the shadow of her overbearing family. After she’s diagnosed with terminal heart disease, giving her only a year to live, she throws caution to the wind and finds the courage to pursue her true desires. In a statement, Cinegryphon founder Scott Aharoni said the novel is “a beautiful reminder of how there is no such thing as wasted time — that no matter how ‘old’ or ‘late’ we may be, we can always start taking ownership of our own lives and live the one we’ve always desired or dreamed of having.”

Over 100 Books Have Been Challenged in Eanes, Texas, Since March 20

Over 100 books have been challenged in the small central Texas school district of Eanes.

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First Major Biography of Volodymyr Zelensky in English Will Be Published in July: Today in Books

Nikolaj Coster-Waldau Joins Jennifer Garner in Apple’s The Last Thing He Told Me

Nikolaj Coster-Waldau has been cast as the male lead in the Apple limited series The Last Thing He Told Me, based on the novel of the same name by Laura Dave. Coster-Waldau will be starring opposite Jennifer Garner in the drama from Reese Witherspoon’s Hello Sunshine. Author Laura Dave is adapting her book and serves as co-creator on the series alongside her husband Josh Singer, who won an Oscar for Spotlight.

First Major Biography of Volodymyr Zelensky in English Will Be Published in July

Polity Books will be publishing Serhii Rudenko’s biography of Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky this summer. Zelensky: A Biography is the first major biography of the leader to appear in English. The book, translated from Ukrainian by Michael Naydan and Alla Parminova, will be published in the UK on July 1st and in the US on July 25th.

State Street Pictures Developing Film Based On Comic Book Assassin & Son

State Street Pictures has optioned the comic book Assassin & Son for development as a film. The comic, created and written by the late Shad Gaspard and Marc Copani and illustrated by Eder Messiah, follows the story of Donovan Braddock, a one-man killing unit who works with a team of covert assassins known as “The Horsemen.” After Braddock finds love, he tries to leave the assassin life behind, but his old life still torments him.

Obi-Wan Kenobi Trailer Released on Star Wars Day

May the 4th was Star Wars day. And Disney celebrated by releasing a full trailer for the new series Obi-Wan Kenobi.

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An Unofficial BRIDGERTON Ball is Popping Up in Melbourne: Today in Books

Bella Thorne to Star in Thriller Saint Clare

Actress, model, and singer Bella Thorne is set to star in thriller Saint Clare, based on the novel Clare At Sixteen by Don Roff. Rebecca DeMornay (Jessica Jones) is also in negotiations to join the cast, with additional casting of other key roles underway. The film will be directed by Mitzi Peirone, who also scripted the adaptation alongside Guinevere Turner (who co-wrote the screenplay for Bret Easton Ellis adaptation American Psycho).

An Unofficial Bridgerton Ball is Popping Up in Melbourne

On September 17th, for one day and night only, Melbourne’s Plaza Ballroom is playing host to an unofficial Bridgerton Ball. There will be music played by a string quartet, food and drinks, games, live drawing, and more. Sessions take place from 12–4pm and 7–11pm, and tickets cost $209 per person. For more information and to buy your tickets, head over to the event website.

This Site Helps You Find Books Set Where You Live

If you live in the United States, Books Around America is an interactive tool that can help you find books set where you live in the US. Just enter your zip code or city to search for books that take place (more or less) near you. The site, created by by Crossword-Solver.com, said that (surprise!) they discovered that New York City is the most common literary setting in the US, appearing prominently in 2,609 books. Perhaps more surprisingly, every novel set in Pearl Harbor is listed as “historical” on Goodreads. And 92.59% of all books set in Bloomington, Indiana, are listed as romance.

Rapid City Area Schools Withheld 350+ New Books and Attempted to Destroy Them

350+ brand new books intended for high school seniors in Rapid City Area schools never made it to them. They might be destroyed instead.

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Alycia Debnam-Carey Set As Lead in SAINT X Recasting: Today in Books

Rare “Wicked” Bible that Encourages Adultery Discovered in New Zealand

A rare bible, infamous for its error that encourages adultery, has been discovered in New Zealand. The 1631 bible, known as the “Wicked” Bible, omits the word “not” from its seventh commandment, informing readers “thou shalt commit adultery.” One thousand copies of the text were printed before the error was discovered a year later. Upon discovery of the mistake, printers Robert Barker and Martin Lucas were stripped of their printing license and most of the texts were destroyed. Only about 20 remain in circulation. These rare bibles have resurfaced mostly in Britain or the US, but this is the first time one has been discovered in the southern hemisphere.

Alycia Debnam-Cary Set As Lead in Saint X Recasting

Hulu’s upcoming series Saint X is going through major recasting changes, including recasting the lead role. Victoria Pedretti was originally set to play the lead, but she has been replaced by Fear the Walking Dead‘s Alycia Debnam-Carey. The series, based on the novel of the same name by Alexis Schaitkin, is produced by ABC Signature and is shooting in the Dominican Republic.

Bookmark Marks the Closing of Landmark Bookstore in Kanda-Jinbocho District

A landmark building in the Kanda-Jinbocho District in Tokyo is set to undergo reconstruction soon, which has prompted the long-standing Sanseido Bookstore to close its doors on May 8th. The bookstore will be back after construction is finished in 2025, but that is a long time for the Tokyo book community to go without this beloved bookstore. In commemoration of the closing, a fair dedicated to the bookstore is currently being held. In front of the bookstore’s location, there is now a large, suspended sign in the shape of a bookmark that reads, “We’re putting the bookmark in for a moment.”

Why Should We Care About Freedom of the Press?

While the internet has made information more accessible than ever, we’re facing new threats to freedom of the press.

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Oprah Defends Keeping AMERICAN DIRT in Book Club After Controversy: Today in Books

Pablo Neruda’s Question Poems, Now Translated and Illustrated for Children

A new bilingual, illustrated selection of Neruda’s question poems from Libro de las Preguntas (Book of Questions) has been published by Enchanted Lion Books for children. Compiled throughout the poet’s life and published a year after his death in 1973, Neruda’s question poems ask things like, “Who shouted for joy at the birth of the color blue? When I look once more at the sea, does the sea see me or not see me? Why do the waves ask me the same questions I ask them?” Now children will have the opportunity to explore these questions along with the Chilean poet. “Children are constantly asking things because in their eyes, everything is new. So they ask questions to structure the world they’re coming into,” said Paloma Valdivia, the book’s illustrator. This selection of the poet’s work is a curated collection of 70 questions of the 300+ ones Neruda asked. Valdivia’s illustrations accompany the poems in large fold-out pages.

Blake Lively to Direct Adaptation of Graphic Novel Seconds

Blake Lively will make her feature directorial debut with an upcoming film adaptation of the graphic novel Seconds, created by Bryan Lee O’Mally. The script for Seconds was written by Edgar Wright, who previously helmed the first adaptation of an O’Malley’s Scott Pilgrim vs. the World. Wright will also produce the film, alongside Marc Platt.

Oprah Defends Keeping American Dirt in Book Club After Controversy

Oprah Winfrey says she has no regrets about choosing the controversial novel American Dirt as an official Oprah’s Book Club pick. In the inaugural episode of ABC News’ literary podcast The Book Case, which released today, Winfrey explained why she chose to stick with the title despite criticisms and calls to reconsider. “I had chosen that book and stood by that book because the truth of the matter is, I really loved the book,” Winfrey said. “And that was the only reason I was choosing the book, because I really loved the book. And even though lots of people were asking me now to disown that, I’d already owned it, so I wasn’t going to go back on my word and now say, ‘Well, because you think she shouldn’t have written the book, I no longer liked the book.'” The novel in question received criticism from the Latine community, who argued that it perpetuated harmful stereotypes and read as “trauma porn.” 82 diverse writers wrote a letter to Winfrey asking her to reconsider her pick. Those writers, which included Carmen Maria Machado, Daniel José Older, and R.O. Kwon, called the book “exploitative, oversimplified, and ill-informed” and cited accusations that the story stole from other Latine writers’ works.

Comic Book Legend Neal Adams Has Died at 80

From creating iconic superheroes and groundbreaking storylines to fighting for creator rights, Neal Adams was a legendary comic book artist.

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Manga is Booming: Today in Books

Atria Lets Córdova’s ‘Angels’ Fly

Melanie Iglesias Perez at Atria bought world English and Spanish rights to The Fall of Rebel Angels by Zoraida Córdova. The book is set for fall 2023, and Córdova’s representative Suzie Townsend describes it as “love story between a woman suspected of murdering her former lover and a fallen angel who is cursed to search for his wings on Earth every one hundred years.”

Frank Miller started a publishing company

Comics legend, Frank Miller, is starting a publishing company called Frank Miller Presents. Miller will be acting as president and editor-in-chief, with the goal of creating and curating a line of comics that captures his distinct visual style from a range of comics veterans as well as rising artists.

Manga Is Booming

The manga marketplace sales have exploded in North America with sales currently at more than 2.5 times larger than its earlier sales peak back in 2007 according to Masaaki Shimizu, general manager and publisher at Square Enix Manga & Books. Not only are publishers seeing growth in bestselling, but they’re also reporting higher than usual sales for midlist and backlist titles as well.

Tennessee Lawmaker Suggests Burning Banned Books

While debating the HB 2666/SB 2247 bill in the House, Democratic State Representative John Ray Clemmons asked Republican State Representative Jerry Sexton what he would do with the books deemed “inappropriate” for the collection. Sexton responded, “I would burn them.”

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Nicola Yoon to Publish First Novel for Adults: Today in Books

2022 Edgar Allan Poe Award Winners Announced

Mystery Writers of America has announced the Winners for the 2022 Edgar Allan Poe Awards, honoring the best in mystery fiction, non-fiction, and television published or produced in 2021. Winners included Five Decembers by James Kestrel for Best Novel, Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York by Elon Green for Best Fact Crime, and Firekeeper’s Daughter by Angeline Boulley for best Young Adult. You can see the full list of winners here. The winners were announced in a ceremony at the New York Marriott Marquis Times Square and livestreamed on YouTube.

Nicola Yoon to Publish First Novel for Adults

Young adult author Nicola Yoon is writing for adult audiences for her next novel One of Our Kind, which will be out from Anchor in 2024. Yoon, author of The Sun is Also a Star and Everything, Everything, describes her next book as “The Stepford Wives meets Get Out.” One of Our Kind will follow the story of a family who moves to a Black community in California, only to uncover a frightening secret about the town’s history. Yoon’s agent, Jodi Reamer, says the novel “takes the Nicola Yoon canon to a brilliant new level.”

Wake School Board Rejects Book Challenge

The Wake County school board in North Carolina has rejected a parent’s request to remove young adult novel Out of Darkness by Ashley Hope Perez from Cary High School’s library. The parent argued that the book contains profanity and sexually explicit content. On Thursday, a school board panel voted 3-0 on to allow the book to remain in Cary High’s library, citing a “full reading” of the book and the fact that students aren’t required to read the novel as part of the school’s curriculum. “This isn’t anything assigned to any child,” vice chairman Chris Heagarty said during the open-session discussion. “It’s only available in the media center.”

Is Romance Set in the Book World Trending?

Books about books have always been super popular, but there are a lot of romance novels set in the publishing world in 2022.

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Here’s A Sneak Peek at Rachel Hawkins’ Next Thriller THE VILLA: Today in Books

P. Djèlí Clark Makes His Middle Grade Debut in 2023

Nebula, Locus, and Alex Award-winning author P. Djèlí Clark has sold his middle grade debut novel to Ali Fisher at Starscape in an auction. Clark’s novel Abeni’s Song is a fantasy adventure that draws on African and Diaspora myths and folklore. Publication is planned for summer 2023.

Here’s A Sneak Peek at Rachel Hawkins’ Next Thriller The Villa

Rachel Hawkins, author of The Wife Upstairs and Reckless Girls, has a new thriller novel coming out on January 3rd, 2023. And here’s a sneak peek at The Villa, including a cover reveal. Hawkins says her latest novel draws from many influences, including the music of Fleetwood Mac, the Manson murders, and the notorious summer Mary Shelley, Lord Byron, and Percy Bysshe Shelley spent vacationing in a castle in Geneva. “I have basically been obsessed with the Romantic poets and Mary Shelley and that whole scene for years,” Hawkins said in an interview with Entertainment Weekly. “There is something so like, narratively rich about that summer that they spent at Lake Geneva.” Hawkins says she asked herself,”‘What if I took those guys and put them in the 1970s music scene?’… And then I just went from there.”

Happily Ever After Books, A Bookstore for Romantics, Opening in Canada

Happily Ever After Books, a bookstore for romantics, is opening up in Canada. The bookstore made the announcement on Twitter on April 27th. Happily Ever After wrote, “It’s official! We are opening a romance exclusive bookstore in Canada! We will be online only for now but we will be popping up all over Toronto and the Greater Toronto Area throughout the year!” If you want to follow them, they are also on Instagram.

You Don’t Solve Book Bans by Banning More Books: This Week’s Book Censorship News

This week’s book censorship news, including removal of books in Wausau, Wisconsin, Ottumwa, Iowa, and more.

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LeVar Burton to Receive Lifetime Achievement Award at 2022 Emmys: Today in Books

LAIKA’s Next Stop-Motion Film Is Based On a Fantasy Novel by the Lead Singer of The Decemberists

LAIKA, the studio behind Coraline and ParaNorman, have announced that their next stop-animation project currently in production is based on the book Wildwood by the Decemberists lead singer and songwriter Colin Meloy. Wildwood takes place in Portland, Oregon, in an enchanted wood. LAIKA CEO Travis Knight is directing. “The Night Gardener is a beautiful and timeless story that quickens the pulse as often as it breaks the heart,” Knight said in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter. “It’s gonna be one helluva movie.”

LeVar Burton to Receive Lifetime Achievement Award at 2022 Emmys

Roots star and Reading Rainbow host LeVar Burton will receive a lifetime achievement award at this year’s first annual Children’s & Family Emmy Awards. The ceremony is expected to be held in person at the Wilshire Ebell Theater in Los Angeles this December. 

Award-Winning Novelist Rolando Hinojosa-Smith Dies at 93

Rolando Hinojosa-Smith, the award-winning author of 15 novels, died on April 19th in Cedar Park, Texas. He was 93. His daughter Clarissa Hinojosa said the cause of his death was complications of dementia. Dr. Hinojosa-Smith wrote stories in Spanish and English about race, power, class, money, and war set in a fictional version of the lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas, where he was raised. “He captured people in realistic ways that reflected their humanity,” Jaime Mejia, a professor of Chicano literature at Texas State University in San Marcos, told the New York Times. “He could convey their humor and tragedy whether they were working class, middle class, petty, loyal, honest or pretentious.”

London Catholic School Teachers Strike Over Cancelled LGBTQ Book Talk

The diocese cancelled the author visit and fired several governors. Now the school is closed due to a staff shortage as teachers strike in protest.