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Today In Books

Barack Obama’s Memoir Release Date? Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by the audiobook edition of The Guest Book by Sarah Blake.

The Guest Book audio cover


Barack Obama’s Memoir Release Date?

While many were expecting Former President Barack Obama’s post-White House memoir to release this year it is now being speculated that we’ll be waiting until 2020. Ya know the year of the next U.S. presidential election–which I’m assuming is a coincidence because he just hasn’t finished writing it yet. I mean he is having to follow in Michelle Obama’s writing footsteps, that’s a lot of pressure.

Watchmen Teaser!

If you’ve been anticipating HBO’s series adaptation of Dave Gibbons’ Watchmen we finally have a teaser. An intense teaser! Starring Regina King, Jeremy Irons, Don Johnson, and Jean Smart, it’ll premiere this fall.

And Another A Christmas Carol

The BBC’s three-part series adaptation of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol will air on FX in December. Starring Guy Pearce as Ebenezer Scrooge, produced by Ridley Scott, Tom Hardy, and FX Productions, and written by Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight the production “will respectfully present what we believe to be a timely interpretation of a timeless story.”

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Riot Rundown

050919-TheInvited-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by Sponsored by Doubleday.

What happens when your dream house becomes a nightmare? Find out in The Invited, a chilling ghost story by Jennifer McMahon, bestselling author of The Winter People. Helen and Nate take up residence on forty-four acres of land in the Vermont woods, with ambitious plans to build a house. When they discover that the property has a dark past, Helen becomes consumed by a century-old local legend. As the house takes shape, it becomes a place of menace: a new home that beckons its owners and their neighbors toward unimaginable danger.

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Check Your Shelf

Breakerspaces, Roxane Gay News, and the Very White State of the U.K. Writing Community

Welcome to Check Your Shelf! This is your guide to help librarians like you up your game when it comes to doing your job (& rocking it).

“Check Your Shelf” is sponsored by Albert Whitman & Company, 100 Years of Good Books.

It’s been a year since the Catalog Killer terrorized the sleepy seaside town of Camera Cove, killing four people before disappearing without a trace. Like everyone else, eighteen-year-old Mac Bell is trying to put that horrible summer behind him—easier said than done since Mac’s best friend Connor was the murderer’s final victim. But when he finds a cryptic message from Connor, he’s drawn back into the search for the killer—who might not have been a random drifter after all. Now nobody—friends, neighbors, or even the sexy stranger with his own connection to the case—is beyond suspicion.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Cool Library Updates

Worth Reading

Book Adaptations in the News

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

New & Upcoming Titles

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

RA & Genre Resources

Books & Authors in the News

Numbers & Trends

Award News

Pop Cultured

All Things Comics

Audiophilia

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/YA

Adults

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in LibraryReads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.

 

Thanks for hanging out and I’ll see you again next week!

–Katie McLain, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading Evil Things by Katja Ivar.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships May 10

It’s Friday, ye salty dogs and sugary cats! (Are sugary cats a thing? They should be a thing.) It’s Alex, here to bring you the news and whatever random thing squeezes out of my brain when I cruise through today in history.


This newsletter is sponsored by Stranger Things from Dark Horse Comics and Netflix.

Stranger Things coverSee The Other Side of the hit Netflix series Stranger Things in this original comic series, now collected in trade paperback! Find out what happens to young Will Byers after he is trapped in a dark dimension all alone… with a terrifying monster. Will must use his wits, courage, and heart to survive the monster and escape the Upside Down.


Awards Season Continues Apace

The Aurealis Awards have announced their 2018 winners! I recommend a browse through the shortlist to get your hands on some excellent Australian genre fiction.

The shortlist for the Arthur C. Clarke Award as been announced: Semiosis by Sue Burke, Revenant Gun by Yoon Ha Lee, Frankenstein in Baghdad by Ahmed Saadawi, The Electric State by Simon Stålenhag, Rosewater by Tade Thompson, and The Loosening Skin by Aliya Whiteley. Look, it’s an exciting list.

The Locus Awards Finalists have also been announced!

News and Views

Here’s a really cool post on Tor.com about Terry Pratchett and logic in the Discworld books. (Full confession: I took just enough logic in university to become utterly insufferable.)

In D&D news for the week, there’s a documentary coming up about the art of the game. You can see an exclusive clip at io9.

A look into an older piece of New Zealand fantasy kidlit that’s pretty bananas.

Bethesda might have plagiarized a D&D adventure in Elder Scrolls Elsewyr.

I admit this is only barely in the remit of the newsletter, but I live for genre and comics writer Genevieve Valentine’s red carpet rundowns, and the one she did for the Met Gala was something else.

Seanan McGuire talks about writing Middlegame.

There’s going to be a Nancy Drew series on the CW? I think my brain just cramped.

Book Riot contributor Alison Doherty on how teaching 6th grade made her love Twilight.

On the May 8 episode of the SFF Yeah! podcast, Sharifah and Liberty talk pirates!

You can now watch The Wandering Earth on Netflix; it’s based on Liu Cixin’s novella of the same name. And so far, it’s the third highest-grossing film of 2019.

Free Association Friday

Well, it’s actually John Scalzi’s birthday–happy birthday, Scalzi! My favorites of his lately have been Lock In and Head On. They’re fun detective stories and I wish to draw more attention to the fact that there are two versions of the audiobooks, one narrated by Wil Wheaton and one narrated by Amber Benson.

Don’t worry, I’m not free associating on Scalzi. It’s also worth noting that apparently on this day in 1962, Marvel published its first issue of The Incredible Hulk.

But instead, let’s talk about how in 28 BCE, Chinese astronomers observed a sunspot. It’s one of the earliest dated observations for China, but of course people have been observing sunspots for as long as there have been people who just really wanted to look at the Sun and figured out you could get away with it when there was fog or clouds or the Sun was at the horizon (NOTE: DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME. IT’S STILL BAD FOR YOUR EYES.) Sunspots are temporary cool (and therefore dark) areas on the surface of the Sun that result from magnetic field flux, which makes them a great way of tracking solar activity.

Rosarium publishing’s put together a two-volume collection of 100 short stories in fantasy, science fiction, and horror from around the world for its fifth anniversary. I mention this because they’re called Sunspot Jungle volume 1 and volume 2.

I also can’t help but think of Liu Cixin’s Three Body Problem, not because it’s about sunspots, but because part of the plot is about a world with three suns, viewed through a virtual reality game.

Sunspots are markers of solar activity, which over the last 1,150 years–until 1975, note–tracked pretty well to Earth’s climate so that more activity tended to match higher global temperatures. It does make sense in that more sunspots equals more activity equals a slightly brighter Sun. (But no, we can’t blame the current warming on solar activity no matter how much some people would like to. It’s all us.) And if we’re talking climate, I’ll just say I hope everyone’s read The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin and Parable of the Sower and Parable of the Talents by Octavia Butler. The last of those really freaked me out with its prescience on multiple axes.

See you, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me on the (Hugo-nominated!!!) Skiffy and Fanty Podcast or over at my personal site.

Categories
Today In Books

Lawsuit Filed Over Bible’s Placement: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by Stranger Things from Dark Horse Comics and Netflix.

Stranger Things cover


Lawsuit Filed Over Bible’s Placement

A federal lawsuit has been filed over the placement of a Bible at the Manchester Veterans Affairs Medical Center, by a patient. But this isn’t the first battle: Previously the Bible had been removed after complaints from the Military Religious Freedom Foundation but opposition to its removal/movement also sparked outcry. Read more on this case, along with the history of this specific Bible, here.

Adaptation I Want Now!

Alexa Martin’s Intercepted–a romance about a woman who swears off football players after she gets rid of her cheating dog boyfriend only to be pursued by a *prince in a football helmet–is being adapted! It’ll be a series on Starz starring La La Anthony and Curtis Jackson (50 Cent). *not an actual prince.

Batwoman!

The CW has a teaser for the upcoming Batwoman series starring Ruby Rose! Check her, and her costume, out here while we wait for the show’s premiere–which will be the first superhero series with a gay lead character.

Categories
Kissing Books

Win a Waterproof Paperwhite, Because There are Too Many Books

This is the first full week of May, and holy forking shirtballs, this is a good month for books. I don’t even understand how all of these books are coming out at the same time. If the film industry understood that the only movie that would really come out during Avengers weekend was Avengers, the book industry knows that we need to build some kind of time-extension machine so that only one book comes out per week. Because damn. This week.


Sponsored by The Way You Make Me Feel from Maurene Goo and Fierce Reads

An NPR Best Book of 2018 Clara Shin lives for pranks and disruption. When she takes one joke too far, her dad sentences her to a summer working on his food truck alongside her uptight classmate, Rose Carver. Not the carefree summer Clara had imagined. But maybe Rose isn’t so bad. Maybe the boy crushing on her is pretty cute. Maybe Clara actually feels invested in her dad’s business. What if taking this summer seriously means that Clara has to leave her old self behind? “It’s sexy, it’s silly, and it’s super-sweet without being saccharine.” —Bustle


Over on Book Riot

This list might make you grumpy, because none of these books are out yet, but this is a promising list of baseball romance to try at the height of the season.

Dana was busy, and also wrote about some awesome friendships in romance. Who are your faves?

You have all month to enter this giveaway for a waterproof Kindle Paperwhite, but might as well enter now, right?

Looking to start a book blog? Here are some tips.

Deals

cover of tell me it's real by tj luneTJ Klune’s books are basically never on sale, so it’s definitely time to celebrate that two of them are! Tell Me It’s Real, the first book in the At First Sight series, is 1.99, and The Queen and the Homo Jock King, the second, is 99 cents. Until You, the third, is 4.31, so technically not too bad. The fourth, Why We Fight, comes out next week, so now’s definitely a good time to catch up.

Did you know you could get the mass market paperback of Can’t Escape Love now? If you’re working on a print collection of The Reluctant Royals, both novellas are available to fulfill that dream. So go for it! It’s 4.99 (as is Once Ghosted, Twice Shy, if you haven’t gotten that one yet).

Recs

Holy crap, this week. Let’s talk about some of the books out this week.

the bride testThe Bride Test
Helen Hoang

Even if you haven’t yet picked up The Kiss Quotient, you need to get this one right away. It’s a devourable little book with almost more heart packed into it than the average person can stand. Esme, who has lived as a very poor person in Vietnam, meets Khai’s mother in the bathroom where she is cleaning, and is surprised by her proposal: come to California for the summer, and maybe marry her son. Esme is hesitant, but in the end can’t say no. She doubts she’ll want to marry the woman’s handsome son, but she’ll at least be able to make some money, and maybe find her father, an American who went back to the states before she was born.

When she meets Khai, though, there is a disconnect between them. Khai is autistic, and doesn’t process emotions or communication the same way Esme does. This leads to some interesting interactions, especially as they get to know each other. But Khai doesn’t think he has the ability to love, so things get much more complicated than they need to be, very fast.

This is a beautiful book, a beautiful story, and there’s a sobworthy author’s note at the end.

cover of reverb by anna zaboReverb
Anna Zabo

This wraps up Anna’s Twisted Wishes series, and wow. All the subtle ways it gets you.

Mish, the last standing single person in the band Twisted Wishes, has to deal with a lot of unwanted attention. This comes to a head when she sprains her wrist after a guy comes at her with a pair of scissors. (She punches him, but swears the sprain is actually from falling wrong afterward.) The band thinks it’s time to bring in personal security, especially after concluding that she might have a stalker. David, a trans man, takes to the band immediately, but is hesitant to form relationships with the job. But damn, is he attracted to Mish. Not just for sex, though. He could see something more happening with her. But getting involved with the person you are protecting could make him sloppy. We’ve all seen The Bodyguard. (By the way: the stage musical? Terrible book, great song placement. And I like the replacement of the country bar with karaoke. The end.)

Anna is yet another master of their craft, and they have built such an insular family, I am sad to leave them behind. Maybe they’ll consider revisiting Twisted Wishes with a novella or two.

And then there’s all the ones I am itching to read (Seriously. Publishing. Take a break.)

cover of rogue ever afterRogue Ever After (By ALL THE PEOPLE)
Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors by Sonali Dev
I Think I Might (Love You) by Christina C. Jones
Proper English by KJ Charles
Hot to the Touch by Jaci Burton (I have been watching a LOT of 9-1-1 on Fox and am very eager to read this book)
Tightrope by Amanda Quick
Her Royal Highness by Rachel Hawkins

Like, seriously? You do this on the FIRST TUESDAY OF MAY? Can you even imagine what the rest of the month looks like?

What are you reading this weekend? As usual, catch me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or send me an email at jessica@riotnewmedia.com if you’ve got feedback, book recs, or just want to say hi!

Categories
Book Radar

50 Cent Adapting Alexa Martin’s INTERCEPTED and More Book Radar!

Welcome back to another Thursday! Funny how that happens. As you are receiving this, I should be on my way back from an overnight trip to Bard College to see Craig Ferguson talk about his new book. I don’t mind field trips cutting in on my reading time, as long as they are book-related. I hope whatever you’re doing, you have a great rest of your week, and remember to be kind to yourself and others.  I’ll see you again on Monday. – xoxo, Liberty


Sponsored by Graphix Books, an imprint of Scholastic, Inc.

From comics rising star Sarah Graley, a fresh and funny middle-grade graphic novel featuring a girl who must save a virtual world… and her own! Izzy has an incredible secret — she can enter the world of her new video game! She meets Rae, a robot who says Izzy is destined to save Dungeon City from the Big Boss. How is this possible?! And how can she fight for this virtual world when she’s got a whole real life to keep up with: her family and her best friend, Eric. Can Izzy survive Dungeon City and save their friendship?


Trivia question time! What author once opened a coffee house and jazz bar, called the Peter Cat? (Scroll to the bottom for the answer.)

Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

interceptedCurtis “50 Cent” Jackson and La La Anthony are teaming up to make a series from Alexa Martin’s Intercepted.

Colin Firth will star in an adaptation of Operation Mincemeat by Ben Macintyre.

HBO removed the coffee cup from S8 Ep5 of Game of Thrones.

R.L. Stine and Marc Brown signed a deal to create animated content.

Pretty Little Liars author Sara Shepard has a new series, Crown Lake, that will stream with Brat.

Cover Reveals

Lucasfilm unveiled all the covers and titles for The Journey to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker publishing program.

Book Riot Recommends 

At Book Riot, I work on the New Books! email, the All the Books! podcast about new releases, and the Book Riot Insiders New Release Index. I am very fortunate to get to read a lot of upcoming titles, and learn about a lot of upcoming titles, and I’m delighted to share a couple with you each week so you can add them to your TBR! (It will now be books I loved on Mondays and books I’m excited to read on Thursdays. YAY, BOOKS!)

Excited to read:

question markThe Unwilling by Kelly Braffet (MIRA, February 25, 2020)

AHHHHHHHHHHH! I love Kelly Braffet’s novels – Last Seen Leaving, Save Me, Josie & Jack – and I’m so excited because this is going to be her first FANTASY novel!!!! There’s not much of a description yet, just that it’s about a girl who decides she doesn’t have to wait to get magical powers – she can take them. And it’s 600+ pages. I am BOUNCING with excitement!

What I’m reading this week.

The Confessions of Frannie Langton by Sara Collins cover imageThe Confessions of Frannie Langton: A Novel by Sara Collins

Slumber Party by Christopher Pike

Home Remedies by Xuan Juliana Wang

Flowers over the Inferno (A Teresa Battaglia Novel) by Ilaria Tuti, Ekin Oklap (translator)

And this is funny.

Follow that bird!

Trivia answer: Haruki Murakami.

You made it to the bottom! High five. Thanks for reading! – xo, L

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The Kids Are All Right

ESL Stories in Children’s Books

Hi Kid Lit Friends,

There have been so many wonderful books out lately about kids learning English as a second language. According to Face the Facts, a project of George Washington University, ten percent of all public school students are English Language Learners. NPR also has really interesting graphics about how each state does in terms of serving this population of learners.

Here is a list of some great children’s books featuring children learning English as a second language. I love all of these for their honesty, beautiful writing, and terrific storytelling.


Sponsored by Crossing on Time by David Macaulay

David Macaulay, co-creator of the international bestseller The Way Things Work, brings his signature curiosity and detailing to the story of the steamship in this meticulously researched and stunningly illustrated book. Prior to the 1800s, ships crossing the Atlantic Ocean relied on the wind in their sails to make their journeys. But invention of steam power ushered in a new era of transportation that would change ocean travel forever: the steamship. Framed around the author’s own experience steaming across the Atlantic, Crossing on Time is a tour de force of the art of explanation and a touching and surprising childhood story.


*Please note that all book descriptions come from the publisher.

Picture Books

The Name Jar by Yangsook Choi

Being the new kid in school is hard enough, but what about when nobody can pronounce your name? Having just moved from Korea, Unhei is anxious that American kids will like her. So instead of introducing herself on the first day of school, she tells the class that she will choose a name by the following week. Her new classmates are fascinated by this no-name girl and decide to help out by filling a glass jar with names for her to pick from. But while Unhei practices being a Suzy, Laura, or Amanda, one of her classmates comes to her neighborhood and discovers her real name and its special meaning. On the day of her name choosing, the name jar has mysteriously disappeared. Encouraged by her new friends, Unhei chooses her own Korean name and helps everyone pronounce it—Yoon-Hey.

My Name is Yoon by Helen Recorvits, illustrated by Gabe Swiatkowska

Yoon’s name means “shining wisdom,” and when she writes it in Korean, it looks happy, like dancing figures. But her father tells her that she must learn to write it in English. In English, all the lines and circles stand alone, which is just how Yoon feels in the United States. Yoon isn’t sure that she wants to be YOON. At her new school, she tries out different names―maybe CAT or BIRD. Maybe CUPCAKE!

Dreamers by Yuyi Morales

In 1994, Yuyi Morales left her home in Xalapa, Mexico and came to the US with her infant son. She left behind nearly everything she owned, but she didn’t come empty-handed. She brought her strength, her work, her passion, her hopes and dreams. . . and her stories. Caldecott Honor artist and six-time Pura Belpré winner Yuyi Morales’s gorgeous picture book Dreamers is about making a home in a new place. Yuyi and her son Kelly’s passage was not easy, and Yuyi spoke no English whatsoever at the time. But together, they found an unexpected, unbelievable place: the public library. There, book by book, they untangled the language of this strange new land, and learned to make their home within it.

Here I Am by Patti Kim, illustrated by Sonia Sanchez

Newly arrived from their faraway homeland, a boy and his family enter into the lights, noise, and traffic of a busy American city in this dazzling wordless picture book. The language is unfamiliar. Food, habits, games, and gestures are puzzling. They boy clings tightly to his special keepsake from home and wonders how he will find his way. How will he once again become the happy, confident kid he used to be? Walk in his shoes as he takes the first tentative steps toward discovering joy in his new world. A poignant and affirming view of the immigrant experience.

Alma and How She Got Her Name by Juana Martinez-Neal

If you ask her, Alma Sofia Esperanza José Pura Candela has way too many names: six! How did such a small person wind up with such a large name? Alma turns to Daddy for an answer and learns of Sofia, the grandmother who loved books and flowers; Esperanza, the great-grandmother who longed to travel; José, the grandfather who was an artist; and other namesakes, too. As she hears the story of her name, Alma starts to think it might be a perfect fit after all — and realizes that she will one day have her own story to tell.

One Green Apple by Eve Bunting, illustrated by Ted Lewin

Farah feels alone, even when surrounded by her classmates. She listens and nods but doesn’t speak. It’s hard being the new kid in school, especially when you’re from another country and don’t know the language. Then, on a field trip to an apple orchard, Farah discovers there are lots of things that sound the same as they did at home, from dogs crunching their food to the ripple of friendly laughter. As she helps the class make apple cider, Farah connects with the other students and begins to feel that she belongs.

 

Middle Grade Books

Stella Diaz Has Something to Say by Angela Dominguez

Stella Diaz loves marine animals, especially her betta fish, Pancho. But Stella Diaz is not a betta fish. Betta fish like to be alone, while Stella loves spending time with her mom and brother and her best friend Jenny. Trouble is, Jenny is in another class this year, and Stella feels very lonely. When a new boy arrives in Stella’s class, she really wants to be his friend, but sometimes Stella accidentally speaks Spanish instead of English and pronounces words wrong, which makes her turn roja. Plus, she has to speak in front of her whole class for a big presentation at school! But she better get over her fears soon, because Stella Díaz has something to say!

One Good Thing About America by Ruth Freeman

Back home, nine-year-old Anaïs was the best English student in her class, but here in Crazy America it feels like she doesn’t know English at all. Nothing makes sense (chicken fingers?), and the kids at school have some very strange ideas about Africa. Anaïs misses home.  She misses their little house under the mango trees, and the family left behind—Papa and grandmother Oma and big brother Olivier.  She worries about the fighting that drove her and Mama and little Jean-Claude to leave.

I Lived on Butterfly Hill by Marjorie Agosin

Celeste Marconi is a dreamer. She lives peacefully among friends and neighbors and family in the idyllic town of Valparaiso, Chile—until the time comes when even Celeste, with her head in the clouds, can’t deny the political unrest that is sweeping through the country. So Celeste’s parents—her educated, generous, kind parents—must go into hiding before they, too, “disappear.” To protect their daughter, they send her to America. As Celeste adapts to her new life in Maine, she never stops dreaming of Chile. But even after democracy is restored to her home country, questions remain: Will her parents reemerge from hiding? Will she ever be truly safe again?

Lety Out Loud by Angela Cervantes

Lety Muñoz’s first language is Spanish, and she likes to take her time putting her words together. She loves volunteering at the Furry Friends Animal Shelter because the dogs and cats there don’t care if she can’t always find the right word. When the shelter needs a volunteer to write animal profiles, Lety jumps at the chance. But grumpy classmate Hunter also wants to write profiles — so now they have to work as a team. Hunter’s not much of a team player, though. He devises a secret competition to decide who will be the official shelter scribe. Lety reluctantly agrees, but she’s worried that if the shelter finds out about the contest, they’ll kick her out of the volunteer program. Then she’ll never be able to adopt Spike, her favorite dog at the shelter!

Pie in the Sky by Remy Lai

When Jingwen moves to a new country, he feels like he’s landed on Mars. School is torture, making friends is impossible since he doesn’t speak English, and he’s often stuck looking after his (extremely irritating) little brother, Yanghao. To distract himself from the loneliness, Jingwen daydreams about making all the cakes on the menu of Pie in the Sky, the bakery his father had planned to open before he unexpectedly passed away. The only problem is his mother has laid down one major rule: the brothers are not to use the oven while she’s at work. As Jingwen and Yanghao bake elaborate cakes, they’ll have to cook up elaborate excuses to keep the cake making a secret from Mama.

Other Words for Home by Jasmine Warga

ude never thought she’d be leaving her beloved older brother and father behind, all the way across the ocean in Syria. But when things in her hometown start becoming volatile, Jude and her mother are sent to live in Cincinnati with relatives. At first, everything in America seems too fast and too loud. The American movies that Jude has always loved haven’t quite prepared her for starting school in the US—and her new label of “Middle Eastern,” an identity she’s never known before.

Front Desk by Kelly Yang

Mia Tang has a lot of secrets.
Number 1: She lives in a motel, not a big house. Every day, while her immigrant parents clean the rooms, ten-year-old Mia manages the front desk of the Calivista Motel and tends to its guests.
Number 2: Her parents hide immigrants. And if the mean motel owner, Mr. Yao, finds out they’ve been letting them stay in the empty rooms for free, the Tangs will be doomed.
Number 3: She wants to be a writer. But how can she when her mom thinks she should stick to math because English is not her first language?

 

Around the web…

Penguin Partners with the Crayon Collection on Recycling Program, via Publisher’s Weekly

25 Fantastic Middle Grade Books by Black Authors, via Book Riot

Elle Fanning and Others to Perform The Baby-Sitters Club Audiobooks, via Book Riot

 

I would love to know what you are reading this week! Find me on Twitter at @KarinaYanGlaser, on Instagram at @KarinaIsReadingAndWriting, or email me at karina@bookriot.com.

Until next time!
Karina

Izzy hanging out with last week’s new releases!

*If this e-mail was forwarded to you, follow this link to subscribe to “The Kids Are All Right” newsletter and other fabulous Book Riot newsletters for your own customized e-mail delivery. Thank you!*

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Giveaways

050819-TorAcq-Giveaway

We have one brand new waterproof Kindle Paperwhite up for grabs courtesy of Tor Books.

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the image below. Good luck!

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Canada Giveaways

050819-EmpressIdaho-CanadianGiveaway

We have 5 copies of The Empress of Idaho by Todd Babiak to give away to 5 Canadian Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

Bestselling and award-winning author Todd Babiak returns with an immersive story about fourteen-year-old Adam Lisinki and his all-consuming fascination with Beatrice Cyr, the enigmatic new woman in town. By turns riveting and tender-hearted, The Empress of Idaho is a story about the vulnerability and confusion of adolescence at the moment when it slams against adulthood. It’s an unforgettable portrait of a boy’s difficult coming of age.

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the cover image below!

Babiak_R1_2