Categories
Riot Rundown

041719-UponABurningThrone-Riot-Rundown

Today’s Riot Rundown is sponsored by HMH.

The Emperor of the vast Burnt Empire has died, leaving a turbulent realm without a sovereign. Two young princes are in line to rule, but birthright does not guarantee inheritance: For any successor must sit upon the Burning Throne and pass The Test of Fire. Imbued with dark sorceries, the throne is a crucible—one that incinerates the unworthy.

The princes pass The Test . . . but there is another who also survives: a girl from an outlying kingdom. When she is denied her claim, her father, a powerful demonlord, declares war—leaving the princes to rule a shattered realm embroiled in rebellion.

Categories
True Story

Democracy, Lady Codes, and Social Adaptations

Hello hello, and happy Wednesday! I am happy to report that I (and the rest of the Midwest) have survived an April blizzard and spring is in sight. But, let’s not dwell on the weather when there are books to enjoy.

In keeping with April’s theme of ALL THE BOOKS, I’ve got a full newsletter again today — five titles highlighted in a bit of detail, then a few more that should be on your radar at the end. Yay, books!


Sponsored by The Five by Hallie Rubenhold, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH)

Five devastating human stories and a dark and moving portrait of Victorian London—the untold lives of the women killed by Jack the Ripper. For more than a century, newspapers have been keen to tell us that “the Ripper” preyed on prostitutes. Not only is this untrue, as historian Hallie Rubenhold has discovered, it has prevented the real stories of these fascinating women from being told. Now, in this devastating narrative of five lives, Rubenhold finally sets the record straight, revealing a world not just of Dickens and Queen Victoria, but of poverty, homelessness and rampant misogyny. They died because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time—but their greatest misfortune was to be born a woman.


The Problem of Democracy: The Presidents Adams Confront the Cult of Personality by Nancy Isenberg and Andrew Burstein – Two historians look at the intersecting personal and political lives of John Adams and his son John Quincy Adams, as they grappled with politics in early America.

 

Southern Lady Code by Helen Ellis – A collection of essays “on marriage and manners, thank-you notes and three-ways, ghosts, gunshots, gynecology, and the Calgon-scented, onion-dipped, monogrammed art of living as a Southern Lady.”

 

 

Magical Realism for Nonbelievers: A Memoir of Finding Family by Anika Fajardo – At 21 years old, Anika Fajardo boarded a plane to Colombia to visit the birthplace of the father she’s never known while uncovering the story of her parents’ marriage and her own experiences as parent.

 

 

The House of the Pain of Others: Chronicle of a Small Genocide by Julián Herbert, translated by Christina MacSweeney – In 1911, around 300 Chinese immigrants were massacred over the course of three days in the Mexican city of Torreón. In this book, Herbert tries to understand this horrific incident and put it in context within the history of Mexico and the Americas.

The Human Swarm: How Our Societies Arise, Thrive, and Fall by Mark Moffett – This book looks at the history of human civilization from chimpanzee communities to today’s sprawling civilizations. Drawing on biology, psychology, sociology, and anthropology, Mark Moffett tries to explain the social adaptations that bind us together.

 

 

And now five more books you could grab that I didn’t have a chance to write about in more detail:

And that’s it for this week! You can find me on Twitter @kimthedork, on email at kim@riotnewmedia.com, and co-hosting the For Real podcast here at Book Riot. This week, Alice and I chatted books around the theme of “death and taxes,” which I promise is interesting. Happy reading! – Kim

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Courtroom Drama, Con Artists, And A Fun Murder Mystery!

Hello mystery fans! I have for you this week a fantastic courtroom drama/mystery, a fun murder mystery, and a nonfiction about con artists!


Sponsored by Libby, the one-tap reading app from your library and OverDrive

Meet Libby. The award-winning reading app that makes sure you always have something to read. It’s like having your entire library right in your pocket. Download the app today and get instant access to thousands of ebooks and audiobooks for free thanks to your public library and OverDrive.


Fantastic Mystery + Courtroom Drama (TW child abuse/ suicide/ sexual assault)

miracle creek cover imageMiracle Creek by Angie Kim: I couldn’t put this one down, even in the parts that hurt I couldn’t even flinch because I might miss something. This book works on so many levels, including as a courtroom drama, a mystery, an exploration of being an immigrant, marriage… The way Kim has layered everything between the current courtroom trial and the unraveling of everyone connected’s lives and lies is *chef’s kiss.* We start with a mother accused of setting a fire that caused an explosion, killing and injuring patients getting treatment inside a pressurized oxygen chamber. The oxygen chamber, the Miracle Submarine, was being run by the Yoo family in a small Virginia town. The mystery surrounds the woman on trial: did she set the fire on purpose to kill her son who was in the tank? Once you start meeting the Yoo family, the other patients, and watching the court testimony it starts to feel like everyone could have somehow been connected to the fire–including the mother on trial who has overwhelming evidence, including child abuse, against her as she tried to “cure” her son of autism. If you like courtroom dramas, small-town mysteries, and literary novels I wouldn’t miss this one–it’s definitely one of the best of 2019. And this is Kim’s debut novel so I can’t wait to see more from her.

Fun! (TW suicide)

Real Murders cover imageReal Murders (Aurora Teagarden #1) by Charlaine Harris: This has a fun premise: a group of people who meet to discuss true crime find themselves embroiled in a true crime. When the members of Real Murders Society show up to discuss a historical true crime they instead discover a murder–or at least Aurora “Roe” Teagarden finds the body. Being a group of true crime buffs, they can’t help but point fingers and think they can solve this (there is a journalist and cop amongst the group!), except soon there are more murders and it’s clear someone is framing people. Who would do this and why is what Roe, especially, wants to find out, being that she finds herself the target of poisoned food. She’s a librarian who has never had much luck dating but suddenly finds herself courted by two gentlemen: a writer and a police officer. But it’s hard to focus on dating when everyone is in danger and everyone is a suspect! This was one of those fun murder mysteries that stays fictional enough to be entertaining while also real enough to not be ridiculous. I’m curious to see how the characters and story will develop over the next nine books.

True Crime Memoir For Social Science Fans (TW suicide/ rape/ briefly mentions cases with pedophile)

Duped cover imageDuped: Double Lives, False Identities, and the Con Man I Almost Married by Abby Ellin: I love true crime memoirs–any memoir especially where the author just bares all–and have always loved social science so this hit a lot of yeses for me. Abby Ellin was basically duped by a conman and she tells her story here–interestingly enough, the two things I thought should have been the biggest red flags were actually the things he wasn’t lying about. She then also looks into why people lie, con, cheat, sociopaths, and those who fall victim. It’s a book that is very easy to judge and say, “Well, you should have known better,” or “I would never have fallen for that,” but that’s the whole point of the book–why do we blame the victims? And is it better to live life assuming everyone is out to get you or to have faith that they aren’t? I also found myself thinking about how victims are chosen and how someone who wants to be, and feels they need to be, loved can make easier marks, and how predators know this. I felt like this had a good balance between her story and accessible social science that the book works well for most readers–and I recommend going with the audiobook if you have the option.

Recent Releases

diary of a murderer cover imageDiary of a Murderer: And Other Stories by Young-Ha Kim, Krys Lee (Translator)

Alice’s Island by Daniel Sánchez Arévalo (Mystery/family drama)

Flowers over the Inferno (Teresa Battaglia #1) by Ilaria Tuti (Italian police procedural)

The Department of Sensitive Crimes (Detective Varg #1) by Alexander McCall Smith (Humorous procedural)

Before She Was Found by Heather Gudenkauf (YA mystery/thriller)

The Better Sister by Alafair Burke (Family secrets/ murder mystery)

Cult X cover imageCult X by Fuminori Nakamura, Kalau Almony (Translator) (Paperback) (For fans of cults.)

The Banker’s Wife by Cristina Alger (Paperback) (I really enjoyed this thriller starring a journalist–Full review.) (TW suicide/ rape)

Bearskin by James A. McLaughlin (Paperback) (For fans of crime novels in the wilderness.) (TW rape/ animal cruelty)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, and Litsy–you can find me under Jamie Canavés.

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own you can sign up here.

Categories
Today In Books

Unknown Daphne du Maurier Poems Discovered: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by HMH.


Unknown Daphne du Maurier Poems Discovered

Thanks to the auctioning of items by Daphne du Maurier’s husband’s secretary’s daughter, two previously unknown poems written by Maurier have been discovered. Tucked behind a framed photograph of the author are two poems written ten years before the publication of Rebecca.

600+ Books Looted After WWII Have Been Recovered

In 2017 Tania Grégoire sent 150 antique books to Sotheby’s for auction. The books were immediately flagged. Thanks to a few markings the books were linked to the University of Bonn in Germany which has an extensive catalogue of books that went missing. After learning that the books Grégoire had tried to auction were most likely looted, her father having been stationed during the war in Bonn, she led authorities to 450 more books. You can read more here, including the University’s press release.

Netflix Is Buying All The Book Rights

If it feels like every day we’re hearing about book rights being sold to Netflix it’s probably because they are. Not only have they been on a buying spree but 50 of the projects are being turned into series. PW takes you into the world of Netflix adaptations here.

Categories
What's Up in YA

“A Book About Anxiety Is Always Relevant”: YA Author Samana Schutz On Her Verse Memoir, Mental Health, and More

Hey YA Readers: today highlights YA memoirs, mental health, and more with guest Samantha Schutz.

“What’s Up in YA?” is sponsored by Algonquin Young Readers, publisher of In the Neighborhood of True by Susan Kaplan Carlton.

In 1958, Ruth Robb’s family moves from New York City to Atlanta after her father’s death. In her new hometown, Ruth quickly figures out she can be Jewish or she can be popular, but she can’t be both. Eager to fit in, Ruth decides to hide her religion. Before she knows it, she is caught between two worlds, two religions, and two boys. When a violent hate crime brings the different parts of Ruth’s life into sharp conflict, she will have to choose between all she’s come to love about her new life and standing up for what she believes.


Samantha Schutz published a YA memoir back in 2016 called I Don’t Want To Be Crazy. It’s a chronicle of her experience with a mental breakdown and the book itself helped serve as a means for her to cope with understanding her mental health.

Nearly fifteen years later in an era where discussions of mental health are happening more frequently — though certainly not at the level they should be happening — Scholastic has republished Schutz’s book with a new author letter. This rerelease marks an opportunity for the title to reach new readers and the note included in the book connects Schutz’s personal experiences at the time of her writing with the research and realities acquired in the time between its publication and now.*

I’m excited to talk with Sam today about I Don’t Want To Be Crazy, her experiences with mental health, and more, what she sees and hopes to keep seeing in terms of mental health representation in YA and with teens more broadly.

Samantha is a full-time publishing professional living in NYC. She is also the author of the YA verse novel You Are Not Here. For more info, visit Samantha-Schutz.com and @youmakemefeellessalone on Instagram.

Kelly Jensen: Your memoir hit shelves in 2006 — nearly 15 years ago — and it’s being rereleased this year with a new cover and new author’s note. What brought about this exciting decision and how are you feeling about your work connecting with a new and arguably different YA readership? 

 

Samantha Schutz: Scholastic approached me about creating a new edition a year ago. “People need this book now more than ever,” was a reoccurring phrase I heard from the Scholastic team. In fact, that’s what most people say when I tell them about the new edition of the book.

 

A book about anxiety is always relevant. But I’m especially glad that my book is being rereleased now. Studies show that millennials are particularly anxious as compared to other generations. They were the first to grow up with the constant flood of the Internet and social media. Life feels more fast paced and competitive to them. Everything has to happen NOW and that puts so much extra pressure on them.

 

My hope, as ever, is that people can read my book and feel less alone. They can see my journey and know that it’s possible to get help and that there is a way through difficult times.

 

KJ: One of the themes throughout is how hard it was for you to admit you were sick. Do you think this is still the case for today’s teens? Have you seen a change around self-acceptance and acceptance from others when it comes to mental health and illness? 

 

SS: The way we speak about mental illness—or anything that makes us feel “other”—has changed so much since I was in high school in NYC 1992-1996. No one was talking about anxiety or depression. For teens now, being around people who are transparent about who they are and what they might be struggling with is commonplace. A study showed that millennials are more accepting of people with mental health issues and more likely to talk about their own experiences. But just because people are talking about it doesn’t mean that it’s not still really painful to acknowledge to yourself and the people around you what you are going through. It still takes courage. And for all the people who are able to speak up, there are still lots of people who feel too ashamed.

 

 

KJ: The new author’s note talks about how writing this memoir worked as a tool for you to better understand your anxiety. Can you talk a bit to that? 

 

SS: While I wasn’t having a lot of problems with anxiety when I was about 23, I was still living like I did. I was in a cloud of trauma as a result of the years of panic attacks and I couldn’t see through it. I thought that if I could remind myself of how bad things were in college, I could see how different — and how good — my life was now. So I started re-reading my college journals. I only had to read a few pages to see how bad things had been. The difference between “then” and “now” was stark. It was as if I was reading about this character who was eerily familiar. There was something transformative about looking at myself from far above while at the same time doing inward reflection. The journey to write this book began with the intention of healing myself, but as I filled page after page and wrote poem after poem, I knew this book could provide comfort to others. I knew I wasn’t alone in these feelings.

 

KJ: Why did you choose to write your memoir in verse? 

 

SS: Writing in free verse comes naturally to me, and it’s how I’ve written in my journals since I was a teen. This style was a natural choice—it allows an author to convey an incredible amount of emotion in a concise way. It’s like cutting away all the fat and just getting to the meat of things. This book is all about in-the-moment emotion and this form allows me to keep the focus there. Free verse also allows the author more control over the rhythm through line breaks and the way the poem is organized on the page visually. The broken nature of the work also leaves space on the page that allows the reader to use their imagination and do some contemplation. It also makes it easier for the reader to read the book in small bursts–and that’s a good thing for a heavy topic like this.

 

 

KJ: You also mention that the most common response you’ve heard is that your book made someone feel less alone. This has been the most common comment I’ve received with (Don’t) Call Me Crazy as well. Which leads me to ask: do you think we’re doing enough in the YA world to highlight mental illness and help make young readers feel less alone? What have you seen change in the 15 years between the publication of your memoir and today? 

 

SS: I’m impressed with the tremendous efforts that publishers have gone to to represent diverse and authentic voices. When IDWTBC first came out, there were just a handful of YA books in this genre. The ones that were impactful on my process included Speak, Luna, Perks of Being a Wallflower, It’s Kind of a Funny Story, Crank, Cut, Stop Pretending: What Happened When My Big Sister Went Crazy. Now there are so many more books available about mental health issues.

 

Everyone deserves to be recognized and seen. And when you can find a book that mirrors your own experience, it’s incredibly validating. And when someone reads a book about someone experiencing something that’s foreign to them, it can expand their world and hopefully their ability for compassion, too.

 

That’s why I started @youmakemefeellessalone on Instagram. People can submit their art and writing about the challenges they are facing. The person submitting benefits because it’s a way for them for them to unburden themselves. The viewers benefits too because they can relate to what they are reading and feel less alone.

 

 

KJ: Did you find any books to be particularly comforting to you when you struggled with panic attacks? Are there any books, especially ones published as YA, that you find to be particularly well done or resonant now? 

 

SS: I loved reading the journals of Anais Nin during those times. There was something about the way she scrutinized all of her emotions and picked everything apart that really drew me in. I was also a somewhat obsessive journal writer myself, so she was my idol.

 

YA as we know it didn’t exist in the late 1990s. Looking back, Girl, Interrupted and Prozac Nation both debuted while I was in high school and I would have likely felt a connection to those books at the time, but they weren’t on my radar. When I was in college, reading for pleasure was not something I did—in fact, I was never a big reader as a kid/teen. The only book I ever purchased as a young adult to help with my anxiety was The Anxiety Workbook and I dreaded using it and filling out its pages in between therapy sessions.

 

The most recent book I read that deals with mental health and really blew me away was Hey, Kiddo by Jarrett Krosoczka. This YA graphic novel memoir is about growing up in a family grappling with addiction and finding the art that helps you survive. It’s painful and honest and incredibly beautiful. Also Little Panic: Dispatches from an Anxious Life, a memoir by Amanda Stern, was wonderful. It was fascinating to be inside the mind of the author as very young girl and hear her seemingly endless anxious thoughts.

 

KJ: What are some of your favorite YA verse books?

 

SS: Stop Pretending: What Happened When My Big Sister Went Crazy by Sonya Sones was my bible when I started writing I Don’t Want to Be Crazy. I was comfortable writing short stories and poems in my journal and rambling about my feelings. But I had never tried to tell such a big story and I often found myself getting lost. Time and time again, I went back to Sones’ book. As far as I was concerned, that book was perfection. It was brief (not much more than 150 pages), intense, painful, hopeful, and gorgeous. Every word she wrote was a road map to me. When I stared at a blank page, wondering how to best write dialogue in verse, I turned to Sones. If I was working on a scene with a lot of action, I looked to see how Sones handled it. How did I convey time passing? Sones.

 

I’m also a big fan of anything Ellen Hopkins has written. She takes verse to a whole new level. Any time I see her poems that are written in two columns, I take a deep breath and smile. That format usually means that in addition to being able to read the poem horizontally across the page from left to right, it also means that you can read the vertical columns independently as two different poems. Each way you read it, it takes on a different meaning. It’s incredible!

 

Two other fabulous verse novels are Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds and The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo.

 

KJ: If you could go back in time and hand your teenage self any YA book, what would it be and why?

 

SS: Is it too cheesy to say my own book? I would love to show her proof that everything is going to be ok. That there is an end in sight to the pain she is feeling. It’s going to be hard and it’s going to take work and it’s never going to be perfect, but she is going to get through this.

Thank you so much for talking with us, Sam!

*Of note: Because the content of the book has not changed in the time between its original release and rerelease, there might be some language that doesn’t sit well with contemporary readers.


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

— Kelly Jensen, @veronikellymars on Instagram and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

Categories
The Stack

041619-Hellboy-The-Stack

Today’s The Stack is sponsored by Mike Mignola’s Hellboy.

In 1994, Mike Mignola released the first Hellboy series, Seed of Destruction, and introduced the world to the Right Hand of Doom, the Bureau for Paranormal Research and Defense, and one of the most iconic comic book characters—and universes—of all time. For 25 years, Mignola and a host of celebrated writers and artists have chronicled the adventures of Hellboy. Now, for the first time ever, Dark Horse presents Mike Mignola’s award-winning Hellboy stories in chronological order with the Hellboy Omnibus Collection, creating the definitive reading experience for Hellboy fans and an ideal entry point for new readers.

Categories
Giveaways

041519-WickedGames-Giveaway

We have 5 copies of Wicked Saints by Emily A. Duncan to give away to 5 Riot readers!

Here’s what it’s all about:

The monster hidden behind pale, tortured eyes and a devastating smile. The girl with Dark Gods whispering spells in her head. The prince surrounded by deadly assassins and ambitious suitors.

“This gothic jewel of a story will sink its visceral iron claws into you, never letting go until you’ve turned the last page.” (Robin LaFevers)

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

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords & Spaceships Apr 16

Hello gelflings and garudas! I am returned from my cryopod, I MEAN Toronto, and am back in the saddle. Today we’re talking a little GoT, a little Star Wars, a little science, and Falling in Love with Hominids by Nalo Hopkinson.


This newsletter is sponsored by Libby, the one-tap reading app from your library and OverDrive.

Meet Libby. The award-winning reading app that makes sure you always have something to read. It’s like having your entire library right in your pocket. Download the app today and get instant access to thousands of ebooks and audiobooks for free thanks to your public library and OverDrive.


We’re a little light on straight-up book news today, but there are some interesting things afoot regardless:

Winter has arrived with the latest season of Game of Thrones, and all you die-hard fans will be excited to hear that Folio Society is releasing a collector’s edition later this year!

Sharifah and I spent a bunch of time discussing the new live-action Cowboy Bepop, as well as con-artists and thieves, in the latest episode of SFF Yeah!

If like me you were traveling on Friday and didn’t get a chance to watch the Star Wars IX trailer, here’s a breakdown from Black Nerd Problems (although heads up that that’s Mark Hamill at the end, not Fisher). (Also, where’s my hankie 😭.)

Speaking of die-hard fans, if you’re burning to know the details of the Mandalorian trailer, viewed only by in-person attendees at Star Wars Celebration on Sunday, io9 has a recap.

And in “science is really freaking cool” news, here’s a fascinating primer on the first-ever photograph of a black hole.

Buzzy new releases this week:

Upon a Burning Throne by Ashok K. Banker
I absolutely intended to read this by review week, and yet. This is an epic fantasy series based on The Mahabharata (like A Spark of White Fire, but for adults) and I am here for it.

No Country for Old Gnomes (The Tales of Pell #2) by Delilah S. Dawson and Kevin Hearne
Not going to lie, I am listing this almost entirely for that title. The description includes gnomes in cardigans and halflings on war alpacas, and it looks like this belongs in the Terry Pratchett-esque section of fantasy, so I am intrigued!

Cheap ebooks update:

The Inheritance Trilogy by N.K. Jemisin, $2.99 (BUY THIS IMMEDIATELY, this is an absolute steal)

The Vampire with the Dragon Tattoo by Kerrelyn Sparks, $1.99 (I know nothing about this but can’t stop laughing, today is Amazing Titles Day)

Brown Girl in the Ring by Nalo Hopkinson, $1.99 (relevant to today’s review)

Let us talk about the timeliness of Falling in Love with Hominids by Nalo Hopkinson:

an illustration of a brown woman with a giant red fro. her eyes are closed and she appears to be sleeping or dreamingEven though it was published in 2015 and the stories were written over the course of many years, the foreword of Falling in Love with Hominids feels like it could have been written yesterday. Hopkinson writes:

[O]ne of the progressions I’ve made is from being a depressed teenager who saw how powerless she was to change all the ills around her to being a mostly cheerful fifty-something who realizes there are all kinds of ways of working towards positive change. […] [W]e’re all on the same spinning ball of dirt, trying to live as best we can. […] So part of the work of these past few decades of my life has been the process of falling in love with hominids.

In this Year of Our Continued Angst 2019, this was both a welcome message and reminder that facing and exploring humanity’s flaws is not the same as exonerating them, and the stories contained within do that work in so many ways. These are stories of abuse, of failure, of violence, but also of love, of yearning, of joy.

Whether she’s reimagining werewolves in “The Easthound,” The Tempest in “Shift,” or dating a plant-lady in “A Raggy Dog, A Shaggy Dog” (a personal favorite, that last one), Hopkinson is deeply aware of the fault lines in the human psyche. That’s where the horror comes from, but also the beauty. “Delicious Monster” takes a complicated father-son relationship and gives it a supernatural twist; “A Young Candy Daughter” imagines what growing up might look like for God. If you’re a Borderlands fan — and even if you’re not — “Men Sell Not Such in Any Town” is a must-read.

Each of the 18 stories comes with a short intro, and each is infused with Hopkinson’s lyrical language, Caribbean rhyme and folklore, and often patois. Some are as short as a page and a half while others are as long as 20 pages, but all feel much bigger on the inside, as the saying goes. And all of them went some way towards helping me fall a little bit back in love with humanity. I’m glad I’m not legally required to pick a favorite Hopkinson; between Brown Girl in the Ring, Salt Roads, Midnight Robber, and Falling in Love with Hominids, it’s an impossible choice. For those looking for a starting place to her work, this is a perfect entry point; for current fans, it’s a must not miss.

And that’s a wrap! You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. If you’re interested in more science fiction and fantasy talk, you can catch me and my co-host Sharifah on the SFF Yeah! podcast. For many many more book recommendations you can find me on the Get Booked podcast with the inimitable Amanda, or on Twitter as jennIRL.

May the Force be with you,
Jenn

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

Hello, people of Earth! TAKE ME TO YOUR READER. Today is what you call a “Tuesday,” and it is full of those things you call “books.” As you read this, I am relaxing on the mothership, having taken a week off, but I still needed to tell you about some of today’s great new releases. Because recommending books is ingrained in the fiber of my being! Below are a few of today’s amazing new releases, and you can hear about more awesome reads on this week’s episode of the All the Books! María Cristina and I talked about Miracle Creek, The Binding, Alice’s Island, and more great books.


Sponsored by The Hummingbird Dagger by Cindy Anstey and Swoon Reads

A dark and twisty regency novel perfect for readers who like their Jane Austen classics with a side of mystery and murder. 1833. A near-fatal carriage accident has deposited an unconscious young woman on the doorstep of young Lord Ellerby. When she finally awakens, it is with no memory of who she is or where she came from. As the mystery woman tries to solve the puzzle of her own identity and the appalling events that brought her to their door, nothing can prepare her for the escalating dangers that await. What she can’t remember could be deadly.


southern lady codeSouthern Lady Code: Essays by Helen Ellis

You may have heard us talk about Ellis on All the Books! before, because she is a SCREAM. And this collection of essays proves it! She tells the most amazing, frank, deliciously naughty, and over-the-top stories, while also discussing growing up in the South, and how to decode the expressions. (Example: “It’s just the house settling” is Southern Lady Code for: “Yep, you heard a ghost, but we need you to feed the cats while we’re out of town.”) I laugh-snorted my way through the whole thing, and will never look at a bottle of Liquid Plumr the same way. (Fun fact: She is an amazing poker player, and taught Colson Whitehead everything he know, which he documented in The Noble Hustle.)

Backlist bump: Eating the Cheshire Cat by Helen Ellis

diary of a murdererDiary of a Murderer: And Other Stories by Young-Ha Kim, Krys Lee (translator)

An aging serial killer sets his sight on another serial killer – who happens to be his daughter’s boyfriend – before dementia overtakes him. Two school friends reunite after 20 years, with dark results. A son returns years after being kidnapped. And a man thinks he is – wait for it – a cob of corn. These are the stories in this fascinating, well-imagined collection. I look forward to reading more by Kim.

Backlist bump: The Lonesome Bodybuilder: Stories by Yukiko Motoya and Asa Yoneda

normal peopleNormal People: A Novel by Sally Rooney

Already available across the pond, this dynamic novel has won several awards and been nominated for umpteen more. It’s about Marianne and Connell, two teens who are outside each other’s social circles, but have a connection away from school that they keep hidden from the world. And as they move on to college, and the boundaries of their relationship change, and their social standings and personalities shift, they must decide what it means for them. It’s a lovely rumination on young first love and class, told with sparse beauty.

Backlist bump: Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney

Thanks so much for visiting me here each week! Y’all are the best.

xoxo,

Liberty

Categories
Today In Books

Snacks Or Snakes Confusion After Library Typo: Today In Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by New Harbinger Publications.

Mastering Adulthood cover image


Snacks Or Snakes Confusion After Library Typo

Let’s start the week with a good laugh! Pflugerville Public Library placed an ad in the paper about their anti-prom event which was gonna be fun thanks to a DJ and a photo booth and snakes–*record scratch!* They meant snacks, obviously, and assumed everyone would realize that but nope suddenly they had many calls about “snakes in the library?!” Thanks to a good sense of humor all around this got even funnier.

We’re Getting More SHRILL!

This is not a drill: Shrill, based on Lindy West’s memoir, has been renewed for season two on Hulu and this can not get here fast enough!

Saga Knows Its End Date

The saga that is Saga now has an official end in sight. Issue #54 of Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples’ graphic novel was its exact middle point and from there on we’re on course to the end. I love this comic and have to say this is great news because, as much as I want the things I love to exist forever in theory, I really hate that so many things run longer than they should.