Categories
New Books

September New Books Megalist – The Sequel!!!

What time is it? NEW BOOK TIME! This may be the last megalist sequel for the next few months, but for today, there are a TON of great books to choose from, and I wanted to share with them with you! So here’s a big list! And on this week’s episode of the All the Books! Rebecca and I talked about some more great new releases out today, such as Children of the New World, Rani Patel in Full Effect, and The Last Days of Jack Sparks.

artofmissp_300pxThis week’s newsletter is sponsored by The Art of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Leah Gallo published by Quirk Books.

Witness the genesis of peculiardom! This visual tour of the movie world of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, created by iconic filmmaker Tim Burton, is sure to be a must-have for fans of the series. A companion book to the film, it features behind-the-scenes images and set information from two of Burton’s longtime collaborators, including details on costume design, cinematography, set design, concept art, and more.

a song to take the world apartA Song to Take the World Apart by Zan Romanoff

Loner by Teddy Wayne

The Virginity of Famous Men: Stories by Christine Sneed

A Second Chance: The Chronicles of St. Mary’s Book Three by Jodi Taylor

Where Am I Now?: True Stories of Girlhood and Accidental Fame by Mara Wilson

The Shooting by James Boice

Black Panther: A Nation Under Our Feet Book 1 by Ta-Nehisi Coates and Brian Stelfreeze

the home placeThe Home Place: Memoirs of a Colored Man’s Love Affair with Nature by J. Drew Lanham

Fates and Traitors: A Novel of John Wilkes Booth by Jennifer Chiaverini

A Tree or a Person or a Wall: Stories by Matt Bell

The Orphan Mother by Robert Hicks

Feminist Fight Club: An Office Survival Manual for a Sexist Workplace by Jessica Bennett

Little Nothing by Marisa Silver

Red Right Hand by Chris Holm

intimationsIntimations: Stories by Alexandra Kleeman

Edward Gets Messy by Rita Meade and Olga Stern

Umami by Laia Jufresa (Author), Sophie Hughes (Translator)

Shakespeare in Swahililand: In Search of a Global Poet by Edward Wilson-Lee

Avid Reader: A Life by Robert Gottlieb

The Island by Olivia Levez

I’m Judging You: The Do-Better Manual by Luvvie Ajayi

We Gon’ Be Alright: Notes on Race and Resegregation by Jeff Chang

where did you sleep last nightWhere Did You Sleep Last Night by Lynn Crosbie

Girlfriends, Ghosts, and Other Stories (New York Review Books Classics) by Robert Walser

Shelter in Place by Alexander Maksik

The Risen by Ron Rash

This Vast Southern Empire by Matthew Karp

Jerusalem by Alan Moore

In Such Good Company: Eleven Years of Laughter, Mayhem, and Fun in the Sandbox by Carol Burnett

Ghosts by Raina Telgemeier

catlantisCatlantis by Anna Starobinets (Author), Andrzej Klimowski (Illustrator), Jane Bugaeva (Translator)

Black Water by Louise Doughty

Wolf Boys: Two American Teenagers and Mexico’s Most Dangerous Drug Cartel by Dan Slater

The Sleeping World by Gabrielle Lucille Fuentes

Wintersong by S. Jae-Jones

Darktown by Thomas Mullen

Nine Island by Jane Alison

Every Kind of Wanting by Gina Frangello

commonwealthCommonwealth by Ann Patchett

Black Wave by Michelle Tea

Fates and Furies by Lauren Groff (paperback)

YAY, BOOKS! That’s it for me. If you want to learn more about books (and see lots of pictures of my cats), or tell me about books you’re reading, you can find me on Twitter at MissLiberty, on Instagram at FranzenComesAlive, or Litsy under ‘Liberty’!

Stay rad!

Liberty

Categories
The Goods

10 Days Til Book Mail!

Heads up, Book Mail readers! The next box is just 10 days away.

Put a pretty red circle around Tuesday, September 20th on your calendar (or stick an awesome sticker into your Passion Planner, whatever floats your boat), and get ready to treat yourself to a magical (wink wink) box of books and bookish goodies.

Still on the fence? Check out previous boxes here.

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As always, supplies are limited, and you on the Book Mail mailing list get the first shot. Watch your inboxes on the 20th, and don’t hesitate! We can’t wait to share more great reads with you.

 

Categories
Letterhead

Join Us For Read Harder Book Groups in September!

This month’s groups are sponsored by Crooked Kingdom by Leigh Bardugo and Penguin Random House Audio.


It is September, how did that even happen?! Tis the Season of Back to School, Back to Work (if you get summers off, you lucky ducks), and of course New Releases Galore. Plus, there are only three months left if you’re working your way through the 2016 Read Harder Challenge. If you’re having trouble figuring out how to prioritize your TBR pile, where to start with what’s new, and/or just want to talk about books with a bunch of other book-loving fools, the Read Harder Book Group meet-ups are here for you.

We’re meeting in a city near you this month; come join us!

Vancouver, BC — 9/15
Chicago, IL — 9/15
New York City, NY — 9/17
Los Angeles, CA — 9/17
Glasgow, GB — 9/17
Boston, MA — 9/17
Toronto, ON — 9/17
Portland, OR — 9/18
Philadelphia, PA — 9/18
Houston, TX — 9/18
Washington, DC — 9/18

Read Harder Book Group logo

 

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Welcome to Swords and Spaceships! (DEV)

Binti by Nnedi OkoraforWomen took top honors in this year’s Hugo Awards, with awards in each of the four fiction categories going to women authors. Three of the awards in the fiction categories went to women of color, and authors of African descent took the award in the longest fiction categories: N.K. Jemisin received the Best Novel award for The Fifth Season, and Nnedi Okorafor’s Binti received the award for Best Novella. These results bear heavy significance on their own: women who write science fiction and fantasy have historically faced many trials in receiving recognition for their work. The same can be said for people of African descent. The fact Jemisin’s and Okorafor’s works have received a Hugo award is amazing, and important for those reasons alone.

This victory has an additional significance. For the second year in a row, one of two right-wing networks of authors has attempted to game the Hugo Awards ballot with a slate of work that, they claim, calls back to recognition of more traditional, conservative science fiction. The leaders of these groups have been widely recognized as bigots. Their slate of recommended works this year was weak, haphazard, and the work of many of the authors therein has been recognized as not deserving of the award because, frankly, it just isn’t good enough.

These cabals and their supporters oppose the existence of writers like Okorafor and Jemisin, and consider their work to be representative of everything that is wrong with the genre’s direction. They view the genre’s increased focus on prioritizing the voices of those who have been historically marginalized as a threat to their own success, as if the groups that they represent have not dominated the awards and controlled avenues to success in the genre for decades.

The Fifth Season by N. K. JemisinThe news of this win comes on the heels of a report showing that, at least at the short fiction level, black authors of science fiction and fantasy are just not being published. Until very recently, the only black authors featured on lists of recommended science fiction and fantasy books were Octavia Butler, Samuel Delany, or Nalo Hopkinson. Despite claims to the contrary, black readers have always looked to speculative fiction as a way of dealing with the social and political realities of their lives. And black writers have always used speculative fiction to wrestle with a world that marginalizes and threatens them. Black readers and writers of speculative fiction have also always had to deal with the reality that mainstream speculative fiction publishing and fandom was not built for us or by us, and because of this, the two institutions struggle to recognize the brilliance of our works and voices.

But with this award win, both black readers and black writers are validated. Hugo award winners are not decided by a distant panel of “experts.” They are decided by the reading public, people who love these books enough to make their voices heard. Readers of all races, cultures, and ethnicities came together not just to deal a blow to alt-right ideologues and their temper tantrums, but also to uplift the work that they, rightfully, considered the most powerful, most significant, most relevant work to have been produced in a year full of powerful, significant, relevant works of speculative fiction.

And these books are written by black women. Jemisin and Okorafor used the earth and stars to write stories that speak to their experiences and histories as complete humans. Readers for years to come will be able to find these books more easily, and lose themselves in the truths and realities that they contain. These books and these authors’ names will now be prefaced forever more with “Hugo Award Winning,” and when new readers encounter them in libraries, when new writers begin to aspire, they will be comforted by the fact that these books have been vetted and found to meet the exacting standards of thousands readers and writers just like them. Jemisin and Okorafor’s Hugo Award win is a win for all readers of speculative fiction, but most especially for black ones.

Categories
The Goods

Read Harder totes launch + scarves

It’s been the Book Riot motto for years, and now you can take it wherever you go! Rock the new Read Harder tote bag, and get 25% off when you pair it with any adult t-shirt.

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In the mood for something cozier? Wrap yourself in words with our new lightweight scarves. We’ve got banned books, Poe-ka dots, and more.

BR_oopScarves_email

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks!: September 8, 2016

51vvh0yv4gl-_sl300_This week’s Audiobooks! Newsletter is sponsored by The Call by Peadar O’Guilin.

You wake up alone in a horrible land. A horn sounds. The Call has begun, and you have three minutes and four seconds to save your life from the Sidhe, the most beautiful and terrible fairies you’ve ever seen. 14-year old Nessa knows she’ll be Called soon, and no one thinks she has any chance to survive. But she’s going to prove them wrong. Peadar O’Guilin’s The Call is a heart-stopping, blood-pounding, can’t-put-down-until-you’ve-read-the-last-word fantasy thriller you won’t be able to forget. Could you survive the Call? (Narrator Amy Shiels will appear in next year’s Twin Peaks revival!)

The Most Exciting Audiobook of the Year?

41oqrhcrtlHave you guys read Rupi Kaur’s Milk and Honey yet? It’s been making headlines for selling almost half a million copies — pretty badass for a book of poems that was originally self published. Rupi Kaur moves people with her words, and excitement about Milk and Honey has spread through word-of-mouth, booksellers, and social media. And if you haven’t read it yet, you’re kind of in luck that you waited, because the audiobook just came out!

Andrews McMeel Publishing has only published a few collections of poetry, so we’re really lucky that they stumbled onto Milk and Honey. After a little experimenting, they noticed that spoken-word poets were really popular on college campuses. As they put it in a piece by Publishers Weekly, “We saw that there was this generation of young women, mostly in that early-20s age group, who were responding to this form of expression.”

Milk and Honey is a mix of prose and poetry that explores survival, violence, abuse, love, loss, and femininity, taking a journey through life’s most bitter moments to find sweetness. It’s divided into four chapters that each deal with a different kind of pain and heartache, and you can check out an excerpt of the audio here, performed by Rupi Kaur (yes!).

How Audiobooks Can Help With ADHD

I love Kate Scott’s recent piece for Book Riot about what she calls her “Tigger brain.” Even though she wants to read pretty much everything ever written (yep, same here), her neurobiology doesn’t always cooperate (again, same!). I like to think that while my wandering attention doesn’t always make it easy to be a reader, at least I wind up listening to some COMPLETELY CAPTIVATING books — sometimes they’re the only ones that can hold my attention! For Kate, listening to audiobooks is her version of meditation, and it’s her #1 reading tip for people with ADD / ADHD.

My Latest Audiobook Obsession

crazyrichasiansRemember 2 seconds ago when I was talking about audiobooks that are COMPLETELY CAPTIVATING? This is fully true of Crazy Rich Asians, a gossipy novel about Singapore’s most rich and famous. Rachel and Nick, both young academics in New York, take a romantic trip to Singapore where Nick will be the best man in his friend’s wedding. Oh, and P.S.: Nick will also introduce Rachel to his family, no pressure. What’s more, Rachel has no idea that her humble, mild-mannered boyfriend is actually from one of Singapore’s richest families and is the most eligible bachelor in the country. Shenanigans, schemes, and gossip ensue.

I don’t know why I didn’t read this book instantly. Maybe I worried that it would be formulaic with half-hearted chuckles? Think again, self: it’s more like Edith Wharton meets Gossip Girl set in Singapore with a dash of Emily Gilmore. It’s completely funny and original, and it has what I’ve come to think of as a strong narrative voice — a quality that I love about audiobooks like Where’d You Go, Bernadette, City of Thieves, and anything by Nora Ephron. It’s almost like these stories were meant to be read out loud.

As narrator, Lynn Chen hits it out of the park with breezy humor, backstabbing relatives, and effortless accents from New York, Singapore, China, Taiwan, Australia, England, and more. I loved everything about this audiobook and am psyched that the saga continues with two more books. <3

Categories
The Goods

Store newsletter scheduling test 3

This is test 3! It should publish at 2:15pm eastern, for a newsletter at 2:30pm.

Categories
The Goods

Store Newsletter Scheduling Test 2

This is the second test newsletter! I’m setting it to publish at 1pm Eastern, with sailthru sending at 1:30pm.

Categories
The Goods

Store Newsletter Scheduling Test 1

This is the first test email. I’m setting it to publish at 11:30am Eastern, and will schedule Sailthru to send at noon.

Wheeee!

Categories
This Week In Books

The Big Books of Fall 2016: This Week in Books

Big Books in Busy Fall Publishing Season

It’s the biggest time of year in books. Most of the book-buying happens in the fall, and there are always major titles coming out in anticipation of holiday buying. Many media outlets are rounding up their picks, so I’ve gathered a few of them here for your perusal. A round-up of round-ups, if you will.

The Wall Street Journal’s Books Every Geek Should Read This Fall

Amazon’s Big Fall Books Preview

The Huffington Post’s 20 Books You Need on Your Shelf This Fall

BuzzFeed’s What Book Should You Read This Fall? Quiz

Entertainment Weekly’s 55 Books to Read This Fall

You might also be interested in the Fall Books episode of our own All the Books! podcast.

 

What Will Obama Write?

President Obama is already of course a best-selling writer, but it seems that his most interesting days as an author will likely come after he leaves the White House. Apparently, President Obama still has one book left on his existing contract with Crown (an imprint of Penguin Random House), though that contract was from before he was elected, and it seems unlikely that those terms will be met (either ripped up, re-negotiated, or otherwise altered to reflect his enormous sales potential). But the most intriguing detail here is that President Obama has always wanted to write a novel. Books by former presidents are nothing new, but a literary novel by one is news indeed. Here’s keeping our fingers crossed.

Alabama Willing to Put People in Jail for Library Fines

Under funding pressure, the Athens-Limestone Public Library in Athens, Alabama will begin enforcing an ordinance in which patrons who “fail or refuse to return” library materials are subject to up to $100 in fines and/or up to 30-days in jail. 

The library reports that it has over $200,000 in overdue library materials outstanding and that it would much rather receive the overdue materials than enforce the ordinance. The ALPL’s move runs counter to many recent amnesty efforts from some public libraries to combat the same problem.

 


Thanks to Still a Work in Progress by Jo Knowles for sponsoring This Week in Books.

51sVff8rnYL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_In a return to middle-grade fiction, master of perspectives Jo Knowles depicts a younger sibling struggling to maintain his everyday life when his older sister is in crisis.

Noah is just trying to make it through seventh grade. The girls are confusing, the homework is boring, and even his friends are starting to bug him. Not to mention that his older sister, Emma, has been acting pretty strange, even though Noah thought she’d been doing better ever since the Thing They Don’t Talk About. The only place he really feels at peace is in art class, with a block of clay in his hands. As it becomes clear through Emma’s ever-stricter food rules and regulations that she’s not really doing better at all, the normal seventh-grade year Noah was hoping for begins to seem pretty unattainable. In an affecting and realistic novel with bright spots of humor, Jo Knowles captures the complexities of navigating middle school while feeling helpless in the face of a family crisis.