Categories
Kissing Books

YA Romances I Wish I Had Read as a Teen

Welcome, or welcome back, to the Kissing Books newsletter. I’m PN Hinton, your guide to all things romance-related. Thanks for taking time from your day to give this a read! I hope this newsletter helps to brighten up your day just a little bit more.

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

Before we get too deep into it, I wanted to give a quick heads up that there will not be a send next Thursday, due to the holiday here in the US.

I am happy to report that I am fully out of my stagnate reading state and have spent the majority of my time over the last week reading. I devoured Leather & Lark, which gave me the drive to start a handful of other books. At the recommendation of my FYP on TikTok, I borrowed Crafted From the Ashes of Roses from Kindle Unlimited. I also started How to End a Love Story, A Novel Love Story, and The Lost Story in addition to still making my way through Director’s Cut.

I just realized that a majority of the books I’m reading have the word “story” in them, which was a completely random happenstance.

Bookish Goods

picture of TBR Tarot Towel

TBR Tarot Towel by BinkyGirlCreations

Whether it’s on the beach, poolside, or even in your own backyard, this is a perfect towel to lay out on while you attack your personal TBR. Prices start at $33.

New Releases

cover of Confidential Attraction

Confidential Attraction by Brenda Jackson

After a family tragedy, Mark finds himself the guardian of his infant niece. While successful in business, the entrepreneur has no clue on how to be a father figure to a tiny human. Seeing his ineptitude, his assistant, Allison, decides to help by moving in and becoming a temporary nanny. However, with the extra time spent together, Mark and Allison are unable to ignore the shared attraction, which will have a ripple effect on all other aspects of their lives.

cover of Change of Heart

Change of Heart by Kate Canterbary

Successful surgeon Whitney spends her summer days leading her hospital’s new ethics initiative and her nights crashing weddings with her BFF and indulging in one-night stands. When Henry, her latest conquest, turns out to also be one of the new surgical residents, she is determined to keep it professional. However, the universe appears to have other plans for them, and their paths continue to cross. Soon, Henry has Whitney rethinking her “one night only” stance and begins to wonder about the possibility of a happily ever after.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

Over the weekend I visited The Book Burrow, which is one of my favorite independent bookstores, and walked away with two vintage YA Avon Flare books.

I’ve said many times that my love of the romance genre started in middle school, but that’s when my love of *adult* romances began. I read romance novels from the moment one of my older cousins bequeathed younger me her collection of First Love from Silhouette books, and that is what placed me on the romance path.

Now, because of when these books were written and published, they weren’t as diverse as YA romance is today. Which is sad, because no matter the age of the reader, they should be able to see themselves in the books they read. With that in mind, today’s recommendations are going to be YA romances that I wish I had as a younger book dragon.

cover of Happily Ever Afters

Happily Ever Afters by Elise Bryant

Shortly after 16-year-old aspiring romance writer Tessa gets accepted to the creative writing program at a prestigious art school, she’s struck with the dreaded writer’s block. Luckily, her friend Caroline has a romance checklist which will not only help Tessa get her writing mojo back but will also help to catch the interest of her real-life love interest, Nico. As Tessa works through the list, she begins to question if her happily ever after is with Nico or maybe with Sam, the boy next door who was also her first real friend at her new school.

finding jupiter book cover

Finding Jupiter by Kelis Rowe

When Ray and Orion meet at the local skating rink, both are processing a familial loss. As such, they’re instantly drawn to one another, sensing the kindred soul. Soon, they’re spending more time together and finding solace in each other’s company. However, the path to love isn’t always smooth, and soon they find themselves having to fight opposing forces, including a decades-long family secret, that threaten their blossoming love.

Summer reads for the win!

Take this food quiz and get your Bridgerton match.

picture of vintage YA paperbacks

In case anyone was curious, these are the books that inspired today’s recommendations. I know that they will be full on cheese, but sometimes you need that in your reading life.

And that’s all she wrote for today. If you’re ever interested in what I do between the sends, you can always give me a follow over on Instagram under @pns_bookish_world. Until then, happy reading and stay hydrated!

Categories
Book Radar

The Best Books of 2024 So Far and More Book Radar!

Dear Book Friends,

It’s here. The halfway point of 2024. I know it’s wild, and June especially has just flown by. But now that we’re here, let’s reflect on the year so far and look ahead to what is coming. In this newsletter, I’ll share some of my favorite books of 2024 so far and the ones I’m looking forward to in the second half of the year. Ready? Let’s go.

Book Deals and Reveals

cover of Happy Place

Jennifer Lopez’s production company Nuyorican is teaming up with Netflix to adapt Emily Henry’s bestselling novel Happy Place into a series. In a post on Instagram, Lopez said that she “can’t wait” to work with Emily Henry on this adaptation.

Bridgerton author Julia Quinn has spoken out about the big change the Netflix adaptation is making to Francesca’s love story. Spoilers for season 3 if you haven’t watched yet!

Sophie Kinsella, author of the bestselling Shopaholic series, has sold North American rights to her “deeply personal” novella What Does It Feel Like? to the Dial Press.

Remy Lai has sold her debut adult cozy fantasy series, An Ancient Witch’s Guide to Modern Dating, to Amara Hoshijo at Saga Press.

I Saw the TV Glow director Jane Schoenbrun has a debut novel coming out with Hogarth. The publishing company called the book “an epic blend of literary fantasy, coming-of-age, sci-fi, and horror.”

Hillary Rodham Clinton has just announced a new memoir this September. The press release says Clinton’s new book, Something Lost, Something Gained: Reflections on Life, Love, and Liberty, “Hillary like you haven’t seen her before, offering a glimpse into her closest friendships and enduring marriage as well as her unvarnished views on politics, democracy, the threats we face and the future within our reach.”

These are the best queer books of 2024 so far, according to all the lists. What LGBTQ books have been your favorite this year?

And here are the winners of the 2024 Locus Awards. The Locus Science Fiction Foundation announced the winners last weekend.

It’s the end of June, which means it’s time to check in on this year’s Read Harder Challenge! Take this survey, and let us know how it’s going so far.

Book Riot Recommends

Hi, welcome to everyone’s favorite segment of Book Radar called Book Riot Recommends. This is where I’ll talk to you about all the books I’m reading, the books I’m loving, and the books I can’t wait to read and love in the near future. I think you’re going to love them too!

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

The Best Books of 2024 (So Far)

It’s been a good year for books. Here are some of my favorites of the year so far.

diavola book cover

Diavola by Jennifer Thorne

A terrifyingly haunting book about a family vacation gone incredibly wrong. But the terrors don’t leave our main character behind after the vacation is over.

Interesting Facts About Space by Emily Austin

A funny and heartfelt story about overcoming anxiety, reconnecting with family, true crime podcasts, and space trivia.

Horror Movie by Paul Tremblay

A unique and unforgettable horror novel about an indie horror movie that never was. This book gave me literal nightmares. And yes, I do mean that as a compliment.

Funny Story by Emily Henry

My first Emily Henry novel, and it did not disappoint! I love a love story that’s about more than just the romance. This is a story that’s just as much about self-discovery as it is about finding love.

One-Star Romance by Laura Hankin

This is a romance story about an author who has to walk down the aisle with a man who rated her novel one star on Goodreads. It made me laugh. It made me cry big ugly tears that stained my face. I rated this one (and all the other ones on this list) FIVE STARS on Goodreads.

What To Look Forward to in 2024 (Round 2)

The rest of the year is yet to come! Here are the books I’m most looking forward to in 2024, round 2:

cover of I Was A Teenage Slasher by Stephen Graham Jones; image of an empty black hooded sweatshirt

I Was A Teenage Slasher by Stephen Graham Jones (S&S/Saga Press, July 16)

First up, another new one from Stephen Graham Jones. This man cannot be stopped. This novel is the “autobiography” of a teen boy cursed to kill for revenge.

Society of Lies by Lauren Ling Brown (Bantam, August 13)

This debut suspense/thriller novel has all the things we just can’t get enough of: secret societies, dark academia, murder. Sign me up.

Sacrificial Animals by Kailee Pederson (St. Martin’s Press, August 20)

This queer, supernatural horror debut explores ancient Chinese mythology and family trauma. The story also draws heavily from the author’s own experiences of being adopted from Nanning, China, and growing up in Nebraska on a farm.

A Sunny Place for Shady People by Mariana Enríquez (Hogarth, September 17)

Last year, Mariana Enríquez’s epic horror novel Our Share of Night had us all shook. Now the author is back with a new and equally stunning collection of short stories. You won’t want to miss this.

Roland Rogers Isn’t Dead Yet by Samantha Allen (Zando, December 3)

You are in for a treat with this queer supernatural romance novel. What happens when an author is hired to ghostwrite a famous actor’s memoir…only to find out said actor is a ghost himself? A lot of things. But you’ll have to read to find out!

And Here’s A Cat Picture!

Another day, another cat in the window. Well, this time, it’s two cats in the window, actually. I love how there are two beds in the window, but Murray has decided he needs both of them and Remy gets zero. This says a lot about their dynamic.

Okay, well, that’s the end of this newsletter, friends. I hope you have an incredible weekend, and I’ll see you in July!

Emily

Categories
Past Tense

The Best Historical Fiction of 2024 So Far

Hi, historical fiction fans,

How y’all doing? Finding ways to stay cool and hydrated in all this heat? I sure hope so. I’ve got another great week of historical fiction reads for you here, including two intriguing new releases and a collection of my favorite historical fiction reads of the year. Hopefully you can find some great new reads and some distraction from the summer heat.

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

Bookish Goods

Image of a gold book shaped locked on a delicate gold chain draped against an open book.

Book Locket from Kristin Grace Jewelry

Check out this fun book locket that lets you wear a book around your neck. $28.

New Releases

The Lions' Den book cover

The Lions’ Den by Iris Mwanza (June 25, 2024)

In the early ’90s in Zambia, a rookie lawyer fights for a young queer dancer who is beaten and detained before disappearing from the system. Along with a former freedom fighter and the head of her law firm and ready for one last fight as his own battle against AIDS takes its toll, Grace will have to fight a corrupt system and the ugliness at the very core of President Kaunda’s administration to seek justice for her client.

Husbands and Lovers book cover

Husbands & Lovers by Beatriz Williams (June 25, 2024)

Husbands & Lovers follows two women connected by a family heirloom in the 1950s and 2020s. With her son in desperate need of a kidney donor after consuming a poisonous mushroom at summer camp, Mallory Dunne is forced to confront two family secrets that have haunted her: her mother’s adoption from an infamous orphanage in the 1950s and her own love affair with a now-famous singer a decade prior.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

Somehow we’ve reached the halfway point of 2024, so it’s high time to talk favorite books. I am certain there are many other incredible historical fiction titles from the year, but these three are my favorites.

You Dreamed of Empires book cover

You Dreamed of Empires by Álvaro Enrigue, translated by Natasha Wimmer

In this surreal reimagining of the Spanish conquistadors’ first foray into the Aztec stronghold of Tenochtitlan, nothing goes quite as it seems—or quite as history tells it. Cortés meets Moctezuma, but it’s the complicated intersecting decisions leading up to that moment that changed history forever. It’s history and historical fiction as you’ve never seen it before.

The Woman With No Name book cover

The Woman with No Name by Audrey Blake

Based on the life story of an incredible woman working against the Nazis in WWII, The Woman With No Name follows Yvonne Rudellat, a French woman living in England during the Second World War. Her daughters and her neighbors are all doing their part, but despite Yvonne’s best attempts, no one seems to think a middle-aged woman can be of any help. Until she is recruited by the SOE to become the first female sabotage agent in France.

cover of Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange; teal blue with orange stars and black font

Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange

Although this is a follow-up and companion to Tommy Orange’s bestselling novel There There, it can be read—and thoroughly enjoyed—on its own. The story follows generations of a Cheyenne family and explores the complicated intergenerational legacy of trauma, from the Sand Creek Massacre and the Carlisle Indian Industrial School to a modern-day shooting that nearly tore a family apart.

That’s it for now, folks! Stay subscribed for more stories of yesteryear.

If you want to talk books, historical or otherwise, you can find me @rachelsbrittain on most social media, including Instagram, Goodreads, and Litsy.

Right now I’m reading Sorcery and Small Magics by Maiga Doocy. What about you?

Categories
Giveaways

062524-JuneEACHouse-Giveaway

We’re teaming up with Crime & Chocolate to give away a pair of AirPods Pro to one lucky winner!

Enter here for a chance to win, or click the image below!

Here’s a bit more from our sponsor: Immerse yourself in the gripping world of mystery, crime, and unexpected sweetness with our exclusive newsletter, Crime & Chocolate. Tailored for the discerning aficionado of intrigue and supense, this newsletter is your monthly gateway to the latest and greatest in crime, mystery, and thriller novels. Join us on a journey through the shadows, where every page turned is a step deeper into the unknown.

Categories
Letterhead

A Heartthrob Hades and a Cursed Office Clerk: Read an Excerpt of THE GAMES GODS PLAY by Abigail Owen

If there’s anything we’ve learned from mythology, it’s don’t mess with the gods. In The Games Gods Play by Abigail Owen, one cursed soul gets tangled up in divine distraction when she’s selected as Hades’ champion. Read on to learn more about this spicy, new romantasy, out September 3rd, through an excerpt and artwork from the deluxe limited edition, available for preorder.

The Games Gods Play by Abigail Owen cover with decorated edges

The Games Gods Play by Abigail Owen

The gods love to play with us mere mortals.
And every hundred years, we let them…

I have never been favored by the gods. Far from it, thanks to Zeus.

Living as a cursed office clerk for the Order of Thieves, I just keep my head down and hope the capricious beings who rule from Olympus won’t notice me. Not an easy feat, given San Francisco is Zeus’ patron city, but I make do. I survive. Until the night I tangle with a different god.

The worst god. Hades.

For the first time ever, the ruthless, mercurial King of the Underworld has entered the Crucible—the deadly contest the gods hold to determine a new ruler to sit on the throne of Olympus. But instead of fighting their own battles, the gods name mortals to compete in their stead.

So why in the Underworld did Hades choose me—a sarcastic nobody with a curse on her shoulders—as his champion? And why does my heart trip every time he says I’m his? I don’t know if I’m a pawn, bait, or something else entirely to this dangerously tempting god. How can I, when he has more secrets than stars in the sky?

Because Hades is playing by his own rules…and Death will win at any cost.


Excerpt – Chapter 4

Hades’ barely-there smile turns condescending. “Was that so hard?”

It’s too…deliberate. Like he’s decided to play this a different way. Only that makes no sense.

But gods don’t have to make sense, I guess.

Drawing the notice of any of them is a bad idea. They are capricious beings who might curse you rather than bless you depending on their mood and the way the breeze is blowing. Especially this one.

“Now, let’s talk about what you think you were doing,” Hades says.

I frown, confused. “I thought you already—”

“And with the Crucible starting tonight, even,” he continues in a disappointed voice, as if I hadn’t spoken.

I sigh. “Do you want an apology before you smite me or something?”

“Most would fall to their knees before me. Beg for my mercy.”

He’s toying with me now. I’m a mouse. He’s a cat. And I’m his dinner.

I swallow hard, trying to force my heart back down my throat. “I’m pretty sure I’m dead either way.” Of course I am. Let’s not heap even more humiliation on my early end. “Would kneeling help?”

His silvery eyes—not dark like I thought at first, but like mercury—swirl with cold amusement. Did I say something funny?

“Is that why you’re here?” I ask. “The Crucible?”

Hades has never participated, and Zeus is hardly his favorite sibling, so why is he at this temple, really?

“I have my own reasons for being here tonight.”

In other words, Don’t ask gods questions, reckless mortal.

“Why did you stop me?” I glance at the temple, ignoring his tone entirely.

Instead of answering, Hades taps his thumb against his chin. “The question is, what do I do with you now?”

Is he enjoying my predicament? I’ve never thought much about the god of death—I’m a little busy with surviving mortality first—but I’m starting to really not like him. If Boone acted more like this, I’d have gotten over him ages ago. “I assume you’re going to send me to the Underworld.”

Seriously, stop talking, Lyra.

Hades hums. “I can do worse than that.”

Just like with Chance, backing down now isn’t an option. “Oh?” I tip my head, pretending like I don’t already know. “I do hear you are creative with your punishments.”

“I’m flattered.” He gives a tiny, mocking bow. “I could make you roll a rock up a hill and never make it to the top, only to start back over every single day for the rest of eternity.”

That already happened to Sisyphus ages ago. “I’m pretty sure Zeus came up with that.”

His lips flatten. “Were you there?”

I shrug. “Either way, it sounds like a vacation. Peaceful, undisturbed labor. When do I start?”

My mouth is going to get me permanently dead.

I’m waiting to end up in the Underworld any second, or maybe for Hades’ famous bident to appear in his hand for him to skewer me with.

Instead, he shakes his head. “I’m not going to kill you. Yet.”

Really? Do I trust him?

He must see the wariness in my eyes, because a muscle tightens in his jaw like he’s irritated I would doubt his word. “Relax, my star.”

I hesitate at the endearment. It clearly means nothing to him. When he doesn’t immediately talk, I manage not to as well, and instead I take in more details about the god standing before me.

He’s not exactly what I expected. I mean, beyond the obvious dark and brooding thing. It’s his clothes. He’s wearing worn boots and jeans, for Elysium’s sake. The jeans sit low on his narrow hips and are paired with a sky-blue button-down shirt rolled up at the sleeves to reveal forearms a deeper tan than I would expect from someone who lives in the Underworld. Who knew forearms could be sexy?

Over the shirt, he wears vintage leather suspenders that I suspect meet in the back at the top of his shoulder blades, side holster–style. The metal rings on the suspenders look like they have a purpose that he’s not using them for right now. Are they for weapons? Or does he have a bad back?

“Do I pass inspection?” he drawls.

I jerk my gaze back up to his face. “You look different than I thought.”

Both eyebrows twitch up. “And what did you expect? All-black clothing? Perhaps a full leather getup?”

Heat flares up my neck. Something like that, actually. “Don’t forget the horns. And maybe a tail.”

“That’s a different god of death.” He makes an exasperated sound, then mutters something about abhorring expectations.

Meeting those expectations, I think he means. Strange that I have something in common with a god. I may be cursed, but damned if I’m going to let it dictate who I am.

“Your home in the Underworld is Erebus,” I say pointedly.

“And?”

“It’s called… Wait for it.” I hold up a hand. “The Land of Shadows.”

Someone should duct tape my mouth shut.

Hades slips his hands in his pockets, casually relaxed in a leashed predator sort of way. “I always thought that naming was unoriginal. It’s the Underworld. Of course there are shadows.”

This conversation seems to be going off the rails a bit. “I guess.” And then, because my brain can’t help itself, I actually consider what he said. “I mean, technically, you’re not the god of shadows or even the goddess of night.” Now I’m on a roll. “And if the fire-and-brimstone thing is true, then it seems like it would be quite well lit down there.”

His eyes glint at me like sharpened knives.

I can’t tell if he’s offended or surprised by my running commentary.

Unfortunately for both of us, I have a good imagination—and a lot of opinions. “You have a perception issue, if you think about it.”

I have a perception issue,” he repeats.

“Yes, you do. If they can’t see for themselves, mortals will believe what they are told. I was always told that Hades is shrouded in darkness, smells of fire, and is covered in tattoos that can come alive at his will.”

His gaze trails down my body with such slow deliberation, it sends the heat from earlier crawling farther up my neck and into my cheeks. “And yet you’re the one dressed in black and with tattoos, my star,” he points out.

I follow his gaze to my black fitted shirt paired with jeans—so it’s not all black. One sleeve has ridden up slightly to expose the pale skin of my wrist where the black ink tattoo peeks out. Two stars. A third star is on my other wrist, and when I put my arms together, they form Orion’s Belt.

One of the few things I remember before being taken in by the Order is watching Orion move across the sky outside my bedroom window. The constellation is an unchanging, ever-fixed mark in the night.

Is that why he called me his star twice now? I tug the sleeve down.

“So…” He comes out of his casual leaning to step closer. Close enough that I can breathe him in, which is when I learn that the god of death smells like the darkest, most sinful, bitter chocolate.

“What’s your name?” he asks.

I definitely do not want a god knowing my name. “Felix Argos.”

Hades doesn’t call me on the lie. Just watches me, gaze assessing like he’s debating something. A creative new punishment for me, probably.

“So…” I mimic his earlier phrasing and glance to the side of the temple and the way down the mountain. Escape is so close. Just out of reach, like the open door of a birdcage with a cat sitting outside. “What happens now?”

“What did you mean about being cursed?”

Ugh. I don’t want to talk about that. I hedge instead. “You don’t know?”

“Tell me like I don’t.”

“What if I don’t want to?”

He lifts a single eyebrow, and I get the message. Trying not to clench my teeth, I refuse to think about how Hades is only the second person I’ve ever shared this with.

After taking a deep breath, I say in a rush, “Twenty-three years ago, when I was still in my mother’s womb, she and my father came here to make an offering and pray for blessings on the birth. Her water broke, and your brother apparently took offense at her defiling his sacred sanctuary. As punishment, he cursed her baby—me, as it happens—that no one would ever love me. There. End of story.”

His gaze turns colder, so calculating that I take a step back.

“He made you unlovable?” he asks as though he isn’t quite sure he believes me.
I give a jerking nod.

That curse is why my parents gave me up. They said it was the debt, but I know otherwise. It landed me in the Order of Thieves at three years old. It’s why I have no ride-or-die friends. It’s why Boone…

Up until tonight, I’ve tried to convince myself that things could have been worse. I mean, I could have ended up as kraken fodder or with snakes for hair and stone statues as my friends.

But it led me to this moment. Facing a different god. A worse god.

One who obviously finds my curse interesting. Why? Because Zeus gave it to me? The current King of the Gods is a dick. That’s one thing

Hades also agrees with me on. The question is, what is he going to do with me now?


Artwork From the Deluxe Edition of The Games Gods Play

Map illustration from The Games Gods Play deluxe edition
Interior map illustration by Elizabeth Turner Stokes
Foil stamped case from The Games Gods Play deluxe edition
Foil-stamped case. Cover art and design by Bree Archer and LJ Anderson, Mayhem Cover Creations
Original art on the end papers for The Games Gods Play deluxe edition
Endpaper illustration by Kateryna Vitkovskaya
Categories
Promo

Meet Ann Patchett: Award-Winning Author and Bookstore Champion

Award-winning author Ann Patchett will be honored with the Carl Sandburg Literary Award at the 2024 Chicago Public Library Foundation Awards!

Patchett is the author of nine critically acclaimed novels, including The Patron Saint of Liars, Taft, The Magician’s Assistant, Bel Canto, and #1 New York Times bestseller Tom Lake. She has received numerous accolades including the PEN/Faulkner Award, the Women’s Prize, and was featured as one of Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People. In 2021, Patchett was awarded the National Humanities Medal for “putting into words the beauty, pain, and complexity of human nature.”

In November 2011, she opened Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee, with her business partner Karen Hayes. She has since become a spokesperson for independent booksellers, championing books and our freedom to read.

“Public libraries are a reminder of what our country is capable of being: welcoming, safe, and equal. All books are available to people. It’s a beautiful thing,” Patchett says.

author Ann Patchett sitting with her arms crossed in front of bookshelves in a bookstore
Image credit: Emily Dorio

What Ann is Reading

cover of An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s by Doris Kearns Goodwin

Ann is currently reading An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s by Doris Kearns Goodwin. In a blend of biography, memoir, and history, best-selling author and presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin chronicles her marriage to the late Richard Goodwin, who was a speechwriter for both Kennedy and Johnson, and reflects on the legacies of both presidents.

Books That Shaped Ann

When we asked Ann about the books that helped shape her, she said, “So many, but here are two.”

cover of A Little Devil in America by Hanif Abdurraqib

Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White — it made me a vegetarian.

And recently, A Little Devil in America by Hanif Abdurraqib, because it taught me how to think about what an essay can do.”

More Good Stuff

Follow along with Parnassus Books on X, Instagram, and Facebook!

Subscribe to Ann’s blog, Notes from Ann, for book recommendations, exclusive commentary, articles, and more.

Watch previous Carl Sandburg Literary Award honorees like Judy Blume, George RR Martin, Isabel Wilkerson, Amy Tan, and Colson Whitehead.  

Categories
The Stack

Comics About the Korean War

A hearty hello once again, nerd friends! I hope you’re ready to learn about history and some other fascinating topics in today’s newsletter. It’s never a bad time to expand your knowledge, after all!

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

Bookish Goods

A black tumbler featuring a city skyline with a Bat-signal, plus the words "Gotham City University"

Gotham City University Tumbler by DogRockPopShop

It’s probably a lot safer to drink from this tumbler than it would be to actually go to Gotham City U! $27

New Releases

Science of Ghosts cover

The Science of Ghosts by Lilah Sturges and El Garing

Joy’s job is to help ghosts solve their problems, but she’s got plenty of problems of her own: her ex-wife hates her, Joy’s first relationship since transitioning is not going smoothly, and also she keeps finding clues to an unsolved murder that she should probably do something about…

Villain Actor Vol 1 cover

Villain Actor Volume One by Mikumo Seto and Kentaro Harada

Ayumu always wanted to be a hero, but since it’s hard to find jobs in that area, he settled for becoming a police officer instead. Even that job is jeopardized when Ayumu inexplicably turns into a city-destroying monster! Can Ayumu change back and become the hero he knows he was meant to be?

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Today’s Riot Rec theme is: the Korean War. Today is the 74th anniversary of the day the war started, so let’s look at some comics that use it as a backdrop for some very intimate stories.

The Waiting cover

The Waiting by Keum Suk Gendry-Kim

Gwija was a young mother when her family tried to flee northern Korea to the south. Only Gwija and her daughter Jina made it; her husband and son were left behind. Seventy years later, Jina knows she only has so much time left to reunite her family.

Red Scare cover

Red Scare by Liam Francis Walsh

Peggy and her dad are both learning to cope with disabilities: she had polio, and he was traumatized by his service in Korea. Peggy’s attempts to fix things only make her situation worse, requiring both her and her dad to rediscover their inner strength. I admit I’m not entirely fond of the book’s ending, but it’s still a fun blend of all the things that made the real 1950s not so fun.

And with that, I leave you once again until Thursday! Stay cool in the meantime (unless you’re in Australia, in which case, snuggle under those blankets!).

~Eileen

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Poisoned Tea and Political Plots

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’m here with new releases for this last week of June, and to tell you how much I love Judy I. Lin’s books. Because that’s what I did over the weekend when it was horrifically hot: hid in the basement and read three absolutely delightful novels. I definitely recommend it as a way to stay cool in the summer, assuming you have a basement available and have forged a peace with your uncomfortably large basement spiders. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here are two places to start: Palestinian Children’s Relief Fund, which provides medical and humanitarian relief to children in the Middle East regardless of nationality, religion, or political affiliation; and Ernesto’s Sanctuary, a cat sanctuary and animal rescue in Syria that is near and dear to my heart.

Bookish Goods

A hardcover edition of A Magic Steeped in Poison with its edge beautifully painted

Painted Edge: A Magic Steeped in Poison Hardcover by LiteraryDreamer

I truly love the artists who take hardcovers of books and add their own designs to the edges to tie the front and back covers together. It’s just so beautiful! $80

New Releases

Cover of Festival & Game of the Worlds by Cesar Aira translated by Katherine Silver

Festival & Game of the Worlds by César Aira translated by Katherine Silver

This is a book made of two smaller books. In Festival, a sci-fi filmmaker named Alex Steryx comes to a film festival as its star guest…and brings his 90-plus-year-old mother with him as his plus one. Things only get more surreal from there. In Game of the Worlds, a middle-aged dad in the far future is grappling with something all parents understand: a complete inability to grasp the fad technology his kids are into. Except this particular internal cultural crisis may result in a world-ending chain of logic.

Cover of Sleep Like Death by Kalynn Bayron

Sleep Like Death by Kalynn Bayron

Eve is a princess with a unique magical talent: she can conjure weapons from nature. And she has one task, which is to destroy the Knight who has terrorized Queen’s Bridge for far too long. But the conflict between her mother and the Knight is not as simple as she was raised to believe, and it will be up to her to decide which side she will fight for.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

I have been on a Judy I. Lin kick recently, so I am taking this corner of my newsletter to scream about her books. Because I can.

One thing I do want to call out specifically for her duology and the standalone novel is that they’re in fantasy worlds that are built on the foundation that queer people exist and their relationships are accepted. It was a delight to encounter that casual world-building detail, and it made me feel so welcomed as a reader.

Cover of Song of the Six Realms by Judy I. Lin

Song of the Six Realms

This is an absolutely delightful take on a gothic romance. It’s got everything: mysterious nobleman, crumbling manor, suspiciously missing former betrothed. And here, the magic is based on the main character’s skills at playing the qín, something that hit me straight in the heart because I play the koto. (Which is the Japanese equivalent…ish.) Anyway, I mainlined this book and heartily recommend it.

a magic steeped in poison book cover

A Magic Steeped in Poison

And of course, do not miss the sequel, A Venom Dark and Sweet.

I picked this book up because I loved Song of the Six Realms so dang much, and I was not disappointed. A country girl with a special kind of magic that’s based on making tea goes to the capital city to compete to become the Emperor’s tea master, in hopes it will enable her to save the life of her sister, who is slowly dying from having partaken in one of the bricks of mysteriously poisoned tea that have been spread across the empire. Dark political plots are pretty obviously involved from the start, but then the gods wade in…

See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

Happy Tuesday, book fans! We had some wild, loud thunderstorms here in Maine over the weekend. I found them to be quite impressive! My cats were not as impressed. Thunder boomed, and the felines went scrambling, knocking stacks of books all over the place. In the chaos, they did manage to unearth a book I had been searching for, so that was helpful, at least. I really need to reorganize the stacks in my house, but that would cut in on my reading time, lol.

Today, I have an excellent fairytale-inspired novel, another fantastic fairytale-related novel but YA, and a horror involving a young girl and “Other Mommy.” As for this week’s other new releases, at the top of my list of today’s books that I want to get my hands on are Practice by Rosalind Brown, Ricky: & Other Love Stories by Whitney Collins, and The Tyranny of Flies by Elaine Vilar Madruga, Kevin Gerry Dunn (translator). You can hear about more of the fabulous books coming out today on this week’s episode of All the Books! Emily and I talked about books we are excited about, including All the Colors of the Dark, The Eyes Are The Best Part, and Dancing on My Own.

Learn something new, sharpen your skills, and expand your horizons with our Better Living Through Books newsletter. Better Living Through Books is your resource for reading material that helps you live the life you want. From self-help to cookbooks to parenting to personal finance, relationships, and more, Better Living Through Books has got you covered. If it’s part of life, it can be part of your reading life. Sign up for your free subscription to Better Living Through Books today, or become an All Access member starting at $6 per month or $60 per year and get unlimited access to members-only content in 20+ newsletters, community features, and the warm fuzzies knowing you are supporting independent media.

cover of Bear by Julia Phillips; rainbow-hued illustration of a forest

Bear by Julia Phillips 

This was one of my most anticipated novels of 2024, and it did not disappoint! Inspired by the Brothers Grimm fairytale Snow-White and Rose-Red, Bear is the story of two sisters who live on a Northern Pacific island with their mother. Sam and Elena have only ever lived on the island, and their lives have been hard, with resources and money always in short supply. They long to leave the island and start new lives. When a bear is spotted swimming in the waters near their home, they respond differently to its presence. Sam is sure it is a sign of danger and that they should leave the island, while Elena is completely delighted by the bear turning up in their world. But does the bear’s arrival signify danger, and should Sam leave everything behind, including her sister?

Backlist bump: Disappearing Earth by Julia Phillips

cover of Sleep Like Death by Kalynn Bayron; illustration of a young Black woman out in the snow holding a green apple

Sleep Like Death by Kalynn Bayron

Kalynn Bayron tackles another classic fairytale with this exciting take on Snow White! Princess Eve only knows one existence, that in which she was raised to destroy the evil sorcerer, the Knight. Trained to use her magic specifically for this goal from a young age, Eve is set to turn 17 and is ready to take him on. But weird things start happening. Her mother, the Queen, has begun talking to herself in the mirror. And then a mysterious stranger appears, telling Eve shocking things about her past he says were kept from her. Torn in two over what she is supposed to do now, Eve must carry on into battle, but now she’s unsure who it is she must fight to save herself and the queendom.

Backlist bump: Cinderella is Dead by Kalynn Bayron

Cover of Incidents Around the House by Josh Malerman; photo of a stuffed rabbit toy in shadow beneath red title font

Incidents Around the House by Josh Malerman

And last but not least, why not get a little scared this summer? And there isn’t much scarier in horror than little kids talking to invisible things! Eight-year-old Bela lives with her parents and her grandmother…and with her Other Mommy, a hostile presence in their home only Bela can hear. Other Mommy keeps asking Bela if she can go in her heart, which doesn’t sound like a good time to Bela. But only Bela’s loving, stable home is keeping Other Mommy at bay, and now her parents are having problems in their marriage. Bela must decide if she should let Other Mommy have what she wants, as the entity grows stronger and more vicious, before she just takes it anyway, and everyone Bela loves has to pay the price. Can this horror book go inside your heart?

Backlist bump: Bird Box by Josh Malerman

faded calico cat sitting on a desk with her paws folded in front of her; photo by Liberty Hardy

This week, I am reading Dynasty Restored: How Larry Bird and the 1984 Boston Celtics Conquered the NBA and Changed Basketball by Thomas J. Whalen, The Night of Baba Yaga by Akira Otani, Sam Bett (translator), and another re-read of the complete collection of Bone by Jeff Smith. How has there not been an adaption made of Bone yet? I know they’ve tried, many times. I say give it to the people who made the adaptation of Nimona. That was *chef’s kiss*. (Also, Bone has been out for almost 35 years, which seems impossible!) The song stuck in my head this week is “The One Thing” by INXS (which is over 40 years old now!) And here is your weekly cat picture: All hail the queen. Millay was supervising as I read books in my office last week. Probably in case I got a paper cut or something.

That’s all for this week! I appreciate you more than I can say, friends. Thank you for joining me each Tuesday as I rave about books! I am wishing you all a wonderful rest of your week, whatever situation you find yourself in now. And yay, books! See you next week! – XO, Liberty

“What we become depends on what we read after all of the professors have finished with us. The greatest university of all is a collection of books.” ― Thomas Carlyle, On Heroes, Hero Worship and the Heroic in History

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Authors Recommending Authors

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Another weekend gone and another weekend spent doing literally nothing around the apartment. The shower is dirty, the clothes are unwashed, and the carpet is unvacuumed. Hmph.

Attention librarians, booksellers, and book nerds! You can apply to become a Bibliologist for Tailored Book Recommendations and get paid for your bookish knowledge! TBR is a subscription-based book recommendation service where customers receive three hand-picked recommendations per quarter that are tailored to their specific reading likes and dislikes. Of special interest: bibliologists who can recommend across a variety of genres. Click here to read more and fill out an application.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Denver’s Tattered Cover bookstore has been sold to Barnes & Noble.

Macmillan is launching a new imprint that will focus on “new adult” fiction.

An unhinged history of American publishing: HarperCollins.

Why are fashion brands leaning into the literary world?

A leaked document shows that Amazon’s book business is booming.

Has the DEI backlash come for publishing?

My Kindle thinks I’m stupid now: a journey into Kindle AI slop hell.

A deeper dive into the tech company that’s creating AI reading companions based on famous authors.

How to fix “AI’s original sin.”

The Encyclopedia Project, or how to know in the age of AI.

Can AI think creatively? Can we?

New & Upcoming Titles

Here is Publishers Weekly’s Adult Fall preview, although a reminder that you’ll only be able to view it if a) you haven’t used up your monthly allotment of free articles or b) you pay for a subscription.

Carol Moseley Braun, the first Black woman to be elected to the US Senate, is writing a memoir in 2025.

Goldie Hawn is co-writing a middle grade series with Lin Oliver.

Jennifer Aniston is writing a picture book.

Here’s the cover reveal for Sophie Kinsella’s latest novel, What Does it Feel Like, along with a brief update on the author since her cancer diagnosis.

Here’s the creepy cover reveal for Clay McLeod Chapman’s Wake Up and Open Your Eyes.

Summer reading picks from New York Times, PBS (list 1, list 2).

Best books of 2024 (so far) from CBS, NPR (fiction, nonfiction).

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

June picks from People.

July picks from Barnes & Noble (adults, teens, children).

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Swan Song – Elin Hilderbrand (Elle, People)

I’m Mostly Here To Enjoy Myself: One Woman’s Pursuit of Pleasure in Paris – Glynnis MacNicol (New York Times, Washington Post)

Sandwich – Catherine Newman (New York Times, NPR)

Little Rot – Akwaeke Emezi (New York Times)

On the Riot

5 new picture books set at Pride parades.

8 great new Pride reads for 2024.

New queer BIPOC books.

15 of the best LGBTQ beach reads of 2024.

The best queer books of 2024, so far.

The best new weekly releases, and the best new weekly LGBTQ releases to TBR.

Wicked women, magical realism, and more picks for your book club.

All Things Comics

Adult Swim is adapting Anthony Bourdain’s graphic novel series, Get Jiro!

Audiophilia

Libro.fm is celebrating its 10th anniversary this month!

Music publishers file an FTC complaint against Spotify for “fraudulent” practices.

Amazon is accused of an audiobook monopoly in an author class action lawsuit.

John Mulaney is narrating the audiobook version of Glory Days by Simon Rich. (Rich is a former SNL writer.)

Discover exceptional audiobooks with these Earphones Award winners.

On the Riot

Audible’s top audiobooks of 2024, so far.

Libro.fm’s best-selling audiobooks of all time.

10 excellent Black historical audiobooks.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Board books about big feelings.

Adults

10 banned books by LGBTQ+ authors you don’t want to miss.

8 books recommended by romance author Alexis Hall.

7 funny essay collections by and about millennial women.

5 of the best books about math.

Mystery authors recommend their summer picks.

5 underrated weird mysteries.

11 page-turning fiction picks.

25 gay romance books you’ll totally love.

15 delightful romances recommended by Christina Lauren.

8 assassin stories to read right now.

On the Riot

8 celebrity picture books worth reading.

The new bounty of fat kids in picture books.

The spiciest books on BookTok in 2024, according to readers.

72 of the best horror books, according to horror authors.

Books set at Pride celebrations.

9 unputdownable books that will grip you until the last page.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen has a guide to discovering upcoming diverse books, and Edelweiss has a new catalog dedicated to diverse titles, which is managed by Early Word Galley Chatter Vicki Nesting. Check it out!

a brown tabby cat laying on its back, licking a black and white cat's head

Is Jonesy giving Dini kisses or is he putting Dini in a headlock? Who knows??

That’s all I have for today. Back on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.