Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Jewish American Heritage Month, Hungry Bears, And More Great Kids’ Books!

Happy Sunday, kidlit friends! Congrats to the 2024 Barnes & Noble Children’s & Young Adult Book Award Winners. I loved both I Lived Inside a Whale by Xin Li and The Misfits: A Royal Conundrum, and I’m so glad to see them win some awards.

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

This week, I review books for Jewish American Heritage Month, plus some new releases.

Bookish Goods

Where the Wild Things Are Swaddle by CuddleMuffinsBlanket

Where the Wild Things Are Swaddle by CuddleMuffinsBlanket

If you know anyone expecting a baby, this customizable Where the Wild Things Are swaddle would make an adorable gift. $21+

New Releases

Cover of A Bear, a Fish, and a Fishy Wish by Daniel Bernstrom, illustrated by Brandon James Scott

A Bear, a Fish, and a Fishy Wish by Daniel Bernstrom, illustrated by Brandon James Scott

The hungry bear from A Bear, a Bee, and a Honey Tree returns in this hilarious follow-up. Bear is still hungry, and this time he spies a fish swimming upstream. Each has a wish—Bear wishes to eat the fish, and Fish wishes to reach home. Whose wish will be reached? This is so cleverly written, each line is full of sound and intention, and the illustrations are so expressive. Even though my daughter reads picture books less and less these days, she adored this one, and we’ve read it many times.

Cover of Rising by Sidura Ludwig, illustrated by Sophia Vincent Guy

Rising by Sidura Ludwig, illustrated by Sophia Vincent Guy

Told from a child’s perspective, this gentle, poetic picture book depicts a child and mother making challah for Shabbat. The illustrations show an additional rising: the mother is pregnant, and at the end, the mother holds an infant while the child makes challah with Dad. It’s a lovely, quiet Jewish picture book and includes the author’s favorite challah recipe at the end.

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

Riot Recommendations

May is Jewish American Heritage Month, so I thought I would review four new-ish children’s books about Jewish experiences by Jewish authors.

Cover of Challah Day! by Charlotte Offsay, illustrated by Jason Kirschner

Challah Day! by Charlotte Offsay, illustrated by Jason Kirschner

Where Rising is gentle and meditative, Challah Day! depicts the chaotic mayhem that often accompanies cooking with multiple children and pets. A family of four, plus their pet dog, prepare challah for dinner with grandparents. Offsay’s playful, rhyming text has the family joining together to follow the steps in baking the bread, while the illustrations show the mess that accompanies such preparations, from the baby throwing eggs on the floor to a braiding tug-of-war with the dog and creative ways of pouring flour. The illustrations take a whimsical turn when the children are depicted as smaller, climbing flour bags and hopping on sugar and oil. It’s a picture book full of Jewish joy. Back matter includes a description of why challah is important and a recipe.

Cover of The Blue Butterfly of Cochin by Ariana Mizrahi, illustrated by Siona Benjamin

The Blue Butterfly of Cochin by Ariana Mizrahi, illustrated by Siona Benjamin

This lovely picture book tells the story of Jewish life in Cochin, India. It is the first time I’ve read a children’s book centering Indian Jewish experiences. Leah is a storyteller, and after Shabbat, she tells stories to children in the synagogue’s courtyard. Butterflies listen nearby, and then one day, a butterfly notices that Leah seems sad and lands on her shoulder and asks why. She tells the butterfly that she and her family are leaving India to live in Israel. Leah misses India when she moves, but remembering her stories and the butterflies helps her.

Cover of Across So Many Seas by Ruth Behar

Across So Many Seas by Ruth Behar

This is one of my favorite middle grade novels of the year so far. It’s a beautiful historical fiction following four Jewish 12-year-old girls in the same family across the centuries. It begins with a young girl’s expulsion from Spain in 1492, then to Turkey, where the family finds refuge, then to Cuba, where Fidel Castro forces the family to leave, and finally to Miami. It’s really moving to read about how each journey is filled with terror and grief for lost homes and family, but then each new country becomes home and becomes loved and becomes integrated into the family’s culture, only for them to be rejected from the country once more for being Jewish. Behar has several other middle grade novels depicting Jewish experiences.

Cover of Shira and Esther's Double Dream Debut by Anna E. Jordan

Shira and Esther’s Double Dream Debut by Anna E. Jordan

This joyful, cute middle grade is like a Jewish The Parent Trap and has sadly gone a bit under the radar. It takes place in the 1940s in a fictionalized city. Through some kind of magic, Shira and Esther were born nearly identical in the same hospital on the same day. But the girls could not be more different otherwise. Shira’s rabbi father looks down on her dreams of performing, while Esther’s stage performer mother is equally dismissive of Esther’s goals to learn more about Jewish religion. When the two 12-year-old girls meet for the first time, they hatch a plan to switch places and fulfill their dreams. It’s a delightful read.

Trolls at Bernheim Forest, The Kids Are All Right

For Mother’s Day, my spouse surprised me with a day trip to Bernheim Forest in Kentucky to see the trolls. They were amazing! I loved the park as a whole.

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, Bluesky @AReaderlyMom.bsky.social, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

All the best,

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
Giveaways

051724-FoulDays-Giveaway

We’re giving away three copies of Foul Days by Genoveva Dimova to three lucky Riot readers!

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

The Witcher meets Naomi Novik in this fast-paced fantasy rooted in Slavic folklore, from an assured new voice in genre fiction.

As a witch in the walled city of Chernograd, Kosara has plenty of practice treating lycanthrope bites, bargaining with kikimoras, and slaying bloodsucking upirs. There’s only one monster she can’t defeat: her ex, the Zmey, known as the Tsar of Monsters. She’s defied him one too many times and now he’s hunting her. Betrayed by someone close to her, Kosara’s only choice is to trade her shadow—the source of her powers—for a quick escape.

Categories
True Story

Fall in Love with Cuisine

As many of you already know, when I’m not wandering around my library or walking the Corgis, I’m probably going to be cooking. Besides the fact that cooking is the perfect activity to get in some audiobook listening time, it’s also a great way to express creativity, spend time with the people you love, or explore the world through new-to-you cuisine.

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Today, I’m sharing two of my favorite cookbooks, both of which include beautiful photography and mouth-watering recipes. But first, bookish goods!

Bookish Goods

a photo of a purple sweatshirt embroidered with the words "happiest when reading"

Happiest When Reading Embroidered Sweatshirt by embroideredking 

I’ve been very into embroidered sweatshirts at the moment. This one has perfected the beautiful simplicity of design. $67

New Releases

a graphic of the cover of Magical/Realism: Essays on Music, Memory, Fantasy, and Borders by Vanessa Angélica Villarreal

Magical/Realism: Essays on Music, Memory, Fantasy, and Borders by Vanessa Angélica Villarreal

When Vanessa Angélica Villarreal becomes a mother, she decides to return to Mexico to learn more about her grandmother and her family. But when Villarreal returns, she finds that her entire life — her marriage, her family, her reality — has fallen apart. With Magical/Realism, Villarreal puts her life back together using everything from pop culture references to video games.

a graphic of the cover of The Infernal Machine: A True Story of Dynamite, Terror, and the Rise of the Modern Detective by Steven Johnson

The Infernal Machine: A True Story of Dynamite, Terror, and the Rise of the Modern Detective by Steven Johnson

The author of The Ghost Map returns to tell the story of the evolution of the NYPD. Set against the backdrop of 1914 New York City, Steven Johnson tells the story of the anarchy movement that led to the birth of the modern detective, when the NYPD stopped responding to crime and started solving it.

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

Riot Recommendations

a graphic of the cover of I Am a Filipino: And This Is How We Cook by Miguel Trinidad and Nicole Ponseca

I Am a Filipino: And This Is How We Cook by Miguel Trinidad and Nicole Ponseca

This incredible cookbook is a 2019 James Beard Award Finalist. Plus, it was named a Best Cookbook of the Year by The New Yorker, Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, New York Times Book Review, Houston Chronicle, Food52, PopSugar, and more. This phenomenal cookbook invites readers into the diverse range of Filipino cuisine with all of its many influences, including Chinese, Arab, Mexican, and Spanish cooking techniques. The authors invite readers to learn more about the origins of their recipes, creating a cookbook that is such a wonderful celebration of Filipino cooking.

a graphic of the covers of In Bibi's Kitchen: The Recipes and Stories of Grandmothers from the Eight African Countries that Touch the Indian Ocean by Hawa Hassan

In Bibi’s Kitchen: The Recipes and Stories of Grandmothers from the Eight African Countries that Touch the Indian Ocean by Hawa Hassan (with Julia Turshen) 

My favorite cookbooks are those that have at least some little snippet of storytelling in them. I want to know more about where the recipe came from. Where did the cookbook author first discover their love of food? In Bibi’s Kitchen does that and more. Somali chef Hawa Hassan talks to bibis (grandmothers) from South Africa, Mozambique, Madagascar, Comoros, Tanzania, Kenya, Somalia, and Eritrea. They share their recipes and wisdom around their love of food. This cookbook feels like travel writing, a memoir, and a cookbook all rolled into one!

That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave, over on Instagram @kdwinchester, on TikTok @kendrawinchester, or on my podcast Read Appalachia. As always, feel free to drop me a line at kendra.d.winchester@gmail.com. For even MORE bookish content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy reading, Friends!

~ Kendra

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Keira Knightley to Star in THE WOMAN IN CABIN 10 Film Adaptation at Netflix

Hello, mystery fans! I got my hands on advanced reader copies for two upcoming mysteries I’m really excited about — Exposure by Ramona Emerson and Alter Ego by Alex Segura — so those, a giant pile of graphic novels, and some classic horror novels are my current reading plans.

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Bookish Goods

two ceramic pots with little hands and legs reading books

Cozy Pot Reading Book by CraftIRL

This is an adorable ceramic plant pot! Options: size, adding drainage, book color. ($16)

New Releases

perfect little monsters book cover

Perfect Little Monsters by Cindy R.X. He

For fans of YA mysteries where all the friends are suspects!

Dawn Foster’s life has dramatically changed recently: following her parents being injured in an accident, the family has moved from California to Wisconsin to live with an aunt. Dawn attempts to fit in by joining the cheerleading team, but after a party, one of the girls is dead and the rest are brought in for questioning…

cover image for Disturbing the Dead

Disturbing the Dead (A Rip Through Time #3) by Kelley Armstrong

For fans of historical mysteries with time travel and past and present procedural timelines!

In our present time, Mallory Atkinson was a homicide detective who went to visit her grandmother in Edinburgh, got attacked in an alley, and woke up in 1869 in the body of housemaid Catriona Mitchell (the first book)! What is a detective to do? Solve crimes in a different era while trying to figure out what is happening. Her current case: A host disappears during a mummy unwrapping…

If you want to start at the beginning of the series, pick up A Rip Through Time.

Looking for more new releases? Check out our New Books newsletter!

Riot Recommendations

Here are two very different from each other backlist titles that have amateur sleuths and are not cozy mysteries.

book cover for Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line

Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line by Deepa Anappara

This great adult crime novel starts as a coming-of-age mystery and ends in noir territory, with children as lead characters who keep things upbeat while exploring dark themes. Children are disappearing, and the police don’t seem to care enough to search properly. Nine-year-old Jai thinks he can find his missing classmate being that he has watched enough procedurals to be a proper sleuth. He convinces fellow schoolmates Faiz and Pari to help solve whether a bad djinn or a bad person is behind the missing person cases. and so they set off across the city to get answers.

The audiobook narrators — Indira Varma, Himesh Patel, and Antonio Aakeel — are fantastic!

(TW child, domestic abuse/ child deaths)

A Death of No Importance cover image

A Death of No Importance (Jane Prescott #1) by Mariah Fredericks

This is a historical mystery set in 1910 NY that follows Jane Prescott, a ladies’ maid for the rich turned sleuth. Jane, who was raised by her uncle who ran a home for rescued women, finds herself needing to get answers when two people she knows are suspects in the murder of her mistress’s fiancé. The world of the upper class in the house Jane works in is contrasted by the world outside as anarchists fight for working conditions for the lower class in the city.

News and Roundups

Cross Trailer: Amazon Reveals First Look at Aldis Hodge as James Patterson’s Legendary Black Detective

Library of Congress Centers for the Book Choose ‘Great Reads’ Titles for Each State, Territory for 2024 National Book Festival

Amazon MGM Lands Elizabeth Rose Quinn’s Unpublished Novel Follow Me

Mr. & Mrs. Smith Renewed for Season 2 at Amazon

The 2024 Barnes & Noble Children’s & Young Adult Book Award Winners

12 Book Club Picks For May 2024, From #ReadWithJenna to NYPL’s Teen Banned Book Club

Keira Knightley to Star in The Woman in Cabin 10 Film Adaptation at Netflix

Only Murders In The Building Season 4 Gets Premiere Date & Trailer With Melissa McCarthy Joining Cast

Murder in a Small Town lands Alert‘s timeslot on Fox in fall 2024

Browse the books recommended in Unusual Suspects’ previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2024 releases and mysteries from 2023. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and get Tailored Book Recommendations!

Until next time, keep investigating! In the meantime, come talk books with me on Bluesky, Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, 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
Read This Book

Read This Book…

Welcome to Read This Book, your go-to newsletter if you’re looking to expand your TBR pile. Each week, I’ll recommend a book I think is an absolute must-read. Some will be new releases, some will be old favorites, and the books will vary in genre and subject matter every time. I hope you’re ready to get reading!

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Have you revisited Sailor Moon since it first came out in the ’90s? It really holds up. I loved the anime and the manga back in the day. Around the time of the pandemic, I rewatched the original series and picked up the newer Eternal Editions of the manga, and I’ve been 100% back in the Sailor Moon fandom since then. I’ve posted about it on Book Riot. But whether you’re already a huge fan of Sailor Moon or you’ve never heard of it before, here’s a great place to start. And it’s a manga you might have missed!

codename sailor v book cover

Codename: Sailor V by Naoko Takeuchi

Before there was Sailor Moon, there was Sailor V. The series first appeared as a one-shot in the manga magazine RunRun in 1991. I wonder if author Naoko Takeuchi could have possibly known then that she was about to launch one of the most popular manga series of all time. And it all started right here, with a young 13 year-old girl named Minako Aino, who just wants to find a boyfriend and fall in love.

What she finds instead is a white cat with a crescent moon on his forehead. What’s more, this cat can talk. He says his name is Artemis and that Minako is actually Sailor Venus, a guardian of the planet Venus whose duty it is to protect Earth. Whaaaat? With the help of Artemis and her magical pen that helps her transform into the Soldier of Justice: Sailor V, Minako fights against the Dark Agency and protects the world from evil. So much for searching for a boyfriend after school!

As Minako learns more about her true identity and her mission, she discovers that there are other Sailor Guardians like her, and so the ending of this series expertly sets up the beginning of the series we all know and love, Sailor Moon. Sailor Venus realizes that to truly save Earth, she will have to set out to find her companions, the other four Sailor Guardians, as well as the Moon Princess.

Sailor Moon diehards, if you’re wondering why you maybe missed this manga series before, it might have been because it was never released in English in the ’90s. In fact, English-speaking fans didn’t have an opportunity to read a translated version until 2011. Now with the Eternal Editions, you can read the whole Codename: Sailor V series in two volumes. And I just have to say, these are absolutely stunning.

Everyone talks about how Naoko Takeuchi’s manga, featuring strong (but beautifully flawed) teenage girls (and talking cats), is so empowering and uplifting. But I feel like we’re not talking enough about how gorgeous her illustrations are. I had to own all of these Eternal Editions (both Codename: Sailor V and aaallll the Sailor Moon volumes) because each one features all-new holographic cover illustrations and giant colored images throughout. It’s so gorgeous. If I could, I would buy two so I could cut up one and put it all over my wall. Unfortunately, I’m not a 13-year-old girl anymore, so that’s not really socially acceptable home decor…but I’ve thought about it.

If you’ve never thought about picking up Codename: Sailor V before, this edition is the one to get. Start the best-selling manga series where it all began, and learn a lot more about everyone’s favorite Libra Sailor Guardian, Sailor Venus (yay Libras!).


Happy weekend reading, bibliophiles! Feel free to follow me on Instagram @EmAndHerCat, and check out my other newsletters, The Fright Stuff and Book Radar!

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Queer Tales of Monsters, Angels, and Other Creatures

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’ve got new releases and two queer short story anthologies for you to check out. We’re past Mother’s Day in Colorado now, which means that it’s time for us to finally start planting flowers. (Before Mother’s Day, chances are that you’re going to get a freeze coming in to ruin your day.) It’s been really cool to have a garden again, and plants, and the chance to think about trees and the like. It’s going to be a long-term project, but I’m bringing color and botanical diversity to this yard! Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Tuesday!

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

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

Queer bookshelf stickers

Pride Bookshelf Stickers by BackroadsBookstore

These cute stickers come with books in different colors for each pride flag — and each has a different little potted plant with it too. I love them. $3

New Releases

Cover of The Dangerous Ones by Lauren Blackwood

The Dangerous Ones by Lauren Blackwood

Jerusalem is a Saint, gifted with the powers of a demi-god and the physicality to match. She fears nothing and has but one goal: revenge on the vampires who enslaved and murdered her family. Yet she finds herself teaming up with the Ancient Vampire Alexei on the Union’s side to fight the Confederates, and together they might well change the course of the war.

cover of til death do us bard by rose black

Til Death Do Us Bard by Rose Black

Logan “The Bear” Theaker hung up his axe a year ago and has settled in for a life of quiet domesticity with his bard husband, Pie. But when Pie abruptly vanishes, Logan doesn’t hesitate to follow — especially when he finds out that Pie has been blackmailed into stealing an artifact that can create and control an undead army. But the deeper Logan goes into the rescue, the more secrets he uncovers, until he’s wondering if he will be able to save his marriage even if he does save his husband.

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

Riot Recommendations

We’ve got a brand new queer short story anthology, and I’m recommending another that isn’t quite as new-to-the-shelf shiny but still just as good!

Cover of We Mostly Come Out At Night edited by Rob Costello

We Mostly Come Out at Night: 15 Queer Tales of Monsters, Angels & Other Creatures edited by Rob Costello

Trans and queer authors bring you 15 short stories about being the monster and what that might mean.

We're Here (2020) edited by CL Clark

We’re Here: The Best Queer Speculative Fiction (2020) edited by C.L. Clark & Charles Payseur

This anthology contains 15 queer speculative fiction short stories that were published in 2020.

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
Check Your Shelf

The Strange Lives of Book Husbands

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. My husband sent me this TikTok and all I can say is please…please…don’t be late to work on the first day of summer reading.

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Inside libraries’ battle for better eBook access.

Book Adaptations in the News

Universal Television has acquired the rights to Jana Monroe’s memoir, Hearts of Darkness: Serial Killers, The Behavioral Science Unit, And My Life As a Woman In The FBI.

Alice Sadie Celine will be adapted for film.

The Maze Runner is getting a reboot.

Andy Serkis is directing and starring in the latest Lord of the Rings project: The Hunt for Gollum.

First look at The Lady in the Lake.

Here’s the trailer for the film adaptation of Wicked.

And here’s the trailer for The Rings of Power Season 2.

Censorship News

How to prepare for Pride Month in libraries this year.

OK, Groomer: a reporter’s dispatch from the trenches of the gender and sexuality wars in schools across the US portends a perilous future for LGBTQ teens.

Here’s who is behind the battle of the school book fairs.

The long history of censorship in prisons.

Fort Worth ISD (TX) released a list of books returning to library shelves after a nine-month review. (This may be paywalled.)

Montgomery County (TX) libraries are dealing with a group of book banning activists that call themselves “Two Moms and Some Books.”

The Cy-Fair ISD school board (TX) removes mentions of vaccines, climate change, and cultural diversity from textbooks. (This may be paywalled.)

A new coalition of Christian nationalist groups is mobilizing congregations to take over Texas school boards.

The Hernando County School Board (FL) voted to permanently remove 20 of 21 challenged titles, overturning the decisions made by 13 different committees to retain the books.

Stratford (CT) school librarians face unemployment as the town weighs budget cuts.

North Hunterdon-Voorhees Regional High School District (NJ) voted to retain Let’s Talk About It.

Five of the six books challenged in the Transylvania County School District (PA) will remain on shelves. (The sixth book is still being reviewed.)

Warwick School District (PA) is discussing changes to the school’s book challenge policy.

A member of the New Hanover County School Board (NC) wrote an opinion piece about the activism being promoted in statewide “Battle of the Books” programs.

A proposed budget would eliminate all school librarian positions in Franklin County (NC), and yes, this is 100% tied to censorship efforts.

The state of book bans: South Carolina is poised to get worse.

The National Women’s Law Center filed two civil rights complaints against Georgia and Florida school districts for censoring inclusive books.

Librarians and advocates sue to block restrictive new Alabama library policies.

EveryLibrary supports the plaintiffs in the Autauga-Prattville Lawsuit against discriminatory library policies. Meanwhile, the interim director has pulled 60 books for review based on a list from a right-wing book ban group, but don’t worry!! The interim director says that the books haven’t actually been removed from the library – just taken out of the catalog. (This same director also refused to talk to the Alabama Political Reporter because she considers them “fake news.” Real great leader they’ve got over there).

A Huntsville (AL) librarian speaks out on a bill that could penalize librarians.

The Arkansas State Library Board on Friday voted down two motions to withhold state funding from libraries suing the state until litigation is concluded.

The New Orleans Public Library made changes to their youth library cards in response to new legislation that requires libraries to have a procedure in place to prevent kids from checking out potentially inappropriate materials. Parents now have to re-up their kids’ library cards as a result of this new policy, which means a ton of kids are going to lose library access because their parents aren’t able to get them to the library to renew the cards.

The Enid Public Library board (OK) has banned Pride displays this year, marking the third year of battles over LGBTQ displays.

Colorado lawmakers have passed an anti-book ban bill that now sits on the governor’s desk.

Garfield County (CO) library board appointments drew a crowd of protestors after county commissioners took over the selection process.

“Wyoming’s largest school district is considering a library book procurement policy for controversial sexually themed materials that, if passed, would likely be the strictest in the state.” This is Laramie County School District No. 1.

“The Larsen-Sant Public Library in Preston [ID] will temporarily restrict public access to its building starting Monday in response to a new law that opens libraries to lawsuits if minors access inappropriate content on the shelves.”

Related: Library officials in Idaho say that the new state law about harmful material is “vague and difficult to implement.” As it was designed to be.

The Ketchikan School Board (AK) voted to retain Red Hood by Elena Arnold.

(Paywalled): “Copycat” book bans: How US activists are impacting Australian libraries.

“A Sydney council has voted to place a blanket ban on same-sex parenting books from local libraries in a move the New South Wales government warns could be a breach of the state’s Anti-Discrimination Act.”

Books & Authors in the News

Nobel Prize-winning author Alice Munro has died at 92.

Writers who have withdrawn support from PEN America for the organization’s response to the war in Gaza organized their own event: Freedom to Write for Palestine. Related: what’s wrong with PEN America and why we need it to survive.

Colson Whitehead pulls out as a commencement speaker at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, which he said is due to the school’s leadership decision to use police force to disperse a group of students protesting the crisis in Palestine.

Colleen Hoover is a wildly successful author, so why has she stopped writing?

Numbers & Trends

The most-read books on Goodreads last week.

The best-selling books of the week.

Award News

The CWA Daggers shortlists have been announced.

Barnes & Noble reveals their Children’s & Young Adult Book winners.

The 2024 Locus Awards finalists have been released.

Pop Cultured

Michelle Yeoh is starring in Amazon’s Blade Runner 2049 sequel series.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

TikTok and the National Literacy Trust (NLT) are partnering to bring 20 bookshelves to 11 UK areas. “The partnership entails TikTok paying for books that will be selected by NLT youth volunteers, and placed in areas that have high foot traffic, like around youth clubs and community centers.”

CNN does a deep dive into the concept of the “beach read.”

Against the objectification of books.

The strange lives of “book husbands.”

a brown tabby cat showing its tummy to a woman, who looks scared to pet the tummy

I know Jonesy’s tummy is a trap, but when he rolls over and looks this adorable, I can’t help myself!

Okay, friends. It’s the weekend! Have a good one, and I’ll be back on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Giveaways

051624-EACInternalPushes-May2024-Giveaway

We’re teaming up with Gungnir to give away a 1-year subscription to Tailored Book Recommendations (TBR) to one lucky winner!

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

Here’s a bit more from our sponsor: We believe creators deserve a spotlight, a gateway to the broad, energized audiences hungry for journeys of inspiration, tales of might, and sagas of magnitude… adventures that challenge and delight.‍

We live the attitude of punk rock, manifested by the power of subversive storytelling. GUNGNIR knows that today’s fresh creators are 21st Century philosophers, provocateurs, and mythmakers.. Their voices, ideas, and inspired views of society will ignite the conversations that shape tomorrow. 

We’re here to stand watch as new worlds grow. The first and best defense against the mundane dark might seem like a blade. But at GUNGNIR…we know the right story can cut even deeper.

Categories
Kid Lit Giveaways

051624-ThePumpkinPrincessAndTheForeverNight(pre-pub)-KidlitGiveaway

We’re giving away 20 advance reader copies (ARCs) of The Pumpkin Princess and the Forever Night by Steven Banbury to 20 lucky Riot readers!

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

In this spooky yet heartwarming adventure, Eve flees an unpleasant orphanage and is saved by the fabled Pumpkin King. Accepting the offer to become his daughter, she is whisked away to the misty Hallowell Valley—home to witches and vampires, ghosts and goblins, and all that go bump in the night. But just when she believes she’s found her place among the undead, a sinister scheme unearths itself, threatening to take everything from Eve unless she can stop it.

Enter to win an ARC of this Indies Introduce selection, perfect for fans of Nevermoor and the hit series Wednesday.

Categories
The Stack

Time Flies When You’re Reading Comics

Is it Thursday again already? Didn’t we just have one last week? Oh, well, at least now I have another excuse to talk about comics (like I need an excuse!).

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Bookish Goods

A series of brown leather wallets featuring various superhero logos and personalized messages

Super Hero Inspired Wallet by EtraLeather

What more heroic way to safeguard your hard-earned cash and cards? Now 20% off! $16

New Releases

Forecast from Stonehenge cover

Choose Your Own Adventure: Forecast from Stonehenge by Stephanie Phillips and Dani Bolinho

Remember these books? Now they come in graphic novel format! Head on over to England and get to the bottom of the mysterious Stonehenge with help — or hindrance — from the bizarre characters you meet. What you do is up to you!

I Want to End This Love Game Vol 2 cover

I Want to End This Love Game Volume Two by Yuki Domoto

Yukiya and Miku have made a game of their feelings by saying they love each other and then pretending not to mean it. Who will crack and admit their love first? What will be the breaking point? A date, perhaps, or a hand-holding contest, or maybe just those three simple words: “I love you?”

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

Riot Recommendations

Today’s Riot Rec theme is: a race against time! Stories are more exciting when a character has to work against a ticking clock to meet their goals.

Secret of the Ravens cover

The Secret of the Ravens by Joanna Cacao

The Raven Quests seemed like the ideal way for impoverished siblings Liza and Elliot to make their fortune. But the Quests prove more dangerous than they realize, and with Liza’s life on the line, Elliot must risk it all to help her before it is too late. Who will prevail: Elliot, or the poison coursing through his sister’s body?

The Matriarchs cover

The Matriarchs by LouAnne Brickhouse, Jennifer Rea, and Renae De Liz

A council of superpowered, female immortals has set themselves an important goal: find an end to male violence. But what happens when some on the council decide that the only “cure” is to kill all men? The dissenters will have to act fast — and confront their own terrible actions — to save them.

We’re really racing towards the weekend now, but don’t forget to enjoy the good stuff along the way, even if it’s as small as a nice birdsong or a pretty flower!

~Eileen