Categories
Book Radar

MEXICAN GOTHIC Series No Longer Happening on Hulu and More Book Radar!

Dear Book Friends,

Hello, and happy Thursday. It’s me, Emily, coming to you from my cat cave. I am surrounded by all three of my cats right now, and they say hello. The cats and I have a lot of book news to share with you today, so let’s do this!

Book Deals and Reveals

cover of Mexican Gothic

Author Silvia Moreno-Garcia has shared some rather disappointing news: “Hulu did not renew the option for Mexican Gothic: so no show will be made,” she tweeted. “I appreciate the hard work of everyone in trying to bring it to the screen. Hopefully it gets adapted in the future.”

Here’s the cover reveal of If I Were You by Cesca Major. The author describes the book as a “mad & sad ‘What If’ soul swapping [love] story set over a fancy wedding weekend!” It’s out this July!

Yellowjackets actress Nicole Maines has announced a new memoir, It Gets Better…Except When It Gets Worse. The book will be published on October 15.

Here’s the cover for Alan Moore’s upcoming novel The Great When. This one’s out from Bloomsbury on October 1.

Jenna Bush Hager has announced her next Read With Jenna book club pick! It’s Real Americans by Rachel Khong!

Butterfly in the Sky, the documentary about Reading Rainbow and its beloved host, LeVar Burton, is now available to stream on available on demand on Amazon Prime, Apple TV, Google Play, and XBOX!

The Love We Found by Jill Santopolo, the sequel to the international bestseller The Light We Lost, will be published in spring 2025 by Putnam.

Kayla Hardy’s The Quarter Queen, “a mother-daughter saga set in a magically and racially divided 19th-century New Orleans,” with be published by Ballantine. No publication date has been set yet.

Sean “Big Sean” Anderson will publish his book Go Higher: Five Practices for Purpose, Success, and Inner Peace with Simon Element this October.

Participating in Book Riot’s Read Harder challenge? Here are six AAPI books you can read for the challenge to celebrate AAPI Heritage Month!

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!

Looking for a thoughtful Mother’s Day gift? Go beyond the tried and true flowers and chocolate and give the gift of reading with Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists are standing by to help your mom find her next favorite read, delivered right to her inbox or doorstep. And with gifts starting at just $18, there’s something for any budget! Head to mytbr.co/gift to send the gift of reading to the book nerd in your life!

Can’t Wait for This One!

cover for roland rogers isn't dead yet

Roland Rogers Isn’t Dead Yet by Samantha Allen (Zando, September 10)

Samantha Allen, author of Patricia Wants to Cuddle, has her sophomore novel out from Zando this fall, and I absolutely cannot wait for this one to hit shelves! It has everything you could possibly want! Romance! Celebrity gossip! Ghosts!

Roland Rogers is an A-list actor who has been hiding a secret for years. But now he’s ready to spill in his brand new tell-all memoir, and he’s chosen the perfect ghostwriter to help him tell his story. For ex-Mormon and memoirist Adam Gallagher, helping a Hollywood heartthrob tell his life story sounds like a pretty cushy gig. There’s only one problem…Roland Rogers isn’t alive anymore.

Yep, you heard right. Roland Rogers is already dead. But with a lot of concentrated effort, the late actor has found a way to communicate to the world of the living through his kitchen speaker. Now he must tell his story to Adam before time runs out and the rest of the world discovers that he’s dead. As the two men race against the clock to get Roland’s story down on paper, they don’t always agree with how the memoir should be written. Nevertheless, they might just fall for each other anyway.

Words of Literary Wisdom

“If TV has taught us anything, it’s that the murder rate in small villages is disproportionately high.”

How to Solve Your Own Murder by Kristen Perrin

And Here’s A Cat Picture!

a photo of three cats sleeping near each other on a couch

Here we have a very unique sight! A three-cat pile-up! Cersei, Murray, and Remy all existing peacefully together. The end of the world must be nigh.

But we already knew that.

Anyhow! That’s all I have for this round of Book Radar. I hope you have a gorgeous weekend, whether you finish seven books or whether you read nothing at all. Just have fun! And see you Monday!

Emily

Categories
What's Up in YA

Time Loops Loops Loops: YA Book Talk and News, May 2, 2024

Hey, YA Readers!

I don’t know about you, but I cannot believe it is May. May feels like the gateway to summer, and I, for one, am looking forward to my first wide-open summer without many responsibilities in years. There will, of course, be a LOT of reading happening in the hammock.

Looking for a thoughtful Mother’s Day gift? Go beyond the tried and true flowers and chocolate and give the gift of reading with Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists are standing by to help your mom find her next favorite read, delivered right to her inbox or doorstep. And with gifts starting at just $18, there’s something for any budget! Head to mytbr.co/gift to send the gift of reading to the book nerd in your life!

Today, let’s peep the new paperback YA releases hitting shelves and catch up on the latest in YA news.

Bookish Goods

ghost library card pin

Ghost Library Card Pin by AshaLines

I’ve seen many a cute library card enamel pin, but I have yet to see one of a ghost holding its pet froggy. This is the cutest dang pin. $14.

New Releases

Dive into this week’s full slate of YA paperback releases over here. As always, you might need to toggle your view to see the paperback edition.

if i see you again tomorrow book cover

If I See You Again Tomorrow by Robbie Couch

Clark has lived the same Monday for 309 days. Same boring math class, same meals, same everything. But on day 310, that math class has a new guy. One that Clark has never seen before.

Given this change, Clark decides he’s going to follow Beau on an adventure through their city of Chicago. If he’s not going to have a different day tomorrow, why wouldn’t he try?

What Clark does not account for is starting to fall for the new guy.

This is a book that follows Clark and his experiences of loneliness and what happens when that’s (temporarily?) interrupted.

Book cover of Their Vicious Games by Joelle Wellington

Their Vicious Games by Joelle Wellington

Adina Walker knows she’s got to work twice as hard to get half as much, especially at her elite New England school, where she attends on scholarship. She makes one slip, though, and she finds herself on the blacklist of her top Ivy League college.

She is disappointed but plans to see if she can redeem herself. The opportunity to do so lies in Finish, a high-intensity contest held by the founders of her high school. The three-part challenge asks 12 women to compete, and the winner is able to become part of the institution’s family. This recognition? It’ll be the key to anything the winner wants.

Just as Adina prepares for the Finish, she feels something is off. The deeper she is into the games, the more off they become, and soon this is no longer about getting into her dream school. It’s about staying alive.

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

YA Book News

As always, thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you Saturday with a fresh round of YA book deals.

Until then, happy reading!

–Kelly Jensen, just finishing up Pretty Furious by E.K. Johnston (if you like stories of good girls getting revenge, this will be your jam!).

Categories
True Story

Buzzy New Nonfiction!

Here in the American South, we are enjoying the last of the spring breezes before the heat of summer sinks over the region. We took the Corgis to the park to play with their friends (Gwen) and play endless rounds of fetch (Dylan), and we definitely felt the heat. I even got a headstart on my Chaco tan. I don’t know what it is about this time of year, but I’m always diving into nonfiction books that delve into ideas around parts of society that the author wants to bring to light. Sometimes, it’s wheat harvesters moving across the heartland, while at other times, I’m learning about class dynamics in the United States. So today, I’ve chosen a couple of past favorites to share with you. But first, bookish goods!

Looking for a thoughtful Mother’s Day gift? Go beyond the tried and true flowers and chocolate and give the gift of reading with Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists are standing by to help your mom find her next favorite read, delivered right to her inbox or doorstep. And with gifts starting at just $18, there’s something for any budget! Head to mytbr.co/gift to send the gift of reading to the book nerd in your life!

Bookish Goods

a photo of a piece of metal wall art that features a space for a custom name and then the word "library"

Library Custom Metal Sign by smittenware

I love metal wall art, and this is perfect for folks wanting to personalize their library. $52

New Releases

a graphic of the cover of Disability Intimacy: Essays on Love, Care, and Desire edited by Alice Wong

Disability Intimacy: Essays on Love, Care, and Desire, edited by Alice Wong

Disability rights activist Alice Wong is back with another anthology, this time about disabled people’s experiences with intimacy. The selections include a wide range of experiences: platonic, sexual, and everything in between.

a graphic of the cover of ​​The Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War by Erik Larson

​​The Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War by Erik Larson

With ​​The Demon of Unrest, narrative history bestseller Erik Larson looks at the five months between the election of Abraham Lincoln and the start of the Civil War. Larson moves back and forth between the political unrest, chaos, and outbreaks of violence that started the horrific war that divided the nation. With Larson’s eye for detail and attention to storytelling, this is sure to be one of the most beloved history books of the year.

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

Riot Recommendations

a graphic of the cover of Squeezed: Why Our Families Can’t Afford America By Alissa Quart

Squeezed: Why Our Families Can’t Afford America by Alissa Quart

Alissa Quart follows several different working-class and lower-middle-class families as they try to navigate a world growing more and more expensive. From childcare to healthcare, American families can barely afford the necessities, let alone anything “extra” that might come up. Quart really pushes the idea that our country should better value caregiving, both for early childhood and for seniors. You can really tell a lot about a country by how it treats its less wealthy citizens, and for America, it’s not always looking good.

a graphic of the cover of American Harvest: God, Country, and Farming in the Heartland by Marie Mutsuki Mockett

American Harvest: God, Country, and Farming in the Heartland by Marie Mutsuki Mockett

Marie Mutsuki Mockett is a biracial Japanese American writer whose family has been farming in Nebraska for generations. So, Mockett decides to follow the migrating wheat harvesters on their journey through Texas, Oklahoma, and eventually back to her family’s farm in Nebraska. As someone who has spent most of her life in urban centers, Mockett begins to reevaluate the assumptions that she has about the wheat harvesters. She begins to realize that there is a lot more to these men and women than she first thought.

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

Why Patricia Highsmith’s Most Famous Creature, Tom Ripley, Continues to Fascinate

Hello, mystery fans! I have abandoned the last three romcom films I’ve started watching for not being good, so fingers crossed I’ll finally hit a watchable one with The Idea of You. It’s streaming on Prime as of May 2nd and stars Anne Hathaway and Nicholas Galitzine.

Looking for a thoughtful Mother’s Day gift? Go beyond the tried and true flowers and chocolate and give the gift of reading with Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists are standing by to help your mom find her next favorite read, delivered right to her inbox or doorstep. And with gifts starting at just $18, there’s something for any budget! Head to mytbr.co/gift to send the gift of reading to the book nerd in your life!

Bookish Goods

illustrated sticker of a pink dinosaur reading a book

Cute dino reading sticker by PagePalsStickers

Look at this little pudding pop reading! ($4, size and finish options).

New Releases

cover image for Missing White Woman

Missing White Woman by Kellye Garrett

For fans of fictional true crime, influencer culture, and murder mystery domestic thrillers!

Bree Wright is at the beginning of a relationship with Ty Franklin and is excited to go on a weekend getaway to a rental home in NJ. Despite Ty working too much, Bree thinks his assurance that he’ll now focus on her for the rest of the trip will be exactly what they need. Cue Bree waking up alone and finding a dead woman at the base of the stairs. Ty, now missing, becomes the suspect of the woman’s murder. Bree isn’t certain what is happening, but she’s fully aware that she and her boyfriend being Black and a dead white woman—one that a TikToker is using in a social media campaign for justice—mean danger for them. Plus, Bree was arrested a decade ago which she’s been hiding ever since…So Bree reaches out to a person she was happy to never speak to again, a best friend from college she had a massive falling out with, but who is now a lawyer. She really needs a lawyer…

I’ve been a big fan of Kellye Garrett since her debut and read her books as soon as I get my hands on them. If you’re a backlist reader looking for a cozy mystery, pick up Hollywood Homicide. If you’re looking for a murder mystery with sisters, pick up Like A Sister!

(TW assumed suicide)

cover image for The Reappearance of Rachel Price

The Reappearance of Rachel Price by Holly Jackson

For fans of fictional true crime and YA thrillers!

At the age of two, Bel was found in her mother’s car, her mother nowhere around. Now Bel is 18 and she still has no idea what happened to her mother, Rachel Price. Everyone has opinions, from the town believing Bel’s father killed Rachel to Bel’s own belief that her mom chose to leave. So when the Price family decides to help film a documentary about Rachel Price, the last thing anyone expects is for Rachel to show up—and for her reappearance to only be the beginning of more questions and mysteries…

For backlist readers, pick up the twisty YA trilogy starter A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder (bonus: it reads as a standalone)!

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

Riot Recommendations

If you read, or look at enough books, you’ll start to notice cover image tropes. The silhouette of a person’s face is pretty common in the mystery/thriller genre and that’s what these two backlist titles have in common! Bonus: they’re also two books where going in knowing the least possible about them makes them more fun.

The Good Son by You-jeong jeong cover image

The Good Son by You-Jeong Jeong, Chi-Young Kim (Translator)

For fans of slow-burn psychological suspense, translated crime novels, and whydunnits!

I’m not gonna give away a lot for this one because I like the way it unfolds, slowly revealing long-held secrets. The novel starts with 20-year-old Yu-jin covered in blood, no memory, and his mother dead.

(TW: stalking/ suicide)

neverworld wake cover image

Neverworld Wake by Marisha Pessl

For fans of genre blends: speculative fiction mystery!

Beatrice’s boyfriend Jim died by suicide the previous year and she hasn’t seen the group of friends they belonged to since. Until now when they have a night of partying in which Beatrice is prepared to finally talk to them and say that Jim’s death never felt like a suicide to her.

News and Roundups

Why Patricia Highsmith’s most famous creature, Tom Ripley, continues to fascinate

Disney+ K-drama Chief Detective 1958: Lee Je-hoon plays a beloved classic cop in the fun, nostalgic prequel

Get a first look at Al Roker’s new book Murder on Demand

Georgia Is Stopping a Bookstore from Sending Books to Prisons

Sony Will Be the Latest to Try to Remake Clue, This Time for Both Film and TV

The Spy Inside Your Smartphone: Around the globe, journalists, human rights activists, scholars, and others are facing digital attacks from Pegasus, military-grade spyware originally developed to go after criminals. Some of the people targeted have been killed or are in prison. In this episode, Reveal partners with the Shoot the Messenger podcast to investigate one of the biggest Pegasus hacks ever uncovered: the targeting of El Faro newspaper in El Salvador.

Witty Retro Crime Drama Chief Detective 1958 Has U.S. Debut In May

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
Past Tense

Flower Power and Hippie Cults

Hi, historical fiction fans,

Happy May! I know spring technically begins in March in the Northern Hemisphere, but May is the month I always most associate with spring. All the wildflowers are blooming and there’s a nice breeze to temper the hotter days. It’s just the perfect time of year, and I’m not just saying that because it’s also my Birthday month.

Looking for a thoughtful Mother’s Day gift? Go beyond the tried and true flowers and chocolate and give the gift of reading with Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists are standing by to help your mom find her next favorite read, delivered right to her inbox or doorstep. And with gifts starting at just $18, there’s something for any budget! Head to mytbr.co/gift to send the gift of reading to the book nerd in your life!

If the weather is as nice in your neck of the woods as mine right now, I highly recommend checking out one of the books on this list for a little reading in the park. It’s the best time of year for it.

Bookish Goods

Pressed flower bookmarks featuring each month of the year's birth flower in clear bookmarks

Flower Bookmarks from Celestial Flowers by B

Celebrate your birth month and your love of nature with these gorgeous pressed flower bookmarks from Etsy. $27

New Releases

Ella book cover

Ella by Diane Richards (May 7, 2024)

In this biographical historical fiction novel, author Diane Richards brings to life the incredible story of Ella Fitzgerald. From her mother’s death during the Great Depression, which led Ella to work for the mob to make ends meet, to her unlikely career as the bestselling female vocalist in the United States, it’s the story of one talented and determined woman’s triumph over the harshness of life.

Monkey King book cover

Monkey King: Journey to the West by Wu Cheng’en (May 7, 2024)

This new hardcover edition of the Chinese classic follows a shapeshifting trickster on a quest to find eternal life. Along with a group of fallen immortals, Sun Wukong must protect a monk on his 14-year journey to India in order to redeem himself in the eyes of the Buddha after stealing from Heaven’s Orchard of Immortal Peaches.

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

Riot Recommendations

I’ve had the phrase “April showers bring May flowers” stuck in my head recently, so this first week of May seems like an appropriate time to share some historical fiction books set in the era of flower power. Of course, it wasn’t all good times. Cults and communes cropped up like wildflowers during the ’60s and ’70s and these two books describe the allure and dysfunctional relationships that fueled them.

Arcadia book cover

Arcadia by Lauren Groff

An idealistic group of dreamers set off to create a better way of life in the 1960s, settling their commune in a decaying manor called Arcadia House. Through the eyes of the first child born into the group, Bit, Arcadia recounts the rise and fall of a hippie commune and all the people who hoped it would be perfect.

The Girls book cover

The Girls by Emma Cline

When Evie spots a group of carefree girls at the park, she’s immediately drawn into their orbit. Suzanne especially enthralls her. As Evie grows ever nearer to the center of the cult and its charismatic leader, she fails to see the violence and horror hurtling their future.

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 Faebound by Saara El-Arifi. What about you?

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book…

Welcome to Read this Book, a newsletter where I recommend one book that needs to jump onto your TBR pile! Sometimes these books are brand new releases that I don’t want you to miss, while others are some of my backlist favorites. This week, I’m sharing the perfect pop social science book that’s ideal for anyone who loves a funny, informative book.

Looking for a thoughtful Mother’s Day gift? Go beyond the tried and true flowers and chocolate and give the gift of reading with Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists are standing by to help your mom find her next favorite read, delivered right to her inbox or doorstep. And with gifts starting at just $18, there’s something for any budget! Head to mytbr.co/gift to send the gift of reading to the book nerd in your life!

a graphic of the cover of The Age of Magical Overthinking: Notes on Modern Irrationality by Amanda Montell

The Age of Magical Overthinking: Notes on Modern Irrationality by Amanda Montell

I know that when I pick up an Amanda Montell book I’m in for a good time. Her previous books include Wordslut and Cultish, both of which have this delightful tone like Montell is sitting across from you with a cup of coffee. You’re going to have a fun conversation, but Montell isn’t going to hold back. She’s going to put the truth out there.

The Age of Magical Overthinking tackles ideas around how human beings try to “manifest” a reality that is most likely not going to happen. The chapters are organized around thought fallacies, like the “Sunk Cost Fallacy,” which can keep us holding onto projects, goals, or relationships that aren’t working for us. Or the “Halo Effect” which can make us always assume the best about our favorite singers and other celebrities. 

Like her other two books, The Age of Magical Overthinking is conversational. Its witty asides and healthy dose of snark make for a perfect pairing with Montell’s ideas. She presents her subject in a funny, accessible way that doesn’t go light on the research. She balances fun and substance to perfection. I especially love how she uses stories and interviews to communicate her ideas. She has this down-to-earth way of telling a story that makes your eyes become glued to the page.

For audiobook fans, I can’t recommend the audio edition enough. Montell reads the audiobook herself, bringing to life her snappy prose, dialogue from her interviews, and funny anecdotes. Her performance enhances that feeling that she’s sitting down with you over drinks talking about all of her ideas around magical thinking, manifesting, and the positive vibes that people try to put out into the world.


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
Giveaways

043024-AprilEACGiveawayPush-Giveaway

We’re teaming up with Penguin Random House to Get Offline and Unwind! Enter for a chance to win a weekend retreat, books, wellness goodies, and more!

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

One grand prize winner will receive $1,000 towards a weekend reading retreat plus a bundle of books and wellness products to help you escape and unwind. Read on for the full list of prizes!

ONE Grand Prize Winner: $1,000 towards a reading retreat plus a collection of 10 books and a bundle of wellness products! Including:

FIVE Winners:
A collection of 10 wellness and escapist reads and a bundle of wellness products!
FIFTY Winners:
One free book from Penguin Random House!

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

AAPI Heritage Month, Yo-Yos, And More Great Kids’ Books!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! I’m reeling a bit today from recent Tennessee legislation (where I live) allowing teachers to bring guns to school. Meanwhile, teachers don’t have the final say in books included in class libraries. How does it make sense?! (It does not, I know. It’s not supposed to.)

Looking to elevate your reading life? Tailored Book Recommendations is here to help with handpicked recommendations. Tell the Bibliologists at Tailored Book Recommendations about what you love and what you don’t. You can get your recommendations via email or receive hardcovers or paperbacks in the mail. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Plans start at just $18! Subscribe today.

Anyway, today I review four fantastic middle grade books to read for AAPI Heritage Month, plus two phenomenal new releases also by AAPI authors.

Bookish Goods

More Books Please Print by MeenalPatelStudio

More Books Please Print by MeenalPatelStudio

I love this adorable print by the children’s book author and illustrator of Priya Dreams of Marigolds & Masala. $32+

New Releases

Cover of Pedro’s Yo-Yos by Rob Peñas, illustrated by Carl Angel

Pedro’s Yo-Yos by Rob Peñas, illustrated by Carl Angel

I’m always here for picture book biographies that introduce me to new, fascinating people. This one is about the man who popularized the yo-yo in America, Filipino immigrant Pedro Flores. Pedro was born on an island in the Philippines in 1896 when Spain ruled his country, though Spain sold the country to the United States when he was a child. After school, Pedro and his friends played with a curved disc like the contemporary yo-yo. At 15, he immigrated to the United States. He traveled on steamships, went back to school, and worked as a bellhop. When he made a yo-yo from his childhood to play with a boy he was staying with, he came up with an idea to find success in the United States. He opened a yo-yo factory, taught people yo-yo tricks, and became a successful businessman. Back matter includes more history of the Phillippines, the yo-yo, and of Pedro Flores.

Cover of Priya’s Kitchen Adventures: A Cookbook for Kids by Priya Krishna

Priya’s Kitchen Adventures: A Cookbook for Kids by Priya Krishna

Priya Krishna is the author of the adult cookbooks Indian-Ish and Cooking at Home. Her latest is a delightful children’s cookbook full of recipes from around the world and anecdotes from Krishna’s travels. She includes recipes from China, Greece, Peru, Mexico, Morocco, England, Italy, Japan, France, Egypt, Trinidad and Tobago, and India. Recipes include difficulty levels and photographs of the steps. Most of these recipes will require some adult oversight, depending on the child’s age. It’s a super fun cookbook to read and explore with kids.

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

Riot Recommendations

May is Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. There are so many excellent new children’s books by AAPI authors, many of which I’ve already reviewed in this newsletter. Here are four amazing middle grade books by AAPI authors I haven’t reviewed here yet. I’ll do another list of picture books later in May!

Cover of Made in Asian America: A History for Young People by Erika Lee & Christina Soontornvat

Made in Asian America: A History for Young People by Erika Lee & Christina Soontornvat

This is an amazing middle grade nonfiction adaptation of The Making of Asian America. Lee and Soontornvat cover a broad array of Asian American history. Much of it looks at the racism and civil rights struggles Asian Americans have experienced, starting with the 13th-century fascination with the “Orient,” and including the model minority myth and COVID-19 hate crimes. It’s an accessible and fascinating nonfiction.

Cover of Fighting to Belong by Amy Chu & Alexander Chang, illustrated by Louie Chin

Fighting to Belong! by Amy Chu & Alexander Chang, illustrated by Louie Chin

This slim graphic nonfiction is the first volume in a new series uncovering Asian American and Pacific Islander history. It follows four middle schoolers and a museum guide as they prepare for a school project about AAPI history by going to a history museum with a special AAPI exhibit. They learn about the arrival of the “Manilamen” in New Orleans, the Gold Rush in California, Chinese railroad workers, and more. The second and third volumes will be released later this year and early next year. Back matter includes a curriculum guide. It’s an excellent book to use in middle school classrooms or to read at home!

Cover of Exclusion and the Chinese American Story by Sarah-SoonLing Blackburn

Exclusion and the Chinese American Story by Sarah-SoonLing Blackburn

This middle grade nonfiction focuses specifically on Chinese American experiences. It covers a broad array of experiences and gives mini-biographies, historical anecdotes, and discussions of larger major events. Blackburn begins in 499 CE, describes the Exclusion Act, delves into major laws, and more. She includes questions for further thinking. It’s a really great addition to this nonfiction series.

Cover of Monkey King and the World of Myths: The Monster and the Maze by Maple Lam

Monkey King and the World of Myths: The Monster and the Maze by Maple Lam

Now for something completely different! This is a super fun middle grade graphic novel that combines Chinese and Greek mythology. It stars the Monkey King — Sun Wukong — on his quest to become a god. After much mischief in the world of Beasts, Sun Wukong travels to the world of the Gods, where beasts aren’t allowed. After making a ruckus, God Venus says that Sun Wukong can earn his godship by working with the Gods. He agrees. The first stop is Crete, where a minotaur is causing some trouble. I’m hoping there will be more books in this series!

Bad Kitty and Kitten Ninja book, the kids are all right

I mentioned recently how my daughter loves Kitten Ninja. She also loves Bad Kitty, and wrote and illustrated a book starring the both of them!

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
New Books

Hooray, It’s Time for New Books!

Hello, book friends, and happy Tuesday. How was your weekend? There was pretty great weather here in Maine. We had several (evening) sightings of the neighborhood gray foxes and our first visit this spring from a Baltimore Oriole. (Errrr, the bird, not the baseball player.) They’re so beautiful! I hope you’re also getting a chance to enjoy nature this spring. Now, let’s talk about books. Today I have a multigenerational novel about class, race, and family; a debut set in contemporary China about a funeral cryer; and a near-future satire in translation about banned books!

As for other new releases, at the top of my list of today’s books that I want to get my hands on are Sound the Gong (Kingdom of Three) by Joan He, Bite by Bite: Nourishments and Jamborees by Aimee Nezhukumatathil, and The Swans of Harlem: Five Black Ballerinas, Fifty Years of Sisterhood, and Their Reclamation of a Groundbreaking History by Karen Valby.

You can hear about more of the fabulous books coming out today on this week’s episode of All the Books! Vanessa and I talked about books we are excited about that are out this week, including The Chain, What’s Eating Jackie Oh?, and The Cats of Silver Crescent.

Looking to elevate your reading life? Tailored Book Recommendations is here to help with handpicked recommendations. Tell the Bibliologists at Tailored Book Recommendations about what you love and what you don’t. You can get your recommendations via email or receive hardcovers or paperbacks in the mail. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Plans start at just $18! Subscribe today.

cover of Real Americans by Rachel Khong; glimpses of maps and cities in repeating ovals

Real Americans by Rachel Khong

The author of Goodbye, Vitamin returns with a new novel about class, family, race, and responsibility. On the cusp of Y2K, Lily, the child of immigrant scientists, falls for Matthew, the heir to a pharmaceutical fortune. It’s love. But we know that something happened to separate the couple because the book moves to 2021, where we meet their son, Nick. Nick is unhappy living alone with his mother, Lily, on a remote island in Washington and sets out to find his father, whom he hasn’t met before and doesn’t know much about. But Nick’s interest in his heritage has the potential to open old wounds and disrupt the lives of everyone involved. This is a heartfelt story of family, genetics, love, and forgiveness.

Backlist bump: Goodbye, Vitamin by Rachel Khong

cover f The Funeral Cryer by Wenyan Lu; illustration of Chinese woman in white robe and black belt next to bamboo

The Funeral Cryer by Wenyan Lu 

This is an imaginative debut novel about a woman in rural China, who works as a—you guessed it—funeral cryer. Funeral criers are hired to evoke emotion in the mourners and help with their grief using their own words and tears. Despite providing a service, the unnamed narrator of the novel is an outcast in her village, because she works so closely with death. She’s also having a hard time with her husband and is unsure if their marriage will survive. So she decides to do something she hasn’t done before—seek out joy for herself and change her life. It’s an interesting story of a midlife crisis in an area not often portrayed in novels, with more humorous moments than you wouldn’t expect for a novel involving funerals.

Backlist bump: Sin Eater by Megan Campisi

cover of The Book Censor's Library by Bothayna Al-Essa; illustration of a white rabbit head in the center with different colored rays surrounding it

The Book Censor’s Library by Bothayna Al-Essa, Ranya Abdelrahman and Sawad Hussain (translators)

And last, but not least, the winner of the 2021 Sharjah Award for Creativity in the novel category, now in English. This is a sharp and fitting satirical novel for our times. It’s about a book censor who spends his days scouring reading material for mentions of things that have been banned since the Revolution, including anything that mentions the world before the Revolution. But he is also moved and intrigued and curious, and brings the confiscated books home and reads them secretly at night. And what he reads starts to invade his dreams and his days, as he becomes wrapped up in the world of brave people fighting back against censorship.

Backlist bump: Ella Minnow Pea: A Novel in Letters by Mark Dunn

close up of orange cat's nose upside down; photo by Liberty Hardy

This week, I am reading Women and Children First by Alina Grabowski and Highway Thirteen: Stories by Fiona McFarlane. I haven’t managed to fit in any television this week (besides the Celtics), but I am looking forward to Jeopardy Masters starting tomorrow. I just love trivia so much! (Speaking of Jeopardy, last week I picked up Baby Got Facts: Totally ’90s Trivia by Jeopardy champion Buzzy Cohen.) The song stuck in my head this week is “Close To Me” by The Cure. And here is your weekly cat picture: Say it with me now: “BOOOOOOP.”

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

“…I persist in believing that poems do more than newspapers to mend the world.”—Kathleen Rooney, From Dust to Stardust

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042924-FilthyRichFae-Giveaway

We’re giving away three copies of Filthy Rich Fae by Geneva Lee to three lucky Riot readers!

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

Cate Holloway always avoided the Gage crime family—before her brother got caught in their chaos. Now Cate has no choice but to confront the dark prince of New Orleans and beg. But Lachlan Gage is as lethal as he is beautiful…and the only currency he’s interested in is her soul. Because Lachlan isn’t some ruthless criminal. He’s fae. And he has his own mysterious reasons for binding her to him. Desperate, Cate is trapped between humanity and the mesmerizing Otherworld. And if she can’t break their bargain in thirty days, she’ll be bound to Lachlan and his deadly world…forever.