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, let’s talk about a stellar sophomore novel from Lisa Ko.

a graphic of the cover of Memory Piece of Lisa Ko

Memory Piece by Lisa Ko

When I first read Lisa Ko’s debut novel The Leavers, I felt completely consumed by the story of a young Chinese American man who had been adopted by white parents. Ko possesses this ability to flesh out her characters with such care and attention to detail. So the moment I heard that her second novel, Memory Piece, was coming out, I knew I had to get my hands on a copy.

It’s the 1980s, and three friends — Giselle Chin, Jackie Ong, and Ellen Ng — come of age determined to make their mark on the world. Giselle Chin is a performance artist, and even locked herself in a mall for an entire year, chronicling her experience for art’s sake. Jackie Ong is a programmer who creates her own social media space in her spare time. Ellen Ng is an activist, working to create a communal space for marginalized folks in need of a home.

The three women make their own ways in the world, each moving in and out of each other’s lives, for better or worse. The novel moves forward in time from the 1980s to the 2040s, showing the changes in the friends’ lives through the decades. I particularly loved how all three friends are so different, each with their particular quirks and interests. They fight, make up, and fight again, creating a unique friend group that holds up through the tests of time. 

Audie award-winning narrator Eunice Wong performs the audiobook beautifully. Each viewpoint character is distinct, each with her own narrative voice. I felt consumed by their story and found excuses to keep listening until the very end. Memory Piece is a must-read for anyone who loves women’s coming-of-age stories or complex, decades-long female friendships.

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.


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
Letterhead

A Flirty, Flower-Filled Sapphic Romance for Spring

Opal Devlin’s life only got more complicated when she won the lottery. Unable to say no to the flood of people who showed up to ask her for money, she decides to remove herself from the situation. Opal finds her fresh start in the form of a failing flower farm in Asheville, North Carolina, which she buys with the intention of letting nature run its course while she starts a painting business.

But there’s a problem: a total knockout named Pepper Boden says she is the farm’s rightful owner, and she doesn’t intend to go anywhere. (Think: there’s only one bed, but make it a cozy cabin on a farm.) The two agree to try living together, and sparks fly in multiple sense of the word.

Mazey Eddings’s Late Bloomer is available April 16 wherever books are sold.

“I . . . I demand you tell me what’s happening.” Opal says, putting her hands on her softly curved hips and squaring her shoulders, standing her full height of what couldn’t be more than five foot two. I loom over her by a solid nine inches.

It’s a bit difficult to take Opal’s demand seriously, with her big scared eyes and messy hair and full, rosy cheeks. The woman is, unfortunately, rather cute. Which makes the massive upheaval she’s caused in my life all the more disarming. And annoying.

So very fucking annoying.

“Fine,” I say, slipping around her and trudging toward the porch. “You want to know what’s happening? I’ll tell you. Trish—the nice lady who sold you this place for a song?—she’s my mother. And a massive con artist. Tragically for me, this is apparently the one time she’s done something with the law on her side, which puts me in the super-fun position of being homeless. And I guess jobless since you want to turn this flower farm into some sort of shoe factory like a pink-haired Keebler elf. Does that paint a clear enough picture for you?” I turn on Opal, towering over her. I know I’m not supposed to shoot the messenger, but I’m certainly not above yelling at one.

Opal is silent for a moment, then swallows. “Don’t Keebler elves make cookies?” she whispers.

The anger that floods through me is hot enough to send this entire farm up in flames.

“Sorry. Sorry,” Opal rushes out. “I imagine now isn’t the right time for elf semantics.”

“How much did you pay for it?” I know—from endless studying of interactions between neurotypicals—that talking about money is rude. But I’m beyond forcing myself into social niceties when my entire world is falling apart.

Opal blinks those wide blue eyes. “I . . . uh . . . th-three. Three hundred. Thousand. Three hundred thousand dollars.”

That amount of money is so inconceivably large that I, not for the first time that evening, feel like I might collapse. My knees give out, and I plop down onto the top step of the porch.

“Let me get this straight,” I say through a rough throat. “You paid three hundred thousand dollars, in cash, for a flower farm on the verge of bankruptcy that you’ve never even set foot on before?”

“I . . . I paid with a check,” Opal whispers, like it makes any fucking difference to how absolutely bonkers the whole thing is.

What am I going to do?” I mumble to myself, voice cracking as overwhelming thoughts clog up my brain. “Like, seriously. If I lose this place, I have . . .” Nothing. If I lose the Thistle and Bloom, I have nothing. No purpose. No safe space. No shelter filled with the happiest moments of my life. I’d once again be a lost buoy in the endless ocean of life. Directionless. Untethered. Alone.

“Stay with me.” Opal’s words are loud. A bit startling. I’m coming to realize that everything about her is startling, though.

“What?” I say, turning to look at her.

Opal clears her throat, eyes fixed on my face. “Stay here with me. Or, uh, I stay with you. Or, um, I guess we stay together? In the cabin?” Opal’s hand flaps wildly toward the front door.

My mind goes blank. There is no way I can live with this strange woman with wild hair and an alarming amount of shoes who bought property off Facebook Marketplace without some sort of homicide situation.

“Inconceivable,” I eventually press out.

Opal giggles. Giggles. At a time like this? The woman is nothing but a compact, pink-haired monster.

“I’ve never heard someone say that word without doing the Princess Bride voice.” Opal giggles even harder. The homicide might come sooner than I anticipated. “But seriously,” Opal continues, trying and failing to gulp down her remaining laughs. “I think it’s the best solution to our problem.”

“Does it really solve anything?” I snap, looking at Opal, tracing the sincerity of her eyes, the kind softness to her dimpled smile.

She chews on the question, full lips puckering and a small furrow forming between her eyebrows. “I think . . .” she says slowly, carefully, “it solves enough for tonight. And tomorrow we can figure out the rest.”

I continue to stare at her, heart wary and exhausted, everything in me screaming that Opal can’t be trusted. No one can be trusted. Especially someone associated with Trish. But my oversaturated brain isn’t able to come up with any alternatives, and all I really want is to put on my softest pajamas, curl up under my quilts, and wake up tomorrow morning to find this was all an awful dream.

“Okay,” I say at last, standing up. “We’ll leave the rest for the morning.” I walk to the door, Opal’s boots clunking up the porch steps behind me. I hold open the screen door for her, but she hesitates.

“And, uh, just to like, confirm and stuff . . . you aren’t a serial killer or anything, right?”

My head jerks back. “Excuse me?”

“I’m not saying you give off that vibe,” Opal says, waving her hands frantically in front of her. “I just thought I should double-check. Since we’ll be like . . . in the same house and stuff. And like . . . I mean I guess I just don’t want to get . . . well. Murdered. Or anything.”

I scan this bizarre woman from the top of her head to the bottom of her cuffed jeans. Was she sent from my personal seventh circle of hell just to torture me here on earth?

“I’m not murdering anyone tonight,” I say with a sigh. “But now you have me super freaked out so I’ll be sleeping with my door locked and pepper spray close if it turns out you’re the actual murderer.”

“Let’s just agree on a mutual no-murder situation,” Opal says, stepping through the door and into the cabin’s warm kitchen. “See, another problem solved. We’re on a roll.”

“Right. I’m sure everything else we have to figure out will be as easily handled as agreeing not to kill each other.” I maneuver around Opal in the small kitchen, blowing out the candles on the table as I go.

“We’ll find a happy ending to all of this. Just you wait.”

Today has been filled with so many curveballs and upheavals, there’s one thing I know, beyond reasonable doubt, to be true: there is no happy ending that could ever, ever, come from this nightmare.


From LATE BLOOMER by Mazey Eddings. Copyright © 2024 by the author and reprinted with permission of St. Martin’s Publishing Group

Categories
The Stack

Brave the Wild World of Comics

How are we feeling about this Tuesday, nerd friends? Wishing it would magically become Friday already? Confident in our ability to get through everything that needs getting through? Hopefully, the comics featured here will give you the boost you need to make it over hump day and all the way to the weekend!

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.

Bookish Goods

A comic book stand shaped like Thor's hammer. On the hammer head, Thor's name appears in yellow letters.

Magnetic Thor Mjolnir Comic Book Stand by StandItUp

Use this cool stand to show off your worthiest comics! $45

New Releases

Tales of the Titans cover

Tales of the Titans by Various Creators

The Titans (teen and otherwise) work great as a team, but seeing them go on solo adventures is an exciting way to dig deeper into who they are as people and as heroes. This collection spotlights many of your favorite Titans team members to show off who they are and what they’re made of!

Three Exorcism Siblings Vol 1 cover

Three Exorcism Siblings Volume One by Shinta Harekawa

Mamoru’s fate is already sealed: he will spend his life fighting horrific monsters, and then he will die in the line of duty. But there’s one thing he can still control, and that is his younger brothers’ destinies. Mamoru is determined that they will not have to endure what he does. How long can he keep that promise?

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

Riot Recommendations

Today’s Riot Rec theme is: the wilderness! There are plenty of ways to enjoy the outdoors — or not — as you can see from these comics!

Bad Medicine cover

Bad Medicine by Christopher Twin

A group of Indigenous teens settles around a campfire to tell scary stories based on Cree legends. While they themselves never travel far from home, the characters in their stories often find themselves in the middle of nowhere, alone with the demons — both supernatural and human — that stalk them.

Be Prepared cover

Be Prepared by Vera Brosgol

Vera is starting to think she doesn’t fit in anywhere. At school, the other girls think her Russian traditions are weird, and at Russian summer camp, Vera isn’t “Russian” enough. She resorts to bribery and even bullying to try to make the other kids like her before finally realizing that she can find friends and happiness by just being herself.

Don’t get lost on your way to Thursday — just plow straight on through the next couple of days, and you’ll be getting more comic book recs from the Stack before you know it!

~Eileen

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Passover, Churros, And More!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! We are still in the middle of sick funkiness, so we spent the weekend napping and doing as little as possible. I did read through a giant stack of children’s books publishers sent me, and I can’t wait to share some of those with you!

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.

Today I review two Latine new releases and Passover children’s books.

Bookish Goods

I Read Banned Books T-Shirt by EliteGirlTee

I Read Banned Books T-Shirt by EliteGirlTee

I love that this tee comes in so many different sizes, from babies to adults. The whole family can wear matching book shirts! $16+

New Releases

Cover of A Maleta Full of Treasures by Natalia Sylvester, illustrated by Juana Medina

A Maleta Full of Treasures by Natalia Sylvester, illustrated by Juana Medina

In this sweet picture book, Dulce’s abuela comes to visit her and her family in the U.S. from Peru. Dulce has never been to Peru and has never met her cousins or other relatives who live there, but she longs to visit and better understand her heritage. Once a year, Abuela comes bringing Peruvian treasures in her suitcases to share with Dulce. The illustrations are warm and inviting. The entire book is like one big hug.

Cover of Churro Stand by Karina N. González, illustrated by Krystal Quiles

Churro Stand by Karina N. González, illustrated by Krystal Quiles

Now for a picture book that will make you crave churros! It’s summer in New York City, and Lucía and her brother are accompanying their mother to work. Mamá runs a churro stand in Union Square. The morning begins in the kitchen preparing ingredients. Then the trio takes the subway to Union Square and sets up the stand. The kids wonder if ice cream would sell better because, initially, no one comes to the stand. Then a rainstorm sends everyone scurrying away. But with a little clever thinking, the churro stand is a success. This delightful picture book is being published in both English and Spanish.

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

Riot Recommendations

Passover begins April 22, so I wanted to put some new Passover children’s books on everyone’s radar.

Cover of Afikoman, Where'd You Go? by Rebecca Gardyn Levington, illustrated by Noa Kelner

Afikoman, Where’d You Go? by Rebecca Gardyn Levington, illustrated by Noa Kelner

This super fun rhyming search-and-find Passover picture book is sure to be on repeat in many households. A family has gathered for Passover, but the mischievous matzah keeps hiding in every room of the house, inside and outside. Kids and pets search for that sneaky Afikoman, and young readers can join the search.

Cover of Tyrannosaurus Tsuris by Susan Tarcov, illustrated by Elissambura

Tyrannosaurus Tsuris by Susan Tarcov, illustrated by Elissambura

Kids will also love this dinosaur take on Passover. Tyrannosaurus Rex wants to host the seder for all the dinosaurs, but none of them want to come. They’re worried he will eat them! This gives him tsuris — worry. But then all the dinosaurs tell him what gives them tsuris, and it turns out they have a lot to worry about, too. It’s a funny picture book that dinosaur lovers will enjoy.

Cover of Where Is Poppy? BY Caroline Kusin Pritchard, illustrated by Dana Wulfekotte

Where Is Poppy? by Caroline Kusin Pritchard, illustrated by Dana Wulfekotte

This is a lovely picture book about grieving for a lost grandparent. A young girl is celebrating Passover with her family, but how can it be Passover without Poppy, her beloved grandfather? Family members tell her he’s still there with them, but the child has trouble understanding what they mean. How is Poppy still there? Where is he? As she searches, she remembers cherished moments with him.

Cover of On All Other Nights edited by Chris Baron, Joshua S. Levy, and Naomi Milliner

On All Other Nights edited by Chris Baron, Joshua S. Levy, and Naomi Milliner

There aren’t very many Passover books for middle grade readers, and this short story anthology helps to fill the gap. Fourteen Jewish middle grade authors write Passover-themed short stories, comics, and poems. It’s cleverly organized around the 14 parts of the Passover Seder, and the acknowledgments use the “Who Knows One” pattern, the traditional Passover song. Contributors include Ruth Behar, Veera Hiranandani, Sarah Kapit, A. J. Sass, Laurel Snyder, and more.

a kid under a blanket reading Kazoo magazine

We’ve been doing a lot of reading in bed and on the couch this week. I got a few copies of Kazoo Magazine, and my daughter has been going through them while sick. It’s a super cool magazine for girls ages 5-12 with lots of content: crafts, activities, interviews, stories, comics, art, and more. She’s been really enjoying reading them while sick!

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, my friends. I hope you are having a wonderful April so far. Here in Maine, the critters and birds are all twitterpated, and everything is green. (Well, not the birds and critters.) I am here to once again tell you about a few books that might strike your fancy. A book that caught my eye this week that I want to read right now is We’ll Prescribe You a Cat by Syou Ishida, translated by E. Madison Shimoda. I will get it just for the title and the cute cover, but I bet it’s a lot of fun inside too. Turning to new releases, today I have a sci-fi novella of a carceral system aboard a spaceship, a runaway bestselling Japanese crime novel based on true events, and a middle grade memoir about growing up with undiagnosed OCD.

As for other new releases, at the top of my list of today’s books that I want to get my hands on are Late Bloomer by Mazey Eddings, Sheine Lende by Darcie Little Badger and Rovina Cai, Knife: Meditations After an Attempted Murder by Salman Rushdie, and My Beloved Monster: Masha, the Half-wild Rescue Cat Who Rescued Me by Caleb Carr. (I know this one is going to absolutely destroy me. I’m crying just thinking about it.) 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 that are out this week, including You Know What You Did, Immortal Pleasures, and The Band.

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 The Practice, the Horizon, and the Chain by Sofia Samatar; black with six interlocking blue rings in the center

The Practice, the Horizon, and the Chain by Sofia Samatar

This book is only 126 pages, but like everything Sofia Samatar writes, it’s so wise and compelling. It’s set on a mining ship in space, where a boy has spent his life enslaved in the bowels of the ship as a member of the Chained. His life is changed when he is brought to the ship’s university, where he befriends a professor who has worked her whole career to get out from under the stigma of having been born to the Chained. It’s a look at literal and figurative bonds holding people back in their lives and a society that enables the subjugation of others in favor of their own advancement. Everything Samatar writes is brilliant, and this is no exception. (Content warnings include enslavement, classism, and racism.)

Backlist bump: A Stranger in Olondria by Sofia Samatar

Cover of Butter: A Novel of Food and Murder by Asako Yuzuki; yellow with the word 'butter' in red being offered up on a black serving platter

Butter: A Novel of Food and Murder by Asako Yuzuki, Polly Barton (translator) 

This crime novel was a bestseller in Japan when it was released in 2017, and is now in English for the first time. And it’s based on a real case! Rika Machida is a journalist who is tired of her job, working in a newsroom with all men, where she is often harassed and overlooked. That is, when her ideas aren’t being stolen. Then the case of a gourmet cook with expensive taste accused of murdering her benefactors catches Rika’s eye. She’s disgusted by how the news and social media talk about Manako Kajii, who is not thought of as conventionally attractive. People wonder how “someone like her” could have attracted these men in the first place. Rika wishes to expose this side of Manako’s story, but Manako has refused all interviews with journalists. But when Rika approaches it from a different angle and instead writes to Manako about food and cooking, she is able to strike up a correspondence. And Rika discovers she has more in common with Manako, an alleged serial killer, than she expected. (CW includes sexism, misogyny, body shaming, fatphobia, disordered eating, loss of a loved one, stalking. violence, injury, murder, and death.)

cover of Puzzled: A Memoir of Growing Up with OCD; illustration of a young boy with brown hair and a purple shirt, with jigsaw puzzle pieces drawn over him

Puzzled: A Memoir About Growing Up with OCD by Pan Cooke

And for my last pick in this very different trio of new releases: a memoir written (and drawn) for middle graders! When Cooke was young, he experienced a lot of anxiety, and as he got older, his anxious thoughts sometimes made it hard for him to accomplish tasks, make friends, or attend sleepovers. For many years, he worried about almost everything, from basic concerns to wildly improbable outcomes. (It doesn’t help that he doom-scrolls on the internet.) But then he was diagnosed with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. And as he learns about the condition, he begins to find ways to calm his worries and his obtrusive, anxious thoughts. It’s an informative look at things so many kids go through in school, such as bullying and fear of embarrassment. But it’s also an examination of a condition so often overlooked in young people, and how to get help. (CW include OCD/anxiety, disordered eating, and bullying.)

Backlist bump: Jawbreaker by Christina Wyman

a callico cat and twp orange cats sitting on and in front of a green chair; photo by Liberty Hardy

This week, I am reading Swift River by Essie Chambers and The Cats of Silver Crescent by Kaela Noel. (That makes three books with cats in the title mentioned in this newsletter!) I finally started watching The Good Lord Bird miniseries, which I have been meaning to do for years since I love the book. (Wait, am I just drawn to books with animals mentioned in the title???) The song stuck in my head this week is “Anthem for a Seventeen-Year-Old Girl” by Broken Social Scene. And here is your weekly cat picture: Throwback to these three knuckleheads posing for their indie rock album cover.

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 get up every morning determined to both change the world and have one hell of a good time. Sometimes this makes planning my day difficult.” —E.B. White

Categories
Giveaways

041524-GroupLiving-Giveaway

We’re giving away fifty copies of Group Living and Other Recipes by Lola Milholland to fifty lucky Riot readers!

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

“With intelligence and humor, Lola Milholland invites us to join her in a timely (and delicious!) interrogation of the ethics of food, housing, family, land, and self.”—Ruth Ozeki

For readers of Blood, Bones & Butter comes a charming exploration of group living that encourages readers to reconsider the meaning of family and home. Group Living and Other Recipes tells the story of the Holman House —of transcendent meals and ecstatic parties, of colorful characters coming together in moments of deep tenderness and inevitable irritation—with a thoughtful, wider exploration of group living as a way of life.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

The Wrath of Nature’s Revenge

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’ve got new releases and some short stories for you. I had a great weekend, and I hope you did, too. It was my nibling’s birthday, and I rode my bike while I listened to a good book and got a bit of natural vitamin D in my system. I’m back to getting lots and lots of audiobooks from the library, and I’m enjoying the heck out of it. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

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.

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

Half a set of bookends that show a pirate ship grabbed by a giant tentacle

Pirate Ship vs. Tentacle Bookends by KnobCreekMetalArts

You know I love a clever set of bookends. The other half of this set is enormous tentacles coming up from the sea, going through your books to grab the hapless pirate ship. Perfect. $70

New Releases

cover of The Practice, the Horizon, and the Chain by Sofia Samatar

The Practice, the Horizon, and the Chain by Sofia Samatar

The Chained are condemned to ceaselessly toil in the lower decks of a mining ship that drifts between stars. One day, a boy is brought to the upper decks and informed he will be educated in the ship’s university. He comes under the tutelage of “the professor,” the descendant of other Chained who were elevated, who struggles still to be validated by her peers. Together, they may find a way to truly free themselves.

to gaze upon wicked gods by molly x chang book cover

To Gaze Upon Wicked Gods by Molly X. Chang

Ruyang is a survivor in a world conquered by invaders who one day simply descended from the heavens and swept aside her people and their magic with their overwhelming technology. Ruyang was also born blessed by death, which gives her the power to kill at will at the cost of her own life force. When her gift is discovered by an enemy prince, he offers her a horrific bargain: become his personal assassin, and he will protect her family from further brutalization by his people.

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

Riot Recommendations

We’ve got some new short stories on the radar!

Cover of To Root Somewhere Beautiful edited by Lauren T. Davila

To Root Somewhere Beautiful: An Anthology of Reclamation edited by Lauren T. Davila

Twenty-two diverse authors imagine what the wrath of Nature would be like, when she’s lost patience with humanity’s strife and destruction — and how humanity could change, adapt, and redeem itself.

weird black girls book cover

Weird Black Girls: Stories by Elwin Cotman

This collection from Elwin Cotman promises stories that hybridize the literary, the fantastic, and the unnerving, all while focusing on the anxieties inherent in living while Black.

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

Sad Girl Novels and Octopi

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. It took me longer than usual to put this newsletter together because Jonesy was conked out in my lap and absolutely refused to move for my computer. He’s now stretched out on the floor, acting pitiful because I dislodged him. Better finish this up quickly before he comes back!

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.

Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

Simon & Schuster turns 100, and KKR is in no hurry to sell.

Could the AI industry implode?

How tech giants cut corners to harvest data for AI.

Are publishers publishing too many books?

An unhinged history of American publishing: Macmillan.

The book summary apps accused of damaging authors’ sales.

New & Upcoming Titles

Liane Moriarty has a new book coming out this fall.

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump has signed a mega deal for a new crime fiction series with Bantam Books.

Jordan Harper’s The Last King of California will be published in the US this fall.

Lauren Oyler’s essay collection, No Judgment, is soliciting a lot of…well…judgment. More info here.

Here’s a preview of Ruthi Thorpe’s latest novel, Margo’s Got Money Troubles.

Here’s a preview of Ina Garten’s memoir, Be Ready When the Luck Happens.

Cover reveal for Mariana Enríquez’s short story collection, A Sunny Place for Shady People.

The 25 most buzzworthy books of the moment.

The best horror books of 2024 (so far).

New dark and twisty novels from horror to thriller.

4 new books on women in the arts & sciences.

The major book club picks for April 2024.

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

April picks from People.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Mania – Lionel Shriver (LA Times, New York Times, Washington Post)

The Familiar – Leigh Bardugo (New York Times, Washington Post)

The Garden – Clare Beams (New York Times, People)

RA/Genre Resources

Where to start with Patricia Highsmith.

Mystery writers for both standalone and series readers.

“Sad girl novels” and the dubious branding of women’s emotive fiction.

On the Riot

Book Riot founder Jeff O’Neal talks about what he would do if he were starting Book Riot today.

The best new weekly releases to TBR.

9 of the best romance books to bring with you this spring and summer.

11 book club picks for April.

An introduction to all the punk subgenres.

The best Japanese authors you’ve never heard of.

Where to begin with reading poetry.

Poetic memoirs, collections, and nonfiction books for your book club.

All Things Comics

Olivia Wilde is directing the Margot Robbie-produced adaptation of Avengelyne.

18 Canadian comics & graphic novels to check out this spring.

Audiophilia

The hottest new release on BookTok is the audio release of 1984, featuring Andrew Scott and Andrew Garfield, but listeners are focusing primarily on the torture scene between their two characters, which is…kinda icky.

Audiobooks to lull you to sleep.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

13 imaginative picture books about libraries.

18 Earth-friendly reads for kids.

Adults

The best reads for the total solar eclipse.

7 novels set in refugee camps.

The 30 greatest book series of all time.

A reading list for Americans in search of LGBTQ Canadian history.

Must-read “bad neighbor” thrillers.

5 of the best books about siblings.

17 baseball romance books that knock it out of the park.

On the Riot

9 historical romantasy books.

8 genre-blending nonfiction books you need to read.

10 of the best books about octopuses (octopi? octopodes?).

8 out-of-this-world romances in space.

8 sci-noir books that blend genres.

8 of the best queer sports romance books.

8 mysteries and thrillers set during the Great Depression.

The best cookbooks for cooks of all levels.

8 fantasy horror books to delight you.

10 genre-blending short-story collections.

8 books that blend and transcend genre.

8 creepy and compelling historical horror novels.

Suggestions for National Poetry Month.

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 sleeping next to a laptop with its paw resting on the keyboard

This was taken earlier in the day, but it clearly shows Jonesy planning to assert dominance over my laptop by taking over my lap space.

All right, friends, that’s it for me. See you on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

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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!

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.

This week, I’m back with another manga recommendation, because I am in my manga era, apparently. This one was also adapted into an anime series, and I just purchased a Crunchyroll subscription just so I can watch it. So yes, that means I really enjoyed this series. But it is a pretty heavy read, so major trigger warning for discussions of grief, depression, and suicide.

orange book cover

Orange by Ichigo Takano

On the first day of 11th grade, Naho receives a strange letter. The writer of the letter claims to be Naho from the future — ten years in the future, to be precise. And in it, future Naho tells her younger self to look out for Kakeru, a new student who will be joining her class. From the moment Naho sees Kakeru, she feels a deep connection with the melancholy boy, and she happily invites him to be a part of her close-knit group of friends. Still, she’s skeptical about the letter. How could it possibly come from an older version of herself in the future? Surely it has to be a prank.

But then things in the letter start coming true. And the more the letter is able to foretell the future, the more Naho has to take the warnings seriously. No matter what the cost, she must save Kakeru from a horrible fate. And every change she makes to the timeline will have consequences.

If you’ve ever lost someone close to you, then you have probably wondered what would have happened if you could go back and change the past, knowing what you know now. You’ve probably wondered if there is some alternate world out there where they are still alive. I really appreciated how this manga explores that possibility. And without giving too much away, we do also get to flash forward to the future to see where Naho and her friends are now, years later, still reeling from the loss of Kakeru, a person who had such an immense impact on their lives when they were younger. How does changing the past affect these people in the future? You will have to read to find out.

Orange is juggling a lot of elements, and I think this series does it really well. It’s a reflection on grief and loss, absolutely. But this is also a story I would comfortably categorize as sci-fi, as it also explores elements of time travel and the consequences of alternate timelines. Orange is also a love story, one in which — no matter how the story shakes out — someone is going to end up brokenhearted.

Above all else, though, this is a story about friendship. This is a story of a group of six friends who will do absolutely anything to support each other and take care of each other. Friends who manage to stay connected into adulthood. Despite the often depressing subject matter of this manga, ultimately, the message of Orange is that friendship is what makes life worth living.


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

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Bookish Goods

Bookish Good of the Week: April 14, 2024

Handmade Crochet Flower Bookmarks

Handmade Crochet Flower Bookmarks by MaPetiteFeeGift

These crochet flower bookmarks are so cute, unique, and spring-coded. $20+