Categories
Unusual Suspects

What Is Your Damage, Heather?: 9 Thrillers About Friendships Gone South

This post is written by Liberty Hardy.

There is a famous saying that goes something like, “Good friends help you move, but true friends help you move bodies.” But what happens if you stop being friends and they still know where the bodies are buried? That just opens you up to blackmail. Then the expression “Two can keep a secret if one of them is dead” is better suited. (Or, in Billy Shakespeare’s case, “Two may keep counsel, putting one away.”) When your relationship with your bestie goes bust, that can be a very sad occasion — or even a deadly one, like the friendships in the books on this list of thrillers about friendships gone south!

There is a terrible secret that tears two friends apart, only to find themselves working together years later; a group of old friends and festering resentments snowed in at a chalet; a group of teenagers who get drawn into a neighbor’s murder; a young girl who thinks she wants the life her friend has; a woman whose BFF is murdered and isn’t sure that she isn’t the killer; and more! Some of these friendships were tried and true, and some…well, were they ever really friends to begin with, or was it all an act? You’ll have to read them to find out!

Give Me Your Hand cover

Give Me Your Hand by Megan Abbott

Kit and Diane were as close as two friends could be when they were teenagers — or so they thought. But then Diane confessed something that ripped their friendship apart. Years later, Kit is striving to be the best in her field as a scientist. But it turns out that when a position opens up to work on groundbreaking research, Diane is her competition for the job. How far will Kit go to get the job she wants? How far will Diane go to keep Kit from sharing what she knows?

We Were Never Here cover image

We Were Never Here by Andrea Bartz

Emily is really looking forward to her annual vacation with her BFF Kristen. When a dead backpacker turns up in their room, Kristen says it was self-defense, and Emily wants to believe her. But there was that dead body that turned up during vacation last year as well…Emily doesn’t want to think the worst of her best friend, so she decides some time away from Kristen might do her good. But when Kristen shows up unannounced, is she there as a friend, or to make sure Emily doesn’t tell her secret?

The Hunting Party cover image

The Hunting Party By Lucy Foley

This is another thriller about a group of old friends reuniting each year as a tradition. This time it’s friends from Oxford, who visit an isolated Scottish estate for the winter holidays. Their reunion soon turns sour when old secrets rear their ugly heads, and a snowstorm traps them in the house. By the time help arrives and they are shoveled out, one of them is dead. But which one did it?

Jar of Hearts cover image

Jar of Hearts by Jennifer Hillier

For 14 years, everyone thought Geo was mourning her friend, Angela, who disappeared without a trace. They thought Angela was another victim of the local serial killer Calvin James. How devastating for Geo to lose her best friend that way. But for 14 years, Geo has kept a terrible secret. And now Angela’s remains have been found, and the truth will no longer stay silent.

cover of Real World by Natsuo Kirino

Real World by Natsuo Kirino

Four bored teenage girls are spending a hot summer in a Tokyo suburb. When the neighbor of one of the girls is murdered, and her teenage son is suspected, suddenly, things are more interesting for them. A murder next door, how exciting! And they know the killer! While the suspected killer is on the run, the girls speculate about events, and keep secrets, and get closer and closer to danger as the days go on.

cover of Summer's Edge by Dana Mele; illustration of young woman swimming in a red lake, with large yellow font

Summer’s Edge by Dana Mele

This is a YA thriller about a group of friends who reunite at the site where one of them died the year before. Emily’s death in a fire on the lake drove a wedge between the once-close friend group. But in honor of her memory, they decide to gather together a year later. Only it’s seeming more and more possible that, somehow, Emily has joined them as well. What really happened to Emily last summer, and who was responsible? Inquiring ghosts want to know.

cherish farrah book cover

Cherish Farrah by Bethany C. Morrow

Farrah is very close with her best friend, Cherish. Cherish and Farrah are the only two Black girls in their community. But Cherish has wealthy white parents, which makes Farrah jealous since her family is in dire financial straits. So she comes up with a scheme to ingratiate herself in Cherish’s home and hopefully live in the lap of luxury. But — you know what comes next — be careful what you wish for! Weird things happen in Cherish’s home, alarming and upsetting things, and Farrah realizes that maybe things aren’t what they seem.

cover image for I'm Not Done With You Yet

I’m Not Done with You Yet by Jesse Q. Sutanto

When Jane and Thalia, two aspiring writers, were BFFs at Oxford, it was the happiest Jane had ever been. But then a horrible event shattered their friendship, and Jane lost Thalia for what she thought was forever. But many years later, Jane recognizes a famous author appearing at a mystery convention. It’s Thalia, writing under a pseudonym. So Jane buys a ticket to the convention. She’s going to reunite with her bestie, and this time, she’s never going to let her go.

cover image for Listen for the Lie

Listen for the Lie by Amy Tintera

Everyone was devastated when golden girl Savvy was murdered in a small Texas town, and they were shocked when her BFF Lucy was suspected of the crime. But no one was more shocked than Lucy, because she’s not sure she didn’t kill Savvy. Lucy can’t remember anything from that night, and with no evidence, she’s never charged with murder. Still, she leaves town, because no one wants a probable murderer around. But when a popular podcast decides to do an episode on the murder of Savvy, Lucy agrees to return to town and talk to the host to get to the bottom of what happened on that summer night. Even if it means the story ends with her behind bars.

For more books on friendships, check out these books about obsessive friendships. And if you enjoy thrillers, be sure to sign up for our mystery newsletter, Unusual Suspects, and listen to our mystery podcast, Read or Dead!

Categories
Kissing Books

8 of the Best Romance Short Stories

This post is written by Carolina Ciucci.

Romance short stories may be tricky to get just right, but when they are, they’re one of my favorite things to read. Delicious love stories that I can gulp down in one greedy bite? Or, alternately, savor like a truly excellent chocolate truffle? Yes, please, and thank you. I love a good doorstopper, but there’s something so satisfying about reading a great love story in a single sitting. And that’s what you’ll find here: eight romance short stories you can read in a single, delightful sitting.

The stories on this list all come in at somewhere between 25 and 50 pages, and there is something for everyone. You like your romance to be retellings of folklore and mythology? You got it. You prefer YA? You will find it here. You’re all about vampires? Knock yourself out. From witty bookstore owners to vampire mercenaries, there’s a variety of characters and relationship dynamics, so you’ll be sure to find something that works for you. (Personally, all of these stories worked for me.)

Most of these are part of anthologies, and a couple of them are part of a longer series of romance short stories, so you’ll be getting an embarrassment of riches if you check these out. Now take a seat, grab a cup of your beverage of choice, and dive in.

cover of Love in Colour- Mythical Tales from Around the World, Retold by Bolu Babalola

“Ọṣun” by Bolu Babalola

Beautiful Ọṣun is in a relationship with selfish Ṣàngó. But when Erinlẹ enters her life, she realizes she can be more than looked at: she can be seen.

From Love in Colour: Mythical Tales from Around the World, Retold

cover of Who's Loving You: Love Stories by Women of Colour

“Long Distance” by Varaidzo

June finds herself admiring May. There is just one problem: the two women seem to exist four years apart.

From Who’s Loving You: Love Stories by Women of Colour

“The Way We Love Here” by Dhonielle Clayton

Viola lives in a world where you can tell how close you are to meeting your soulmate by a red coil wrapped around your ring finger. She’s anxious about it…until she meets Sebastian.

From Meet Cute

cover of Fools In Love: Fresh Twists on Romantic Tales

“Silver and Gold” by Natasha Ngan

Mila and Ru are rivals with a romantic history that neither cares to acknowledge…until they’re snowed in together in the middle of a blizzard.

From Fools In Love: Fresh Twists on Romantic Tales

cover of Finding Ms. Write

“Consignment” by Elaine Burnes

A bookstore owner. A writer looking to get her book in stores. A beautiful love story full of sweetness and (what else?) books.

From Finding Ms. Write

cover of With Any Luck (The Improbable Meet-Cute #5) by Ashley Poston

“With Any Luck” (The Improbable Meet-Cute #5) by Ashley Poston

Imagine being the person everyone dates right until they find their soulmate. That’s the case for Audrey Love, who’s afraid she might have kissed her best friend during his bachelor party. Why else would he have disappeared hours before the wedding? Now she needs to find the missing groom — and maybe her own happy ever after.

cover of Drop, Cover, and Hold On (The Improbable Meet-Cute #4) by Jasmine Guillory

“Drop, Cover, and Hold On” (The Improbable Meet-Cute #4) by Jasmine Guillory

A natural disaster traps Daisy and Harris together during Valentine’s Day. What else is there to do but get closer (in more ways than one)?

cover of The Mammoth Book of Vampire Romance

“Fangs for Hire” by Jenna Black

Gemma is just your regular mercenary who’s been assigned her next hit. Regular, that is, except for the fact that she’s a vampire. And her target, Ross, happens to be distractingly hot.

From The Mammoth Book of Vampire Romance

If you’re looking for more romance short stories, be sure to read about 9 of the best romance anthologies out there. If you’d like something a bit longer, how about checking out romance novellas?

Categories
Past Tense

Muslim Historical Fiction

Hi, historical fiction friends!

Do you ever talk to people about books in real life who read such different genres than you that you don’t even know how to explain to them what you’re reading? I have that experience a lot, especially when people find out I write about books professionally. How exactly am I supposed to explain to them that I’m currently juggling a sapphic selkie fairy tale retelling and a story about a shape- and gender-shifting alien that uses dating apps to hunt their prey? I can tell you these kinds of answers are never what they’re expecting.

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

Image of a woman wearing a dusty blue sweatshirt with a rainbow and the words "reading rainbow" across the chest

Reading Rainbow Sweatshirt from Stella Vita Studio

Here’s one for all the former Reading Rainbow kids out there! $54

New Releases

1666 book cover

1666 by Lora Chilton (April 2, 2024)

In Colonial Virginia, the Patawomeck Tribe faced a massacre, where their men were murdered, and the women and children marched south to board a slave ship headed to Barbados. But thanks to three brave women, whose story has been passed down among the Patawomeck people for generations, they were able to perform a harrowing escape and make their way back to Virginia, ensuring the preservation of their tribe.

The Titanic Survivors Book Club book cover

The Titanic Survivors Book Club by Timothy Schaffert (April 2, 2024)

A book club for people who were meant to be on the Titanic’s fateful voyage brings together a bookshop owner named Yorick and a quirky group of other almost Titanic passengers. But even as they grow closer, the Great War looms on the horizon, threatening to destroy all the peace they’ve created with one another.

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

Riot Recommendations

With Ramadan having started at the end of March and lasting through the first week of April, it seems like the perfect time to feature some great Islamic historical fiction.

To Keep the Sun Alive book cover

To Keep the Sun Alive by Rabeah Ghaffari

In 1979, the Islamic Revolution in Iran is fast approaching, as is a solar eclipse. For a couple living on an orchard in the small town of Naishapur, life goes on even as it changes. Over long terrace lunches, they discuss life and politics, and we watch a large cast of characters fight for, embrace, or avoid the future.

Every Rising Sun book cover

Every Rising Sun by Jamila Ahmed

This retelling of One Thousand and One Nights puts Shaherazade at the center of the story. In 12th century Persia, Shaherazade tries to save the man she loves—and her people—by telling the Malik a new story every night to stave off his violence. But his rage runs too deep, and Shaherazade conspires with her father to persuade him to set off for the ongoing Crusades, all the while trying to entrance the Malik with her stories and navigate the complicated intricacies of courtly life.

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 Walking Practice by Dolki Min, translated by Victoria Caudle.

Categories
Letterhead

15 YA Horror Stories in Which the Black Girl Survives

If you’ve read or watched even a little bit of horror, you’ve probably recognized that in far too many cases, Final Girl = white girl. Desiree S. Evans gives this harmful trope a long-overdue overhaul with The Black Girl Survives in This One, a new anthology of 15 YA stories that center Black girls as the heroes who beat the baddies, survive the horrors, and live to tell the tale.

Featuring stories by acclaimed writers like Zakiya Delilah Harris (The Other Black Girl), Monica Brashears (House of Cotton), Justina Ireland (Dread Nation) and an introduction from legendary horror writer Tananarive Due, The Black Girl Survives in This One celebrates voices that are challenging and changing what horror means. It’s available now wherever books and audiobooks are sold.

Here’s an excerpt of “The Brides of Devil’s Bayou” by Desiree S. Evans.


Aja dreams of broken girls. 

Girls like the one sitting at the edge of her bed tonight. This girl is smiling at Aja, but the girl’s teeth are all missing, leaving a mouth full of bleeding gums and gaping holes. Aja wants to speak to the girl, to ask her who she is, but she can’t make a sound. She can only watch as the girl crawls closer, as her toothless grin widens. 

Everything inside Aja is screaming to move, to run, to get away. With a count to three, she forces herself into motion, scrambling out of bed and tumbling onto the floor. When she looks up, she sees the girl moving toward her. This close, Aja notices how the girl’s face is a Halloween mask of bleeding scars and crusted wounds. 

Aja opens her mouth, finally able to screech, “No!” 

The girl reaches out a hand as if to help Aja up from the floor. “No,” Aja whimpers again. 

One!” the girl rasps out.

At that moment something grabs Aja from behind, and she screams until she blacks out. 

When Aja wakes, she remembers where she is. 

She sits up, gasping like she’s been underwater. It takes her a minute to relax enough to slow her breathing and to let her eyes adjust to the dark—she’s back home. Or what used to be home, a tiny shotgun house on the outskirts of Devil’s Bayou, Louisiana. It’s the first time Aja has been back since her daddy took her away when she was twelve. 

Aja throws off her blanket and looks around her old childhood bedroom. It feels weird not to be back in her freshman dorm room at Sycamore College in North Texas with her snoring roommate, Chelsea, and her Tweety Bird alarm clock. Aja shakes off the sense of wrongness that sits deep in her belly, the way she feels foreign even though she’s back in familiar territory. Homesickness long ago settled in her spirit, a constant feeling of missing a part of her past she can’t ever get back. 

Aja knows time doesn’t stand still. She’s no longer a child running through the swampy grove, chasing fireflies and mysteries. She’s eighteen now, an actual adult preparing to take on the world. Right? Yeah, right. Most days, Aja feels clumsy in her body, sloppy and unready for the tasks at hand. Like the task she now finds herself facing, having returned to Devil’s Bayou, the land of her mama’s kinfolk. 

Two days ago, Aja took her last final exam of the semester, and then convinced her best friend, Letricia Moseley, to fly to Louisiana with her for the weekend. She and Letricia had arrived at the house earlier that evening, after driving two hours from the airport through winding, rural backroads. The plan is to celebrate Aja’s nineteenth birthday in two days here in her old hometown, heeding the advice of Aja’s therapist from the campus health center: Go to the source of your fear and let it go. 

Aja still can’t believe it’s been seven years since her daddy had told her they were leaving this cursed bayou forever. They’d resettled out in Fort Worth, and he’d forbidden her to ever return. Told her that staying away was for her own good, that the town gossip and rumors wouldn’t follow her around anymore. But then the nightmares began a year ago, and the only thing Aja has been able to think about since is coming back to Devil’s Bayou. 

Aja checks the time on her cell phone: 11:15 p.m. She’d slept for three hours, which for her is a pretty good run, considering her insomnia. Glancing at her phone’s lit screen, she notices another missed call from her daddy. She swallows back her guilt. She hadn’t told him about this trip, knowing he’d be upset. In fact, she’d been ignoring his calls for the past three days, shooting off quick texts of I’m fine! and Exams are killing me! 

Aja climbs out of bed and winds her way through the dark house before stepping outside onto the porch. She takes in the wild expanse of her family’s land. The quarter moon sits huge and heavy in the sky beyond the bayou’s bend, and the trees in the yard—full of moonlight and shadows—cocoon the house on all sides. Aja can’t believe her ancestors had lived out here alone for generations. That Memaw Abbigail had died out here alone, too, nearly two years ago.

Needless to say, then, Aja is shocked when she turns to see the old woman seated in her favorite porch rocking chair, as if she’d been waiting for her. 

“I’m still dreaming, ain’t I?” Aja breathes out, the realization making her dizzy. 

Memaw Abbigail chuckles, rocking away. She looks much like she did the last time Aja had seen her seven years ago. Thin and regal, with light brown skin and a head full of kinky silver hair. Her face, even in old age, had always been soft with few lines, giving her an ageless appearance. 

“It come for you,” Memaw Abbigail says to Aja, her voice rough but familiar. 

“Memaw, stop with the ghost stories.” Aja sighs, exhausted by the old tales and superstitions, the very reasons her daddy had taken her away in the first place. She turns from her grandmother and gazes out at the tangled yard, at the blue glass bottles that dangle from the branches of the oak tree out front. Like the witch knots that hang from the porch ceiling, the bottles are meant to trap evil spirits that make it across the bayou. Memaw Abbigail’s old-time beliefs fill so many of Aja’s childhood memories of home. 

“Now that you a woman, that demon gonna come for you,” Memaw Abbigail says again, gazing out at the darkness. “Gonna make you its bride.” 

“I ain’t being no demon bride, Memaw!” Aja huffs, shaking her head. 

Even here in Aja’s dreams, her memaw is stubborn in her belief in their old family legend. Its origin story is one Aja heard throughout her childhood. Her ancestor, a young enslaved girl named Mosi, made a pact with a demon she’d summoned out in Devil’s Bayou. In exchange for freedom and safety, the girl had promised the demon five generations of her bloodline’s eldest daughters. 

Cara. Margaret. Anna. Catherine.” Aja whispers the names of the four young women in the family who had vanished into the swamp on their nineteenth birthdays. Never to be seen again. According to the story, Aja should be next, as the eldest daughter of the fifth generation descended from Mosi. Growing up, everyone in town would whisper about Aja’s inevitable fate, about how she was the last of the cursed girls, the final bride promised to the demon of Devil’s Bayou. 

This piece of family folklore used to scare Aja more than anything in the world, but her therapist had told her these stories were just a way her family had tried to make sense of the horrible things that had happened to them. 

“It’s how we try to understand tragedy,” Aja repeats aloud, into the quiet of her dream. “This swamp is full of natural dangers. Those girls either got hurt in the swamp, ran away, or killed themselves. No reason to blame a monster.” 

Wary of the family’s influence on her, Aja’s daddy even forbade her from attending her memaw’s funeral two years ago. Now all Aja has left of her memaw is the crumbling, empty house she’d inherited from her. And these dreams. 

Silence for a long time, and then Memaw Abbigail asks, “What do you dream about?” 

Aja chuckles softly. A dream asking about a dream—how fitting. Yet it’s true that all her dreams these days are like this one—murky, strange.

“What do you see?” her memaw continues. 

“You. This house,” Aja whispers, recalling her dreams of late. “Snakes swarming me.” Her dreams are often filled with slithering things creeping and crawling across her body in the nightmare dark. Two weeks ago she’d begun to see the broken girls, but tonight was the first time one actually spoke to her. 

“It’s calling to you.” Memaw Abbigail’s voice echoes in the night. Then: “Find the bone. Send it home.” 

Before Aja can even process her memaw’s last cryptic words, she sees a disturbance in the overgrown front yard. Something glistening in the moonlight, rising up from the tall grass. It takes Aja a moment to understand what she sees. 

A teenage girl silhouetted against the night sky. She climbs out of the ground, her white dress mud ravaged and bloody. Her dripping, tangled hair is plastered across her face. The girl has no eyes. 

Aja watches in horror as two long snakes slither out of the girl’s empty eye sockets, circling around her neck like a noose just before the girl collapses back to the ground. Down in the grass, the girl croaks out one wet, phlegmy word: “Two.” 

“Hell nah,” Aja says, backing away slowly. “You’re not real. I’m still dreaming.” She wills herself to believe this as the girl begins crawling forward through the grass, her eyeless face grinning, ghastly. 

Wakeupwakeupwakeup! Aja tells herself. 

From inside the house, the family’s old grandfather clock chimes five times. 

Aja wakes to predawn shadows crossing the empty porch and emptier yard. She knows the dream is over, but her memaw’s strange words linger. 

Find the bone. Send it home.


“THE BRIDES OF DEVIL’S BAYOU” EXCERPTED FROM THE BLACK GIRL SURVIVES IN THIS ONE. COPYRIGHT © 2024 BY DESIREE S. EVANS. EXCERPTED BY PERMISSION OF FLATIRON BOOKS, A DIVISION OF MACMILLAN PUBLISHERS. NO PART OF THIS EXCERPT MAY BE REPRODUCED OR REPRINTED WITHOUT PERMISSION IN WRITING FROM THE PUBLISHER.

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Autism, The End of the World, and More Great Kids’ Books!

Happy Tuesday, kidlit friends! There’s another KidLit4Ceasefire auction going on with some great things to bid on, from manuscript critiques to signed books and AMAs with fantastic authors. Funds from this auction will help children and their families in Gaza, Sudan, and Congo. A portion of the auction will also go toward the Little Miss Flint water fundraiser. The auction ends April 10th, so be sure to check it out.

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 books by neurodivergent authors about autism as well as two fantastic new middle grade releases.

Bookish Goods

Neurodivergent Pride Pin by RainbowedResistance

Neurodivergent Pride Pin by RainbowedResistance

Pin this lovely neurodivergent pin on your library book bag. Or am I the only one with a specific bag for my library books? $15+

New Releases

Cover of Running in Flip-Flops from the End of the World by Justin A. Reynolds

Running in Flip-Flops from the End of the World by Justin A. Reynolds

This is a funny follow-up to It’s the End of the World and I’m in My Bathing Suit, about everyone in the world disappearing except for five middle schoolers. It’s told from the perspective of Eddie, a young kid with ADHD writing in a diary. He is really scared, but he’s hiding his fear by having as much fun as possible, including filling a bathtub with ice cream. The kids want to drive to the beach to see if their parents are there (because that’s where they were going when they disappeared), but weird and creepy things keep happening to the car Eddie inexpertly drives.

Cover of Timid by Jonathan Todd

Timid by Jonathan Todd

This is a sweet middle grade graphic novel about a shy Black tween, Cecil, who loves drawing cartoons and comics. He and his family are moving from Florida to Boston. His older sister tells him he needs to make Black friends fast, or he’ll be called an Oreo, but he has trouble working up the courage to do so. Meanwhile, several white kids initiate a friendship, but one wishes to take advantage of his art skills while the other keeps perpetuating racist microaggressions.

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

Riot Recommendations

April is Autism Awareness Month/Autism Acceptance Month, and today, April 2nd, is World Autism Awareness Day. Many autistic and neurodivergent folk have concerns about this month and experience lots of ableism during the month. If you’re doing something to celebrate autism and neurodivergence, here are some tips. Use the rainbow infinity symbol, not rainbow puzzle pieces. Have books by actually autistic writers and actually autistic guest speakers. Autism Speaks is not the organization you should be referencing or supporting. It’s come under heavy criticism. Instead, check out the Autistic Self Advocacy Network. “Nothing about us without us” should be the motto whenever you’re focusing on autism, neurodivergence, or disability.

Now for some new books by neurodivergent authors!

Cover of Flap Your Hands by Steve Asbell

Flap Your Hands by Steve Asbell

This picture book is an absolute joy. It’s a celebration of stimming that centers four neurodivergent children. Asbell directly addresses young readers: “When you’re feeling overwhelmed / And the world’s too much to bear.” He invites readers to stim to relieve stress. One child flutters hands by their ears, another tickles the air in front of them to see the sparkling lights. Some use their feet and entire bodies to dance and move. The illustrations are vibrant and exuberant. It’s a book that invites movement.

Cover of Next Level by Samara Cole Doyon, illustrated by Kaylani Juanita

Next Level by Samara Cole Doyon, illustrated by Kaylani Juanita

This wonderful picture book, which releases April 16th, also celebrates stimming and neurodivergence in general. While the author bases the story on the experiences of her non-speaking autistic son, she is also neurodivergent. Doyon advocates for all ways of communication and experiencing the world to be celebrated, not shunned. It follows a Black son and mother as they go to church, play in fall leaves, and spend a lovely day together. This is Doyon’s love letter to her son. Kaylani Juanita’s illustrations are expressive and depict the child stimming and chewing on sensory toys.

Cover of Paige Not Found by Jen Wilde

Paige Not Found by Jen Wilde

This middle grade novel also releases on April 16th, and it’s going to be one of my favorite books of the year. It’s a fantastic sci-fi middle grade about autistic kids being part of an experiment where The Dot gets put into their brains, tracking their vitals and releasing serotonin when it senses the kids are stressed. Paige was seven when The Dot was surgically placed inside her head, and she was told she was getting her tonsils out. She only finds out about The Dot when she sees an email about her on her dad’s computer. Then she hears that The Dot is being sold to a social media company, and Paige is desperate to get it out of her brain. She contacts other autistic kids who are part of the study for help. Paige is also queer, and there’s lots of good friend drama and first crushes. This book was hard to put down!

Cover of Invisible Isabel by Sally J. Pla

Invisible Isabel by Sally J. Pla, illustrated by Tania de Regil

Although this book doesn’t release until July 9th, I decided to go ahead and get it on everyone’s radar. It’s a really sweet illustrated novel-in-verse for younger middle grade readers. It’s about a girl with undiagnosed autism and anxiety who wants to befriend a new girl at school. Unfortunately, the new girl leans into being mean and popular at Isabel’s expense. It alternates perspectives between the two girls. It’s a great book for understanding autism and anxiety. There aren’t too many books for younger middle grade readers, so it helps to fill an important gap. It’s very accessible and engaging and will be a great book for initiating important conversations.

Bird drawing, the kids are all right

I love this drawing of a bird in a nest my daughter brought home from school. Birds are covering our yard, and I guess she was inspired to draw one! Ninety-nine percent of her drawings are of cats, so I appreciate the change of pace.

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
The Stack

It’s International Children’s Book Day!

A lot of people still think that all comics are for kids. This is clearly untrue, but there are plenty of graphic novels out there designed with a younger audience in mind. Today, all of the featured comics are kid-friendly — though, of course, adults can enjoy them too!

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 black backpack with a pink front that contains repeating images of a little Black girl in a superhero costume standing among various onomatopoeias

Black Girl Superhero Backpack by RedStoneCreativeShop

Ensure your kid has a heroic day at school with this backpack! Comes in three different sizes. $35+

New Releases

Continental Drifter cover

Continental Drifter by Kathy MacLeod

Kathy is half American, half Thai — and thoroughly confused. She spends most of the year in Thailand, but she longs for the summers her family spends in rural Maine. Feeling out of place in both countries, can Kathy find out where she really belongs by the time summer ends?

I Survived the Battle of D-Day 1944 cover

I Survived the Battle of D-Day, 1944 by Lauren Tarshis and Brian Churilla, Adapted by Georgia Ball

Part of the “I Survived” series of historical graphic novel adaptations, this installment follows a young French boy, Paul, who feels helpless as World War II drags on. A chance encounter with an American soldier gives him the opportunity he has been waiting for to help defeat the Nazis and bring peace back to his village.

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

Riot Recommendations

Today’s Riot Rec theme is: children’s comics! Here are a couple more great titles to share with the little ones.

August Moon cover

August Moon by Diana Thung

As soon as Fiona moves to the town of Calico, she starts making magical discoveries. For example, she meets the supernatural creatures — and the mysterious boy who travels with them — who spread light over the town at night. She also learns that Calico is in danger and that she has to help save it!

Monster Bar Mitzvah cover

Monster Bar Mitzvah by Josh Anderson and Dustin Evans

A bar mitzvah is a major rite of passage for Jewish boys. Eli knows this and wants to make his brother’s big day special…and then the monster under his bed shows up to make a mess of everything. Now it’s up to Eli to save his brother’s bar mitzvah before he gets into monster-sized trouble!

Whether you are a child or a child at heart, comics are a wonderful source of entertainment and life lessons. Don’t stop reading, nerd friends!

~Eileen

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Giveaways

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We’re giving away ten copies of Fate: The Winx Saga by Olivia Cuartero-Briggs to ten lucky Riot readers!

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

Inspired by the hit Netflix series, Fate: The Winx Saga Vol. 1: Dark Destiny follows a group of fairies enrolled at the magical school of Alfea in the wake of losing their close friend, Bloom. This semester, Aisha, Kat, Terra and the rest of our heroes must face a mysterious new enemy that threatens to destroy everything they love.

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Canada Giveaways

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We’re giving away a surprise box of 10 banged-up books to one lucky reader!

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

Book Riot’s Tailored Book Recommendations ships lots of new hardcover and paperback books to subscribers. Some of the books get a bit banged-up in transit, and dinged corners or smudged dust covers mean they can’t go out to customers — but they’re still the same great books! Give them a home and get hours of reading for free. Fill out the form above, and you will be entered to win. All you have to do is sign-up for our What’s Up in YA newsletter that delivers all things young adult literature to your inbox.

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New Books

New Books for the First Tuesday of April!

Hello, star bits, and happy April! I hope you are ready to add more books to your TBR. I know I say this at least once a year, but I really, really need someone to invent a machine to stop time, so we can all catch up on our reading. I mean, it’s getting ridiculous that this isn’t a thing yet. I want it now! (“I want to lock it all up in my pocket…“) Well, even though we can’t stop time (yet), we can still try and shove as many books in our brains as possible. Starting with new releases. And, hey, wouldja look at that — there are a whole bunch of new releases listed below!

At the top of my list of books to acquire today are The Night in Question by Susan Fletcher, Women! In! Peril! by Jessie Ren Marshall, and Clear by Carys Davies. And on this week’s episode of All the Books!, Danika and I talked about great books we loved that are out this week, including The Husbands, Something Kindred, and The Murder of Mr. Ma.

Today, I am doing a round-up of several exciting books from the first Tuesday of April 2024. Below, you’ll find titles (loosely) broken up into several categories to make it easier for your browsing convenience. I hope you have fun with it! And as with each first Tuesday newsletter, I am putting asterisks *** next to the books that I have had the chance to read and loved. YAY, BOOKS!

cover of Sociopath: A Memoir by Patric Gagne; school portrait of the author as a young girl, with blonde hair

Biography and Memoir

Move by Move: Life Lessons on and off the Chessboard by Maurice Ashley

Sociopath: A Memoir by Patric Gagne, PhD

The Minotaur at Calle Lanza by Zito Madu

We Loved It All: A Memory of Life by Lydia Millet

Rebel Rising: A Memoir by Rebel Wilson

Wild Life: Finding My Purpose in an Untamed World by Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant

cover of The Husbands by Holly Gramazio; illustration of a ladder leading to an attic with the title tumbling down the rungs

Fiction

The Husbands by Holly Gramazio***

Clear by Carys Davies***

The Cemetery of Untold Stories by Julia Alvarez

The Sentence by Matthew Baker

The Hollow Beast by Christophe Bernard, Lazer Lederhendler (translator)

Village Weavers by Myriam J.A. Chancy

The Audacity by Ryan Chapman

I Cheerfully Refuse by Leif Enger 

A Good Happy Girl by Marissa Higgins

American Daughters by Piper Huguley

cover of The Stone Home by Crystal Hana Kim; image of person kneeling down in front of a large stone under a setting sun

Orphia and Eurydicius by Elyse John 

Relative Strangers by A.H. Kim

The Stone Home by Crystal Hana Kim***

All We Were Promised by Ashton Lattimore

Women! In! Peril! by Jessie Ren Marshall***

Choice by Neel Mukherjee

Beautiful Beautiful by Brandon Reid

The Titanic Survivors’ Book Club by Timothy Schaffert

Habitations by Sheila Sundar

Table for Two: Fictions by Amor Towles

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.

Middle Grade and Picture Books

cover of Sky & Ty 1: Howdy, Partner! by Steve Breen; cartoon of a young Black girl in a cowboy hat riding an orange dinosaur

Ahoy! by Sophie Blackall

Sky & Ty 1: Howdy, Partner! by Steve Breen***

The Mystery of Locked Rooms by Lindsay Currie

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

Timid by Jonathan Todd***

Meet Me on Mercer Street by Booki Vivat***

Mystery and Thriller

The Murder of Mr. Ma by John Shen Yen Nee and SJ Rozan***

I Disappeared Them by Preston L. Allen

Young Rich Widows by Kimberly Belle, Layne Fargo, Cate Holahan, Vanessa Lillie

She’s Not Sorry by Mary Kubica

cover of Nosy Neighbors by Freya Sampson; illustration of two women peering through the mail slot in a door

Ash Dark as Night (A Harry Ingram Mystery Book 2) by Gary Phillips

The Sicilian Inheritance by Jo Piazza

Nosy Neighbors by Freya Sampson

City in Ruins (The Danny Ryan Trilogy) by Don Winslow

Nonfiction

How to Train Your Human: A Cat’s Guide by Babas, Katherine Gregor (translator)

With My Back to the World: Poems by Victoria Chang

Joy is the Justice We Give Ourselves by J. Drew Lanham

You Are Here: Poetry in the Natural World edited by Ada Limón

Like Love: Essays and Conversations by Maggie Nelson

All Things Are Too Small: Essays in Praise of Excess by Becca Rothfeld

The Mango Tree: A Memoir of Fruit, Florida, and Felony by Annabelle Tometich

cover of Like Love: Essays and Conversations by Maggie Nelson; purple with large pink font

The Lantern and the Night Moths: Five Modern and Contemporary Chinese Poets in Translation edited and translated by Yilin Wang

Romance

Here We Go Again by Alison Cochrun

Just for the Summer by Abby Jimenez

Fate Be Changed by Farrah Rochon

Sci-fi, Fantasy, and Horror

Someone You Can Build a Nest In by John Wiswell***

A Short Walk Through a Wide World by Douglas Westerbeke 

Court of Wanderers (Reaper Book 2) by Rin Chupeco

Play of Shadows (Court of Shadows, #1) by Sebastien de Castell

The Monstrous Misses Mai by Van Hoang

cover of Someone You Can Build a Nest In by John Wiswell; red with human-ish person standing in red flames

This Skin Was Once Mine and Other Disturbances by Eric LaRocca

Lake of Souls: The Collected Short Fiction by Ann Leckie

Young Adult

Something Kindred by Ciera Burch

The Black Girl Survives in This One: Horror Stories edited by Desiree S. Evans and Saraciea J. Fennell

Made Glorious by Lindsay Eagar 

The Misdirection of Fault Lines by Anna Gracia

Otherworldly by F.T. Lukens

orange cat on the back of a red couch, sitting like a person with one long leg stuck straight out; photo by Liberty Hardy

This week: I’m currently reading Model Home by Rivers Solomon and The Sexual Life of Flowers by Simon Klein. Things have been bananas around here in Maine still, so I haven’t had time to start watching a new show yet, but I have a good feeling that this spring is going to yield great things. It was such a mild winter here this year, aside from the random snowstorm we had last weekend. The warm air and little critters everywhere are giving me new life. Moving on: The song stuck in my head (and now in yours) is “Prince Ali” from Aladdin. (You’re welcome!) And here’s a cat photo: Zevon is putting his best foot forward.*

*I don’t actually know if that’s his best foot. He has four of them, and they’re all pretty cute.


That’s it for me today, friends. I am sending you love and good wishes for whatever is happening in your life right now. Thank you, as always, for joining me each week as I rave about books! See you next week. – XO, Liberty

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Swords and Spaceships

Hat Tip to the Trans Cyborgs Out There

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’ve got new releases for you and a bit of trans pride! We missed the Trans Day of Visibility by a couple of days…or did we? Because when you’re in my house, every day is Trans Day of Visibility, my loves. Be glorious today and every day! 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

picture of a Trans cyborg sticker

Trans Cyborg Sticker by BoyPilotGoods

I saw a lot of hilarious T-shirts while looking for trans pride stuff (“Guess who failed their gender assignment” is one I’m still giggling about), but this sticker wins from the sci-fi angle. Hat tip and much love to all my trans cyborgs out there! $4

New Releases

Cover of Play of Shadows by Sebastien de Castell

Play of Shadows by Sebastien de Castell

Damelas used an archaic law to flee a judicial duel with the Vixen, one that allowed him to take the stage as an actor and use that role as a shield. But then, one night, a ghostly voice in his head forces a confession from him instead of the lines he’s practiced: the city’s greatest hero might, in fact, be a murderer and a traitor. With that ugliness in the open, Damelas has no choice but to try to unearth the full truth of the matter, not helped by the fact that most everyone around him wants him dead.

Cover of Darker by Four by June C.L. Tan

Darker by Four by June CL Tan

Rui has magic, but only one goal for it: to avenge the death of her mother. Yiran has no magic, and feels like a hollow shell, shunned by his family because of this lack that is not his fault. When an accident transfers Rui’s magic to Yiran, he feels he’s finally been given the life he should have had, while she’s left defenseless. but Rui may hold the key to the missing death god, and she can leverage that knowledge to get what she wants…she thinks.

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

Riot Recommendations

This year’s trans dar of visibility didn’t fall on a newsletter day, so I want to spotlight a couple of books by my fellow trans authors!

the cover of The Bruising of Qilwa

The Bruising of Qilwa by Naseem Jamnia

Firuz-e Jafari is a refugee in the Democratic City-State of Qilwa, escaping from the slaughter of traditional blood magic practitioners like themself. Firuz takes work as a healer in a free clinic, and all seems well…until a mysterious illness shows up, one that leaves bruises on its victims. When accusations of blood magic begin to surface, Firuz must solve the origin of the disease to save themself and their fellow refugees.

cover of unwieldy creatures of addie tsai

Unwieldy Creatures by Addie Tsai

In this retelling of Frankenstein, Plum, an intern at an embryology lab, runs away from home to be with her girlfriend, only to be deserted. She ends up in the employ of Dr. Frank, a brilliant scientist who will happily compromise all she claims to hold dear in her pursuit of procreation without the need for sperm or egg. Their success, a carefully crafted creation, is quickly abandoned at birth due to complications that come at the hands of a twisted revenge.

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.