Categories
Today In Books

Here’s Your First Look at John Le Carré’s Final Novel: Today in Books

Crime Novelist Mo Hayder Dies at 59

British crime novelist Mo Hayder has died at the age of 59 after being diagnosed with motor neurone disease (MND) on December 22. Mo Hayder, which was the pen name for Clare Dunkel, was often called the “queen of fear” for her dark, shocking thriller stories. Hayder’s publisher Transworld, who announced the death earlier this week, said that since Hayder’s diagnosis, the author “fought valiantly,” but ultimately “the disease progressed at an alarming rate.” The publisher reported that Clare Dunkel was working on a new series under the name Theo Sand. The new novel The Book of Sand will be published in early 2022. The author is survived by her daughter Lotte and her husband Bob.

Here’s Your First Look at John Le Carré’s Final Novel

Legendary spy novelist John le Carré’s posthumous novel Silverview will be released on October 12th of this year, and here’s your fist look at the book. Le Carré’s final novel follows Julian Lawndsley who flees the city to work at a bookstore in a small town. Meanwhile, a London spy chief arrives to that same town to investigate a potential leak. Silverview will include an afterword from le Carré’s son Nick Cornwell, paying tribute to his father — along with his siblings and an archivist, he’s currently cataloguing all of le Carré’s work. “This is the authentic le Carré, telling one more story,” Cornwell said. “The book is fraught, forensic, lyrical, and fierce, at long last searching the soul of the modern Secret Intelligence Service itself. It’s a superb and fitting final novel.”

4thWrite Short Story Prize Reveals 2021 Shortlist

The 4thWrite Short Story Prize—a prize seeking out the best new Black, Asian, and minority ethnic writers—has announced its 2021 shortlist. Chosen from a longlist of twelve stories, the six finalist are: “Cadaver” by Sulaxana Hippisley; “Home Is Not Here” by Laura Blake; “Hopscotch” by Inigo Laguda; “The Ritual Seat of the King” by Zimbabwe-born Gift Nyoni; “Pontianak” by architect Nicola Sheppey; and “Postpositions” by Amaan Hyder. The winner will be announced on September 1st. The winner’s prize includes £1,000, a one-day publishing workshop at 4th Estate, and publication on The Guardian website.

#TheNewLatinoBoom: The Rise of Literature Published in Spanish in the U.S.

In the United States, there’s been a growing interest in Spanish literature in its original language. Here’s what you should know about the New Latino Boom.

Categories
The Fright Stuff

Ringing in the End of (Summer) Days

Hey‌ ‌there‌ horror fans, ‌I’m‌ ‌Jessica‌ ‌Avery‌ ‌and‌ ‌I’ll‌ ‌be‌ ‌delivering‌ ‌your‌ ‌weekly‌ ‌brief‌ ‌of‌ ‌all‌ ‌that’s‌ ‌ghastly‌ ‌and‌ ‌grim‌ ‌in‌ ‌the‌ ‌world‌ ‌of‌ ‌Horror.‌ ‌Whether‌ ‌you’re‌ ‌looking‌ ‌for‌ ‌a‌ ‌backlist‌ ‌book‌ ‌that‌ ‌will‌ ‌give‌‌ you‌ ‌the‌ ‌willies,‌ ‌a‌ ‌terrifying‌ ‌new‌ ‌release,‌ ‌or‌ ‌the‌ ‌latest‌ ‌in‌ ‌horror‌ ‌community‌ ‌news,‌ ‌you’ll‌ ‌find‌ ‌it‌ ‌here‌ in‌ ‌The‌ ‌Fright‌ ‌Stuff.

It is my favorite day of the month, ghouls and goblins. It’s new releases day! Every month on the first Monday of the month it is my pleasure to list for you some of the forthcoming releases that I am most excited about. Let me tell you, from here until that most haunting of holidays, Halloween, our months are jam-packed with horror! It’s going to be a great season. The humid, sweaty slog of summer is nearly over, Autumn is in the offing, and what better way to welcome in the dying of the year than with some new books?

So clear your calendars and make room on your TBRs for these fantastic August new releases!

Cover of Queen of Teeth by Hailey Piper

Queen of Teeth by Hailey Piper (August 1st)

Oh yeah. Months of waiting, but folks it is finally time! What better way to kick of your August reading than with Hailey Piper’s newest, teeth-tastic horror novel. When Yaya Betancourt discovers that she has spouted teeth in her vagina, she assumes that it is a side effect of a pharmaceutically induced genetic condition that she and thousands of others developed in the womb with a little help from AlphaBeta Pharmaceutical. Whoops. But when she realizes that ABP is determined to hunt her down after her incident of toothy sprouting, and when her condition suddenly… worsens… Yaya has to consider the possibility that there may be another, darker motive behind ABP’s pursuit.

Cover of Tidepool by Nicole Willson

Tidepool by Nicole Willson (August 3rd)

You know how sometimes you trip across one of those books that’s just an instant purchase/preorder? Yeah. I have been (im)patiently waiting for Tidepool, and I am so glad that’s almost here! It’s 1913, and Sorrow Hamilton’s brother Henry has gone missing from the small town of Tidepool. Despite her father’s demand that she remain home in Baltimore, she sets out to find her brother. When eviscerated bodies start washing up with the tide, Sorrow has to consider the possibility that when it comes to Tidepool and its secrets, she may be in way over her head.

cover of the dead and the dark by courtney gould

The Dead and the Dark by Courtney Gould (August 3rd)

Finally. Come to my arms delightful, queer small town YA horror novel. Two girls – Logan, whose dads are the stars of the popular TV ghost hunting show ParaSpectors, and Ashley, a Snakebite native whose boyfriend has gone missing – face off against a small town full of secrets, slipping slowly into chaos. Ashley’s boyfriend was only the first in a string of missing teenagers, and now he’s returned to haunt her. The only one she can trust is Logan as the pair’s investigation into the town’s secrets threatens everything they believe they know about Snakebite, their families, and themselves.

Cover of Mine by Delilah S. Dawson

Mine by Delilah S. Dawson (August 10th)

You know that horror trope where the unsuspecting family movies into a new house in a new town and a new state and it’s supposed to be their fresh start? Forget the past, honey! Everything’s going to be great here in Haunted House in Murder, U.S.A.! (Okay not really but you get the point.) Well for Lily’s family, the move to Florida that really was suppose to be their beginning couldn’t be off to a worse start. The house is disgusting, full of trash with a slime ridden pool in the backyard and an old dock crumbling away into the creepy swamp out back. But the worst part is that Lily is pretty sure the house is haunted, and no one will believe her.

Bad Witch Burning by Jessica Lewis (August 24th)

Hang onto your bookmarks, folks, because I’ve been hearing some amazing things about Jessica Lewis’ Bad Witch Burning. If you like your books dark, emotional, and witchy (with a side of necromancy for good measure) this is going to be one YA horror novel you will not want to miss! Katrell makes her living talking to the dead. But while clients are happy to pay her for access to their dead loved ones, they don’t pay well enough. So when a routine summoning goes wrong, resulting in Katrell accidentally raising a spirit from the dead and her realizing how much money there is to be made from a little light necromancy, she jumps at the chance to put poverty behind her. Even warnings from the dead themselves can’t slow her down. But the bigger the magic the higher the price, and the dark is circling, waiting for Katrell to fall.

My Heart is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones (August 31st)

I am absolutely going to die a slow death waiting for the end of August when I can finally get my hands on My Heart is a Chainsaw. I have been making grabby hands at this slasher-inspired horror for months, and I am so excited. Jade Daniels has always been an outsider in Proofrock, the small lake town she grew up in that is now slowly being over run by gentrification. In her anger and her loneliness, Jade turns to horror for comfort, letting herself get lost in a world of masked killers and revenge. But when Proofrock’s wealthy newcomers begin dying in bizarre ways, Jade realizes that there is a familiar pattern to their deaths. A pattern that only she can see, and that may foretell a massacre in the making.

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

As always, if you are looking for even more exciting August horror releases (particularly since I ran out of room for all the amazing titles being published this month) be sure to visit the grand champion of lists that is Nightfire’s “All the Horror Books We’re Excited About in 2021”.

Speaking of TBR additions: The Ladies of Horror Fiction Award recipients have been announced!

This article by Ally Russell (@AllyOutThere) is a wonderful (and all too relatable) discussion about growing up as a horror fan.

As always, you can catch me on twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

Categories
True Story

Olympic Reads for Champion Readers

I’m gonna admit it, I rarely get into the Olympics. But we were visiting my wife’s mom and the Olympic softball game got put on and I was INTO IT. Is it a cliché? Perhaps (yes). But I woke up so very early to watch them lose to Japan. NOT EVEN MAD ABOUT IT THOUGH because Japan looked so happy to win. Yeah, it was a sober response from the USA, but now I am someone who has opinions about Monica Abbott (the opinion is that she is great), so that feels like a win for everyone.

Let’s look at some Olympic-centered books!

My Mother's Daughter cover

My Mother’s Daughter: A Memoir of Struggle and Triumph by Perdita Felicien

Two-time Olympian Felicien is a retired hurdler from Canada. Wow, hurdling. Running is hard enough, but let’s add jumping over things to that. I looked up the height of Olympic hurdles, and it is 3’6″, which is 67% of my height. In her memoir, Felicien talks about her mother’s immigration to Canada from St. Lucia, and how despite the many obstacles they faced as a family, her mother Catherine pulled them through.

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The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics by Daniel James Brown

Yeah, like I’m doing an Olympian list of books and NOT including this one. This is about the University of Washington rowing team that represented the United States at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin (the same games where Jesse Owens won FOUR GOLD MEDALS). It details their backgrounds, their growing up during the Great Depression, and how they beat Italy and Germany to win gold.

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Native American Son: The Life and Sporting Legend of Jim Thorpe by Kate Buford

Thorpe was the first Native American to win a gold medal for the United States in the Olympics, winning TWO gold medals at the 1912 Olympics for classic pentathlon and decathlon. He also played football, baseball, and basketball. He grew up in the Sac and Fox Nation, and after his Olympic wins, played with the New York Giants baseball team (yes, baseball) and played professionally for six seasons! You might have seen the story floating around the internet that someone stole his shoes before the decathlon. He found a mismatched pair of shoes, competed in them, and won gold. Amazing.

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Fire on the Track: Betty Robinson and the Triumph of the Early Olympic Women by Roseanne Montillo

Robinson was the winner of the first Olympic 100 meter dash for women at the 1928 Summer Olympics. This history encompasses her career, as well as that of early Olympians like Babe Didrikson (won “two gold medals in track and field at the 1932 Summer Olympics, before turning to professional golf and winning 10 LPGA major championships”[x]) and Stella Walsh (represented Poland at the 1932 Olympics in the 100 m dash and won gold).

Amazing job to all! I could do none of these things. Making it to the Olympics itself is a huge achievement. And if anyone comes for Simone Biles, I will come for you. *narrows eyes*

For more nonfiction reads, check out the For Real podcast which I co-host with the excellent Kim here at Book Riot. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Best British Fantasy Finalists

Happy Friday, shipmates! Wow, how the heck is this the last Friday of July already? Where did the month go??? It’s Alex, and I’ve got some neat award nominees to share with you, and some fun links for your edification. And I don’t know about you, but I am going to see The Green Knight tonight and I could not be more excited. I’ll shriek at you about it on Tuesday if it was as good as I expect it to be. Have a great weekend, and stay safe out there, space pirates.

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


News and Views

Women, Worldbuilding, and Fantasy

Militaries plunder science fiction for technology ideas, but turn a blind eye to the genre’s social commentary

Q&A with Bonnie Jo Stufflebeam

Interview with Silvia Moreno-Garcia

A24 will adapt Octavia E. Butler’s Parable of the Sower into a movie

Now we know what the guts of Mars look like

Because I still don’t know WTF I watched, you should also see the trailer for Lamb

Star Wars: The High Republic: Out of the Shadows author Justina Ireland explains why the Jedi are a little sexier

Were we wrong all along? Interspecies relations in CJ Cherryh’s Foreigner series

SFF eBook Deals

I’m Waiting for You by Kim Bo-Young for $1.99

The Bone Maker by Sarah Beth Durst for $1.99

City of Stairs by Robert Jackson Bennett for $1.99

On Book Riot

16 books like Red Queen

Rebellions, rivals, and ruthless rulers: 9 fantasy books with epic political intrigue

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast contains a summer reading list

Register to win copies of The Last She by H.J. Nelson and Crossbones by Kimberly Vale

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes & Noble gift card, a Kindle Paperwhite, and a Kindle Oasis.

Free Association Friday: British Fantasy Finalists

This week we got to see the short list for the 2021 British Fantasy Awards, and there were a lot of books on there that you might not be familiar with from the other award shortlists. These are just the finalists for the Robert Holdstock Award, which is for Best Fantasy Novel.

NOTE: The City We Became by N.K. Jemisin is also a finalist for this award, and deservedly so, but I’ve left it out of the big list below because I’ve already expounded upon it multiple times in other finalist lists.

Cover of Threading the Labyrinth by Tiffani Angus

Threading the Labyrinth by Tiffani Angus

Toni leaves behind her failing gallery in New Mexico to come to England and inherit a manor house from a mysterious relative she never knew she had. Surrounded by overgrown gardens and a crumbling house, she submerges herself in the history of the house, learning about all the people who tended the gardens over the centuries. Soon she can see the ghosts in the changing garden and begins to understand the past that echos into her modern life from deep in the past.

Cover of Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow

The Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow

When the 19th is about to turn into the 20th century, there is no room for witches, and hasn’t been for quite some time. All the witches have been long since burned, and if a woman wants power now, she needs to fight for her suffrage. When the three Eastwood sisters join the suffrage movement in New Salem, they want not only this new power, but to reclaim what is old and forgotten. But their enemies aren’t just the misogynists that believe women have no place outside the home, but also those who will not suffer a witch to live… let alone vote.

Cover of Dark River by Rym Kechacha

Dark River by Rym Kechacha

A story of two mothers, 8000 years apart, struggling to save their children from the destructive future they see coming. In Doggerland, Shaye takes her family to a sacred oak grove to perform a ritual that she hopes will save them all–but what she discovers will cut her deeply. Shante flees a London threatened by climate change, trying to reach the north and the new opportunities is presents–but first she must survive a dangerous wilderness.

Cover of The Bone Shard Daughter by Andrea Stewart

The Bone Shard Daughter by Andrea Stewart

The emperor’s mastery of bone shard magic has allowed him to rule for many decades, creating bone constructs to maintain his power. His daughter Lin vows to prove her worth when he refuses to recognize her as heir, and the path she sees to that is through mastering the bone shard magic of her father. When the revolution her father has been trying to suppress reaches the gates of the palace, it’s for Lin to decide what she will do to claim the throne–and save her people.

By Force Alone by Lavie Tidhar

A new telling of the Arthurian legend, where nothing you know is true. Arthur is an egotistical gangster promoted above his ability. Merlin is an otherworldly parasite. Excalibur is not a sword, but a shady arms deal with an even shadier dealer. And Britain? A garbage heap that Rome got out of as soon as it could.

…all right, maybe that last one is true, from a certain point of view.


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

How Much Are YOUR Tarot Cards Worth?

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. You ever have one of those days where your brain just refuses to do things like remember schedule changes, do basic math, or print the correct documents? Yeah, that’s been my day today. I’ll try to get through this newsletter in one piece.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

The Niles-Maine Public Library (IL) board has agreed to a compromise budget that doesn’t cut staff hours or building improvements, but does make significant cuts to collections, librarian outreach efforts, and more.

Two library workers have filed a lawsuit against the city of New Orleans, saying that a recently-issued social media policy for city employees is censoring their right to free speech on their own private social media accounts.

The Whitefish Bay Public Library (WI) removed a sign addressing systemic racism after community members complained.

Cool Library Updates

A new Little Free Library program will bring thousands of diverse books to Detroit neighborhoods.

Worth Reading

The rescue of the New York Public Library.

Book Adaptations in the News

Shailene Woodley will star in the upcoming adaptation of Lisa Taddeo’s Three Women.

Apple has tapped Siân Heder to write and direct an adaptation of Judy Heumann’s bestselling memoir, Being Heumann: An Unrepentant Memoir of a Disability Rights Activist.

Netflix will adapt The Night Agent by Matthew Quirk as a series.

Anansi Boys by Neil Gaiman is getting a series adaptation from Amazon.

Arthur is ending its 25-year run in 2022.

The Stephen King short story “Strawberry Spring” is being adapted as a podcast.

Casting update for The Shining Girls.

Here’s the latest trailer for Dune.

Books & Authors in the News

Controversy continues at the Columbia County school district, where a local parent is pushing back on the school’s decision to include Raina Telgemeier’s Drama on library shelves.

Parents of Northampton Area School District students expressed concern over book donations from the Conscious Kids Foundation, claiming that the foundation uses “Marxist critical race theory.” Don’t mind me, my head is just exploded in fury.

Five authors have been arrested in Hong Kong for sedition for publishing children’s book that tries to explain the pro-democracy movement and portrays supporters as sheep surrounded by wolves.

Numbers & Trends

San Francisco public libraries loan the most books per capita, per year worldwide.

What are the fastest selling books in US publishing history?

Take a peek at the results of Book Riot’s pandemic reading habits survey.

Award News

The winners of the Eisner Awards, Agatha Awards, and Kitschie Awards have been announced.

The 2021 World Fantasy Award finalists have been announced.

The 2021 Booker Prize longlist has been announced.

Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous

Sylvia Plath’s tarot cards just sold for $207,000.

Are book clubs better on Zoom?

On the Riot

How do rural libraries serve patrons?

The best places to find library jobs.

Great library displays and how effective they are.

Meet the Wind River Reservation Little Free Library.

Little Free Diverse Libraries: what they are and how you can help.

How to get into BookTok.

Forging more mindful connections to books.

How reading Lord of the Rings helped this reader cope with their OCD.

The history of book blurbing.


Have a peaceful weekend, friends. I’ll see you on Tuesday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book: The Knockout by Sajni Patel

Welcome to Read This Book, a newsletter where I recommend one book that I think you absolutely must read. The books will vary across genre and age category to include new releases, backlist titles, and classics. If you’re ready to explode your TBR, buckle up!

This week’s pick is one I read on recommendation of fellow YA author Emma Kress earlier this summer, and I loved it! I don’t think it’s getting nearly enough attention, but it’s the perfect read for those of you who are immersing yourselves in all things 2020 Olympics!

The Knockout book cover

The Knockout by Sajni Patel

Kareena Thakkar started practicing Muay Thai as a kid, in part because she needed an outlet for the stress of her father’s terminal illness diagnosis. Now she’s in high school and at the top of her game. When she receives an invite to the Muay Thai US Open, she’s ecstatic. Winning could mean incredible things for her career as an athlete, and it could even mean a shot at the Olympic team when Muy Thai is officially incorporated as an Olympics sport. But there are a few problems: Her family can’t afford the cost of her competition, her dad’s health is worsening, their Indian community has pretty much abandoned the family, and in order to keep her grades up, she’s agreed to tutor Amit Patel, the model Indian guy she’s falling for. No pressure.

I was a huge fan of Patel’s adult romance, The Trouble With Hating You, so I was super excited to check out her YA debut, and I was not disappointed. This is such a great novel about not only the physical intensity of being an elite athlete training for a big competition, but also the mental toughness that is required. Kareena can’t help but worry about her parents and their family’s financial burden, even though she’s told not to let it distract her from her training. Add on top of that the social pressure and the alienation she feels from her Indian community because she isn’t considered ladylike or proper since she takes part in an intense contact sport, and Kareena has a lot of mental and emotional challenges in addition to the physical challenges of training constantly, eating right, and getting her head in the competition. I can’t help but think that this nuanced focus on an athlete’s mental and emotional wellbeing is more important than ever, especially given how Simone Biles made the brave choice to value her mental health over a competition.

The book is also really swoony, and I love that Patel never puts Amit in direct opposition of Kareena’s aspirations. She keeps her sport a secret from him at first because she’s worried about the judgment she might face, from him and his parents, but when she tells him about her sport and her big competition, he’s so supportive and he lets her set the pace of their relationship. That was so wonderful to see, and I loved that their relationship is very considerate and healthy, and Amit is supportive of Kareena and respectful of her wishes and boundaries when it comes to training.

At its heart, this is a book about an elite athlete who has what it takes to go all the way to the top, but her emotional journey is about learning to accept support from the people who are enthusiastic about giving it…and drawing boundaries between herself and those people who aren’t supportive or whose support is conditional. And that’s why Kareena is such a strong and admirable protagonist, and why we root for her!

Bonus: I listened to the audiobook narrated by Soneela Nankani, and it was excellent, as all of her audiobook narrations are!

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Find me on Book Riot, the Insiders Read Harder podcast, All the Books, and Twitter. If someone forwarded this newsletter to you, click here to subscribe.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Summer Thriller Picks!

Hello mystery fans! Time for some mystery book roundups, news, adaptations, ebook deals, and a bit of my reading life.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

Velvet Was The Night cover image

9 of the Best Summer 2021 Thrillers

Liberty and Patricia discuss new releases including Not a Happy Family by Shari Lapena on All The Books!

Amanda and Jenn help readers find paranormal mysteries and read-alikes for Veronica Speedwell fans on Get Booked!

‘Lucifer’ Season 6 to Premiere in September

Read an excerpt from Samantha Downing’s new page-turner For Your Own Good

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12 authors on their must-read summer thriller picks

Escapist Reading with a Murder Mystery

Mystery, Mayhem & Nostalgia: Inside The Intense World Of Nancy Drew Computer Game Fans

Dexter Revival Premiered First Trailer at Comic-Con 2021: Watch

Dread Pirate Roberts escaped development hell: Making Silk Road work as a film

‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ on Hulu: Everything We Know

Someone made a dress to match the cover of Pride and Premeditation!

6 Great Books Hitting Shelves This Week

A Bit Of My Reading Life

Only the Holy Remain cover image

I’m currently reading a murder mystery procedural of a detective on leave who has decided to investigate on his own the murder of Father Pantone, because it was his friend who he was visiting when he discovered the crime scene: Only The Holy Remain by Alverne Ball. So far it’s checking off the tropes I like and it’s tossed in a job I don’t think I’d read about before, a military chaplain.

I refuse to get off this romance train I’ve been on since around 2016 and am loving Alexis Daria’s A Lot Like Adiós. And my fantastic memoir streak continues as I just finished the excellent audiobook for Somebody’s Daughter by Ashley C. Ford.

And a few authors I really like have upcoming books I am THE most excited to have gotten my greedy little hands on galleys: Secret Identity by Alex Segura; Silent Parade by Keigo Higashino; The New Girl by Jesse Q. Sutanto. I squealed for each one!

Kindle Deals

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A Spell for Trouble (An Enchanted Bay Mystery #1) by Esme Addison

Start a new cozy mystery with magic for $1.99!

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Slippery Creatures (The Will Darling Adventures #1) by K.J. Charles

The only thing I know about this is that it is a historical romance mystery and that I snagged it RUL quick for $3.99!

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The Project by Courtney Summers

If you’re a fan of reading about cults and like character driven mysteries, grab this one for $2.99!

(TW brief on-page suicide, detail/ past child abuse recounted, details)


Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2021 releases. 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 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.

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Riot Rundown

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The Stack

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Today In Books

Tracey Ullman Narrating David Sedaris’ Latest Audiobook: Today in Books

Regé-Jean Page to Star in Paramount’s Reboot of THE SAINT

Bridgerton’s Regé-Jean Page is set to star and executive produce Parmount’s upcoming reboot of The Saint. The project is based in part on Leslie Charteris’ 1920s book series and the 1960s UK TV series, starring Roger Moore. The story follows Simon Templar, also known as The Saint, a criminal and a thief for hire who goes on an adventure that takes him around the world. Plot details for the film are still unknown, but insiders say this new version of The Saint will be a completely fresh take on the character and his world. Lorenzo DiBonaventura, Brad Krevoy, and Mark Vahradian will produce the film, and Kwame Kwei-Armah is writing the script.

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Working on Book About Leadership and Philanthropy

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are keeping busy. After the announcement that Harry would be publishing a memoir, the royal couple also announced that they are working together on a book about “leadership and philanthropy.” Additionally, it is rumored that Meghan is working on a memoir of her own and another book about “wellness.”

Tracey Ullman Narrating the Latest David Sedaris Audiobook

David Sedaris’ latest book A Carnival of Snackery will be hitting shelves (and headphones) this October. And if you decide to go for the audiobook version of the book, you’ll be treated to a narration from actress and comedian Tracey Ullman. While Sedaris traditionally narrates his own works, this collaboration with Ullman was what Sedaris wanted for this particular book. He explained, “I knew early on that I wanted someone to read all the U.K. and Irish and Australian entries in this book. So much of what I’ve heard in those countries is funny specifically because of the way it was said…Then I thought, Well, since people think it’s a woman recording my audiobooks anywaywhy not get the real thing? A British woman who’s fun and patient and good at accents. Tracey Ullman.”

No More New Episodes of Arthur

Say farewell to all the memes. The PBS animated series Arthur is ending in 2022.