Categories
Audiobooks

My Favorite Audiobooks of All Time

Hello there, audiophiles! I’m Kendra, and I’ll be your new resident audiobooks enthusiast moving forward. A huge thanks to Vanessa for showing me the ropes, and I’m so excited for her as she takes the helm as Book Riot’s new Managing Editor. *confetti cannons*

As a little introduction, I’m a disabled book nerd from Appalachian Ohio and now live in the South Carolina Low Country with my Corgi, Dylan. Like I’ve mentioned in previous articles on Book Riot, because of my disability, I can’t read print anymore, so audiobooks have been my lifeline to the bookish world. I use roughly a dozen audiobook apps to keep up with my own quest to read ALL of the things!

photo of Kendra and her corgi Dylan

To help us get to know each other, I thought I’d start by sharing some of my favorite audiobooks of all time.

The Golden Compass audiobook cover

The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman

As a kid, I used to listen to audiobooks on my boom box like there was no tomorrow. I fell in love with the audiobook production company Full Cast Audio, which produced books from children’s authors Tamora Pierce and Bruce Coville. But my favorite book of theirs was the full-cast production of His Dark Materials Trilogy. I still listen to the series every few years and cry at the end of The Amber Spyglass every time.

Narrated by Philip Pullman and a full cast

Sabriel audiobook cover

Sabriel by Garth Nix

I’ve written a couple of times about my love of playing video games and listening to audiobooks. Sabriel inspired many of my adventures in World of Warcraft—Abhorsen is even my character’s name! Tim Curry (yes, THE Tim Curry) narrates this dark story of the Abhorsen, the title of the person tasked with hunting down necromancers throughout the Old Kingdom. Curry does a particularly excellent job voicing Mogget, a cat (sort of) who is the Abhorsen’s official companion and provides much of the book’s comedic relief.

Narrated by Tim Curry

audiobook cover image of Disability Visibility: Unabridged Selections edited by Alice Wong

Disability Visibility: Unabridged Selections edited by Alice Wong

As a disabled person, I rarely see that part of myself in books. But when I heard about Disability Visibility, I knew I had to pick it up. The essays from the writers inside were everything I’d hoped they’d be, and I felt seen in ways I never had before. Later, Alice Wong told me she wanted as many disabled people included in the project as possible, so she was delighted that Alejandra Ospina, who is also disabled, was chosen to perform the audiobook.

Narrated by Alejandra Ospina

audiobook cover image of The Secret Lives of Church Ladies by Deesha Philyaw

The Secret Lives of Church Ladies by Deesha Philyaw

As an Appalachian, I can’t help but notice that folks often have a certain memoir in mind when they think of Appalachian Literature. So when Appalachian writer Deesha Philyaw started taking the world by storm with her short story collection, The Secret Lives of Church Ladies, I couldn’t have been more thrilled. Philyaw has this way of capturing her characters on a page that is all-engrossing. The all-star audiobook narrator Janina Edwards performs the collection, making the listening experience as close to perfection as you can get.

Narrated by Janina Edwards

audiobook cover image of The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin

The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin

I remember The Fifth Season not just as my first time listening to N.K. Jemisin, but also as the first time I remember adoring Robin Miles. There’s a video online where Miles and Jemisin discuss the making of the audiobook edition, and it’s this magical piece of insider perspective on what a narrator brings to the table.

Narrated by Robin Miles

Those are a few of my favorite audiobooks that I plan on listening and re-listening to until the end of time (or close to it, anyway). But now it’s time for a few new releases!

New Releases – Week of July 6th

audiobook cover image of Rise to the Sun by Leah Johnson

Rise to the Sun by Leah Johnson

After her incredibly successful debut You Should See Me in a Crown, Leah Johnson is back with Rise to the Sun, another young adult queer romance. Like most of the bookternet, I adored Johnson’s first novel, especially since the audiobook edition is narrated by Alaska Jackson, who became an instant favorite of mine. Jackson is back to narrate Rise to the Sun, but this time with Lexi Underwood, and the two make a fabulous team.

Narrated by Alaska Jackson and Lexi Underwood

audiobook cover image of Razorblade Tears by S.A. Cosby

Razorblade Tears by S.A. Crosby

The moment I heard Adam Lazarre-White read the first line of this book, I became hooked. The novel focuses on two ex-cons whose sons are both murdered. They carry a lot with them, including their mixed emotions about their sons being gay and very much in love with each other. But their quest for justice for their sons unites them in a single cause. So buckle in. Crosby’s second novel is just as all-engrossing as his first.

Narrated by Adam Lazarre-White

audiobook cover image of Incense and Sensibility by Sonali Dev

Incense and Sensibility by Sonali Dev

Sonali Dev is back with another Jane Austen retelling, and this time she’s retelling Sense and Sensibility. The novel focuses on Yash Raje, California’s first Indian American gubernatorial candidate, who starts to spiral after witnessing his friend become a victim of a hate crime. Yash’s family turns to his sister’s best friend, India Dashwood, to help teach Yash stress management. This is a romantic comedy, so you can see where this is going, but with Sonali Dev’s storytelling, it’s sure to be quite the journey. As an added bonus, one of my favorite narrators, Soneela Nankani, performs the audiobook!

Narrated by Soneela Nankani

Over on Book Riot

7 More of the Best Audiobooks to Celebrate Disability Pride Month

From Around the Internet

Check out these Audiobook inspired recipes in AudioFile!

Here are 7 Summer Listens from Audiobook Producers

For those who love insider baseball, this article discusses how audiobook royalties work and why they may need to change


I’d love to hear from you! Drop me a line at kendra@readingwomenpodcast.com or say hi over on Instagram @kdwinchester. For even MORE audiobook content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy listening, bookish friends!

~ Kendra

Categories
Canada Giveaways

070721-VanishingStars-CAGiveaway

We’re giving away five copies of The Forest of Vanishing Stars by Kristin Harmel to five lucky Riot readers!

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

Here’s what it’s all about:

The New York Times bestselling author of the “heart-stopping tale of survival and heroism” (People) The Book of Lost Names returns with an evocative coming-of-age World War II story about a young woman who uses her knowledge of the wilderness to help Jewish refugees escape the Nazis—until a secret from her past threatens everything.

Categories
Kid Lit Giveaways

070721-Wayside-KidlitGiveaway

We’re giving away 10 boxed sets of the Wayside School books by Louis Sachar to 10 lucky Riot readers!

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

Here’s what it’s all about:

Wayside School is back in session! Dive into the box set to read the iconic & bestselling stories about the unusually surreal school from Newbery Award-winner Louis Sachar, and don’t miss the newest addition, Beneath the Cloud of Doom, now out in paperback! Over 15 million readers have laughed at the clever and hilarious stories of Wayside School. So what are you waiting for? Come visit Wayside School!

Categories
Riot Rundown

070721-TogetherWeWillGo-RR

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Kidlit Deals for July 7, 2021

Hey there, kidlit pals! I hope you had a great long weekend and you’re staying cool, hydrated, and in the shade this July! I have series starters, award winners, and graphic novels in this bunch of deals. Grab them before they’re gone, because book deals never last long!

Best Friends cover image

Chris Colfer’s The Wishing Spell, the first in the Land of Stories series, is just $2!

And speaking of fantasy series starters, The Oddmire, Book 1: Changeling by William Ritter is just $2!

The sequel to Real Friends, Best Friends, is now just $2.99! Shannon Hale and LeUyen Pham are a dynamite duo.

Scary Stories for Young Foxes by Christian McKay Heidicker and illustrated by Junyi Wu is just $3!

Want to add a Newbery to your TBR? The Midwife’s Apprentice by Karen Cushman is $3.

cover art of The Jumbies

I know I’ve shared The Jumbies by Tracey Baptiste recently, but I am excited to add that all three books in the series are $2 apiece! Pick up Rise of the Jumbies and The Jumbie God’s Revenge!

The Language of Spells by Garret Weyr is a whimsical fantasy for just $2.

Happy reading!
Tirzah

Categories
True Story

New Releases: So Much Good Stuff Here

After finishing one book in June (the busyness of summer! also I have been watching just so much Superstore), I have been diving back into the reading world. I just finished Punch Me Up to the Gods by Brian Broome, which was SO good. My wife and I have very different reading preferences, so I rarely recommend books to her, but I immediately told her she needed to read it. If you love structure, it’s so structured! And Broome is also a poet, which always adds an extra kick to nonfiction writing.

After a dearth of new releases last week, we are back into a deluge, which is a delight. These all look great, so enjoy:

Vessel a Memoir cover

Vessel: A Memoir by Chongda Cai

Look at this cover. LOOK AT THIS COVER. This is a memoir that “illuminates the lives of rural Chinese workers, offering a portrait of generational strife, family, love, and loss.” Cai grows up in a rural fishing village in Fujian province and, after his father has a stroke, has to start earning money for his family and his father’s medical bills. After going to college, he moves to Beijing, where he eventually becomes the editorial director of GQ China (a twist I was not expecting!). This is being compared to Hillbilly Elegy (hm) and The Glass Castle (huh). It looks really interesting.

Books Promiscuously Read cover

Books Promiscuously Read: Reading as a Way of Life by Heather Cass White

If there’s one thing readers are suckers for, it’s books about how great reading is. White is an English professor (natch) who splits the book into three different ways of thinking about reading (Play, Transgression, Insight). She “advocates for a life of constant, disorderly, time-consuming reading, and encourages readers to trust in the value of the exhilaration and fascination such reading entails.” Yesss. Also, this is under 200 pages, and I am all for a short book.

Open Skies cover

Open Skies: My Life as Afghanistan’s First Female Pilot by Niloofar Rahmani with Adam Sikes

In 2010, Afghanistan allowed women to join the armed forces, and in 2013, Niloofar Rahmani became Afghanistan’s first female fixed-wing air force pilot. After receiving death threats from the Taliban, who disapproved of her career choice Rahmani sought and was granted asylum in the United States. She is only in her late twenties, but has already done way more than anyone I know.

Black Nerd Problems cover

Black Nerd Problem: Essays by William Evans, Omar Holmon

If this looks familiar, it’s because I talked about it in my second half of 2021 releases newsletter! Still psyched about this one, and it’s out now. Evans and Holmon write about “everything from Mario Kart and The Wire to issues of representation and police brutality across media.” Side note: I asked last time if it’s too late to watch The Wire and I was assured it’s not, so. That’s on my to-do list. Anyway. Check this out!

The Sound of the Sea cover

The Sound of the Sea: Seashells and the Fate of the Oceans by Cynthia Barnett

Nothing makes me more aware of how much I love nonfiction than when I see a title like this and gasp with delight. Who doesn’t want to learn more about seashells! They’re so neat! I’m not super-clear on whether we’re supposed to take them from beaches, but my guess is no if we apply the “take only memories and leave only footprints” forest ranger rule. Do I have some anyway? Maybe. Yes. It’s fine. But back to Barnett’s book, which probably elucidates these points! It is a “history of seashells and the animals that make them, revealing what they have to tell us about nature, our changing oceans, and ourselves.” Ooo.

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
In The Club

In the Club 07/07/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. If you will, please picture me singing those first dulcet notes of Adele’s Skyfall like a loser because this, indeed, is the end. After just shy of three years bringing you nibbles, sips, and tips for book club, this is my final edition of In the Club.

The good news is that I’m now Book Riot’s Managing Editor (wut wut!)! I’ll still be around doing all the Book Riot things, it’s just time to pass the club torch to someone new. So allow me to introduce our new Associate Editor Erica Ezeifedi! She’ll be taking over this newsletter as of next week. Give her a warm club welcome!

For my final newsletter, I’m hitting you with the club’s greatest hits: random club memories from the last three years that even I have looked back on and went, “how do you have friends?” Then I’ll drop a few club lessons before I bid you adieu.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

Listen, I can’t write my final newsletter and not suggest a toast. Next time you gather for book club, grab some bubbly. Add a little juice for a brunchy mimosa (tangerine has been a recent fave for me), or maybe a little St. Germaine for that sweet, delicate floral flavor. Raise your glass to me—just kidding! Raise your glass to yourselves—to good company, good books, and for just making it through the last couple of years. As for me, I will indeed raise a glass to endings, new beginnings, and the wonderful unifying power of the written word. Salud!

A Look Back at Three Years In the Club

image of two people reading at a wooden table

My Very First Newsletter

First things first — I’m not Jenn! My name is Vanessa and I will be taking over this here newsletter. I’ve been writing for Book Riot for just shy of a year and am super jazzed to be the new bouncer of this club. Get it? Because clubs have bouncers. No? I’m sorry, I’ll stop.

From my very first newsletter back in August 2018

The First of Many Cheesy Song Remixes

This feels like the right time to confess that every time I type the words “in the club,” I most definitely start rapping my very own remix of what was once a college party anthem:

You can find me in the club… of books so there’s no snubs
Look buddy I got the blurbs if you’re into bookish plugs
I’m into reading ARCs from the big and the indie pubs…

What’s that? I’m a loser? Right. Let’s get back to bookish things.

From my second newsletter in April 2018, after which I was shockingly not canned.

P is for Poison

… I really did ask myself, “Would it be weird if I suggested concocting poisons from A is for Arsenic as a book club activity?” I mean, it’s really just chemistry. Yay science! Since I’m really not trying to go down for a mass poisoning though, I do have an alternate suggestion.

From June 2019’s “Please Don’t Get Me Arrested” newsletter

Has Anyone Checked on Andrew Keegan?

…Ah, the film that had all the girls thinking they could drop it low to Biggie’s “Hypnotize” just because Julia Stiles tried it. Shade aside, I love this movie and instantly start singing “Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You” when I think of it. I invite you to join me in spending a little time with Willy Shakespeare, then with Heath Ledger. Also, when’s the last time anyone checked on Andrew Keegan? Is he okay? Does he have snacks? Is he living comfortably off that Tiger Beat money?

From April 2020, book + adaptation pairings
still frame of Andrew Keegan and Larisa Oleynik from movie 10 Things I Hate About You https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0147800/mediaviewer/rm2609944577/
“Do you know who I am? I have TIGER BEAT money!” – a thing Andrew Keegan probably said

That Poor, Poor Family

…After a fire drill and a miscommunication result in a rescue gone viral, the two embark on a fakelationship with some very steamy sexy time scenes. In case you’ve forgotten, I learned this while audiobooking in my car as Dani went on about her throbbing clitoris right as I pulled up next to a family in a Subaru at a stoplight.

From November 2020’s “pick a mood and I’ll give you a book to read” newsletter. I still think about that Subaru.

That Time I Called a Character Hottie McGuapo

… To prove that he’s a brujo, he performs the sacred coming-of-age ritual wherein brujx come into their powers; with the help of his BFF cousin, he uses his powers to summon the ghost of his murdered cousin and set it free. Pero….. the ghost he summons isn’t his cousin. His name is Julian, he refuses to leave, and he’s what I’ve affectingly dubbed a Hottie McGuapo. The book is inspired by lots of different Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) rituals and is full of Spanish much to my heart’s delight. It’s a sweet, funny and romantic read with great conversation potential.

From December 2020, Best Book Club Books of 2020

What the Club Life Taught Me

Finally, I leave you with lessons I’ve learned from writing this newsletter.

  • Book clubs can be big and boisterous or a one-person affair. Whether you’re gathering with a large group or reading independently at a silent book club, it all counts.
  • People want to be heard, or at least know that they could be. One of the most important aspects of book club is to make sure it isn’t just one or two people dominating the conversation. Everyone should feel like they can contribute, or like they could at any given time. Sometimes it takes a minute for some folks to speak up, but they should feel empowered to do so.
  • Life Happens. So you can’t make this month’s meeting, or maybe the whole things gets postponed. Maybe it’s still on but you didn’t finish the book. It’s all fine! Book club should be a thing that adds to your life, not one detracts from it or gives you feelings of guilt. Jump in and out as you see fit, meet irregularly, go to the meeting for discussion even if you haven’t read the book.
  • Book club is a great place to learn. We’re all on different paths on our journey to be our best selves, and while I certainly don’t think books alone are going to save the world, they can be a fruitful start. I’ve suggested a lot of uncomfortable topics in the last three years and I’ve received a ton of great feedback about the discussions these topics have encouraged. I hope you’ll always read for joy, but that you’ll also take the time to read to learn, grow, and challenge the status quo.

Suggestion Section

This Bronx-based book club shows how community can help anyone build wealth at any age.

A review of Oprah’s latest book club pick, The Sweetness of Water

BuzzFeed’s July book club pick asks: what would you do if your best friend was all, “Hey, so, I’m starting a cult!”?


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. 
Vanessa 

Categories
Today In Books

Nikole Hannah-Jones and Ta-Nehisi Coates Join Howard University Faculty: Today in Books

Nikole Hannah-Jones and Ta-Nehisi Coates Join Howard University Faculty

Howard University announced yesterday that two iconic American authors would be joining their faculty: Nikole Hannah-Jones, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter who covers racial injustice for The New York Times Magazine and the creator of the landmark 1619 Project; and Ta-Nehisi Coates, author of Between the World and Me and The Water Dancer. Hannah-Jones turned down a UNC tenured position to become a tenured faculty member of Howard’s Cathy Hughes School of Communications, filling the newly created Knight Chair in Race and Journalism. Coates will be a faculty member in the flagship College of Arts and Sciences. Both Hannah-Jones and Coates wish to support and help educate the next generation of Black journalists.

The Horror Writers Association Offers Endowments to Fund Teen Writing Programs

The Horror Writers Association (HWA) is offering endowments to libraries to fund teen writing programs as part of the association’s ongoing dedication to furthering young adult literacy. HWA is the premier organization of writers and publishers of horror and dark fantasy, and it is the home of the Bram Stoker Awards. Their Young Adults Write Now fund will provide up to five endowments of $250 each per year to help libraries establish writing programs. Currently, the program is only available to US libraries, but they hope to open up the program to include other countries as part of the HWA’s global presence. Former HWA President Lisa Morton said, “We look forward to working more closely with libraries to expand public awareness of, and appreciation for, horror literature.” 

Children’s Books Help Keep Dogs Calm on the 4th of July

On July 4th, a lot of dogs all around the country get disturbed by the loud bangs of fireworks. Pets have very sensitive ears, and they can find the fireworks to be very scary. Worried about the poor pups? At least you can rest assured that the dogs at the Kentucky Humane Society were fine. Volunteers came to the shelter to help calm the dogs down by reading them children’s books. On July 5, the shelter posted on Facebook sharing images of people reading to the pups outside of their cages. Above the images the organization wrote: “A big thanks to our amazing volunteers who spent time at the shelter July 4th comforting the animals… Many pets fell fast asleep on their beds—some were even snoring! We also want to give a special thanks to Angie from KHS and her family, who organized the event and came in early to prep the treats and welcome the volunteers.”

What the Literati Reviews Didn’t Tell Me

Here’s your in-depth look at Literati’s book club launch. Find answers to what you can expect, how much it costs, and much more beyond the standard Literati reviews.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Must Read Criminal Narrative Nonfiction

Hello mystery fans! I have two narrative nonfiction titles for you that are many things rolled into each book from history to legal cases, both urgently current. I can not recommend these two books enough, especially the first for its exceptional writing and both for the information.

A Knock at Midnight: A Story of Hope, Justice, and Freedom by Brittany K. Barnett

A Knock At Midnight reminded me of Bryan Stevenson’s Just Mercy and Chanel Miller’s Know My Name in that it is exceptionally written about difficult topics while managing to somehow always keep a level of hope. So much so that I usually have to pace myself on this type of nonfiction, but I instead listened to the audiobook over two days; the narrator, Karen Chilton, is fantastic.

Brittany K. Barnett tells the story of growing up with a loving family, including her mom who dealt with drug addiction, her first career, deciding to go to law school, and then discovering cases of people imprisoned for lengths of time that were grossly disproportionate to the crimes. The war on drugs created a war against Black and brown communities disproportionate to white ones by creating a fixed sentencing that was different for powder cocaine to crack cocaine. This left many people with life sentences for nonviolent drug offenses. Not only does Barnett take us through the cases that crossed her path and those she took on, but she also takes a look at the system and laws that were created during the war on drugs and also where things stand now.

Reading the cases in this book and how addiction was treated cruelly and criminally is heartbreaking, but Barnett always has hope and leads with action. A Knock At Midnight is a fantastic mix of memoir, history, law, legal cases, a love letter to Black communities, and how to turn outrage into action for change. I can’t recommend this book enough and have been kicking myself for taking so long to get to it.

(TW addiction/ partner abuse/ malpractice pregnancy loss/ brief suicide mention, detail/ racism/ prison abuse)

The Unfit Heiress Cover

The Unfit Heiress: The Tragic Life and Scandalous Sterilization of Ann Cooper Hewitt by Audrey Clare Farley

This is a shocking story to start with about a mother, Maryon Cooper Hewitt, who had her daughter, Ann Cooper Hewitt, sterilized without her consent or knowledge for an inheritance. It gives you the story of Maryon and Ann along with the court case that followed when Ann realized what had been done to her. But the book has a much wider and horrifying scope because laws that allowed this to happen are still in place and still function to control mostly people with uteruses by controlling their reproductive rights. Think of Britney Spears saying in court that she’s being forced to keep an IUD (it is worth the time to read Britney Spears’s Conservatorship Nightmare) and women coming forward last year to say hysterectomies were performed on them while in immigration custody.

The book takes a dive into the history of eugenics and how these laws were devised, the tests used to determine who was “unfit” to have children, and how certain communities—including disabled people and people of color—were targeted because white wealthy women went from having six children to three. This is not a history that we’re far removed from, this is a horrifying and terrifying practice in the here and now.

(TW child abuse/ suicide, detail/ attempted suicide treated as criminal case/ ableism/ eugenics–racism, misogyny, homophobia)

From The Book Riot Vault

Bolder and Wiser: 3 Shows About Older Women Writer-Detectives


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.

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Gay Teens in Trucks, Sam and Frodo are Queer, and New LGBTQ Books OUT This Week

Alas, Pride month has come and gone! The queer bookish content online sure dried up fast between the last day of June and the first week of July. Luckily, what remains is top notch, so I still have some great links to share with you today.

Liberty and I talk about three of the queer books out this week (Everyone in this Room Will Someday Be Dead, Rise to the Sun, and The Very Nice Box) on the All the Books Book Riot podcast, so make sure to check that out!


I don’t have a good segue into the books I’m highlighting today except to say that these all have summer vibes. There’s something about the image of being a teenager, driving to the edge of town, and laying in the cab of your truck looking up at the stars. It’s a perfect expression of the limited freedom of being a teenager, especially a queer teen, where having a car can make it the only small piece of the world that’s just yours.

Of course, I never owned a car as a teen, never mind a truck, but somehow it still feels nostalgic to me. So here are the three queer teens and their trucks books I’ve read and loved. Let me know if I missed any!

Aristotle and Dante in a truck fan art
Ari and Dante stargazing in the bed of a truck. Fan art by Meruz, accessed via Tumblr.
Aristotle and Dante cover

Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Sáenz

Let’s start with the obvious. I mean, the iconic red truck is right there on the cover. As the cover crowded with award stickers indicates, this is a beautiful and unforgettable book–and the sequel is coming out soon! It’s about the unlikely friendship between Ari and Dante and how it evolves over the years, and it’s also about everything Ari is hiding from the world.

While I love this book, I think it’s often recommended without the proper context, so do be prepared going in for violently homophobic and transphobic scenes.

The Miseducation of Cameron Post movie cover

The Miseducation of Cameron Post by emily m. danforth

I’m not usually one to choose a movie cover, but I couldn’t resist using the version with them sitting in a truck bed. There’s a kind of book end effect here: the image on the cover is one of the last scenes of the movie, while the book begins with Cam kissing her best friend in the bed of Coley’s truck. It’s a symbol of freedom for these queer teens, but it’s also just a tiny oasis against an often homophobic world. This is my favorite YA book of all time, and it has a similar mix of melancholy and hope as Aristotle and Dante. Content warning for conversion camp.

Starting From Here by Lisa Jenn Bigelow cover

Starting From Here by Lisa Jenn Bigelow

I can’t believe I didn’t realize until adding the covers to this newsletter that all of these titles have the trucks prominently displayed on them. I am clueless. Lisa Jenn Bigelow’s Starting From Here broke my heart and put it back together again, and it’s another one of my favourite queer YA books. Oddly enough, it’s also about heartbreak and hope–but this one has a dog, so that’s an immediate plus. I deeply want fan art of Ari & Dante, Cam, and Colby all laying in truck beds looking at the stars together. Someone artsy get on that, please.

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

cover of everyone in this room will someday be dead by emily austin

Everyone in this Room Will Someday Be Dead by Emily R. Austin (Lesbian Fiction)

Gilda is a “twenty-something, atheist, animal-loving lesbian” overwhelmed with anxiety and depression. She goes to a church for free counseling, but they mistake her for a job applicant, and she’s too embarrassed to correct them. Now she’s a church receptionist, and she soon finds herself pretending to be Grace–the late receptionist–over email, because she doesn’t want to be the one who has to break the news that she died. Then the police start investigating Grace’s death, and Gilda “may have to finally reveal the truth of her mortifying existence.” This is a funny and touching comedy of errors.

Rise to the Sun cover

Rise to the Sun by Leah Johnson (F/F YA Contemporary)

This is the newest book from the author of You Should See Me In a Crown, and it’s another Black sapphic YA novel that should appeal to fans of her previous book–but I read this first, and I loved it! In some ways, it’s a perfect summer read: it takes place at a music festival and has a swoon-worthy romance–but it also tackles gun violence, grief, and sexual harassment. It’s about Olivia, a hopeless romantic fresh off the worst of a string of disastrous breakups, who’s running from the thought of having to face a judiciary hearing of her ex. She does this by convincing her best friend to go to a music festival with her–and this time, she promises, it will be just them: no romances. There, she bumps into Toni, who’s dreading starting university and mourning her father, who died from gun violence. They fall for each other, but it’s not long before things between them and their friends become very complicated.

The Very Nice Box by Yves Gleichman and Laura Blackett (Bisexual/Queer Fiction)

Summer in the City of Roses by Michelle Ruiz Keil (Queer YA Historical Fantasy)

Any Way the Wind Blows by Rainbow Rowell (M/M YA Fantasy)

It Ends in Fire by Andrew Shvarts (Bisexual YA Fantasy)