Categories
True Story

New Releases: Cats, Black Europeans, and the WNBA

WELP here we are with some A+ new releases once more. I’m v. excited about all of them, so let’s get into it:

Queer Icons and Their Cats Cover

Queer Icons and Their Cats by Alison Nastasi, PJ Nastasi

CAN YOU EVEN. Jujubee is on the cover! Famed drag artist and lover of cats! The description of this is filled with cat puns like “amewsing” anecdotes and “impawtent” moments (I was especially impressed by the latter) from the lives of queer heroes. If you love queer icons and also photos of cats, this feels like a must. *looks at the cover again* Ahahaha I love it so much.

African Europeans Cover

African Europeans: An Untold History by Olivette Otele

Otele is Professor of the History of Slavery at Bristol University and the first Black woman to be appointed to a professorial chair in history in the United Kingdom. Here she tells the story of African Europeans, “from Emperor Septimius Severus, to enslaved Africans living in Europe during the Renaissance, and all the way to present-day migrants moving to Europe’s cities.” So much history! I’m so glad this book exists!

They Better Call Me Sugar Cover

They Better Call Me Sugar: My Journey from the Hood to the Hardwood by Sugar Rodgers

My work bestie loves the WNBA so THIS IS FOR YOU, LINDSEY (she doesn’t subscribe to this newsletter). Rodgers was recruited out of high school to play college basketball, and was then drafted by the Minnesota Lynx in 2013. She was the first of her family to attend college and “speaks of her struggles both academically and as an athlete with raw honesty.” TW for early mom death (Rodgers was 14), but more WNBA books, please. They do amazing work!! And they deserve for their stories to be told.


For more nonfiction new releases, 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
Read This Book

Read This Book: A Song of Wraiths and Ruin

Welcome to Read This Book, the newsletter where I recommend one book for your TBR that I think you’re going to love! Genre fiction is my wheelhouse, and about 90% of my personal TBR, so if if you’re looking for recommendations in horror, fantasy, or romance, I’ve got you covered!

If I could sum up this week’s read in one it would be: I came for the murder marriage and possible necromancy, and stayed for the gorgeous worldbuilding. If you love stories about monsters, and the monstrous things we do for the ones we love, set in vibrant worlds full of magic and myth, this book is definitely one for your TBR.

A Song of Wraiths and Ruin by Roseanne A. Brown

Malik and Karina stand on two separate sides of the same world, on the brink of a religious festival that comes only once every 50 years. For Malik, Solstasia means a new beginning not just of an era but of a new life in Ziran for himself and his two sisters, Nadia and Leila. Their home has been devastated by war, and what is left of their family cling to survival in a refugee camp, relying on the money that he and Leila will send back. But when Nadia accidentally makes a bargain with a dangerous dark spirit, Malik is forced to strike a deal as well: kill Karina, Crown Princess of Ziran. His sister’s life for that of the princess.

But when Malik joins the Solstasia champions in a bid to get closer to the princess, he doesn’t realize that he’s involved himself in another deadly game, this one of Karina’s making. Her mother, the Sultana, is dead; a closely guarded secret being kept from the thousands who flocked to Ziran for the celebrations. Karina has until the moment that secret gets out to stop it from being true. She will do whatever it takes to enact the ancient ritual that will bring her mother back from the dead, including marry the champion who wins the Solstasia competition as a means of acquiring the rarest component for the spell: the still-beating heart of a king.

Inspired by West African folklore, A Song of Wraiths and Ruin sings with color, music, and magic. And while there were some aspects the did feel underdeveloped at times, that didn’t at all detract from what ended up being an engaging, suspenseful battle of wills between the two protagonists caught up in magical forces far greater than themselves.


Happy Reading!
Jessica

Categories
In The Club

In the Club 05/05/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. It’s somehow May already, and that means its Mental Health Awareness Month. I don’t know about you, but this last year in particular has made me acutely aware of the importance of discussions around mental health. So today’s book club picks are all works of fiction to spark discussions about mental illness: its intricacies, stigmas, how we address it, and all the ways we get it wrong.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

I had a mad craving last week for chicken shawarma bowl, specifically the kind you get from carts like The Halal Guys. Well, remember the Moribyan food blog I mentioned a few weeks ago? The lovely woman who runs it came through once again with not one but two fantastic mouthwatering recipes. First I made her Halal cart chicken and rice, and puh-lease use ghee if you can because it really does make all of the difference in the world. I had a ton of leftover rice, so next I made these oven-baked kefta (beef kabobs) to pair with it, too. WHEW, friends. I didn’t have any sumac for any of these recipes, but they still came out to perfect! Enjoy.

Mental Illness in Fiction

cover image of Darius the Great is Not Okay by Adib Khorram

Darius the Great Is Not Okay by Adib Khorram

Darius knows more about Hobbit social cues than Persian customs and speaks better Klingon than Farsi. The son of a Persian mother and a white American father, he’s never felt like he fit in anywhere, a worry not at all helped by his clinical depression. When his family travels to Iran to visit his mother’s family, Darius meets Sohrab, the boy next door. Soon the boys are spending their every moment together, and Darius realizes he’s never felt more like himself.

Book Club Bonus: Discuss how two people with the same diagnosis can have very different experiences and won’t necessarily relate, and how challenging it can be to communicate mental illness to a different generation or culture.

cover image of Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

Gifty is a Ghanian American working on a PhD in neuroscience, studying depression and addiction by observing the reward-seeking behavior of mice. This work is very personal: she was just a kid when her brother injured his ankle during a high school basketball game, then got hooked on Oxycontin and died of an overdose. Gifty turns to science to understand Nana’s addiction and the depth of her family’s loss, but also finds herself pulled in by the allure of salvation offered by the faith she thought she’d long abandoned.

Book Club Bonus: There’s a meaty discussion to be had here about the relationship between mental illness and religion, specifically how so many faith systems handle mental illness with a lot of dismissal and instructions to just “give it God” and pray.

cover image of Turn of Mind by Alice LaPlante

Turn of Mind by Alice LaPlante

Retired orthopedic surgeon Dr. Jennifer White is battling dementia and all of the life adjustments that come with her diagnosis. When her best friend is killed and found with several of her fingers removed with surgical precision, Dr. White is immediately the #1 suspect. The worst part: Dr. White could very well have done it, but she doesn’t know if she did. This thriller is well-paced and handles the subject of dementia with a lot of care.

Book Club Bonus: Dr. White’s dementia added a layer of complexity to what otherwise might have been a more straightforward thriller—explore that! Discuss the frailty of memory as both a blessing and a curse.

cover image of Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys

Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys

This one I haven’t read yet, but it was recommended to me by a reader (thank you so much!) after I talked about my love of Jane Eyre retellings.Wide Sargasso Sea gives a new voice to one of fiction’s most fascinating characters: the madwoman in the attic from Jane Eyre. Bertha, born Antoinette Cosway, is a protected young woman when she’s sold into marriage to the prideful Mr. Rochester. Her reputation is ruined by rumors about her past fueled by some really puritan attitudes towards sexuality, and her prideful husband becomes emotionally abusive and unfaithful. As he flaunts his affairs in her face, Bertha is continually gaslit until she reaches her emotional breaking point.

Book Club Bonus: Makes it kinda hard to write her off as “crazy,” doesn’t it? Discuss how a deeper examination of Mr. Rochester makes him a much more unsavory character than the one we’ve come to know in the original story, and how unfair Bertha’s narrative has been to her (and women in general).

Suggestion Section

May book club picks for Today with Jenna Bush Hager, LA Times, and Vox

at School Library Journal: 5 Tips for Starting a Nonfiction Book Club for Kids


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 

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Giveaways

050421-Harlequin.comEAC-Giveaways

Book Riot is teaming up with Harlequin.com to give away an iPad Mini to one lucky winner! Fill out the form here for a chance to win!

Here’s a little more about Harlequin.com: Harlequin.com is the official Harlequin book site. Join us to see the newest novels, read exclusive free stories from Harlequin authors, connect with our community of romance book lovers, meet your favorite authors, buy romance books online and more!

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Riot Rundown

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The Stack

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Check Your Shelf

May the Fourth Be With You!

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. It’s Star Wars Day, aka the perfect day to include Baby Yoda in all of your library social media posts today!


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

(TW: sexual abuse, misconduct) Vanity Fair takes a close look at the New York Times’ reporting of the Blake Bailey scandal.

Publishers are drawing fire for signing Trump officials to book deals.

Authors form a task force after Disney refuses to pay them.

Reese Witherspoon launches a fellowship for underrepresented women writers.

These are some of the fastest-growing indie publishers of 2021.

New & Upcoming Titles

Gabrielle Union is releasing a second memoir: You Got Anything Stronger? I am SUPER excited about this, and if you haven’t read We’re Going to Need More Wine yet, get on that ASAP!

Tordotcom Publishing has acquired six books by Martha Wells, three of which will be part of the Murderbot Diaries.

We’re getting a Jim Morrison book of poetry, lyrics, and other writings this summer.

Lil’ Kim is writing a memoir, The Queen Bee, which comes out in November.

The recent tell-all book about Harry and Meghan, Finding Freedom: Harry and Meghan and the Making of a Modern Royal Family, is getting a revised edition with updated chapters.

Check out the cover of Christopher Golden’s upcoming horror novel!

Weekly book picks from Bustle, Crime Reads, LitHub, New York Times, and USA Today.

May book picks from Barnes & Noble, Bustle, Epic Reads (YA), Gizmodo (SFF), New York Times, Washington Post.

Spring reading picks from the Seattle Times.

50 highly anticipated romance novels of 2021 to renew your faith in love.

55 Canadian poetry collections for spring.

30 stellar spring reads from diverse authors and creators.

50 of the best new nonfiction books about the natural world.

10 poetry books out this year by women of color.

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

Whereabouts – Jhumpa Lahiri (New York Times, NPR, USA Today)

Second Place – Rachel Cusk (LA Times, New York Times)

Secrets of Happiness – Joan Silber (NPR, Washington Post)

The Haunting of Alma Fielding: A True Ghost Story – Kate Summerscale (New York Times, NPR)

White Magic – Elissa Washuta (LA Times, NPR)

RA/Genre Resources

Psychological thrillers and domestic suspense in the pandemic era.

Meg Gardiner and the essential elements of great thrillers.

How Bridgerton has changed the face of the romance genre.

On the Riot

Weekly book picks to add to your TBR.

5 recent and upcoming SFF books by trans and nonbinary authors.

The current state of disability representation in children’s books.

How inclusive is that diverse book cover, though?

The books that changed this reader’s life the most weren’t very good.

All Things Comics

Graphic novels that illustrate resilience.

Great graphic novels to add to your classroom library.

On the Riot

How to read manga.

A closer look at Kindle Unlimited manga.

3 new comics anthologies for your TBR.

Audiophilia

Recorded Books has withdrawn the audio version of Blake Bailey’s Philip Roth biography.

The bizarre world of scam audiobooks. I…did not even know this was a thing.

The best audiobooks for soothing anxiety. Plus, the special comfort of audiobooks during COVID-19 and trying times.

If you liked these Oscar-nominated movies, you’ll love these audiobooks!

On the Riot

5 of the best audiobooks for your next sick day.

On the companionship of audiobooks and podcasts.

Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

20 of the best children’s books about the glory of summer.

19 YA books with southern charm.

26 YA trilogies that prove that trilogies are still the way to go.

18 of the most crush-worthy queer YA novels.

Adults

8 books for Lesbian Day of Visibility.

10 novels that illuminate lesser-known events in history.

5 SFF books about the magic of creativity.

11 fantasy novels to read after watching Shadow and Bone.

Historical fiction about war-torn love.

11 books to pull you out of a reading rut.

Stories based on Jewish folklore and magic.

Books that imagine a world without men.

Top 10 books about brothers.

12 of the best books about climate change.

10 of the best Star Wars books.

On the Riot

13 ocean books for seafaring kids.

15 of the best shark books for kids.

13 of the best middle grade science fiction books.

6 YA books about parents cheating.

13 books to inspire you for post-pandemic entertaining.

20 must-read contemporary sapphic novels.

8 of the best cats in science fiction and fantasy novels.

5 cookbooks for when you want to cook healthy food fast.

Horror anthology books for some mid-year frights.

7 nonfiction books about weird jobs.

8 books about prodigies and late bloomers.

8 books you didn’t know were musicals.

9 books where nature or landscape are main characters.

Level Up (Library Reads)

Do you take part in Library Reads, the monthly list of best books selected by librarians only? We’ve made it easy for you to find eligible diverse titles to nominate. Kelly Jensen created a database of upcoming diverse books that anyone can edit, and Nora Rawlins of Early Word is doing the same, as well as including information about series, vendors, and publisher buzz.


Hope you’re all wearing your geekish best today! I’ll catch you all on Friday.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading Girl A by Abigail Dean.

Categories
Today In Books

Author Arundhati Roy Speaks Out on India’s COVID-19 Problem: Today in Books

Author Arundhati Roy Speaks Out on India’s COVID-19 Problem

In a column for The Guardian, author and activist Arundhati Roy criticizes Narendra Modi’s handling of the coronavirus crisis. “The system hasn’t collapsed. The government has failed,” writes the the Booker Prize-winning Indian novelist. “Perhaps ‘failed’ is an inaccurate word, because what we are witnessing is not criminal negligence, but an outright crime against humanity.” In her column, Roy slams the Modi government for failing to anticipate COVID’s second wave and for having a general lack of understanding how to act during a pandemic. She also appeals to the international community at large. If you’re wondering how you can help, here’s a list of resources from CNN.

The Marvels Hits Theaters on November 11, 2022

Marvel has announced that its sequel to Captain Marvel, The Marvels, will be making its way to theaters on November 11, 2022. Brie Larson will reprise her role as Captain Marvel/Carol Danvers. Joining her will be Teyonah Parris, who plays Monica Rambeau, and Iman Vellani as Kamala Khan/Ms. Marvel. Iman Vellani will debut as Ms. Marvel in an upcoming Ms. Marvel Disney+ Series, set to hit the streaming platform at the end of 2021.

Watchmen and V for Vendetta Writer Alan Moore Announces Five-Volume Fantasy Epic

Two years after he announced that the was retiring from comics, Alan Moore, the author of Watchmen and V for Vendetta, has announced that he’s working on a “groundbreaking” five-volume fantasy series as well as a “momentous” collection of short stories. Moor says he is “bursting with fiction, bursting with prose,” and he’s signed a six-figure deal with Bloomsbury to publish his upcoming works. The short story collection Illuminations is planned for publication in fall 2022. The fantasy series Long London will launch in 2024.

Fund These Classroom Libraries to Show Teachers Some Appreciation

May 3rd to 7th is Teacher Appreciation Week! If you’re looking for a way to show teachers appreciation this week, consider helping to fund these classroom libraries.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for May 4

Happy Tuesday, shipmates, and May the Fourth be with you! It’s Alex, with your first round of new releases for May and a few links for funsies. Wow, how is it May already? March 2020 was the longest month that has ever existed, and suddenly it’s May 2021 and I have no idea how we got here. But we got here! We survived it! And I’m pleased to report that after 24 hours of laying on the couch, drinking ginger ale, and being unable to do anything more energy-intensive than marathon Fast and Furious movies, I have bounced back from my second vaccine shot. May yours be an even easier journey. Stay safe out there, shipmates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

Thing that made me smile this week: an excellent XKCD comic

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


New Releases

Note: The new release lists I have access to weren’t as diverse as I would have liked this week.

Cover of The Ones We're Meant to Find by Joan He

The Ones We’re Meant to Find by Joan He

In a world ravaged by climate change, Cee has been trapped alone on an island for three years. She doesn’t remember how she got there or who she was before, but she knows her sister Kay needs her, and so she works to build a raft from salvaged junk. In an eco-city where residents must spend a third of their time in stasis pods, Kasey has given up her sister Celia for dead after she sailed out to sea and never returned. But public pressure makes her rethink this assumption, and she begins to retrace Celia’s path.

The Dragon of Jin-Sayeng by K.S. Villoso

While Queen Talyien has at last returned home, she does not find peace in her father’s castle. Her son has been stolen, her warlords plot rebellion, and war and invasion threaten. Worse, her father’s secrets seek to unbury themselves and ruin all of Jin-Sayeng. Will the queen flee that darkness or embrace it?

Cover of Firebreak by Nicole Kornher-Stace

Firebreak by Nicole Kornher-Stace

In the near future, the US has been inundated by rising waters and the surviving states divided between two megacorporations, Stellaxis Innovations and Greenleaf. One city is split between them, and thus in a constant state of civil war. Mallory lives in that city, where she streams wargames for Stellaxis and lives off tips. But when an in-game tip leads to an IRL mission for a missing girl, she finds herself in real danger that she only knows how to handle in a virtual world.

Ariadne by Jennifer Saint

As the Princess of Crete, Ariadne grows up with the ever-present specter of her brother, the Minotaur, and the knowledge that he demands a blood sacrifice. The arrival of Theseus offers her escape, at the price of defying the gods and betraying her people and her family. But will escape become a happy ending for her–and what of the younger sister she leaves behind?

Cover of Far Out edited by Paula Guran

Far Out: Recent Queer Science Fiction and Fantasy edited by Paula Guran

An anthology of LGBTQ+ science fiction and fantasy short fiction published during the last decade, with stories by Nalo Hopkinson, Charlie Jane Anders, Neon Yang, Amal El-Mohtar, and others.

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

Ryland Grace can’t remember anything; he’s been awoken millions of miles from home with only two corpses for company, in a ship that must have an important mission… if only he could recall. Ryland Grace is, even though he doesn’t know it yet, humanity’s only hope for survival.

News and Views

The 2021 Locus Awards Finalists have been announced! Congrats to all!

The 2021 Seiun Awards Nominees also announced

Writers Orgs Form #DisneyMustPay Task Force. Remember when Disney was refusing to pay author Alan Dean Foster royalties owed under a really gross and shady legal theory? The good news is, he’s finally getting paid, at least. The bad news is, he wasn’t the only one, and he only got paid after a massive internet stink.

Joshua Whitehead and Darcie Little Badger talk about the power of Indigenous speculative fiction

Hear me out: why Johnny Mnemonic isn’t a bad movie – okay actually, I never thought Johnny Mnemonic was a bad movie, so this made me feel quite vindicated.

April round-up of indie speculative fiction

Clarion West has three virtual panels you can register for in May

Even if you can’t go to the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art to see their Ray Harryhausen exhibit, there’s a bunch of really cool stuff on the exhibit page

How J.R.R. Tolkien blocked W.H. Auden from writing a book about him

The most important science you will read about all week: Kid’s science fair project answers the eternal question: “Does Your Cat’s Butthole Really Touch All the Surface in Your Home?”

On Book Riot

Purrfectly fantastic: 8 of the best cats in science fiction and fantasy novels

5 recent and upcoming SFF books by trans and nonbinary authors

This month you can win a year of reading.


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
New Books

First Tuesday of May Megalist!

Happy Tuesday, readers! It’s another amazing day in Bookland. There are approximately a zillion new releases out today, give or take a few. And I am so excited for you to read so many of them. Damn it feels good to be a reader! Me, I’m an eeeeeeeeeeeee reader. (Sorry, not sorry.) Why do I make you a megalist each month? Because books are not just my job, they’re my life. They’ve gotten me through many hard times and brought me so much joy, so I like to give you as many options as I can to help you find the books that do that for you, too. (Also, check out this amazing “Books Saved My Life” shirt from Uncle Bobbie’s.)

I did get a chance to read several of today’s books, but there are still soooo many more on this list that I can’t wait to get, like On Juneteenth by Annette Gordon-Reed, The Secret Talker by Geling Yan, and Ariadne by Jennifer Saint. And as with each first Tuesday megalist, I am putting a ❤️ next to the books that I have had the chance to read and loved. You can also hear about several new releases on this week’s episode of the All the Books! Danika and I discussed Great Circle, Luck of the Titanic, Sorrowland, and more. Okay—everyone buckled in? Get ready to click your little hearts out, because here come the books! – XO, Liberty

P.S. If you’re not busy tonight, come hear me interview Aidan Truhen about his new book!

Realm Breaker by Victoria Aveyard ❤️

Meet Cute Diary by Emery Lee

Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead ❤️

Last Gate of the Emperor by Prince Joel Dawit Makonnen and Kwame Mbalia

Negative Space (SFWP Literary Awards) by Lilly Dancyger

The Parted Earth by Anjali Enjeti

An Ordinary Age: Finding Your Way in a World That Expects Exceptional by Rainesford Stauffer

On Juneteenth by Annette Gordon-Reed 

Sacrifice: A Gold Star Widow’s Fight for the Truth by Michelle Black 

Billionaires by Darryl Cunningham

cover of seven demons by aidan truhen

Seven Demons by Aidan Truhen ❤️

Living in Data: A Citizen’s Guide to a Better Information Future by Jer Thorp 

Nothing Personal: An Essay by James Baldwin

The Girl Who Died by Ragnar Jonasson

The Hummingbirds’ Gift : Wonder, Beauty, and Renewal on Wings by Sy Montgomery

The Glorious Guinness Girls by Emily Hourican

Sorrowland by Rivers Solomon ❤️

Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest by Suzanne Simard

The Secret Talker by Geling Yan

Albert and the Whale: Albrecht Dürer and How Art Imagines Our World by Philip Hoare

Luck of the Titanic by Stacey Lee ❤️

Films of Endearment: A Mother, a Son and the 80s Films That Defined Us by Michael Koresky

Stranger Care: A Memoir of Loving What Isn’t Ours by Sarah Sentilles

Find You First by Linwood Barclay ❤️

Monkey Boy by Francisco Goldman 

Remake the World: Essays, Reflections, Rebellions by Astra Taylor

The Premonition: A Pandemic Story by Michael Lewis 

Let’s Talk About Hard Things by Anna Sale

Living Nations, Living Words: An Anthology of First Peoples Poetry by The Library of Congress, Joy Harjo 

My Time Will Come: A Memoir of Crime, Punishment, Hope, and Redemption by Ian Manuel

Arsenic and Adobo (Tita Rosie’s Kitchen Mystery #1) by Mia P. Manansala

Seeing Sideways: A Memoir of Music and Motherhood Part of: American Music by Kristin Hersh ❤️

Mergers and Acquisitions Or, Everything I Know About Love I Learned on the Wedding Pages by Cate Doty

Better Than the Movies by Lynn Painter

The Dead Husband by Carter Wilson 

Excuse Me While I Ugly Cry by Joya Goffney

African Europeans: An Untold History by Olivette Otele

The Mysteries by Marisa Silver

The Siren by Katherine St. John

Firebreak by Nicole Kornher-Stace ❤️

Bad Lawyer: A Memoir of Law and Disorder by Anna Dorn

Sunshine Girl: An Unexpected Life by Julianna Margulies  

The Ones We’re Meant to Find by Joan He ❤️

Secrets of Happiness by Joan Silber 

The Renunciations: Poems by Donika Kelly

Leda and the Swan by Anna Caritj

Second Place by Rachel Cusk ❤️

A Lonely Man by Chris Power

The Newcomer by Mary Kay Andrews ❤️

Take Me Home Tonight by Morgan Matson

Ariadne by Jennifer Saint

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

Summer on the Bluffs: A Novel (Oak Bluffs) by Sunny Hostin

When You Get the Chance by Tom Ryan and Robin Stevenson

The Secret to Superhuman Strength by Alison Bechdel ❤️

Finding Junie Kim by Ellen Oh

The Most Beautiful Girl in Cuba by Chanel Cleeton 

Pop Song: Adventures in Art & Intimacy by Larissa Pham

Family Law by Gin Phillips

Rooted: Life at the Crossroads of Science, Nature, and Spirit by Lyanda Lynn Haupt

The Bookshop of Second Chances by Jackie Fraser

Hurricane Summer by Asha Bromfield 

Maybe Maybe Marisol Rainey by Erin Entrada Kelly 

Hour of the Witch by Chris Bohjalian ❤️

Prom House by Chelsea Mueller 

The Black Ghost by Monica Gallagher, Alex Segura, Marco Finnegan

The Woman with the Blue Star by Pam Jenoff

Things We Lost to the Water by Eric Nguyen 

The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura Dave

It Had to Be You by Georgia Clark

Everybody: A Book about Freedom by Olivia Laing

Just Last Night by Mhairi McFarlane

Eartha & Kitt: A Daughter’s Love Story in Black and White by Kitt Shapiro with Patricia Levy


Thank you, as always, for joining me each week as I rave about books! I am wishing the best for all of you in whatever situation you find yourself in now. – XO, Liberty