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Today In Books

Colin Kaepernick’s Publishing Company to Release ABOLITION FOR THE PEOPLE in October: Today in Books

Regina King to Direct Adaptation of Image Comics Series Bitter Root

Regina King is producing and directing a feature film adaptation of the Image Comics Series Bitter Root by David F. Walker and Chuck Brown. Bryan Edward Hill is currently working on a script. Set during the Harlem Renaissance in 1924, Bitter Root explores the story of a family of monster hunters who face a great evil descending upon New York City.

Colin Kaepernick’s Publishing Company to Release Abolition for the People in October

On Tuesday, former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick announced that his publishing company Kaepernick Publishing would be releasing an anthology of essays. The anthology, Abolition for the People: the Movement for a Future Without Policing and Prisons, will contain essays from 30 different contributors writing about abolishing police and prisons. On Twitter, Kaepernick Publishing wrote, “Join us on our collective journey toward building a better world — a world without and beyond policing and prisons.” The book is set to release on October 12.

Airini Beautrais Wins New Zealand’s Okham Fiction Prize

Airini Beautrais’ short story collection has won the top prize at the Okham New Zealand Book Awards: the NZ$57,000 Jann Medlicott Acorn prize for fiction. Beautrais won for her collection Bug Week & Other Stories, which she describes as “unhappy love stories.” While the author has published several books of poetry, this is her first work of fiction.

7 Exciting New Murder Mysteries

Listen up, murder mystery fans! Here are 7 new murder mystery titles you’ll want to give a read.

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Giveaways

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We’re giving away 10 audiobook downloads of The Bookworm’s Guide to Flirting by Emma Hart to 10 lucky Riot readers!

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

Here’s what it’s all about:

“Let it be known that I, Saylor Green, am wholeheartedly against blind dating. But when Dylan Parker takes the seat across from me, I might want him to stay.” Enter for a chance to win The Bookworm’s Guide to Flirting audiobook!

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Kissing Books

Writing i s Writing

Hello again romance readers. I’m PN Hinton, your companion for the world of romance. If you’re new to the Kissing Books newsletter, welcome and enjoy your stay. If you’re a long-time reader, welcome back; it’s good to see you again. 

I had a great weekend! It was warm enough Saturday to go swimming at my cousin’s apartment, which the teenager loved. Since it’s still early May it’s not quite hot as hell yet so there was a bit of a breeze. We spent a couple of hours out there and ended up calling it when he couldn’t stop shivering. On Sunday, my mother-in-law took me to see In the Heights with premiere tickets she had won.

And Readers, it was amazing. I saw the stage version years ago and loved it. I’m a huge fan of musical theatre and they did a good job adapting it to the screen. The choreography was phenomenal all around, especially for “96,000” where a good amount of it took place in a pool. There were some seeming unnecessary story changes, but nothing took away from the overall enjoyment or message of the movie.

TLDR; I recommend seeing or streaming it when it becomes available.

I also did make it to the wine bar. Happiness all around. 

Around the Web in Romance

Don’t forget to enter here for a chance to win a free iPad mini!

Oh wow, estranged friends to lovers? Sign me up for this catnip.

Read about one romance lover’s joy over The Soulmate Equation. Even though it’s on my own TBR, I understand the concern over the book. But sometimes reading someone else’s perspective can add a different layer to things.

From the World of Romance

Recently there has been conversation floating in the Twitter-sphere about how not difficult it is to write a romance. Now, this mindset isn’t anything new; but it’s still tiresome to hear. Romance has always been ridiculed as being trash and its critics consistently and constantly strive to undermine the genre. So, allow me be perfectly frank. 

Writing is hard. 

Writing on a consistent basis is hard. I don’t care what genre you’re writing in or where it’s published. It’s hard. I went to school specifically for writing and it’s still hard. I love writing this newsletter and am grateful for it. But it’s still a challenge to come up with ideas on what to write about on a bi-weekly basis.

Authors have to write even more than that and and consistently come up with new ideas. Now, critics may scoff that it’s easy or that “It’s their job.” But, is your job always easy? Do you like it when people sneer that “it’s your job?” Or are there some days where it’s a challenge, even if you love it? Authors have these days too too; and then they have to deal with the added sting of people belittling their work by saying that it doesn’t take any effort or talent to do what they do. 

At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what genre someone writes in; they’re still people who work hard at what they do. Just because you don’t like a specific genre doesn’t make it any less. And that is another thing; it’s people who don’t even read the genre who are undermining both its authors and readers.  

That would be like me saying that, since I don’t enjoy fantasy, that all those writers are hacks. Someone could rightfully clap back and say, “Well you don’t read anything in that genre, so how would you know?”

Recommendations

May is Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. So, I wanted to take a moment to uplift some of those voices in the romance genre. Of course, I’m a big proponent of reading diversely all year around, no matter what genre you read. And it is something that I still strive to do on a regular basis. But, as with previous months, I also want to acknowledge the importance of these voices in Romancelandia.

A Sweet Mess by Jayci Lee

Aubrey’s life gets turned upside down when a cake mix-up leads to a harsh review from a food critic who turns out to be a past one-night stand. She is left scrambling to save her business begrudgingly with help from aforementioned food critic, Landon. Will Aubrey be able to ignore her hormones and heart and listen to her head to help her get back to the business she loves. Or will the temptation be too much to bear?

Wrong to Need You by Alisha Rai

Jackson has returned home after 10 long years after being cleared of a crime he didn’t commit. He returns to help Sadia, his brother’s widow, with the café she has inherited. When the unspoken attraction between them can no longer be denied, it ignites a steamy affair. But will they be able to let go of their complicated past for the hope of a bright future?

cover of Ice Cream Lover by Jackie Lau

Ice Cream Lover by Jackie Lau

Drew has sworn off ice cream ever since his fiancée left him at the altar and bad-mouthed him in her bestseller. However, he is still forced into the Ginger Scoops ice cream parlor and into the path of owner Chloe. Will Drew allow himself a second chance at love for both a woman and ice cream, or let his past cloud his future?


Of course, there are many more options out there for you to pursue. Even though all these authors are delightful, don’t limit yourself in any capacity.

And that’s all she wrote for now. If you wanted snippets of me between the editions, then give me a follow at Twitter under @PScrie801. Until next time. 

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The Kids Are All Right

Kidlit Deals for May 12, 2021

Hey there, kidlit pals! Are you ready for book deals? Because this week’s selection is just so excellent and had me clicking buy too many times. As always, make sure you grab them before they’re gone!

cover art of The Girl and the Ghost

The Girl and the Ghost by Hanna Alkaf is a perfect pick for any kid who loves folk tales and Rick Riordan books, and it’s $2.

The Best At It by Maulik Pancholy is about a gay American Indian seventh grader in pursuit of the thing he’s great at, and you can grab it for just $2.

Looking for a great kid-friendly dystopia? The List by Patricia Ford is just the thing, for $2.

Steam Train, Dream Train by Sherry Duskey Rinker and Tom Lichtenheld is a great bedtime picture book for only $2.

This much lauded middle grade novel is about a town that isn’t quite as it seems–Eventown by Corey Ann Haydu is $2.

The Brilliant Deep: Rebuilding the World’s Coral Reefs: The Story of Ken Nedimyer and the Coral Restoration Foundation by Kate Messner and Matthew Forsythe is an important nonfiction picture book that you can add to your library for $2.

Looking for a great new chapter book series for your beginning reader? Zapato Power by Jacqueline Jules launches with Freddie Ramos Takes Off for just $2, and the sequels are all $3 each.

Radioactive!: How Irène Curie and Lise Meitner Revolutionized Science and Changed the World by Winifred Conling is a great middle grade nonfiction title for $2.

cover art of Measuring Up

Measuring Up by Lily LaMotte and Ann Xu is a heartwarming middle grade graphic novel about food and family for $2.

Need a new middle grade mystery series? Look no further than the Myrtle Hardcastle Mystery series by Elizabeth Bunce! Premeditated Myrtle and How to Get Away With Myrtle are $2 each, ahead of the release of Cold-Blooded Myrtle!

Happy reading!
Tirzah

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Riot Rundown

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Today In Books

Watch the New Trailer for David Lowery’s THE GREEN KNIGHT, Starring Dev Patel: Today in Books

LeVar Burton’s Book Club is Launching Today

It’s been almost 40 years since LeVar Burton began introducing kids to the joys of reading as the host of the show Reading Rainbow. Now, he continues to share his love of books through his podcast LeVar Burton Reads. And as of today, LeVar Burton has launched his book club via the new social reading app Fable. To start things off, the actor has chosen three books that he says “represent how my identity as a reader has been shaped.” Those books are Go Tell It on the Mountain by James Baldwin, Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler, and essay and poetry collection The Fire this Time, edited by Jesmyn Ward. In the first month, the book club will cover Go Tell It on the Mountain. Three new book club picks will be announced every three months.

Ghost Boys Pulled from Florida Classes After Police Union Complaint

Complaints from a police union and parents prompted a South Florida school system to temporarily stop the teaching of Ghost Boys by Jewell Parker Rhodes. In Ghost Boys, a young Black boy is fatally shot by a white police officer. Paul Kempinski, a member of the Fraternal Order of Police district lodge, complained that the book in question is “propaganda that police officers are liars, racists, murderers.” A spokesperson from the school district said in a statement, “Procedures were not proactively followed prior to the assignment of the novel… Subsequently, upon receiving parental concern, the use of the book was paused in two 5th Grade classrooms until procedures are implemented.” Author Jewell Parker Rhodes declined to comment.

Watch the New Trailer for David Lowery’s The Green Knight, Starring Dev Patel

Earlier today, a new trailer for The Green Knight was released. After being pushed back for a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, David Lowery’s film adaptation of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, entitled The Green Knight, will finally hit theaters on July 30, 2021. The film stars Dev Patel, Alicia Vikander, Joel Edgerton, and a talking fox.

Why You Should Start a Dungeons and Dragons Club At Your Library

Looking for a fun, immersive activity for the school library? One librarian suggests starting a Dungeons and Dragons club, and here’s why.

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Read This Book

Read This Book: The Lady from the Black Lagoon

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!

When I love a piece of media, I can get a bit… obsessed. I want to know everything about it. Is there lore I can consume? A sequel I can preorder? Behind the scenes footage I can our into my eyeballs? I want it. This is one of the reasons – aside from the fact that almost a decade of academic analysis is a hard habit to break – that I love critical texts and supplemental books that allow me re-visit and get a new perspective on books or films that I love. This week’s title is a piece of non-fiction tangentially related to one of my favorite films of all time: Creature from the Black Lagoon.

The Lady From the Black Lagoon cover image

The Lady from the Black Lagoon by Mallory O’Meara

Chances are that if you follow any book related social media you heard about The Lady from the Black Lagoon when it was published back in 2019. Mallory O’Meara’s biography of monster creator and artist Milicent Patrick shines a light on a forgotten figure in Hollywood history, and is also part memoir and part scathing critique of the ways in which men have done their best to oppress talented women in art and film industries for decades.

The star monster of Creature from the Black Lagoon, the much beloved Gill Man, was the last of Universal Studios classic monsters to make his on-screen debut. These days, his appearance is iconic but the woman responsible for his creation is largely unknown. Or she was, until Mallory O’Meara began researching what would become The Lady from the Black Lagoon. And the more O’Meara shares with her readers about Patrick’s life – as one of the first female animators at Disney and a creator in an industry that was, and a genre that still is, largely dominated by men – the more you realize what an incredible life she led.

And O’Meara’s recounting of her research journey is as fascinating as it is entertaining. Her footnotes frequently had me laughing out loud, which is what you want from footnotes if you can possibly get it. So whether you’re a horror fan, a fan of old Hollywood History, a devotee of amazing women, or all three, The Lady from the Black Lagoon should definitely be on your TBR!


Happy Reading!

Jessica

Categories
Unusual Suspects

PI Agency and a Popcorn Thriller!

Hello mystery fans! I have the start to a series starring a PI working with a team of PIs, and a thriller that will have you racing to the end.

Bury Me When I’m Dead (Charlie Mack Motown Mystery #1) by Cheryl A. Head

Not only do you get a PI but it’s an agency so you get a whole team! Charlie Mack is a PI with an agency she started with fellow PIs Don and Gil–who she previously worked with at INS/homeland security–and their office manager, Judy. They’re four completely different personalities who annoy each other like siblings–Judy always quoting musicals to Don’s annoyance–but at the end of the day are a great team. Which they need to be to stay alive in what starts as a simple case and gets really dangerous and complicated quick.

Mack’s father’s friend, once her mentor, needs her help: as the owner of Reliable Restaurant Supply he’s discovered that an account executive was stealing and disappeared with over a hundred grand. Mack and her team are to find her, which leads the team to travel from Detroit, Michigan to Birmingham, Alabama. Only the case has a lot of layers, people, moving parts, and secrets–oh and that danger I mentioned. So it quickly becomes clear that it’s a far-from-easy case, and they’ll need to make more than one trip to Birmingham.

And while trying to focus on the case, Mack is also trying to spend as much time as she can with her mother who is living in a care facility with the beginning stages of Alzheimer’s, and Mack has started dating a cop but is spending more time hiding from her feelings and not committing.

If you like watching cases as they unfold step by step, while trying to put the puzzle pieces together yourself, and procedural shows that involve teams of investigators, here’s your next great read. It’s everything you want in a great PI novel. And I immediately bought the second in the series upon finishing.

(TW parent early stage Alzheimer’s/ ableism/ forced vasectomy on teen)

Find You First by Linwood Barclay

Barclay has become my reliable popcorn thriller author–I need a tub of popcorn to inhale while inhaling his page-turners. And this one has a known hook that takes its own path and adds twists. Miles Cookson is very wealthy and has just been diagnosed with a terminal illness that is also genetic. Instead of leaving his money to his only family, his brother, he ends up discovering that the long ago donation to the sperm bank did get used and he’d rather give the resulting children his money.

Nothing personal against his brother, he just isn’t a fan of his wife. Plus, discovering he has kids makes him want to at least leave them money in case he did pass on the disease. Lucky for him, Chloe Swanson had already started looking for her biological father, so Cookson doesn’t have a hard time finding and meeting her. Except they quickly find that something isn’t right and Cookson’s half-siblings are disappearing. Did I mention the team of contract killers out just randomly killing people? Have fun trying to figure out, along with Swanon and Cookson, what is going on and how much danger they themselves are in…

This is a fun page-turner with heart that blends a mystery with thrills and action scenes. I really enjoyed the contrasting scenes between the contract killers, and Swanson and Cookson getting to know and trust each other. And bonus: I really liked the audiobook, narrated by George Newbern.

(TW suicidal thoughts recounted/ groomer of teen girls, no assault scenes on page but emotional abuse, kidnapping is/ infertility/ attempted suicide scene)

From The Book Riot Crime Vault

The Final Folk of Thrillers and Horror


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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True Story

New Releases: Benin Bronzes, Victorians, and Food

I like doing the new release newsletter because the mix of books is frequently very ODD with no real through-line. I mean, you could probably find one if you really looked. Also, I tend to trust that the really huge releases are going to have big enough advertising budgets that they don’t need a lot of help. So we get to look at some fun or weird or not as known books. Which is exciting.

Loot Cover

Loot: Britain and the Benin Bronzes by Barnaby Phillips

Okay. I wouldn’t normally START by quoting the book description, but look at this: “In 1897, Britain responded to the killing of a group of officials by razing an empire to the ground.” Like, what?? That’s an amazing intro. Horrifying, but amazing. The kingdom of Benin (now Nigeria) was destroyed by the British and they carried off the Benin Bronzes, which still sit in the British Museum. Author Phillips is also working to shut down the ivory trade and save Africa’s elephants. Great job, sir.

Out of the Shadows Cover

Out of the Shadows: Six Visionary Victorian Women in Search of a Public Voice by Emily Midorikawa

This title refers to the Spiritualist movement and the women who made their names off it. This includes the Fox sisters, who started the movement with the knocking sounds they claimed to hear in their Hydesville, NY home, to Victoria Woodhull, Georgina Weldon, and others. More books about women in the 19th century! All the books.

Tastes Like War: A Memoir

Tastes Like War: A Memoir by Grace M. Cho

It’s a food book, it’s a memoir, it’s a “sociological investigation.” There’s a lot going on here. Cho grew up with a white American father and a Korean mother. In Cho’s teens, her mother was diagnosed with schizophrenia. In “her mother’s final years, Grace learned to cook dishes from her parent’s childhood in order to invite the past into the present, and to hold space for her mother’s multiple voices at the table.”


Don’t forget to enter Book Riot’s iPad Mini giveaway, because hey — free iPad Mini. 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.

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Riot Rundown

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