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Today In Books

FORREST GUMP Author Has Passed Away: Today In Books

Forrest Gump Author Has Passed Away

Alabama governor Kay Ivey has confirmed that journalist and author Winston Groom has passed away at age 77: “While he will be remembered for creating Forrest Gump, Winston Groom was a talented journalist and noted author of American history. Our hearts and prayers are extended to his family.”

Chris Pine & Thandie Newton In Spy Novel Adaptation

Hello, to this casting news and only this casting news: Chris Pine and Thandie Newton will star in an adaptation of Olen Steinhauer’s All The Old Knives, about two spies, ex-lovers, who reunite for dinner and realize only one will live through the night… Amazon Studios has now boarded as a producer.

If Special Referendum Succeeds Most Nashville Libraries Could Close

While the election has yet to be scheduled, many local leaders have taken to publicly opposing a special referendum proposed for December, which, if it succeeds, would roll back a 34% property tax increase. Among those opposed is Nashville Public Library Director Kent Oliver who claims it will take away $332 million from the city and close almost all of Nashville’s 21 public libraries. “Oliver says the library system would be vulnerable to widespread librarian layoffs, since a large share of its funding goes toward staff.”

Banned Books To Read During Banned Books Week

Here are some books you’ll want on your TBR for Banned Books Week, including The Complete Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi.

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Giveaways

091820-Joker:KillerSmile-Giveaway

We’re giving away five copies of Joker: Killer Smile by Jeff Lemire and Andrea Sorrentino to five lucky Riot readers!

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

Here’s what it’s all about:

Arkham Asylum is home to many of the Batman’s worst enemies— including the most dangerous one of all: The Joker. No one has ever been able to break through the insanity of the Joker’s mind. Many have been broken themselves in the attempt. But Dr. Ben Arnell is sure that he will be the one to finally cure him. From the creative team of Jeff Lemire and Andrea Sorrentino comes Joker: Killer Smile, a terrifying tale of psychological horror that explores the madness within The Joker— and the family man who will risk it all to gaze into the abyss.

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Riot Rundown

091820-SleepinaSeaofStars-RR

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Today In Books

The Beatles First Official Book In 20 Years: Today In Books

The Beatles First Official Book In 20 Years

The Beatles haven’t put out an official book since 2000, but that’s changing now with the release of The Beatles: Get Back in 2021. The book will be about the last album they made, Let It Be, and is based on over 100 hours of studio sessions’ conversations that were transcribed. “The book documents January 1969, with friction building in the band as they recorded music for an intended TV special – George Harrison walked out of the sessions at one point and John Lennon described them as ‘hell’.”

The DOJ Opens Criminal Investigation Over Bolton’s Memoir

After the Trump administration was unsuccessful in blocking from publication former national security adviser John Bolton’s memoir, The Room Where It Happened, they have opened a criminal investigation. According to three sources the Department of Justice has issued a subpoena for the publisher, Simon & Schuster, in relation to communications related to the memoir.

You Can Search 1.5 Million Newspapers With This AI

The US Library of Congress continues being awesome. They have released an AI, Newspaper Navigator, that allows you to search for images through 1.5 million historical newspapers. You can easily search starting with a keyword, narrow your results with a time period and state, and download the image you want while also having the option of reading the article it came from and the newspaper issue.

Obama’s Presidential Memoir (Volume 1) Is Coming!

Former President Barack Obama’s memoir A PROMISED LAND will be published on November 17, 2020.

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What's Up in YA

Sweet YA Ebook Deals This Week

Hey YA Readers!

If your weekend plans look anything like mine do from here on out, you’re itching to find your next great read. Let me help you with this roundup of excellent YA Ebook deals.

All of these deals are current as of Friday, September 18. Snap ’em up before they’re gone.

A fantasy read about magic? A book that’s been optioned for adaptation? Grab Caster by Elsie Chapman for $2.

Jennifer Donnelly’s Stepsister is a twist on Cinderella for fans of retellings. $2.

Dear Martin by Nic Stone is a YA essential read and you can pick it up for $2 — read it for the first time or revisit it before the companion Dear Justyce comes out later this month.

One of my favorite YA books, We Are Okay by Nina LaCour, which is about loneliness and grief, is on sale for $3. Everything Leads To You and Hold Still, two of Nina’s other books, are also $3 each.

Itching to begin a fantasy series full of politics and which has been named a favorite by so many readers? The first few books in “The Queen’s Thief” series by Megan Whalen Turner are all on sale for $3. Begin with The Thief, then The Queen of Attolia, then The King of Attolia, A Conspiracy of Kings, and then Thick As Thieves. The final book in the series hits shelves soon, and for $15, you can read the first five books in preparation.

Sarah Dessen’s The Rest of the Story is $3.

Love a good ballet story? Grab Tiny Pretty Things by Dhonielle Clayton and Sona Charaipotra before it hits Netflix for $3.

Speaking of Sona Charaipotra, her most recent book Symptoms of a Heartbreak, is $3.

Ink and Bone by Rachel Caine, the first book in a series about a magical library, is $3.

A humorous book about basketball and Islamophobia, Sara Farizan’s Here To Stay is a must-read. $2.

The entire three-book Skinjacker trilogy (Everlost, Everwild, and Everfound) by Neal Shusterman is on sale for $5.


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you on Monday!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram and editor of Body Talk(Don’t) Call Me Crazy, and Here We Are.

Categories
Check Your Shelf

Hachette Sues Lindsay Lohan, and a Lot of Parents Are Upset About a Lot of Books In Schools

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. My husband and I are watching a baseball game right now, and started arguing about whether or not Sandstorm by Darude is a jam. This is what quarantine has turned us into. (Also it is 100% a legitimate jam, and I will stand by that fact forever.)

So. Where were we. Libraries? Let’s do it.


Libraries & Librarians

News Updates

Cool Library Updates

Worth Reading


Book Adaptations in the News


Books & Authors in the News


Numbers & Trends


Award News


Pop Cultured


Bookish Curiosities & Miscellaneous


On the Riot


It’s the weekend again, and I’ll see you all next week.

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter. Currently reading Meddling Kids by Edgar Cantero.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for September 18

Happy Friday, shipmates! We’re at the midpoint of September now, and hopefully you’re getting to feel the change in the seasons. I’ve gotten to have my AC off for a week and a half now, though all of the wildfire smoke is making having the windows open a little iffy. Yes, it’s Alex, with a few news items and my favorite quarantine reads so far. Stay safe out there, and I’ll see you for new releases on Tuesday!

Excellent thing for today: a new song from Janelle Monáe

Looking for non-book things you can do to help in the quest for justice? blacklivesmatter.card.co and The Okra Project.

News and Views

News about Leviathan Falls, the final book of The Expanse

Margaret Atwood has won the Dayton literary peace prize

Alasdair Stuart writes about Warren Ellis for Sarah Gailey’s personal canons series.

A reflection on gender, joy, and worldbuilding, set off by an observed revision in Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness.

Matriarchy and gender magic in the Tamir Triad

Tessa Gratton on reclaiming genderqueer monstrousness

18 years on, the filmmakers look back on Reign of Fire

The second season of The Mandalorian has a trailer

Which Hugo finalists don’t have a Wikipedia page? (The list is actually shorter than I might have guessed.)

Some exciting (or if you’ve read The Expanse, slightly terrifying) news from Venus, though cosmologist Katie Mack would like everyone to calm down and be patient, please.

Argh, apparently it makes no difference to the deluge of robocalls whether you answer them or not.

On Book Riot

9 under-the-radar fairytale and folktale retellings

This week’s SFF Yeah! Podcast is about the multiverse

You can win a copy of Ink and Sigil by Kevin Hearne

This month, you can enter to win $50 to spend at your favorite indie bookstore and a free 1-year audible subscription.

Free Association Friday: Favorite Quarantine Reads (so far)[lolsob]

Today I celebrated my one year anniversary at my job, which is a Big Deal. And then I realized that it’s also the six month anniversary of my job going into lockdown… which is… sure something. Though I’m no longer spending over an hour a day on public transit, my reading time has gone way up. This might also have something to do with the fact that I injured my right hand opening a beer growler (hush, the orthopedic doctor assured me that’s a perfectly valid injury, and I have never felt so seen before), so I can’t play video games right now.

So what’s the best book I’ve read in each month of this super fun and exciting period in all of our lives? It’s a silver lining, at least.

Lady Hotspur cover imageBack Half of March: Lady Hotspur by Tessa Granton – It’s a gender bent Henry V that is also Extremely Queer in all the ways, and a massive meditation about love and duty and the way prophecy (and expectations) can seriously f*** people up. Just call me out by name next time, Tessa. (You don’t need to read The Queens of Innis Lear first—I didn’t—but you might get a bit more out of it that way.)

April: Qualityland by Marc-Uwe Kling – This might be a little too satirically dystopian for me, six months in, but in April it was still extremely, nastily funny. It helps that it’s definitely making fun of capitalism and politics and there are no pandemics involved, just snitty delivery drones in a horrible world that’s run by Definitely Not Amazon.

a slightly pixelated red cardinal is mirrored by a blue bird with a white stomach; both are against a light blue backgroundMay: This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone – This book has won about a zillion awards now, and all of them are well-deserved. My favorite thing to come out of this is apparently lesbians are now picking each other up on dating apps by identifying if they’re a red or a blue. This is the best kind of crossover with reality. (Full disclosure: I have the same agent as Amal and Max.)

June: Stealing Thunder by Alina Boyden – Considering I wrote an entire Friday piece about how much I love this book and why, so this should come as no surprise. To sum it up: “There’s a lot of discussion about stories of queer suffering in general. … There definitely needs to be space for us to process our traumas and explore darker themes, and do so when we are our own intended audience. But we so infrequently get a chance to explore our wishful fantasies and our joy, particularly not when major publishers are involved. That’s why Stealing Thunder was a shot of sunlight directly to my heart.”

July: The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson – I literally read this book in two nights because I could not stop reading it, even though it kept me up waaaaaay past my bedtime. It’s tonally like the movie The VVitch, which makes it way more horror than my weenie self can normally handle, but it’s feminist and wrathful and takes blood revenge for the way society is built on the lives and bodies of women. Plus the voice of the book is gorgeous.

August: The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson – I am still haunted by this book. Another one with incredibly strong voice, and plot twists that had me whispering “Oh, shit!” at the end of every other chapter. A multiverse novel like I never could have imagined. I want everyone to read this book!

Front Half of September: Savage Legion by Matt Wallace – Honestly, I’m not that much into epic fantasy because it tends to be so stuck in its own world build and convoluted plots that it lacks the emotional meat I crave. This book does not have that problem, and it’s a deep examination of the way outwardly perfect, enlightened societies treat their least powerful citizens and control information. It’s a scream of primal rage at the lionization of men who have to make “necessary” and “difficult” decisions that treat people like things. (Full disclosure: I have the same agent as Matt.)


See you, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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
Unusual Suspects

Female Spies, True Crime Adaptations, And Tons of News 🔪

Hello mystery fans! This week actually brought a good amount of news, we have some roundups, and great Kindle deals to escape into.

From Book Riot And Around The Internet

American Spy cover imageTirzah chats about two great backlist books about female spies on All The Backlist!

Alice and Kim chat adaptations, including Just Mercy and The Orchid Thief, on the latest For Real.

Rincey and Katie talk about mysteries featuring technology and social media, along with some mixed feelings about adaptation news recently announced on the latest Read or Dead.

The most famous fictional detectives

A Necessary Evil cover image: silhouette of man in coat and hat standing in a lush forest8 Books That Explore Family and Crime

Author Toni Jensen Reminds Us the Face of Gun Violence Is Not What We Think

Reese Witherspoon explains why this female-authored mystery-thriller is her September book club pick

Alyssa Cole recommended great crime novels on Instagram

Enter to Win $50 to Your Favorite Independent Bookstore!

News  And Adaptations

Trouble Is What I Do cover imageNational Book Foundation to present Lifetime Achievement Award to Walter Mosley

International Thriller Writers Regroup After Resignations

Author Ann Cleeves funds ‘bibliotherapy’ service to help people heal with books

Ex-Theranos CEO Holmes puts mental state at issue, to be examined by U.S. experts (For fans of Bad Blood)

Grown cover imageTiffany D Jackson and the conversation tied to her recent book Grown: #HeKnewBetter and Laurie Halse Anderson and Tiffany Jackson discuss YA and the Me Too movement

The Royal Mint Release an Agatha Christie £2 Coin

HBG Releases Diversity and Inclusion Progress Report

PRH Releases Workforce Report on Diversity

Kindle Deals

Iced in Paradise cover imageNeed to armchair travel to Hawaii and want a cozy? Iced in Paradise by Naomi Hirahara is $6.15 (Review) (TW addiction/ sick parent/ past stalking incident mentioned)

Need a fun ridiculous read? Hope Never Dies (Obama Biden Mysteries #1) by Andrew Shaffer is $2.99!

For a quirky YA mystery: Bellweather Rhapsody by Kate Racculia is $2.99! (Author of Tuesday Mooney Talks to Ghosts)

The Sun Down Motel cover imageFor a ghostly past and present mystery: The Sun Down Motel by Simone St. James is $1.99! (Review) (TW mentions past rape, not graphic)

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming releases for 2020 and 2021. 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, 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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Read This Book

Read This Book: The Poisoner’s Handbook by Deborah Blum

Welcome to Read This Book, a weekly 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 a fascinating nonfiction title, The Poisoner’s Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York by Deborah Blum!

I bought this book years ago, and there it sat on my shelf gathering dust until I finally cracked it open earlier this year and WOW, I can’t believe I waited so long! It follows the history of forensic medicine in New York City, first giving readers an overview of how early chemistry, poison, and crime unfolded in society until scientific discovery at the turn of the century finally, finally allowed scientists to identify and prove when poisonous substances were found in humans–and allow them to detect and fight crime. Of course, then the trouble was in developing a system of investigation, examination, and scientific review that would help law enforcement catch and prosecute criminals–no small task in the corrupt city departments. Enter Charles Norris, the man who would become New York City’s groundbreaking medical examiner, and his recruit, toxicologist Alexander Gettler. Together the two men reformed their departments, contributed to science, and changed how we understand poison.

What I loved about this book was how Blum framed everything to tell a story that captures your attention–from the chapters that are named after a different poison plaguing society and the scientific communities to exploring various pivotal cases that Norris and Gettler encountered, there is never a dull moment in this book. It reads as breathlessly as a thriller and is never short on twists, interesting crimes, and surprising developments. Honestly, reading this book might make you keenly aware of your own mortality (how did any of our ancestors survive when beauty products full of radium were once on the market?), but it will also give you a deeper appreciation for the systems that we have in place and the scientific advancements that make our every day life safer and healthier. Blum does this in such a way that goes beyond what most of us know from that one time we had to read The Jungle by Upton Sinclair. Even if you aren’t a science reader, there is so much here about history, politics, every day life, crime, and justice that you’re sure to find an entry point into this fascinating book! I can’t wait to check out more books that Blum has written!

I’m also eager to check out American Sherlock: Murder, Forensics, and the Birth of American CSI, which looks at another forensic scientist working at about the same time, but on the opposite coast, in Berkeley, CA!

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
True Story

Mystery + Crime Nonfiction

Mysteries and crime! There are many books about them and here, I am highlighting a select five. Happy Friday, here are your picks:

The Invention of Murder: How the Victorians Revelled in Death and Detection and Created Modern Crime by Judith Flanders. The detective fiction of today owes a lot to the Victorian era. Wilkie Collins, Charles Dickens, etc. popularized the detective novel, and the nineteenth century’s weirdness really leaned into sensationalizing murder (much like today! #truecrime). This books talks about all these beginnings and recounts the stories of some of the most infamous crimes of that era in Great Britain.

 

The Golden Thread: The Cold War and the Mysterious Death of Dag Hammarskjöld by Ravi Somaiya. If you were not around yet in the 1960s, here’s the center of this story: On Sept. 17, 1961, Dag Hammarskjöld boarded a Douglas DC6 propeller plane on the sweltering tarmac of the airport in Leopoldville, the capital of the Congo. Hours later, he would be found dead in an African jungle with an Ace of Spades tucked in his collar. Do you need more info than that to read this book? Probably not.

 

Forensics: What Bugs, Burns, Prints, DNA and More Tell Us About Crime by Val McDermid. As someone who watches a whole lot of Forensic Files, I was relieved to see this came out as recently as 2014, as various branches of forensic science have basically been declared a lot of bunk over the years. Crime writer McDermid delves into the world of forensics and “discovers how maggots collected from a corpse can help determine one’s time of death; how a DNA trace a millionth the size of a grain of salt can be used to convict a killer; and how a team of young Argentine scientists led by a maverick American anthropologist were able to uncover the victims of a genocide.”

 

A Massacre in Mexico: The True Story Behind the Missing 43 Students by Anabel Hernández. In September, 2014, 43 male students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers’ College went missing in Iguala, Guerrero, Mexico (about a three hour drive south of Mexico City). In the wake of the students’ disappearances, protestors in Mexico took up the slogan “Fue el estado”–“It was the state.” Author Hernández backs this up with her research, which points to a massive governmental cover-up.

 

Dead Mountain: The Untold True Story of the Dyatlov Pass Incident by Donnie Eichar. If you’re familiar with the Dyatlov Pass Incident, you know it was deeply weird. In 1959, a group of nine experienced hikers in the Russian Ural Mountains died mysteriously on an elevation known as Dead Mountain. Incidents such as “unexplained violent injuries, signs that they cut open and fled the tent without proper clothing or shoes, a strange final photograph taken by one of the hikers, and elevated levels of radiation found on some of their clothes—have led to decades of speculation over what really happened.” Check this out to learn more.

 

Have a truly amazing weekend! As always, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime and co-hosting the nonfiction For Real podcast with Kim here at Book Riot. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.