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Unusual Suspects

Mystery Authors Writing In TV And Film

Hello mystery fans! I have something a bit different for you this week. Sometimes while waiting for an author I love’s next book I will go in search of what they’ve announced and discover that they’re working on something completely different. Like a TV show. Getting to watch a show or film an author has written (not necessarily an adaptation of their work) feels like bonus content. Plus, for anyone struggling to read during the absolute garbage fire that is 2020, this may offer you some viewing options. Or maybe you’ve seen one of these shows/films and didn’t know one of the writers had great novels, and now you have even more to add to your TBR. Either way, here are some of my favorite dual writers of novels and TV/Film.

Bluebird Bluebird by Attica Locke cover imageLet’s start with Attica Locke, who I discovered was one of the writers for Empire (Cookie!) after having read her Jay Porter legal series and standalone The Cutting Season and needed more of her writing. Since then her TV writing credits have only grown! Not only is Locke one of our best crime writers today (run to read Bluebird, Bluebird if you’ve yet to), she also wrote on Ava DuVernay’s Netflix mini-series When They See Us (trailer) based on the true crime case of the Central Park Five. And she wrote on Hulu’s adaptation of Celeste Ng’s novel Little Fires Everywhere (trailer) starring Kerry Washington and Reese Witherspoon. So you have five novels, a network show, and two streaming mini-series to marathon. Make popcorn.

Megan Abbott writes about girls and women in a way that always gets under my skin and stays (in a brilliant way) while writing about all the complexities of being a teenager and woman. And her novels usually have an obsession or unique “community” like gymnastics in You Will Know Me and a research lab studying premenstrual dysphoric disorder in Give Me Your Hand. She also wrote great noir novels in which she went all feminist on the genre: my favorite stood-up-and-clapped-when-I-finished being Queenpin. While you may already know that she wrote on her own USA Network series adaptation of her cheerleading crime novel Dare Me (trailer), you may not know that she was also story editor for HBO’s The Deuce (trailer), set in set in ’70s/80s New York City, starring Maggie Gyllenhaal and James Franco. Which means you have 9 novels, a crime graphic novel (Normandy Gold), and two shows to marathon.

deacon king kongDeacon King Kong is not only one of my top crime reads this year, but it’s one of my favorite reads period, which sent me on a mission to read more James McBride. And that’s how I discovered that one of his previous novels, The Good Lord Bird, is a Showtime limited series that will premiere in October starring Ethan Hawke–and for fans of Daveed Diggs, he plays Frederick Douglass (trailer). The story is set right before the Civil War and follows a young slave and a group of abolitionist soldiers. Lucky for readers McBride has an extensive catalog of novels, nonfiction, and memoir to dive into.

Here’s the author that started this whole fall down this rabbit hole: Gillian Flynn. Yes, she’s known for the did-you-see-that-coming novel and screenplay film adaptation of Gone Girl. But she also adapted Lynda La Plante’s novel Widows (trailer) with Steve McQueen into an awesome heist film starring Viola Davis. And it turns out Flynn’s latest project is Utopia (trailer), a conspiracy thriller series starring John Cusack, Rainn Wilson, and Sasha Lane, coming soon to Amazon Prime. So if you’ve been waiting for her next novel, which she briefly hinted at a while back, you can at least watch some of her stuff in the meantime. If you’ve yet to read Flynn’s before-Gone-Girl work, Dark Places is one of the only crime novels I’ve read where I didn’t figure out the solve.

The Spellman Files cover imageAnd here’s some TV show writing overlap: Lisa Lutz, who wrote the great dark comedy PI series The Spellmans, was also on the writing team for HBO’s The Deuce and USA Network’s Dare Me. So if you’ve yet to discover Izzy Spellman, the PI working at her parents’ firm, you have six novels to marathon.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. See 2020 upcoming releases and 2021. An Unusual Suspects Pinterest board. 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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Today In Books

Reese Witherspoon Picked Her First YA For Book Club: Today In Books

Reese Witherspoon Picked Her First YA For Book Club

Reese’s Book Club has picked its first YA title to read: You Should See Me in a Crown by Leah Johnson. According to Witherspoon’s post on her Hello Sunshine site, she’s been reading a lot of diverse YA titles lately that she wants to share so they’ll become the bonus monthly book club picks. Excellent first pick.

Jensen Ackles To Join The Boys S3

If you’re sad about Supernatural coming to an end at least you’re guaranteed more Jensen Ackles on your screen: he’s joining the cast of Amazon Prime’s The Boys comic adaptation in season 3. The move makes sense considering Eric Kripke created both Supernatural and The Boys adaptation. You’ll have to wait a bit though before getting to see Ackles as Soldier Boy since season 2 is set to start in September.

Hartford Public Library Starts Antiracism Book Club

Hartford Public Library has partnered with Noname Book Club to start a book club, The Awakening Book Club, encouraging patrons who are teens to mid-twenties to join in to read social justice and antiracism books, with a space to discuss them. September’s book is White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo and October’s is So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Olou.

Libraries Reopen in COVID-19 Hot Spots: Are Library Staff Being Protected?

In considering whether staff are being protected as libraries reopen during the pandemic, we take a look at some Arizona libraries.

Categories
True Story

New Releases: Soap Operas and Changemakers

We’re starting to get smashed with huge release dates due to all the postponed books from the spring, so consider these but a sprinkling of new nonfiction releases. If you’re interested in a more complete list, check out Book Riot Insiders, but between this newsletter and the podcast For Real, I try to catch what look like some of the best and/or weirdest. Here we go:

The Organ Thieves: The Shocking Story of the First Heart Transplant in the Segregated South by Chip Jones. I cannot summarize this any better than the publisher: “In 1968, Bruce Tucker, a black man, went into Virginia’s top research hospital with a head injury, only to have his heart taken out of his body and put into the chest of a white businessman. Now, in The Organ Thieves, Pulitzer Prize–nominated journalist Chip Jones exposes the horrifying inequality surrounding Tucker’s death and how he was used as a human guinea pig without his family’s permission or knowledge.”

 

Always Young and Restless: My Life On and Off America’s #1 Daytime Drama by Melody Thomas Scott. Yeah, like I’m NOT going to include this book. For those not caught up in the heady days of the ’90s soap opera, The Young and the Restless has been number one in the ratings for 28 years. Scott joined the show in 1979 and she is still on it. Soap operas are amazing, do not fight me. She talks about her forty years on the show, as well as her career as a child actor (she was in Hitchcock’s Marnie!). I was a Days of Our Lives lady, but I stan this book.

 

Resist: 35 Profiles of Ordinary People Who Rose Up Against Tyranny and Injustice by Veronica Chambers. John Lewis, Lucretia Mott, Rachel Carson, Dolores Huerta, Nelson Mandela, and more are profiled in this YA collection of activists around the world. Each has a resistance lesson and shows “men and women who resisted tyranny, fought the odds, and stood up to bullies that threatened to harm their communities.” Chambers also has a book out about the suffrage movement for younger readers called Finish the Fight.

 

BACKLIST BUMPS

Making Our Way Home: The Great Migration and the Black American Dream by Blair Imani. This came out back in January, but Morgan Jerkins’s new release Wandering in Strange Lands reminded me of it! It’s an illustrated history of “the Great Migration and its sweeping impact on Black and American culture, from Reconstruction to the rise of hip hop.” It looks at voting rights, domestic terrorism, discrimination, and segregation alongside the flourishing of arts and culture, activism, and civil rights. Check it out!

 

Girl Decoded: A Scientist’s Quest to Reclaim Our Humanity by Bringing Emotional Intelligence to Technology by Rana el Kaliouby. Love a long subtitle. This also came out closer to the beginning of the year, but tells the story of how el Kaliouby came to work on artificial emotional intelligence (Emotion AI). The purpose of this is to “humanize our technology and how we connect with one another.” Which anyone who’s dealt with a misunderstanding due to the lack of tone in text messages knows is SORELY needed.

 

That’s it for this week! 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.

Categories
What's Up in YA

This Week’s YA Book News and New YA Books

Hey YA Fans!

It’s time for your weekly roundup of YA book news and new book releases.

I hope you’re strapped in, as the next few weeks will be heavy hitters with new releases, as many of the spring books that got shifted are finally hitting shelves.

That just means lots of great new reading, right?

This Week’s YA Book News

This Week’s New YA Books

A * means I’ve read and recommend the book.

All Eyes On Her by L.E. Flynn

The Beckoning Shadow by Katharyn Blair (paperback)

Bright Star by Erin Swan (paperback)

Body Talk: 37 Voices Explore Our Radical Anatomy edited by Kelly Jensen (paperback, and obviously, I recommend it)

City of Beasts by Corrie Wang (paperback)

The Confusion of Laurel Graham by Adrienne Kisner (paperback)

Displacement by Kiku Hughes

Guardians of Liberty: Freedom of the Press and the Nature of News by Linda Barrett Osborne

Last Girl Lied To by L.E. Flynn (paperback)

Raybearer by Jordan Ifueko (first in a series)

*Revolution of Birdie Randolph by Brandy Colbert (paperback)

Sea Witch Rising by Sarah Henning (paperback, series)

The Secret Runners by Matthew Reilly

Six Angry Girls by Adrienne Kisner

Skywatchers by Carrie Arcos

Soul of Stars by Ashley Poston (paperback)

*Start Here by Trish Doller (paperback)

Vicious Spirits by Kat Cho (series)

*What Goes Up by Christine Heppermann

This Week on Book Riot

Speaking of You Should See Me In a Crown, check out this badass enamel pin of Liz Lighty! I’m obsessed. $10.50.


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you for some great ebook deals on Saturday!

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

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Giveaways

081820-MoreThanaWoman-Giveaway

We’re giving away 100 audiobook downloads of More Than a Woman by Caitlin Moran to 100 lucky Riot readers!

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

Here’s what it’s all about:

The author of the international bestseller How to Be a Woman returns with another “hilarious neo-feminist manifesto” (NPR) in which she reflects on parenting, middle-age, marriage, existential crises—and, of course, feminism.

It’s been a glorious ten years since How to Be a Woman was published: Barack Obama loves Fleabag, and Dior make “FEMINIST” t-shirts. However, middle-aged women still have some nagging, unanswered questions: Can feminists have Botox? Why isn’t there such a thing as “Mum Bod”? Written with Caitlin’s trademark blend of humor and brutal honestly, More Than a Woman is an absolutely necessary take on the life of the modern woman.

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Riot Rundown

081820-AllTogetherNow-RR

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The Stack

081820-DarkOnes-The-Stack

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Check Your Shelf

Children’s Books About (and by!) VP Candidate Kamala Harris

Welcome to Check Your Shelf. Anyone else hitting a wall from working at home? I had been doing fine for awhile, but now it’s like my brain refuses to do any sort of high-level thinking, planning, or executing, which is…irritating, to say the least. We’ll see if this week is any better.


Collection Development Corner

Publishing News

New & Upcoming Titles

What Your Patrons Are Hearing About

RA/Genre Resources

On the Riot


All Things Comics

On the Riot


Audiophilia

On the Riot


Book Lists, Book Lists, Book Lists

Children/Teens

Adults

On the Riot


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.

Mask up and stay hydrated. See you on Friday!

—Katie McLain Horner, @kt_librarylady on Twitter.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for August 18

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s new book release day, and there were plenty of great books to choose from (apparently we’re going to get buried on September 3, though, so… brace yourself?). It’s Alex, with a selection of new titles and some news for you.

I got a lot of reading done this weekend because there are two massive wildfires in western Colorado that have filled the air with ash and made it basically unbreathable. On the downside, I am getting cabin fever because I couldn’t ride my bike around. On the upside, I got to finish The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson, and I’m taking a point of personal privilege to tell you THIS BOOK IS SO FREAKING GOOD. A multiverse story like I’ve never read before, filled with grit and marrow and science and spirituality, about the multitudes every single person contains. I cannot recommend it enough.

Here, start your week off right, is Steve Martin playing the banjo.

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

New Releases

Raybearer by Jordan Ifueko – Tarisai was raised in strict isolation without the normal warmth of a family by a demanding and distant mother she knows only as The Lady. The Lady sends her to compete to join the Crown Prince’s Council of Eleven, a body that is joined through the magic powers of the Ray in a bond deeper than blood. But what seems like a dream for lonely Tarisai becomes a nightmare when The Lady demands that she murder the Crown Prince, and she must choose between loyalty and her own deepest wishes.

The Faithless Hawk by Margaret Owens – With the death of the king and the bid of the witch queen Rhusana for the throne, the Crows are forced into hiding—leaving the country vulnerable to a raging plague. Fie must call on old allies to bring the Crows back to the land—and discover ancient secrets along the way.

Ikenga by Nnedi Okorafor – When the Chief of Chiefs, the most powerful criminal in Kalaria, murders the good-hearted chief of police, he leaves the man’s twelve-year-old son, Nnamdi, alive. Nnamdi helplessly vows revenge, but there’s little he can do against such a powerful adult… until a mysterious nighttime meeting leaves him with a magic object, one that gives him superpowers.

When Comes the Stroke of Midnight by Madeline Walz – Zaivyer has never met his father, though he has his name, his eyes, and the same inert metal plate embedded in his temple. When he turns thirteen, the plate activates… and so do his gifts, ones that may lead him some day to save two worlds.

The Vanished Queen by Lisbeth Campbell – The queen vanished long ago, disappeared by her king, who claimed she was assassinated by the neighboring kingdom. Reeling from the unjust execution of her father, Anza finds this long-missing woman’s diary. From the past, her words inspire Anza to join in a plot to overthrow the king at last.

Vicious Spirits by Kat Cho – Somin is ready to help her friends move on from their losses and trauma, but Jihoon and Miyoung are still in deep mourning. Only the dokkaebi, Junu, is ready to resume life. Too bad Miyoung’s lost fox bead has caused a rift between the worlds of the living and dead, and it’s up to Somin and Junu to work together to fix the breach before they lose another friend.

Noumenon Ultra by Marina J. Lostletter – For a hundred thousand years, the great AI I.C.C. has lain dormant, its ships quiescent. But someone walks the halls of the convoy, someone who isn’t human, and the AI stirs. Noumenon is still too young to have evolved intelligent life—so who are these visitors, and what do they want? (Full disclosure: Marina and I have the same agent.)

News and Views

From NYT: ‘We already survived an apocalypse’: Indigenous Writers Are Changing Sci-Fi

Mark Oshiro on the unintended education of literature

FIYAH and Tor.com are working together on an online flash fiction anthology written by Black authors

New generation of writers of color reckon with HP Lovecraft’s racism

Speaking of, Misha Green (showrunner of Lovecraft Country) talks about the horror of marginalization

Tor.com showed off the new cover for A Desolation Called Peace, sequel to A Memory Called Empire–and announced Arkady Martine’s next book, Prescribed Burn.

There’s an SFF Limerick contest!

Sascha Stronach (author of The Dawnhounds, which I am currently reading) offers a Twitter tour of South Island NZ baked goods.

“Teeth the size of bananas.” Okay sure why not. At least they’re safely fossilized and not, like, you know, a fire tornado.

On Book Riot

11 Black sci-fi authors to read right now

This month you can enter to win $50 at your favorite indie bookstore and a 1-year Kindle Unlimited subscription.


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
The Kids Are All Right

New Children’s Book Releases for August 18, 2020

Dear Readers,

We’re back with another set of children’s new releases for you. This week there are some beautiful picture books hitting shelves, and even though Halloween is still a ways away, you can get an early start with some of this week’s spooky releases.

Maud and Grand-Maud by Sara O’Leary, illustrated by Kenard Pak

This adorable picture book follows a girl who dreams of being just like her grandmother. On special weekends Maud gets to stay at her grandma’s house, having breakfast for dinner, watching old movies, and telling stories. This is a sweet and snuggly read about the power of generational relationships.

We’re Going On A Goon Hunt by Michael Rex

Halloween is imminent, and in case you weren’t aware, here’s a new Michael Rex Halloween parody for you. Off the heels of Goodnight Goon, this new one is a scary play on We’re Going On A Bear Hunt in which a family goes off on a Halloween jaunt, through pumpkin patches, swamps, and other spooky locales in search of a goon.

Finish the Fight by Veronica Chambers and the Staff of the New York Times

This illustrated primer on women’s voting rights is a perfect introduction for those looking to broaden kids’ understanding of the right to vote. After the passage of the 19th amendment, there were still women who were barred from voting, and this colorful book continues the story of how women of color, like Macy Mcleod Bethune, Mable Ping-hua Lee, and Jovita Idár rose to finish the fight for their rights, and how the fight continues today.

The World’s Poorest President Speaks Out by Yoshimi Kusaba, illustrated by Gaku Nakafawa. Translated by Andro-Ryuo Wong

This one is another great read for those looking to engage kids in social justice discussions, especially ones about poverty and what it means to have enough. Based on a speech given by José Mujica, the president of Uruguay, at the 2012 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, this asks us to consider what our purpose on Earth is: whether its to buy and to sell or to pursue happiness.

Ikenga by Nnedi Okorafor

Sci-fi wonder Okorafor makes her middle grade debut with this adventure a boy named Nmadi, seeking revenge after his father, the police chief of Kaleria, is killed. Though Nmadi doesn’t think he can do much, that changes when he’s given a magical object, an Ikenga, that gives him superpowers.

 

Thirteens by Kate Alice Marshall

This is a fun, suspenseful middle grade story about three friends (Eleanor, Otto, and Pip) in an Oregon town fighting against fate as they unravel the town’s supernatural secrets. Including one of a local legend that promises that, on every thirteenth Halloween, and on their shared thirteenth birthday, three children will disappear. If true it means Eleanor, Otto, and Pip will be the ones to disappear.

 

The Second Best Haunted Hotel on Mercer Street by Cory Putnam Oakes, illustrated by Jane Pica

Another spooky tale for middle grade kids, this one is a hilarious tale of a family-run haunted house forced to compete against the Hauntery, a corporate-backed haunted house that opens up nearby. Worried that their haunted house won’t survive, Willow enlists the help of one of the Hauntery’s ghosts, Evie, but Evie doesn’t tell her new friend she’s still working for the competition.

That’s all for now! See you again in seven days. If you’d like to visit with me in the meantime, you can find me on Twitter.

Chelsea