Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Kidlit Deals for August 12, 2020

Hi kidlit pals! I’m back this week with another round up of great book deals for all the young readers in your life, and this week’s selection is awesome. From great fantasies to books about friendship and competitive eating, and award-winning classics to biographies, here are some of the best kidlit book deals of the week!

These deals were active as of writing this newsletter, get them while they’re hot!

Paula Chase’s novel So Done, which is about friendship and middle school, is only $2.

Snag Love That Dog by Sharon Creech for $2.

Boy Bites Bug by Rebecca Petruck is perfect for readers who aren’t squeamish, and is $3.

Got a fantasy lover and Rick Riordan fan on your hands? Grab The Serpent’s Secret by Sayantani DasGupta for just $5.

Meet the Magnificant Mya Tibbs in her first book, Spirit Week Showdown, which you can pick up for under $5.

Slider by Pete Hautman is about a kid who is a competitive eater, it’s only $5.

Rules by Cynthia Lord is about a girl learning to see her autistic brother in a new light, and it can be yours for $4.

Erin Hunter fans will enjoy the first book in the Bravelands series, Broken Pride, which is available for $2.

Learn more about E.B. White, author of Charlotte’s Web, in Melissa Sweet’s Some Writer!: The Story of E.B White, which is only $3.

For $2, pick up The Dark Lord Clementine by Sarah Jean Horwitz, a funny book about a girl destined to grow up a villain.

Happy reading!

Tirzah

Categories
Riot Rundown

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Categories
In The Club

In the Club 08/12

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. This week I’d like to remind everyone to get outside if you’re able and it’s safe to do so. Summer is starting to wind down (queue Lana del Rey’s “Summertime Sadness”), so I’m determined to absorb all the Vitamin D and get as much outside air in these lungs as I can. When my anxiety creeps back up or I’m overcome by the stuck-in-the-house blues, I feel almost instantly better after going for a walk or sitting in a park for as little as 30 minutes. So let this be a reminder to get outside if you too are feeling all the things. Bring your book club buddies and some nibbles, too.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

I celebrated a friend’s birthday yesterday with a social distance picnic at one of our favorite parks. I packed a simple lunch of sandwiches, chips, and rosemary lemonade—it was perfect, if I do say so myself!

I know what you’re thinking: “Woman, I know how to make a sandwich.” Yes! But! To some a sandwich is just meat, cheese, bread—and sometimes that is all you need. But your flavor fairy bookmother is here to remind you to step up your between-the-bread game. Start with good bread, meats and cheeses: I got a hearty loaf from a local bakery, some ham and capicola, a little provolone, and a nice sharp cheddar. But don’t forget the spreads, sauces, and toppings! I brought a whole bunch of stuff for everyone to build their sando to their liking: lettuce, tomato, red onion, avocado, pepperoncinis, jalapeños, mayo, dijon mustard, and red wine vinaigrette. The possibilities are endless, just take a few extra minutes to pack them up.

Now for the beverage: there is nothing quite as satisfying as a nice, tart lemonade on a hot summer day. I tossed together the juice of about a dozen lemons, water to taste, a quick rosemary simple syrup for sweetness (sugar, water, rosemary, heat, pow!). And because I promised my friend some birthday bourbon, in the bourbon went.

No Theme. Just Books.

I couldn’t think of a theme to tie these books together, friends. I just think you should read them because they’re really great reads and have lots of discussion potential.

By Force Alone by Lavie Tidhar – This is an Arthurian retelling unlike any I have ever read. No one is particularly likable: the Knights of the Round Table are all sort of out for themselves, Merlin is a jerk who feeds off violence and conflict, even the Lady of the Lake is a shady arms dealer. I’m sorry.. what?! Out there as this premise sounds, stay with it; it’s a really smart (and violent and funny and the most subversive) critique of Brexit. Make sure to read the afterword, then discuss how Tidhar’s twisting of such a venerated story works to point out the hypocrisy of nationalism.

Disfigured: On Fairy Tales, Disability, and Making Space by Amanda Leduc – Oh my gatos, this own voices book on disability in fairy tales was a wake up call. You may think you know that the fairy tales of the West have major ableist tones, but reading this book really aims a floodlight at all that’s problematic. Able-bodied privilege has kept many of us from thinking critically about the implications of ableist messaging in these beloved stories, from those of the Brothers Grimm to Hans Christian Andersen to Disney. The villains are either disfigured in some way or disability is doled out as a punishment. The princesses and princes who find love aren’t ever disabled, or if they are, it’s after their hideous disfigurement has been shaken off. Discuss all the ways in which disabled representation frankly just sucks, and how so much of our society’s approach to disability focuses on curing it rather than making spaces (and not just physical ones) accessible for disabled people.

Take A Hint, Dani Brown by Talia Hibbert – I knew I wanted to include this book after a particular corner of the internet lost its ever loving mind over the song “WAP.” This newsletter isn’t the space for me to go on the stop-policing-women’s-pleasure-and-sit-down-if-you-never-had-a-problem-with-men-rapping-about-the-same-thing rant I have in my soul, so instead I’ll recommend a romance novel—and series, really—that portrays women (emphatically!) owning their sexuality. The titular character of Take A Hint, Dani Brown is a queer Black woman who openly likes to get hers, and her hottie love interest is a former pro rugby player coping with mental health struggles. It was so refreshing to see each of these characters exploring issues so often hush-hushed and shamed by society. It’s also just a super fun take on the fake relationship trope with some very steamy sexy time scenes. This is excellent on audio with narration by Ione Butler. Just.. maybe be careful if you’re listening to it loudly in your car and you’re at a stoplight next to a family in a Subaru, or else be prepared for shocked expressions when Dani starts going on about her throbbing lady parts… I’ve heard that can happen. Discuss!

Suggestion Section

Pick a title from this list of books to inspire confidence, especially if your book club members are feeling a little out of sorts these days. I go back to the Year of Yes a lot years after reading it, especially the part about saying yes to saying no.

Also up at the Riot right now: this roundup of books for a more inclusive approach to learning US history. I like to call this “WTF reading” because I dare you to read any one of these books and not mutter “what the f@%#?” to yourself at least once. When your club sits down to discuss it, take turns sharing how much of what you read was or was not taught to each of you in school, or what version of that history you got instead.


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

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
True Story

[8/12] New Releases: Robber Barons and National Parks

We haven’t checked in on STATS in a while. How’re your 2020 reading stats? If you’ve abandoned them in the abyss otherwise known as 2020 Plans, that makes complete sense. I’ve got some new reads for you! Just in case you’re lookin’.

Iron Empires: Robber Barons, Railroads, and the Making of Modern America by Michael Hiltzik. I don’t know how into nineteenth-century America you are, but if you know anything about it, you know that the railroads were The Thing. Crossin’ the country! Ruining nations of people! And then the robber barons, i.e. Vanderbilt, Morgan, and all those guys, hoarding all the wealth, like smug dragons. Hiltzik talks here about the impact of the railroad and how bananas everything went when/while it was built.

Good for You: Bold Flavors With Benefits by Akhtar Nawab. Ok, these are “100 recipes for gluten-free, dairy-free, vegetarian, and vegan diets.” Wow. Impressive. I have a hard time just trying to incorporate more protein into my diet, and Nawab is like, here’s how to cut it down to the essentials. Each recipe doesn’t cover ALL those bases though, because it includes things like Fish Tacos with Pistachio Mole, Gazpacho with Poached Shrimp, AND Dark Chocolate Almond Butter Cups with Sea Salt. A+.

Leave It As It Is: A Journey Through Theodore Roosevelt’s American Wilderness by David Gessner. Do you miss going outside? Why not read about it (she said, sadly)? Here, Gessner “embarks on a great American road trip guided by Roosevelt’s crusading environmental legacy.” Roosevelt, complicated figure that he was, laid the foundation for many of our national parks and was the first president to create a Federal Bird Reserve. On the trip, Gessner “questions and reimagines Roosevelt’s vision for today.” Which is GREAT, because, as previously stated: complicated.

BACKLIST BUMPS

CasteCaste: The Origins of Our Discontent by Isabel Wilkerson. Ok, this isn’t really “backlist,” but it came out last week and I MISSED IT. In Wilkerson’s next book after The Warmth of Other Suns, she looks at “how America today and throughout its history has been shaped by a hidden caste system, a rigid hierarchy of human rankings.” By looking at America, India, and Nazi Germany, Wilkerson walks you through eight pillars that support caste systems around the world.

 

Amazons, Abolitionists, and Activists: A Graphic History of Women’s Fight for Their Rights by Mikki Kendall and A. D’Amico. This graphic history takes a more zoomed-out approach to the history of women’s rights. Kendall starts in antiquity, moves to slavery, colonialism, and imperialism, and then suffrage, civil rights, and women’s rights from the ’60s to today. It’s easy for women’s rights to be centered around the ballot when there is so much more to it.

 

That’s it for this week. 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.

Categories
Unusual Suspects

(8/12) A Fancy Party With A Garden Murder 🔪

Hi mystery fans! I have a great addition to the not-like-the-others spy stories and a Regency mystery that is delightful.

A Spy in the Struggle by Aya de León: Remember on Friday when I said I was looking forward to reading this over the weekend? Well, I ended up reading the first half in one sitting Friday night—until that pesky thing of needing sleep happened—and finishing it Saturday morning, hence why I’m starting my raving about a December book in August. It’s very good and worth the pre-buy and letting your library know you want them to have it.

Aya de León never fails to create excellent characters while bringing communities, and their different voices and complexities, to life. Yolanda Vance is a Type A personality who has done nothing but focus on school and work until she finds herself handing in evidence during a raid of her law firm and becoming a pariah in the legal field. With that path blown up, she ends up hired by the FBI as a lawyer. Before she can settle in, she’s given an undercover assignment she has no training for—because she’s all they have in the form of a young Black agent who can relate to teens. She isn’t that confident about her ability to blend in seeing as she’s never felt she fit in anywhere; but she has a positive-thinking-book’s lessons always at the ready and never quits, so off she goes from NY to California.

The assignment is to bug the center of Red, Black, and Green!, a teen activist group the FBI has labeled as extremist, while volunteering for the group and reporting back what she learns. While she struggles to keep her opinions to herself—that anyone who doesn’t like their situation can just work hard enough to change it—she also learns a few interesting things: that a recent overdose isn’t believed by the community to be an OD, that the informant who came before her was murdered, that she may not be as anti-love as she thought, and that many of her beliefs are about to be challenged.

We get to know Yolanda as she gets to know the FBI team, her new Red, Black, and Green! team, a suitor, and through memories of her childhood with her widowed mother and her years at a prep school and then law school. We also get to know the community fighting against the government-tied corporation that RBG! is protesting and the hilarious, creative, and smart teens making their voices heard, along with the rookie cop who found the OD in question, and adult coordinators of RBG!. I absolutely loved the characters, story, and the bonus of a few shexy-time scenes. Add this to the list of fantastic mold-breaking spy novels like American Spy and the Vera Kelly series. I’m always here for more de León novels and would be thrilled for more Yolanda Vance—this could easily be a series, and I would totally be here for that! (TW drug overdose, talk of addiction/ brief past mention of child-on-child attempted sexual assault)

The Body in the Garden (Lily Adler Mystery #1) by Katharine Schellman: A delightful Regency era murder mystery. Lily Adler is recently widowed and while she chooses to be an independent woman, she in no way wants to be shunned by society. At a ball in London, she’ll get more than she bargained for: she overhears blackmail, a man is murdered, and she discovers the magistrate is bribed to not solve the case. Whatever is a lady to do? Investigate herself, of course! I mean she doesn’t have a plan, nor does she think she knows what she’s doing. But she figures she can’t make the situation worse, so why not? Seriously, I love her.

She won’t be working—secretly on solving a murder—alone, however. And she certainly will not be ignoring all of society’s gender and class rules—maybe just a couple. She has navy captain Jack Hartley, who was her husband’s friend, and nineteen year old West Indies heiress Ofelia Oswald, who has ties to the dead man, to help. And oh are they going to bicker, and question each other, and bicker some more—in the fun, amusing way. There may even be some love in the air? There will definitely be more murder, so they better get their antics under control and solve this quickly! If you need a truly enjoyable start to a new historical murder mystery series, this is your book. Also, the audiobook has a lovely voiced British-born narrator, Henrietta Meire, so highly recommend that format. I can’t wait for the next mystery!

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.

Categories
Today In Books

Children’s Book Gets Less Creepy Rewrite: Today In Books

Children’s Book Gets Less Creepy Rewrite

Fans of the children’s book Love You Forever may have noticed that while the book is overall sweet and full of love, there is a creepy bit: “the part where the son is a grown adult living on his own, and the mom will occasionally sneak into his bedroom to check on him and sing him a lullaby—that’s kind of weird.” Well now you can download an edited version by Topher Payne titled Love You Forever And I’ll Call Before I Come Over which has changed that bit to include bars on his windows and a lesson on space. You can also checkout Payne’s other two edits for The Giving Tree (The Tree Who Set Healthy Boundaries) and The Rainbow Fish (The Rainbow Fish Keeps His Scales).

John Legend Adapting Crime Novel

Nia Long (Dear White People, Fatal Affair), John Legend’s Get Lifted Film Co, and Sony Pictures TV have teamed up to adapt Paper Gods by Goldie Taylor. Production is set to begin later this year with Long playing fictional Atlanta Mayor Victoria Dobbs. Making popcorn!

The Kids Are Alright

Fifteen-year-old Riya Joshi loves words–competing twice in grade school in the Scripps National Spelling Bee–and has put that passion into creating a booklet filled with crosswords, word scrambles, and word searches: Detective Wordy: Chicago Edition. She prints three copies for every sale to donate to children’s support homes, hospitals, and assisted living facilities. “Joshi has sold more than 150 copies and donated more than 560, all before starting her sophomore year at Walter Payton College Preparatory High School.”

For The Anxious Bebes

These picture books for anxious kids are a great starting place for helping children understand and name their fears.

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book: THE MOTHERS by Brit Bennett

Welcome to Read This Book, the newsletter where I recommend a book you should add to your TBR, STAT! I stan variety in all things, and my book recommendations will be no exception. These must-read books will span genres and age groups. There will be new releases, oldie but goldies from the backlist, and the classics you may have missed in high school. Oh my! If you’re ready to diversify your books, then LEGGO!!

Weeks after Brit Bennett’s sophomore novel The Vanishing Half was published in June 2020, Rioters were singing its praises, and HBO announced it won the heated auction to adapt the novel into a limited series. When it comes to writing critically acclaimed books Hollywood is eager to adapt, Brit Bennett is two for two. Her debut novel, The Mothers, was optioned by Warner Bros. with Kerry Washington as the producer less than a year after it was published.

The Mothers Book CoverIn Brit Bennett’s The Mothers, Nadia Turner should be reveling in her last year of high school. Instead, the rebellious seventeen-year-old beauty is grieving her mother’s recent suicide. During this summer before college, Nadia splits her time between her God-loving, best friend, Aubrey, and the local pastor’s son, twenty-one-year-old Luke Sheppard, the former football star now waiting tables following a career-ending injury. Nadia and Luke’s summer romance results in a pregnancy and subsequent cover-up that will impact the rest of their lives. As the years pass, Nadia, Luke, and Aubrey become adults living in debt to the choices they made that one fateful summer.

Standouts from The Mothers are without a doubt all of the insightful quotes that will linger on your brain long after you’ve finished the book. Bennett’s beautiful prose will have you unable to put this book down until you learn how this love triangle between Nadia, Luke, and Aubrey will end. It’s why I devoured most of this book during a two-hour plane ride! I needed to know if any of these relationships were strong enough to survive all the secrets and lies.

It is difficult to discuss in detail exactly what I love about The Mothers  without giving away important plot points because the interaction between the characters is really what drives the story. Overall, I love the focus on relationships between friends lovers, and family and how secrets affect those relationships. Often, we think keeping secrets from the people we love is for their own protection. However, if we’re honest, we would admit it is really to protect ourselves. That is very much evident in the Luke-Aubrey-Nadia love triangle.

Also, like many books I have thoroughly enjoyed, the ambiguous ending to The Mothers left me wanting more. I will always give my seal of approval to a book that leaves the me wanting more story. I want a sequel about how Nadia, Luke, and Aubrey are dealing with middle age life. Have they healed from the pain they caused each other? Are they even still friends?

I was engrossed in The Mothers from beginning to end. When I finished, I wished there was just one more chapter. Now, I am just “patiently” waiting for that adaptation.

Until next time bookish friends,

Katisha

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What's Up in YA

This Week’s YA News and New YA Books

Hey YA Fans!

Let’s dig into this week’s YA book news, as well as look at this week’s stellar roundup of new YA book releases.

YA Book News

New YA Books

So many great releases this week I cannot wait to get my hands on.

All Our Worst Ideas by Vicky Skinner

Chasing Starlight by Teri Bailey Black

The Chosen by Taran Matharu (series, paperback)

Color Me In by Natasha Díaz (paperback)

Crossing Stones by Helen Frost (paperback rerelease)

Cut Off by Adrianne Finlay

A Dress for the Wicked by Autumn Krause (paperback)

Facing The Sun by Janice Lynn Mather

Gut Check by Eric Kester (paperback)

Hello Girls by Brittany Cavallaro and Emily Henry (paperback)

kingdom of soulsKingdom of Souls by Rena Barron (paperback)

A Lady Rogue by Jenn Bennett (paperback)

Let’s Call It A Doomsday by Katie Henry (paperback)

On The Edge of Gone by Corinne Duyvis (paperback)

Sia Martinez and the Moonlit Beginning of Everything by Raquel Vasquez Gilliland

Star Daughter by Shveta Thakrar

This Town Is Not All Right by M. K. Krys

You Must Not Miss by Katrina Leno (paperback)

This Week at Book Riot


I’m obsessed with this rainbow Book Nerd tee and needed y’all to become equally so. $25.


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.

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Giveaways

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Categories
The Stack

081120-CatalystPrime/SevenDays-The-Stack