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Today In Books

A Hogwarts Digital Escape Room: Today In Books

Hello bibliophiles! We made it through the week: let’s take a deep breath, release our shoulders from our ears, and when needed take it just one minute at a time. We collected this week’s COVID-19 pieces for you, with some staying informed and a lot of needed escape reading. Remember to check in on each other, help where you can, and be kind.

A Pennsylvania library created a Hogwarts digital escape room; boredom be gone, we’re headed to Hogwarts!

Wondering how your favorite PRIDE AND PREJUDICE character would react to COVID-19 related social distancing? Cue dream sequence.

If you want one less thing to think about, including which book to read next, take this quiz and find your next book series to read while social distancing.

School has closed and the kids are quarantined at home? We have the best educational comics to start your sudden homeschool journey (and save your sanity).

One reader takes solace in and shares some advice on social distancing from WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING.

Looking for a quarantine reading list? Book Riot contributors list the books they’re planning to read while they stay home and practice social distancing.

Dear Sugar is back! Cheryl Strayed is giving advice as Sugar this Friday on the first episode of Live Wire House Parties.

Creative ways to keep your book life alive during quarantine.

Categories
Book Radar

THE DARK DESCENT OF FRANKENSTEIN is Coming to Television and More Book Radar!

Welcome to Monday, readers! I hope you were able to relax a little this weekend and read something wonderful. I know it’s hard right now. I recommend screaming into a pillow. No, really. Let it out!

Unfortunately, there’s not much more going on in the book world right now than delays and cancelations, but I have a few exciting things to tell you. And here’s where you can learn more about COVID-19 Updates from the Bookish World. We continue to update it regularly.

Whatever you are doing or watching or reading this week, I am sending you virtual hugs. Please try and enjoy the rest of your week as best you can, and remember to stay inside and wash your hands. We’re going to be okay. I’ll see you again on Thursday. – xoxo, Liberty

Here’s Monday’s trivia question: “The Knitting Done” is the title of the second-to-last chapter in what classic book? (Scroll to the bottom for the answer.)

Deals, Reels, and Squeals! 

Ibi Zoboi will chat live online next week with Dr. Yusef Salaam, one of the exonerated Central Park 5, about their upcoming YA novel.

The Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein by Kiersten White is being made into a series.

Axie Oh and Rory Power announced new novels coming in 2022.

Tor.com revealed the cover of The Fourth Island by Sarah Tolmie.

And Tor’s new horror imprint, Nightfire, will be publishing Nothing But Blackened Teeth by Cassandra Khaw.

Melissa Febos announced a new essay collection.

Subterranean Press is publishing a new Aliette de Bodard novella.

Book Riot Recommends 

At Book Riot, I work on the New Books! email, the All the Books! podcast about new releases, and the Book Riot Insiders New Release Index. I am very fortunate to get to read a lot of upcoming titles, and learn about a lot of upcoming titles, and I’m delighted to share a couple with you each week so you can add them to your TBR!

Excited to read:

Ring Shout by P. Djèlí Clark (Tor.com, October 13)

I am a big fan of The Black God’s Drums, so I can’t wait to get my hands on Clark’s newest novella. This one is a supernatural twist on D.W. Griffith, The Birth of a Nation, and the Ku Klux Klan. In it, Griffith is a sorcerer, and he and the Klan are preparing to open Hell on Earth. Looking to stop them is bootlegger Maryse Boudreaux, who has a magic sword and a sharpshooter friend. I love supernatural twists on history!

What I’m reading this week:

Malorie: A Novel by Josh Malerman

The Invisible Life of Addie La Rue by V.E. Schwab

The Kidnap Years: The Astonishing True History of the Forgotten Kidnapping Epidemic That Shook Depression-Era America by David Stout

Earthlings: A Novel by Sayaka Murata

The Eighth Life: for Brilka by Nino Haratischvili

Pun of the week: 

A magician decided to incorporate the use of trapdoors in his shows. But it’s probably just a stage he’s going through.

Here’s a cat picture:

This goofball.

And this is funny.

Everything needs pockets.

Trivia answer: A Tale of Two Cities.

You made it to the bottom! Thanks for reading! – xo, L

Categories
The Fright Stuff

Quarantine and Plague Horror

I don’t know about y’all, but I’m struggling. My anxiety is usually pretty under control, and as far as I know, I have not been exposed to the virus, plus I’ve been following all of the protocol, but the paranoia builds in me every time I reach to touch a doorknob, turn on a light, or even cross the street so as to avoid coming within six feet of someone, waving even as I do it because, I mean, I’m not a monster… I just want to stay away from your gross body and your nasty cooties.

Normally, when I’m anxious about something, I just dive deeper into the crevasse. Meaning, if I’m scared of home invasion, I’ll watch a thousand Lifetime documentaries featuring B&Es, et cetera, because I feel like the better informed I am, the better I can protect myself against whatever I’m afraid of (and I have anxiety, so, like, I’m afraid of everything). To paraphrase Karen Kilgariff from My Favorite Murder, I need to know all of the most horrible shit so that I can avoid it.

It usually works for me. If you’re reading this horror newsletter, it might probably work for you, too. By the way, I’m Mary Kay McBrayer, and you’re in The Fright Stuff, Book Riot’s weekly newsletter featuring the latest and greatest in horror. I structured this newsletter a little differently from the others because, well, desperate times call for desperate measures.

So, here are the greatest books that I know of about plague and/or quarantine:

the old driftThe Old Drift by Namwali Serpell

This impeccable debut novel admittedly makes this list because of a small portion that is narrated by a swarm of mosquitos in Zambia, who are self-proclaimed as man’s greatest nemesis. Still, the Old Drift, a colony established generations before, sees change through three families plagued by magical maladies and less magical epidemics like AIDS.

 

Room by Emma Donaghue

Jack, the five-year-old “Bonsai Boy” narrates this novel in which a woman has been abducted and held in a shop-turned-bunker for years. It’s compelling, sweet, and devastating. I had this book on audio, and I highly recommend that option.

 

 

Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk

This collection of stories shares a frame narrative with the Canterbury Tales… sort of. A bunch of writers go to a lock-in retreat where each of them thinks they’ll sabotage the stores and rations just to make things a little more interesting. It unsurprisingly turns into a survival situation pretty quickly, and they all get what they wanted: something to write about.

 

her body and other parties“Inventory” by Carmen Maria Machado in her collection Her Body and Other Parties

I mentioned this story recently, but I think it bears repeating. Not only is Machado one of THE most interesting voices in horror now, but this story compiles an inventory of sexual experiences which the narrator writes to keep her mind off of being one of–if not THE–last surviving person of a plague.

 

the brief history of the dead by kevin brockmeierThe Brief History of the Dead by Kevin Brockmeier

This fascinating novel braids two storylines: in one of them, the City is inhabited by souls that have departed earth, but have not yet been forgotten by the living, and yet their number is decreasing. Meanwhile, Laura Byrd’s supplies dwindle in her Antarctic research station, and all she can find on the radio is static. Both groups wonder what is happening, and the story progresses, meeting in the middle to illustrate it to the reader as the characters unpack the mystery.

Zone One by Colson Whitehead

If you’re looking for pandemic literature, you can’t skip this one: a pandemic has sorted out all of earth’s inhabitants into the living and the living dead. The narrative follows Mark Spritz, a member of one of the sweeper units that clears lower Manhattan of the remaining feral zombies, and the rest of the population deals with the post-apocalyptic stress disorder that HAS to be a thing–THANK YOU.

 

clay's ark by octavia butlerClay’s Ark by Octavia Butler

It’s our woman science fiction author prototype, Octavia Butler, again! This novel follows a family as they are kidnapped by Eli, the only survivor of a space mission gone awry, crash-landed in the Mojave desert, and in which he was infected with an alien microorganism. In effort to slow its transmission to the rest of the human species, Eli isolates himself in a “family” situation quarantine. Yikes.

The Last Man by Mary Shelley

We most likely know Mary Shelley from the book that made her famous, the allegedly first science fiction novel, born of an orgy/party hosted by Lord Byron, Frankenstein. This book, too, focuses on a theme of science fiction. After all of humanity has been wiped out by the plague, the Last Man wonders, “And what does our narrator do, alone in the world? “I also will write a book, I cried—for whom to read?” He calls it “The History of the Last Man,” and dedicates it to the dead. It will have no readers. Except, of course, the readers of Shelley’s book.” (This last quotation comes from “What Our Contagion Fables are Really about.”)

The latest in horror:

In keeping with the regulations on how to decrease the spread of COVID-19, I’m just going to list a whole bunch of dope books that have just/are about to release. There isn’t a theme. Or, the theme is, books whose authors/publishers have taken one for the team in limiting their exposure by canceling book releases and launches, thereby directly affecting their books’ sales. In case you missed that subtext: BUY OR PRE-ORDER THESE BOOKS. They’re not getting the exposure that they deserve because their authors, publishers, publicists, et al, have a high regard for human life. (This list is by NO means comprehensive, and if I missed YOUR book or one that you love, pleeeeease let me know. My contact info is in the signature!)

The Fish & the Dove by Mary-Kim Arnold

This collection of poems reflects the history of the Korean War, its effects on generations afterward, and the institutionalized language that it produced. Arnold says, the “legendary Assyrian warrior goddess Semiramis haunts this book,” which I love.

 

 

and I do not forgive youAnd I Do Not Forgive You: Stories & Other Revenges by Amber Sparks

This collection of short stories in unmissable–it blends elements of the fairy tale, mythology, contemporary ideals, and apocalyptic technologies to illustrate feminine narratives in hilarious and horrifying ways. You’re gonna love it.

 

 

lakewood by megan giddingsLakewood: A Novel by Megan Giddings

This book narrates a horror of medical experimentation as it addresses class and race. It’s described as part Handmaid’s Tale and part Immortal Life of Henrietta LacksDON’T MIND IF I DO.

 

 

No Bad Deed by Heather Chavez

When a veterinarian pulls over to help at a bad car wreck, one of the survivors leaves her with an impossible choice: she can either let the other victim die, or she can die.

 

 

 

Here are more books (not exclusively horror) whose releases have been affected by the quarantine.

Harbingers (FKA as news):

Do you want to know what our contagion fables are really about? Check out this article on The New Yorker. (Bonus: I learned that heating books in the oven at 160 degrees kills bed bugs WITHOUT damaging the books.)

Rachel Harrison (author of the newly-released title The Returnexplains on CrimeReads how a sense of dread is the essential ingredient of a good dark fiction story.

Want to know how Snowpiercer might be a dark sequel to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory? Of course you do.

Want to learn about how the first myth of alien abduction was born? I don’t–you might remember that I’m exxxtra afraid of aliens. But maybe you do?

Did you see that Audible just made hundreds of audiobooks free to stream? The list includes some horror classics like Frankenstein, The Picture of Dorian Gray“The Yellow Wallpaper,” and a collection of Edith Wharton short stories.

Also, let’s just say that going “deeper into the crevasse” just isn’t working for you, or let’s just say you’re not that into horror right now because the world is scary enough. Here’s a list of books in which NOTHING BAD HAPPENS.

And y’all know I always make jokes about Dante and being your Virgil, but real talk, this time, Italy is about to celebrate its first Dante Day, as the 700th anniversary of his death approaches.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this edition of THE FRIGHT STUFF, and hopefully it made you feel that you weren’t alone, even if you are physically alone. I’m Mary Kay McBrayer, and you can find me on Twitter or Instagram– make sure y’all get at me with any important news that I missed, okay? But y’all keep in mind, too, that while I DO DEFINITELY want to know my mistakes, I also work real hard on this, so y’all be nice about it. Stay safe and sequestered!

Until next week,

Your Virgil (y’all know I’m a stick to my guns on this name),

Mary Kay McBrayer
Co-host of Book Riot’s literary fiction podcast, Novel Gazing

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Picture Books That Celebrate Book Love!

Hi Kid Lit Friends,

I had an eye surgery earlier this month, and since the recovery was going to take a couple of weeks I pre-wrote all of my Book Riot posts for the month of March. As a result, none of these posts in March had any mention of coronavirus, which I’m sure some of you noticed! I’m popping in here just to say that I’m thinking of all of you teachers and librarians and parents and grandparents who are trying to figure out this new environment we’re living in. If you have ideas for how you’re incorporating reading and books into your socially distanced, quarantined home, email me at KarinaBookRiot@gmail.com to let me know. I’ll be collecting responses and sharing them each week.

And now, on to our book topic of the day! If you’re reading this newsletter, I am certain that you are my people! Those of us who love books are certain to love books that are all about loving books. Here are some wonderful picture books to hand to young bookworms.

Dreamers by Yuyi Morales

This book is about author and Caldecott Honor artist Yuyi Morales, who left her home in Xalapa, Mexico and came to the US with her infant son. This gorgeous picture book Dreamers is about making a home in a new place. Yuyi and her son Kelly’s passage was not easy, and Yuyi spoke no English whatsoever at the time. But together, they found an unexpected, unbelievable place: the public library. There, book by book, they untangled the language of this strange new land, and learned to make their home within it.

How to Read a Book by Kwame Alexander, illustrated by Melissa Sweet

Poetry by Newbery Medalist Kwame Alexander and gorgeous illustrations by Caldecott Honoree Melissa Sweet make a perfect match in How to Read a Book – a celebration of books and reading. The words sing on the page and the bright, bold colors of Sweet’s illustrations show that there are an infinite number of ways to enjoy a book.

Hooray for Books! by Brian Won

This sweet book is all about loving books. Turtle has looked everywhere for his favorite book, but it’s nowhere to be found! Maybe his book was borrowed by Zebra, Owl, Giraffe, Elephant, or Lion. As Turtle searches, his friends offer to share their own favorite stories, but other books just won’t do. Or is it time for Turtle to try something different?

Let Me Finish! by Minh Le, illustrated by Isabel Roxas

This book is perfect for all of us who get interrupted just when we get to the best part of our book. In Let Me Finish!, our young hero settles in to read and the last thing he wants is for some noisy animals to ruin the ending of the story. But ruin it they do. And as it turns out, the boy is quickly approaching a surprise ending of his own! Maybe he should have listened to the animals after all. . . .

Help Wanted, Must Love Books by Janet Sumner Johnson, illustrated by Courtney Dawson

This new picture book is a perfect bedtime read aloud. Shailey loves bedtime, especially reading with her dad. But her dad starts a new job, and it gets in the way of their bedtime routine. So Shailey takes action! She fires her dad, posts a Help Wanted sign, and starts interviews immediately. She is thrilled when her favorite characters from fairytales line up to apply. But Sleeping Beauty can’t stay awake, the Gingerbread Man steals her book, and Snow White brings along her whole team. Shailey is running out of options. Is bedtime ruined forever?

This Book of Mine by Sarah Stewart, illustrated by David Small

The beloved author-illustrator team of The Gardener and The Library brings us a new treasure in This Book of Mine, a sweet picture book that celebrates the power of reading and speaks of the ways in which books launch our adventures, give us comfort, challenge our imaginations, and offer us connection. From new mothers to fantasy lovers, butterfly hunters to musicians, the readers of This Book of Mine all share a common passion for favorite books―whether freshly discovered at the library or bookstore or saved from childhood and reread across a lifetime.

 

What are you reading these days? Let me know! Find me on Twitter at @KarinaYanGlaser, on Instagram at @KarinaIsReadingAndWriting, or email me at KarinaBookRiot@gmail.com.

Until next time!
Karina

*If this e-mail was forwarded to you, follow this link to subscribe to “The Kids Are All Right” newsletter and other fabulous Book Riot newsletters for your own customized e-mail delivery. Thank you!*

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Riot Rundown

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The Goods

25% Off from Out Of Print

Add some bookish gear to your stay-at-home wardrobe! Get 25% off your order from Out of Print through 3/31. Use code SHOP25 at checkout.

Added bonus: 25% of sales go to BINC to support independent booksellers.

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Giveaways

032720-BookClubbishEAC-Giveaway

No book club? No problem! Book Riot is teaming up with Bookclubbish to give away one Book Club Bundle containing five of the ultimate book club picks: The Wives by Tarryn Fisher, Followers by Megan Angelo, The Grace Kelly Dress by Brenda Janowitz, Truths I Never Told You by Kelly Rimmer, and I’ll Be There For You by Kelsey Miller.

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

Here’s what BookClubbish is all about:

BookClubbish is brought to you by publishing professionals passionate about celebrating books and popular culture. They bring the best content and resources to readers (like you!), booksellers, librarians and book clubs.

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What's Up in YA

Stream These YA Adaptations While You’re Stuck Inside

Hey YA Fans!

I hope you’re all healthy and weathering this new reality of ours. I know that one of my personal challenges has been staving off anxiety enough to sit down and enjoy a book. In those times when I can’t, I’ve found tuning into streaming shows and movies to be just what I need.

Today’s newsletter will highlight some of the best YA adaptations currently streaming on Netflix. I know not everyone has ‘Flix, but I chose to focus here because they lend themselves to social interaction while in quarantine with Netflix Party.

Kick back and enjoy your YA, visual style. Note that since we’re entering a new month soon, some of these might end up disappearing later in the week. I’ve done my best to make sure they’ll be around for a good while.

This list is going to be pretty white, since adaptations themselves trend that way. Descriptions of the adaptation are from IMDB, and in cases where the name of the adaptation differs from the name of the YA book, I’ve noted that.

The 100 (series)

Set ninety-seven years after a nuclear war has destroyed civilization, when a spaceship housing humanity’s lone survivors sends one hundred juvenile delinquents back to Earth, in hopes of possibly re-populating the planet.

To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before and P.S. I Still Love You

A teenage girl’s secret love letters are exposed and wreak havoc on her love life.

Lara Jean and Peter have just taken their relationship from pretend to officially official when another recipient of one of her old love letters enters the picture.

Anne With An E (series)

The adventures of a young orphan girl living in the late 19th century. Follow Anne as she learns to navigate her new life on Prince Edward Island, in this new take on L.M. Montgomery’s classic novels.

(I know this is debatable on whether or not it’s a YA series, but the books are beloved by YA readers, so I’m including it!).

Coin Heist

United by dire circumstances, four unlikely allies from a Philadelphia prep school – the hacker, the slacker, the athlete, and the perfect student – band together to attempt the impossible: steal from the U.S. Mint.

Dumplin

Willowdean (‘Dumplin’), the plus-size teenage daughter of a former beauty queen, signs up for her mom’s Miss Teen Bluebonnet pageant as a protest that escalates when other contestants follow her footsteps, revolutionizing the pageant and their small Texas town.

Gossip Girl (series)

Privileged teens living on the Upper East Side of New York can hide no secret from the ruthless blogger who is always watching.

Let It Snow

In a small town on Christmas Eve, a snowstorm brings together a group of young people.

Naomi & Ely’s No Kiss List

Naomi and Ely have loved each other their whole lives, even though Ely isn’t exactly into girls. The institution of a “No Kiss List” has prevented the two from rifts in the past, but bonds are tested when they both fall for the same guy.

Radio Rebel (In YA, it’s titled Shrinking Violet by Danielle Joseph)

Tara, a painfully shy high-schooler, has a secret: she is also a confident DJ known as Radio Rebel, who lends her voice to others.

Saving Zoë

The high school freshman kid sister of the murdered Zoë finds her diary, which sheds new light on the murder missed by the police. She investigates.

The Spectacular Now

A hard-partying high school senior’s philosophy on life changes when he meets the not-so-typical “nice girl.”

Trinkets (series)

An unexpected friendship forms when three teenage girls meet in Shoplifters Anonymous.

Vampire Diaries (series)

The lives, loves, dangers and disasters in the town, Mystic Falls, Virginia. Creatures of unspeakable horror lurk beneath this town as a teenage girl is suddenly torn between two vampire brothers.


Thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you again later this week!

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

Categories
Today In Books

Readers Are Turning To Challenging Classics: Today In Books

Readers Are Turning To Challenging Classics

Apparently people’s bucket list reads are classics and long novels–or maybe they just figure they finally have the time so why not. Either way, according to Waterstones, UK’s largest book chain, sales were not only up 400% but there was also a significant rise in sales of classics. “Titles including Gabriel García Márquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude and Love in the Time of Cholera, Toni Morrison’s Beloved, F Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby and Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar.” And Nielsen BookScan backs this with also seeing rises in War and Peace, The Lord of the Rings, and In Search of Lost Time sales.

Dear Sugar Live!

Cheryl Strayed, the author of the memoir Wild (adapted into the Reese Witherspoon starring film) and writer of the Dear Sugar column, will grace us with some advice on Live Wire Radio’s Live Wire House Party on Friday the 27th. You can also catch it on the Live Wire podcast.

Fun!

A bunch of DC middle grade authors and artists have joined together to curate an at-home activity program called DC Kids Camp! There’s previews of DC middle grade comics and superhero-themed activities like learning to draw your favorite heroes! And that’s just some of the fun–excuse me while I go pretend to be a kid.

Categories
True Story

Pandemic History Reads

If you’re choosing to deal with your anxiety in ways other than “if I study the history of similar crises, perhaps I shall be better equipped for this one,” then these book picks may not be for you. I started thinking today about how people dealt with the influenza outbreak in 1917 (my great-aunt had it as a baby! she lived for so long!) and started looking up some well-reviewed nonfiction reads. Here they are!:

The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History by John M. Barry. This seems like a good overview of the influenza outbreak of 1918 if you’re looking for a straight-up history. It was on the NYT bestseller list for more than a year. “At the height of World War I, history’s most lethal influenza virus erupted in an army camp in Kansas, moved east with American troops, then exploded, killing as many as 100 million people worldwide. It killed more people in twenty-four months than AIDS killed in twenty-four years, more in a year than the Black Death killed in a century.”

Pale Rider: The Spanish Flu of 1918 and How It Changed the World by Laura Spinney. Ok, I am seriously so interested in this: “Laura Spinney traces the overlooked pandemic to reveal how the virus travelled across the globe, exposing mankind’s vulnerability and putting our ingenuity to the test. As socially significant as both world wars, the Spanish flu dramatically disrupted–and often permanently altered–global politics, race relations and family structures, while spurring innovation in medicine, religion and the arts. It was partly responsible, Spinney argues, for pushing India to independence, South Africa to apartheid and Switzerland to the brink of civil war. It also created the true “lost generation.””

The Great Mortality: An Intimate History of the Black Death, the Most Devastating Plague of All Time by John Kelly. Do you really want to lean into this virus/plague thing? Why not read about one of the most devastating plagues of all time and how it affected the world.

 

 

 

Balanced Books

Want some reads to balance this deep dive into the world as we know it today and instead practice some nice avoidance? Great. Check out:

Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns) by Mindy Kaling. I read this while hiding in a room during a particularly stressful holiday party, and it. was. great. Mindy Kaling absolutely felt like my friend telling me smart, funny stories, and I love this book forever for providing some extreme comfort.

 

 

Dear Girls: Intimate Tales, Untold Secrets & Advice for Living Your Best Life by Ali Wong. You all with kids right now. I don’t even know how you’re doing it. But if you have a free minute, maybe check this out! Also check it out if you don’t have kids, ’cause I do not and I loved it. Wong “shares the wisdom she’s learned from a life in comedy and reveals stories from her life off stage, including the brutal singles life in New York (i.e. the inevitable confrontation with erectile dysfunction), reconnecting with her roots (and drinking snake blood) in Vietnam, tales of being a wild child growing up in San Francisco, and parenting war stories.” It’s hilarious and emotional, but not TOO emotional for these trying times.

Stay inside if you can, nonfictionites. Wash your hands, Clorox-wipe your phone, and read read read (while also taking a break to prevent eye strain!). If you are so inclined, check out COVID-19 Updates from the Bookish World. As always, you can find me on Twitter @itsalicetime and co-hosting the For Real podcast with Kim here at Book Riot. Until next time! Enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.