Categories
Giveaways

121919-TBREAC-Giveaway

We’re giving away a year of free books, courtesy of Macmillan’s eDeals Newsletter!

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the image.

This sweepstakes is open to residents of the United States (excluding Puerto Rico and all other US territories). Entries will be accepted until 11:45pm, January 15, 2020. Winner will be randomly selected. Complete rules and eligibility requirements available here.

Categories
Today In Books

Judge Rules No Money For Snowden: Today In Books

Judge Rules No Money For Snowden

Employment contracts with the NSA and the Central Intelligence Agency have a requirement that any book published by the employee must be submitted prepublication for review. For obvious reasons Edward Snowden did not comply with that before publishing his memoir Permanent Record. A judge has now ruled that the U.S. government is entitled to all proceeds from the book.

The Far Side Returns

It’s been 24 years since The Far Side creator Gary Larson put out new work, having retired his surreal comic in 1995. For fans who have been waiting a long time, the wait is finally over as TheFarSide.com has officially launched. The site will show previously unseen sketches and cartoons, and new work, but his publishers, Andrews McMeel, also admitted, “In truth, we really have no idea what might show up. But, on the other hand, what’s changed?”

Awesome!

An online literary journal and event series, inQluded–which launched in 2018 and put out its first issue in June–“provides a space for young queer, trans, and intersex black and Indigenous writers of color (QTIBIPOC).” QTIBIPOC writers between the ages of 13 and 30 can submit work in various genres and inQluded is designed to help them get a foot in the door.

Categories
Book Radar

Stephen King’s FIRESTARTER Gets a Reboot and More Book Radar!

Hello, my Thursday friends! This is the last Thursday Book Radar of 2019, because Book Riot is on vacation next week. Which means, by default, I am on vacation next week. I’m excited. I plan to read books, play with my cats, and watch Stargate SG-1. So, like a regular week, only there are no newsletters to write or podcasts to record.

I already have a BIG list of books I want to read on vacation, except for the name of the first book I will read in the New Year. I always have a hard time deciding that one! I still have almost two weeks to figure it out. (I did manage to make a pretty picture of each of the books I read first in every year this decade.)

I hope that you are all well, and enjoying the last weeks of the decade with good books. Whatever you are doing or reading this week, please remember to be kind to yourself and others. I’ll see you again on Monday! – xoxo, Liberty

Trivia question time! What is Stephen King’s middle name? (Scroll to the bottom for the answer.)

Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

permanent recordJon H. Chu will direct an adaptation of Mary H.K. Choi’s YA novel Permanent Record for Warner Bros.

Uzo Aduba and Zackary Momoh will join Lupita Nyong’o in HBO Max’s Americanah series.

Here’s the cover reveal for Darius the Great Deserves Better by Adib Khorram. It’s the sequel to Darius the Great is Not Okay.

The Root’s Michael Harriot has signed a two-book deal.

Tyler Feder also announced a new two-book contract.

Here’s the trailer for the second season of You on Netflix.

This week in Stephen King reboots: Firestarter.

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! (It will now be books I loved on Mondays and books I’m excited to read on Thursdays. YAY, BOOKS!)

Excited to read:

catherine houseCatherine House by Elisabeth Thomas (Custom House, May 12)

I am a sucker for a Secret History comparison (even though I have still never found a book that earned it), so I NEED this book. It’s a Gothicky novel about a very selective school of higher learning hidden in the Pennsylvania woods, and a shocking secret about a group of its most elite students. MY BODY IS READY.

What I’m reading this week.

The Missing American cover imageThe Missing American by Kwei Quartey

Resistance: A Songwriter’s Story of Hope, Change, and Courage by Tori Amos

Follow Me to Ground: A Novel by Sue Rainsford

The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett

The Unidentified: Mythical Monsters, Alien Encounters, and Our Obsession with the Unexplained by Colin Dickey

And this is funny.

Doesn’t leave a lot of options.

Song stuck in my head:

“Archive” by Mal Blum.

Trivia answer: Edwin.

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

Categories
Kissing Books

Multiple Surprise Releases This Week

Happy Star Wars day, KB! This one isn’t going to be quite as long as Monday’s, I promise. But there are a lot of books to talk about.

Over on Book Riot

It’s hard to say what makes an author “like Nora Roberts” but some kind of way Alison really nailed it down. Check out these authors and books that are reminiscent of the prolific princess of…promance. (I tried.)

Enter to win a subscription to the Fresh Fiction box! They aren’t focused on romance, but they do have romance titles pretty regularly. Or, (and?) enter to win a year of free books from TBR! You could get a yearlong hardcover subscription to the excellent program that includes annotated book selections by a few Riot-related bibliologists.

Would you agree with Abby’s ranking of Austen heroines by badassery?

And check out Trisha and me discussing the finer details of “Wanted” versus “Desired” and other fun stuff.

cover of a prince on paper by alyssa coleDeals

It’s not too late to start compiling your books for Read Harder 2020. So, if you’re looking for a book for the “last book in the series” task, look no further than A Prince On Paper, which is 1.99 right now. While it gathers people from the previous books at a wedding between [surprise?] the couple in the first book, you don’t really need to have read the previous books in the series…though if you haven’t, you definitely should. (Start with A Princess in Theory.)

New Books

This has been the week of surprise books all over the place, including Adriana Herrera dropping Mangos and Mistletoe a week earlier than originally planned. Some are holiday reads, some are just a total surprise. And then of course there are the ones that I knew were coming out, but wasn’t prepared for. I don’t know when I’ll get around to any of them

This Christmas Rivalry
Beverly Jenkins

This holiday novella was originally published in the Merry Sexy Christmas anthology in 2012, and was just released as a standalone novella. Drew intends to buy the semipro team he GMs, but the owner’s granddaughter inherits it instead. They butt heads and exchange a searing attraction as the team moves forwards towards the championship on New Years Day.

No Room At the Inn
Brooke Winters

“Two women. One bed, And a night that changes everything.” That definitely hooked me. Emma and Sylvia are stranded at the hotel where they work, and as the holiday draws near, so do the temptations of kinky friends-to-lovers fun.

Grounded for Christmas
Savannah J. Frierson

When a snowstorm strands Mary and her brother’s best friend #pilotbae…I mean, Joseph (yes, those are their names) during their holiday travels, the pair try to amend a years-old schism that might just give them a second chance at love. This is a novelette, so be prepared to devour it in a single sitting.

Bittersweet
Christina C. Jones

Christina C. Jones is one of the most prolific authors I can think of. This novella set in her Equilibrium universe brings us into the lives of a familiar face to readers. Anika and her manager trainee Royal don’t get along, but things might change if Royal has anything to do with it. Yes, it’s enemies-to-lovers.

Frostbite
J. Emery

A spoiled vampire and a former monster hunter get snowed in for Christmas? Is this really my life? Vampire Ezra gets kidnapped by a rival vampire clan, and when he escapes, he finds his way to a cabin that is already occupied by Morgan, who has just left his monster-hunting family. As the snow keeps them trapped, they each discover more about the other. And what it means to be to be enemies.

Working Title
Holley Trent

This woman just went and dropped a whole FFM novella, part of her Plot Twist series (which was initially published by Carina, so I wonder if she only had a two-book contract with them?). Lisa and her boyfriend Joey can’t seem to properly break up, which becomes a problem when Jake’s work rival Finch decides Lisa deserves better. And well, if you know Holley Trent, you know where it goes from there.

That’s not even all the ones I’ve come across, but my wallet and I are tired, so I imagine you and yours are as well.

As usual, catch me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or send me an email at wheninromance@bookriot.com if you’ve got feedback, bookrecs, or just want to say hi!

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 12/18

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.

People of the club: it’s the last In the Club newsletter of the year! I’m playing that Adele song from the Skyfall soundtrack (This is the end… hold your breath and coooount… to ten…) as I put this together, taking dramatic pauses in which I gaze outside a window for no other reason than because I am extra as a person. Rest assured, it’s not really the end for us: me and all of my Spanglish ridiculousness will be right back in your inbox on January 8th! Until then, enjoy this list of some of my favorite book club themes with book suggestions for each.

Have a fantastic holiday season, end of year, and end of decade, friends. I wish you all the love, laughter, and lots of libros.

To the club!!


Rich People Problems Book Club – Indulge in a read where people with monies and privilege make poor decisions and lament the “tragic” hand they’ve been dealt. Serve yourself a healthy portion of this delicious schadenfreude with a cold glass of sparkling wine, or better yet: a steaming cup of tea.

Suggestions: The Nest by Cynthia d’Aprix Sweeney, Rich and Pretty by Rumaan Alam, Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan, Nothing to See Here by Kevin Wilson

Get Your Sh*t Together Book Club – We all have an area in our lives where we need to do better. Pick a thing: health, finances, professional development, conversations about race, communication in relationships, etc. Find a relevant read to read you to filth help you make meaningful change. Si se puede!

Suggestions: So You Want to Talk About Race Ijeoma Oluo, Radical Candor by Kim Scott, Live Richer Challenge by Tiffany “The Budgetnista” Aliche, Drop the Ball by Tiffany Dufu

Black Girl* Magic Book Club – Ok, I have Feelings about pageantry. I am also positively living for the #blackgirlmagic that is sweeping all the titles this year! Inspired by this majesty of melanin, let’s have a Black Girl Magic edition of book club.

Suggestions: Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi (and/or its sequel: Children of Virtue and Vengeance), Tiny Pretty Things by Dhonielle Clayton & Sona Charaipotra, The Prey of Gods by Nicky Drayden, Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor

*I use “girls” here in reference to the Black Girl Magic movement, but I am here for all the beautiful black magic along the entire gender spectrum

Case of the Did-Ya-Knows Club – Pick a book that will have you out here acting like Hermione Granger with your know-it-all self. Take this opportunity to learn more about a thing that interests you, or maybe find a new thing to obsess over.

Suggestions: How to Hide an Empire by Daniel Immerwahr, Stiff by Mary Roach, These Truths by Jill Lepore, Quackery: A Brief History of the Worst Ways to Cure Everything by Lydia Kang and Nate Pedersen

Steamy McSexy Times Book Club – Read romance, yo. Period. Historical, contemporary, paranormal, sports, fantasy, gothic, time-travel: so many options! For the purposes of Steamy McSexyTimes Club, try a work of erotic romance. Discuss what the sexy times look like in terms of heat level, but also how the book handles consent in light of the times in which we be livin’. Careless Whisper playing in the background is suggested but not required.

Suggestions: Hate to Want You by Alisha Rai, For Real by Alexis Hall, Taking the Lead by Cecilia Tan, Beautiful Bastard by Christina Lauren

in the dream house book coverLatinx Love in this Club – Read books by writers of color, queer authors, disabled authors- all of the authors not traditionally given the space they deserve! Here I’m suggesting Latinx reads because I’m just so damn proud of my people and want to champion their work.

Suggestions: In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado, Dealing in Dreams by Lilliam Rivera, Gods of Jade and Shadow by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, The Book of Lost Saints by Daniel Jose Older

Foodie Friends Book Club – You know I had to sneak this in! I love me a cooking book club. Instead of a piece of fiction or a straight up cookbook, pick a food memoir or work of food writing and whip up a menu inspired by your reading.

Suggestions: Buttermilk Graffiti by Edward Lee, Blood, Bones & Butter by Gabrielle Hamilton, Save Me the Plums by Ruth Reichl, Where I Come From: Life Lessons from a Latino Chef by Aaron Sanchez


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, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

More Resources:
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page

Categories
Giveaways

121719-MacmillanBookClubEAC-Giveaway

We’ve got a 6-month subscription to the Fresh Fiction box to give away to one lucky reader, courtesy of Macmillan’s Reading Group Gold newsletter!

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the image.

This sweepstakes is open to residents of the United States (excluding Puerto Rico and all other US territories). Entries will be accepted until 11:45pm, December 31, 2019. Winner will be randomly selected. Complete rules and eligibility requirements available here.

Categories
True Story

My 10 Favorite Nonfiction Reads of 2019

Hello and happiest of Wednesdays, nonfiction friends! Given the dates of the Christmas and New Year’s holidays this year, this will be my last Monday newsletter until 2020. This make it feel like the perfect time to dive into some of my favorite reads of the year.

A quick caveat – this is definitely not a “best books of the year” list. I never read enough to really be able to do a list like that. Instead, I can just speak to my own idiosyncratic and limited reading over the last 12 months. These are just 10 of the books that meant the most to me this year, listed in the order I finished them.

Parkland: Birth of a Movement by Dave Cullen – This book is an account of the shooting at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida and the student activists who have emerged in the wake of the tragedy. It’s an empathetic, meticulously reported book that I couldn’t put down. It’s also a fascinating companion to Cullen’s other major book, Columbine, another one I highly recommend.

 

 

Notes from a Young Black Chef by Kwame Onwuachi and Joshua David Stein – This memoir is about how Kwame Onwuachi went from being a kid in the Bronx to a celebrated chef in Washington D.C. His path took him all over, from New York to Nigeria to the Gulf of Mexico and beyond. I loved how honest he was about his choices (both good and bad), and appreciated hearing about his perspective and experiences as a black man in a largely white industry.

 

Good Talk by Mira Jacob – This graphic memoir is about “American identity, interracial families, and the realities that divide us.” It’s heavy, but also really funny, and increasingly relevant as political divides become even more stark. I’m not sure I read a more heartbreaking or relevant book this year, which I say in the best way possible. Go read this one!

 

 

The Collected Schizophrenias cover imageThe Collected Schizophrenias by Esmé Weijun Wang – This book is a collection of autobiographical essays about what it’s like to struggle with both mental illness and a chronic illness. Esmé Weijun Wang begins with her initial diagnosis with a “schizoaffective disorder,” then goes on to look at arguments about labeling and diagnosis procedures, how schizophrenia manifests, and other misconceptions surrounding her diagnosis. It’s fascinating and beautifully written.

No Visible Bruises: What We Don’t Know About Domestic Violence Can Kill Us by Rachel Louise Snyder – Each day around the world, 137 women are killed by familial violence. And 54 percent of mass shootings in America today involve domestic violence. These statistics are at the core of the argument in this book: that domestic violence isn’t a private problem, it’s an urgent matter of public health. Rachel Louise Snyder explores big questions about domestic violence with really precise, articulate, and confident reporting. It’s remarkable and so very important.

Burnout: The Secret to Unlocking the Stress Cycle by Emily Nagoski and Amelia Nagoski – If I had to pick the book that had the biggest impact on me personally this year, it’d be this one. This spring and summer, I realized that I was experiencing many of the symptoms of burnout and needed to do something about it. This book changed my outlook, specifically looking at what stress is like for women and offering concrete steps to address it in both the short and long term. Lightbulbs!

 

Maybe You Should Talk to Someone by Lori Gottlieb – After a traumatic break-up, therapist Lori Gottlieb realized she needed some help in processing her thoughts and emotions. This book is all about therapy – what it’s like to go to therapy, what it’s like to be a therapist, and what it takes to really get the most out of therapy that you can. Gottlieb is open with her experiences, and writes about her own patients with an incredible sense of empathy. I was very moved by this book.

Make it Scream, Make it Burn by Leslie Jamison – This collection of essays from one of my favorite authors covers a huge range of subjects, from children with past-life memories to a lonely whale named 52 Blue, to the author’s feelings about becoming a stepmother and a mother. I appreciate how specifically Leslie Jamison interrogates her thoughts and feelings, and how the themes of connection and privilege and perspective play into her work. She’s a really interesting thinker.

 

in the dream houseIn the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado – For many years, Carmen Maria Machado was part of an abusive queer relationship. In the book, she plays with format and narrative tropes to tell the story of that relationship and try to better understand queer domestic abuse more generally. I loved the way she used different storytelling techniques to see the relationship in different ways, and how each piece built on everything we’d already learned. It was utterly fascinating to read, and a book I’ve already recommended many times.

And there you have it, 10 of my favorite reads this year! It’s been such a great year of books, even if it feels like my reading pace has been positively glacial.

Come share your favorites with me! You can find me on Twitter @kimthedork, on email at kim@riotnewmedia.com, and co-hosting the For Real podcast here at Book Riot. Happy reading! – Kim

Categories
Today In Books

Tournament of Books Shortlist: Today In Books

Tournament of Books Shortlist

Playing off of March Madness, Tournament of Books pits two books against each other each week of March, with one advancing to the next round, until there’s just one book–the winner-standing! And we now have the shortlist for the 2020 matches. I love so many books on this list; every round is going to be filled with celebration and heartbreak.

Another Shortlist!

This time for the Oscars: Hair Love has made the shortlist for the 92nd Academy Awards in the Animated Short Film category. You can see the short film here and you can pick up a copy of the book Hair Love by Matthew A. Cherry, Vashti Harrison (Illustrator).

Apple TV+ Now Has Books

Apple TV+’s bookish show Ghostwriter, a remake of the ’90s show, now has books to go along with the show. First up are classics with the Ghostwriter branding on them (The Jungle Book and Alice in Wonderland), and coming very soon are original stories that will include puzzles, vocabulary guides, and reading games.

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What's Up in YA

The Biggest YA Books Of The Decade

As we roll through the last weeks of the decade, it seems fitting to highlight some of the biggest YA books from the past ten years. It’s fascinating to look at the big book from each year and how it reflected the general vibe of that year. But more fascinating is looking at the ways that the themes of the books evolved and shifted over the years. What does it mean? What does it show about how much YA has grown in the last 10 years?

Below, find the “biggest” book of the year, determined by it residing on the YA bestsellers list for a significant period of time. Those titles are pulled from among a number of sources, including Publishers Weekly’s lists, the New York Times lists, and other compilations around the web; they’re not scientific.

I also included the winner of the National Book Award (NBA) from that year, as a means of comparing what it was the general reading audience determined as the best book (we all know that the bestselling book doesn’t mean “best,” but this is a measure we have) and what it was a jury of kid lit writers and experts determined to be the best that same year.

2010

Bestseller: Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins

NBA winner: Mockingbird by Kathryn Erskine

Erskie’s book is middle grade, so not the most apt to compare. But what is interesting is the title similarity here. Collins book was the final in “The Hunger Games” series — or at least until April 2020 when the prequel releases — and as we’ll see, the series did not slow down in sales for years.

2011

the hunger gamesBestseller: The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

NBA winner: Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai

The NBA winner is again a middle grade read, but for long-time YA fans, 2011 might be remembered as the year of the Chime/Shine confusion at the awards.

The first book in Collins’s trilogy enjoyed a return to the top of the bestsellers list in 2011, in large part due to the upcoming film release and the way the series caught fire (heh) following the conclusion in fall of 2010.

2012

Bestseller: Insurgent by Veronica Roth

NBA winner: Goblin Secrets by William Alexander

Another year where the NBA title happened to be a middle grade title; interestingly, it was the only middle grade book in the short list, as the other three were YA books. Although John Green’s The Fault In Our Stars released this year, it wasn’t until 2013 where sales shot into the stratosphere (it sold very well in 2012, too). Roth’s second entry in her “Divergent” series was the biggest seller and it’s likely we can thank the success of Collins’s adaptation that brought hunger for more dystopia.

For YA history fans, 2012 was the year when we learned how many adults were buying YA books. This is still an oft-cited study with so many flaws that it should be read with some understanding of how teenagers are able to — or not able to, as it were — acquire books on their own.

2013

Bestseller: The Fault In Our Stars by John Green

NBA winner: The Thing About Luck by Cynthia Kadohata

I promise there are YA books which will make the NBA list, but that’ll be happening in the latter half of the decade. Although John Green has been popular since his debut in 2005, it was his 2012 book which really flew off shelves. It would sell tremendously well in 2014, too, with the release of the film adaptation that year.

2014

Bestseller: Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell

NBA winner: brown girl dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson

Rowell’s debut YA novel sold extremely well in 2013, but it went up against some slightly-heavier hitters. With it receiving a Printz honor to kick off 2014, though, it seemed right to include it here as the bestseller of the year. After years of dystopian domination on the bestseller list, Green and Rowell made it clear that realistic fiction was far from dead.

Woodson’s memoir in verse, which neatly toes the line between middle grade and YA, was a huge win and huge seller in 2014 as well. For many, it was their introduction to the long-time kid lit fan. It was also a forerunner to how the NBA awards would shift from middle grade heavy to YA.

Another big thing in 2014? We Need Diverse Books began.

2015

Bestseller: See below!

NBA winner: Challenger Deep by Neal Schusterman

In August 2015, the New York Times changed how they were ranking their YA bestsellers. It would be hardcover books only, which was a bit of a game-changer in terms of what books remained on the list and which would fall off. In the second half of the year, after the change was implemented, Victoria Aveyard’s The Red Queen, Nicola Yoon’s Everything, Everything, and Rainbow Rowell’s Fangirl all remained on the list for a good period of time.

But according to Publishers Weekly, once the John Green titles were removed, the bestselling YA title was Ransom Riggs’s Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. It’d released a few years prior, but with news of the movie, the book’s sales soared.

The NBA winner in 2015 seems, like the bestsellers list, to indicate shift. We’re into the world of YA winning this award now, and more, the winner was Schusterman, a man of color, who depicts mental health in the story.

2016

Bestseller: This Is Where It Ends by Marieke Nijkamp

NBA winner: March Book 3 by John Lewis, Nate Powell, and Andrew Aydin

The year when the election signaled a tone shift in the books we were discussing more broadly — no longer were dystopian titles the biggest books — we saw a graphic novel win the biggest award for children’s literature. Nijkamp’s multi-perspective debut YA novel explored gun violence. Both books highlight the hunger for social and cultural reform that would continue through the following years.

2017

the hate u giveBestseller: The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas

NBA winner: Far From The Tree by Robin Benway

Whispers about a huge book hitting shelves in 2017 from an author of color about Black Lives Matter began to hit in early 2016. So it’s no surprise that Thomas’s debut took the world by storm when it came out. The book is still in hardcover as of this writing, which is a remarkably long run in that format.

Although not focused on social justice, Benway’s novel seems to have represented the power of a range of family experiences that readers have been clamoring for. Perhaps, too, the emotional release this book encouraged helped readers build up their resilience and reserves for continuing to advocate for a breadth of stories that were both windows and mirrors.

2018

Bestseller: One Of Us Is Lying by Karen M. McManus

NBA winner: The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo

Readers wanted a thriller last year, and McManus’s book delivered. Currently in development for small screen adaptation and with a sequel due out next month, chances are we’ll be seeing McManus on the top of the best selling list for a while to come. The other huge seller last year? Tomi Adeyemi’s Children of Blood and Bone.

Acevedo’s novel in verse took home the NBA. This is the second book in verse to win in the last five years, as well as the third book not told in a “traditional” prose format. It explores family and cultural heritage — topics that, as seen, began to take center stage in the biggest YA books over the last few awards years.

2019

It’s too early to know what the best seller will be this year, exactly, but dollars to donuts it’ll be far more like the bestsellers of the last couple of years than those in the early part of the decade.

As for the NBA winner this year, 1919 by Martin W. Sandler won. This nonfiction dive into the social, cultural, and political history of 100 years ago was an interesting selection. The book is certainly savvy for connecting those past events to today’s reality, but in my read, it wasn’t necessarily representative of the most memorable book of 2019, but instead, one which spoke more to this moment. In other words, it’s powerful now, but might not have the same punch upon reflection in a few years.


Thanks for hanging out and going down this memory lane of YA from the 2010s. Here’s to amazing history to be made in the 2020s.

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

Categories
The Stack

121719-MaryShelley-The-Stack