Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
Borrower returns library book 47 years past due, provides explanation in ‘thoughtful letter’
The Mysteries of Encyclopedia Brown: The Books, The Lawsuits, The HBO Show?!—Who doesn’t want to stop and learn more about ol’ Encyclopedia?
Damppebbles’s annual recommendation-fest, #R3COMM3ND3D is in the home stretch now, this week’s offerings are diverse genre-wise, but share a similar high quality.
…with #Author Terry Tyler
…with #Reviewer Davida Chazan
…with #Author Rachel Sargeant
…with #BookBlogger Jude Wright
…with #BookBlogger Rae
…with #BookBlogger Jo
…with #BookBlogger Wendy W.
Enough of 2022 (for a minute), let’s glance at 2023 with The Real Book Spy’s Our (Way too) Early Look at Notable 2023 Thrillers, Part Two, Part 3—my dance card is already starting to look a little packed
I shared some of the posts last year from the series Neurodivergence in Fiction. It’s been brought back with a broadened view and kicks off with this post from A.C. Cross, Mental Health in Fiction: Writing Through the Pain—I expect this series will as good—if not better—than its predecessor.
Thoughts After Writing Lots of Negative Reviews
10 Funny Reasons Why I prefer Physical Books
A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
Don’t Remember Me Like This—I keep meaning to fit this “a podcast of short stories, memoir, satire, commentary, and essays with an occasional seizure of fiction, interviews and maybe even poetry” into my rotation, but I haven’t yet. I enjoyed Barber’s book a few years ago, and am looking forward to the same kind of humor in audio form.
Blood Brothers Episode 111 with Robert Crais—I’ve heard Crais on a decent number of podcasts, but he seems looser and less canned than I’m used to here
This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
Little Ghost by Chris McDonald—McDonald launches a new series—this one promises a noir feel about a PI in Denver. Looking forward to diving in.
The World Record Book of Racist Stories by Amber Ruffin & Lacey Lamar—the sisters pair up again for more stories of racism that you have to laugh at (so you don’t burn down the world)
NYPD Red 7: The Murder Sorority by Marshall Karp—Karp takes over control with this series entry about a hunt for a team of assassins taking down notorious New Yorkers. Which is an inadequate description, really. You should read my post from last week instead.
Yesha
Thank you for including my post among many amazing posts. I’m sure going to visit some of these.
HCNewton
Absolutely! It was a good post, glad to spread the word.