Saturday Miscellany—7/19/25

I somehow deleted my list of new releases for the week–I’m pretty sure I reconstructed it all, but the haunting feeling that I missed one is going to eat at me for a day or two.

A shorter post this week, but…you have no idea how busy this site is going to be next week. I gave myself “plenty” of advance time to get things done–and promptly filled it with other stuff. So, I’m scurrying around a little today. Anyway, be sure to check out the Self-Published Authors Appreciation Week posts here and around the book blogosphere next week!

But for now:
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:
bullet New ‘Dresden Files’ book is coming: See the cover reveal for ‘Twelve Months’—98% of those who care have likely seen this already—what do I care? I’m excited about the cover and the brief synopsis. January can’t get here fast enough! (although there’s plenty that I want to accomplish before then, so…maybe it can)
bullet Who Gets a POV In Your Story? It’s a Political Decision: Everyone in a story is a person, and nobody is an NPC.—Yes, this is primarily for writers, but there’s something for we readers to chew on here, too.
bullet Even Better the Second (or Third, or Fourth…) Time: In Praise of Re-Reading
bullet Where authors gossip, geek out and let off steam: 15 of the best literary Substacks
bullet The Thing You Want to Read Is Out There (Probably): On reading—and looking—outside your comfort zone
bullet Book Blogging in 2025 Survey Results—I look forward every year to see what Jo Linsdell’s survey brings
bullet Monthly Manga Mania Featuring First Duelist: Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D’s by Masahiro Hikokubo
bullet I Made a Massive 14,000 Page Book—This is disturbing, impressive, mind-boggling, and cool.
bullet The Five Book Lover Languages

To help talk about backlist titles (and just for fun), What Was I Talking About 10 Years Ago Week?
bullet Murder Boy by Bryon Quertermous—I’ve often thought about revisiting this one to see if it was just the wrong time for me.
bullet Armada by Ernest Cline
bullet And I talked about the releases of Go Set a Watchman by Harper Lee (IT’S BEEN 10 YEARS ALREADY??); Armada by Ernest Cline; Scents and Sensibility by Spencer Quinn; Hostile Takeover by Shane Kuhn (I miss this writer); Last First Snow by Max Gladstone; Cold Iron by Stina Leicht; Alive by Scott Sigler; Once Upon a Crime by P. J. Brackston; Lagoon by Nnedi Okorafor

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Three Shattered Souls by Mai Cortland—I just finished book one of this trilogy last weekend, I haven’t even picked up my copy of book two (and won’t be able to read it until September), but am more excited about this release than anything else this week. And no, I won’t give a synopsis of it, because I’m hiding from any discussion of it.
bullet Mrs. Plansky Goes Rogue by Spencer Quinn—The widow is back in action (thankfully, no international travel is called for this time). I’ve been trying to write something since Monday…you’ll see me blather on about it soon.
bullet American Mythology by Giano Cromley—Who doesn’t like a Bigfoot story? Moreso when it’s described as: “A spooky adventure story and a wry and heartwarming tale of friendship, American Mythology is a fabulous debut about the power of belief and our sacred bond to nature.”
bullet A Witch’s Guide to Magical Innkeeping by Sangu Mandanna—This sounds like a bit of breezy niceness. “A whimsical and heartwarming novel about a witch who has a second chance to get her magical powers—and her life—back on track.”

Being a reader means voluntarily signing up for fictional heartbreak and then recommending the pain to others.

Previous

REPOST: Mrs. Plansky’s Revenge by Spencer Quinn: A (Relatable) Revenge Fantasy Full of Heart and Panache

Next

REPOST: Heaven on Earth by Thomas Brooks: A Classic Examination of and Exhortation to Assurance of Faith

3 Comments

  1. Thank you for including my teens post!

    • HCNewton

      My pleasure. I read ’em, I don’t understand a lot of what he says (that’s me and the medium, not him). Sincerely trying to glean enough that I can have conversations…

Read Irresponsibly, but please Comment Responsibly

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén