This lil’ feature is getting harder to find material for—hard to take a quick spin through my social media feeds for things without being distracted by/inundated with/overwhelmed by politics, events, news, etc. and really awful takes on politics, events, news, etc. You’ve probably all encountered similar things in your day-to-day websurfing/social media scrolling. As the philosopher asked, “My world’s on fire, how bout yours?” (or at least it seems to be).
I’m not sure I have a point there…just had to ramble a bit this morning, I guess. How about we get down to biz-ness?
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:
What To Do When You’re in a Reading Slump—some tips from a local bookseller
Retiring from Novels—I get his thinking, but hope this retirement is short-lived. If not, I hope his next endeavors succeed.
Fiscal Funny Business: Susan Grossey talks to Crime Time—a nice little piece from one of the niche-est writers I follow.
(It’s Not) The Death of Criticism (Again)—Molly Templeton explores the nature of, reasoning behind, and the current conversation(s) around criticism
8 Times Authors Took Revenge in Their Fiction—a fun listicle
Misconceptions, Mishaps and CrAzY Stories From Working in Libraries! What is it REALLY like?—I do wonder what the non-PG version would contain…but I think I’m better off not knowing
Mental Health and Fantasy—an updated version of a great post

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
Dear Dr. Fantasy: episode 80, with Joe (JCM Berne)—Haven’t found/made the time for this yet, but it looks really good.

To help talk about backlist titles (and just for fun), What Was I Talking About 10 Years Ago Week?
The Fraud by Brad Parks
Witches of Lychford by Paul Cornell—interesting timing for this to come up if you look down below
Indexing: Reflections, Episode 3: Brotherly Love by Seanan McGuire
A Red-Rose Chain by Seanan McGuire
Who Let The Dog Out? by David Rosenfelt
It was a good release week, I mentioned the following: Robert B. Parker’s The Devil Wins by Reed Farrel Coleman; Witches of Lychford by Paul Cornell; Make Me by Lee Child; All In by Joel Goldman and Lisa Klink; and A Guide To Being A Dog, by Seamus Wheaton by Wil Wheaton

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
Gnomes of Lychford by Paul Cornell—”Gnomes, witches, and podcasters clash for the future of the village of Lychford in this delightful conclusion to the Witches of Lychford series.” (I thought the series had already ended…oops. Glad to be proven wrong, if only for 160 pages)
Reacher: The Stories Behind the Stories by Lee Child—”These are the origin tales of all of the Reacher novels written solely by Lee Child, chock full of colorful anecdotes and intriguing inspirations. One by one, they expand upon each novel and place it in the context not only of the author’s life, but of the world outside the books.”
Crooks: A Novel About Crime and Family by Lou Berney—A fascinating-looking book that “follows a uniquely American crime family on an unforgettable journey across four decades.” This review over at The Hard Word sold me.


theorangutanlibrarian
haha I do think it’s wise to not wonder what the non PG version is! 😉 To be fair, we used to have a homeless man come into one of the libraries I worked in and he thought all sorts of wild things happened at night when we closed the doors… which was not true at least 😂 so it’s somewhere between the most extreme conspiracy theory you can imagine and the stories I already wrote about! 😂 Anyway, thank you for sharing my post!
wittysarcasticbookclub
Thank you for including me!
That article from Orangutan Reads was interesting, to say the least!
Krysta
I had to take a look at the authors who went too far with revenge, because I was going to be upset if Dante didn’t make the cut. 🤣
HCNewton
Right? Would’ve been worthy of a small bit of vengeance if he didn’t!