Check out the best new mystery books this week! With new releases from Linda Fairstein, Peter Robinson and more!
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Check out the best new mystery books this week! With new releases from Linda Fairstein, Peter Robinson and more!
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This week in new books to read: Jennifer Weiner's new book, Who do You Love, is a lovely read about love, life, and the power of second chances. On our list of best new fiction also sits the fantastic new release The Beautiful Bureaucrat, a genre bending novel of love, life, death, and, above all, the importance of properly filed paperwork.
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What do Pizza, Doctors, and Musicians have in common? You can read about them in today's new biography and memoir books to read!
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In this week's list of new books for teens: Six Impossible Things by award-winning author Fiona Wood is the lovely story of one nerdy, somewhat lost teenaged boy who is trying to keep his life together, despite the obstacles thrown in his way. Fancy some Fantasy? Reawakened is a great historical fantasy by New York Times Best Selling author Colleen Houck.
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Robin Hobb and Elliot James both have new releases this week! Looking for a good fantasy book full of heroes, adventure, magic and mischief? Grab these wonderful reads!
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Tell us a little bit about your new release, The Book of Speculation.
A librarian receives a book that reveals a centuries-old curse, a curse that’s claimed the lives of women in his family, a curse that now threatens his sister. He must discover the curse’s source, and how to break it, before it strikes again. It’s a genre bender in that it’s a literary mystery with elements of fantasy, historical fiction, and magical realism. There are circus mermaids who can hold their breath for ten minutes, a mute fortune teller who can disappear, and a very frustrated librarian whose house happens to be falling off a cliff into the Long Island Sound. Ultimately it’s a story about families, obligation, and sacrifice. Oh, and bibliophilia.
What's the best advice you've ever received?
Say yes. This was drilled into my head when I was a performer. Much gets made of saying no and setting boundaries. Boundaries are essential, but nothing interesting ever happens if you only say no. To date, every good thing that’s ever happened to me has been as a direct result of saying yes to something I found intimidating.
Where did your affinity for Whac-a-mole come from?
The carnival that came to my town every summer always had Whac-a-Mole. As a kid there are times when you need to smack things with a mallet without repercussions. I had a powerful need to bop things on the head. Looking back, it must have been frustrating for all those guys trying to impress their girlfriends—here’s this annoying girl just annihilating mechanical moles. I won a lot of stuffed animals.
You now host a talk show (congrats). Who would be your first guest?
Stephen Fry. If I’m ever going to make an idiot of myself on television, I’d prefer to do it alongside an incredibly intelligent and charming person. Plus, then I can convince myself I’ve met Oscar Wilde.
Who is your favorite fictional character from literature?
Oh, it has to be Arthur Dent from The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. He’s so incredibly relatable. His entire planet gets bulldozed, he’s tossed into a strange new universe, and there he is in his bathrobe, unable to get past the fact that he’ll never again have a good cup of tea. That’s all of humanity right there, isn’t it?
What was your most spectacular fail on your baking blog? or biggest win?
The orange curd cake. It was memorable in that it made me cry on my kitchen floor. Most of the orange curd was spilled down a burner and into my stove. We do not speak of the orange curd cake. The orange curd is dead to us. There was a lemon chiffon pie that deflated, but really, that’s nothing when compared to cleaning a quart of curd out of a stove.
Who was your childhood hero?
I had two: Amelia Earhart and Sally Ride. For me, the skies and heavens have always belonged to women.
What's on your writing desk?
Pens, endless pens. Two small sculptures. A legal pad. A Jane Austen action figure, of course. A notebook. Two printers (it’s a long table). My sketch pad. Speakers for my music. A really haphazard stack of pages that probably shouldn’t be discussed. I’ve somehow fit an entire room on a table.
What's your favorite quote from The Book of Speculation?
“Hard thoughts are held in small words.” I can pull out a lyrical phrase when I need to, but there’s no sentence that more perfectly captures my meaning. In context it’s loaded.
Do you have a favorite local bookstore we can give a shoutout to?
The Astoria Bookshop has been a huge voice on my behalf. They’re a fantastic addition to the neighborhood, and they’re just great book people.
Do you have a motto, quote or philosophy you live by?
Hard work speaks for itself.

Erika Swyler is the author of the new book The Book of Speculation
Connect with Erika
Author Website
Twitter
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Happy Book Lover's Day, NewInBooks readers! We asked our audience on Instagram (if you aren't following us, check it out) to send us their favorite quotes about reading in honor of this awesome holiday. We pulled together our favorites and included them below.
We hope you're reading something that brings you joy on Book Lover's Day 🙂
Want to see all of the wonderful quotes submitted by our readers? Check out the comments in the below Instagram post.
https://instagram.com/p/6Agy1qnqHc
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Fast-paced thrillers are perfect for summer reading. One of our favorite thriller authors, Stefanie Pintoff, has a new book coming out on August 18th that Lee Child calls “the perfect blend: an urban thriller as modern as tomorrow’s New York Times, driven by a two-hundred-year-old idea, with a main character to die for." We have a few advance copies of the new Stefanie Pintoff book in the Eve Rossi series (get excited), and we're giving a few away to our readers.
If you want to read the new Stefanie Pintoff thriller before it comes out, enter to win below. Good luck!
Fans of crime novels and urban thrillers will love the action-packed new book by Edgar-award winner Stefanie Pintoff, Hostage Taker.
Follow Eve Rossi, FBI agent, as she tracks down a mysterious hostage taker. Rossi is surrounded by a team of ex-convicts with no regard for the rules, which makes for a highly unconventional trackdown.
If you're a thriller fan looking for a new book to read for the end of summer, look no further!
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China Miéville's new book, Three Moments of an Explosion, is a mind bending adventure through language and illusion. If you aren't already a fan of China Miéville and his tales of the monstrous and strange, buckle your seat belts, because his ability to create a world, or change our own, through language is magnificent. I first experienced Miéville's work in Perdido Street Station, a book featuring many permutations of magic, monsters and intrigue, and quickly consumed The City and The City and Kraken. When Three Moments of an Explosion was released this week, I was all too excited to fall back into the hallucinatory pages of his work. And let me tell you, Three Moments of an Explosion does not disappoint. Since it is a lengthy collection, including 28 stories, I am here today to tell you a bit about my favorites.
In this story, Miéville creates a new word. A word that - until this story - I hadn't realized I needed. As I kept reading, it's necessity became apparent. That word, is bund: a word that means both but and and at the same time. Readers who love the flidity of language, will be drawn to China Miéville's work.
The rules of reality are bent in this story of professional card-game players, and the hidden suits that emerge under just the right circumstances. New rules, regulations, and punishments apply to the playing of these mysterious cards. Will you be initiated?
An interesting tale built of madness, conquest, faith, and truth. What would you do, if you were a rebellious slave, tasked with taking care of foreign gods until their countries have been conquered?
While the protagonist spends most of her time relating occurrences related to politics in the fiction London in which she resides, The Dusty Hat has some great paragraphs that express what paranoia really feels like. Miéville is great at personifying inanimate objects.
What were your favorite stories in China Miéville's Three Moments of an Explosion? Do you plan on incorporating bund into your personal vernacular? Tell us on Twitter and Instagram at @newinbooks!
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Good News, Problematic Trends, and Wise Words await in this week's News in Books:
The Stylist has done a lovely job of reminding us of all of the lovely benefits of reading (relaxation, memory, activating language centers, and more!) Read More ↦
Alas, we have another sad experiment in which the bias towards male authors becomes evident. In this piece, Catherine Nichols does a fantastic job looking at the plethora of factors that may lead this to be the case, but consciously and subconsciously. Read More ↦ & More ↦
Yep. You Read that right. The Pope wrote an encyclical on climate change that was leaked on June 15th in an online Italian magazine. This week, Melville House pulled off one of the fastest publishing jobs in the history of the industry and brought it to print Read More ↦
Love Ursula as much as we do? Read this lovely NYT interview, and don't forget to watch this fantastic speech of hers from last year when she won the National Book Foundation's Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters.
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Pretty pictures of books and bookcases. Because, we live vicariously through not only books, but other readers, and what kind of Friday would it be without a little eye candy 😉 Feast Your Eyes ↦
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