Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Ideas For Book Displays and Other Passive Readers Advisory - Science Fiction Edition

This is the first of some genre-focused posts. Rather than start with genres I know more about (romance and horror) I thought I would do the harder ones first so we are jumping off with science fiction. There is science fiction content on my post about general book content so check those sites as well if you are looking for science fiction book news. 

Whether right or wrong, the worlds of science fiction and gaming seem to have an affiliation so I've included some gaming sites with book related content. 

Also, if you have suggestions here, please let me know!

The Portalist: A site run by Open Road Media (which operates other genre-focused sites like The Lineup) focused on science fiction and fantasy. The focus is on backlist titles. There are a lot of articles with read-alikes and lists based upon a theme such as "Must Read Space Opera Books." They also cover movies and TV shows along with weird news that will appeal to fans of the genre. 

Book Riot has science fiction content and also a newsletter called Swords & Spaceships with recommendations and news. They also host a sci fi/fantasy biweekly podcast called SFF Yeah!  . They make a strong effort to be as inclusive as possible. 

The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association is another great source of information about science fiction as a genre. They present the Nebula Awards, voted on by members. Librarians can join at the affiliate level.

The Fantasy Reviews has a section about science fiction. There are lists that can inspire your readers advisory as well as a lot of content devoted to science fiction properties like Doctor Who and Dune. 

Wired Magazine has a section on their website called Geek's Guide to the Galaxy, devoted to books, TV, gaming, and movies. 

Kirkus Reviews covers science fiction news including adaptions on their website. 

Polygon, a site with a lot of gaming content, has a section devoted to books with news, lists, and articles that you can use. 

Worlds Without End, a fan-run website and online community, has a lot of book related content including information about the various book awards, including international ones, book lists, information about authors, podcast listings, and resources. Their lists of subgenres alone may inspire some book lists or displays. Their lists of websites includes author blogs, awards, and general science fiction focused websites. 

The Hugo Awards are awarded by Worldcon and seem to be unable to stay away from controversy but the past winners, nominees, and readalikes can inspire a list or display. 

Locus  is a long running science fiction, fantasy, and horror magazine. There is news, reviews, feature articles, and creator spotlights. 

IO9, part of Gizmodo, covers movies, television, gaming, and books with news and feature articles. 







Monday, February 26, 2024

Ideas For Book Displays and Other Passive Readers Advisory - Basic Book Content

Listed below are some sites where you can find information about books in general including lists, reviews, and feature articles. There is content on most of them about the various genres of fiction as well so keep that in mind. Obviously, I haven't listed all sites imaginable but let me know if there is a great one I missed!

My suspicion is that I will need to make a part two of this!

Barnes & Noble may seem like an odd choice but their blog has great ideas you can use to market your library's collection.

Book Riot has podcasts, feature articles, newsletters and more. It's definitely a site many avid readers are using for information.

Entertainment Weekly has book reviews as well as book news and lists. You can also curate a book display by looking at what is popular in other areas of entertainment. "Books to read if you love [popular television show]" as an example. 

Esquire has book content including lists, interviews,  and best of the year content for genre. 

Goodreads has its pros and cons but there are a lot of lists on a wide range of topics on the site. It can be very useful while you are trying to find titles for a book display. 

Kirkus Reviews also includes feature articles and news in addition to reviews and a lot of book lists. 

NPR books includes reviews, industry news, and lists including genre content. 

People Magazine has a book section with lists and feature articles. Many of the books they highlight appear on our request lists. 

The famous Powell's Books in Portland, OR has a blog with book news, interviews, and lists.

Formerly Tor.com, Reactor has news, columns, blogs, and information about fiction in general as well as genre focused content. There is a lot of fun reading to be had on this site that should inspire your passive readers advisory. 

Readers Advisory expert Becky Spratford maintains a blog with so much great information about books, reading, and readers services in libraries. She usually posts daily, Monday - Friday, so add checking out RA For All to your daily routine. She includes information about all the major book awards, how to use them, as well as a lot of other information that will enhance your ability to help patrons. 

Library Journal is an obvious choice for someone who works in a library. I do want to highlight their Book Pulse which usually comes out daily. You can sign up for an email notification of when it posts. They highlight media appearances by authors, let you know which books were selected by the big celebrity book clubs, adaption information, as well as a lot of other book news that is very helpful. 

Booklist Online is another ALA site with book and book review information for librarians. As with Library Journal, some of the content is paywalled. 

Most major newspapers have book review sections and they can be useful for getting ideas for readers advisory. Don't forget your local paper's book section, if they have one. The bigger national papers have a wider audience but your patrons will react to local news. I will list a few of the biggest sites: USA Today, New York Times, Washington Post, and The Guardian

The AP has a page with their book information curated. A wide range of genres, fiction and non-fiction, as well as youth material is included. 



Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Book Display Idea - Subgenre: Space Operas

 The Portalist recently curated a list of 25 Must Read Space Operas. Diving into a subgenre like this is another way to showcase your collections' backlist in a book display or book list. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction defines a space opera as: "colorful action-adventure stories of interplanetary or interstellar conflict." (This page also includes the names of many of the authors who have worked in the subgenre.) These are not books with hard science throughout and may instead include more fanciful ideas of technology. These sprawling, epic adventures can be humorous or have romantic subplots. Goodreads has lists of titles as well a definition and related subgenres. Reactor has tagged their related articles and lists with space opera as well. 

There are a lot of series that would fit into this sort of display or list. There is also ample opportunities to promote diverse books and authors within this subgenre. 

You can include a definition on signage as well as links to online resources on your display. 

Add audiobooks and DVDs of movies from your collection that fit the theme as well. If you have local or library based book displays that focus on science fiction, promote them as well on the display. 

Here are some lists to get you started on your own space adventure!

Book Riot has a list of 25 of the Best Space Opera Books of All Time and 10 Space Opera Series to Get You Through The Winter

Bookish Brews - 20 Best Diverse Space Opera Books You Need to Read

The Fantasy Review  - 7 Modern Space Opera Novels That Will Take You On Epic Adventures

Publishers Weekly  - 10 Authors Shaking Up Space Opera

If you want to explore sci-fi subgenres further, The Portalist has a guide to get you started: Powerful Sci-Fi Subgenres That Every Geek Needs to Explore. 

Monday, January 29, 2024

Ideas from publisher marketing emails -Anti-New Year's Resolution Reads

 I've mentioned before that you can use ideas from the emails publishers and other vendors send you to create your own book displays or lists. Simon and Schuster recently sent me an email with a link to the following list: Anti-New Year's Resolution Reads. The idea behind the list is to promote books  "if you’re done with setting life goals, check out these books filled with excess, desire, and obsession." This is such a fun idea. 

I am not a fan of New Year, New You displays. This would be a fun alternative. The publisher clearly is promoting their own titles but you can look at the backlist in your library's collection and curate a display from what you own that could use a little more attention and promotion. 

There are links to some lists below to get you started. Don't forget to look at your non-fiction especially cookbooks and biographies of those who lived with "excess, desire, and obsession." Also remember that people can become obsessed or passionate about many things so expand your search into your collection!

Goodreads - Excess Books

Crime Reads - 8 Books abut Dark Desires That Will Crush You

Goodreads - Listopia Desire Book Lists

The Rumpus - What to Read When You’re Looking for Desire

The Independent - Nine Books That Get Women's Desire Right

The Guardian - Top 10 Stories of Obsession

Pan MacMillian - Books About Obsession That will Have You Hooked

Novel Suspects - Obsession in Psychological Thrillers

Crime Reads - 7 Novels about Wealthy People Behaving Badly





Tuesday, January 9, 2024

Ideas from publisher marketing emails

You don't have to come up with new ideas every time you change out a book display or create a book list. Use the headlines from all of the marketing emails publishers send you as a jumping off point. Just take the basic idea and use what you have in your collection that is not moving and go from there. 

As an example, Off the Shelf from Simon & Schuster offered these list ideas: 

  • 12 Addictive Reads You Can Finish in a Single Flight: 
  • 6 Upcoming Releases Everyone Will Be Talking About This Year
  • 11 Books That Are Guaranteed Page Turners
For the first one, you can add audiobooks or links to your eAudiobook collection. The theme could be a car trip or a single evening/weekend. If you decide to go with upcoming releases, the library's holds/reserve list can be promoted. Add cover images from those titles you want to promote and include a QR code to your catalog where patrons can place a hold. Upcoming titles does not mean those titles that are guaranteed to be a bestseller. Work with your acquisitions librarians to find titles that could use a little more promotion. As always, readalikes from your backlist can be added. The concept of a page turner is very loose so add any and all genres. Get other library staff involved and dig into your backlist. Don't worry about if a book is perfectly described as a page turner. The idea is to market your collection by using face outs. No one will grade your display. 

Every major publisher sends out promotional emails with lists of their backlist and new titles grouped in thematic lists. Borrow the idea, customize it to your collection and your community, and then go promote your collection!



 


Friday, December 29, 2023

My TopHorror Reads of 2023

 I read fairly broadly every year but my December LibFaves are always horror focused. While EarlyWord has changed to a spreadsheet for this year (see their website for details), I thought I would curate my list here of what were my favorite horror reads in 2023. Are they the best of the year? I don't know! That's someone else's list. Also, a few people do have more than one entry. I couldn't decide and it's my list.  They aren't in any order. 

Bad Cree by Jessica Johns (Doubleday): A story filled with complex female relationships as Mackenzie, a young Cree woman,  tries to deal with her sister Sabrina's death. Eventually, her intense dreams, filled with violence, drive her home to Alberta where she and her family must face their guilt and grief. This is coming of age horror and grief horror. I love a story with a core of female relationships not built around the men in their lives. With this debut, Jessica Johns shows great promise. 

Chapman Chapbooks #1-3 (Shortwave Media) and What Kind of Mother (Quirk Books) by Clay McLeod Chapman: Becky Spratford (RA for All and RA for All: Horror) has said that for this year it's WTF for the win. Clay's books are definitely filled with moments that will make you question what you just read as well as what kind of mind could create the story you are reading. In What Kind of Mother, Madi, a palm reader, has been forced to return to her hometown  in the Chesapeake Bay Area with her teenage daughter. While working a farmer's market, she is reintroduced to her high school boyfriend, Henry. He's been searching for his missing infant son for 5 years. As Madi grows more unsure of what happened and if Henry was involved, the reader is drawn deeper and deeper into a story that starts with unease and ends with terror. 

The Chapbooks are three short stories that are quick shots of Clay storytelling. They are all three terrifying and will leave you terrified at the idea that someone would write these. It's as if someone went ahead with one of those "Can you imagine..." ideas that you have with your friends late at night. Baby carrots become horrifying in his hands. . .  

What Clay is especially skilled at doing is taking small ordinary events and moments and infusing them with emotion and horror as part of revealing what could happen next. With his books, it's difficult to predict what is going to happen next. He's perfect for that person who thinks that they have read everything and is feeling kind of jaded.

Loteria (Agora Books) and The Shoemaker's Magician by Cina Pelayo(Agora Books): From my Goodreads review of LoteriaRich collection of poetry, short stories and a novella. There are ghosts and monsters within the text, both human and supernatural. Great for fans of Latin American folktales, horror, or for breaking a reading slump. As with all of her work, Cina Pelayo digs deeply into the human heart and shows us our pain and love and hatred and joy. 

In The Shoemaker's Magician, Pelayo has another genre blend of mystery/police procedural with horror and fairy tale retellings. This is book 2 in the Chicago Saga which began with The Children of Chicago. What you will get immediately is a sense of Chicago as a real place and how much love its residents have for it, complicated history and all. Paloma Ramos has a YouTube show discussing classic horror. Her neurodivergent son, Bela, occupies a lot of her remaining time. Her husband Sebastian, a homicide detective, is called to case in which a poster from a 1920's film is attached to the body. This starts a mystery Paloma and Sebastian try to solve together. It's tied to a horror TV host, Grand, and a lost silent film. This book is perfect for a mystery/thriller fan who is open to some horror and supernatural touches.  It's a gripping story that is driven by complex characters and their relationships. 

Whalefall by Daniel Kraus (MTV Books): From my Goodreads review- Scientifically accurate and stands as a terrifying story of a diver being swallowed by a sperm whale. Jay, feeling guilty about his father's suicide and his refusal to visit before, attempts a dive to find his father's remains. An accidental encounter with a giant squid puts Jay in real jeopardy when a hungry sperm whale swallows the squid. Jay is dragged along and has one hour to find a way out before he runs out of oxygen. 

Jay's descent into the whale is entangled with a descent into his complicated feelings about his father, a local diving legend. Coming to terms with his father and his feelings is an important to Jay's survival as is finding a way out of the whale. Kraus uses the alien, claustrophobic environment of the deep sea to mirror how unprocessed trauma and grief have trapped Jay. His real physical danger is reflected in the flashbacks to his childhood, which show the emotional cost of having a father like his. 

Recommended for fans of Jaws and deep sea terror and survivor stories as well as fans of complicated family stories and those about death and grief.

How to Sell a Haunted House by Grady Hendrix (Penguin Random House): Best selling author Grady Hendrix has written another book deserving of its attention and praise. Louise reluctantly leaves her daughter with her ex and travels to Charleston after the death of her parents. Her father and her mother left a house filled with memories and the puppets and dolls which occupied so much of their mother's time. Mark has never left his hometown and fails at one enterprise after another. While Louise intends on selling the house as quickly as possible, she learns the truth about the house and its plans for them... Grady is so very good at describing and getting to the heart of relationships. His description of complicated sibling relationships is so dead on accurate. This is one of those books that everyone I suggest it to adores. 

Hungers As Old As This Land by Zachary Rosenberg (Brigids Gate Press, LLC): From my Goodreads review-This horror western is a fast read and it's a testament to Rosenberg's talents that readers seem to be left wanting more of both the world he's created and his characters. What could be a typical western plot of a good town facing invasion by bad men is made fresh with strong female characters, a town established as a haven for Jewish settlers, and bargain between a small town and monsters hiding in the nearby mountains. There is great character development with the two main characters being tough women who can take care of themselves and hold their ground. It's a rich novella that packs a lot into its pages. I can't wait to read something else from this author.

Black Sheep by Rachel Harrison (Berkley): From my Goodreads review Vesper is living a listless existence as a waitress at a chain restaurant in New York City. Disaffected and sarcastic, she has fled the authoritarian religious group she grew up in, knowing that if you leave, you can never return. She's surprised to receive an invitation to the wedding of her childhood best friend and her first love, both of whom stayed loyal to the cult and remained in their tiny New Jersey town. Despite a tense relationship with her cold, detached scream queen mother, a star of b horror films, Vesper's curiosity gets the better of her and she returns for the wedding, the prodigal child. 

Vesper learns secrets about her family and childhood faith that she struggles to accept. It's a darkly humorous book that still manages to wrestle with themes of faith, memory, family, and identity. How much of one's identity is tied to one's past? Can you escape who you used to be or who other people wanted you to be? Harrison has written a book that is fast paced and filled with great characters. If you are a fan of fiction about cults, family tension, or strained parent/child relationships you will enjoy this release. There are twists and turns that will keep you reading.

Nestlings by Nat Cassidy (Tor Nightfire): This is another recent horror novel that has a 70-80's horror movie feel that I love. The comparison to Rosemary's Baby is apt and New York City is drawn so that readers will have a real sense of the city. Ana and her husband Reid win a lottery for an apartment in a desirable New York City building. While Ana grows increasingly disturbed by strange happenings at the building, Reid dismisses her sense of unease but the couple and their baby are drawn deeper and deeper into whatever is wrong with their new home. The sense of unease grows into terror as the couple realize what is really going on at the Depford building.  

Ana's postpartum depression and disability are woven into the story as she tries to move forward. Antisemitism is also deftly handled by Cassidy. A reader that doesn't always feel drawn to horror but loves horror movies will enjoy this book. 

Lone Women by Victor LaValle (One World): Another genre blending book with historical fiction and horror combined, Lone Women is the story of Adelaide Henry in the Montana of 1915. She has fled her home in California with only a mysterious trunk that must never be opened. The book is fast paced and even after the secret of the trunk is revealed, the reader is compelled to read on. There are some great female characters and relationships in the book. Issues of sexism, racism, and classism are woven into the story as Adelaide struggles to find her place in the world and escape her family's past. She is a wonderfully complex character who kept me reading.

Another book to recommend to those readers who are open to horror when blended with a genre they already love. It should be showcased on any list or display of historical fiction. 

The Reformatory by Tananrive Due (Saga Press):  I was partially familiar with the history of the Dozier School for Boys in Florida. (TampaBay Times story can be read here.) Set in fictional, Gracetown, Florida, this book was inspired by the real-life horrors of the Dozier School as well as what Due's relative experienced there.  There are real world terrors blended in the supernatural throughout the book. Robby Stephens Jr. is sent to  Gracetown School for Boys after kicking the son of a powerful man while defending his sister, Gloria. Robby can see "haints" or ghosts, a talent that allowed him to see his beloved mother after she died. In the reformatory, Robby is haunted by boys who died terrible deaths at the hands of sadistic staff members. He makes friends while at the school with Redbone and Blue who try to help him learn how to survive. His sister, burdened by the reputation of their father whose activism forced him to flee to Chicago, works tirelessly to get Robby released, harnessing connections to the NAACP and activist lawyers. 

Tying the horrors of the Jim Crow south to those of restless souls tied to where they were unjustly murdered, Due has written one of the best books of the year. Robert and Gloria are multidimensional characters, dealing with tragedy upon tragedy. The supporting cast of their friends and supporters is given depth and Due narrates their struggles with racism and poverty as both a collective struggle while also allowing each character to face them as individuals.    Historical fiction fans who love books like The Nickel Boys by Colton Whitehead should love this book. 

Spin a Black Yarn by Josh Malerman (Del Rey): Imagine that you are sitting on a plane and a seemingly nice guy sits down next to you and begins to tell you a story. The story, while normal at first, becomes increasingly more disturbing and horrifying as it proceeds. You are trapped until the plane lands. This guy is Josh Malerman. Spin a Black Yarn is five completely different stories, each a unique take on something we think we know about - sibling relationships or deathbed confessions, for example.  This compelling collection is disquieting and the terror creeps up on the reader, no mean feat given that these are shorter works. This collection really showcases Malerman's talent with characters and dialogue. 

There were a ton more great books published this year. I am still working through them all. It's not a comprehensive list. Check Becky's blog for more lists of great 2023 books. I hope 2024 brings us more genre blended stories as well as more Jewish horror! 






ARRTCon 24 Presention - Marketing Your Collection, Programs, and Services With Better Book Displays.

I am a huge fan of Chicago-Area libraries and their library workers. Every time I visit, I learn something from the trip. Recently, I was fo...