Latest News

Starred Review

The Sylvan Hotel

by Frannie James

Set in the early 1990s, The Sylvan Hotel by Frannie James is a captivating whirlwind of drama that follows a recent college graduate as she navigates the "in-between" stage of her life. James also captures the Emerald City at the precipice of its evolution from a "pretty pit stop" with provincial sensibilities into a 21st-century metropolis. Cameos by Kurt and Courtney Love Cobain set a nostalgic backdrop for James's Seattle story.

Joann is a "somewhat preppy" 20-something Asian American working the swing

Read More »

A Gallery of Cats

by Ruth Brown, illus. by Ruth Brown

Beloved picture book author/illustrator Ruth Brown (Eye Spy) pays homage to 13 famous artists in her magnificent picture book A Gallery of Cats, in which she takes readers on an immersive and whimsical tour of an art gallery with a feline focus.

A boy is wandering alone in a museum. Large, framed paintings (rendered in acrylic and pen and ink) line the walls, each modeled after the work of a famous artist. At each piece's heart is a cat that Brown has cleverly inserted into the image. Next to each work is

Read More »

Bigger: Essays

by Ren Cedar Fuller

Ren Cedar Fuller's perceptive debut work, Bigger, offers nine linked autobiographical essays in which she seeks to see herself and family members more clearly by acknowledging disability, neurodivergence, and gender diversity.

In "Naming My Father," Fuller theorizes that her late father was "on the autism spectrum." He was exacting and emotionless--he spouted facts but never expressed love; he hit his four daughters and couldn't tell them apart unless they stood in height order. She intersperses notable moments

Read More »

The Uncool: A Memoir

by Cameron Crowe

Director Cameron Crowe is best known for films such as Vanilla SkySay Anything..., and the semi-autobiographical Almost Famous, all of which feature iconic soundtracks. The critical role music plays in his film work is no accident. Indeed, the journalist turned director claims in his captivating memoir, "The marriage of film and music would soon be my favorite part of writing and directing films."

In The Uncool, Crowe depicts his unlikely journey from gawky high schooler in the 1970s

Read More »

Mothers

by Brenda Lozano, trans. by Heather Cleary

Mexican writer Brenda Lozano and translator Heather Cleary reunite after Witches for Mothers, about two women bound together by their temporarily overlapping motherhoods. On January 22, 1946, in Mexico City's wealthy Colonia Juárez, Gloria Felipe leaves her two-year-old daughter, Gloria Miranda Felipe, for 16 minutes to play with a new neighbor in their apartment building's courtyard, and the child vanishes. In nearby Colonia Guerrero, Nuria Valencia, who "had been trying for years to get pregnant with

Read More »

Wild Song

by Candy Gourlay

A bold Bontok teen endeavors to live among those who treat her people as savages in this striking YA historical novel, one of the winners of the 2024 National Children's Book Award of the Philippines.

Sixteen-year-old Luki, who lives in U.S.-controlled Bontok in the Philippine Islands, signs up to attend the 1904 World's Fair because the alternative--marriage--enrages her. She seeks instead the "sweet land of liberty" and, with other village members, takes a tumultuous weeks-long voyage to Saint Louis, Mo.

Read More »

Welcome

Shelf Awareness offers free e-newsletters about books and the book industry. We also partner with hundreds of indie booksellers across the country.

For Readers: Every Friday, discover the 25 best books published that week as selected by our industry insiders. Sign up now.

For Book Trade Professionals: Receive daily enlightenment with our FREE weekday trade newsletter. Sign up now.

Free indie partner newsletters: Customizable and turnkey options supporting bookstore marketing. Learn more.

Shelf Discovery

What a Way to Go

by Bella Mackie

The head of a wealthy family winds up dead at his Cotswolds country house in Bella Mackie's second mystery, a hilariously bruising riff on the lengths people will go to justify appalling behavior.

Read Full Review »

Unfit

by Ariana Harwicz, trans. by Jessie Mendez Sayer

In Unfit, Argentine writer Ariana Harwicz presents a raw, frenzied portrait of a woman desperate to reunite with her young twin sons.

Read Full Review »

Orange Wine

by Esperanza Hope Snyder

A creative young woman in early 20th-century Colombia defies tradition to express her talents and find true happiness.

Read Full Review »

Mirage City

by Lev AC Rosen

The fourth volume in Lev AC Rosen's superior series is a fresh homage to noir that delves into the LGBTQ+ community's struggle for their rights.   

Read Full Review »

The Life of Violet

by Virginia Woolf, Urmila Seshagiri, editor

This collection of stories--a newly discovered draft of an early manuscript by Virginia Woolf--with commentary from scholar Urmila Seshagiri is a triumph and a delight.

Read Full Review »

Blood & Breath

by Qurratulayn Muhammad

In this beguiling Jazz Age-era paranormal fantasy, a lower-class girl makes a deal with a devil to enact revenge on the magical ruling class.

Read Full Review »

Cover Story

by Mhairi McFarlane

In this romance set in Manchester, England, two journalists who hate each other are forced to investigate a story together.

Read Full Review »

Cat

by Rebecca van Laer

Rebecca van Laer's Cat is encyclopedia entry and memoir in one, dabbling in the general history and domestication of cats, and the specific history of her cats and the lives they have lived.

Read Full Review »

Venetian Vespers

by John Banville

John Banville's Venetian Vespers is a satisfyingly ruthless chess match about a hack English writer, his heiress wife, and the mysterious siblings they meet during their Venice honeymoon.

Read Full Review »

The October Film Haunt

by Michael Wehunt

A former horror movie influencer comes face to face with the demon(s) she created in this complex, layered, thoroughly imagined take on film, reality, and the blurry line in between.

Read Full Review »

Matisse at War

by Christopher C. Gorham

Henri Matisse's fearless decision to stay in France under the Nazi occupation is the backdrop to this sweeping overview of heroic patriots and artists who remained to create art and resist tyranny.

Read Full Review »

Cinder House

by Freya Marske

A young woman embodies her family home and strives for a happy ending in this queer, gothic retelling of "Cinderella."

Read Full Review »

Media Heat

Thursday, October 30, 2025

Sherri Shepherd Show: David Burtka, co-author of Both Sides of the Glass: Paired Cocktails and Mocktails to Toast Any Taste (Plume, $35, 9780593719862).

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Good Morning America: Roy Woods Jr., author of The Man of Many Fathers: Life Lessons Disguised as a Memoir (Crown, $32, 9780593800072).

Fresh Air: Judd Apatow, author Comedy Nerd: A Lifelong Obsession in Stories and Pictures (Random House, $50, 9780593595930).

Jimmy Kimmel Live: Christian Petroni, co-author of Parm to Table: Italian American and American Italian Recipes from Ponza to the Bronx (Harvest, $35, 9780063378582).

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

CBS Mornings: Nicholas Thompson, author of The Running Ground: A Father, a Son, and the Simplest of Sports (Random House, $30, 9780593244128).

Good Morning America
: Catherine Newman, author of Wreck: A Novel (Harper, $26.99, 9780063453913).

Sherri Shepherd Show: Brie Larson and Courtney McBroom, author of Party People: A Cookbook for Creative Celebrations (DK, $35, 9780593970027).

Late Night with Seth Meyers: Reese Witherspoon and Harlan Coben, authors of Gone Before Goodbye (Grand Central, $32, 9781538774700).

Monday, October 27, 2025

Good Morning America: Jonathan Karl, author of Retribution: Donald Trump and the Campaign That Changed America (Dutton, $32, 9798217047000). 

CBS Mornings: Cameron Crowe, author of The Uncool: A Memoir (Avid Reader Press, $35, 9781668059432). 

Late Night with Seth Meyers: Zadie Smith, author of Dead and Alive: Essays (Penguin Press, $30, 9780593834688).

Late Show with Stephen Colbert: Judd Apatow, author Comedy Nerd: A Lifelong Obsession in Stories and Pictures (Random House, $50, 9780593595930). 

Thursday, October 23, 2025

CBS Mornings: Tom Colicchio, author of Think Like a Chef, 25th Anniversary Edition (Clarkson Potter, $38, 9798217034888).

Drew Barrymore Show: Malala Yousafzai, author of Finding My Way: A Memoir (Atria, $30, 9781668054277).

Powered by: Xtenit