Shelf Awareness for Wednesday, May 7, 2025


Tor Books: Red City (New Alchemists #1) by Marie Lu

Hanover Square Press: Hazel Says No by Jessica Berger Gross

Pluto Press (UK):  Fascist Yoga: Grifters, Occultists, White Supremacists, and the New Order in Wellness by Stewart Home

Little, Brown Books for Young Readers: The Glittering Edge by Alyssa Villaire

Viking Books for Young Readers: The Raven Boys: The Graphic Novel by Maggie Stiefvater and Stephanie Williams, illustrated by Sas Milledge

Little, Brown Books for Young Readers: I Am Strong! by Todd Parr

W. W. Norton & Company: Dark Renaissance: The Dangerous Times and Fatal Genius of Shakespeare's Greatest Rival by Stephen Greenblatt

News

For Sale: Out West Books, Grand Junction, Colo.

Out West Books, which opened in 2014 at 533 Main St. in Grand Junction, Colo., has been put up for sale and will close later this year if a buyer is not found. 

In a social media post, owner Marya Johnston wrote: "After 11 years in business and 30+ years of bookselling, I have made the difficult decision to retire from the bookselling profession. I am ready to move on to a new chapter. It has been my absolute pleasure to spend the last 11 years as a part of Grand Junction's reading community, however I've come to realize that life is short and I want to spend more time with my family--as a result, I have put Out West Books up for sale. Should the store not sell, I will close the doors in the early fall."

Noting that she is passionate about books and bookselling and her heart will always lie with the book community, Johnston observed: "YOU are the reason I love what I do. What a joy it has been to see children who attended our story times as toddlers now come into the store as young adults. (I can only hope that this little bookstore has played some small part in their success... and they will be successful because they are at home in a bookstore.) It has been happily fulfilling to put the right books into the hands of the right person, to educate recent residents and visitors about the wonders and history of the area, to get to know you as customers and then as friends....  

"If we do not see each other in the coming months, please know your support and encouragement has meant the world to me. I saw a niche that needed to be filled, filled it, and you encouraged and championed this little Independent Bookstore from humble beginnings to become a well known part of the community. I will miss it--and all of you--dearly."

For more information, check out the real estate listing here


G.P. Putnam's Sons: Tantrum by Rachel Eve Moulton


Rediscovered Books, Boise, Idaho, Relocating

Rediscovered Books in Boise, Idaho, has launched a GoFundMe campaign in advance of moving to a new location this summer, 2IdahoNews reported.

Rediscovered Books' current location.

The new and used bookstore will be moving from its longtime home at 180 N. 8th St. to 1576 W. Grove St. The new location is larger and will have a dedicated events space, as well as its own parking lot. It is a 10-minute walk from the current location.

The Rediscovered Books team is looking to raise $20,000, which would go toward moving costs, paying staff while the store is closed, and anything unexpected along the way. Backer perks range from limited-edition stickers to a private cocktail hour and shopping experience.

"Our decision to leave 8th Street, where we have been for the past 14 years, was not made lightly," read an announcement posted on Instagram. "Our current space has been a great place for us, and we have enjoyed being a part of the downtown core. However, we are ready for new opportunities that will help support long-term stability, and we believe this space on Grove Street will fulfill our needs and allow us to do even more with our ever-growing community of readers."


Simon & Schuster Children's: Register Now for our Fall 2025 Author Preview!


Bookish Police Blotter: Storefront Hit & Run in Rome, Ga.; Parklet Destruction Arrest in Kingston, N.Y.

On Sunday night, a driver crashed into the front of River & Hill Books in Rome, Ga., and then left the scene of the accident. In an Instagram post, the bookstore noted: "Thankfully no one was in the store when this happened, and the damage could have been a lot worse. We will be CLOSED today to assess and clean up and will hopefully have more information tomorrow about store hours and our schedule for the rest of the week. While we're closed, remember you can always shop online on our website. Thank you for your support! We hope to be back to normal as soon as possible! Special thanks to the Rome Fire Department for their quick response and help!"

--- 

In Kingston, N.Y., an arrest has been made in the hit-and-run incident that destroyed the "parklet" outdoor seating area in front of Rough Draft Bar & Books last month. Police told the Times Union that a 31-year-old Ulster Park man struck the parklet with his 2013 Chevy pickup at 4:45 a.m. on April 24 and then drove away from the scene without reporting the accident, according to security camera footage.

He was charged with misdemeanor criminal mischief for recklessly damaging property and leaving the scene of a property damage accident without reporting it, which is a violation, the Times Union wrote. The driver admitted to causing damage, but police did not say whether the crash was accidental or intentional.

On May 3, Rough Draft posted on Facebook that "the glorious parklet is REBUILT, thanks to the heroic efforts of our contractor Alejandro."


Oberlin College Bookstore Closing

The Oberlin College Bookstore, Oberlin, Ohio, will close in June and be replaced by a merchandise and gear store, the Oberlin Review reported.

The college bookstore, which is operated by Barnes & Noble College, is located in a space on Main St. After it closes, the Campus Store, which will be operated by University Gear Shop, will open in a smaller space in Oberlin's Mudd Center.

The Campus Store will not carry physical books, though students will be able to order them there. University Gear Shop will work in partnership with eCampus.com, the school's online bookstore provider.

"The old College Bookstore occupied retail space that was much larger than its retail merchandise needs; this was necessary in part because the bookstore required extensive space for basement textbook organization and storage," Oberlin v-p for finance and administration Rebecca Vazquez-Skillings told the Oberlin Review. "With the launch of our new online bookstore, there is no longer a need for such a storage space."

The new store will be open for the Fall 2025 semester.


Shelf Awareness Delivers Indie Pre-Order E-Blast

This past week, Shelf Awareness sent our monthly pre-order e-blast to more than 940,000 of the country's best book readers. The e-blast went to 942,520 customers of 265 participating independent bookstores.

The mailing features 11 upcoming titles selected by Shelf Awareness editors and a sponsored title. Customers can buy these books via "pre-order" buttons that lead directly to the purchase page for the title on each sending store's website. A key feature is that bookstore partners can easily change title selections to best reflect the tastes of their customers and can customize the mailing with links, images and promotional copy of their own.

The pre-order e-blasts are sent the last Wednesday of each month; the next will go out on Wednesday, May 28. Stores interested in learning more can visit our program registration page or contact our partner program team via e-mail.

For a sample of the April pre-order e-blast, see this one from West Side Stories, Purcellville, Va.

The titles highlighted in the pre-order e-blast were:

Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil by V.E. Schwab (Tor Books)
Flashlight by Susan Choi (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Atmosphere: A Love Story by Taylor Jenkins Reid (Ballantine Books)
Don't Let Him In by List Jewell (Atria)
Badlands (Nora Kelly) by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child (Grand Central)
So Far Gone by Jess Walter (Harper)
The Listeners by Maggie Stiefvater (Viking)
The Ghostwriter by Julie Clark (Sourcebooks Landmark)
Murderland: Crime and Bloodlust in the Time of Serial Killers by Caroline Fraser (Penguin Press)
The Survivor Wants to Die at the End (They Both Die at the End #3) by Adam Silvera (Quill Tree Books)
Let Them Stare by Jonathan Van Ness (Storytide)


Notes

Image of the Day: Sherman Alexie at Village Books

Sherman Alexie appeared twice at Village Books and Paper Dreams in Bellingham, Wash., for his memoir You Don't Have to Say You Love Me (Little, Brown). After the first scheduled event sold out, Alexie agreed to add a second--"and that one sold out, too!" said Kelly Evert, co-owner of Village Books. "One attendee traveled all the way from Las Vegas specifically to see Sherman," she added. Representatives from the Lummi Nation's Children of the Setting Sun Productions also attended to welcome and help introduce him. Pictured: Kelly Evert, Sherman Alexie, and co-owner Paul Hanson.

Personnel Changes at Candlewick/Holiday House/Peachtree

At Candlewick Press, Holiday House, and Peachtree:

Alison Tarnofsky has been promoted to senior marketing manager, trade. She previously was marketing manager, trade.

Elyse Vincenty has been promoted to senior marketing manager, trade. She was previously marketing manager, trade.


Media and Movies

Media Heat: John Green on the Daily Show

Today:
The Daily Show: John Green, author of Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection (Crash Course Books, $28, 9780525556572).

Tomorrow:
CBS Mornings: Bill Gates, author of Source Code: My Beginnings (Knopf, $30, 9780593801581). He will also appear on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert.

Good Morning America: Judy Joo, author of K-Quick: Korean Food in 30 Minutes or Less (White Lion Publishing, $35, 9780711297586).

Kelly Clarkson Show: Ana Huang, author of King of Envy (Bloom Books, $17.99, 9781728289762).

Tamron Hall: Amerie, author of This Is Not a Ghost Story: A Novel (Morrow, $30, 9780358653080).


TV: The Life Inside

The BBC has greenlit screenwriter Dennis Kelly's (Matilda: The Musical) adaptation of Andy West's bestselling book The Life Inside: A Memoir of Prison, Family and Philosophy. Deadline reported that Josh Finan (The Responder) leads the cast as Dan, "a philosopher who begins teaching a class of men in prison. The character is based on West and the show currently has the working title Waiting for the Out." 

The cast also includes Gerard Kearns, Samantha Spiro, Phil Daniels, Stephen Wight, Ronkẹ Adékoluẹjo, Neal Barry, Alex Ferns, Francis Lovehall, Steven Meo, Ric Renton, Tom Moutchi, Nima Taleghani, Sule Rimi, Charlie Rix, and Jude Mack. The project is backed by BBC Studios, which will handle global sales.

"It's not at all unusual for the men in Andy West's family to end up in prison--but Andy is the only one that chose to be there," said writer and executive producer Kelly. "His book is funny, insightful, beautiful, genuinely heartbreaking and nothing like what you'd expect it to be--we've tried to take that into the series."

West, who is also exec producing, added: "I'm so thankful to the writers, directors, producers and everyone involved in adapting The Life Inside. They have brought extraordinary creative and moral imagination to the stories in the book. We all hope to make a series that goes beyond the cliches about prisons and the families inside them and that touches people either side of the wall."



Books & Authors

Awards: Sami Rohr Finalists

Finalists have been selected for the $100,000 2025 Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature, in association with the National Library of Israel, which honors "emerging writers who explore the Jewish experience in a profound and original way." The winner will be announced later this month. The finalists:

Toby Lloyd, for Fervor (Avid Reader Press)
Benjamin Resnick, for Next Stop (Avid Reader Press)
Sasha Vasilyuk, for Your Presence Is Mandatory (Bloomsbury Publishing)
Janice Weizman, for Our Little Histories (Toby Press)


Reading with... Sarah Ruhl

photo: Gregory Costanzo

Sarah Ruhl is a playwright, poet, and essayist. Her works include the memoir Smile, 100 Essays I Don't Have Time to Write (a New York Times Notable Book), two books of poetry, and 14 plays. Her plays have been produced on Broadway and been translated into 15 languages. She is a two-time Pulitzer finalist and Tony Award nominee, and the recipient of a MacArthur "Genius" grant. She is currently professor of playwriting at the Geffen School for Drama at Yale. She lives in Brooklyn, N.Y., with her family. Ruhl's new book is Lessons from my Teachers (Simon & Schuster, May 6, 2025), an inspiring meditation on the life-altering bonds between teacher and student and the ineffable wisdom imparted both inside and outside the classroom.

Handsell readers your book in 25 words or less:

A portrait of my life, told through stories about the many teachers I've been lucky enough to have, from preschool to the present.  

On your nightstand now:

Let's see, having a look at a rather large pile. If you want I can whittle this down: Intermezzo by Sally Rooney, Morning and Evening by Jon Fosse; Antarctica by Claire Keegan; Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch by Rivka Galchen; Ceremony by Leslie Marmon Silko; Roman Stories by Jhumpa Lahiri; The Playbook by James Shapiro; The America Play and Other Works by Suzan-Lori Parks; The Seven Storey Mountain by Thomas Merton; Green Water, Green Sky by Mavis Gallant; Poetry Unbound by Pádraig Ó Tuama; Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck; Shantideva's A Guide to the Bodhisattva's Way of Life translated by Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche; galleys of Jacinda Ardern's upcoming A Different Kind of Power; and Moby-Dick by Herman Melville--still not done with it.

Favorite book when you were a child:

My favorite childhood books were the Betsy-Tacy series by Maud Hart Lovelace. I was a true zealot and still am. In fact, I just bought a tea towel from the Betsy-Tacy Society, of which I am a proud card-carrying member. The society worked to get Lovelace's books back into print after they went out of fashion for a time. They are the coziest books, and the characters feel absolutely real and three-dimensional, as you follow them from their Midwestern childhoods into adulthood. Those books also taught me that being a woman and being a writer is eminently possible, from the time I was seven.

Your top five authors:

Virginia Woolf, Toni Morrison, Sharon Olds, Elizabeth Bishop, Shakespeare.

Book you've faked reading:

I don't fake reading.

Book you're an evangelist for:

Letters to a Young Poet by Rainer Maria Rilke. I think this classic has the power to banish loneliness and change lives. It's the perfect book to give to a young person on their way to college, or after they suffer a heartbreak, when they need a wise companion.

Book you've bought for the cover:

Sheila Heti's Pure Colour. I love the inside of that book too; I think it's a work of mystery and genius; I was excited that Sheila helped design the font for the cover and I simply had to have it in my hands. I'm obsessed with fonts.

Book you hid from your parents:

That would be The Wit and Wisdom of Fat Albert by Bill Cosby. I hid it because I stole it from my preschool, which was in a church basement. I was desperate to read the book at home and keep it for myself. But ultimately, I felt too guilty about the stolen object.

Book that changed your life:

Reflections on a Mountain Lake by Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo. This book explained Tibetan Buddhism to me with such clarity and vividness that I sought out the author (an incredible Buddhist nun) in person at a teaching in New York City, and that teaching changed the course of my life. Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo was the first Western woman (born in England) to undergo a 12-year retreat in a Himalayan cave. When she emerged, she founded a nunnery, and she continues to teach and write books. Her story is utterly inspiring.

Favorite line from a book:

"'Life, life, life!' cries the bird." --from Virginia Woolf's Orlando

Five books you'll never part with:

My father's copy of e.e. cummings's 100 Selected Poems; Betsy and the Great World by Maud Hart Lovelace; Letters to a Young Poet by Rainer Maria Rilke; Max Ritvo's Four Reincarnations; and Paula Vogel's The Baltimore Waltz and Other Plays.

Book you most want to read again for the first time:

I'd love to read all of Agatha Christie's books again for the first time. I was a big Agatha Christie enthusiast when I was little, and I also love reading her books as a grown-up, and now I never know when I'm going to remember a plot. Sometimes I think I've ingeniously figured out the mystery in my middle age, but it's really just that I read the book when I was a kid.


Book Review

Children's Review: I Come from Another Galaxy

I Come from Another Galaxy by James Kwan (Abrams Books for Young Readers, $18.99 hardcover, 40p., ages 4-8, 9781419771149, July 1, 2025)

I Come from Another Galaxy humorously, compassionately--and with a healthy dose of cuteness--relates the story of a dauntless young human who finds that things are very different away from Earth, where they are now the alien.

"Hello, friends." Intrepid adventurer James, who's zooming off to school in another galaxy, explains that they're writing in their little book to share "discoveries from outer space." Their new classmates are all aliens, adorned with slimy tentacles, big googly eyes, and noodle arms. James has "never seen anyone like them!" At school, no one knows how to pronounce the young traveler's name ("Joo-mez?"), and the bathroom has so many buttons that James decides to "hold it in." Not only is James not slimy enough for slime-ball, but when it's time for show and tell--where everyone else shares their favorite shiny, fancy things--James realizes that all they have to share is their little book. Slowly, they open it and read what they've written.

Turns out communicating helps! Once the aliens learn how to say the name "James" correctly, they cheerfully say "hi" (and "greetings" and "beep boop") to the human, after which they advise "PRESS RED! THEN GREEN! THEN SQUARE!" to help James use the toilet. With the help of new friends James can even be slimy enough to play slime-ball. Finally, wonderfully, James offers up things from their own "alien" culture: toothbrushes, socks, and noodles for lunch ("!!!"). The little book, it turns out, lets James "feel bigger having shared it."

James Kwan (Dear Yeti) takes the familiar premise of aliens coming to Earth and spins it 180 degrees. James (the character) is an earnest adventurer who's exhilarated by all the exciting new things they can learn, and their counterparts in the other galaxy are likewise eager to find out about James, all of which delightfully affirms the power of dialogue and the benefits of keeping an open mind. Kwan's pencil drawings are digitally colored in dark pastels, and his characters are engaged, unthreatening, and frankly adorable as they demonstrate how easy it might be to help someone new feel at home. I Come from Another Galaxy beautifully suggests it is likely that everyone has "special stories to share"--even if they are stories from another galaxy. --Lynn Becker, reviewer, blogger, and children's book author

Shelf Talker: I Come from Another Galaxy uses humor, heart, and a healthy dose of cuteness to illustrate beautifully how space-traveling Earthling James finds things very different in outer space.


The Bestsellers

Top Book Club Picks in April

The following were the most popular book club books during April based on votes from book club readers in more than 92,000 book clubs registered at Bookmovement.com:

1. James: A Novel by Percival Everett (Doubleday)
2. The God of the Woods by Liz Moore (Riverhead)
3. The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon (Doubleday)
4. The Wedding People: A Novel by Alison Espach (Holt)
5. The Briar Club: A Novel by Kate Quinn (Morrow)
6. The Women: A Novel by Kristin Hannah (St. Martin's Press)
7. Broken Country by Clare Leslie Hall (Simon & Schuster)
8. All the Colors of the Dark by Chris Whitaker (Crown)
9. Here One Moment by Liane Moriarty (Crown)
10. First Lie Wins by Ashley Elston (Pamela Dorman Books)

Rising Stars:
Remarkably Bright Creatures: A Novel by Shelby Van Pelt (Ecco)
Beautiful Ugly: A Novel by Alice Feeney (Flatiron Books)


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