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The most banned book in America (about growing up LGBTQ+) is getting a new expanded edition
A new expanded edition of Maia Kobabe's award-winning graphic memoir "Gender Queer" will be released next year.
Oni Press has announced that "Gender Queer: The Annotated Edition" will be available in May. The special hardcover edition of the seminal LGBTQ+ coming of age memoir includes commentary by Kobabe as well as other comic creators and ...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Oct. 18, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2025 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2025, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. Remain. Sparks...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Oct. 18, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2025 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2025, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. "Remain: A ...Read more
Cameron Crowe on Jann Wenner, his new memoir and the stories he regrets writing
Twenty-five years after "Almost Famous" put his origin story on movie screens, Cameron Crowe is thinking again about his roots as a teenage music journalist.
The Oscar-winning filmmaker's new memoir, "The Uncool," is a tender and insightful account of his adventures covering the likes of the Eagles, Led Zeppelin and Joni Mitchell for Rolling ...Read more
Review: The gales of November remembered, 50 years later
The SS Edmund Fitzgerald turned heads when she was launched in Detroit in 1958. The ship was longer and could carry more taconite than any other Great Lakes freighter, and it boasted plush quarters for the captain and sailors (carpeting! AC!), making it a sure bet to draw the best crew on the lakes.
So the 17-year-old vessel was already famous ...Read more
Review: 'A Burning' followup 'A Guardian and a Thief' is a 'classic'
At just a hair more than 200 pages, “A Guardian and a Thief” manages superbly (and efficiently) to be many things: A beguilingly simple tale. A complicated morality play. A sensitive evocation of a time — the near future — and a place — Kolkata, India — during a period of flooding, drastic food shortages and heat like “a hand ...Read more
Roundup: Can you put together the pieces of these puzzle-ing mysteries?
For years, the most beloved part of my personal library was my two-volume set of the Oxford English Dictionary (“the OED,” to word nerds everywhere). Poring over its tissue-thin pages, tracing a word’s etymology, scouring a follow-up entry then another and another, realizing hours later I’d fallen down a logophile’s rabbit hole. Bliss....Read more
Review: A 'Bad Bad Girl' writes about her (worse) mom
First, you get stuck with a crappy mom. Then she lives to be 95. That’s nearly a century of terribleness.
In “Bad Bad Girl” author Gish Jen’s case, “terrible” doesn’t quite cover it. Her Chinese mother, who came to the United States in 1947, was mean, abusive, unapologetic and unchanging.
Still, as Jen says in an author’s note,...Read more
Review: 'I Love Dick' author moves to the Iron Range in sordid novel
Can a cover doom a book?
I’d argue that’s what happens with “The Four Spent the Day Together.” It’s 304 pages long but the event that’s detailed on its back cover — three young people on the Iron Range murder an acquaintance while on a meth binge — does not happen until page 182. That incident also gives the book its title, and ...Read more
Review: Prepare to care more about tubas than you ever thought possible
Add the tuba to the list of book subjects you probably thought you didn’t care about but that is suddenly compelling as heck.
We’ve had entire books about salt, the digestive system and the color mauve and every one of them was oddly riveting. So, too, is “The Perfect Tuba.” Author Sam Quinones, who was bummed out by the bleak reporting...Read more
Commentary: The censors have names. Use them
Banned Books Week just ended, but the fight it highlights continues every other week of the year. This year’s theme was Censorship is So 1984: Read for Your Rights, invoking George Orwell’s famous novel to warn against the dangers of banning books.
It was a powerful rallying cry. But now that the week has ended, we need to face two ...Read more
The world is scary. How about escaping into these 5 fear-filled books?
Right now, I find reading horror cathartic. No matter how bad things get, at least my house isn’t haunted, an ancient entity hasn’t possessed my husband (as far as I know) and the penguins I’ve seen recently at the Minnesota Zoo didn’t peck out my eyes.
In his introduction to Ira Levin’s horror classic “Rosemary’s Baby,” Chuck ...Read more
'I didn't like it.' John Grisham on how he fixed his novel 'The Widow'
It’s been four decades since John Grisham was a small-town Mississippi lawyer, but that experience continues to provide material for his bestselling novels.
That was true of his first, “A Time to Kill,” published in 1989, and it’s true of his latest, “The Widow,” which he’ll discuss at the Minnesota Star Tribune and MPR News’ ...Read more
Michelle Obama bringing new live podcast to Brooklyn with Tracee Ellis Ross
NEW YORK — With her latest book, “The Look,” Michelle Obama is kicking off a live tour for a new podcast series in Brooklyn.
The former first lady, producer and bestselling author will be joined by actress Tracee Ellis Ross at the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Nov. 5, the same day a special, six-part podcast series, “IMO: The Look,” ...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Oct. 11, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2025 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2025, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. "The Intruder"...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Oct. 11, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2025 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2025, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. The Intruder. ...Read more
M. Night Shyamalan announces 'Magic 8 Ball' series and releases a horror-romance novel with Nicholas Sparks
PHILADELPHIA — Filmmaker M. Night Shyamalan is dipping his hands into the world of literature and is revisiting the small screen.
On Monday, Variety reported that the Shyamalan will direct "Magic 8 Ball," a live-action series based on the popular Mattel fortune-telling toy.
“Been working on this for a couple years … Who’s in?,” ...Read more
Q&A: Nick Offerman's life is a circus. It's also a rousing manifesto against AI
CHICAGO — “When I daydream,” Nick Offerman says, “it’s of having quiet moments with a cup of tea, sitting out by the birdfeeder and coming to know my neighborhood birds by name as they come to eat out of my hand.”
The fantasy, however, has yet to become a reality. “I’m moving too fast to do that right now.”
Offerman's newest ...Read more
Kate DiCamillo channels Hans Christian Andersen in 'Lost Evangeline'
Of the title character in “Lost Evangeline,” it is said she “lived a great life of the imagination.” You could say the same about Evangeline’s creator, Kate DiCamillo.
The beloved, Minneapolis-based writer has created more than three dozen books, including two that won the coveted Newbery Award, “The Tale of Despereaux” and “...Read more
Review: 'Amanda' charts love found, lost and (maybe) found again
Fiction is full of characters falling in and out of love. Less common, at least outside the realm of slushy romantic comedies, are novels in which lovers go their separate ways, voluntarily or otherwise, and later reunite to revive what they lost.
H.S. Cross’ new novel, “Amanda,” is about two individuals, Marion and Jamie, who seem ...Read more











