Category: News

Celebrate Your Freedom to Read

Banned Books Week: September 18 – 24, 2022

Courtesy of the American Library Association, ala.org

The goal of Banned Books Week is to draw attention to the fact that books are often challenged or banned, pulled from school and community libraries, with relatively little fanfare. But this year, book banning has not been quiet.

In 2021, the American Library Association Office for Intellectual Freedom said it received reports of 729 challenges, representing 1,597 books. This up sharply from the 2020 numbers of 156 challenges, representing 273 books.

PEN America reports that it found 1,586 book bans in 86 school districts in 26 states between July 1, 2021 and March 31, 2022.

This is a tactic designed to push marginalized writers and readers off the page, and to shut down discussions about race and sexuality, among other topics, that many people find controversial. But what one person finds controversial, another may find enlightening or affirming. The goal of Banned Books Week is to encourage people to read widely and make up their own minds — and to encourage us all to stand up for the right of everyone to read freely.

Celebrate your right to read with us September 18 – 24. You might be surprised to see many old favorites in our banned books display, including several of Judy Blume’s books, as she is one of the most frequently challenged authors of the 21st century. Pick up a book that someone else doesn’t think you should read. Read dangerously!

If you want to make your voice heard, standing against censorship, you can join booksellers and their customers in a petition condemning book banning. Also, check out the ALA’s new campaign, Unite Against Book Bans.

NEW WINDOWS FOR BOOKS & BOOKS

Books & Books at the Studios is currently closed for browsing as we upgrade the store windows. Staff will be available daily from 10am to 6pm during the closure to help customers by phone, email and to assist with pick-up orders. Please keep an eye on our social media accounts and on this website for updates and reopening announcements.

Our online store is always open and as a reminder we delivery to Key West and Stock Island, Monday through Friday. Look for the availability status “On Our Shelves Now” for books that are in stock and ready to be delivered.

August Staff Pick: Nettle & Bone

Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher (Tor Books), picked by Bookseller Camila

“The trees were full of crows and the woods were full of madmen. The pit was full of bones and her hands were full of wires.”

first line, Nettle & Bone

I was browsing for a summer read amongst our new releases when I came upon this brief description on the back jacket of one of our bestsellers.

“This isn’t the kind of fairy tale where the princess marries a prince. It’s the one where she kills him.”

Well, that grabbed my attention and I started Nettle & Bone that very evening. Marra is our princess and the hero of this story, or rather dark & twisty fairy tale. She is the youngest of three sisters in a kingdom struggling to maintain its power. Marrying off the sisters seems to be the only way to keep it safe from invasion, even if the marriage is to a powerful yet abusive prince. We follow our hero Marra while she plans a rescue mission to save her sister, murder a wicked prince, and topple his throne. In order to receive the help she needs to fight such an evil adversary, Marra needs to succeed in this insurmountable quest:

  • Build a dog of bones
  • Sew cloak of nettles
  • Capture moonlight in a jar.

Along the way she meets new friends and gathers a fierce team of the quintessential fairy tale variety which includes a courageous yet disgraced ex-knight, a fairy godmother with unreliable magic, a dog of bones, an ornery grave witch, and a demonic chicken. Can they save her sister and survive this mission? Will they have their happy ending?

I loved reading this dark fantasy and devoured it within one sitting. Nettle & Bone is a perfect summer read… especially if you like a blend of fantasy, horror, unforgettable characters, humor, and a brave feminist protagonist. Enjoy the journey, I sure did.

~ Camila

Judy & George Recommend

For early summer reading, I chose a glorious romp of a novel. Not a rom-com, but something different for me. I’d read good reviews and it’s hard to beat that cover. Turns out LOVE MARRIAGE by Monica Ali was just what I craved.

The story of two young doctors, engaged to marry, set in London. She is from a conservative middle class British/Indian family. He is the son of a wealthy, liberal, famous feminist. Both families approve of the marriage. That’s not the problem.

Everything else is. Plenty of humor, political satire and sex. It all comes together and makes for a great read. I loved it!

George just finished RIVER OF THE GODS by Candice Millard. At first I told him to stop telling me the story. I wanted to read it myself. But his stories about the characters and their adventures were so fascinating I encouraged him to tell me just a little bit more each time.

We both wish you many happy hours of reading this summer.

~ Judy Blume, store co-founder


About RIVER OF THE GODS, George writes:

The fabulous true story of the brave, obsessive Englishmen who discovered the source of the Nile, and of the role played by heroic Africans who guided and supported them.

“Compulsively readable, and ultimately heartbreaking.”

June Staff Pick: Daughter of the Moon Goddess

Picked by bookseller Riona Jean

Daughter of the Moon Goddess by Sue Lynn Tan (Harper Voyager)

Raised by her mother in exile, Xingyin must flee her home in the middle of the night. Separated from everything & everyone she’s ever known, Xingyin strikes out on her own. She quickly finds ways to improve her isolated situation, while also acquiring archery skills and prowess.

Xingyin is determined to pave her own path through life without being beholden to another; she acknowledges her complicated romantic emotions yet stays true to her ultimate goal of safely rescuing her mother. Battling epic monsters, both demonic and fellow Immortals, Xingyin grows into herself and her strength.

This is an enthralling tale that will sweep you off into the night.

Take Pride in Reading Banned Books

Have you read GENDER QUEER, a graphic novel memoir by Maia Kobabe? It’s about a lot of things you might expect in a memoir, growing up and fitting in, and it’s about Kobabe’s experience of being nonbinary.

Some people think you or your kids and grandkids shouldn’t be able to read GENDER QUEER or the 1500 other books that were challenged or banned last year, according to stats collected by the American Library Association Office for Intellectual Freedom.

But it’s not actually about GENDER QUEER or THE HATE YOU GIVE by Angie Thomas (which has been on the top banned list 4 out of the 5 years since its publication in 2017) or A COURT OF MIST AND FURY by Sarah J. Maas, which a Virginia judge thinks might not be appropriate to sell unrestricted in bookstores. As librarian Alex Brown wrote recently for Tor.com:

Banning books is always bigger than just the ban or just the book. It’s a concerted effort to whitewash and sugarcoat history, to deny the truth of what happened and who we are as a nation, and to continue the dismantling of our public educational institutions. 

Book Bans Affect Everybody — Here’s How You Can Help

And it’s getting worse – along with targeting school libraries at every level and public libraries, an active challenge right now is trying to restrict Barnes & Noble bookstores from selling certain books to kids, and maybe to anyone at all (in Virginia).

Find the list of the Top Ten Challenged Books of 2021 at https://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/top10

[Read more: The American Booksellers for Free Expression statement]

It’s not really about the books. It’s about the people. The kids who are hungry to see themselves and their experiences in the books they read. All of us who want to read widely, adventurously and freely. The authors who are writing their best stories with heart and hard-won wisdom, or maybe just for fun.

This Pride month, pick up a copy of GENDER QUEER, and see what you think. And, if it’s not for you, pick up something else – but champion everyone’s right to read freely.

If you want to do more, check out the ALA’s new campaign, Unite Against Book Bans.

~ Robin, social media manager

Windswept & Interesting by Billy Connolly

Happy publication day (Two Roads, May 24) to Windswept & Interesting  by Billy Connolly!

In his first full-length autobiography, comedy legend and national treasure Billy Connolly reveals the truth behind his windswept and interesting life.

Windswept and Interesting is Billy’s story in his own words. It is joyfully funny – stuffed full of hard-earned wisdom as well as countless digressions on fishing, farting and the joys of dancing naked. It is an unforgettable, life-affirming story of a true comedy legend.

Bookseller Lori recommends A Little Devil in America: In Praise of Black Performance by Hanif Abdurraqib to Billy Connolly

We were delighted to be part of the filming of his documentary Billy Connolly: My Absolute Pleasure.

Here’s a little taste of the documentary (which, sadly, is not currently available in the U.S.):

May Staff Pick: Booth

Picked by store co-founder, George Cooper

BOOTH by Karen Joy Fowler

When I learned that Fowler, author of the witty and surprising We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves had a new novel, I jumped at the chance to preview it. 

She’s still surprising, but in a completely different way. BOOTH is historical fiction, but it might better be described as a novelistic biography of a famous family, famous for its lifelong brilliant achievements on the Shakespearean stage, but even more for the single dastardly act of young John Wilkes.

The father, Junius Brutus Booth emigrated from England as a young man and went on to triumph on the American stage, and father a family of six children who survived into adulthood. Son Edwin became even more celebrated than his father as an actor, perhaps the most famous Hamlet ever; daughter Asia had some success as a writer; and son June (Junius, Jr.) became a theatrical producer. 

But the novel is not limited to these foreground players. Equally important are daughter Rosalie, the stay-at-home ugly duckling of this luminous family, and long-suffering mother Mary Ann who held the family together through periods of poverty, as the often drunk, flamboyant father would disappear on road tours for months, often drinking his fees rather than sending them home.

The period covered goes from the arrival in America of Junius and Mary Ann in 1821, until 1865. A crushing gloom and infamy then settled on this northern, Lincoln loving family as it tried to reconcile love for its assassin son with revulsion at what he did. The book is a novel, but supported by a wealth of research: letters from and to the principle characters, journals and news stories, and the documented history of the United States during a period of passionate divisions that bears disturbing parallels to today.

It’s full of descriptive set pieces from this master novelist, like the burdens of a journey by citified Easterners to San Francisco by boat and a slog through the mountainous jungles of Panama – supposedly easier and safer than the direct overland route through Indian lands and the Rockies – that makes one marvel at the fortitude of ordinary men and women of the time.

This is historical fiction at its finest.

April Staff Pick: Taste

Picked by Gina, bookseller

Cook
        Smell
                Taste
                        Eat
                                Drink
                                        Share

Repeat as necessary.

Gina’s pick for this month is TASTE: MY LIFE THROUGH FOOD by Stanley Tucci.

“TASTE reminds me that whomever you are and wherever you come from the sharing of food connects us,” Gina writes. “It’s impossible to read this book and not be drawn back into your memories to the feel of a certain room, the sounds and smells of that ONE special dish (that of course only your family makes perfectly). And, then to sharing that dish with family or people who will become family.

Plus, I learned how to make the “perfect” martini! PRICELESS!”

March Staff Pick: Black Cake

Picked by Robin, social media manager

I like to be surprised – and BLACK CAKE by Charmaine Wilkerson (Ballantine Books), our staff pick of the month for March, begins on a literal cliffhanger.

“He stood at the water’s edge, now, watching the waves crash white against the rocks, waiting for his daughter’s body to wash ashore.

… He remembered a clattering of plates, the splintering of glass on the tile floor, someone crying out. When he looked toward his daughter, she was gone and her satin-covered shoes lay strewn on the lawn outside like tiny capsized boats.”

Black Cake

In a family shaped by secrets, siblings Byron and Benny sit down with the family lawyer to hear about their mother’s past, revealed only after her death. She asks them the share a Black Cake, a recipe that has been an important part of their family traditions and gains significance as the story unfolds. Before the cake is shared, we learn there should be one more at the table.

These are people who have never heard Dr. Phil’s adage: Would you rather be right or would you rather be happy? But they are compelling characters and the plot is propulsive. This book is the whole package: beautiful cover, good writing, strong plotting, relatable characters.

Twisty, fun and moving, you’ll enjoy this book where everyone has (a lot of) secrets.

****

“Survival is not enough. Survival has never been enough.”

Black Cake

I love this quote, which comes late in the book, because in a story about Black characters it makes sense out of context, but in the larger context it pulls together the themes of the book. Love and inheritance and all the bigger problems of the world that we can’t ignore or escape.

Here’s a bit more of the quote, from page 372 of the hardcover,

“Etta is swimming for her children now, and for their children, too, not for the records. She uses every chance she can to talk about the health of the oceans. Seafloor damage, runoff, plastics, rising water temperatures, overfishing. She calls for the designation of additional protected zones. But she also take the time to show the audience old photos of herself as a girl in a swim cap, plus her favorite snapshots of Patsy and the boys when they were little, poking around a tide pool in Wales, their shoes clumped with wet sand. She never forgets to show the joy, to show the love. Because, otherwise, what would be the point of anything?

Survival is not enough. Survival has never been enough.”

Black Cake