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Prime Days (and Anti-Prime Days) are Coming |
Amazon’s Fall Prime Days are October 7 – 8
, and we already have some sense of what they and their competitors are cooking up. Here is a book-reader focused rundown of some of the more interesting deals across retailers. Amazon The biggest savings are on Kindle bundles, with savings up to 32% off regular prices. If you are looking for an iPad mini
, which might just be the best all-around reading device, you can pick one up for $399 ($100 off the regular price). There are plenty of deals on both print and ebooks as well. Looking over the print offerings, The Dream Hotel in hardback and Isola
each for less than $14 each are pretty enticing. On the ebook side,
The Gene and Between Two Kingdoms for $1.99 each are screaming bargains. Bookshop.org Bookshop.org has offered some compelling deals as an alternative to Prime Day of late. This time, there are two main offers: free shipping across the site and
20% off a selection of titles that are frequently banned, curated with We Need Diverse Books. Bangers throughout, ranging from Stephen King to Sally Rooney to Toni Morrison, with YA titles being especially (unfortunately) well-represented. Use code BBW25 at checkout to get the discount. Thriftbooks Simple and straightforward offering here:
double ReadingRewards points (Thriftbooks’ loyalty program). Also of note: Thrifbooks gives free shipping on orders over $15 in the U.S. Kobo Get 10% off Kobo devices and accessories throughout the month of October.
Walmart Their week-long event kicks off tomorrow morning, and early indications are that tech and household deals are the best bets. Walmart also sells a ton of books, so you might want to check out that section when the full line-up goes live.
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A new book from Thomas Pynchon, whose last novel came out 12 years ago, is always a big deal. A new book from Thomas Pynchon at the same time that a blockbuster film from one of the most acclaimed directors, starring one of the biggest actors, based on one of Pynchon’s previous novels, is in theaters? Huge.
It almost doesn’t matter what Shadow Ticket is about. Pynchon is a vibe. Chaotic, absurd, political, zany, impossible to pin down. I just read Pynchon for the first time—better late than never—and can’t wait to pick this one up. Also hitting shelves this week:
- The internet sucks now. Sci-fi author and tech journalist Cory Doctorow explains why and what we can do to fix it in Enshittification.
- US Poet Laureate Joy Harjo’s memoir
Girl Warrior recounts her artistic evolution as a Native American woman.
- Booker Prize-nominated author Brandon Taylor returns with Minor Black Figures, a novel about a Black painter at a critical crossroads in his creative life.
Browse more new releases in every genre. p.s. Wanna know about the book before you see the film? Listen to our discussion of
Vineland, the Pynchon novel One Battle After Another is based on. |
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Your phone is essential, so treat it that way. An OtterBox case offers proven protection against everything from minor fumbles to serious falls. Protect your device with a case you can trust. Take 30% off Apple and Samsung cases through October 12th. Also available from
Amazon.
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Reflecting on 20 years of Twilight |
Two things can be true.Twilight by Stephenie Meyer isn’t above critique—it glorifies purity culture and appropriates Native American mythology, just to get started—and it is essential for understanding the current landscape of YA fiction and romantasy.
Many of today’s bestsellers and BookTok phenomena wouldn’t exist if an angsty teen girl hadn’t yearned for a sparkly vampire first. Listen to our conversation about Twilight‘s enduring impact on reading culture on Zero to Well-Read. |
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| | The Guggenheim Fellowships at 100 |
In 1925, Simon and Olga Guggenheim endowed The Guggenheim Foundation with a mission that feels more remarkable today than it did even then: to support "exceptional individuals in pursuit of scholarship in any field of knowledge and creation in any art form, under the freest possible conditions."
One hundred years on, Guggenheim fellowship awardees read like a who’s-who of American cultural and intellectual life: Rachel Carson, Zora Neale Hurston, Linus Pauling, and on and on. Edward Hirsch, President of the Guggenheim Foundation, says this is the ultimate goal of the awards: "Our idea is that by supporting the most talented individuals, we participate in American culture and contribute to the whole, to the common good."
In honor of the program’s centennial, The Guggenheim Foundation has collaborated with The New York Historical Society on an exhibition highlighting the work of Guggenheim fellows. Hannah Pennington, Archivist and Associate Director of the Guggenheim Foundation, says that the material comes from applications from previous fellows and subsequent correspondence. "I think this exhibit is an exciting opportunity to share archival materials that have rarely been seen before or have not been exhibited to the public in this way before," Pennington says.
To take just one example, Pennington says that Hurston’s materials at the Guggenheim show just how crucial a fellowship can be: "In 1936, she applied for a fellowship on her application form. She described her field as literary science." She used the fellowship money to travel to Haiti to write. The book she produced? Their Eyes Were Watching God, which Hurston dedicated to Henry Allan Moe, then Secretary General of the Guggenheim Foundation.
You can see other material from the Guggenheim archives on display in The Guggenheim at 100, on view at The New York Historical Society through November 30th. |
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For a limited time, earn 10% Cash Back on Kobo eReader and accessory purchases. Plus, new Rakuten members earn a $20 Welcome Bonus. Offer ends October 31st. Terms and conditions apply. |
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What was the "It" book of September? |
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🍁 Complete a line or try to black-out the whole board. Tag @bookriot on the socials as you track your progress. |
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For four days only, every dollar you spend earns double rewards points! Whether you’re shopping our best prices, exploring already discounted ThriftBooks Deals
, hunting for rare collectibles, or pre-ordering those must-have sprayed edges, now is the perfect time to treat yourself and get FREE US Shipping on orders over $15. |
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OF COURSE HE DIED IN OCTOBER |
EDGAR ALLAN POE (died, October 7, 1849) |
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You are now free to roam about the internet |
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Written by Jeff O’Neal and Rebecca Schinsky. Thanks to Vanessa Diaz for copy editing.
Did someone forward you this email? Sign up here. If you’ve made it all the way to the end, you get to read the first lines of Edgar Allan Poe’s
hauntingly relatable poem, "Alone": From childhood’s hour I have not been As others were—I have not seen As others saw—I could not bring My passions from a common spring— From the same source I have not taken My sorrow—I could not awaken My heart to joy at the same tone— And all I lov’d—I lov’d alone—
Got a tip, question, comment, or story idea? Drop us a line: thenewsletter@bookriot.com. |
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