📚 Books win big
Election night brings great news for books and libraries
͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­ ͏ ‌     ­
Presented By

🍾 We’re popping bottles. Our new podcast Zero to Well-Read broke 100k downloads earlier this week after just nine episodes, and we. are. stoked. Turns out, book nerds are everywhere! If you haven’t checked out the show, it’s part book club, part English class, 100% the literary cocktail party of your dreams. Big thanks to everyone who has listened, rated and reviewed, and shared the show with bookish friends.

Spread the word. Share this email with friends.

 

THE HEADLINE

Books and libraries for the (election night) win

When people show up to the polls, they support their libraries. This week’s elections brought a lot of great news nationwide for libraries, as numerous institutions passed levy measures to ensure their continued survival.

These levy passages were especially crucial in states like Ohio, which changed how the state funds their libraries earlier this year. Facing potential closures, libraries in places like Greene County, Jefferson County, Newcomerstown Library District, Tuscarawas County Library District, and Massillon Public Library all saw their residents vote in favor of paying a little more money for continued access. Ohio wasn’t alone. Michigan saw several pro-library measures pass, including in Milan and Fillmore Township, as did Oregon and Washington state. 

Another big winner this week? Pro-public education candidates running for school boards, especially those running in districts that have been among those most eager to ban books and censor curriculum.

Progressive candidates swept the ballot in Pine-Richland School District (PA), took several seats in Gardner Edgerton Schools (KS), and all of the open seats at Cy-Fair Independent School District (TX), knocking the wind out of the ongoing efforts to suppress facts and information that have plagued these districts for years. Indeed, Texas’s school board elections saw great results nearly across the board. While the state may continue to push for censorious legislation , communities are responding loudly by voting in favor of candidates who care more about their schools providing a robust education than removing books by or about LGBTQ+ people and/or people of color. 

Local elections matter. These are the decisions that directly impact our everyday lives. Numerous states will have elections in March 2026, and some of the most consequential midterm elections will happen next November. It is never too early to begin preparing to be a pro-library, pro-education voter in anticipation of what’s to come–and it’s absolutely worth celebrating the wins this week, many of which were a direct result of better advocacy and mobilization around down ballot and local elections.

Check this handy guide, and consider where and how you may be able to develop your own tools for helping people navigate school board or library board elections.

 

RECOMMENDED READING

Indigenous YA books to make you think

It’s always a good time to read Indigenous authors.

In celebration of Native American Heritage Month, we’re delighted to share some recommendations from Chickasaw author G.M. DiDesidero, whose debut YA fantasy novel Undrowned is out now.

  • Looking for Smoke by K.A. Cobell : Mara, new to the Blackfeet reservation, steps into a traditional Giveaway ceremony to honor a missing girl, only to become a murder suspect. Last to see Samantha alive, Mara and teens Loren, Brody, and Eli become persons of interest in the investigation, and each has their own complicated history with Samantha. Cobell layers Blackfeet culture into each character’s point of view. This is a thriller with teeth and unexpected twists, but it’s also an important call to action. In her debut, K. A. Cobell weaves a heartbreaking mystery around the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) crisis. 
  • Rez Ball by Byron Graves : After losing his brother Jaxon in a car accident, Ojibwe teen Tre Brun throws himself into basketball as a way to cope with grief and honor his brother’s legacy. If he wants a spot in the NBA, he’ll have to lead the Red Lake Warriors to their first state championship. Balancing stereotypes, underage drinking, school, and the weight of expectations on Minnesota’s Red Lake Ojibwe Reservation, Tre struggles to find footing on and off the court. Partially framed as a documentary, Byron Graves’s Rez Ball delivers a gritty, authentic sports drama and coming-of-age story that will have readers cheering every hard-won victory.
  • The Unfinished by Cheryl Isaacs: The Unfinished is part campfire tale, part thriller. When high-school athlete Avery drinks from a black pond deep in the forest, she unwittingly unleashes an ancient evil—a gelatinous black water monster. Avery has heard stories of Unfinished beings but never believed them. Now, it even haunts her tea, taking eerie shapes. When her crush, Key, disappears, Avery is forced to reconnect with her Mohawk heritage and the elders she’s ignored in search of answers. This debut is a chilling ghost story dripping with Mohawk lore that YA horror readers will devour.

See the rest of DiDesidero’s recs.

 

TOGETHER WITH TAILORED BOOK RECOMMENDATIONS

Looking for a novel gift for the book lover on your list? With over 180,000 reading recommendations under our belt, Tailored Book Recommendations has the chops to match any reader with their next favorite page-turner. All your gift recipient has to do is out a quick survey about their reading likes and dislikes, and our professional book nerds will round up three books just for them. Choose between gifting just the recommendations, or send paperbacks or hardcovers right to their door. Gift TBR today starting at just $18!

 

ADAPTATION NATION

New adaptations to check out this week

A few noteworthy adaptations coming out in the next week for your consideration:

🚂 Train Dreams (Netflix, November 7)

  • Original Book: Train Dreams by Denis Johnson
  • The Deal: An epic-in-miniature about a railroad worker in the early 20th century. Beautiful, grim, and strange. 
  • Outlook: There will be a lot of staring into hard landscapes, and sadness. I can’t wait.

💔 Die, My Love (Theaters, November 7)

  • Original Book: Die, My Love by Ariana Harwicz
  • The Deal: A new mother goes more than a little mad in rural France.
  • Outlook: Apparently, Martin Scorsese read this in his book club, thought Jennifer Lawrence would be great as the main character, and sent it to her production company. Upshot: she will be doing a whole lot of acting in this movie. 

🪖 Nuremberg (Theaters, November 7)

🔪 As You Stood By (Netflix limited series, November 7)

  • Original Book: Naomi & Kanako by Hideo Okuda (not yet translated into English)
  • The Deal: Two women strike a deal to kill one’s abusive husband.
  • Outlook: These kinds of stories always work out well, so I am sure everything will go according to plan.
 

HOW TO

Everything you need for a bookish cocktail party

Image via InkAndPaperCuts on Etsy

Infuse your next cocktail party, book club, or holiday dinner with bookish vibes with these tips from Susie Dumond:

Overwhelmed by the idea of trying to plan a meaningful gathering? There’s a book for that, too.

 

TOGETHER WITH SONY PICTURES CLASSICS

Based on the acclaimed book The Nazi and the Psychiatrist by Jack El-Hai, Nuremberg confronts the horrors of the Holocaust as, in the aftermath of the Second World War, U.S. Army psychiatrist Lt. Col. Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek) is tasked with evaluating the mental state of Hermann Göring (Russell Crowe)—Hitler’s second-in-command—and other high-ranking Nazi officials.

As the Allies, led by Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson (Michael Shannon), work to establish the first international tribunal to hold the Nazi regime accountable, Kelley begins a tense psychological duel with Göring. What starts as a clinical assessment becomes a chilling exploration of how ordinary men commit extraordinary evil.

Nuremberg is in theaters tomorrow.

 

LET ME UPGRADE YOU

Level-up your reading life

Book Riot All Access members get a pile of benefits, including unlimited reading on bookriot.com, recommendations for the Read Harder Challenge, and access to our New Release Index to curate your TBR. Here are a few recent highlights:

🔓 Unlock access for just $6/month.

 

BOOKED SOLID

Meet Maggie O’Farrell in LA this Saturday

You’ve still got a few weeks to stockpile tissues before Chloé Zhao’s adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet hits theaters.

In the meantime, readers in the LA area have four opportunities to meet the author and pick up signed copies of the novel. O’Farrell will be conducting a bookstore crawl to four indies this Saturday, November 8, which will conclude with a hosted conversation at L.A.’s oldest indie, Chevalier’s Books, at 1pm.

Visit any of the four locations to purchase a special edition of the book and enter to win a pair of tickets to the LA premiere.

Watch the trailer for Hamnet from Focus Features, opening in select theaters Wednesday, November 26, with wider release on December 5.

 

TOGETHER WITH KEURIG

Reclaim your counter space! Meet the K-Mini Mate —the smallest Keurig yet—now 25% off. At only 4 inches wide, it packs all the convenience and quality you can expect from Keurig into a tiny footprint. And can we talk about the fun colors? For a limited time, shop keurig.com and get 25% off site wide with code WINTER2025.

 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

Colson Whitehead, born November 6, 1969

 

CRITICAL LINKING

You are now free to roam about the internet

🫖 Elevate your tea time and celebrate the classics with a gorgeous porcelain book club mug.**

🎁 Get a jump on holiday shopping with a gift guide for the very specific readers in your life.

💎 Make off with a pile of fantasy heist novels.

📚 Stack ’em high with Vulture‘s picks for 7 books you should read in November.

📱 Catch up on the latest BookTok trends.

**This is a product recommendation from the Book Riot team. When you buy through these links, we may earn a commission.

 

END NOTES

Written by Rebecca Schinsky, Jeff O’Neal, and Kelly Jensen. Thanks to Vanessa Diaz for copy editing.

Did someone forward you this email? Sign up here.

Got a tip, question, comment, or story idea? Drop us a line: thenewsletter@bookriot.com.

LiveIntent Logo AdChoices Logo