Latest News

Shelf Awareness for Tuesday, March 24, 2026


Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers: Ape Escape (Funjungle) by Stuart Gibbs

Tor Books: The Infinite State: Book One of the Decurion Saga by Richard Swan

Oxford University Press: Your Spring Preview 2026. Discover More!

Sugar Shack Books: Forever Is the Sweetest Con by Joanna Thurlow

Berkley Books: The Dating Game by Ally Zetterberg

Frayed Pages X Wattpad Books: Crash Into Me by Taylor Romagnoli

News

A Seat at the Table Books, Elk Grove, Calif., Burglarized

A Seat at the Table Books in Elk Grove, Calif., was burglarized over the weekend, KCRA3 reported. Early Sunday morning, two men broke into a lock box that contained an extra key meant for vendors, entered the store, and took the cash drawer and a computer monitor. They also damaged the store's back office and receiving desk.

"Nothing like waking up to an alarm alert because someone is stealing your cash boxes and trashing your back office looking for easy grabs," wrote store owner Emily Autenrieth on Instagram. "What kind of person decides to hit an INDIE BOOKSTORE?"

Following the burglary, the bookstore asked customers to pay by credit card or exact change for the immediate future, and drag queen Dolly Romano, who has done many events at A Seat at the Table, began asking for donations on the bookstore's behalf to help with damages and replacing what was broken. Autenrieth noted too that this was one of a spate of burglaries in the area that involved breaking into lock boxes.

According to KCRA3, police officers found the store's cash box in a nearby neighborhood.


G.P. Putnam's Sons: The MASH Up by Laura Marie Meyers


Why Choose Debuts in Tucson, Ariz.

Why Choose, a romance-focused bookstore emphasizing underrepresented voices and stories, debuted late last year in Tucson, Ariz., the Arizona Daily Star reported.

Jessica Pryde

The bookstore sells new and used romance titles and pops up periodically at 4th & 4th, at 402 E. 4th St. The inventory consists of around 600 titles, and there are books from self-published as well as traditionally published authors.

Owner Jessica Pryde is a librarian and lifelong romance reader who has written extensively on the genre and published a collection of essays called Black Loves Matter. She also runs the romance-genre program at the Tucson Festival of Books.

"I have wanted to run a romance-centric bookstore since I read about Ripped Bodice opening in L.A. 10 years ago," Pryde told the Daily Star. "I even called them to see if they might be interested in franchising. They weren't, but I never stopped wondering if there might be a way to do something like that here in Tucson."

Pryde was able to open a store of her own in December. Since then she's held a variety of pop-ups with different themes, including a Black Joy pop-up that featured romance written by Black authors. Her next pop-up is scheduled for March 29, Major League Baseball's opening day, and will focus on sports romance.


Your Brother's Bookstore, Evansville, Ky, Relocating

The future home of Your Brother's Bookstore

Your Brother's Bookstore, Evansville, Ky., will be relocating to 100 North First Ave., directly across from Willard Library, WEHT reported. The goal is to be open in the new space for Independent Bookstore Day on April 25, with a grand re-opening celebration planned for the second weekend of May during Sidewalk Sale.

"The store is everything we have been looking for and it's very serendipitous in the way everything has been unfolding. There is a lot planned for this new space," Your Brother's Bookstore, which is owned by brothers Sam and Adam Morris, posted recently on social media. 

As far as details of the physical move is concerned, the bookstore said, "We have definitely heard from a lot of people who have offered to move and look forward to the help.... Thank you to everyone for being so patient with us. And thank you to all the regulars who have been so supportive over the years. There is no way we could be doing any of this without the love!"


RJ Julia Booksellers Manager Julie Arriens Retiring

Julie Arriens, store manager at RJ Julia Booksellers in Madison, Conn., is retiring after 25 years with the bookstore, effective March 27. 

In her "Dear Reader" column in the bookshop's newsletter, owner Roxanne Coady offered a tribute to Arriens: "Over the years, many of you have been kind enough to tell us how much you value and appreciate our booksellers. A great deal of that credit belongs to Julie Arriens, our store manager.... Sad for us (and very good for her), Julie is retiring.  

"Julie has brought a level of commitment, wisdom, and care that any organization would dream of. We have been extraordinarily fortunate to benefit from that talent for so long. She will leave a real hole--not just within the store, but in the broader community that has grown around it.

"She has hired and trained and nurtured literally a generation of booksellers. All these wonderful booksellers, with Julie's guidance, have made tens of thousands (umm, maybe hundreds of thousands!) of readers happy. Over Julie's 25 years with us, she has imprinted her DNA--her passion for our community and our readers--into everything we do. Her legacy will remain--in the quality of our booksellers, in our dedication to service, and in the ethos of RJ Julia..... If you get a chance to stop by, please share in our heartfelt gratitude for her extraordinary impact on RJ Julia."


Obituary Note: Calvin Tomkins

Calvin Tomkins, "whose elegant and searching profiles for the New Yorker created an enduring portrait gallery of the prime movers in modern art from the 1960s onward," died March 20, the New York Times reported. He was 100. By his own admission, Tomkins "knew nothing about modern art when, as an editor at Newsweek, he was sent in 1959 to interview Marcel Duchamp, the French-born conceptual artist who offered up 'ready-made' objects as artistic creations. The ensuing conversation, in which Duchamp discoursed wittily about the complex relationships between art and ideas, turned out to be an eye-opener."

"I began thinking about modern art for the first time," he told an interviewer for the National Gallery of Art in 1997. "So he's really responsible for my whole interest in this subject." Tomkins joined the New Yorker staff in 1960, writing profiles that were first collected in The Bride and the Bachelors: The Heretical Courtship in Modern Art (1965).

"As chronicler of the avant-garde for the New Yorker, Calvin Tomkins has specialized in rendering the esoteric doings of artists comprehensible to a reader whose initial reaction to the art might be suspicion or hostility," art historian Mary Ann Tighe wrote in the Washington Post in 1980. "His quiet, meticulously detailed prose is the voice of reason calmly explaining the work of madmen."

Tomkins told the Art Review in 2014: "You know, John Cage said that at any one time one of the arts is doing the talking and the others are listening. At the time he said it, he felt it was music that was doing the talking and the others were listening. I think that since the early 1960s it's art that's been doing the talking."

Time-Life hired him to write The World of Marcel Duchamp, part of a series of books on major artists. He returned to the subject in Duchamp: A Biography (1996) and Marcel Duchamp: The Afternoon Interviews (2013).

In a 2011 profile for the Times, critic Deborah Solomon observed that "Tomkins's writing style, as it happens, shares much with Duchamp's aesthetic. It is witty, literary and civilized. It does not betray the strain or turmoil inevitably involved in its creation. But, unlike Duchamp's, Mr. Tomkins's work is prized for its clarity and accessibility. His profiles read as if they were coated with a nonstick surface created to repel academic theory and moldy clumps of artspeak."

His many books include Merchants and Masterpieces: The Story of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (1970); The Scene: Reports on Post-Modern Art (1976); Off the Wall: Robert Rauschenberg and the Art World of Our Time (1980); Post- to Neo-: The Art World of the 1980s (1988); Merce at 75 (1995); and Lives of the Artists (2008). He also co-authored Alex: The Life of Alexander Liberman (1993) with his wife, the Vogue writer Dodie Kazanjian. 

One of his most admired books was Living Well Is the Best Revenge (1971), "a slender, flavorful biography of the glamorous aesthetes Gerald and Sara Murphy, the models for Dick and Nicole Diver in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel Tender Is the Night," the Times noted.

In a tribute to Tomkins, the New Yorker wrote: "When Tad was 99 and the work of traipsing off to far-flung destinations and carrying a long piece around in his head had finally become too trying, he and Dodie stayed mainly at their house in Rhode Island. Tad decided to keep a diary. 'Old age is no joke, but it can feel like one,' he wrote. 'You look everywhere for your glasses, until your wife points out that you're wearing them.' From there, he went on to reflect on moments from his past, his children, his friends, various artists, Dodie, and the days he had left. After suffering a stroke, he wrote:

The medical consensus seems to be that I will get a lot better, but it will take time, and (wouldn't you know) I'll have to do most of the work--new exercises ahoy. Meanwhile, my centennial is at the door. This will be the last entry for a while. 

"The diary was published in our pages just as Tad hit his hundredth birthday, on December 17th. He kept writing just about until the day he died."


Notes

Image of the Day: Bookstore Makes a Wish Happen

The Well-Read Moose in Coeur d'Alene and Make-A-Wish Idaho teamed up to grant 15-year-old Mariah Lowman's wish: she wanted to be a published author and to celebrate with a book signing at her favorite bookstore. Her debut novel, Dragon Slayers, is the first part of the Golden Heir series.

Make-A-Wish Idaho's director of mission delivery Matt Dahlgran said this was the first time Make-A-Wish has helped get a book published in the U.S. Liz Burkwist of the Well-Read Moose reported, "The day was filled with joy, emotion, and a deep sense of community as Mariah held her book in her hands for the very first time and shared it with close family and friends. As booksellers, it was incredibly meaningful to witness not just the launch of a new fantasy series, and being chosen as the setting for such a milestone moment is something we will never forget."

Pictured from left: bookstore owner Melissa DeMotte; author Mariah Lowman; Liz Burkwist, community outreach and events.


Simon & Schuster to Sell and Distribute Arcturus Publishing

Simon & Schuster will handle sales and distribution for Arcturus Publishing Limited in the U.S. and Canada, beginning April 1.

Arcturus Publishing has a broad and commercially focused list spanning adults and children's fiction and non-fiction, as well as a growing range of gift, stationery and books-plus products. Emphasizing high production values, distinctive visual design, and attractive pricing, Arcturus publishes in a range of subject areas, including classics, history and reference, true crime, mystery and the supernatural, mind‑body‑spirit, practical art, puzzles, coloring, journals, children's original fiction, and educational titles, with a deep backlist.


Media and Movies

Media Heat: Arthur C. Brooks on CBS Mornings

Tomorrow:
CBS Mornings: Arthur C. Brooks, author of The Meaning of Your Life: Finding Purpose in an Age of Emptiness (Portfolio, $30, 9780593545423).

Sherri Shepherd Show: Brian Hart Hoffman, author of Bake from Scratch: Volume Ten (83 Press, $44.95, 9798992385311).


TV: Death of a Diplomat

Karine Vanasse (Cardinal) will star in Death of a Diplomat, based on the debut novel by Iceland's former First Lady Eliza Reid. Deadline reported that Canadian streamer Crave will develop the project and Iceland's Síminn has acquired local rights to the six-episode series, which comes from Canada's Blink49 Studios and Iceland's Truenorth. Groupe Entourage is an executive producer.

Vanasse will play Jane Shearer, "the Canadian ambassador's wife, as she decides to investigate the poisoning of a prominent figure at a soirée at a remote Icelandic location. She partners with a young detective and uncovers a web of secrets, corruption and betrayal stretching from Reykjavik's elite to the heart of her own marriage," Deadline wrote.

Executive producers Carolyn Newman and Virginia Rankin said Vanasse's "talent and presence make her the perfect choice to lead this high-stakes, internationally thrilling story. With Lynne Kamm's adaptation and our partners at Groupe Entourage and Crave, we're excited to bring this series to life for audiences in Canada and around the world."

Lynne Kamm, the show's writer and showrunner, added: "Karine Vanasse is the ambassador's wife, polished charm on the surface, and gloriously mischievous underneath. She brings the cheeky wit and killer curiosity this role demands."



Books & Authors

Awards: BMO Winterset Finalists

ArtsNL revealed three finalists for the C$12,500 (about $9,110) BMO Winterset Award, which celebrates excellence in Newfoundland and Labrador writing across all genres, Quill & Quire reported. The winner will be named April 9. This year's finalists are:

The Saltbox Olive by Angela Antle 
Cautiously Pessimistic by Debbie McGee 
Veal by Mackenzie Nolan 


Bookseller Faves: March Romance Titles

Coco Zephir is a bookseller at An Unlikely Story in Plainville, Mass., where she works on the events and marketing teams. She loves romance titles and here offers a roundup of some of the books coming out this month that she's most excited about:

No Matter What by Cara Bastone (Dial Press)

No Matter What captures a marriage in flux as only Cara Bastone can--with care, subtlety, and beauty.

Roz needs to live again. Her world has been slowly crumbling over the past year after experiencing a traumatic incident with her husband, Vin. Even though Roz and her husband have drifted apart, she's shocked to find Vin's new apartment lease on their kitchen counter. As she ventures to investigate his new digs, she stumbles upon a drawing class that will help to unearth what's in her own heart. 

As Roz dives into drawing, Vin learns to communicate his feelings. After their shared traumatic experience leaves them struggling, their separate emotional work lays a new foundation for connection and understanding that's central to their new story.

A quiet story about finding hope in a marriage, Bastone's compelling narrative shows that her work continues to deliver.

Star Shipped by Cat Sebastian (Avon)

Two TV stars road trip to prove to the world they like each other in Star Shipped, a queer romance with all the best tropes. Think forced-proximity, enemies-to-lovers, grumpy/sunshine. Simon and Charlie will have you laughing out loud and relishing in their warmth. 

Simon Devereaux has a strict regimen to handle his anxiety and migraines. Charlie Blake knocks that out of line each day during filming for Out There, the duo's space opera TV show. When the two adventure on a road-trip the heat cranks to scorching--and what's always been animosity may really have been something else all along?

A thoughtful romance, Star Shipped is written in the language of care and compassion. Readers will love each minute spent with Simon and Charlie.

The Bridge Back to You by Riss M. Neilson (Berkley)

Exes find their way back to each other through food and family in The Bridge Back to You, a culinary romance featuring Olivia and Carmello who are both working to build a new, bright future amid the stress of sharing ownership of a restaurant. 

Olivia, a talented chef living with endometriosis, gets news that her life could change: she's been left shares in a restaurant, Celia's Place, a spot that was transformative to her as a child. It's the spot where she learned to cook, felt joy following tragedy, and learned to love. Her co-owner, and ex, Carmello, is shocked when Olivia wants in--it's his place, his restaurant, his home. As Olivia settles in and learns the inner workings of the restaurant, tension with Carmello rises. Will they be able to set aside their differences long enough to run the restaurant? Or will their chemistry keep getting in the way?


Book Review

Review: A Perfect Coincidence: The Extraordinary Friendship and Astonishing Deaths of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson

Perfect Coincidence: The Extraordinary Friendship and Astonishing Deaths of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson by Jim Rasenberger (Scribner, $31 hardcover, 496p., 9781668003428, May 12, 2026)

Many observers would insist that U.S. politics have never been more tumultuous than in the first quarter of the 21st century, but even a casual acquaintance with the history of the country's early decades belies that claim. In A Perfect Coincidence, Jim Rasenberger (Revolver) offers ample evidence for that proposition in a lively depiction of the era, seen through the complex relationship between two of its preeminent figures: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.

The book's title refers to the remarkable fact that Adams and Jefferson died on the same day--July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. But as Rasenberger reveals in this smoothly paced chronological account, their public careers and private lives intersected in innumerable ways over the half-century that followed the country's birth. Though it's well known that both Jefferson and Adams were members of the committee that drafted the Declaration, and that Jefferson served as Adams's vice-president and succeeded him as president in 1801, Rasenberger also illuminates the close bond that formed between the two men in 1784-85, when they served as diplomats in France for their infant nation.

But Rasenberger doesn't confine himself to recounting epochal events, as he devotes considerable attention to the personal lives of both men. He pulls no punches in assessing their shortcomings, frankly revealing Adams's obstinacy, self-regard, and his uncanny talent for political self-sabotage, alongside Jefferson's hypocrisy on the issue of slavery and his lifelong financial profligacy. While he avoids turning his subjects into demigods, he likewise offers no radical reevaluation of their respective places in American history.

One of the most appealing aspects of this work is how the two men overcame long-simmering political grievances to resume in 1812, after a 12-year hiatus, what Rasenberger calls "one of the great correspondences of American history." That rapprochement came about, in part, as a result of an eerily prescient dream related to Adams by the pair's revolutionary colleague and mutual friend, Benjamin Rush. Over their remaining years, Adams and Jefferson regularly exchanged letters that reflected on their lengthy and productive careers, while sharing the deeply personal joys and sorrows experienced by two men fortunate to live long, fruitful lives.

Almost to the end of their days, both men were involved in consequential moments, with the opening of Jefferson's beloved University of Virginia in 1819 and the election of Adams's son, John Quincy, as the sixth president in 1824. Though some of their fellow members of the founding generation may have come close to matching their achievements, none surpassed them. Jim Rasenberger makes that abundantly clear in this engaging work of popular history. --Harvey Freedenberg, freelance reviewer

Shelf Talker: In a well-paced narrative, Jim Rasenberger explores the many cooperative and contentious intersections in the lives of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.


The Bestsellers

Top-Selling Self-Published Titles

The bestselling self-published books last week as compiled by IndieReader.com:

1. Daggermouth by H.M. Wolfe
2. The Fly Who Flew Under the Sea by Lauren Sánchez Bezos
3. The Close-Up by Kennedy Ryan
4. The Passive Income Power Plan by Halle Eavelyn
5. Faking Cinderella by Pippa Grant
6. The Poison Daughter by Sheila Masterson
7. Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman
8. Tempting Boss by Lillian Monroe
9. Only for Him by Nastha Maddison
10. The Heir by Elodie Hart

[Many thanks to IndieReader.com!]


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