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Shelf Awareness for Tuesday, March 3, 2026


Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers: The Future Book by Mac Barnett, illustrated by Shawn Harris

Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers: The Future Book by Mac Barnett, illustrated by Shawn Harris

Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers: The Future Book by Mac Barnett, illustrated by Shawn Harris

Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers: The Future Book by Mac Barnett, illustrated by Shawn Harris

News

Wi2026: Bookstores in the Time of Fascism

"You do not wait for times to get better," said Keaun Michael Brown of Ujamaa Community Bookstore, Indianapolis, Ind., during Winter Institute 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pa., last week. 

Brown was one of four booksellers on a panel convened to discuss bookselling in times of fascism, and with him were Kimberly Daniels, manager of the Country Bookshop, Southern Pines, N.C.; Lisa Swayze, general manager of Buffalo Street Books, Ithaca, N.Y.; and Jackie Davison, operations manager at the Lynx, Gainesville, Fla. Daniels served as moderator for the discussion.

"You do not wait for an administration to end," Brown continued. "You wait for nobody but yourself."

When it comes to activism and resistance, Brown emphasized the importance of starting small, starting locally, and starting "with what you can do." Booksellers should think about what they can do "right now" with the resources at hand, and if something isn't sustainable, it's a "waste of time." Places to start might include asking customers to round up to the nearest dollar to benefit a local mutual aid fund, or donate a percentage of sales to help local families. And speaking from his experience as an activist, he noted that booksellers already have an extremely valuable asset--a venue, which can sometimes be the "hardest thing" to find.

Left to right: Jackie Davison, Lisa Swayze, Keaun Michael Brown, Kimberly Daniels

He cautioned booksellers against neglecting the "small things" because they're thinking about larger systemic and structural problems. "Sometimes what your community, what your people, what your neighbors need is the small stuff," Brown said.

One of the key things to remember, he said, was that "none of this is new." Mass deportations, attacks on queer and trans people, and book bans, to name just a few examples, did not begin with the Trump administration and will not suddenly end when he is out of office. People have been resisting for a long time, and they've "never once given up," said Brown. Those people are out there in communities across the country, and the people "who came before us have all the answers that we need."

Swayze agreed that "a lot of what we can do is in our own communities and in our own stores," while stressing the need for managers and owners to communicate with and care for their staff. Whatever the store ends up doing, staff members "need to be comfortable with it, and they need to be able to own it." At the same time, owners and managers need to "treat them well, and feed them, and do all the things that help them do whatever it is you're going to keep doing."

Much of what Buffalo Street Books does, Swayze added, comes from their community. It has become a space where community members bring resources to be shared and disseminated, whether that be face masks or material about free expression. Starting with something as simple as a community information board could be a good way to start forming those relationships, she said. And whatever tactic a bookstore is looking to pursue, there are almost certainly other organizations in the area doing the same work.

Over the past few years, Swayze continued, Buffalo Street Books has gotten a lot of experience dealing with content and curation challenges, ranging from the events the store hosts to the books it carries. The bookstore has learned to not engage on an emotional level with the people making these challenges, as they are often only interested in provoking booksellers and recording a "soundbite" to be shared online. It is much better to engage based on the "rules and values that you established in your store," such as a curation policy. Swayze urged booksellers to make use of the content challenge resources available from ABFE on Bookweb.org

Davison remarked that while Florida is "last in a lot of things," it is "number one in book bans." In the 2023-2024 academic year, when there were some 9,000 books banned in the entire country, Florida was responsible for about 4,500 of those, and in the '24-'25 school year, there were more than 2,000 in the state. The store was founded with the goal of fighting back against book bans, Davison said, and the plan was always "we're going to be loud about it."

As such, there is a banned books display right at the front of the store that spans two bays and is there year-round. The upper left corner of the display features the top 10 most banned books, per PEN America, and that is updated each year when a new top 10 list appears. The display also features shelf talkers for the books with information about how many times the title has been banned and the reasons why. Davison called those shelf talkers "invaluable" for starting conversations about book bans, and for these and other conversations about potentially contentious issues, she advised booksellers to prepare "specific language" that staff members can cite.

On the subject of staff training, Davison pointed out that "you don't have to be the expert." She, for example, is not an expert in de-escalation, but she found someone who is, and that expert comes to the Lynx once a year to teach staff about it. Similarly, booksellers should remember that "you can't do everything" and "you shouldn't do everything." It is enough to "pick something and go for it."

Touching on community partnerships, Daniels recommended booksellers use "structures that are already in place" as well as pre-existing relationships as starting points. A lot of bookstores already have plenty of experience partnering with schools to get books to children, she said, and they can use those school partnerships as models for working with other organizations in the community. As an example, the Country Bookshelf has partnered with a nonprofit to buy copies of Jon Meachem's American Struggle and is getting those books into people's hands via community organizations with which the store already has relationships.

When it comes to the "intentionality of language," Daniels said people are coming to the bookstore to have conversations "because they are looking for the language" to be able to talk about these issues at cocktail parties, PTA meetings, basketball games, or wherever else. She encouraged booksellers to have bullet points prepared for staff on various topics so they never have to scramble when customers ask questions. "Say it, practice it," and serve as a model for talking about these things in places where doing so may not be normalized, she said.

Daniels urged booksellers to remember that "every interaction that you have matters" and to take "confidence in every relationship that you have." Just the act of being "can be an act of resistance in every moment." --Alex Mutter


Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers: The Future Book by Mac Barnett, illustrated by Shawn Harris


Michelle Montague Joins Behrman House as Head of Sales & Marketing

Michelle Montague has joined Behrman House as head of sales & marketing, where she will lead the publisher's initiatives to build educator engagement and support the educational community, expand its reach beyond the company's traditional educational channels, and create innovative marketing campaigns highlighting the company's award-winning books and market-leading educational resources.

Michelle Montague

Most recently, Montague was v-p of trade marketing & publicity at Walker Books Group, which includes children's publishers Candlewick Press, Holiday House Publishing, and Peachtree Publishing. Previously, she held marketing roles at Abrams, Simon & Schuster, and Putnam Publishing.

Derek Stordahl, president and publisher, who bought Behrman House in January and earlier was general manager at Holiday House and Peachtree, said, "Having seen Michelle's marketing expertise and outstanding results across a range of categories, I'm delighted to have her join our leadership team. Her ability to develop our relationships with educational and channel partners, tailor and create impactful book-specific marketing outreach, and collaborate with creators to expand our readership is critical to our continued momentum."

Montague said, "Joining Behrman House is a rare opportunity to align my passion for book marketing with my devotion to my Jewish heritage, and I look forward to working alongside this talented team and with Derek once again. There are so many important books on both the Behrman House and Apples & Honey Press lists; books that are vital to build knowledge, cultivate resilience, and to support Jewish families and our larger community."


Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers: The Future Book by Mac Barnett, illustrated by Shawn Harris


Binc Names Denver Publishing Institute Scholarship Winner

Amanda Qassar, a bookseller at Warwick's in La Jolla, Calif., has been awarded a scholarship to attend the Denver Publishing Institute this summer. A collaboration of the Book Industry Charitable Foundation, Sourcebooks, and the DPI, the scholarship includes tuition, room and board, and up to $2,000 to cover travel and lost wages.

Amanda Qassar

"Binc already does so much to keep this career sustainable, but this scholarship is an astonishing boon," said Qassar. "I'm staggered by the generosity of Binc and Sourcebooks; without them this chance to level up my knowledge of all parts of a book's lifecycle--to enrich my connection to the bookselling ecosystem that I love and respect--would otherwise be beyond my reach. I'm also so grateful that DPI sees the value in strengthening the symbiosis between booksellers and publishers by admitting someone like me into the program."

Todd Stocke, senior v-p, editorial director at Sourcebooks, said: "When publishers and booksellers connect, magic happens for readers and authors alike. Booksellers are the beating heart of this business and the students of the Denver Publishing Institute are among its future leaders. I'm a former bookseller myself, and I can tell you how integral that frontline experience is to understanding publishing. As a long-time Binc partner, Sourcebooks is delighted to continue to ensure that booksellers have a vital voice."


Shelf Awareness Presents! Calling Booksellers and Publishers

Along with veteran booksellers Valerie Koehler of Blue Willow Bookshop in Houston Tex., and Shane Mullen of Left Bank Books in St. Louis, Mo., Shelf Awareness recently presented a webinar on connecting customers to difficult topics. Shane and Valerie shared some best practices from their years of experience. They talked about how to create a space where customers can feel comfortable browsing books, and about how they engage with the customers. Useful information for any bookseller or librarian! The conversation was followed by title presentations from Magination Press and Difference Engine. A recording from the session can be found here.

Would you like to be involved in a future webinar as a bookseller? Would you like to sponsor your own webinar as a publisher? Please reach out to Shelf Awareness publisher Matt Baldacci and we'll work together to create a useful and powerful presentation.


Love Y'All Book Fest: 'Romance Can Bring Us Back to a Hopeful Place'

Coco Zephir is a bookseller at An Unlikely Story, Plainville, Mass., where she works on the events and marketing teams. She sent this report about the recent Love Y'all Romance Book Fest, focusing on one of the hottest book genres. 

Love Ya'll organizers (from left) Vania Stoyanova, Jo Schulte, and Preet Singh.

Love Y'all Book Fest, the annual conference that took place over Valentine's Day weekend, featured two days of panels, author signings, and experiences for readers to engage with their favorite authors in an intimate setting. This year's conference, now in its third year, drew almost 900 attendees and 80 authors, and began with opening remarks from the event's three organizers: Vania Stoyanova, author of Why on Earth; Preet Singh, events coordinator at Eagle Eye Book Shop, Decatur, Ga.; and Jo Schulte, author of The Whisperwood Legacy.

At the heart of the festival were four tables from local indie bookshops: Brave and Kind Book Shop, Eagle Eye Book Shop, Charis Books, and Read it Again Bookstore. 

Opening keynote with Scarlett St. Clair (l.) and Kate Dramis.

The festival's smaller, intimate setting sets it apart from larger conferences. Ashley Jordan, author of Once Upon a Time in Dollywood, had previously attended the festival as a reader. "I was thinking right after I got my book deal, I can't wait to be on the panels and be attending as an author," she said. For Alexandra Vasti (The Halifax Hellions), Love Y'all was her first romance convention. "It was so lovely," she said, noting that the festival "celebrate[s] all the best parts of romance." 

Love Y'all prides itself on being "a celebration of romance for all," and Kalie Cassidy, author of In the Veins of the Drowning and the upcoming In the Wake of the Ruined, agreed: "I love that this is a safe, positive, and happy atmosphere that they've built." Denise Williams (The Re-Do List) said, "I fell in love with everything about the energy of it.... Come to Love Y'all, come to Atlanta."

"The Spice-O-Meter: Exploring Romance that Turns Up the Heat" panelists Alexandra Vasti (moderator), Lauren Morrill, Lauren Connolly, Andie J. Christopher, Ava Rani, Emily Krempholtz, and Nadine Gonzalez.

Authors, influencers, booksellers, and librarians were on panels covering topics ranging from diversity in romance to how chemistry drives plot. Sponsored events from Berkley, Bramble, Dell, and Love Underlined also offered opportunities for readers and influencers to snag upcoming releases and other bookish goodies.

"We need as much love as we can get," Jordan said. A common thread throughout the weekend was why the genre is such an important touchstone for readers and authors alike. Vasti, who writes historical romance, said it's "really special for the way it can allow us to talk about things that are going on in the contemporary world, but with a different lens." Denise Williams noted that romance allows for representation: "Everyone deserves to see themselves on the page." Williams added, "Romance can tell us any kind of story and bring it back to a hopeful place."


Obituary Note: Dan Simmons

Dan Simmons, award-winning author of 31 novels and short story collections, died February 21. He was 77. His books garnered many honors, including the Hugo, three Bram Stoker Awards for horror, a dozen Locus Awards, and the Shirley Jackson Award. His titles have been translated into at least 20 languages and published in 28 countries.  

Dan Simmons

Simmons wrote in a variety of genres, publishing works of historical fiction, horror, hard-boiled crime, and speculative fiction, as well as exploring topics ranging from Ernest Hemingway's World War II Cuban spy ring to mountain climbing in the Himalayas. In 2018, his novel The Terror (2007) was adapted as a 10-part AMC series. At the time of his death, Simmons was at work completing his next novel, Omega Canyon, to be published by his longtime publisher, Little, Brown. 

A native of Peoria, Ill., Simmons's childhood experiences found their way into his horror fiction. After college, he taught sixth grade until his debut novel, Song of Kali, won the 1986 World Fantasy Award. In 1987 he left teaching to become a full-time author.

His other books include Carrion Comfort (1989), Summer of Night (1991), the sci-fi epics Ilium and Olympos, and Drood (2009), based on the last years of Charles Dickens's life. His political thriller Flashback (2011) "was widely criticized as an anti-left rant, imagining a dystopian future where mass immigration, the climate change 'hoax,' 'socialist entitlement programs,' and foreign policy failures under Barack Obama have led to the ruin of America, a 'Second Holocaust,' and the rise of an Islamic New Global Caliphate,' " the Guardian wrote.

In response, Simmons argued that he had written a short story version in 1991 that imagined a post-Reagan U.S., telling an interviewer: "I've been called a Nazi. I've been called a racist. People who have no idea of my life, what I've done, how I've worked for civil rights throughout my life, or what my politics have been, and what Democratic candidates I've written speeches for.... They think I was just going after Obama in the book; well, it used to be Reagan, and if I had waited a few years it would be whoever else would be president."

His obituary noted: "Like his early reading pursuits, Dan always wrote about what he loved. He defied literary norms by writing across genres, switching between major publishers, and defying pressure to conform to formulaic novels. Dan was a profoundly curious learner who delighted in connecting with other curious minds, and the many stories he dreamed up helped him connect with others throughout his entire life."


Notes

Image of the Day: Dual Launch at Odyssey Bookshop

Christopher Castellani (Last Seen; Viking) and Michael Lowenthal (Place Envy; Ohio State Univ. Press) were in conversation at Odyssey Bookshop in South Hadley, Mass., for a joint launch of their books.

Cool Idea: Paper Plane Weekends

In February, Act 4 Books, Perry, N.Y., hosted Paper Airplane Weekends, inviting airborne-inclined patrons to "bring your best paper plane skills (or fold one in-store!) and see how far you can fly. How it works:

  • Planes must be made of paper
  • Bring your own or make one here
  • Each pilot gets 3 throws per day (same plane or different ones)
  • Start at the front door with feet on the first black mat
  • Distance is measured front-to-back of the store (no diagonals!)
  • If the shop is busy, pilots may need to wait their turn"

In anticipation of the final session last Saturday, bookshop posted: "Paper airplanes are still flying. Come, fold, fling and win!"


Personnel Changes at Hachette; Sourcebooks

Debbie Aroff has joined the Hachette Book Group as v-p, director of marketing and brand development, James Patterson. She worked her entire career of more than 20 years at the Random House Group at PRH, most recently as v-p, director of marketing & brand strategy for The Dial Press.

---

At Sourcebooks:

Tamara Davis has joined the company as marketing designer.

Allison Ruffolo has joined the company as marketing assistant--children's.


Media and Movies

Media Heat: Annie Leibovitz on CBS Mornings

Tomorrow:
CBS Mornings: Annie Leibovitz, author of Women (Phaidon Press, $99.95, 9781837290499).

The View: Christina Applegate, author of You with the Sad Eyes: A Memoir (Little, Brown, $32, 9780316594929).



Books & Authors

Awards: PEN/Faulkner Fiction Finalists

Finalists have been released for the 2026 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. The winner, who will receive $15,000, will be named in early April, with the remaining four finalists each receiving $5,000. All five authors will be honored on May 6 at the 46th Anniversary PEN/Faulkner Award Celebration in Washington, D.C. This year's finalists are:

Dominion by Addie E. Citchens (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
The White Hot by Quiara Alegría Hudes (One World)
The Sisters by Jonas Hassen Khemiri (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Heart the Lover by Lily King (Grove Press)
Small Scale Sinners by Mahreen Sohail (A Public Space Books)

The judges said: "The five vital, brilliant books on our shortlist draw us into humanity's complex core of beauty, violence, joy, intelligence, and imagination. Families spin; nature embraces life; connections whisper or shout; hearts break then grow while human truths emerge. These books--outstretched hands--verify that the small can consistently counter mighty power structures endangering our earth and that art always stands resilient, emancipating, and essential."


Book Review

Review: Monsters in the Archives: My Year of Fear with Stephen King

Monsters in the Archives: My Year of Fear with Stephen King by Caroline Bicks (Hogarth, $29 hardcover, 304p., 9780593736722, April 21, 2026)

In 2017, Caroline Bicks was named the inaugural Stephen E. King Chair in Literature at the University of Maine. Four years later, she invited King to give her students craft advice. He generously granted her interviews and extended access to the personal archive at his home. Her fourth book, Monsters in the Archives, is a fascinating insider's look at King's process and themes, offering insight into five early works--and her experience rereading them as an adult facing childhood fears.

Bicks (Shakespeare, Not Stirred) first encountered King via his 1978 short story collection, Night Shift, which she read when she was 12. Growing up in New York City, she recalls, she suffered from baseless anxiety. Reading King's classic horror during summer vacations in Maine was a way of indulging fear safely to achieve catharsis. The tale "The Boogeyman," about a closet-dwelling monster, haunted her thereafter. Bicks insists on King's power to create lasting moments that scare even him (e.g., the tub scene in The Shining).

Each chapter contains an appealing blend of biographical exploration and literary critique. King's stories often took inspiration from his life: Pet Sematary--his son nearly running in front of a truck; The Shining--a visit to a haunted Colorado hotel; Night Shift--the anger spurring college anti-Vietnam War protests; and 'Salem's Lot--his move to Maine with his single mother at age 11. The Shining is a cultural touchstone, though equally for the (significantly different) Stanley Kubrick film. A half century after its publication, Carrie remains unfortunately relevant for its storyline of high school bullying and revenge.

With its close readings, Monsters in the Archives affirms that King's oeuvre merits serious scholarship. It also pinpoints connections to Shakespeare, Bicks's research specialty--The Shining was originally modeled on a five-act Shakespearean tragedy and references Macbeth. Through archival work, Bicks traces King's writing practice. As a penniless beginner, he kept lone copies of typewritten manuscripts and there were several near losses of work. Meanwhile, his editorial changes reveal the development of themes. In 'Salem's Lot, edits reinforced the evil's source within the town; in Carrie, he downplayed mentions of demonic influence, instead emphasizing the protagonist's traumatized humanity.

Readers can't fail to be enticed to try more by King. (Bicks discusses plots in detail, and quotes at length, so spoiler-phobes might want to skip pages here and there.) This isn't just for horror buffs, but for anyone curious about archival research, literature, and writers' lives. --Rebecca Foster, freelance reviewer, proofreader, and blogger at Bookish Beck

Shelf Talker: The Stephen E. King Chair in Literature at the University of Maine gives an enthralling behind-the-scenes account of the horror author's life, work, and editorial process.


The Bestsellers

Top-Selling Self-Published Titles

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

1. The Lion Beneath the Fade by Sebastian Bastian
2. Daggermouth by H.M. Wolfe
3. Real Confidence by Simone Knego
4. The Great Train Heist by Michael J. Coffino
5. Hat Trick by Chelsea Curto
6. Dungeon Crawler Carl: Book 1 by Matt Dinniman
7. Dead or Alive by Kylie Kent
8. King of Damnation by Tammy Andresen
9. The Dungeon Anarchist's Cookbook by Matt Dinneman
10. The Gate of the Feral Gods by Matt Dinneman

[Many thanks to IndieReader.com!]


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