November 2023

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LLF Guest Post by Bill Gaythwaite, Author of UNDERBURN


UnderburnThis gem of a book has set my heart aflutter. This is a wonderful debut about a gay man who flees (with his much younger lover) to his mother’s home after his own home has been destroyed by the fires that ravaged so much of Malibu. He, his mother (a former actress), and his boyfriend have to figure out a way to navigate the waters of this new life together. Humor, tension, tenderness, acceptance, family. It’s all here and it’s written with such authenticity. It’s relatable and real, and I hope you give yourself the gift of reading this book.

Check out this post from the author, Bill Gaythwaite. And check out his talk on Five Minutes with…here. Enjoy!

— Virginia

 

Hello Librarians,

I am so pleased that my debut novel Underburn has been recently published. I’m not sure if I ever expected it would happen. My short stories have been appearing in little magazines for many years, but friends would often ask, “When you are you going to write that novel?” as if it was an errand I had simply forgotten. 

However, I honestly didn’t set out to write a novel.  Underburn started as a text.  I have close friends in California who lost their home to a wildfire in 2018.  They had moved in with family temporarily.  It was a terribly sad time, but rather heroically they were trying to find some humor in their living situation ― landing with elderly parents who were somewhat challenging and set in their ways.   They told me a couple of funny stories, so I turned one of them into a micro fiction piece and sent it to them as a text.  I think they were amused.  Around this same time, I stumbled upon Nancy Sinatra from 1966, singing her hit, These Boots Are Made for Walkin’ on YouTube with some backup dancers.  I started wondering about those dancers and the lives they have led since that performance and how one of them just might have been impacted by the recent wildfire. That gave me Iris Flynn, my first character, and got the plot moving. I was drawn to the idea of the past intruding on everyone in the novel as they deal with unforeseen circumstances. My favorite authors, writers like Joan Silber, Sue Miller, and Elizabeth Strout do a wonderful job of depicting poignant characters who muse about the path not taken or what brought them to their present circumstances.  This was something I tried to do with Underburn, hopefully with some humor and compassion. 

I do need to mention the influence of libraries in my life.  My mother started the library in my elementary school and worked as its chief volunteer.  I would see her almost every day in that context, very happy in her work.  She continued there, even after I’d moved on to middle school and high school.  The library was a big deal to my family. I remember quite clearly that it was cause for celebration in our home when we got our first library card, like getting a driver’s license.  My father was a great reader, but we didn’t have much extra cash to purchase books, so he treated our trips to the library as if they were outings, as if we were going to the zoo or a ball game.  I still remember the pleasure he took in choosing his books and in caring for them ― which was a wonderful example for me. My parents have passed, but I imagine how happy they would be to know that I would have my own book in a library one day.

— Bill Gaythwaite

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HarperCollins/Willam Morrow Mourns the Loss of Celebrated Mystery Author Tim Dorsey

Sad news to report. Author Tim Dorsey has passed away. He was beloved by librarians, patrons, and fellow writers. He was funny and engaging and he loved speaking at libraries. He’d draw a huge crowd, entertain them, make them laugh, and at the end of his presentations, he’d stand on a chair, take a selfie with attendees and post the pictures on his social media! He will be greatly missed but he leaves this world a happier place with his words, written and spoken.

—Virginia

Here is his full obituary:

Tim Dorsey passed away on Sunday, November 26th, 2023. Dorsey wrote the New York Times bestselling Serge A. Storms series hailed as “wickedly funny” (Entertainment Weekly), “rollicking” (NYT), and “laugh-out-loud” (Newsweek). He is survived by his daughters, mother, sister, and brother. 

Tim Dorsey was born in Indiana, moved to Florida at the age of 1, and grew up in a small town about an hour north of Miami called Riviera Beach. He graduated from Auburn University in 1983. While at Auburn, he was editor of the student newspaper, The Plainsman.

From 1983 to 1987, he was a police and courts reporter for The Alabama Journal, the now-defunct evening newspaper in Montgomery. He joined The Tampa Tribune in 1987, as a general assignment reporter. He also worked as a political reporter in The Tribune’s Tallahassee bureau and a copy desk editor. From 1994 to 1999, he was The Tribune’s night metro editor. Tim left the paper in August 1999, to write full time about a deranged serial killer named Serge A. Storms who traveled across his beloved home state.

Over the course of his career, Tim published twenty-six novels: Florida Roadkill, Hammerhead Ranch Motel, Orange Crush, Triggerfish Twist, The Stingray Shuffle, Cadillac Beach, Torpedo Juice, The Big Bamboo, Hurricane Punch, Atomic Lobster, Nuclear Jellyfish, Gator A-Go-Go, Electric Barracuda, When Elves Attack, Pineapple Grenade, The Riptide Ultra-Glide, Tiger Shrimp Tango, Shark Skin Suite, Coconut Cowboy, Clownfish Blues, The Pope of Palm Beach, No Sunscreen for the Dead, Naked Came the Florida Man, The Tropic of Stupid, Mermaid Confidential, and The Maltese Iguana..

“It was a privilege and honor to work with Tim Dorsey. His easy wit and deep knowledge of Florida-lore made his satirical crime capers as entertaining as they were timely. But his greatest gift was the boundless joy and escape that Serge A. Storms brought to readers on every page. Tim was smart, kind, and loved his family and his fans. He will be missed.” said Emily Krump, Tim’s editor at William Morrow.

At this time, the Dorsey family has requested privacy. 

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The December LibraryReads List is Here!

Screen Shot 2023-11-15 at 11.36.12 AMHello, librarians!

You voted, they counted, and the winners have finally been announced!

We are thrilled to share that Christine Platt and Catherine Wigginton Greene’s Rebecca, Not Becky has been selected for the December LibraryReads list! Additionally, Darby Kane has made the Hall of Fame with The Engagement Party. Congratulations to all!

Download egalleys and watch our Writers to Watch program with the authors of Rebecca, Not Becky here.

Want to hear how our authors reacted to the big news? Listen to our latest episode of The Library Love Fest Podcast to hear from them:

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Special *MYSTERY* “Writers to Watch” with Sara Paretsky, Anthony Horowitz, Tamron Hall, & Andrey Kurkov!

11.8.23

We can hardly contain our excitement! Wednesday, November 8th, at 5 PM ET, we are having four fantastic authors on our monthly Writers to Watch program. For those who may not be familiar with Writers to Watch, we host authors for a night of literary delight. Each author talks about their book and then takes questions from librarians! 

This month, we are thrilled to host Anthony Horowitz, author of Close to Death; Tamron Hall, author of Watch Where They Hide; Sara Paretsky, author of Pay Dirt and Andrey Kurkov, author of The Silver Bone

REGISTER ON CROWDCAST
RSVP ON FACEBOOK

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Anthony Horowitz, author of CLOSE TO DEATH (on sale April 16, 2024):
In New York Times bestselling author Anthony Horowitz’s ingenious fifth literary whodunnit in the Hawthorne and Horowitz series, Detective Hawthorne is once again called upon to solve an unsolvable case—a gruesome murder in an idyllic gated community in which suspects abound.
 
 
Tamron Hall, author of WATCH WHERE THEY HIDE (on sale March 12, 2024):
From Emmy Award winner Tamron Hall comes an edge-of-your-seat thriller featuring journalist Jordan Manning as she delves into the case of a mother in danger and uncovers a dangerous web of secrets that could lead right to the missing woman—or put Jordan in the crosshairs of her abductors.
 
 
Sara Paretsky, author of PAY DIRT (on sale April 16, 2024):
Legendary detective V.I. Warshawski uncovers a mystery with roots dating back to the Civil War in this edge-of-your-seat thriller from New York Times bestseller Sara Paretsky.
 
 
Andrey Kurkov, author of THE SILVER BONE (on sale March 5, 2024):
From the Ukrainian Stieg Larsson, a perplexing mystery from a world-renowned literary master that introduces a rookie detective, Samson Kolechko, in Kyiv tackling his first case, set against real life details of the tumultuous early twentieth century.
 
 
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