TBP Book Club Title Announced for September 2024!

Please join us on Tuesday, September 24 at 7:00 p.m. (Central) for our Book Club discussion of LIAR’S DICTIONARY by Eley Williams. DB 1073312. LB 13379.

We host our Book Club discussions via Zoom. However, all you need to participate is a telephone!

If you have a land line, we will provide a telephone number for accessing the Book Club. If you have a smart phone, we will email an easy “one click ” number you can use to join the discussion. We will also email a Zoom invitation to those who prefer to use a computer.

Patrons who register for the discussion will receive this information a week before the book club meeting.

To RSVP call us at 1-800-252-9605 or email tbp.ral@tsl.texas.gov

LIAR’S DICTIONARY is available by mail as a digital cartridge or in large print and is also available to download on BARD.

LIAR’S DICTIONARY by Eley Williams (DB 103312, LB 13379)
Peter Winceworth, Victorian lexicographer, is toiling away on Swansby’s multivolume Encyclopaedic Dictionary, but boredom leads him to insert fictitious entries. In the present day, Mallory, a young intern employed by the publisher, is tasked with uncovering these fake words before the work is digitized. Some strong language. Commercial audiobook. 2021.

We’re looking forward to having you join us on Tuesday, September 24!

Cyberpunk Classics

Do you prefer your science fiction set in a gritty, urban, dystopian future? Are you a fan of punk subculture and early hacker culture? Then cyberpunk may be a sub-genre you enjoy! From Philip K. Dick’s DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP?, the novel upon which the movie Bladerunner was based, to ALTERED CARBON, which was made into a Netflix series in 2018, we have lots of cyberpunk classics to choose from.

Series

Centenal Series
INFOMOCRACY by Malka Older (DB 84733)
Maddaddam Series
MADDADDAM by Margaret Atwood (DB 77487, BR 20284)
Sprawl Series
NEUROMANCER by William Gibson (DB 34589, BR 09062)
Takeshi Kovacs Series
ALTERED CARBON by Richard K. Morgan (DB 75061, BR 22417)
Warcross Series
WARCROSS by Marie Lu (DB 89192)
Zer0es Series
ZEROES by Chuck Wendig (DB 83598)

Stand-Alone Novels

DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP? by Philip K. Dick (DB 54649, BR 14247)
FUTURE HOME OF THE LIVING GOD by Louise Erdrich (DB 87990, BR 22380, en español DB 102396)
HOPELAND by Ian McDonald (DB 119547)
NOOR by Nnedi Okorafor (DBC 24787)
SLEEPLESS by Victor Manibo (DB 111238)
SNOW CRASH by Neal Stephenson (DB 57673)
TECHNOGENESIS by Syne Mitchell (DBC 17063)
TROUBLE AND HER FRIENDS by Melissa Scott (DB 39645)
WASTE TIDE by Qiufan Chen (DB 95246)

College: Take Your Talking Book Service with You!

How exciting! You’re going off to college. It’s really your first true step into adulthood. So, it can be a little daunting too. But remember, you’re not alone; your talking book service can be there with you for this big transition.

If you’re going to a college in Texas, just call us to let us know your new contact information so we don’t lose touch!

But if you’re moving to a college out of state, don’t worry! No matter which state you move to, there is a talking book program service. And we can transfer your service to that state since you’ll be there for the majority of the year.  Once you’ve obtained your new address, give us a call about a week prior to your move at 1-800-252-9605 or send an email to tbp.services@tsl.texas.gov.

Textbooks

Unfortunately, the Talking Book Program does not have textbooks in our collection. But we do often have supplementary materials. For example, you’re taking a course on African American literature. We won’t have your textbook in our collection, BUT we have a lot of books written by and about African American authors. We also have general books about the Harlem Renaissance. Once you get your syllabus, feel free to contact us and see which books are in our collection. Or, better yet, search BARD.

Organizations with Accessible-Format Materials for Students

APH: Accessible Textbooks: An accessible textbook locator service.
Learning Ally: Learning Ally is a national nonprofit that provides reading materials in a variety of accessible formats for people with a wide range of reading disabilities, including blindness, visual impairment, dyslexia, and other learning differences. Students can browse the library, order and download audiobooks, and listen/study on PCs and Mac computers, smartphones and tablets running Android or Apple iOS, as well as on specialized assistive technology devices.
Bookshare® is a FREE, federally-funded library of ebooks designed for students with learning differences. Students who struggle to read traditional books are empowered to read in ways that work for them with specialized ebooks in audio, audio with highlighted text, large font, and braille.
Sight into Sound: An audio production service.

Other Helpful Resources

Let us know if there is other information you need. For example, if you’re writing a paper and need some research pointers, give us a call. Remember, even though you’re an adult, we are still your public library.

Jimmy Fallon’s Summer 2024 Book Recommendations

On Thursday, July 25, Jimmy Fallon revealed his summer 2024 book club pick. The title selected was GOD OF THE WOODS by Liz Moore. Fallon announced the final round of voting for the book earlier in the week and viewers voted online from a selection of books. We’ve listed the six books below. Which one do you think should have been the ultimate winner?

For more information check out the website: https://www.nbc.com/nbc-insider/jimmy-fallon-book-club-summer-2024-winner

GOD OF THE WOODS by Liz Moore (DB IN PROCESS, LB 0000606)
MARGO’S GOT MONEY TROUBLES by Rufi Thorpe (DB 122178 IN PROCESS)
LAST MURDER AT THE END OF THE WORLD by Stuart Turton (DB 122011 IN PROCESS)
YOU ARE HERE by David Nicholls (DB 122159 IN PROCESS)
I WAS A TEENAGE SLASHER by Stephen Graham-Jones (DB IN PROCESS)
PARIS NOVEL by Ruth Reichl (DB 120876, LB 0000350)

Summer Reading Program Presents: Mountain Climbing

Adventure is the theme for this year’s Summer Reading Program. This week we’re featuring books about mountaineering.

Adult Nonfiction

ALONE AT THE TOP: CLIMBING DENALI IN THE DEAD OF WINTER by Lonnie Dupre (DBC 16029)
CALLING: A LIFE ROCKED BY MOUNTAINS by Barry Blanchard (DBC 02626)
DEAD LUCKY: LIFE AFTER DEATH ON MOUNT EVEREST by Lincoln Hall (DBG 08121)
EIGER DREAMS: VENTURES AMONG MEN AND MOUNTAINS by Jon Krakauer (DB 55906)
FOREVER ON THE MOUNTAIN: THE TRUTH BEHIND ONE OF MOUNTAINEERING’S MOST CONTROVERSIAL AND MYSTERIOUS DISASTERS by James M. Tabor (DB 67223)
GHOSTS OF K2: THE EPIC SAGA OF THE FIRST ASCENT by Mick Conefrey (DB 82748)
HIGH CRIMES: THE FATE OF EVEREST IN AN AGE OF GREED by Michael Kodas (DB 67804)
KILLING DRAGONS: THE CONQUEST OF THE ALPS by Fergus Fleming (DB 53702)
LEFT FOR DEAD: MY JOURNEY HOME FROM EVEREST by Beck Weathers (DB 92591)
MOUNTAIN: MY TIME ON EVEREST by Ed Viesturs (DB 78694)
NANDA DEVI: THE TRAGIC EXPEDITION by John Roskelley (BR 07444)
TOUCH THE TOP OF THE WORLD: A BLIND MAN’S JOURNEY TO CLIMB FARTHER THAN THE EYE CAN SEE by Erik Weihenmayer (DB 51505, BR 14512)
TWO SHADOWS: THE INSPIRATIONAL STORY OF ONE MAN’S TRIUMPH OVER ADVERSITY by Charlie Winger (DBC 03296)

Adult Fiction

ABOMINABLE by Dan Simmons (DB 77604)
ABOVE ALL THINGS by Tanis Rideout (DB 76263)
EDGE OF JUSTICE by Clinton McKinzie (DBC 02926)
MOUNTAIN OF THE DEAD by Jeremy Bates (DB 111004)
PATHS OF GLORY by Jeffrey Archer (DB 68935)
SEVENTEEN by Hideo Yokoyama (DB 92989)
STORMS OF DENALI by Nicholas O’Connell (DBC 00221)
THIS COURAGEOUS JOURNEY by Misty M. Beller (DB 109156)
THIS WRETCHED VALLEY by Jenny Kiefer (DB 118975) IN PROCESS
VIEW MOST GLORIOUS by Regina Scott (DB 106556)
WAY OF THE BRAVE by Susan May Warren (DB 98178)

Young Adult Fiction

EVEN THE DARKEST STARS by Heather Fawcett (DB 89269)

Juvenile Nonfiction

BODIES FROM THE ICE: MELTING GLACIERS AND THE RECOVERY OF THE PAST by James M. Deem Grades 5-8
EVEREST: THE REMARKABLE STORY OF EDMUND HILLARY AND TENZING NORGAY by Alexandra Stewart (DB 106544) IN PROCESS
Grades 3-6
RESCUES! by Sandra Markle (DB 62920)
Grades 4-7
TO THE TOP! CLIMBING THE WORLD’S HIGHEST MOUNTAIN by S. A. Kramer (DB 40184, BR 10059)
TOP OF THE WORLD: CLIMBING MOUNT EVEREST by Steve Jenkins (BR 13015)
Grades 2-4

Juvenile Fiction

BETWEEN HEAVEN AND EARTH by Eric Walters (BRG 03241)
Grades 6-12
CLIMB OR DIE by Edward Myers (DB 47312, BR 10476)
Grades 6-9
PEAK by Roland Smith (DB 64746, BR 17994)
Grades 6-9

Steampunk Classics

Do you like a little science fiction in your Victorian era historical fiction? Then you just might like steampunk. Here are some classics in this science fiction sub-genre that you may enjoy, including Jules Verne’s TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA, which is often considered the first steampunk novel. We have both stand-alone and series in the list below, and  we’ve even included a nonfiction title for those who want to learn more about this phenomenon. As always when listing a series, we have started you off with the first title. So, strap on those goggles, don your top hat, and enter into the strange and fantastic world of steampunk.

Series

Burton and Swinburne Series
STRANGE AFFAIR OF SPRING HEELED JACK by Mark Hodder (DB 73822)
Cinder Spires Series
AERONAUT’S WINDLASS by Jim Butcher (DB 82604)
Clockwork Century Series
BONESHAKER by Cherie Priest (DB 70887)
Hungry City Chronicles Series
MORTAL ENGINES by Philip Reeve (DB 58198)
Infernal Devices Series
CLOCKWORK ANGEL by Cassandra Clare (DB 72530)
Iron Seas Series
IRON SEAS SERIES, BOOKS 1-4 by Meljean Brook (DB 84388)
Leviathan Series
LEVIATHAN by Scott Westerfeld (DB 70906)
Matt Cruse Series
AIRBORN by Kenneth Oppel (DB 59792, BRG 00708)
New Crobuzon Series
PERDIDO STREET STATION by China Mieville (DB 58795)
Parasol Protectorate Series
SOULLESS by Gail Carriger (DB 81166)
Stoker and Holmes Series
CLOCKWORK SCARAB by Colleen Gleason (DB 79548)
Tales of Ketty Jay Series
RETRIBUTION FALLS by Chris Wooding (DB 89160)

Stand-Alone Novels

AGAINST THE DAY by Thomas Pynchon (DB 63890)
DIAMOND AGE by Neal Stephenson (DB 41956)
DIFFERENCE ENGINE by William Gibson (DB 36050)
TIME MACHINE by H. G. Wells (DB 33367, BR 08652, LB 06039)
TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA by Jules Verne (DB 57020, BR 09469)

Nonfiction

STEAMPUNK BIBLE: AN ILLUSTRATED GUIDE TO THE WORLD OF IMAGINARY AIRSHIPS, CORSETS AND GOGGLES, MAD SCIENTISTS, AND STRANGE LITERATURE by Jeff Vandermeer (DBG 09391)

Summer Reading Program Presents: Natural Attraction: Romance in the Wild

Adventure is the theme for this year’s Summer Reading Program. This week we’re featuring romance books that take place in the wilderness. We’ve got couples hiking and camping and some romantic suspense where couples must survive the wilderness…as well as Cupid’s arrow.

En Español

CAMINO A RHODES by Mariana Zapata (DB 120214 IN PROCESS)

Adult Nonfiction

BACKWOODS by Jill Sorenson (DB 79234)
ENJOY THE VIEW: MOOSE SPRINGS, ALASKA, BOOK 3 by Sarah Morgenthaler (DB 105384)
FAMOUS FOR A LIVING by Melissa Ferguson (LB 14666)
GIRL UNDERWATER by Claire Kells (DB 112000)
HAPPINESS FOR BEGINNERS by Katherine Center (DBC 11939, LB 08144)
HIGHLY SUSPICIOUS AND UNFAIRLY CUTE by Talia Hibbert (DB 112060)
LOLA AT LAST by J. C. Peterson (DB 114880)
MEET ME AT THE LAKE by Carley Fortune (DB 114298, LB 14839)
SIMPLE WILD: A NOVEL by K. A. Tucker (DB 93876)
SOMETHING WILD & WONDERFUL by Anita Kelly (DB 118310)
SOMETHING WILDER by Christina Lauren (DB 108471)
TAKE ME HIGHER by Pamela Clare (DB 109192)
WHITEOUT by Adriana Anders (DB 98477)

Shipwrecks Ahoy!

There is a fascination that haunts crumbling shipwrecks, whether they be stranded in the depths of the sea or sitting preserved in the Bob Bullock Museum. What these wrecks say about moments of history, of the people who build and break them, can be enlightening as one strives to not only learn but understand those who came before us. It can’t be contended–our society has an obsession with shipwrecks! This is illustrated frequently, with the success of books like David Grann’s THE WAGER (DB 113965, LB 14399, BR 25435 IN PROCESS) and the recurrent cultural fixation on the RMS Titanic grasping our collective consciousness in turn. It can be hard to be sure what it is about these beautiful disasters that draws us to them so strongly, but as we remember the anniversary of the wreck of the USS Indianapolis this month, here are a few selections in the TBP collection about shipwrecks and ocean disasters.

ADRIFT: A TRUE STORY OF LOVE, LOSS AND SURVIVAL AT SEA by Tami Oldham Ashcraft (DB 93382)

First, we’ll start off with something a little more intimate than many of the selections on this list. Adrift is a story about two individuals, the hurricane they found themselves struck by, and the harrowing 41-day journey to safety. It’s a nonfiction story of survival that will keep you on the edge of your seats and, should you want to find it, there was a movie made out of it too!
BOUNTY: THE TRUE STORY OF THE MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY by Caroline Alexander (DB 57656)

Next, a story of rebellion, intrigue, and revisionist history as Caroline Alexander works to correct the records on the legendary mutiny of the crew of the Bounty! Alexander shines with her research and dedication to the truth in this breakdown of the events and following efforts to obfuscate them. As an added bonus, television rights are now in development! 
DEAD WAKE: THE LAST CROSSING OF THE LUSITANIA by Erik Larson (BRG 03809, DB 80936, LB 08677)

For those fascinated by World War I or the history of safety regulations, this could be your next eye-opening read. Many talk about the Lusitania and its impact on World War I, but few explore it in as much detail as Larson. With a fast, narrative style guaranteed to entertain as well as educate, this book is a thorough examination of the Lusitania by an author whose books keep sailing right to the top of the NYT Best Seller list. 
ENDURANCE: SHACKLETON’S INCREDIBLE VOYAGE by Alfred Lansing (DB 119061, LB 03857)

A perennial classic, Lansing does a phenomenal job of exploring every moment of Shackleton’s voyage, from concept of the voyage itself to the months of grueling survival and teamwork. This is a great story of triumph and courage at the ends of the earth! Plus, it’s one of the happier-ending stories on this list by far.
FIVE AGAINST THE SEA: A TRUE STORY OF COURAGE AND SURVIVAL by Ron Arias (DB 32880)

142 days at sea and 4,000 miles traveled could be enough to drive many men mad, but this was not the case for five Costa Rican fishermen who, in 1988, got caught in a vicious storm and cast out to sea. What’s more, they survived this venture largely unscathed! This is a fantastic story of victory, ingenuity, and perseverance, as well as another surprisingly happy ending for a list largely about doom and destruction.
HALSEY’S TYPHOON: THE TRUE STORY OF A FIGHTING ADMIRAL, AN EPIC STORM, AND AN UNTOLD RESCUE by Bob Trury (DB 66099)

Set in World War II, this book explores the terrible mistake ordered by Admiral William “Bull” Halsey that led almost 200 ships right into the path of a major storm. Follow the survivors of this disaster as they fight every natural enemy you could imagine and witness the incredible courage of those who rescued them.
IN HARM’S WAY: THE SINKING OF THE U.S.S. INDIANAPOLIS AND THE EXTRAORDINARY STORY OF ITS SURVIVORS by Doug Stanton (DB 52097)

The belle of the ball, the wreck of the hour, and the inspiration for this list – the USS Indianapolis! This recount of one of the most famous wrecks of all time will have you on the edge of your seat as you engage with not only the stories of those brave men who made it out, but the ones who lost their lives in those hazardous waters. It’s an engaging read that will keep you hooked as you learn that sometimes it’s not just loose lips that sink ships. 
IN THE HEART OF THE SEA: THE TRAGEDY OF THE WHALESHIP ESSEX by Nathaniel Philbrick (BRG 03656, DB 50271)

This is another one of the most fascinating and well-known wrecks of all time. Serving as one of the primary inspirations for the great American classic Moby Dick; or, The Whale, this novel provides incredible context for the tail end of the Nantucket whaling industry and the community that built around it. It has everything, from freak whale attacks and turtle roasting to deeply personal stories of trials and triumph, and we cannot recommend this book enough. It’s a fantastic entry to the subgenre and one that has broad, cinematic appeal—and hey, there’s a movie for it as well! If you’re a fan of the classics or looking for a book to ease you in, give this one a go. You won’t regret it!
IN THE KINGDOM OF ICE: THE GRAND AND TERRIBLE POLAR VOYAGE OF THE USS JEANNETTE by Hampton Sides (DB 79535, LB 08615)

You might notice a bias towards Antarctic exploration on this list. Well, here is something for those of you wanting something a little more northern! IN THE KINGDOM OF ICE follows the devastating and, as the title notes, terrible journey of the ship and her crew. It’s cold, it’s treacherous, and it’s a fantastic read for any and all who have ever found themselves with a fixation on those icy deserts! But beware, you might never think of polar bears the same.
ISLAND OF THE LOST: SHIPWRECKED AT THE EDGE OF THE WORLD by Joan Druett (DB 66506)

Serendipity is the theme of this book as a twist of fate leads two completely different ships to be wrecked on the same hazardous patch of land. Follow these crews to a frigid and hostile island locale 285 miles south of New Zealand (also known as Aotearoa) as they each handle the isolation and desperation differently. With a conclusion part Robinson Crusoe and part Lord of the Flies, you’ll cheer, you’ll despair, and you’ll love every second of this incredible story of humanity at its finest and worst.
MADHOUSE AT THE END OF THE EARTH by Julian Sancton (LB 13462)

Many of these books explore stoic competence in the face of great adversity – adventures of the best of humanity facing the mightiest of foes. Well, this one definitely has foes! This book explores one of the most ill-fated and disastrous Antarctic expeditions in history, doomed by incompetence at almost every level and a heaping serving of plain rotten luck. It is a comedy of errors in most regards, and one that went so incredibly poorly that NASA has studied it to better understand the effects of isolation on the human mind (it’s true! You can find the author of this book talking about it here). But despite it all, this is the first expedition to successfully winter in Antarctica, a dubious honor given the conditions that the crew had to survive. Sometimes it can be fun to take a break from the sheer might of the titans on this list, and if you still want to keep in that nautical wheelhouse, I would definitely direct you here. 
MIGHTY FITZ: THE SINKING OF THE EDMUND FITZGERALD by Michael Shumacher (DB 62656)

You might know this ship from the effervescent ballad by Gordon Lightfoot, but if you have ever wanted a good examination of the wreck itself, look no further! This book strives to sketch out the tragedy, examining why it happened and what the fallout was. It’s incredibly precise in its scope as it breaks down what some refer to as The Titanic of the Great Lakes, but I say this wreck stands all on its own as a disaster every person with even a passing interest should know.
PERFECT STORM: A TRUE STORY OF MEN AGAINST THE SEA by Sebastian Junger (BRG 00962, DB 44751)

Rounding out this list is a look at the disastrous, infamous Hurricane Grace. Read all about the lost Andrea Gail, a fishing trawler caught and destroyed by this horrifying storm, in equal parts speculation and cultural context. This book brings a perspective of the ocean that few can rival, and if you want a great look at not only the impact of these cataclysmic storms but the reality of those deadly waves, give this book a go! And if you’re interested and wanting more, there’s a movie adaptation too.

Did we find your next nautical reading pick? Is there a shipwreck you love that we completely missed (or even got wrong)? Do you have any similar recommendations? Let us know in the comments below!

Until then, safe journeys, safe sailing, and happy reading!

In His Own Words: Kinky Friedman

Richard “Kinky” Friedman died June 27, at the age of 79. Beloved Texas icon, author, songwriter, tequila pitchman, and gubernatorial candidate, Friedman was born in Chicago in 1944 but moved to the Houston area the next year with his family. Nicknamed “Kinky” due to his curly hair, he formed the band Kinky Friedman and the Texas Jewboys in 1973. That same year their song “Sold American” hit the charts when it was covered by Glen Campbell. He was also a prolific author, writing a mystery series that starred a fictional version of the author as a detective. In addition, he was a contributor to Texas Monthly, writing a humor column titled the Last Roundup from 2001-2005. In 2006 under the campaign slogan of “How Hard Could It Be?” he ran for Governor of Texas as an independent candidate. For the past twenty years, he lived on his ranch in the Texas Hill Country where he spent his last years surrounded by the Texas landscape he loved. 

For a more in-depth obituary, check out this one from Texas Monthly.

Here are the titles by Kinky Friedman in the TBP collection.

Fiction

KINKY FRIEDMAN SERIES

1-3. THREE COMPLETE MYSTERIES (DB 39624)
6. ELVIS, JESUS, & COCA COLA (DBC 14308)
7. ARMADILLOS & OLD LACE (DBC 26894)
8. GOD BLESS JOHN WAYNE (DB 45711)
9. LOVE SONG OF J. EDGAR HOOVER (DBC 26309)
10. ROADKILL (DBC 12044)
12. SPANKING WATSON (DB 51194)
13. MILE HIGH CLUB (DBC 18370)
14. STEPPIN’ ON A RAINBOW (DBC 14404)
15. MEANWHILE BACK AT THE RANCH (DBC 18282)
16. CURSE OF THE MISSING PUPPET HEAD (DBC 12055)
17. PRISONER OF VANDAM STREET (DBC 14395)
18. TEN LITTLE NEW YORKERS (DBC 11994, LB 11634)

Stand Alone Titles

CHRISTMAS PIG: A FABLE (DBC 12024)

Non-Fiction

YOU CAN LEAD A POLITICIAN TO WATER BUT YOU CAN’T MAKE HIM THINK: TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR TEXAS POLITICS (DBC 11945)

Eurovision and Other Music Competitions in Literature

By Becky

Lately, there has been a lot of talk about the Eurovision Song Contest, an internationally televised songwriting competition, organized by the European Broadcasting Union and featuring participants chosen by EBU member broadcasters to represent their countries from across Europe and beyond. For more information about Eurovision, check out their website. This made TBP wonder what types of books we have in our collection that feature song contests.

First, there is Catherynne Valente’s SPACE OPERA (DB 94674). A washed-up glam rock singer is selected to be Earth’s representative in an intergalactic music contest. The consequences could be dire—this is Earth’s chance to be declared sentient rather than be eradicated. But it’s a funny book, often described as “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy meets Eurovision.”

Next up is YEAR ZERO by Rob Reid (DB 79694). Humanity is the only species in the galaxy that can produce music—and all the others are deeply addicted to it. They’ve been listening to all our music obsessively since 1977. Unfortunately, according to intergalactic law, everyone who has been listening to our music owes royalties. Some lawyers show up on Earth to talk to an entertainment lawyer, and it turns out that they owe earthlings so much money that it might be better if our planet met with an unfortunate accident. Our entertainment lawyer has to find a way to balance their laws, our laws, who gets paid the royalties, and how to save the world.

Not all of them are science fiction, though. VIOLIN CONSPIRACY by Brendan Slocum (DB 106851) features an African American man who gets into a violin contest. He finds out shortly before it starts that his great-great grandfather’s fiddle is actually a Stradivarius. Then it is stolen on the eve of the competition, and he has to find it.

MUSIC WARS by Gordon Pape (DB 24225) is more of a cold war spy thriller. A Jewish American man enters the Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow in the mid-1980s. He has to decide whether to assist dissidents or just concentrate on the competition. There are also KGB agents, journalists doing their thing, and the competition.

In LIGHT FROM UNCOMMON STARS by Ryka Aoki (DB 105930, BR 24241), a woman makes a deal with the devil for music success. She has to deliver him seven souls and thinks she’s found her final candidate. Then she meets a retired starship captain.

Set in a New Orleans where magic is real, BALLAD OF PERILOUS GRAVES by Alex Jennings (DB 112356, BR 24787 IN PROCESS) features a main character Perilous Graves (Perry) who knows something is off. The Great Magician is seen in odd places and nine songs of power are missing—without them, the city may fall apart. And the Haint of Haints is awake (which sounds bad).

We also have titles on this topic for young adults.

In I’LL BE THE ONE by Lyla Lee (DB 103532), a young woman enters a music contest, hoping to become a K-Pop star. She encounters fatphobia and deals with fame from being on the show alongside her attraction to one of the contestants. But she must persevere if she wants to achieve her goal.

Another novel centered around K-Pop is K-POP CONFIDENTIAL by Stephan Lee (DB 115467). A Korean American teenager secretly enters a global competition to be in a girl group. She has to navigate getting permission from her strict parents to go, the strict rules of the contest, learning Korean fluently, and all the usual teenage angst and drama.

In CROOKED KIND OF PERFECT by Linda Urban (DB 66730), Zoe longs to play the piano, which she views as elegant and dignified. Instead, she plays a wheezy old organ for her parents. Then she starts practicing for the Perform-a-Rama organ competition.

One of the young adult titles features fantasy. In SOFI AND THE BONE SONG by Adrienne Tooley (DB 108276), a girl loses a music contest and sets out to prove her rival cheated by using magic. What she finds out changes everything she thought she knew about music, magic, and her rival.

It’s not all fiction. Here are some nonfiction titles about music competitions in our collection.

This is a book about a piano competition that takes place in Fort Worth, Texas: IVORY TRADE: MUSIC AND THE BUSINESS OF MUSIC AT THE VAN CLIBURN INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION by Joseph Horowitz (DB 34313).

Although it’s not about music competitions, THIS IS WHAT IT SOUNDS LIKE: WHAT THE MUSIC YOU LOVE SAYS ABOUT YOU by Dr. Susan Rogers (DB 116750) is a fascinating look at why your favorite songs move you.

If you enjoy watching or participating in music competitions, or if you’d like to try reading about them, give one of the books above a try.