Here’s a little more about our partner: Join NOVL Nation for YA exclusive sneak peeks, monthly book box giveaways, the NOVLtea talk show, and access to FREE advance copies! Brought to you by @LittleBrownYR and home to Twilight, Kingdom of the Wicked, The Inheritance Games, Folk of the Air, and your other favorite book boyfriends, @thenovl is a community of YA fans who like their worlds fantastic, their points of view diverse, and their love triangles spicy.Simply fill out the form and subscribe to The NOVL for your chance to win! Shortlisted for the 2021 Booker Prize From the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Overstory, Bewilderment features Theo Byrne, a widower trying to figure out how to be a single father to his neurodivergent son, Robin. Theo tries to find a balance between fatherhood and his job as an astrobiologist, but when Robin attacks another boy at school, his life becomes even more complicated. Edoardo Ballerini performs the audiobook with such emotional depth, making me truly attached to the characters. Shortlisted for the 2021 Booker Prize I adored Priestdaddy by Patricia Lockwood, so when she published her first novel, I knew I had to get my hands on it ASAP. Judging panels in the UK adored Lockwood’s novel too, shortlisting the novel for both the Women’s Prize and the Booker Prize. The novel starts with a woman learning to navigate social media but takes a turn when someone she loves is diagnosed with a serious illness. Kristen Sieh keeps up with Lockwood’s hilarious prose, giving this audiobook perfect comedic timing. In A Little Devil in America, Hanif Abdurraqib writes about how Black performance is a key part of America’s culture. The author examines key moments in the history of Black performances across the decades, illustrating his points with a wide variety of examples. All-star narrator JD Jackson reads this book beautifully, a perfect pairing for this text. Longlisted for the 2021 National Book Award for Fiction In this first novel from poet Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, we experience an epic story, spanning generations. Ailey has always wanted to learn more about her family’s past and embarks on a quest to find out about her ancestors, taking listeners along with her. A stellar cast of narrators gives voice to the different characters in the novel, creating a wonderfully immersive listening experience. As an Appalachian, I may be biased, but I could not have been more excited to see Brian Broome win the Kirkus Prize for Nonfiction. His memoir Punch Me Up to the Gods follows his years growing up in rural Appalachian Ohio and his eventual move to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He read the audio edition, giving that special performance that only happens when an author reads his own work. I’ve loved The Stella Prize for so many years now, but sometimes those of us in the U.S. have to wait to get our hands on the prize’s winners. Not this year! Evie Wyld won The Stella Prize for her novel The Bass Rock, which came out late last year. The novel follows three women in three different eras, slowly revealing how their stories are connected. A team of narrators perform the book, giving distinct voices to the novel’s point of view characters.

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