Welcome to Today in Books, our daily round-up of literary headlines at the intersection of politics, culture, media, and more.
Barnes & Noble’s Discover Prize Finalists
Barnes & Noble has selected the six finalists for its Discover Prize celebrating new writers. The most recent winners of this prize were The Berry Pickers by Amanda Peters (2023) and Swift River by Essie Chambers (2024 – I read it and loved it). Here are the finalists for the 2025 Prize:
Tilt by Emma Pattee: a woman nine months pregnant reflects on her life and uncertainties as she walks the wreckage of Portland, OR after a big quake, bearing witness to humanity along the way. The Artist and the Feast by Lucy Steeds: A young journalist spends time with a reclusive artist and his niece and, together, they unlock long-held secrets and new passions. Great Black Hope by Rob Franklin: Race, class, and history clash as a queer Black Stanford graduate arrested for cocaine possession wrestles with himself in his hometown of Atlanta and New York’s underworld. Maggie; or, A Man and a Woman Walk Into a Bar by Katie Yee: A woman undergoes a journey of grief and healing after learning her husband has been having an affair and that she has breast cancer; she names the tumor after the other woman. Lonely Crowds by Stephanie Wambugu: The story of a lasting but volatile friendship that forms between the child of recent immigrants to New England and a Panamanian orphan, from their years as scholarship kids at a Catholic school through their adulthood in New York’s art scene. Kaplan’s Plot by Jason Diamond: A listless, unsuccessful man returns to Chicago and, through unraveling the mystery of his gangster grandfather, opens the door to a brighter, more honest relationship with his dying mother.Congrats to all of the finalists!
Michael Crichton’s Estate v. The Pitt
Please don’t take one of my favorite shows away! I white-knuckled my way through the first season of The Pitt, following a Pittsburgh ER through the most intense shift, and was blown away. I first caught wind of a legal storm brewing over the show from my colleague and fellow armchair doctor, Vanessa, who mentioned there was some dispute about the show being a little too inspired by that other hit hospital drama, ER. I have never watched nor paid attention to ER so it was news to me that The Pitt star and creator Noah Wyle was the star of ER. Well, Michael Crichton wrote the screenplay for the ER pilot and his estate has intellectual property rights to the show. Before The Pitt became a thing, Wyle was in discussions with the Estate and Warner Bros. about an ER sequel that was on the cusp of being made before it fell apart over disagreements. Now, Sherri Crichton, the Jurassic Park author’s widow, is suing, alleging, in essence, that The Pitt is that ER sequel in thin disguise. Whoof. Read all the details here.
Scholastic to Launch Streaming Service
The publisher made famous by its book fairs has announced the launch of a streaming app for kids and families. The app will include more than 400 hours of ad-supported content from its IP catalog, including The Magic School Bus, Goosebumps, and The Baby-sitters Club. You can download the app and start streaming nostalgic content if you have Roku or Amazon Fire TV. Read more about it here.
The Bestselling Books of the Week, According to All the Lists
Who’s surprised that R.F. Kuang’s Katabasis made it on all five bestseller lists? Not I! Find all of this week’s bestselling books (and more great reads) here.
What are you reading? Let us know in the comments!