The 30 Best Mystery Thriller Books to Read in Fall 2024

There’s never a bad time of year to dive into a great mystery thriller book, but something about fall and winter—with their longer nights and sweater weather—makes them the perfect time to hunker down with a heart-racing whodunit. The best books of the genre perfectly combine a mystery and eerie tone with a puzzle so cleverly constructed that it’s almost impossible to solve before the narrator spells it all out, plus enough shocking twists and suspense to keep you on the edge of your seat the entire time.Luckily for fans of thriller books, there’s no shortage of installments in the genre, which stretches back hundreds of years to include classics from the likes of Edgar Allan Poe and Arthur Conan Doyle and spans tales of detectives, spies, and everyday citizens out for revenge. Here, we’ve rounded up 30 of the best mystery thriller books, from those iconic early entries to mid-century bestsellers from Agatha Christie to modern classics from Gillian Flynn, Liane Moriarty, and S.A. Cosby to even new novels. Consider your reading list sorted for the foreseeable future, and good luck solving! Below, find the 30 best mystery thriller books of all time.

‘And Then There Were None’ by Agatha Christie

Often regarded as the best of Christie’s 66 novels, this 1939 classic remains the best-selling mystery novel of all time. And for good reason: It’s a closed-door mystery in which several visitors to an isolated island begin dying off one by one, leaving the reader scrambling to continually reframe their hypothesis of who’s responsible (likely unsuccessfully) until the killer finally unmasks themselves at the end.

‘Before the Fall’ by Noah Hawley

Fargo showrunner Noah Hawley’s 2016 book starts with a mysterious plane crash that leaves only two survivors of the 11 passengers. From there, it flips between a real-time investigation into what, exactly, sent the plane plunging into the Atlantic Ocean and a deep-dive into the murky backstories of everyone on board—which may do a better job of explaining the crash than the technical evaluation.

‘Big Little Lies’ by Liane Moriarty

As in many of Moriarty’s complex, multi-layered mysteries, Big Little Lies starts with a crime, then jumps back in time to introduce a cast of impeccably written, deeply flawed characters, any of whom, frankly, could be guilty. As more and more details are revealed—many of which will throw a wrench into everything you thought you knew—the story slowly starts to become clearer, up until the ultra-satisfying explanation that ties everything together. Until you get to that point, though, you won’t be able to put this addictive book down.

‘The Da Vinci Code’ by Dan Brown

Perhaps no other book generated as loud or thrilling of controversy in the early 2000s as The Da Vinci Code, which was disavowed by multiple global religions while staying on the bestseller list for years. Whether you accept it as rooted in fact or a purely fictional romp, it’s still very much worth a read for the history-loving mystery buffs among us, as Harvard professor Robert Langdon races across Europe to track down the Holy Grail, competing against a pair of cult-like groups and contending with the idea that Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene may have started a still-going bloodline together. Like we said: highly controversial—and definitely worth a read.

‘Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line’ by Deepa Anappara

Deepa Anappara’s award-winning 2020 debut novel spans genres, from mystery thriller to coming-of-age story to sharp societal satire. It follows a police show-obsessed young boy in the slums of a fictional Indian city who embarks on an investigation into the disappearance of one of his classmates since the police are no help. It’s a quest that becomes increasingly dangerous as even more kids go missing.

‘Eight Perfect Murders’ by Peter Swanson

In a very meta twist, Swanson’s 2020 book pays homage to several other iconic murder mysteries from literary history, including some titles and authors featured on this very list. Years after a bookseller makes a list of eight nearly unsolvable “perfect murders,” an FBI agent informs him that a serial killer appears to be working their way through the list and asks for his help in tracking down the killer before it’s too late.

‘The Flight Attendant’ by Chris Bohjalian

The “unreliable narrator” in this 2018 novel is unreliable even to herself: Cassandra is a flight attendant with a penchant for drinking too much who wakes up hungover during a layover in Dubai with a dead body next to her. She then has to assume the role of detective in her own life, parsing through her foggy memories to figure out who the killer is—even if it turns out to be her.

‘The Girl on the Train’ by Paula Hawkins

Gone Girl’s impact is on full display in this 2015 thriller, with its title overlap and unlikeable, un-trustable female narrators. The titular character is Rachel, a divorcée whose struggles with an alcohol addiction make an already confusing situation even more so when her life becomes inexplicably intertwined with those of two other women, one of whom suddenly goes missing one day, making everyone—even Rachel herself—a suspect.

‘The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo’ by Stieg Larsson

The original title of this Swedish book translates to “Men Who Hate Women,” and that’s very much a theme throughout the 2005 bestseller. It sees journalist Mikael Blomkvist teaming up with antisocial hacker Lisbeth Salander to crack the decades-old case of a young woman’s murder, leading them to dive into the increasingly creepy history of the girl’s own extended family. For as triumphant as their team-up is, as that original title suggests, there are some extremely disturbing scenes in this book; major content warning for graphic sexual violence.

‘Gone Girl’ by Gillian Flynn

This 2012 blockbuster bestseller breathed new life into the mystery thriller genre, sparking a long line of breathtakingly twisty books with “Girl” in the title and unreliable narrators at the helm. Without giving too much away, the story opens with a wife missing and a husband acting incredibly suspicious—and you’ll want to buckle in for everything that unfolds after that.

‘The Hunting Party’ by Lucy Foley

Foley has a knack for writing closed-door mysteries that are so confounding and feature interconnected webs of characters so tangly, that you’ll suspect every person on the page before the culprit is finally revealed. That’ll certainly be the case when you read this one, in which a group of old friends gather at an isolated Scottish estate for a holiday reunion already tense enough before one ends up dead on New Year’s Day.

‘In a Dark, Dark Wood’ by Ruth Ware

This one verges into the horror realm, as it’s so unsettlingly creepy that you may not sleep well until the mystery at its heart has been tied up. To avoid any spoilers, all we’ll say is that somebody is killed in a cabin located deep in the woods, where a group of longtime friends have gathered for a bachelorette party and takes our protagonist’s diving decades back in time to finally figure out how everything went so wrong in the present day.

‘In the Woods’ by Tana French

You’ll be thinking about the ending of this novel—the first in Tana French’s Dublin Murder Squad series—for a long time after it’s over. In it, two members of the squad are assigned to find the killer of a young girl, a case further complicated by one of the detectives’ mysterious history at the same location.

‘Lady in the Lake’ by Laura Lippman

To build out her suspense-filled story of two murders in Baltimore in the 1960s, Lippman took inspiration from the real-life unrelated deaths of a young Jewish girl and a Black woman in her 30s during that time in the city. Her resulting book has been hailed for how it tackles both the racism and the misogyny of the time, as its protagonist, a bored housewife and aspiring journalist, begins investigating the pair of mysterious murders.

‘Magpie Murders’ by Anthony Horowitz

With its book-within-a-book structure, Magpie Murders is a special treat for mystery thriller lovers everywhere: double the puzzles! The main story follows an editor tasked with reading through the latest detective novel from a bestselling author. However, as she works through the book, a mystery escalates in the real world with both stories becoming increasingly intertwined.

‘The Maid’ by Nita Prose

Another simultaneously cozy and suspense-filled story, The Maid follows an idiosyncratic young woman working—you guessed it—as a maid in a hotel when she discovers a dead body in one of the guest rooms. She soon becomes tangled up in the investigation into the man’s murder, with her unique voice, world outlook, and quirky group of friends proving to be an unexpected asset to and refreshing break from the stiflingly unimaginative approach of the police on the case.

‘The Maltese Falcon’ by Dashiell Hammett

This 1930 classic—which was further immortalized in the acclaimed film noir starring Humphrey Bogart as private detective Sam Spade—is often considered one of the best of the best mystery novels of all time. In it, Spade is hired by a duplicitous woman to hunt down a valuable statuette of a falcon, a task that pits him against a cast of criminals and finds him tangled up in a complex web of lies and deception.

‘The Murders in the Rue Morgue’ by Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe is often credited with kicking off the modern mystery genre with this 1841 short story. It details the work of a detective, C. Auguste Dupin, as he susses out the culprit in the disturbing murders of a mother and daughter in Paris. Not only is the mystery a delightfully twisty one, but the story is also an interesting read for longtime mystery thriller fans. You’ll see how it set the stage for many of the genre conventions that carry on to this day—from a clever detective who regularly outwits the police to a faithful sidekick who documents all his triumphant works to a locked-room mystery and a thorough explanation of the culprit’s motive and method after they’ve been revealed.

‘The Other American’ by Laila Lalami

Lalami’s 2019 novel was a finalist for the National Book Award for Fiction, and rightfully so. It centers upon the hit-and-run murder of a Moroccan immigrant, switching between an interconnected cast of nine characters from all different races, religions, and class backgrounds to parse through the often-tense circumstances that led up to Driss Guerraoui’s death.

‘The Other Black Girl’ by Zakiya Dalila Harris

Zakiya Dalila Harris has cited a range of works as varied as Get Out, Kindred, and The Stepford Wives as influences on her 2021 debut novel, which tells the story of Nella, the only Black employee at her publishing house until the arrival of Hazel-May. Though Nella’s originally glad to have an ally in the office, it’s not long after Hazel-May’s arrival that creepy things start happening to Nella, leading her to dig into some truly horrific history that seems to be repeating itself.

‘Razorblade Tears’ by S.A. Cosby

Cosby’s 2021 novel is as much a whodunit as it is a powerful social commentary on racism, homophobia, and other issues. In it, two fathers—both ex-cons, one Black and one white—team up to find and get revenge on whoever murdered their sons, a quest that proves to be more powerful than their longstanding prejudices against each other and against their sons, who were married with a baby together.

‘Rebecca’ by Daphne du Maurier

This 1938 novel remains perfectly creepy and intriguing to this day. It’s almost impossible not to get swept up in the tale told by our unnamed narrator, who’s just married a man seemingly still hung up on his deceased first wife. It’s not until the end that we learn the shocking truth of what happened at the grand Manderley estate all those years ago.

‘The Secret History’ by Donna Tartt

In a stellar example of the mind-bending “inverted” mystery style, Tartt’s 1992 debut starts with a vague description of a college student’s death before heading back to the start of the school year to dive into the wild series of events that led up to the climactic moment. You won’t be able to get the sharply written, perfectly distinct six main characters—an eccentric clique on a small college campus—out of your head long after the story’s over.

‘The Silent Patient’ by Alex Michaelides

This is another one of those books so twisty that you might need to take a minute to process the big reveal—or even start over from the beginning. The Silent Patient is narrated by a therapist who’s been assigned a famous artist who’s gone mute after killing her husband as her new patient. Set aside a few hours when you start this one, because there’s no way you’ll be able to put this suspense-filled book down before you’re through.

‘Sometimes I Lie’ by Alice Feeney

Alice Feeney hit it big in 2022 with Daisy Darker, another great and particularly spooky mystery thriller, but Sometimes I Lie, her first book, might be her absolute best. It follows Amber, a woman who’s lying conscious but completely paralyzed in a hospital room, as she recalls the events that led her there, interspersed with excerpts from a decades-old diary. The main story is incredibly well-written and unsettling enough, but add some particularly massive twists, and you’ll be left questioning everything you thought you knew.

‘A Study in Scarlet’ by Arthur Conan Doyle

No list of mystery novels would be complete without an appearance from Sherlock Holmes. This 1887 book marks the iconic detective’s debut, in which he and Dr. Watson first meet and then promptly begin investigating the murder of an American man in London. Interestingly, the killer is revealed by the end of the novel’s first part, after which Part II builds out the fascinating backstory behind the killer’s actions, leading up to the crime itself. It concludes with Watson committing to putting all of Holmes’ successfully cracked cases down on paper, setting up the guiding structure of dozens more of Doyle’s detective stories.

‘The Thursday Murder Club’ by Richard Osman

It may seem oxymoronic to call a mystery thriller heartwarming, but this one—along with its follow-ups in Osman’s bestselling series—surely fits the bill. While there’s certainly a complex and twisty puzzle at its core, the real draw of the story comes from its hilariously quirky cast of characters, a squadron of senior citizens who take up digging into cold cases as a casual hobby at their retirement community, and all too often find themselves facing down fresher murder cases in the process.

‘Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy’ by John le Carré

As a former spy, John Le Carré brought an exhilarating sense of reality to his more than two dozen widely lauded espionage novels. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, published in 1974, is one of his best-known and best-regarded, following spymaster George Smiley as he unravels a confusing conspiracy to place a Soviet mole within the U.K.’s MI6.

‘When No One Is Watching’ by Alyssa Cole

Another skin-crawlingly creepy thriller with a healthy dose of social commentary baked in, Cole’s 2020 novel casts gentrification in an especially spooky new light. It follows Sydney, who sees her Brooklyn neighborhood’s history being bulldozed away and begins having strange experiences, prompting her to investigate, only to uncover a scheme even more horrific than regular old gentrification.

‘Wrong Place Wrong Time’ by Gillian McAllister

In a fresh take on the inverted mystery style, rather than having her characters walk back through the events leading up to a shocking murder via memories or diaries, McAllister sends her protagonist traveling through time. In each chapter, Jen wakes up to a morning she’s already lived—days, weeks, or even months before the last—and ends up in a race against time to figure out why, in the present, she witnessed her teenage son seemingly stabbing a total stranger in the middle of the night. Every step back in time brings a new twist, making reading this book a lot like peeling back the layers of a very mysterious, very thrilling onion.

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‘World’s largest FSRU operator’ going in hot pursuit of greener ops with Wärtsilä’s reliquefaction retrofit as USA racks its brain on bridging the gap for gas project reviews

Wärtsilä Gas Solutions, part of Finland’s technology group Wärtsilä, is helping U.S. offshore gas players future-proof their energy infrastructure with its reliquefaction systems, which it will deliver for retrofit and installation onboard a floating storage regasification unit (FSRU), owned by the U.S.-based Excelerate Energy, a liquefied natural gas (LNG) giant with a full range of flexible regasification services spanning from floating storage regasification units (FSRUs) to infrastructure development and LNG supply.Excelerate Energy’s FSRU; Source: Excelerate Energy

Wärtsilä, which considers Excelerate Energy to be “the world’s largest FSRU operator,” will supply its reliquefaction systems for retrofit installation onboard the U.S. firm’s FSRU, enabling the Texas-headquartered player to clean up its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction act by improving the environmental footprint of its floating gas vessels’ operations.

Walter Reggente, VP of Wärtsilä Gas Solutions, commented: “As a market leader in types of cryogenic gas applications, Wärtsilä Gas Solutions has demonstrated to the market for many years that we have the technology to contribute to greener shipping operations. We are, of course, very proud to be partnering with an industry-leader such as Excelerate Energy, which is a strong testament to our capabilities in delivering quality, commercial value and environmental benefits to our clients.”

The order, expected to be booked by the Finnish player in Q4 2024 at the latest, is for the Compact Reliq Double units, based on the reversed Brayton cycle technology, and designed to reliquefy boil-off gas and return it to the cargo tanks, thus, eliminating emissions and saving cargo at the same time. In addition, the system is fitted with new technology and applications to minimize maintenance and operational costs for the operator.

David Liner, COO at Excelerate Energy, highlighted: “We are committed to reducing the environmental footprint in all our operations, and this project is a substantial part of that commitment. We are very pleased to partner up with Wärtsilä Gas Solutions for this project, as their unmatched experience in reliquefaction systems, state-of-the-art technology, and all-round project engineering capabilities make them the ideal partner for us.”

While the agreement with Wärtsilä will enable the U.S. company to purchase the former’s reliquefaction system for retrofit installation onboard one of its FSRUs, the firm has elaborated that the equipment will be available to be installed on any of its existing vessels based on customer demand or for prospective LNG projects.

The delivery of the Finnish player’s equipment is slated to start in early 2026, empowering further Excelerate’s mission of changing the way the world accesses cleaner forms of energy by providing integrated services along the LNG value chain to deliver rapid-to-market and reliable LNG solutions,

In line with this, Excelerate Energy recently signed a term sheet with ITECO Joint Stock Company, a Vietnamese private development firm, to co-develop a greenfield LNG import terminal in Haiphong, Vietnam. With an import capacity of 1.2 million tonnes per annum (mtpa), the Northern Vietnam LNG terminal (NVLT), will be constructed in two phases.

While the first project stage, with an estimated capacity of 0.7 mtpa, is expected to start operations in 2027, the project development is still subject to the execution of definitive agreements, regulatory approvals, and the satisfaction of other conditions. The main objective of the terminal is to enhance energy infrastructure in northern Vietnam by catering to the region’s energy needs.

Aside from the deal in Vietnam, Excelerate’s 138,000-cbm FSRU is scheduled to service Germany’s Wilhelmshaven 2 LNG terminal, where it will be moored at a new island jetty in northwestern’ Germany’s Jade Bay in late 2024. Natural gas vaporized at the unit will be sent to shore via ECOnnect Energy’s IQuay F-Class System and fed into the Open Grid Europe (OGE) gas grid.

Rethink on FERC’s mind for gas infrastructure projects

Excelerate Energy’s retrofit project comes when the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) is mulling over a potential change for gas infrastructure project reviews in light of recent court rulings. As multiple energy players’ differing proposals for handling environmental reviews of natural gas projects through the lens of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) thrust a widening gap into the limelight over the way the U.S. government tackles such reviews, FERC is at a crossroads as it weights the best way forward, which has the potential to set a precedent for the way the agency will apply the environmental law to the evaluation and oversight of natural gas and LNG projects.

Some developers have been trying to convince the FERC to step aside by claiming that proposals for LNG infrastructure are outside its jurisdiction, which would cause an uproar in the LNG review process, likely resulting in another permitting freeze despite the growing push the Biden administration is getting from the energy industry to unleash U.S. LNG exports to Europe and its allies as a way to assist in strengthening the global energy security and bolster U.S. economy by reaping the benefits of the LNG demand boom.

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Ever since a Trump-era rule relieved the Department of Energy (DOE) from having to undertake the NEPA reviews for proposed LNG projects to avoid duplication of FERC’s review steps, the battle has been raging between those who want to keep things as they are and those that want a greater NEPA oversight to ensure no projects will slip through the cracks due to loopholes that are perceived to be part of the federal agency’s current review process.

Given the rise in state and federal policies revolving around climate change and a transition to clean energy, FERC is being urged to give real weight to the green wave sweeping over the energy industry before it grants certificates for the construction and operation of interstate natural gas pipelines and LNG projects. Aside from prompts to maintain the energy industry’s regulatory certainty, the heat is being turned up on FERC to fortify the agency’s environmental oversight of gas projects.

The Biden administration continues pushing climate change to the forefront of energy policies to become a focal point of many aspects of its domestic and international agenda. FERC, as an independent federal regulatory agency, has been doing its business as usual until lawsuits started to pile up as opponents of fossil fuels saw their chance to stop further gas infrastructure buildout even for projects already in the construction phase.

These sentiments have now put FERC in a tricky situation, as it finds itself at the center of ongoing debates over America’s energy policies and whether or not greenhouse gas emissions need to be considered before a project can get the green light to proceed. One of FERC’s reauthorizations the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit revoked was for NextDecade’s Rio Grande LNG export project, consisting of the Rio Grande terminal and Rio Bravo pipeline.

The developer underlined that global energy security could be jeopardized if the court’s decision is upheld, since Rio Grande LNG’s long-term supply capacity totals almost 6% of the current global supply. The ruling could also compromise other infrastructure projects through a precedent inviting courts to upset federal permits.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit Court axed in July FERC’s approval of Transcontinental Gas Pipeline’s almost $1 billion regional energy access expansion project because the commission allegedly did not adequately review the pipeline’s potential greenhouse gas emissions and questioned whether the U.S. federal agency properly considered the public interest of the pipeline that would boost Transco’s capacity by up to 829,000 Dt/d to serve about 3 million customers.

While Willie Phillips, FERC’s Chairman, pointed out during the commission’s monthly meeting last week that the court made a mistake in vacating the pipeline approval, he also underlined the recent string of court rulings vacating project approvals would force FERC to rethink its pipeline and LNG reviews.

While the approval of Commonwealth LNG’s proposed plant in Cameron Parish was remanded and returned to FERC to reevaluate it to entail climate impacts, the court also ordered the federal regulatory agency to prepare new environmental analyses for NextDecade’s Rio Grande LNG and Glenfarne Energy Transitio’s Texas LNG projects.

As a result, FERC does not expect to be done with the new environmental impact assessments and potentially reissue permits until the end of 2025, which means that the existing timelines for these projects will need to be pushed back. Phillips labeled the latest bundle of court’s rulings against planned LNG infrastructure projects as “a shift in the legal landscape,” since the court’s earlier decisions looked favorably on reissued permits.

While underscoring that “court’s decision is the law,” alongside the federal agency’s commitment to “do what the court told us to do,” Phillips underlined the desire to see FERC conduct its work in a “bipartisan, legally durable way” to handle the court’s concerns in all three gas project, and in future certificate decisions.

A joint venture between Technip Energies and KBR has been hired to repurpose a liquefied natural gas import and regasification terminal, located on Louisiana’s Gulf Coast, into what has been envisioned to become one of the largest LNG facilities in the United States.

FERC’s move to amend its 1999 pipeline policy for the first time two years ago was driven by global energy security concerns prompted by shifts in the availability of energy supply, price changes for U.S. energy resources, and rising concerns over climate impacts of new natural gas infrastructure, in combination with a series of adverse court decisions for the federal agency regarding its assessment of the need for more gas projects and impacts these projects would have on the environment and climate change.

Many have criticized this policy change as it comes with the potential to expand FERC’s ability to address concerns associated with new energy infrastructure from the courts and the public, thus, it even faced strong dissent from two of the federal agency’s commissioners alongside vocal opposition from industry and members of Congress, prompting FERC yet again to reconsider its new policy.

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Today we blockaded @FERC for 1.5 hours and disrupted the meeting 15 times! A large rally with frontline folks from the Gulf outlined that despite DC Circuit Court of Appeals vacating several FERC permits- LNG projects continue. Is FERC and the fossil fuel industry above the law? pic.twitter.com/w3IN45Y8Jn— BeyondExtremeEnergy (@BXEAction) September 19, 2024

This attempt at changing the status quo showed without doubt that any actual energy policy reforms would be contested and hard to implement regardless of their duration. Big Oil and proponents of more oil and gas projects, especially LNG, will continue to clash with those who want to phase out fossil fuels and bolster renewable and clean energy development.

Tracy Carluccio, Deputy Director of Delaware Riverkeeper Network, warned: “There’s a huge, gaping hole in the review of natural gas infrastructure. There could be many projects that completely evade FERC reviews and NEPA reviews.”

Therefore, the pressure is mounting on FERC from both sides to change its ways. While some want to fast-track approval for gas and LNG infrastructure projects, others want to do the same for renewables and hand out a massive bundle of rejections to proposed fossil fuel developments.

These are urging the federal agency to start evaluating the project’s need for natural gas infrastructure by keeping net zero targets firmly in sight, as the age of climate change continues to wreak havoc worldwide, including in America.

There is also a third group, which advocates the pursuit of a balancing act by calling for more oil, gas, and LNG projects, along with renewables and other low-carbon, and green energies to ensure energy security of the U.S. and its allies will not be compromised in the wake of escalating geopolitical tensions.

Rumaan Alam’s new book ‘Entitlement’ shows the haunted trappings of wealth

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Profile shot of Rumann Alam
Profile shot of Rumann Alam
David A. Land
“It’s very, very hard to resist seeing things in dollar value. In fact, I would argue, and I think the book argues this, it is almost impossible.”Bestselling author Rumaan Alam is happy to promote his new novel Entitlement (September 17). “I spend all of my time in this room hunched over this very computer, it’s nice to have an opportunity to exist outside of that.” After the massive success of his last book, Leave the World Behind, Alam is now focusing on money. “We valorized the rich, and by the same token, one must logically admit that we disregard the poor.” Entitlement follows Brooke as she navigates the world of the megarich. “You can’t help engaging or understanding yourself and your accomplishments in American life via money.” Set in the not-too-distant past, the novel says a lot about where we are now and how we got here. “[Michael] Bloomberg as mayor was a fascinating cultural turn. It was the point at which we accepted if you are rich, maybe you know how to do something better. Which is obviously, on the face of it, ridiculous…the end result of that is Donald Trump. Somebody who is not gifted at anything, but feels like he presents himself like he is by virtue of his wealth.”
SUBSCRIBE TO THE PARTING SHOT WITH H. ALAN SCOTTON APPLE PODCASTS OR SPOTIFYEditor’s Note: This conversation has been edited and condensed for publication. How does it feel to have a book coming out that people are genuinely excited to read?Well, I wouldn’t know, because I refuse to allow myself to believe that. There are two muscles that are so important in this, one is the writing and one is the publishing. And, in a way, one has nothing to do with the other. Maybe muscle is not a good metaphor, because muscles all work cohesively. But I do think they’re like two separate endeavors. And the moment that I’m in now, which is about publishing rather than writing, I hold it at some distance for myself, because I just think you’re better off doing that. There’s an imperative to be able to have a conversation like what I’m having with you, or just to be able to talk to booksellers or bookstore audiences, about what you’ve done. But I have to remember that as distinct from what the real job is, this part is just the fun part and the public, outside part. And I think it’s good. I think it’s useful to have this experience every couple of years when you’re publishing a book. I spend all of my time here in this room hunched over this very computer, it’s nice to have an opportunity to exist outside of that, but that’s a different person. It’s a different thing that’s happening to a different part of my psyche. I try not to think too much about the theoretical readers, which I certainly don’t take any of that stuff for granted, because publishing a book is competitive.What inspired you to write Entitlement?It’s a book about money. That’s a subject that’s always interested me as a reader. It’s a subject that has always seemed very rich to me as a writer, and it’s a subject that, as a middle-class person, which is what the book is arguing, you can’t help engaging with it. You can’t help engaging or understanding yourself and your accomplishments in American life via money. And you can feel, at its extreme, like a loser if you don’t own a home, for example. Even though you’re participating in and in some ways victim to an economic system that is so different from the one that our grandparents would have lived under, in which homeownership is really a nebulous and vague promise for most of our peers, right? So you are caught in these contradictions, and even though, like most normal people, I think would say, “Oh, money can’t buy happiness.” “Money doesn’t matter,” all of these things. You also have to acknowledge that that’s not really true, and that money can buy happiness, it can preserve health, it can provide access to education, can provide opportunity, and those are things that are profoundly enriching and make you really happy. So what are you supposed to do with that particular disconnect? With that particular dissonance? How do you go forward? We valorized the rich in this society, and by the same token, one must logically admit that we disregard the poor and that there is some moral value. You live in Los Angeles, I live in New York, there’s no shortage of people in real crisis, real deprivation on the streets. You look at those people, like most normal people, you do not walk around thinking these people are garbage, these people are trash, whatever. That’s not what you think. At the same time, there is some message inside of you that is, these people have not worked hard, have squandered some opportunity, they are ill, whatever, all of which may be true, but is a whole other idea apart from what I’m describing, which is that money has assumed this role as value. It’s very, very hard to resist seeing things in dollar value. In fact, I would argue, and I think the book argues this, it is almost impossible.What about this time period really inspired you?First of all, I got to avoid writing about the pandemic or Trump, which are subjects I was not interested in exploring. But when you write about the recent past, what it does is, it feels legible to you, right? Like you were like, I was in New York at that time. I know what songs were on the radio. I know what I cared about. I know what was interesting, and you know how the story concludes, or you know what happens next in the timeline of the book. But they [the characters] don’t know what is coming. And that tension adds something, I think, to the reading experience. I wanted to write a pre-pandemic book in part because I wanted to write about this New York that I am now nostalgic for, in which there were lots of people on the subway in the morning, or you could go to a restaurant [at any time]. Restaurants close really early now, it’s really weird. I remember an experience in New York City where you could just go to a restaurant and get a table at 10 or 11. That’s no longer the case. You almost have to have a reservation. You kind of have to go at seven or eight, which is fine. I’m an old man, I like to eat dinner at seven o’clock, but sometimes you go to a play and you get out of the play and you’re like, “It’s 11 p.m. let’s go to dinner.” And it’s very weird to be in New York City like, “Wow, there’s nothing open. There’s nowhere to go.” It’s a bummer. So I was sort of trying to capture that New York.The economy is also part of it during this time period, around Occupy Wall Street, the economic crash, etc. I think that’s going to be relatable to a lot of people out of New York City.In retrospect, I think that Bloomberg as mayor was a fascinating cultural turn. It was the point at which we accepted, the electorate seemed to accept, the mass seemed to accept that if you are rich, maybe you know how to do something better, right? Which is obviously, on the face of it, ridiculous. Bloomberg, he knew how to run an organization, so he ran New York City like an organization. You have to give him that he was self-made, whatever we mean by self-made. He wasn’t really, no one is, but anyway, the end result of that is Donald Trump. Somebody who is not gifted at anything, but feels like he presents himself like he is by virtue of his wealth. Or Elon Musk, similar thing. Elon Musk is not like some great inventor, he’s an acquirer of companies. It’s all like based on happenstance. But I mean, he has people who passionately care about him because he’s rich, which is not a personality trait. It’s not anything. It’s not really something to admire. But we, culturally, we do valorize the very rich, we really do. And it’s kind of strange. I’m trying to think of all the billionaires I like, and none of them are that interesting.Is Martha Stewart a billionaire? I think she’s great.Yeah, I like Martha Stewart. I like Oprah [Winfrey]. Oprah’s a good one. But actually, Martha and Oprah are both interesting counters to what I’m describing. Both women, one must notice, who took a very personal thing and spun it into money, and their femininity and Oprah’s Blackness are an essential part of their approach to the discharge of their power. Which is not salient for Michael Bloomberg and not really salient for the billionaire in my novel.How much of yourself do you add to characters in your work?I am not the person to ask that question. You should really ask my husband. When he reads my work, he’s always says, “Oh, this is just you.” He says that of all the people, everyone in the book is just me. And that is interesting, because it’s probably true, because that’s the tool you have, the self, right? I’m not a Black woman [like the protagonist in his novel], so she’s not me in a literal sense, and also she’s not real. So of course, she’s not me, but a lot of what she describes thinking and feeling is stuff that feels familiar to me. I’m not crazy, and there’s a question in the book about her psychic stability. She has an experience where she gets provoked by somebody’s dog. I’m often provoked by people’s dogs. I was at the beach on Tuesday—beautiful, quiet day at the beach, only me and my husband, and this woman’s gigantic wet dog ran onto our blanket. And she was just like, “Oh, he’s friendly.” And I was like, “Get it the f**k away from me. What are you talking about? I don’t care if he’s friendly. He could be Snoopy, I don’t want him on my stuff. Like, what’s the matter with you?” I didn’t attack this woman, but still. I think you cannot help endow people on a page with things that you’re interested in, or things that you do, or things that you say, or things that feel familiar to you. I can’t help it anyway.What do you read while you’re working?When I was writing my first book, I was really afraid of being too closely influenced, so I didn’t read anything for the period in which I was really intensely writing the book, and that made me feel really weird, because I’m such a reader. I felt so untethered from everything. I think now I kind of understand the impulses as distinct. Of course, what I’m reading is the fuel and engine, right? And so I can’t help but in turn to some extent metabolizing what I’m reading, and that works effect on the finished book that I happen to be writing is hard to say, but I no longer worry too much about it. So I just read. I read a fair amount of stuff that I might be reviewing. I read a fair amount of stuff that I might be reading to blurb or as a favor to a friend, or because I’ve traded work with a friend. So I read in that way, yeah. But then I also just read for kicks. I read a lot of Phillip Roth the summer I was writing this book.I mean, I can’t imagine not reading. It’s my default. It’s just what I do. I get angry when I can’t or feel like I’m not reading enough.What I’m always in pursuit of as a reader is a fiction that takes me out of the self. I spent all day being myself, and then I get into bed at night and then I’m inside of something else. That’s almost like a magic trick to me. I can’t believe that books can do that. And that’s what I want in a book. I always tell my kids, bring a book. Get a book. You’re gonna be bored at this party, bring a book. I have so many memories of being utterly bored out of my skull as a child. And then I just would have a book. And it’s like it didn’t matter. My parents would take me to some stupid party, and I would sit in the car and read my book.Your last book was huge. It was even made into a movie. Does that add any pressure to this book?I should probably feel more panic than I do, but it’s not profitable to think about it. It’s so unlikely that I will be able to replicate that particular experience, that particular success, and in some ways that should not be my ambition. And it’s not my ambition. That was a thing that happened to that one specific book, and it’s incredible that it happened, and it’s incredible that Sam Esmail wanted to make a movie. It’s incredible that he actually got the movie made. It’s incredible that the movie is good. It’s incredible that Julia Roberts is in it. It’s incredible that Mahershala Ali is in it. All of these things are very, very hard to believe, and all of them are completely outside of my control. All I can do is appreciate that that’s what happened, and know that that’s not what’s going to happen with this book. It’s just not, it’s not like that. It isn’t like that for most people, I suppose, even Julia Roberts herself, right? Like she could make a movie that makes hundreds of millions of dollars, makes another one, wins an Oscar, makes another one, and then makes one that is more minor. You can’t operate at that level at all times, and you shouldn’t actually aspire to because ultimately, it’s the work that suffers if you’re always living in this high. I should probably feel more stressed, but I’m just gonna choose not to.What are you reading now that you’re loving?First of all, no one’s ever gonna run out of things to read. And no one, in my opinion, should feel embarrassed or abashed about things that they haven’t read. There’s just like a such a huge list of classics that no one can really say they’ve read them all. And so I’ve been sort of enjoying reading into the canon and reminding myself that the books when you’re 15 that you’re assigned to read, or whatever, that you think are boring or dry or 100 years old and have nothing to hold, I’ve been enjoying discovering the extent to which that’s not true. That a book like East of Eden, which I read earlier this summer, which is a century old, has a lot to say even now, which is why it is a classic. And to find that is so surprising. And so I’ve had a really weirdly fun time reading the classics, which is such a weird answer, and also sort of a troubling answer, because then what you’re doing is reading a lot of books by white guys. Because, they got to decide what the classics were going to be, and that’s what they decided. But so I read a book by Sinclair Lewis, American Nobel laureate. Nobody really, I don’t think, really talks about Sinclair Lewis at all anymore, but he wrote this book called Main Street that was his big, big book. Big commercial hit. And it’s a big fat book, and it is so good, oh, and so funny. A really funny book about the collision between idealism and reality, and between the collision of liberalism and reality. It’s a really funny book about America. And the way reading is taught, or the way it was taught, at least when I was in high school, would have done a disservice by you. The teachers are asking you to read like, Thomas Hardy or Willa Cather, and you’re 15, and you’re like, I just want to make out with a boy. I don’t want to read this boring book about covered wagons or whatever. It’s only when you’re older, I think, or have more of a grounding and reading that you’re able to understand that Thomas Hardy or Willa Cather or Sinclair Lewis can talk to you across the distance of a century. And so I would say surprise yourself by rereading something you were forced to read in high school that you thought you hated.
About the writer

H. Alan Scott

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A writer/comedian based in Los Angeles. Host of the weekly podcast Parting Shot with H. Alan Scott, every week H. Alan is joined by a different celebrity. Past guests include Tom Hanks, Keke Palmer, Melissa McCarthy, Michelle Yeoh, Jeff Probst, Tiffany Haddish, Jamie Lee Curtis, Idris Elba, Bette Midler, and many more. He also writes the Parting Shot portion of the magazine, the iconic last page of every issue. Subscribe to H. Alan’s For the Culture newsletter, everything you need to know in pop culture delivered to your inbox every Tuesday and Thursday. H. Alan has previously appeared on The Jimmy Kimmel Show, Ellen, CNN, MTV, and has published work in Esquire, OUT Magazine and VICE. Follow him @HAlanScott. 
A writer/comedian based in Los Angeles. Host of the weekly podcast Parting Shot with H. Alan Scott, …
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Chinese publishers shine at Indonesia International Book Fair

People visit the booth of China Publication during the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair at Jakarta Convention Center in Jakarta, Indonesia, Sept. 25, 2024. A delegation of Chinese publishers on Wednesday showcased more than 700 volumes of premium Chinese books at the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair (IIBF), held from Sept. 25-29 in Jakarta. Organized by China National Sci-Tech Information Import & Export Co., Ltd, the collection featured over 400 types of books, covering topics such as traditional Chinese culture, Mandarin learning, literature, social sciences, children’s books, and traditional Chinese medicine. (Xinhua/Xu Qin)JAKARTA, Sept. 25 (Xinhua) — A delegation of Chinese publishers on Wednesday showcased more than 700 volumes of premium Chinese books at the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair (IIBF), held from Sept. 25-29 in Jakarta.Organized by China National Sci-Tech Information Import & Export Co., Ltd, the collection featured over 400 types of books, covering topics such as traditional Chinese culture, Mandarin learning, literature, social sciences, children’s books, and traditional Chinese medicine.The delegation set up a digital reading stand showcasing Chinese history, culture, and advancements in fields like economics and ecology. The stand’s interactive photo feature allowed visitors to capture memorable moments.A highlight of the event was a signing ceremony between China’s publisher Higher Education Press and Indonesia’s PT Legacy Utama Kreasindo, which secured the Indonesian language rights for “Experiencing Chinese for Primary Schools (International Version).” This comprehensive series, designed for overseas elementary students, will be published in Indonesia later this year.IIBF Chairperson Wedha Stratesti remarked that the 2024 event, featuring publishers from 15 countries, represents a milestone for the fair. ■Dancers perform during the opening ceremony of the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair at Jakarta Convention Center in Jakarta, Indonesia, Sept. 25, 2024. A delegation of Chinese publishers on Wednesday showcased more than 700 volumes of premium Chinese books at the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair (IIBF), held from Sept. 25-29 in Jakarta.Organized by China National Sci-Tech Information Import & Export Co., Ltd, the collection featured over 400 types of books, covering topics such as traditional Chinese culture, Mandarin learning, literature, social sciences, children’s books, and traditional Chinese medicine. (Xinhua/Xu Qin)Children pose for photos in front of People’s Daily’s digital bulletin board at the booth of China Publication during the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair at Jakarta Convention Center in Jakarta, Indonesia, Sept. 25, 2024. A delegation of Chinese publishers on Wednesday showcased more than 700 volumes of premium Chinese books at the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair (IIBF), held from Sept. 25-29 in Jakarta.Organized by China National Sci-Tech Information Import & Export Co., Ltd, the collection featured over 400 types of books, covering topics such as traditional Chinese culture, Mandarin learning, literature, social sciences, children’s books, and traditional Chinese medicine. (Xinhua/Xu Qin)Children look at a Chinese book at the booth of China Publication during the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair at Jakarta Convention Center in Jakarta, Indonesia, Sept. 25, 2024. A delegation of Chinese publishers on Wednesday showcased more than 700 volumes of premium Chinese books at the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair (IIBF), held from Sept. 25-29 in Jakarta.Organized by China National Sci-Tech Information Import & Export Co., Ltd, the collection featured over 400 types of books, covering topics such as traditional Chinese culture, Mandarin learning, literature, social sciences, children’s books, and traditional Chinese medicine. (Xinhua/Xu Qin)Books are on display at the booth of China Publication during the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair at Jakarta Convention Center in Jakarta, Indonesia, Sept. 25, 2024. A delegation of Chinese publishers on Wednesday showcased more than 700 volumes of premium Chinese books at the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair (IIBF), held from Sept. 25-29 in Jakarta.Organized by China National Sci-Tech Information Import & Export Co., Ltd, the collection featured over 400 types of books, covering topics such as traditional Chinese culture, Mandarin learning, literature, social sciences, children’s books, and traditional Chinese medicine. (Xinhua/Xu Qin)Children learn about Chinese culture at the booth of China Publication during the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair at Jakarta Convention Center in Jakarta, Indonesia, Sept. 25, 2024. A delegation of Chinese publishers on Wednesday showcased more than 700 volumes of premium Chinese books at the 2024 Indonesia International Book Fair (IIBF), held from Sept. 25-29 in Jakarta.Organized by China National Sci-Tech Information Import & Export Co., Ltd, the collection featured over 400 types of books, covering topics such as traditional Chinese culture, Mandarin learning, literature, social sciences, children’s books, and traditional Chinese medicine. (Xinhua/Xu Qin)

Starting A New Business? 5 Tips To Strategically Position For Success

Starting a new business is exciting, yet challenging. While passion and a great idea are critical, they aren’t enough on their own to ensure success. If you want your business to grow, thrive, and eventually become profitable, you must strategically position yourself from the start.

The marketplace is competitive and standing out requires deliberate action.

Let’s explore key steps to help you position your new business strategically:
1. Identify a Profitable Niche
One of the most important steps when starting a business is choosing the right niche. It’s not enough to simply have a great product or service idea. You must ensure that there is demand for your offering.

You must research your target market and confirm that there is demand for your offer. Think about who the people are that you want to serve. Are they actively seeking solutions to the problem your business solves? And most importantly, will they pay for your solution?

How to find your niche:
Assess your expertise: What do you bring to the table that sets you apart? Is there a specific problem or pain point you can solve better than others?

Research the competition: Look at what others in your industry are offering. Are there gaps in the market that you could fill? When you understand your competitors, this will allow you to position your business in a different way.

Analyze demand: Use tools like Google Trends or surveys to measure demand for your product or service. Focus on finding a niche with enough demand but not so much competition that the market is saturated.

2. Define Your Unique Value Proposition (UVP)
Once you’ve found your niche, you need to clearly define your unique value proposition (UVP). This is how you stand out and differentiate yourself from your competitors and shows potential customers why they should choose you. Your UVP isn’t just about having a better product; it’s about communicating the specific value that your business offers.
Questions to answer when crafting your UVP:

What makes your offer different from the others in the market?
What problem do you solve for your customers that others can’t or won’t?
How does your solution improve your customers’ lives or businesses?

Your UVP should be at the core of your marketing, sales, and branding efforts. It’s how you show your audience the unique benefits of choosing your business over others.
3. Understand Your Ideal Customer
Understanding your ideal customer is key to crafting effective marketing strategies and growing your business. Who are you trying to reach, and what do they care about?
Knowing your audience will help you tailor your messaging, marketing channels, and even product features to align with their needs.
Steps to define your ideal customer:
Create a customer persona: This includes demographic details like age, gender, occupation, and income, as well as psychographic details like goals, challenges, and buying behavior.
Focus on pain points: What problems do your customers face that your product or service solves? The better you understand the pain they’re experiencing, the better you position your solution.
Customer research: Conduct surveys, interviews, and social media monitoring to learn directly from your audience. This real-time feedback will be invaluable for refining your messaging and product offering.
4. Focus on Building Relationships, Not Just Sales
In the early stages of a business, it’s tempting to focus solely on sales. While revenue is important, building long-lasting relationships with your customers will lead to sustainable growth.
How to build strong customer relationships:
Engage with your audience: When you respond to comments, questions, and feedback on social media it shows that you care about them.
Provide value beyond the sale: Whether through educational content, freebies, or exceptional customer service, show your customers that you care about their success.
Develop a community: Create a space where your customers can connect with you, each other and your brand. Whether through a Facebook group or a newsletter, building a community will increase loyalty.
5. Start Lean, but Plan for Growth
Many new entrepreneurs make the mistake of trying to do too much too soon. While it’s essential to have a big vision for your business, start with a lean approach to avoid wasting time and resources.
How to start lean:
Test your idea: Before fully committing, test your product or service with a small audience. Gather feedback, refine your offering, and ensure there’s demand.
Prioritize spending: Focus on investing in areas that will have the highest return, such as marketing and customer acquisition. Don’t overspend on things like office space or fancy equipment until you have steady revenue.
Be adaptable: As you grow, be prepared to pivot based on customer feedback, market conditions, and new opportunities. A flexible approach will allow you to scale more efficiently.
The bottom line is that starting a new business can feel overwhelming, but with the right strategic positioning, you can increase your chances of success. By following these tips, you’ll be well on your way to creating a sustainable and profitable business. Remember, success doesn’t happen overnight—focus on building relationships, adapting to feedback, and marketing strategically to ensure your new business thrives in the long term.

No need to ban books: 7 ways to find out what your child is reading

In honor of Banned Books Week, it’s a good time to look at ways to curate your child’s reading without taking books away from other children, something happening with increasing frequency around Florida and the country.Book bans have been surging the past couple of years, and the number of challenged books has doubled to more than 10,000 incidents nationwide according to preliminary reports from nonprofit organization PEN America. That’s compared to the surge last year, when there were more book bans in Florida — over 40% of all public school book bans — than in any other state in the 2022-2023 school year.About 8,000 of the reported book bans were in Florida and Iowa, PEN America said, largely “books featuring romance, books about women’s sexual experiences, and books about rape or sexual abuse as well as continued attacks on books with LGBTQ+ characters or themes, or books about race or racism and featuring characters of color.””I believe that censorship is the enemy of freedom,” said filmmaker and honorary Banned Books Week chair Ava DuVernay in a release. “By banning books, we deny ourselves the opportunity to learn from the past and to envision a braver future. Books have the power to open minds and build bridges. This is why certain forces do not want the masses to engage with books.”“If you’re a white kid who only sees and reads about white kids, you can get an inflated sense of how important whiteness is,” Maryland school librarian Melissa McDonald told the National Education Association.Banned Books Week:How to get your hands on free banned or challenged books in FloridaProponents say the restrictions are meant to protect children from sexually graphic and explicit stories and provide parents with control over what their children see. PEN America and other advocates claim that the growing book-banning movement is meant to erase narratives that might make white children uncomfortable while whitewashing American history.A 2023 study by the nonprofit organization First Book found that students spent more time reading after teachers added more diverse books to their classroom libraries, and reading scores improved.As a parent, it’s natural to want to make sure that the books your child is reading are suitable for their age and development level. Still, there are several ways to track and guide your children’s education without pulling books off the shelves so that no other child can see them either, even if they might benefit from them.1. Talk to your children about what they’re readingRegularly talk to your child about what they’re reading and what they think about it. If you don’t agree with parts of the book, use that as a chance to talk about why.2. Talk to your child’s teacher about what they’re readingYour child’s teacher can provide the year’s curriculum and reading list, and you can raise any objections with them about what your child will be assigned. The teacher will be able to tell you why these books were chosen and what value and perspective they bring to your kid’s education.3. Talk to librarians about book suggestionsNo one knows more about books than librarians, and they can be an invaluable resource. Librarians can recommend age-appropriate books and help you find lists and reading programs tailored to your child’s age group or make suggestions if your child is reading above their age.Florida book bans:These 5 books banned from Florida school shelves might surprise you4. Read the books yourselfThe best way to judge whether a book is suitable for your child is to read it. Each child’s development and maturity level is different and your child may be more sensitive than most, or more open to deeper themes.5. Check online reviews of booksIf you don’t have time to read yourself, websites such as Common Sense Media and Goodreads provide reviews and recommendations for books suitable for various age groups and maturity levels. Common Sense Media doesn’t shy away from telling you what potentially sensitive or even objectionable material may be in the book and you can search for suggestions using customizable content limits.Unlike sites favored by people banning books that focus on single objectionable passages to eliminate entire books, Common Sense Media also looks at positive messages, positive role models, how characters are represented, and the educational and literary value of the entire work.Banned books:Why you should read these 51 banned books now6. Talk to other parents about booksCheck with friends and neighbors, or other parents you know. You also can join online parenting forums or Facebook groups where parents discuss age-appropriate books for valuable insights and recommendations.7. See which books are winning awardsThere are multiple honors awarded for excellence in children’s literature, and they can make a good start for a parent looking for well-written, age-appropriate books. Here are a few:Newberry Medal: Every year since 1922 the Association for Library Service to Children has awarded the John Newbery Medal for Best Children’s Book of the Year. You can see a list of previous winners here.Caldecott Medal: This award, established by the American Library Association in 1938, honors artists with the Best Illustrated Children’s Book of the Year.Hans Christian Andersen Award: This international award recognizes a body of work with “lasting contribution” for writers and artists. Awarded every two years by the International Board on Books for Children since 1956.National Book Award – Young People’s Literature: This annual award, voted on by writers, chooses the best in Young People’s Literature, and Fiction, Non-Fiction, and Poetry.By staying aware and investigating the books your child is reading or is expected to read, you can actively engage with your child’s reading choices and help them discover books that are both enjoyable and suitable for their age and maturity level.

Uber, Chinese self-driving tech startup announce partnership to launch robotaxis in UAE

(Reuters) – Uber Technologies and WeRide announced a partnership on Wednesday to bring the Chinese self-driving technology firm’s vehicles to the rideshare platform, starting in the United Arab Emirates.WeRide’s first collaboration with a global ride-hailing platform will help the company expand its reach beyond China, while Uber takes another towards incorporating robotaxis into its platform.Uber expanded its partnership with Alphabet’s Waymo to bring robotaxis to Austin and Atlanta in the United States earlier this month.In August, Uber tied up with General Motors’ robotaxi unit Cruise, which will offer its autonomous vehicles on the platform starting next year.The ride-hailing firm’s partnership with WeRide is set to launch in Abu Dhabi later this year.WeRide was granted UAE’s first and only national license for self-driving vehicles, which allows the Chinese firm to test and operate robotaxis on public roads throughout the country.WeRide was expected to list its shares in the United States, valuing the firm up to $5 billion, but its initial public offering has been delayed and the firm said it was working to complete documentation to go ahead with the listing.The Biden administration on Monday proposed prohibitions that would prevent testing of self-driving cars on U.S. roads by Chinese automakers and which would extend to vehicle software and hardware produced by other U.S. foreign adversaries, including Russia.(Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri)

San Francisco Travel Association appoints Anna Marie Presutti as CEO

San Francisco Travel Association, the official destination marketing organization for the City and County of San Francisco, has appointed Anna Marie Presutti as president and CEO, effective immediately.

Presutti had been serving as San Francisco Travel’s interim president and CEO since mid-May.

Presutti will oversee one of the country’s oldest and largest membership-based tourism promotion organizations.

San Francisco Travel markets and sells the destination globally to attract conventions, meetings and leisure travellers. Tourism is one of the leading industries in San Francisco and is the top generator of outside revenue into the city’s economy. In 2023, tourism accounted for $9.3 billion in total visitor spending and generated nearly $610 million in tax revenues.

“After an extensive search that spanned the country, the Executive Search Committee realized the best candidate was already in the job. Anna Marie is the ultimate champion of San Francisco and a bold, experienced leader,” said San Francisco Travel Board Chair John Anderson. “As a two-time SF Travel Board Chair, Anna Marie is deeply familiar with the organization, its customers and its culture, and her continued leadership will drive the marketing and awareness of this destination.”

“I am passionate about this city and have been a part of San Francisco’s tourism industry for over twenty years. As we emerge from this challenging time, we have much to look forward to,” said Presutti. “My priority is to lean into the momentum building and return our convention business to a healthy level. We will invest in marketing San Francisco’s great strengths, including its culinary scene and arts and culture, and collaborate with other organizations, such as the Bay Area Host Committee, to bring more world-class events here.”
About Presutti
Prior to accepting her new role, Presutti was Vice President and General Manager of Hotel Nikko San Francisco. She made history there in 2006 when she was appointed the first female vice-president for Tokyo-based Nikko Hotels International. (Presutti made history again this year; she is San Francisco’s Travel’s first female CEO.)

Before joining Hotel Nikko San Francisco in 2004, Presutti served as area director of sales and marketing for Kimpton Hotels in San Francisco. Her experience also includes leadership positions with ITT Sheraton, Hilton Hotels and Sunstone Hotel Properties.

Presutti currently serves on the boards of the U.S. Travel Association and the Hotel Council of San Francisco. She also sits on Okura Nikko Management Company’s board of directors and Missouri State University Foundation’s board of trustees.

Drew Stevens ‘actually reading now,’ two books boosted Iowa’s kicker’s confidence

IOWA CITY — A wry smile spread across LeVar Woods’s face.“He is actually reading now,” Woods said. “I never thought I would get Drew Stevens to read, but he is reading. I am sure his mom will be pleased to hear that. It is probably a page or two a day, but he is working on it.“I think that has helped him.”

Iowa kicker Drew Stevens (18) boots an extra point during their game against Troy on Sept. 17.

NIKOS FRAZIER

The Iowa special teams coordinator’s mischievous grin shifted to a more sincere beam as he discussed Stevens’s evolution as the Hawkeyes’ kicker.“Drew had confidence last year,” Woods said. “I think it was false confidence. I think he would be one of the first to tell you that last year. We talk about, in our room, confidence being a feeling and an emotion. Whereas, conviction is like you know it. There is no other way to see it.“Drew, now, is convicted with his routine in practice. He is convicted with his routine away from the building. He is much more mature, (has) a much clearer head.”

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After connecting on just six of his final 11 field goal attempts of 2023, Stevens started the 2024 campaign 6-for-6 with a long of 46 yards.Prior to the start of his junior campaign, Stevens told the Quad-City Times in August that he no longer defined himself as a “feel” kicker.Instead, the third-year starter sought to become more precise with his approach after discussing his craft with NFL kickers during the offseason.“None of them were ‘feel’ guys,” Stevens said. “I was like, ‘Who am I to think I am going to be the first one to do this?’ And, I tried to be a ‘feel’ guy last season and that did not work out percentage-wise to where I wanted to be.“So, I focused on noticing the details.”According to the Noth Augusta, South Carolina native, a quote from The Twin Thieves: How Great Leaders Build Great Teams, a book the Hawkeye specialist read during the offseason, stuck with him during the process.“’Amateurs practice until they get it right,’” Stevens said. “’Pros practice until they get it wrong.’”The quote helped Stevens establish a routine of visualizing his kick before the snap to clear his mind and improve his field goal percentage.Asked about Stevens’s reading material, Woods’s gave another smile.“He went that far, huh?” Woods said. “Did he tell you about the other book?“The other book that we read was a book called Golf’s Sacred Journey. It talks about a pilot and his checklist that he goes through right before he tries to put the plane up in the air.”To Woods, Golf’s Sacred Journey made an equally noticeable difference in Stevens’s game.“As a kicker, as a specialist, you have to go through your checklist and make sure everything is buttoned up and ready to go before you actually approach and try to hit the ball,” Woods said. “Kicking and punting is a lot like golf … If a guy goes through a checklist and he has checked all the boxes and he has the confidence and the conviction to go after the kick, the results usually turn out.“Drew is doing that right now. It took us awhile to get him to that point, to believe in that, but he is doing well and believing in that.”Woods said he was glad to hear that Stevens no longer saw himself as a “feel” kicker.“You cannot just do everything off feel because emotions get involved,” Woods said. “Things like that cloud your judgement. Drew has definitely become more systematic with what he does.”In addition to his field goal execution, Stevens’s kickoff numbers improved to start 2024 compared to his stats in 2023.“His numbers are up, his hang time is up,” Woods said. “It goes back to what he has been doing. He is kicking the ball really well and the hang time is up. Guys are returning it. They have been paying for it.”According to Woods, the impact of the improvement on kickoffs possesses a clear and obvious impact on the outcome of games and on the Hawkeyes as a whole.“If you go back to the game last week, six kickoffs, Drew had, and four of them were returned,” Woods said. “None of them got passed the 21(-yard line).“It has been helping us psychologically as a football team. It has also been helping us with field position. Field position and special teams turns into points for us. That is part of our game plan each week.”Woods was all smiles during his Tuesday media availability while discussing Stevens’s body of work in 2024 — even though the best may still be to come.“A lot of it for Drew is between the ears,” Woods said. “I have just seen this kid grow and mature every single day. Coach (Ferentz) referenced it the other day. I am like, ‘This kid is playing lights out right now.’“On the national scope, I think it is very quiet, but I think there is a tiger in there getting ready to let loose.”

Iowa placekicker Drew Stevens turned into a “a whole different person” during offseason as he works to find more success in his junior season with the Hawkeyes.

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“I am not sure I remember anybody in four games doing what he has done,” Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz said. “He just continues to run really well.”

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