Scientists rebuild the face of 400-year-old Polish ‘vampire’

PIEN, Poland : Buried with a padlock on her foot and an iron sickle across her neck, “Zosia” was never supposed to be able to come back from the dead. Entombed in an unmarked cemetery in Pien, northern Poland, the young woman was one of dozens feared by her neighbours to have been a “vampire”.Now, using DNA, 3D printing and modelling clay, a team of scientists has reconstructed Zosia’s 400-year-old face, revealing the human story buried by supernatural beliefs.”It’s really ironic, in a way,” said Swedish archaeologist Oscar Nilsson. “These people burying her, they did everything they could in order to prevent her from coming back from the dead… we have done everything we can in order to bring her back to life.”Zosia, as she was named by locals, was found in 2022 by a team of archaeologists from Torun’s Nicolaus Copernicus University. Aged 18-20 when she died, analysis of Zosia’s skull suggests she suffered from a health condition which would have caused fainting and severe headaches, as well as possible mental health issues, Nilsson said.The sickle, the padlock and certain types of wood found at the grave site were all believed at the time to hold magical properties protecting against vampires, according to the Nicolaus Copernicus team.  Zosia’s was Grave No. 75 at the unmarked cemetery in Pien, outside the northern city of Bydgoszcz. Among the other bodies found at the site was a “vampire” child, buried face down and similarly padlocked at the foot.Little is known of Zosia’s life, but Nilsson and the Pien team say items she was buried with point to her being from a wealthy — possibly noble — family. The 17th century Europe she lived in was ravaged by war, something Nilsson suggests created a climate of fear in which belief in supernatural monsters was commonplace.Nilsson’s recreation began with creating a 3D printed replica of the skull, before gradually building layers of plasticine clay “muscle by muscle” to form a life-like face. He uses bone structure combined with information on gender, age, ethnicity and approximate weight to estimate the depth of facial features. “It’s emotional to watch a face coming back from the dead, especially when you know the story about this young girl,” Nilsson says.Nilsson said he wanted to bring Zosia back “as a human, and not as this monster that she is buried as”.

How OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s lobbying power tamed Washington

The results of the presidential election will have a big impact on the economy, foreign relations and health care. But when it comes to technology, one of the most powerful people shaping regulation isn’t a candidate at all. It’s Sam Altman.Neither Republican candidate Donald Trump nor his Democratic rival, Vice President Kamala Harris, have been outspoken on generative AI, much less outlined a clear roadmap to regulating a technology that’s already seen explosive growth and integration into businesses and consumer lives.
Altman, the OpenAI co-founder and CEO, meanwhile, has put on a masterclass in wooing Washington, learning from Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and social media’s missteps in front of Congress. Lawmakers have now begun embracing AI in a way they never did social media.”Initially, when AI and ChatGPT came onto the scene, there was a lot of fear and panic about what AI might do in the world.” said Katie Harbath, founder of tech consulting firm Anchor Change and former public policy director at Meta. “You’re starting to see that get pulled back some. They’re worried about how it might impact innovation. People are worried about making sure we can stay competitive with China.”That new messaging on AI regulation is largely thanks to Altman turning OpenAI into a lobbying powerhouse. The startup has spent more than ever to influence Washington, and brought on staff with deep ties to D.C., including Chris Lehane, who joined as its head of global affairs in April.Lehane was a political strategist in the Bill Clinton White House before moving west to help companies like Airbnb and Coinbase shape political strategy. Now, he’s bringing his playbook to OpenAI, where his message to Washington is that if the U.S. doesn’t lead the way in AI, an autocratic nation like China will.”This is technology where we need to almost think about it at the scale of a New Deal. What the New Deal really did is put the U.S. in the position for the 20th century to become the American Century,” Lehane said. “As we think about AI at this particular moment that we’re in, infrastructure is going to be destiny, and that infrastructure has the ability to help re-industrialize the country.”But just like when social media was in its early stages, lawmakers don’t yet have a handle on AI as the stakes only grow larger. Can we trust the people behind the curtain? Watch this video to learn more.

Today In Culture, Wednesday, October 30, 2024: Chicago’s New Art Book Fair | Local Writers’ Johnny Carson Book | Mostra Brings Brazilian Film to Chicago

Taiko Legacy 20/Photo: Ken CarlGet Chicago & Midwest culture news sent to your inbox every weekday morning. Subscribe to Newcity Today here.ARTStaple + Stitch Art Book Fair Coming To ChicagoArt book and print fair Staple + Stitch, featuring publishers, independent presses, book artists, zine makers and printmakers, is coming to 21c Museum Hotel Chicago. Chicago-based book and print vendors include The Renaissance Society, 5×7 books, Chicago’s Printers Guild, Skylark Editions, Western Exhibitions, Bert Green Fine Art, Buddy, The Chicago Reader, Spudnik Press and Sonnenzimmer, as well as individual artists, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago Photography Department and the School of Visual Arts at Columbia College Chicago. November 15-17. More here.Wealthiest Art Collectors Reduce Buying Habits“Art Basel and UBS’ latest collector survey polls 3,660 high net-worth individuals on their buying behavior from fourteen regions during 2023 and the first half of 2024,” reports Artnet. “While median spending has not fallen markedly, the big drop in average spend is mostly due to the buying behavior of millennials, or collectors between twenty-eight and forty-three years old. In 2022, this age group spent the most on art thanks to a small group of big spenders at the top end. Yet, in 2023, their average outlay on art dropped from $864,940 to $395,000, or fifty-four percent.”UChicago Students Can Hang Original Art In Dorm RoomsSome students at the University of Chicago have “the opportunity to borrow an original work of art from the school’s Smart Museum of Art,” reports Alison Cuddy at NPR. The circulating work began with fifty pieces from a Chicago art collector’s gift from 1958, which grew to 500 before the program was dormant from the 1980s until 2017, when it was revived by money from a former participant. Now maintained by the Smart Museum, 134 works of paper from the museum circulate. “The color lithographs [include work by] Joan Miró, Marc Chagall and Yves Tanguy, iconic prints by Gordon Parks and Jenny Holzer, and even a couple of Picassos. Contemporary artists like Takashi Murakami and Robert Indiana are abundant, and Chicago artists, including Nick Cave, Amanda Williams and Karl Wirsum, are well-represented.”Amateur Art Sleuth Brings Lost Works To Light“Dashing, enigmatic” Clifford Schorer III has hunches that “don’t always prove correct: He’s been suckered by at least a few forgeries or phonies. ‘Sometimes you follow threads that turn into an unraveling sweater,’ he admits,” records Vanity Fair. “But many filaments he’s followed have led to veritable treasures: the previously unrecorded van Haarlem he spotted in New Jersey that now hangs in the Art Institute of Chicago; a Cézanne he snagged from a Campbell’s Soup heiress and helped place in Ireland’s National Gallery; and three possibilities he scooped up on the cheap that were subsequently reattributed to the Milanese maestro Daniele Crespi. He also owns four works from Rembrandt’s studio, he claims, including ‘two that I believe are by the master himself.’”DESIGNSOM Will Reimagine Ninety-Fifth And Ninety-Sixth Floors Of John Hancock, Which The Firm OriginatedSkidmore, Owings & Merrill have announced plans “to redevelop the ninety-fifth and ninety-sixth floors of the iconic 875 North Michigan, [formerly] named the John Hancock Center,” reports Arch Daily. “The building, originally designed by SOM in 1967 and completed in 1970, is recognized as the world’s first mixed-use skyscraper.” The redesign “aims to reimagine the two floors, measuring 30,000 square feet, into an observation deck and an attractive destination.”Mag Mile Office Conversion Could Yield More Than 300 Apartments“If approved by City Council, 324 apartments would be built inside a twenty-four-story former office building [at 500 North] Michigan Avenue,” reports Block Club. “Retail space would remain on the first two floors, which are occupied by a Vans store, a Bank of America branch and a Chick-fil-A. Office space will be retained on the third through fifth floors.”Looking Up To A New Glass Tower In Uptown“While some of Chicago’s late nineteenth-century tall buildings, such as the Reliance Building at State and Washington streets, were predominantly glass, it wasn’t until the arrival of Mies van der Rohe and the post-World War II building boom that the glass building become a staple of almost every city’s skyline. More recent developments surrounding energy efficiency and climate change have slowed glass’ dominance, but architects’ preference for large glassy volumes have led them to employ new tricks to maintain the desired aesthetic,” writes Trib architecture critic Edward Keegan. “That’s the case at Solverre, a new twelve-story residential apartment building designed by… Valerio Dewalt Train and facing the Lakefront in Uptown.”Warehouse Fire Reveals St. Louis Has Nine Thousand Vacant BuildingsA fire at a vacant warehouse led St. Louis’ KTVI-TV to tally how many vacant buildings are in that city: the struck building, according to a city website, “is one of more than 9,000 vacant buildings within the city. It also shows another 15,000 vacant properties.”DINING & DRINKINGOooh Wee It Is No MoreChatham soul food restaurant Oooh Wee! It Is! has closed after three years, reports Block Club. It “closed in mid-June for ‘retooling’ and never reopened. A bright orange ‘for sale’ sign adorned the 83rd Street building Monday.” Asking price: $1.35 million. “The restaurant gained local and national acclaim for its pot roast cupcakes, corn muffins and shrimp and grits,” and boasted a cereal bar.Lawrence Fish Market Opens In ChinatownLawrence Fish Market, historically known for fresh, high-quality sushi and seafood at wholesale prices, is opening a second location in Bridgeport-Chinatown on Friday. The new spot will include a ramen bar while offering its signature sushi, maki and sashimi. The expanded menu includes Izakaya-style ramen, in-house noodle, and pork-based dishes. And for the first time, Lawrence Fish Market will offer dine-in service with both counter and waiter service. More here.Within The Orb At Chicago’s Nerds Gummy Clusters Plant“How does a candy brand that was started forty years ago suddenly become one of the most popular treats in America, with a cult following, a Super Bowl ad and TikTok fame?” asks the New York Times (gift link). “The answer lies at the center of a chewy ball rolled in smaller, crunchier balls. In other words, Nerds Gummy Clusters… In 2018, Nerds products brought in $40 million in sales. In the past calendar year, the company said, that number jumped to $800 million, a twenty-fold increase in about six years. The company declined to specify its profits. The new product’s following also led to the first Super Bowl ad in Ferrara’s history, and the company said it planned to release a second Super Bowl ad in 2025.”Wisconsin Pizzeria Accidentally Serves THC-Spiked Crust; Dozens Sick“Public Health Madison & Dane County is urging community members to throw out any pizza they may have from Famous Yeti’s Pizza in Stoughton,” they post, “due to unintentional THC contamination… Famous Yeti’s Pizza operates in a building that also has a shared industrial kitchen where many businesses make food and other products.” Famous Yeti’s posts that pizza dough was “mistakenly prepared with oil contaminated with delta-9. The oil accidentally used in the product originated from a shared storage space in the on-site cooperative commercial kitchen.”FILM & TELEVISIONFifteenth Mostra Brazilian Film Fest Is ComingFrom November 2-16, the fifteenth survey of features, documentaries and shorts from Brazil in the Midwest will hold screenings across Chicago and several cities in Indiana. Opening night at Instituto Cervantes features Kleber Mendonça Filho’s bittersweet documentary, “Pictures of Ghosts,” about his childhood memories of moviegoing, and closes with “Aunt Virginia” by Fábio Meira. Full details here.LITHeeere’s Bill Zehme’s Johnny Carson Biography“Not long after Bill Zehme and I linked up and hit it off, I began helping him streamline and organize transcripts for a memoir he was working on with Jay Leno,” writes Mike Thomas at Chicago magazine. “That morphed into a gig as Bill’s first-ever research assistant—’legman’ in crusty journo parlance… Shortly after Carson’s death in late January 2005, Bill started work on the biography, building on the foundation of his reporting for a 2002 Esquire profile of Carson… Bill was highly skilled at probing and humanizing public figures—especially talk show hosts, and perhaps most of all Letterman, whose psyche he described as ‘squirming, dark, and exquisite.’”Zehme’s health turned eight years into the project, and Thomas took over. “Bill completed the first three-quarters of ‘Carson the Magnificent’ before his diagnosis… Nearly twenty years in the making, the book will finally be published in early November. My part in making that possible was itself made possible by the extensive groundwork Bill laid. Everything I needed (and so much more) was there, somewhere, stashed in long-unopened binders and torn envelopes and dusty bins… But I’ve never lost sight of the fact that, despite my contributions, this is Bill’s book.”Wicker Park Barnes & Noble Opens Today“What was once the most architecturally magnificent chain drugstore in Chicago will soon be the city’s most magnificent chain bookstore,” writes Amy Yee at the Sun-Times. “The 1919 neoclassical building is considered an architectural gem and features a stained-glass window in its intricate ceiling. Entering through its gilt revolving doors creates a transportive feel, fitting for the power of books.”Tradition Of British Book Fairs Endangered“Over the past seventy-five years, the idea of the book festival has become embedded in the British cultural landscape. But as costs rise sharply and reading habits change, many are finding it a struggle to survive,” relays the Guardian.What’s Behind Those Shoddy Paperbacks?Bookstores are stocking more “print-on-demand paperbacks: low quality covers and paper, often poorly printed, and listed at a higher price than their regular-print brethren,” reports Literary Hub. It’s “basically fast fashion for books, and… the sudden rise in ‘cheaper’ paperbacks might have a long-term negative effect on the publishing industry.”MEDIAWashington Post Cancellations Approach Ten-Percent Of Subscriber Base; New York Times Brandishes Harris Endorsement“More than 200,000 people had canceled their digital subscriptions by midday Monday,” after the spiking of an editorial board endorsement of Kamala Harris by owner Jeff Bezos, the world’s third-richest man, reports David Folkenflik at NPR. “The figure represents about eight percent of the paper’s paid circulation of 2.5 million subscribers, which includes print as well. The number of cancellations continued to grow… Earlier this year, Will Lewis, the Post publisher, had touted the paper’s net gain of 4,000 subscribers as noteworthy… Three of the top ten viewed stories on the Post’s website Sunday were articles written by Post staffers outraged by billionaire owner Jeff Bezos’ decision.” Writes Gene Weingarten, two-time Pulitzer winner for the Post with his humor columns, “There is such a thing as moral authority. It may be intangible, but it is there, and it can be powerful. It is essential to newspaper opinion writing. The Washington Post owner flushed it down the toilet yesterday. What is left is invertebrate.”Former Post executive editor Marty Baron tells the New Yorker’s Isaac Chotiner, “I feel exceptionally disappointed. And I worry about what it means, not just for the Post but for democracy… Anybody who owns a media organization needs to be willing to stand up to intense pressure. And Bezos demonstrated that he was capable of that and willing to do that. Now I worry that there’s a sign of weakness. If Trump sees a sign of weakness, he’s going to pounce even harder in the future.” Bezos published an editorial (gift link) citing his reasoning, which only muddied the waters, referring to journalism as “our profession,” which offended professional journalists online. “You can see my wealth and business interests as a bulwark against intimidation, or you can see them as a web of conflicting interests. Only my own principles can tip the balance from one to the other.”To forestall confusion with either the Los Angeles Times or Washington Post abrupt refusals to endorse, Times opinion editor Kathleen Kingsbury tweeted a video assuring that the New York-based media and games conglomerate had in fact endorsed Kamala Harris. Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Times has shed at least 14,000 subscribers this week, tweets Semafor’s Max Tani.Guardian Media Journalists Could Strike Over Planned Sale Of 232-Year-Old The ObserverIn numbers passing ninety-three percent, “Guardian and Observer journalists have voted in favor of possible strike action in protest at proposals to sell The Observer to Tortoise Media,” reports PressGazette. Tortoise Media is a yet-unprofitable digital startup with a portfolio that includes podcasts.MUSICListen To Chopin’s New Release“An unknown work in Chopin’s hand has emerged in a New York museum, the first such find in more than a half century.” The pianist Lang Lang plays it at the New York Times (gift link). “After testing the manuscript’s paper and ink, analyzing its handwriting and musical style, and consulting outside experts, the Morgan has come to a momentous conclusion: The work is likely an unknown waltz by Frédéric Chopin, the great fantasist of the Romantic era, the first such discovery in more than half a century.”Sounds Of The Cold War Fill Guarneri HallThe nonprofit Guarneri Hall, the custom-built classical venue in the heart of downtown Chicago, presents “Sounds of the Cold War,” a three-day concert series examining Cold War-era music from both sides of the Iron Curtain. Honoring the thirty-fifth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, three performances will be held November 7-9, featuring music by Hanns Eisler, Dmitri Shostakovich, Sofia Gubaidulina, György Ligeti and György Kurtág, with each event including commentary about the sociopolitical context for the music from guest speakers from the University of Chicago: sociology professor Andreas Glaeser; Graham School instructor, Jennifer A. Lind; and associate professor of political science Paul Poast. Each performance is followed by a reception where audience members, performers and scholars engage in conversations. Tickets ($40) and more here.“Taiko Legacy 21” Events Unite Taiko ArtistsAsian Improv aRts Midwest and Tsukasa Taiko, with director, multi-instrumentalist and media artist Tatsu Aoki, will celebrate a decade of “Reduction” concerts with “Reduction 10” at the MCA, Saturday, December 14 and the “Taiko Legacy 21” on Sunday, December 15. “The annual ‘Taiko Legacy’ concert is rooted in the traditions of ozashiki (geisha chamber music), ohayashi (classical-folk-theater music), and matsuri taiko (festival taiko music). Performative arrangements of original compositions from Tsukasa Taiko recontextualize the cultural traditions within contemporary ecologies of art, music and theater. Led by professional taiko artists and the longstanding Gintenkai community performance ensemble from Tsukasa Taiko, ‘Taiko Legacy 21’ also features the next generation youth members who form a vital part of this ongoing legacy. Special guests for this concert include flutist Hyakkyou Fukuhara from Tokyo, and Melody Takata and GenRyu Arts from San Francisco.” More details and tickets ($20) here.STAGETwenty-Fifth Chicago Theatre Week Set For FebruaryChicago Theatre Week with discount tickets has been set for February 6-16, 2025. For the third year, HotTix.org will host Chicago Theatre Week Continued from February 17-23, 2025, which will extend Theatre Week discounts to participating productions for an additional week. Tickets ($30, $15 and less) go on sale 10am Tuesday, January 7, 2025 here.ARTS & CULTURE & ETC.Report Released On Local Arts Spending Of Federal Relief Funds“Local arts agencies distributed $100 million in federal relief funding to arts and cultural organizations during the pandemic to sustain and fuel their programs,” relays SMU DataArts, along with Bloomberg Associates. The twenty-three-page report is here (pdf). The report “explores how eleven local arts agencies advocated for and distributed this funding to their communities through document reviews, interviews and qualitative data gathering. The insights gleaned demonstrate the responsive and nimble ways these agencies operated throughout the pandemic, and the common tactics related to advocacy, process, and equity across all eleven cities may point to local arts agency best practices moving forward.” (Chicago and DCASE are among the subjects.)Illinois Sand Mines Key Ingredient For Fracking“Both presidential candidates say a domestic supply of emissions-intensive fossil fuels is essential for national security in what political pundits say is an appeal to Pennsylvania voters,” reports the Tribune. “Fracking enables the extraction of oil and gases encased in rock formations thousands of feet underground that are not easily permeable via traditional drilling methods. The process releases large amounts of methane, a gas with eighty times more warming power than carbon dioxide in the short term. Beyond contributing to climate change, the fracking industry has also had wide-reaching impacts on land use and community health [including from] sand mines in Illinois. LaSalle County in north central Illinois sits on rich deposits of silica sand, the optimal ingredient for a pressurized cocktail of sand, water and chemicals that is essential for fracking.”Union Tells Hard Rock Casino Rockford They Will Be Unionized“Rockford area union members and leaders rallied outside Hard Rock Casino Rockford last week, saying an anti-union campaign is pointless,” reports the Rockford Register Star, and that the establishment “would be better off recognizing employee unions rather than engaging in an expensive anti-union campaign.”Airline Refunds Now Automatic“Airlines in the United States are now required to give passengers cash refunds if their flight is significantly delayed or canceled, even if that person does not explicitly ask for a refund,” reports CNN. “The final federal rule requiring that airlines [issue] refunds—not vouchers—went into effect Monday. The major change is being implemented only a month before the start of what is likely to be a huge holiday travel season.” MarketWatch expands on the new rules here. Transportation Secretary Buttigieg tweets the basics in a chart here.Send culture news and tips to [email protected]

8 Immersive New Epic Fantasy YA Books

Arvyn Cerezo is an arts and culture writer/reporter with bylines in Book Riot, Publishers Weekly, South China Morning Post, PhilSTAR Life, the Asian Review of Books, and other publications. You can find them on arvyncerezo.com and @ArvynCerezo on Twitter.
View All posts by Arvyn Cerezo

Epic ReadsReturn to the world of mythical female warriors in Warrior of Legend, the epic finale to the immersive Heromakers fantasy duology that began with Champion of Fate! Will Reed be able to survive this war with her chosen family—and her heart—intact? From #1 New York Times bestselling author Kendare blake, Warrior of Legend is a must-read for fans of Victoria Aveyard and Shelby Mahurin!
If I pick up an epic fantasy book, it had better completely suck me in. It better have some dragons and princesses, lengthy quests, heroes and heroines attempting to save humanity from destruction, swords clashing to keep an empire from crumbling, or epic battles that hang the world in the balance. It must have a lush, fully realized world, an intricate magic system, and a dense mythology, a total escapism from my current reality.

These ambitious and larger-than-life elements, unfortunately, can be difficult to pull off in an epic fantasy, resulting in books with flat worlds and half-baked magic systems that aren’t ready for prime time. Luckily, I was able to identify recent epic fantasy books that are so engrossing that young readers won’t want to put them down.

In here, all of the books are by authors of color and focus on themes and worlds that are underexplored in the literary landscape. There’s a book set in ancient Rome where young people try to survive a brutal regime, a book set in kingdoms where the protagonists fight their colonizers, a book inspired by Indian mythology where the protagonist is bitten by vipers and becomes a monster herself, a book inspired by the Korean legend of gumiho, or the nine-tailed fox, and so much more. Each offers a unique world of its own and is ideal for young readers or readers who are young at heart.

Here are eight recent immersive young adult epic fantasy books.

Heir by Sabaa Tahir
This is the first in Tahir’s new YA epic fantasy duology. The book follows three different characters, Aiz, Sirsha, and Quil, who come from different socioeconomic backgrounds. Aiz finds herself in prison, Sirsha is tasked with finding a killer that has been terrorizing the Empire, and Quil is the Empire’s crown prince, and he must rise to confront the threat that afflicts his domain.

Set 20 years later in the same world as An Ember in the Ashes, the individual stories of the characters intertwine and culminate in an explosive ending.

Breath of the Dragon by Shannon Lee and Fonda Lee (January 2025)
Every six years, a new Guardian is given the Scroll of Earth. Ambitious 16-year-old Jun wants to join the Guardian’s Tournament in the hopes of improving his family’s reputation after being exiled from their home.

His father doesn’t want him to compete, however, especially as he lacks magical abilities like his twin, a “breathmarked,” who was born with a dragon’s features. Despite his father’s wishes, Jun finds a way to escape anyway. But when he gets to the arena, he discovers that there are far more pressing matters than restoring his family’s honor.

To Gaze Upon Wicked Gods by Molly X. Chang
Ruying, who possesses the ability to sap human life, despises the invaders who have colonized her homeland. There’s brutality and starvation, and Ruying thinks that it’s only a matter of time until her family suffers the same fate.

When the enemy prince discovers her hidden talent, he makes a deal with her. In exchange for her and her family’s safety and well-being, she needs to kill the enemy prince’s opponents. But Ruying is wise to doubt the prince’s motivations, especially as using her magic shortens her life.

A Drop of Venom by Sajni Patel
Manisha, a 16-year-old priestess, meets Pratyush, a monster slayer and warrior on the king’s payroll, and they fall in love.

Shortly afterward, however, a temple visitor assaults Manisha and pushes her until she falls into a snake pit. Nevertheless, the venom doesn’t kill her. Instead, she grows stronger and takes on traits from the vipers…including their wickedness. Manisha transforms men into stones and has been terrorizing the kingdom since she emerged from the snake pit.

The king then sends Pratyush to kill a monster that has been turning men into stone. Will he be able to recognize that it’s his beloved?

Children of Anguish and Anarchy by Tomi Adeyemi
This is the third book in Adeyemi’s Legacy of Orïsha series, following Children of Blood and Bone and Children of Virtue and Vengeance. In book one, Zélie works to restore magic to Orïsha and overthrow the monarchy. The second book follows her struggle to regain control of fractured Orïsha amid the presence of power-hungry rulers.

This one picks up where book two left off, with Zélie captured by the enemy, King Baldyr. She and her friends must fight enemies to save their people as the Orïsha are once again in turmoil.

Dancers of the Dawn by Zulekhá Afzal
Aasira is being trained as one of the queen’s assassins. She has the ability to wield flame through dancing, a powerful magic that enemies are terrified of. Aasira doesn’t know any better, however. All she knows is that after completing her training, she will have to serve her queen as an assassin.

But her fate may change when she discovers a shocking truth. Will she deviate from the path she has always known?

The Fox Maidens by Robin Ha
This YA graphic novel is based on the Korean mythology of gumiho, a nine-tailed fox that transforms into a girl and seduces its victims.

The story follows Kai as she aspires to be a warrior. Her patriarchal society forbids her from becoming one, however. This is compounded by rumors that she’s the granddaughter of Gumiho, the nine-tailed fox. As she navigates her young adulthood, she discovers aspects of her identity that call into question who she truly is.

Spin of Fate by A.A. Vora
The book follows Aina, Aranel, and Meizan as they deal with class divide. Their society is governed by Toranic Law and is primarily divided into upper and lower realms. Those at the top want to keep the status quo, while those at the bottom of the society, including Aina’s family, continue to suffer. Aina is given the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to ascend, but it’s bittersweet leaving her family behind.

Meanwhile, Aranel and Meizan are both members of the Balancers, a group that works to help those in the lower realms. Will they be able to strike a balance in a society that keeps its margins wide?

Do you want to lose yourself in more lore? Here are epic fantasy journeys for every reader and excellent epic fantasy debuts to check out!

A Book Set in ’70s Ireland Asks If Violence Can Save Us

Mystery fans delight, here’s a roundup with news, announcements, and adaptations of all the things to know.270 ReasonsHere’s a project with an array of fantastic authors and writers, each with an essay for why it’s important for them, and everyone, to vote for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz. The 270 Reasons site is simply links to every essay, showing the title, a quote, and the author’s name—and it’s updated daily! I, of course, looked for mystery authors: I Have Some Questions For You author Rebecca Makkai wrote “Because you shouldn’t throw your vote away”; Shutter Island author Dennis Lehane wrote “Because she’s the fighter; he’s the bully”; The Lions of Fifth Avenue author Fiona Davis wrote, “Because she will uphold the peaceful transfer of power.”Exciting Adaptation News
Riku Onda’s Japanese crime novel The Aosawa Murders is being adapted into a limited series! (Bestselling Japanese Crime Novel The Aosawa Murders Set for Limited Series From Jonathan Kier, Matt Brodlie’s Upgrade Productions)
Paul Feig—who directed a handful of very funny films, including Spy and Ghostbusters (2016)—will direct a psychological thriller adapted from Freida McFadden’s The Housemaid. (Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried to Star in The Housemaid Adaptation From Director Paul Feig, Lionsgate)
Don Winslow’s short story Crime 101 is being adapted by Amazon MGM Studios. (Halle Berry Lands Female Lead Opposite Chris Hemsworth In Amazon MGM Studios Thriller Crime 101)
Yellowface by R.F. Kuang, which follows an author who stole a dead author’s manuscript to pass it off as their own, will be adapted into a series! (Lionsgate TV Options Yellowface by R.F. Kuang, Karyn Kusama Attached to Direct)
Patrick Radden Keefe’s true crime history Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland has been adapted into a series, releasing in November, and Vanity Fair wrote a great piece. (Say Nothing Asks a Provocative Question: Can Violence Save the World?)
Start 2025 with a new medical mystery on CBS / Paramount+ starring Watson! (Morris Chestnut CBS Drama Watson to Premiere Following AFC Championship Game)
If you like thrillers and spies, the Slow Horses adaptation has really nailed the pacing and fun tropes that come with the subgenre. Also, chef’s kiss to the dark humor. (Apple TV+ just confirmed its best show is getting a Season 6)
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The Baby Reindeer LawsuitIf you want to keep up with the ongoing case related to the Netflix show Baby Reindeer—which is based on the creator’s claim that Fiona Harvey stalked him— Them has the latest, and backstory: Baby Reindeer is Not a “True Story,” Judge Rules. Fiona Harvey Can Proceed With Her LawsuitIn Mystery Book Announcement NewsBusybody MysteriesAmazon Original Stories has put out a collection of stories from a handful of current mystery writers. The theme? Busybodies, because they notice everything, of course. Pick up One Lucky Subscriber by Kellye Garrett, Staged by Elle Cosimano, The Reunion Dinner by Jesse Q. Sutanto, Crime of Fashion by Emma Rosenblum, The Nosy Neighbor by Nita Prose, and A Classic Case by Alicia Thompson while you wait for their next novels, or use this as a great way to “sample” a bunch of great current writers.Browse the books recommended in Unusual Suspects’ previous newsletters on this shelf. See upcoming 2024 releases and mysteries from 2023. Check out this Unusual Suspects Pinterest board and get Tailored Book Recommendations! Until next time, keep investigating! In the meantime, come talk books with me on Goodreads, and Litsy.If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you or you read it on bookriot.com and you’d like to get it right in your inbox, you can sign up here.