LibraryThing: State of the Thing Dear {NAME}, Welcome to the June State of the Thing! In this issue we celebrate Pride Month with a treasure hunt, and introduce some new features for LibraryThing members. We also debut "Talpa Search," something we created for public libraries, and invite librarians to see us at the American Library Association conference in Chicago. We also serve up lots and lots of book world news, all of our regular columns, and 3,273 free Early Reviewer books! You can like LibraryThing on [Facebook]( and follow [@LibraryThing]( on Twitter and [librarythingofficial]( on Instagram for news and updates. Introducing Talpa Search LibraryThing is delighted to announce [Talpa Search](, an experimental, AI-powered search for public libraries. We invite everyone to check it out and, if you're not a librarian, tell the librarians in your life about it! (You can send them [this blog post]( As with AI Search on LibraryThing itself, Talpa combines new technologies with the authority of traditional library data, to answer queries like: - [astronaut stranded on Mars](
- [kid has a magic crayon](
- [YA romance about dying teens]( Talpa even answers those “I know it has a red cover” questions: - [statistics book with a yellow cover](
- [mafia novel with marionette on the cover](
- [time travel novel with blue cover]( Talpa is also great for subject, topic, author, or series searches: - [modern retellings of Greek mythology](
- [nonfiction books about women in tech](
- [novels about WWII in France]( You can try it out on our launch partners [Mid-Hudson Library System](, [Lafayette Public Library]( and [Waverly Public Library](. We wrote up a longer blog post about it for the [Syndetics Unbound News and Updates](. Or find out more at [Talpa.ai](. LibraryThing at ALA in Chicago The American Library Association's [2023 Annual Conference & Exhibition]( is set to begin on June 22, and LibraryThing founder Tim Spalding ([timspalding]() and staffer Kristi de Bree ([kristilabrie]() will be in attendance! Tim and Kristi will be showing off [Talpa Search](, our exciting new AI library search, at the exhibition hall, from June 23–26. They will have some Talpa, TinyCat and LibraryThing swag—including bags, pins, badge ribbons, and CueCats—to give out, so be sure to stop by. The ALA Conference is being held in Chicago this year, at the [McCormick Place]( convention center. You can find Tim and Kristi at booth #1312! (Send Tim a message on LibraryThing or email tim@librarything.com to make sure to connect with them.) New Cover Search, Charts and Catalog Data LibraryThing is very pleased to announce the launch of some exciting new cover-related charts, catalog data and AI searches. AI Seach. [AI Search]( is better. Now, in addition "what's that book?" questions, you can search for books using cover information, like this: [mystery with a coffee on the cover]( [cookbook with white cover]( [dystopia with an eye on the cover]( Charts and Graphs. You can now see the breakdown of your book collection by color and cover description, with [three new charts]( tracking Basic Colors, Detailed Colors and CoverGuess Tags. Catalog. When browsing your [catalog page](, you [can now add columns]( that track these colors and tags for each title, and can peruse the [Cover Data sub-page](, which lists all of the books in your catalog with these colors and tags. Come learn more about the new [improved AI Search]( and [Cover Charts and Catalog Data](. CoverGuess Contest Comes to an End In [last month’s issue]( of State of the Thing we announced a revamp of [CoverGuess](, our fun, collaborative cover-tagging game, and invited members to join our month-long [CoverGuess contest](. The contest has now come to an end, and we thank everyone who participated! Our twenty prize winners, including the top ten players and ten randomly-selected players, are: [Aquila](, [amanda4242](, [JenniferRobb](, [murderbydeath](, [IvyGreene](, [lemontwist](, [InfoQuest](, [KallieGrace](, [papyri](, [perennialreader](, [Jjean7](, [Victinerary](, [KaskaskiaVic](, [Cloverlimes](, [Felagund](, [rarm](, [kgodey](, [unaluna](, [Heather_Colyer](, and [rob_estee](. Winners will receive a selection of prizes, including stickers, coasters, stamps, and CueCats, with the grand prize winner also receiving a tote bag. Pride Month Treasure Hunt We wish our members a very Happy Pride Month, and invite you all to participate in our annual [Pride Month Treasure Hunt](. Read and solve the eleven clues, and find the pages on LibraryThing that match your solutions. When you find each right page, you’ll see a banner at the top of your screen announcing that you’ve found a rainbow. Everyone who finds at least two rainbows receives a profile badge, while members who find all eleven rainbows will be entered into a drawing for one of five LibraryThing (or TinyCat) [coaster sets and stickers](. We'll announce winners at the end of the hunt. Come brag about your shower of rainbows (and get hints) over in [Talk](. The Talk of LibraryThing What conversations are going on in our groups? - Recommendations for [Humorous, Intelligent Historical Romance]( are being sought over in the [Romance—from historical to contemporary]( group.
- An [Experiment in Reading Only First Chapters]( is being undertaken, and is under discussion amongst members of [The Green Dragon](.
- Questions about [Grading Books on Their Condition]( are being raised by members of the [Book Care and Repair]( group.
- Members are documenting their [June 2023 Reading]( over in the [Crime, Thriller & Mystery]( group. Speaking of Groups, if you’re new to LibraryThing, there’s a group for that: [Welcome to LibraryThing](21)! List of the Month Come join LibraryThing’s List of the Month project, as we create a new thematic book list each month. Like all of our [Lists](, the List of the Month draws upon the knowledge of the LibraryThing community, while also aiming to provoke discussion around each theme. See our [wiki page]( for a complete List of the Month list, and join us over in our [Talk group](, for further discussion of the project. June List of the Month. First impressions are powerful, and the first lines of the books we read can pack quite a punch. Our List of the Month this June is devoted to the books with our favorite first lines. Head over to our list of the [Books With Our Favorite First Lines]( to add your top ten choices. Check out other recent Lists of the Month: - May [Best Graphic Novel Nonfiction](
- April [Best Gardening Books](
- March [Favorite Epistolary Fiction](
- February [Favorite Romance Fiction](
- January [Best Biographies, Autobiographies and Memoirs]( Hot on LibraryThing Here are some titles that have been particularly hot on LibraryThing in the last month: - [Yellowface]( by [R.F. Kuang](
- [Identity]( by [Nora Roberts](
- [The Covenant of Water]( by [Abraham Verghese](
- [The Wishing Game]( by [Meg Shaffer](
- [Ink Blood Sister Scribe]( by [Emma Törzs](
- [Happy Place]( by [Emily Henry](
- [The Five-Star Weekend]( by [Elin Hilderbrand](
- [Lady Tan's Circle of Women]( by [Lisa See](
- [Witch King]( by [Martha Wells](
- [Love, Theoretically]( by [Ali Hazelwood](
- [Fourth Wing]( by [Rebecca Yarros](
- [The True Love Experiment]( by [Christina Lauren](
- [The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder]( by [David Grann](
- [Unfortunately Yours]( by [Tessa Bailey](
- [Pageboy: A Memoir]( by [Elliot Page](
- [Rogue Justice]( by [Stacey Abrams](
- [Drowning]( by [T. J. Newman](
- [She Started It]( by [Sian Gilbert](
- [All the Sinners Bleed]( by [S.A. Cosby](
- [Cross Down]( by [James Patterson]( Hot in Libraries Here's what's hot across [thousands of public libraries]( in the United States: - [Happy Place]( by [Emily Henry](
- [Lessons in Chemistry]( by [Bonnie Garmus](
- [The Covenant of Water]( by [Abraham Verghese](
- [Simply Lies]( by [David Baldacci](
- [The 23rd Midnight]( by [James Patterson](
- [Demon Copperhead]( by [Barbara Kingsolver](
- [Hello Beautiful]( by [Ann Napolitano](
- [It Ends With Us]( by [Colleen Hoover](
- [Remarkably Bright Creatures]( by [Shelby Van Pelt](
- [The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder]( by [David Grann](
- [Spare]( by [Prince Harry](
- [Fourth Wing]( by [Rebecca Yarros](
- [Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow]( by [Gabrielle Zevin](
- [Hang the Moon]( by [Jeannette Walls](
- [The Secret Book of Flora Lea]( by [Patti Callahan Henry](
- [It Starts with Us]( by [Colleen Hoover](
- [The Last Thing He Told Me]( by [Laura Dave](
- [The Making of Another Motion Picture Masterpiece]( by [Tom Hanks](
- [The Wedding Planner]( by [Danielle Steel](
- [The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo]( by [Taylor Jenkins Reid]( This data was collected by Syndetics Unbound, a LibraryThing/ProQuest project to enrich the library catalog. The search data is fully anonymized the day it is collected. For more information about Syndetics Unbound, please visit [Syndetics.com](?utm_source=LT&utm_medium=sott&utm_id=main). Free Books from Early Reviewers! Our Early Reviewers program pairs publishers and authors looking for reviews and book buzz with readers looking for their next great read. This month we’re pleased to feature giveaways from a number of publishers who are new to the program, including [Restless Books](, [Type Eighteen Books](, [The Collective Book Studio](, [Head Shot Press](, [Scotland Street Press](, and [Unbound](. Explore the full list and [sign up to request books](. [Into the Fire]( [The Hidden World of Gnomes]( [Bang!: An Anthology of Modern Noir
Fiction](21-An-Anthology-of-Modern-Noir-Fiction) [Shadows at Dusk]( [Maribelle's Shadow]( [The Invisible Elephant]( [Tell Her Story: How Women Led,
Taught, and Ministered in the Early Church]( [A Royal Christmas: A Christmas
Novella]( [Bald Eagles, Bear Cubs, and Hermit
Bill: Memories of a Wildlife Biologist in Maine]( [The Privilege of the Happy Ending:
Small, Medium, and Large Stories]( [Things to See in Arizona]( [Summer Rental]( [The House of the Lost on the Cape]( [Flood and Fury: Old Testament
Violence and the Shalom of God]( [Calvin and the Sugar Apples]( [The Last Garden: A Memoir]( [The Ice Harp]( [The Persistent Road]( [The Gathering: A Story of the First
Buddhist Women]( [A Cast of Crows: Poe-Inspired
Steampunk]( Our June batch of Early Reviewers has 3,273 copies of 179 books. The deadline to request a book is June 25th, 6pm Eastern time. Did you win a book recently? When you receive your book, make sure you head over to your [Books You've Won]( page to mark it received. After you've read your book, add your review to LibraryThing. First, add the book to your LibraryThing catalog. Then click the pencil-shaped "edit" icon next to the book, or click "edit book" from the work page. Type your review into the Review box, and click "submit" to save it. Reviewing your books gives you a greater chance of winning books in the future, while neglecting to review lowers your odds. For more information, visit the [Early Reviewers Help Page](. Book World News: In Memoriam Acclaimed American writer [Cormac McCarthy](, who is celebrated for his unique and sparse writing style, [has died at 89](. The author of twelve novels, two plays and three screenplays, McCarthy made his debut in 1965 with [The Orchard Keeper](, but first came to wider public attention in 1992, with the publication of his [All the Pretty Horses](. The first in the [Border Trilogy](, the book was a bestseller, winning the [National Book Award](Book+Award) and the [National Book Critics Circle Award](Book+Critics+Circle+Award), before being adapted in 2000 as [a motion picture of the same name](. McCarthy’s [No Country for Old Men](, published in 2005, was [adapted as a film]( by the Coen brothers, winning an Academy Award for Best Picture in 2008. [The Road](, a work of post apocalyptic minimalism, was awarded the 2007 [Pulitzer Prize](Prize), and was likewise adapted as [a motion picture]( in 2009. Largely reclusive, the author gave few interviews, although he had been mentioned by critics as a possible recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature. Inspirational Ghanaian playwright, novelist and educational advocate [Ama Ata Aidoo](, whose work was known for its focus on the contemporary African woman’s experience, [has died at 81](. She made her debut in 1965 with the publication of her play, [The Dilemma of a Ghost](, making her the first published female African dramatist in history. Subsequent plays included [Anowa]( (1971), which was performed by the Gate Theatre in London in 1991. Aidoo made her debut as a novelist in 1977 with [Our Sister Killjoy](, which remains one of her most popular works. Her [Changes: A Love Story]( won the [Commonwealth Writers Prize](Writers%27+Prize) for Best Book (Africa) in 1992. She also published poetry—her collection [Someone Talking to Sometime]( won the Nelson Mandela Prize for Poetry in 1987—and children’s books. In addition to her work as a writer and an academic, Aidoo briefly served as Ghana’s Minister of Education in 1982-83, resigning after eighteen months when she found she could not make education freely available to all. She subsequently lived and worked in Zimbabwe, where she a consultant and curriculum director for the Zimbabwe Ministry of Education. Aidoo has been described as an important author and influence by fellow African writers such as [Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie]( (Nigeria) and [Tsitsi Dangarembga]( (Zimbabwe). English novelist and essayist [Martin Amis](, who was known for his satirical depiction of contemporary Western society, [has died at 73](. The son of novelist and poet [Kingsley Amis](, Martin made his own debut as an author at age twenty-four, with the 1973 publication of [The Rachel Papers](, which won the 1974 [Somerset Maugham Award](Maugham+Award). Amis is often considered to have truly come into his own as a novelist with the 1984 publication of [Money](, and although he was not to win another major literary prize—his [Time’s Arrow]( did make the [Booker Prize Shortlist](Prize+Shortlist) in 1991—he has been described as a powerful influence by writers ranging from [Zadie Smith]( to [Kevin Power](. Many consider Amis’ nonfiction to be as or even more impressive than his novels, with his 2000 memoir, [Experience](, winning the [James Tait Black Memorial Prize](Tait+Black+Memorial+Prize). Other recent losses in the book world: - [Carol Higgins Clark](, American mystery writer, [has died at 66](.
- [John Dunning](, American author and bookseller, [has died at 81](.
- [Daniel Ellsberg](, American military analyst and author, [has died at 92](.
- [Julie Garwood](, American romance novelist, [has died at 78](.
- [Françoise Gilot](, French artist and memoirist, [has died at 101](.
- [William E. Glassley](, American geologist, researcher and author, [has died at 75](.
- [Robert Gottlieb](, American book and magazine editor, [has died at 92](.
- [Ian Hacking](, Canadian philosopher and academic, [has died at 87](.
- [Kevin Ireland](, New Zealand poet, short story writer and novelist, [has died at 89](.
- [Timothy Keller](, American pastor and bestselling religious author, [has died at 72](.
- [John Romita, Sr.](, American comic book artist, [has died at 93](.
- [Inger Sandberg](, Swedish children’s book author, [has died at 92](.
- [Amy Silverstein](, American memoirist and heart transplant patient, [has died at 59](.
- [Alain Touraine](, French sociologist and academic, [has died at 97](.
- [Mariana Villa-Gilbert](, British novelist and poet, [has died at 86](. Book World News: Freedom of Expression Nine months ago, in our [September 2022 issue]( of State of the Thing, we reported on the brutal [on-stage attack]( on author [Salman Rushdie]( at a literary event at the [Chautauqua Institution]( in western New York state. Stabbed repeatedly in the neck and abdomen, he spent six weeks recovering in hospital, and has lost eyesight in one eye, as well as the use of one of his hands. Now, in his first public appearance since the attack, the author was [honored by PEN America]( at their annual gala, giving the final speech at the event, and accepting the [PEN Centenary Courage Award](. The author observed in his remarks that PEN’s mission is more vital now than ever, in this time of increasing book bans, and declared that “Terrorism must not terrorize us. Violence must not deter usâ¦The struggle goes on.” Elsewhere in the United States, the ongoing battle over library books and school curricula only continues to heat up. The White House has announced [a new position within the Department of Education]( to address rising levels of school book bans at the state level. This comes only two weeks after it was announced that the Department of Education had issued a report concerning book removals in a Georgia school district, and [had come to a tentative agreement with the district]( to address the civil rights concerns raised by those removals. Some states are also taking action, with [Illinois recently passing HB2789](, a law which makes state funding for libraries conditional upon their acceptance of the American Library Association’s [Library Bill of Rights](, or a guarantee that books will not be removed from libraries for political or doctrinal reasons. New Jersey lawmakers have [introduced a similar bill](. In Texas, by contrast, Governor Greg Abbott recently [signed House Bill 900 into law](. Advocates of the bill, known as the Restricting Explicit and Adult-Designated Educational Resources Act, or READER Act, insist that it is meant to prevent sexually explicit material in school libraries, while critics maintain that the bill targets books with LGBTQ themes. Meanwhile, [a new Arkansas bill]( signed into law by Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders that removes the exemption formerly enjoyed by libraries and schools in that state, when it comes to prosecution for the dissemination of “obscene” material, [has now led to a lawsuit](. A coalition of eighteen plaintiffs, led by the [Central Arkansas Library System](, has filed a federal lawsuit, arguing that the new law is a violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution. In [last month’s issue]( of State of the Thing we reported on the [IPA]( (International Publishers Association) [releasing the shortlist]( for the 2023 Prix Voltaire, which recognizes “publishers – individuals, groups or organizations – who stand firm on freedom to publish.” The five nominees included individuals and publishers from Egypt, Iraq, Ireland, Pakistan and Turkey. The winner of the prize [was recently named]( at the World Expression Forum in Lillehammer, Norway, with the honor going to Mazin Lateef Ali, the founder of the Baghdad-based publisher, Dar Mesopotamia. Ali, who published books about Iraq’s Jewish community, among other topics, was abducted at gunpoint in January 2020, and has been missing since. His award was accepted by his son, Abdulmoahimen. The IPA also gave out a Prix Voltaire Special Award to Ukrainian children’s author Volodymyr Vakulenko, who was killed last year in the fighting in Ukraine. In Turkey, the [Turkish Publishers Association]( recently announced the winners of their [Freedom of Thought and Expression Awards](, given out in three categories, to a publisher, an author and a bookstore. The winner in the publisher category, [GünıÅıÄı KitaplıÄı]( (“Sunshine Library”), which specializes in contemporary books for children and young adults, was also on the shortlist for the Prix Voltaire this year. The publisher was honored for their work fighting the book bans that have been leveled against many of their titles, which have been labeled “obscene” by the Board for the Protection of Minors from Obscene Publications, and which have been removed from school reading lists, and banned from book fairs and online sales platforms. The imprisonment of Belarussian human rights activist and 2022 Nobel Peace Prize winner Ales Bialiatski, detained without charges or trial in 2021, and recently sentenced to ten years in prison, [has led to international outcry](, with 103 Nobel Prize Laureates signing [an open letter from Pen International]( condemning the president of Belarus and expressing solidarity with Bialiatski. Literary luminaries to sign the letter include [Kazuo Ishiguro](, [Orhan Pamuk](, [Wole Soyinka](, [Olga Tokarczuk](, [J.M. Coetzee](, [Svetlana Alexievich](, [Abdulrazak Gurnah](, [Mario Vargas Llosa](, and [Annie Ernaux](. Book World News: Awards Awards and Prizes. The 2023 [International Booker Prize](Booker+International+Prize) has gone to author [Georgi Gospodinov]( and translator [Angela Rodel]( for [Time Shelter](. The [first work translated from Bulgarian to win the prize](, the novel was praised by judges chair [Leïla Slimani]( as “a brilliant novel full of irony and melancholy” and “a very profound work that deals with a contemporary question and also a philosophical question: what happens to us when our memories disappear?” German author [Katja Oskamp]( and debut translator [Jo Heinrich]( have [been announced]( as the winners of the [International Dublin Literary Award](20IMPAC%20Dublin%20Literary%20Award%20Winner) for [Marzahn, mon amor](. Chosen from a shortlist of six and a longlist of seventy, the novel was praised by Lord Mayor of Dublin Caroline Conway as “a beautifully written novel,” and “a warm, witty and moving portrait of older residents in Berlin, which offers the reader an insight into a community often overlooked.” [Ewald Frie]( has [been named as the winner]( of this year’s [Deutscher Sachbuchpreis](Sachbuchpreis) (German Nonfiction Book Prize) for his [Ein Hof und elf Geschwister: Der stille Abschied vom bäuerlichen Leben in Deutschland]( (One Farm and 11 Siblings: The Quiet Farewell to Rural Life in Germany). Established in 2019, the prize is awarded annually by the [Stiftung Buchkultur und Leseförderung]( (Foundation for Book Culture and the Promotion of Reading) to recognize “outstanding non-fiction books written in German that inspire social debate.” The jury praised the author, writing that “in his amazingly simple and at the same time poetic language, Frie creates access to a changing world—always empathetic, but never nostalgic. Based on interviews with his siblings, Frie has written a profound yet accessible and entertaining historical nonfiction book.” It [has been announced]( that this year’s [RSL Christopher Bland Prize](20Christopher%20Bland%20Prize), which recognizes a “debut novelist or nonfiction writer first published aged 50 or over,” has gone to [Paterson Joseph]( for his [The Secret Diaries of Charles Ignatius Sancho]( (offered in our [March Early Reviewers]( batch this year). Judges chair [Lemn Sissay]( praised the book as a work of “historical fiction, bursting with the wit and perspicacity of its protagonist Ignatius Sancho,” and Joseph as a writer who “inhabits characters and scenes as Dickens does, through the character and story.” The [Women’s Prize for Fiction](Women%27s+Prize+for+Fiction), given annually to the best novel by a female author of any nationality, written in English and published in the UK in the preceding year, [has been awarded]( to American author [Barbara Kingsolver]( for her [Demon Copperhead](, which also won the [Pulitzer Prize](Prize) this year. This is Kingsolver’s second Women’s Prize win—she was also honored in 2010 for [The Lacuna](— and panel chair [Louise Minchin]( described the book as a “towering, deeply powerful and significant book” and an “exposé of modern America, its opioid crisis and the detrimental treatment of deprived and maligned communities.” In Australia, the winners of the [New South Wales Premier’s Awards](20South%20Wales%20Premier's%20Literary%20Award) have been announced in a variety of categories. [We Come With This Place]( by [Debra Dank]( has netted awards in four categories, including Book of the Year, the Douglas Stewart Prize for Nonfiction, the Indigenous Writers’ Prize, and the UTS Glenda Adams Award for New Writing. The Christina Stead Prize for Fiction has gone to [Katerina Gibson]( for [Women I Know](, while the Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry has been awarded to [Kim Cheng Boey]( for his [The Singer and Other Poems](. Author [Corey Tutt](and illustrator [Blak Douglas]( have won the Patricia Wrightson Prize for Children’s Literature for [The First Scientists: Deadly Inventions and Innovations from Australia’s First Peoples](, and [Lystra Rose]( has won the Ethel Turner Prize for Young People’s Literature for her [The Upwelling](. For the complete list of winners, [please see this article](. Also in Australia, [the Sydney Morning Herald has announced]( the [Best Young Australian Novelists]( for 2023, with the honor going to [Jay Carmichael]( for [Marlo](, [Katerina Gibson]( for [Women I Know](, and [George Haddad]( for [Losing Face](. The 2023 [PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in the Short Story](, named for celebrated American writer [Bernard Malamud](, has gone to Haitian-American author [Edwidge Danticat](. Committee chair [Dolen Perkins-Valdez]( praised Danticat as “a once-in-a-generation kind of writer, one who changes the landscape of fiction by crafting stories that exalt human experience into the realm of the mythic. It’s impossible to read Danticat’s exquisitely crafted stories and not walk away transformed.” In Canada, the 2023 [Griffin Poetry Prize](Poetry+Prize) winner [has been announced](, with American poet [Roger Reeves]( taking the honors for his [Best Barbarian: Poems](. Formerly given out in two categories, to a Canadian and an international poet, the prize has been narrowed to a single award for the first time this year. The judges praised Reeves’ collection, stating that “at the intersections of history and myth, elegy and celebration, these poems chart the ruptures and violences enacted across time and space—particularly against black humanity—while leaning always toward beauty. Beauty and tenderness abound in this collection that dares to risk both: a brilliant and ambitious book.” The new [Canadian First Book Prize](20First%20Book%20Prize), instituted as part of the decision to consolidate the larger Griffin Poetry Prize, has [also been awarded this year](, for the first time, going to [Emily Riddle]( for her [The Big Melt](. The 2023 [Lambda Literary Award](20Literary%20Award) winners have recently [been announced]( in a variety of categories. [Gods of Want: Stories]( by [K-Ming Chang]( has won in the Lesbian Fiction category, while [The Foghorn Echoes]( by [Danny Ramadan]( has won in the Gay Fiction category. The winner in the Bisexual Fiction category is [Reluctant Immortals]( by [Gwendolyn Kiste](, while the winner in the Transgender Fiction category is [The Call Out]( by [Cat Fitzpatrick](. The winner in the LGBTQ Nonfiction category is [The Black Period: On Personhood, Race and Origin]( by [Hafizah Augustus Geter](, while the winner in the LGBTQ Anthology category is [OutWrite: The Speeches That Shaped LGBTQ Literary Culture](, edited by [Julie R. Enszer]( and [Elena Gross](. For the complete list of winners, [see this announcement](. [Zain Khalid]( has [been announced as the winner]( of the 2023 [Young Lions Fiction Award](Lions+Fiction+Award), given out annually by the [New York Public Library]( to a writer under thirty-five years of age, for his [Brother Alive](. Judge [Jessamine Chan]( praised the book as a “stunning achievement —conceptually daring, endlessly surprising, and rich with moral and intellectual questions that match the beauty of Zain Khalid’s prose and the fullness of his imagination.” The winner of the 2023 [Four Quartets Prize](20Quartets%20Prize), presented annually by the [Poetry Society of America]( and the [T.S. Eliot Foundation](, has [been announced](, with [Courtney Faye Taylor]( taking home the honor for her [Concentrate: Poems](. Named for [T.S. Eliot’s]( [Four Quartets](, the prize recognizes “a unified and complete sequence of poems published in America in a print or online journal, chapbook, or book.” This year’s [Aurealis Awards](Award), recognizing excellence in Australian speculative fiction, [have been given out]( in multiple categories. The winner of Best Fantasy Novel was [Angela Slatter]( for [The Path of Thorns](, while the winner of Best Science Fiction Novel was [T.R. Napper]( for [36 Streets](. Best Horror Novel went to [Trent Jamieson]( for [The Stone Road](, and Best Graphic Novel / Illustrated Work went to [Matt Ottley]( for [The Tree of Ecstasy and Unbearable Sadness](. The winner of the Best Young Adult Novel was [Vanessa Len]( for [Only a Monster](, while the winner of the Best Children’s Fiction was [Melanie La’Brooy]( for [The Wintrish Girl](. Best Collection went to [Chris Flynn]( for [Here Be Leviathans](, and Best Anthology went to [Mykaela Saunders](, editor of [This All Come Back Now](. The 2023 [Walter Scott Prize](Scott+Prize), named for the famous Scottish author of such classic works as [Ivanhoe](, and celebrating excellence in historical fiction, [has been awarded]( to Belfast writer [Lucy Caldwell]( for her novel, [These Days](. Set during the Belfast Blitz in 1941, the novel was praised by the judges for its "pitch-perfect, engrossing narrative ringing with emotional truth." The [Plutarch Award](20Award), named after the famous [ancient Greek biographer](, and awarded by the [Biographers International Organization]( to the best biography of the year, [has been given this year]( to [Jennifer Homans]( for her [Mr. B: George Balanchine's 20th Century](. Committee chair [Deirdre David]( praised the “magnificent biography” as “a perfect model of seamless narrative integration of the life with the work.” In other biography prize news, [Ramachandra Guha]( has [been named as the winner]( of the 2023 [Elizabeth Longford Prize for Historical Biography](20Longford%20Prize) for his [Rebels Against the Raj: Western Fighters for India’s Freedom](, with the author praised for his “deep empathy and impressive scholarship,” producing a book which demonstrates “how historical biography can illuminate the temper of the times through immersion in individual lives.” In Ireland, the winners of the 2023 [KPMG Children’s Books Ireland Awards](20Children's%20Books%20Ireland%20Awards), which are administered by [Children’s Books Ireland](, and which “identify, honour and promote excellence in books for young people by Irish authors and illustrators,” [have been revealed](. Both the Book of the Year and the Junior Juries Award went to [Girls Who Slay Monsters]( by [Ellen Ryan](, illustrated by [Shona Shirley Macdonald](, while the Judges’ Special Award went to [An Slipéar Ghloine]( by [Fearghas Mac Lochlainn](, illustrated by [Paddy Donnelly](. The Honour Award for Fiction has gone to [The Boy Who Lost His Spark]( by [Maggie O’Farrell](, illustrated by [Daniela Jaglenka Terrazzini](, while the Honour Award for Illustration has gone to [The Wilderness](, written and illustrated by [Steve McCarthy](. The EilÃs Dillon Award, named in honor of the revered Irish children’s author [EilÃs Dillon](, and given out in recognition of an outstanding first book for children and young people, has gone to [The Book of Secrets]( by [Alex Dunne](. Additional Award News This Month: Winners. [The Australian Book Design Awards]( | [The Australian/Vogel Literary Award]( | [The Children’s Book Award]( | [The Children’s History Book Prize]( | [The Crystal Kite Awards]( | [The Dal Stivens Literary Award]( | [The Danuta Gleed Literary Award]( | [The Donner Prize]( | [The Encore Award]( | [The English 4-11 Picture Book Awards]( | [The Ernest Scott Prize for History]( | [The Fogarty Literary Award]( | [The Future Worlds Prize]( | [The Golden Voice Award]( | [The Hayek Book Prize]( | [The Highland Book Prize]( | [The IndieReader Discovery Awards]( | [The International Prize for Arabic Fiction]( | [The Jhalak Prizes]( | [The New Writers Awards]( | [The Nine Dots Prize]( | [The Oxford Weidenfeld-Translation Prize]( | [The Pascall Prize]( | [The Prix Albertine Jeunesse]( | [The RBC Bronwen Wallace Award]( | [The Reading the West Book Awards]( | [The Tir na n-Og Awards]( | [The Writer in the World Prize]( Shortlists / Finalists. [The Australian Literature Society (ALS) Gold Medal]( | [The Chautauqua Prize]( | [The James Tait Black Prizes]( | [The New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults]( | [The Rachel Funari Prize]( | [The Society of Authors Awards]( | [The Text Prize]( | [The Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year]( | [The Wales Book of the Year]( | [The Wilbur Smith Adventure Writing Prize]( | [The YA Book Prize]( TinyCat [TinyCat]( is the online catalog for small libraries, created by LibraryThing. It turns your existing LibraryThing account into a simple, professional, web-based catalog. Follow [@TinyCat_Lib]( on Twitter for the latest TinyCat news, and be sure to check out [LibraryThing’s Youtube channel]( for a range of TinyCat tutorials. TinyCat Webinars. To learn more about TinyCat, join Kristi for a live demo Wednesdays at 1pm Eastern. Webinars are now on Zoom, so make sure to use our new [link to attend](. You can also check out our playlists of Tiny Tutorials on [LibraryThing's YouTube channel](, where Kristi walks you through various features of TinyCat in 30 seconds or less. If you'd like to schedule a webinar at another time or if you have other questions about TinyCat, you can reach Kristi at tinycat@librarything.com. Wait, That's It? That's all I have for the Thing this month! If you have any suggestions, or ideas for improving State of the Thing, please reach out to me at abigailadams@librarything.com. Happy reading, Abigail PS: If you'd rather receive a plain-text version, [edit your email preferences](. You can also read it [online](. This message was sent to {NAME}. Click to [edit your email preferences]( or [unsubscribe from future emails](.