Visit the Foundation’s website to learn more about the titles on the 2025 #NBAwards Longlist for Young People’s Literature!
nationalbook.org/2025-nation…
Congrats to all of the authors, translators, and publishers Longlisted for the 2025 #NBAwards for Young People's Literature and Translated Literature! nationalbook.org/2025-nation…
Congrats to everyone Longlisted for the 2025 #NBAwards for Poetry and Nonfiction! Visit the Foundation’s website to learn more. nationalbook.org/2025-nation…
Attending SXSW next week in Austin? Don't miss our VP, Skip Dye, on the Defending the Right to Read: Working Together panel on 3/4 at 1 pm CT.
Click for more info:
bit.ly/4igo1hO
We’re so excited to announce that our Senior Vice President, Skip Dye, has been named an Honorary Member by the American Library Association.
Congratulations, Skip, and thank you for all you do! ala.org/news/2025/02/america…
💞 Tell us, are you In the Mood to Swoon?? 💞 Don't miss our Valentine’s Day Romance Book Buzz webinar! Join us and our publishing partners for an inside look at the best forthcoming romance titles. See you today at 2pm ET / 1pm CT 🫶🫶🫶 bit.ly/3QD4QmN
We’re excited to share the secret we’ve been hiding: @AuthorDanBrown's new Robert Langdon novel, THE SECRET OF SECRETS will be published 9.9.25. Get ready for a propulsive, twisty, thought-provoking masterpiece! #thesecretsofsecrets
🎉 Celebrate the Lunar New Year with books for the whole family! 🌙📚 Discover stories by Asian authors that highlight the joy of family and shared meals. 🥟❤️
Link in bio! #LunarNewYear#FamilyReads#AsianAuthors#PRHBooks
On January 20th, join the BANNED TOGETHER National Watch Party! Prior to its official release, for one day only, the award-winning feature film will be available to stream.
“We must accept finite disappointment but never lose infinite hope.” – MLK
bit.ly/40lw5Xd
OPRAH’S BOOK CLUB: Colm Tóibín’s “Long Island,” the sequel to “Brooklyn,” is the latest @oprahsbookclub pick.
@Oprah and the author share how the story includes secrets, romance and yearning — and why readers are left guessing up until the end.