Articles

  • 3 weeks ago | m.kuow.org | Emiko Jean |Katie Campbell

    Meet Me Here co-host Katie Campbell recently interviewed Mike Curato, author of "Gaysians," who will be at Queer/Bar in Seattle on June 17, 2025. Design by Katie Campbell Google author Mike Curato and you'll see what's made the bulk of his career: brightly colored children's books, and the young adult graphic novel "Flamer," one of the most banned books in the country for its depiction of a teenage boy struggling with the realization that he's gay.

  • 3 weeks ago | m.kuow.org | Emiko Jean |Katie Campbell |Alicia Inés Villa

    The KUOW Book Club is partnering with Seattle Public Library for a summer reading series in 2025. Design by Alicia Villa The KUOW Book Club has some exciting news to share today: We are kicking off a summer reading series in partnership with The Seattle Public Library. This is the first time our club is doing something like this, and I could not be more stoked. It's an honor for me, as a lifelong library fangirl, to present this super summer program.

  • May 10, 2024 | airmail.news | Lisa Henricksson |Philip Miller |Elly Griffiths |Emiko Jean

    The Hollow Tree by Philip Miller The Last Word by Elly Griffiths The Return of Ellie Black by Emiko Jean When five spooked horses from the Royal Household Cavalry threw their riders and bolted through the streets of central London last month, it was a reminder that although England is an ancient and highly developed civilization, a primal wildness always courses beneath its polite veneer.

  • May 8, 2024 | sacbee.com | Emiko Jean

    Missing persons are almost inescapable in thrillers, and for good reason. Not knowing what has happened to someone, imagining what could have happened, is compelling reading. That's exactly what you'll find in Emiko Jean's "The Return of Ellie Black." This is Jean's first foray into suspense.

  • May 1, 2024 | startribune.com | Emiko Jean

    Missing persons are almost inescapable in thrillers, and for good reason. Not knowing what has happened to someone, imagining what could have happened, is compelling reading. That's exactly what you'll find in Emiko Jean's "The Return of Ellie Black." This is Jean's first foray into suspense.

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