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Review

My Husband’s Wife

by Henrietta Thornton August 7, 2025

When Eden Fox goes for a run near her newly purchased rural English home, Spyglass House, all seems well. She and her husband, Harrison, love the huge old house and are beginning to settle into life in the village. Eden even has a show of her artwork planned at a local gallery. But all happiness and plans evaporate when she returns from her run and her key won’t work. Worse, another woman opens the door and claims she lives there and is Eden Fox. Eden’s husband says the same, and the police are called. In Feeney’s Beautiful Ugly alternating chapters, this bizarre story continues as we also meet police officer Olivia Bird, or Birdy, who is soon embroiled in her own mystery: a relative she didn’t know has died and left her a considerable inheritance. As part of it, Birdy discovers communication from a tech firm that promises to tell subscribers their death date. She and a kindly small town police officer investigate Eden Fox’s case, which soon turns into a missing-person investigation, one that’s surrounded by intriguing small-town goings on and MOST unexpected twists. A must for fans of Feeney’s absorbing novels and of Tana French’s work.

August 7, 2025 0 comment
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Review

The Bridesmaid

by Dodie Ownes August 7, 2025

A quirky forensics expert and an undercover NYPD detective are thrown together here to solve a murder. Adrianna Kensington, daughter of nightclub kingpin Leopold Kensington, is putting together the wedding of the century on the family’s private island, Elysium, while her husband-to-be, tech bro Mark Li, gathers sponsorship deals. Her bridesmaids are all fellow alums of Kensington Manor, an elite all-girls school whose motto is “Discipline, Self-Restraint, and Godliness”—and all of them were with Dri three years ago when she was kidnapped and held captive for three days after her 21st birthday bash at Elysium. When crime-podcaster and bridesmaid Simone is found dead days before the wedding, everything is at risk—Adrianna’s reputation, social-media money, and the whole Kensington empire—and the kidnapper could be after the bride again. Holly was the forensics side of the podcast, and is asked to substitute for Simone at the wedding. Fitzwilliam, a cop as preppy as Holly is goth, tags along as her assistant. The story is told from alternating views of the wedding party, allowing readers to experience the cut-throat world of mean girls, reality-show nuptials, and bridezilla moments. A dark historical twist in the tropical paradise setting adds depth to this high-flying tale of money, murder, and secrets.

August 7, 2025 0 comment
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Review

The Survivor

by Jeff Ayers August 7, 2025

Ben Cross arrives for the first day at his new job in New York City and is promptly fired and escorted out by security. Upset and struggling to understand what happened, he barely catches the 1 train heading uptown from South Ferry station. As he sits on the train, his phone starts receiving text messages telling him not to turn it off or to leave the train. Further, if a particular man in the train car exits at the next station, the man will die. Ben doesn’t believe it, but when the man leaves and is promptly shot, Ben realizes the texts aren’t bluffing, and he was not picked randomly to play this demented game. Outside the train, NYPD detective Kelly Hendricks investigates the murder of a man who just got off the subway and learns of Ben Cross hijacking that very same train. What she’s hearing from her superiors and what her gut is telling her are in conflict, so she decides that confronting Ben directly will provide the answers she wants and perhaps save the lives of every person on board. Reid’s first novel to be published in the United States is a fantastic action thriller that reads like Die Hard mixed with Thomas Harris. The Survivor would make an excellent film as the story primarily takes place in a short amount of time. Readers will want to uncover Reid’s other novel, The Hunter, which was published in the UK, while never riding on the subway again.

August 7, 2025 0 comment
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Review

The Tarot Reader

by Charlotte Del Vecchio July 31, 2025

Jade Crawford, or as her clients know her, Madame Ravencroft, is a 25-year-old psychic, offering a variety of services thanks to her supposed connection with the great beyond. However, Jade’s spiritual talent is nothing more than a creative ruse, delicately toeing the line between criminal and therapeutic. Jade and her younger sister, Stevie, run their Psychic Parlor and Shoppe out of Winston-Salem, NC, struggling to make ends meet and searching for income by any means necessary. After losing their mother to a tragic accident and their father to a prison sentence, the girls were forced to take on the family business and continue the con in order to survive. When a sleazy local politician goes missing, Jade sees an opportunity to promote her business and maybe claim the reward money by sending in a tip offering the location of the body to the police, claiming to have seen it in a vision. When her “vision” is revealed to be hauntingly accurate, Jade and Stevie find themselves in a whirlwind of media and customers demanding a piece of the magic. As Jade continues to spin her web of lies around the police and the town, she finds her sister and herself entangled in the investigation not only as suspects but possibly the next victims. Fans of Samantha M. Bailey will appreciate this thrilling twist on a female-driven thriller with layers of secrets and complexities throughout.

July 31, 2025 0 comment
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Review

Crown City

by Brian Kenney July 31, 2025

Set in 1903 Pasadena and told through the eyes of 18-year-old Ryunosuke “Ryui” Wada, who has recently arrived from Yokohama, Japan, this novel is rich in dualities. An orphan, Ryui is fascinated by the world around himself—including Jack, his talented roommate and photographer and Gigi, a beautiful seamstress. Trained as an artist, Jack manages to find work in Pasadena’s art community as an apprentice, a job that takes him all over town. “In America, or perhaps especially in California, people could be transformed into anyone they dreamed of being.” Pasadena is rife with cultural appropriation; one of the personas Ryui encounters involves young white women re-creating Japanese culture, “which made me feel uneasy and confused,” Ryui notes. But when he and Jack are hired by Toshio Aoki, Pasadena’s best-known Japanese artist, to recover a missing painting (“I could be the first Nipponese detective in this country,” crows Jack) they willingly enter a world where danger abounds and real historical figures have a role. Poignant, marvellously well imagined, and deeply moving, this latest from Hirahara, author of the Edgar Award-winning Mas Arai series, and more recently the writer of Clark and Division and Evergreen, is sure to engage fans of historical fiction.

July 31, 2025 0 comment
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Review

What We Can Know

by Henrietta Thornton July 31, 2025

Be happy, be academically successful, do the right thing—in McEwan’s tale of the mystery surrounding a lost poem, you can only have two. The poem, and those surrounding it, have two lives here. The second part of the book takes place in 2014 at the time of the poem’s creation and involves narcissistic poet Francis Blundy; his wife, Vivien; and their circle. The first part of the book is set in 2119, when humanity has been beset by global warming and nuclear wars. The diminished world is fixated on the (perceived) better past, part of that obsession being Blundy’s poem, which has a place in the culture as the pinnacle of romance and dedication. McEwan spins the reader in circles, showing us the same events first from afar and then from different points of view in the same time period. This creates a sense that what we can know is in fact very little, and maybe that’s for the best. As usual in McEwan’s books, especially his ultra-tense On Chesil Beach, the characters move in such agonizing situations that the book must be set aside at times—but the language, especially concerning characters’ self-regard, whips the reader back in (“…it was no longer me at all. What remained was not even a woman but a poetic convention, the shadow of a woman on the cave walls of a man’s imagination”). A must for McEwan fans; and librarians, take note: the creation and maintenance of an archive has a role here.

July 31, 2025 0 comment
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Review

The Pines Were Watching

by Danise Hoover July 31, 2025

Life in a small town in Minnesota is not supposed to involve complex crimes in the middle of a heat wave, at least that’s how Sheriff Red Hammergren feels, but when missing public-health nurse Joanie Crea’s body is found on the run-down estate of the formerly wealthy Grandgeorge family, tensions and suspicions run away with the locals. There is little help coming from Joanie’s rigid, bureaucratic robot of a boss or her glad-handing, church deacon of a husband. The body of a second woman is found and information from her abused and recently beaten young son may hold a key. A mystery man with a green jacket, missing funds, and long-held secrets all play with Red’s sixth sense, making her feel that the solution is just beyond her grasp. Help comes from Red’s poker-playing buddies and Waltz, a crime scene tech, but her indomitable need to solve the crime is primary. This is a deeply atmospheric and compelling read. We can only hope for more from the series.

July 31, 2025 0 comment
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Review

In the Bones

by Jeff Ayers July 31, 2025

Beautiful, upstate New York, small town Cape Vincent is a place where everybody knows one another. When famous retired hockey player Mikko Helle buys a waterfront house and completely renovates it, he hires Nicole Durham, a local woman, to clean before he moves in. She finds a young woman secretly living inside the house, then the police investigate and discover the remains of another young woman in the basement. With a string of bizarre thefts of items that seem to have no value, the squatter in Helle’s house appears to be the perfect suspect for both the break-ins and the murder. Suspicions mount and trust disappears when Nicole learns about her husband’s surprising connection to the unexpected house guest, the dead body, and Helle’s secret business dealings. How do you discover the truth when everything is built on lies? Wegert creates a vivid town and realistic inhabitants with this taut and compelling mystery. Comparisons to Gillian Flynn’s Sharp Objects and books by Jane Harper and Lucy Foley are warranted

July 31, 2025 0 comment
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Review

A Killer Wedding

by Dodie Ownes July 24, 2025

As a junior editor at Bespoke Weddings magazine, Christine is thrilled when she is chosen to cover the supernova wedding of the year, that of Jane and Graham Beaufort, soon-to-be heirs to the massive and influential cosmetics company Glo. A trip to Ireland and a chance to prove to her boss that she can do the job is just what Christine needs to earn that senior editor title! But nearly from the moment she arrives at the gorgeous yet medieval Ballymoon Castle, something seems off. Some of the Beaufort family does not trust Jane, and none of them trusts one another. Matriarch Gloria Beaufort (known as G.B.), who hand-selected Christine to cover the wedding, reigns over the clan, but her grandson Graham, the groom, is clearly her favorite. On the day before the wedding, tragedy strikes, putting the nuptials at risk, but the family decides the show must go on. Enter a handsome bartender, suspicious minds, secret tunnels, and a missing murderer—along with Jane’s interesting past and family history—and this closed-castle mystery takes off. The Beaufort family has no idea what sort of lessons and payback G.B. has planned for them, but they will find out soon enough. Fans of haute couture and wedding culture will delight in this somewhat snarky take on wealth, celebrity, and the cosmetics industry.

July 24, 2025 0 comment
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Review

Best Little Motel in Texas

by Brian Kenney July 24, 2025

Cordelia West lives a pretty simple life. A devoted young Dallas Public librarian, she likes to keep her past just that: in the past. This includes her mother, a former alcoholic, who pretty much wrecked her childhood (they’re now on better terms). But when she receives a letter from great-aunt Penelope—a relative she has never heard of—Cordelia can’t ignore it. She’s been named sole heir to Penelope’s estate back in their hometown of Sarsaparilla Falls, Texas, a place she has assiduously avoided the past few decades. Turns out her inheritance pretty much consists of the Chickadee Motel, which the will stipulates can’t be sold until all residents leave or pass away. So off she goes to Sarsaparilla to see how she can rid herself of these tenants. Cordelia is savvy, and soon after arriving, she figures out the motel is a brothel, with three over-60 sex workers—Daisy, Arline, and Belinda Sue—AKA the Chicks, all eager for Cordelia to sign on as madam. This is the backstory, which is absolutely delightful, but it’s just a launching pad for the rest of the novel, which features extortion, accidental murder, poisoning, blackmail, corrupt developers, a beguiling romantic subplot, and so much more. Lane has created a fascinating world populated with extraordinary characters. Here’s hoping we all meet again.

July 24, 2025 0 comment
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