Book Review

The Calamity Club by Kathryn Stockett

Kathryn Stockett's long-awaited return, The Calamity Club, follows three women in 1933 Oxford, Mississippi who refuse to take what life has handed them: an eleven-year-old orphan with a sharp mouth, a chinless small-town spinster, and a desperate mother running on fumes. Funny, occasionally baggy, and full of women you do not forget after the last page.

The Faith of Beasts by James S.A. Corey

The Faith of Beasts by James S.A. Corey, the second book in The Captive's War trilogy, is patient, brutal, and deeply human, with comparable reads from Tchaikovsky and Martine.

I Could Give You the Moon by Ann Liang

With I Could Give You the Moon, Ann Liang returns to Airington with a glamorous, slow-burn YA romance about social media masks, missing brothers, and a love that asks for everything

Too Close to Home by Seraphina Nova Glass

Seraphina Nova Glass returns with a three-POV thriller set in a lakefront community where a Labor Day car bomb cracks open every polite secret in the neighborhood. Sharp dialogue, a strong front half, and rich motherhood stakes carry the book. The back third gets crowded, but the voice work and book-club bait are real.

The Thorn Queen by Sasha Peyton Smith

The Thorn Queen by Sasha Peyton Smith is the sequel to The Rose Bargain. Quieter court warfare, hotter romance, darker faerie kingdom.

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