Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Last Mandarin by Louise Penny and Melissa Fung

 

I don't normally love Penny, but this was so much fun. Eunice Wong was fantastic. And I loved the idea of a political thriller that wasn't a steaming pile of toxic masculinity.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

The Shippers by Katherine Center

 

I mean, I'm slightly embarrassed by how much I enjoyed this. It really shouldn't have worked, but it did.


Review copy provided by publisher.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

The Puzzle Master by Danielle Trussoni


 The only thing I liked about this was Eduardo Ballarini.

The Franchise by Thomas Elrod

 

On the one hand, this was a lot of fun. On the other hand, given the set up, it seems like it actually could have been a lot better.


Review copy provided by publisher.

Wednesday, May 06, 2026

The Hill by Harriet Clark

 

I just don't understand why this book is getting so much buzz. It was totally vanilla.


Review copy provided by publisher.

Tuesday, May 05, 2026

The Great Houses of Pill Hill by Diane Josefowicz

 

This was so close to being really good -- interesting premise and fun details. However, like so many mysteries, there was just one too many extraordinary events.


Review copy provided by publisher.

Absence by Andres Dana Hudson

 

I enjoyed this: it was an interesting premise, the pacing was great, and the resolution was not predictable.


Review copy provided by publisher.

I, Spy by L.M. Kemp

 

This was all sorts of fun -- very engaging and entertaining.

Review copy provided by publisher.

The Calamity Club by Kathryn Stockett

 

I suspect that this will be a huge seller even if no one actually likes it, as Stockett's first book since The Help.

But I adored it. It's definitely commercial fiction and not great literature, but it was completely engaging and, even at 640 pages, seemed to fly by. 


Review copy provided by publisher.

Enormous Wings by Laurie Frankel


There are a lot of family dramas out there, but Laurie Frankel writes books that are more interesting than virtually all of the others.

(And the fact that it was set in Austin was fun -- although there was not a lot of local color.)

This would be a great choice for book groups.


Review copy provided by publisher.

Ghost Town by Tom Perrotta

 

This turned into almost a hate read pretty quickly. It just felt way too focused on the perspective of a character type that we have just already seen too often; even when the topic was race, it was clear who was the subject and who were the objects.


Review copy provided by publisher.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Mom Brain by Nicole Hackett

 

Great concept, some very interesting social commentary, but ultimately the transition from psychological thriller to action-adventure didn't quite work for me.


Review copy provided by publisher.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Mad Mabel by Sally Hepworth

 

The description made this sound like another "old woman detective" type book -- there are a lot of those lately, and some are great but it's getting overdone. Well, turns out it was quite different. I felt like it worked really well.


Review copy provided by publisher.

Go Gentle by Maria Semple

 

A really clever combination of mystery, spy thriller, domestic drama, romance, and, you know, shout-outs to stoicism and feminism.


Review copy provided by publisher.

The Adjunct by Maria Adelmann

 

Some parts were funny and interesting, but overall it tried to do too much.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Cherry Baby by Rainbow Rowell

 

So while acknowledging that Rowell is always vaguely disappointing because nothing is ever going to be in the same league as Attachments, I can say that this was quite good -- it wasn't until it was more than half over that I had a sense of which direction it was going to go in, and there was a lot of interesting social commentary.


Review copy provided by publisher.

Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

The Ruins by Lily Brooks-Dalton

 

All through the first third of this, I was seriously considering abandoning it because it just seemed so cliched (professor shows initial promise but then nothing, job threatened and no new grants, problems in personal relationships, blah blah blah). And then there was a plot twist so fun that I ended up taking the day off of work to finish the book. So: highly recommended.


Review copy provided by publisher.

Monday, March 30, 2026