Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Ten perfect books to gift this Valentine’s Day

One title on Tertulia's list of books that make a perfect Valentine’s Day gift:
Felicity: Poems
Mary Oliver

This stunning collection of poems captures the delicate beauty of love, nature, and connection. Described by the New York Times Book Review as “genuine, moving, and implausible as the first caressing breeze of spring,” it's the perfect gift to warm your Valentine’s heart.
Read about the other books on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Monday, January 26, 2026

Eight historical mysteries with pirates & smugglers

Linda Wilgus grew up in the Netherlands and lived in Italy, Belgium, and the United States before settling in England. A graduate of the University of Amsterdam, she worked as a bookseller and a knitting pattern designer before becoming a full-time writer. Her short stories have been published in numerous literary magazines. Wilgus shares her home with her husband, three children, and their dog.

[The Page 69 Test: The Sea Child; Q&A with Linda Wilgus]

The Sea Child is Wilgus's debut novel.

At CrimeReads the author tagged "eight cracking reads about smugglers, pirates and mutineers." One title on the list:
Susanna Kearsley, The Rose Garden

After Eva loses her movie star sister, she returns to Cornwall where they spent their childhood summers, planning to/ in order to scatter her sister’s ashes. But the house Eva used to stay at as a child, Trelowarth, turns out to be a portal between our modern time and the eighteenth century, when smuggler brothers Jack and Daniel Butler lived there.

Soon, Eva is caught up in the brothers’ lives and finds herself falling for Daniel. As if their smuggling operation doesn’t put them enough at risk already, the brothers are also involved in the Jacobite cause, and danger eventually arrives at their (and Eva’s) door. Steeped in smuggling history, this deliciously romantic timeslip novel is a must-read for those who enjoy historical fiction set in Cornwall’s colorful past.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Six thrillers about secrets and lies

Isabelle Popp's first attempt at writing a romance novel came in middle school, when she began a story about a weirdo girl who could photosynthesize. That project was abandoned, but she has plenty of other silly ideas in the hopper. When she isn't reading or writing, she's probably knitting, solving crossword puzzles, or scouring used book stores for vintage Gothic romance paperbacks. Originally from New York, she's as surprised as anyone that she lives in Indiana. Let's Give 'Em Pumpkin to Talk About is her first novel.

At Book Riot Popp tagged six "compelling thrillers about secrets and lies." One title on the list:
Who Knows You by Heart by C.J. Farley

Would you take a mysterious but lucrative job if it meant finally paying off some debts? That’s what Octavia Crenshaw did. Eustachian Inc. specializes in audio entertainment, and they pay much better than the nonprofit sector ever did. So what if they have an entire secret floor of their corporate headquarters? When Octavia is pulled into working on a secret project with another coder, she begins to learn things about her employer that she can no longer ignore. If you like thrillers with a touch of romance, this is the one to pick up.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, January 24, 2026

Ten thrillers and suspense novels for fans of "His & Hers" and "Tell Me Lies"

At People magazine senior books editor Lizz Schumer tagged ten thrillers and suspense novels for fans of His & Hers and Tell Me Lies. One title on the list:
Both Can Be True by Jessica Guerrieri

The Gilmore sisters have drifted apart. Frankie is the funny one, full of restless energy and sharp edges. Now a bookstore owner who has been sober for years, she avoids her past as much as she does alcohol.

Mere is the steady one, the caretaker, a mother quietly unraveling from the loneliness of her marriage and the strain of raising a neurodivergent daughter. When a woman in Frankie’s social circle disappears, the sisters are unexpectedly forced to confront their past, and with it, the unspoken trauma of sexual violence and the vices they turned to in order to survive their fractured bond.
Read about the other entries on the list.

Q&A with Jessica Guerrieri.

--Marshal Zeringue

Friday, January 23, 2026

Six top books about Ohio

Lauren Schott was born in Akron, Ohio, and is a graduate of Duke University. She has spent twenty-five years working in publishing. Very Slowly All at Once is her first novel for adults. She currently lives in Henley-on-Thames, UK, with her family.

At Lit Hub Schott tagged six books that "show, even the darker side of life in Ohio offers up rich lives worth examining." One title on the list:
Curtis Sittenfeld, Eligible

In Sittenfeld’s modern retelling of Pride & Prejudice, a sprawling Tudor in an upscale Cincinnati neighborhood stands in for Longbourne in Hertfordshire. Both places could seem a bit boring, until the Bennet sisters and their suitors show up. Like her Georgian counterpart, Liz Bennet in 2013 enjoys being out in the fresh air, and her long runs offer both an opportunity to encounter Mr Darcy (here a brain surgeon from San Francisco) and showcase the local sites, including the famed Skyline Chili. It’s not Georgian England and it’s not Manhattan, where Liz had been living until her father had a heart attack and she had to return to Cincy, but this country-club-centered version of Ohio still feels high society enough to carry the original novel’s preoccupations with class, marriage, and what everyone will think of you forward into our millennium.
Read about the other novels on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Five historical fiction books about resistance

Rachel Brittain is a writer, Day Dreamer, and Amateur Aerialist. Her short fiction has appeared in Luna Station Quarterly, Andromeda Spaceways, and others. She is a contributing editor for Book Riot, where she screams into the void about her love of books. Brittain lives in Northwest Arkansas with a rambunctious rescue pup, a snake, and a houseful of plants (most of which aren’t carnivorous).

At Book Riot she tagged "five historical fiction books [which] depict resistance against violence and authoritarianism in many forms." One entry on the list:
The Woman With No Name by Audrey Blake

A middle-aged woman overlooked by everyone around her is recruited by British Intelligence to become their first female sabotage agent in France. Yvonne Rudellat thinks her life is over when her apartment is bombed, but somehow she survives. With her home in Britain destroyed and her childhood home of France under Nazi rule, Yvonne decides it’s time to fight back. But no one believes a middle-aged woman will do any good for the war effort, even on the home front. It’s exactly that attitude that will make her the perfect undercover agent. The book is based on the life of a real woman who fought in the French Resistance during WWII, a fact which her family only learned after her death.
Read about the other books on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Seven titles about women who lose the plot

Sara Levine is the author of the novels The Hitch and Treasure Island!!! and the short story collection Short Dark Oracles. She earned a Ph.D. in English Language and Literature from Brown University and was awarded a Mellon Fellowship in the Humanities.

Levine teaches creative writing at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and on Substack at Delusions of Grammar.

At Electric Lit she tagged seven novels that "celebrate reckless speed, dizzying intensity, audacious rudeness, and the abandonment of social norms." One title on the list:
Revenge of the Scapegoat by Caren Beilin

One day Iris, a writing instructor, receives a package containing documents from her teenage years: a play she wrote and two letters from her father, blaming her for the family’s ruin. After complaining to her friend Ray, who is about to have top surgery, Iris swaps her mildewy house for Ray’s doddering Subaru and drives off to the countryside. Did I mention the trip is poorly planned? Iris suffers from an autoimmune disease, and the funniest parts of this funny American book are the dialogues between Iris’s aching feet, whom she has named Bouvard and Pécuchet (after two characters in an unfinished Flaubert novel). The Subaru dies, and Iris lands in a field where she is stepped on by a herd of cows, then winds up working as a cowherd for a sexy lady who probably murdered her own husband and now operates a museum that’s only open one month a year. Then the story really goes off the rails.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Seven top Southern Gothic novels

Mark Murphy is a native of Savannah, Georgia. He's worked as a fast-food worker, marine biologist, orderly, ordained minister, and gastroenterologist, his current "day job." When he's not healing the sick, he writes anything he can-newspaper columns, short stories, magazine articles, and textbook chapters.

Rose Dhu is his third novel.

At The Nerd Daily Murphy tagged seven novels in the Southern Gothic tradition that inspired hi. One entry on the list:
Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner (1936)

Thomas Sutpen, a white man born into poverty in western Virginia, moves to Mississippi in the 1830s. Ruthlessly pragmatic, he wishes to rise above his nondescript beginnings through the product of his own formula, which he terms his “design.” He builds an ostentatious plantation (Sutpen’s Hundred), takes a wife and embarks on a quest for an heir. His obsessive search for power, status and immortality, driven by pride and scarred by past humiliation, is ultimately undermined by his lack of empathy and inherent blindness to the human costs of his own design. Presented in fragmented fashion, largely through other characters’ recollections and with conflicting, sometimes unreliable narratives, this is a challenging read, but Faulkner himself said it was “the greatest novel of the 20th Century.” Many critics agree.
Read about the other entries on the list.

Absalom, Absalom! also appears Nicola DeRobertis-Theye's list of five notable novels of biographical detection, Brenda Wineapple's six favorite books list, Jacket Copy's list of sixty-one essential postmodern readsSarah Churchwell's list of six books on the American Deep South, and Thomas Perry's favorite books list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Monday, January 19, 2026

Five titles to read in the early days of parenting

Catherine Pierce served as the Poet Laureate of Mississippi from 2021-2025, and is the author of four books of poems: Danger Days (2020), The Tornado Is the World (2016), The Girls of Peculiar (2012), and Famous Last Words (2008), all from Saturnalia Books. Each of her most recent three books won the Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters Poetry Prize; Famous Last Words won the Saturnalia Books Poetry Prize. Two new books arrive in 2026: a memoir, Foxes for Everybody, from Northwestern University Press, and a poetry collection, Dear Beast, from Saturnalia.

At Lit Hub Pierce tagged "five books that I would have gratefully devoured as a new mother (and did gratefully devour as a not-quite-as-new one)." One title on the list:
Good Talk by Mira Jacob

Good Talk deftly navigates the complexities of race, family dynamics, politics, micro- and macroaggressions in the wake of the 2016 election, and the surprises that come along with a child’s inevitable questions. In addition to being thought-provoking and moving and cathartic, Good Talk is genuinely funny and utterly engrossing. There’s a reason why graphic novels have become such a successful “gateway” medium for parents trying to get their kids into reading—and it’s not because a graphic novel is watered-down version of a traditional novel. The conciseness, the visual satisfaction, and the crucial interplay between image and word makes reading a good graphic novel—or, in this case, graphic memoir—an electrifying, transporting experience. That was the experience I had when I read Jacob’s Good Talk when my own children were five and eight. This was one of the first books I was able to lose myself in even while my kids were running around the house being the opposite of quiet, and it’s one I haven’t stopped thinking about since.
Read about the other entries on the list.

Good Talk is among Amy Butcher's eight defiant books by women.

--Marshal Zeringue

Sunday, January 18, 2026

The best mysteries and thrillers of 2025 -- "Elle"

One title on Elle magazine's 2025 list of the best mysteries and thrillers:
Fair Play by Louise Hegarty

Hegarty follows the conventions of all the great traditional mysteries...and then twists them. Fair Play is set in a rural Irish country home, an Airbnb rented by a group of friends to celebrate New Year’s Eve with a murder-mystery theme party. When a guest is found dead the next morning, the friends are thrown into an investigation that references all the classic detective plot devices in such a twisty way that you’ll discover there are many more questions (and, eventually, answers) than you first realized.
Read about the other entries on the list.

Fair Play is among CrimeReads' best traditional mysteries released in 2025.

The Page 69 Test: Fair Play.

Q&A with Louise Hegarty.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Seven titles that delve into the great mysteries of Oxford

A. D. Bell lives in Oxford, haunting the city’s bookshops of a weekend, writing in their cafes and walking the winding paths of her characters.

Their debut, The Bookbinder’s Secret, features Lilian ("Lily") Delaney, apprentice to a master bookbinder in Oxford in 1901, who chafes at the confines of her life.

At CrimeReads Bell tagged seven novels that delve into the great mysteries of Oxford. One title on the list:
Simon Mason, A Killing in November

Rounding out this list is a modern crime novel published in 2022, first in the DI Wilkins series. In Mason’s series, two detectives share a surname and little else. One is from the wrong side of the tracks and the other immaculately groomed and privileged Oxford graduate. When a woman is found strangled in St Barnabas Church in Jericho, the unlikely duo investigate.
Read about the other entries on the list at CrimeReads.

--Marshal Zeringue

Friday, January 16, 2026

Nine true crime memoirs that explore why we're so obsessed with darkness

Rebecca Hannigan has an MA in Creative Writing Crime Fiction from UEA, graduating in 2023. She won the UEA/Little Brown Crime Prize for her dissertation. She has also been shortlisted for Virago/The Pool’s Best New Crime Writer.

Her first novel, Darkrooms, is a fictional work in which she explores the "feeling of betrayal and injustice" stemming from "a murder in [her] mother’s small Irish hometown" for which "no one was ever sentenced."

For People magazine Hannigan tagged nine "gripping true crime memoirs that explore why we're all so obsessed with darkness." One title on the list:
We Keep the Dead Close by Becky Cooper

While at Harvard, Cooper learned about the decades-old unsolved murder of Jane Britton, a young archaeology student, and is haunted by it long after graduation. Cooper describes Britton as a big personality, a target for both envy and admiration, and finds a growing kinship that pushes her to investigate. Her obsession animates the exhaustive — and sometimes exhausting — investigation she undertakes, but ultimately leaves the reader wondering what Cooper’s life will look like when the case is finally solved.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue