Saturday, May 17, 2025

Four titles featuring cultural institutions & crime

Molly Odintz is the managing editor for CrimeReads and the editor of Austin Noir. She grew up in Austin and worked as a bookseller before becoming a Very Professional Internet Person. She lives in central Texas with her cat, Fritz Lang.

At CrimeReads Odintz tagged "four excellent recent and upcoming novels featuring cultural institutions and plenty of crimes." One title on the list:
Poupeh Missaghi, Sound Museum

Why should male torturers get all the credit? In Poupeh Missaghi’s parody of corporate feminism and the misplaced morality of professionalism, the women holding up a brutal regime would like their contributions acknowledged, too, thank you very much. And one has created a strange new archive dedicated to analyzing the sounds of torture, which she would love to tell you all about. Humorous enough to avoid feeling heavy-handed, Sound Museum may challenge the squeamish, but even if it takes several sessions to get through Poupeh Missaghi’s Kafka-esque tone poem, it’s well worth the effort.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Friday, May 16, 2025

Five top legal thrillers

Sally Smith is a barrister and KC who has spent all her working life in the Inner Temple. After writing a biography of Sir Edward Marshall Hall KC, a renowned Edwardian barrister she retired from the bar to write fulltime. A Case of Mice and Murder, her first novel, was inspired by the historic surroundings in which she lives and works and by the centuries of rich history in Inner Temple Archives and Library. This is the first in a series introducing the amateur and unwilling sleuth Sir Gabriel Ward KC.

At the Waterstones blog Smith tagged five favotite legal thrillers ("sticking to what have become classics"). One title on the list:
The Firm by John Grisham

The story of an idealistic young lawyer offered what is apparently the dream job in a law firm, who uncovers corruption and learns about the attraction of power and the importance of moral integrity and the pull of both. A terrific read and thought provoking as well.
Read about the other entries on the list.

The Firm is among Michelle Frances's eight top workplace thrillers, Jamie Kornegay's five top novels with criminals covering their tracks, and Alafair Burke's seven top books that show the real lives of lawyers.

--Marshal Zeringue

Nine titles that center asexuality

Debbie Urbanski is the author of the novel After World (2023)—which was named a best book of the year by the San Francisco Chronicle, Engadget, the Los Angeles Times tech, Booklist, and Strange Horizons—and Portalmania (2025). Her writing focuses on the intersections of horror, fantasy, science fiction, asexuality, memoir, and/or the planet. Over the past two decades, she's published widely in such places as The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy, The Best American Experimental Writing, The Sun, Granta, Orion, and Junior Great Books.

At Electric Lit Urbanski tagged nine "narratives [that] push against the traditional definitions of love that confine all of us." One title on the list:
Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe

This graphic memoir relates Maia’s experience growing up as e (Maia uses e/em/eir pronouns) tries to figure out eir identity: what gender e is, who e’s attracted to, what attraction means to e, how e feels about sex, and what sorts of relationships e wants to have in eir life. One of my favorite passages is when Maia describes the relief of realizing that eir life can reflect who e actually is. “I remember when I first realized I never had to have children. It was like walking out of a narrow alley into a wide open field. ‘I never have to get married.’ ’I never have to date anyone.’ ‘I don’t even have to care about sex.’ These realizations were like gifts that I gave myself.” The book, to me, is often about language—specifically the words we use to describe ourselves—and how language can either constrict or expand the possibilities of identity. Since its publication in 2019, Gender Queer has gone on to become one of the most challenged and most frequently banned books in U.S. public schools.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Thursday, May 15, 2025

Ten books for fans of "Sinners"

Brittany K. Allen is a writer and actor living in Brooklyn.

At Lit Hub she tagged ten books for fans of Sinners, the 2025 American musical horror film produced, written, and directed by Ryan Coogler. One title on the list:
Claire Kohda’s Woman, Eating

This contemporary vampire novel also finds echos of colonialism in Dracula’s fangs. Lydia is a “frustrated foodie” who yearns to eat the Japanese cuisine of her father’s homeland. But she can’t stomach anything but blood, due to being undead.

This literary fiction is concerned with thwarted desires, and finely depicts a person straddling several identities while feeling at home in none. Like Coogler, Kohda also does a lot of mixing around the usual lore.
Read about the other entries on the list.

Woman, Eating is among Isabelle McConville's eleven greatest recent bloodsucking books.

--Marshal Zeringue

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Six top puzzle novels

K. A. Merson is a vaguely reclusive writer who lives in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, along with a patient spouse, a malevolent boxer dog, and an Airstream trailer.

The author's new novel is The Language of the Birds.

At CrimeReads Merson tagged six favorite puzzle novels, including:
The Twyford Code by Janice Hallett

A brilliantly clever, mind-bending mystery, The Twyford Code is a page-turning scavenger hunt chock full of puzzles, red herrings, and an endearing protagonist you will not soon forget. I must confess to holding The Twyford Code in a special place as it was one of the three comps (comparable titles) that I used when querying agents for The Language of the Birds manuscript (you won’t find my other two comps on this list). While discussing The Twyford Code, I should also mention The Appeal, Hallett’s debut novel. The Twyford Code might be considered more puzzle-oriented, whereas The Appeal is more of a puzzling twist on a classic whodunnit. But both stories are presented to the reader in strikingly original ways.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Eight novels exploring complicated feelings about ambition

Emma Pattee is a climate journalist and fiction writer.

Her work has been published in The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Guardian, and elsewhere.

Her debut novel, Tilt, is available now.

At Electric Lit Pattee tagged eight "contemporary novels that explore ambition in complicated, nuanced, and exciting ways." One title on the list:
So Big by Edna Ferber

Inspired by a true story, So Big is about a woman who is determined to make something of her life no matter what it takes. When she has a son, she names him So Big, and puts her own dreams to the side in order to help foster his. As every child gymnast tells us, that never goes great! This book is an examination of the American Dream, and asks us that eternal question: is it better to chase money or to be true to yourself?
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Monday, May 12, 2025

Eight top revenge thrillers

At Book Riot Addison Rizer tagged eight "satisfying revenge thrillers where the bad guys finally get their due." One title on the list:
Your House Will Pay by Steph Cha

In the aftermath of the shooting of a Black teenager in 2019, tensions in Los Angeles rise. Especially for Shawn, the brother of a Black girl who was shot and killed in the 1990s. His story intersects with Grace, the daughter of Korean immigrant parents who run a local pharmacy full of family tension of their own. As Shawn and Grace’s stories overlap, revenge, injustice, and loss amass into a tragedy.
Read about the other thrillers on the list.

Your House Will Pay is among the thirteen most essential Los Angeles books of mystery or crime, Jordan Harper's three top novels in the new L.A. crime canon, Erin E. Adams's seven titles that use mystery to examine race, María Amparo Escandón's eight books about living in Los Angeles, Alyssa Cole's five top crime novels that explore social issues, Sara Sligar's seven California crime novels with a nuanced take on race, class, gender & community, and Karen Dietrich's eight top red herrings in contemporary crime fiction.

--Marshal Zeringue

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Nine books about women without children

Nicole Louie is a writer and translator based in Ireland. Her essays have appeared in Oh Reader Magazine, The Walrus, and The Guardian and her curated collections of books, movies and podcasts about women who are not mothers by choice, circumstance or ambivalence can be found on Instagram: @bynicolelouie.

Others Like Me: The Lives of Women Without Children is her first book.

At Electric Lit Louie tagged nine favorite books "by women who placed writing, not babies, at the center of their lives and flourished outside of motherhood." One title on the list:
Where the Past Begins: A Writer’s Memoir by Amy Tan

By uncovering seven plastic boxes of family memorabilia in the corner of her office, Amy Tan goes deep into her traumatic childhood, reflects on her Chinese heritage, and offers insights into the nature of creativity and her writing methods. Where the Past Begins is a poignant and humorous memoir that recounts Tan’s complex relationship with her mentally ill mother, the loss of both her 16-year-old brother and her father within months of each other, and examines her love for art, music, and linguistics.

Old letters to and from her mother, some dating from 1969, when Tan went to college and they separated for the first time, give further insight into a relationship marked by frequent emotional fights and declarations of love. Sunk deep into the material evidence of their mother-daughter bond, Tan shares her feelings about becoming a mother herself, expressing no desire to pass along her genetic structure by stating, “What’s in me that I’d have wanted to pass on is already in the books.”
Read about the other entries on the list at Electric Lit.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Eight globe-spanning titles on World War II

Natasha Lester is the New York Times bestelling author of The Paris Seamstress, The Paris Orphan, and The Paris Secret, and a former marketing executive for L’Oréal. Her novels have been international bestsellers and are translated into twenty-one different languages and published all around the world. When she’s not writing, she loves collecting vintage fashion, practicing the art of fashion illustration, and traveling the world. Natasha lives with her husband and three children in Perth, Western Australia.

Lester's newest novel is The Mademoiselle Alliance.

At Lit Hub the author tagged eight books "which are set in different theaters of the Second World War, from France to Hong Kong, Britain, Japan, Australia and Germany." One title on the list:
Anne Sebba, Les Parisiennes: How the Women of Paris Lived, Loved and Died in the 1940s

If you only want to read one nonfiction book about WWII, make it this one. Anne Sebba doesn’t cover the battles and the front-line heroics of the war; instead she tells the story of the Frenchwomen who had to deal with their German occupiers every day of their lives.

It’s hard to draw a line in the sand between collaborators and résistantes after reading this book because Sebba also considers survival, not just for the women, but for the families who depended on these women for food and shelter. When you finish this book, you’ll want to find out more about the different women Sebba brings to life, some of whom were famous, but many of whom are unknown.
Read about the other entries on the list at Literary Hub.

--Marshal Zeringue

Friday, May 9, 2025

Five top titles about rivers

Robert Macfarlane is Professor of Literature and the Environmental Humanities at the Faculty of English in Cambridge. He is well-known as a writer about nature, climate, landscape, people and place, and his books –– which include Underland (2019), a book-length prose-poem Ness (2018), Landmarks (2015), The Old Ways (2012) and Mountains of the Mind (2003) –– have been translated into more than thirty languages, won prizes around the world, and been widely adapted for music, film, television, radio and theatre.

Macfarlane's new book, Is a River Alive?, is his most personal and political work to date.

At the Waterstones blog the author tagged "five books that present the complexity and importance of rivers through both fiction and non-fiction." One title on the list:
A River Runs Through It by Norman Maclean

I have long thought Maclean’s novella to be one of the most perfect pieces of English prose of the twentieth century, from its unforgettable first sentence (‘In our family, there was no clear line between religion and flyfishing’) to its last (‘I am haunted by waters’). It unfurls in the fast-running mountain rivers of western Montana, where two brothers, both obsessive fly-fishermen, follow very different courses in life. I have read it six times now, and each time it yields new wonders to me.
Read about the other entries on the list.

A River Runs Through It is among Jeff Somers's five novels that play with time and Eric Blehm's most influential books.

--Marshal Zeringue

Thursday, May 8, 2025

Seven Southern Gothic titles set in small towns

Tennessee Hill holds an MFA from North Carolina State University. Her work has been featured in Poetry magazine, Best New Poets, Southern Humanities Review, Adroit Journal, Arkansas International, and elsewhere. She is a native of South Texas, where she still lives and teaches with her husband and their dog.

Hill's new novel is Girls with Long Shadows.

At Electric Lit she tagged seven "books about the small-town Southern Gothic and the creature comforts and ghosts that inhabit it." One title on the list:
Ferris Beach by Jill McCorkle

NC Literary Hall of Fame-er Jill McCorkle’s Ferris Beach catalogues the teenage years of only-child Katie Burns, who lives with her family in Ferris Beach. Katie grows close to a new girl in the neighborhood, and warily nurses a curiosity for a local misfit boy. In orbiting coming-of-independence and youthful curiosity, Ferris Beach considers the sanctity of the family unit, the family home, and the hometown. Nobody captures the small-town south like McCorkle.

I read this book for the first time last July in the middle of a hundred-degree summer and a five-day power outage after a hurricane. It buoyed me.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Seven top works of cross-genre Gothic fiction

Paulette Kennedy is the author of The Artist of Blackberry Grange (2025), The Devil and Mrs. Davenport (2024), The Witch of Tin Mountain (2023), and Parting the Veil (2021), which received the HNS Review Editor’s Choice Award. Her work has been featured in People Magazine, The Mary Sue, Paste Magazine, and BookBub. Originally from the Missouri Ozarks, she now lives with her family and a menagerie of rescue pets in sunny Southern California, where sometimes, on the very best days, the mountains are wreathed in gothic fog.

[The Page 69 Test: Parting the Veil; The Page 69 Test: The Devil and Mrs. Davenport; My Book, The Movie: The Artist of Blackberry Grange]

At CrimeReads Kennedy tagged "seven novels [that] combine aspects of sci-fi, romance, magic, and fantasy with the traditional conventions of the Gothic genre to create something new and fresh." One title on the list:
When The Reckoning Comes by LaTanya McQueen

In this novel of Southern Gothic horror, LaTanya McQueen tackles the problematic nature of plantation weddings, whitewashed history, and the balance between honoring the lessons of the past without erasing the violent nature of its sins. When childhood friends Mira, Jesse, and Celine reunite for Celine’s wedding at the Woodsman Plantation, old scars and grievances reemerge as the injustices and prejudices of their small, southern town coalesce. The plantation, newly renovated as an event venue, stands as a monument to its oppressive, racist history. The service staff is mostly Black, and disturbing antebellum reenactments provide guests with “entertainment.” But when Mira begins to witness horrific visions from the past on the plantation grounds, she and her friends are forced to reckon with the blood-soaked history of the Woodsman Plantation and the righteous fury of its ghosts. Important, powerful, and unforgettable, with shades of Toni Morrison’s Beloved and Octavia Butler’s Kindred, McQueen’s debut should be required reading.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Tuesday, May 6, 2025

Five novels that explore and center female friendship

Disha Bose is the author of Dirty Laundry, which was a Good Morning America Book Club pick and named one of the best books of the year by Harper’s Bazaar and Elle. She received a master’s in creative writing at University College Dublin, where she was mentored by Booker Prize winner Anne Enright. She has been shortlisted for the DNA Short Story Prize, and her poetry and short stories have appeared in The Incubator Journal, The Galway Review, Cultured Vultures, and HeadStuff. Her travel pieces have appeared in The Economic Times and Coldnoon. Bose was born and raised in India and now lives in Ireland with her husband and daughter.

Her new novel is I Will Blossom Anyway.

At Lit Hub Bose tagged five titles that explore and center female friendship, including:
RF Kuang, Yellowface

In most romances, the bad boy is desirable, a part of the fantasy. In books about friendship, the bad girl is someone you have your guard up against.
This is a far more realistic lesson to learn from a book, than pining for a soulmate who will probably never meet all your emotional needs.

In Yellowface, June and Athena, both aspiring writers, have been friends since college. Their friendship is based on intense rivalry and envy, and their dynamic felt so real while I read this book, that it seemed like only a heightened version of what most women have experienced in their own lives with their female friends.

There is something delicious about rooting for the un-happy ending of all the characters in a book.
Read about the other entries on the list.

Yellowface is among Taylor Hutton's five top novels with tantalizing anti-heroes, Elizabeth Staple's eight books about youthful mistakes that come back to haunt you, Lauren Kuhl's eight top novels about toxic relationships, Elly Griffiths's top ten books about books, Toby Lloyd's seven books that show storytelling has consequences, Sophie Wan's seven top titles with women behaving badly, Leah Konen's six top friends-to-frenemies thrillers, and Garnett Cohen's seven novels about characters driven by their cravings.

--Marshal Zeringue

Monday, May 5, 2025

Seven novels that celebrate autistic voices

Casper Orr is a trans disabled writer and artist specializing in memoir, cultural and societal critique, and lyric essays. He’s a Senior Editor and Nonfiction Section Editor for Fruitslice and Managing Editor and contributor of Noise Made By living on the east coast. He has work published or forthcoming in Archer Magazine, t’ART Press, Querencia Press, and more.

At Electric Lit Orr tagged "seven novels [that] celebrate authentic autistic storytellers and their divergence from allistic archetypes." One title on the list:
The Life Impossible by Matt Haig

Matt Haig’s most recent novel is what one may call a “feel good” philosophical work, but don’t let that categorization fool you; it is far from the dull theory taught in Philosophy 101. Much like his New York Times Bestseller, The Midnight Library, Haig interweaves philosophical quandaries throughout the book, but this time, it’s an active contemplation on grief. The narrative follows a middle aged woman named Christina who’s recently been widowed and has long been burdened by guilt after the death of her child. She tries to avoid grief around every corner, until a friend mysteriously dies and leaves Christina her house in her will.

The healing process isn’t linear, an idea that Haig fully dissects within the novel. While the beginning of The Life Impossible can neatly be defined as literary fiction, there is a drastic shift in tone and genre near the midway point, when the cause of the friend’s death begins to pose imminent danger to the island. By turning grief and loss into something magical and surreal, Haig creates an environment in which we can find purpose in our pain and make sense of the senseless.
Read about the other entries on the list.

The Life Impossible is among Anna Montague's seven top novels featuring protagonists over 70.

--Marshal Zeringue

Sunday, May 4, 2025

Seven novels set in supernatural hotels

Molly Odintz is the managing editor for CrimeReads and the editor of Austin Noir. She grew up in Austin and worked as a bookseller before becoming a Very Professional Internet Person. She lives in central Texas with her cat, Fritz Lang.

At CrimeReads Odintz tagged seven recently released or upcoming novels set in supernatural hotels, including:
Ivy Pochoda, Ecstasy

Ivy Pochoda’s new horror novel, Ecstasy, takes place at an exclusive new establishment that may also be home to an ancient Greek god. Pochoda’s protagonist arrives muted and depressed; a group of women engaged in strange rituals may just be the pick-me-up she needs to get out of her funk (and into the service of the aforementioned deity).
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, May 3, 2025

Seven books that turn social media into a plot twist

Liann Zhang is a second-generation Chinese Canadian who splits her time between Vancouver, British Columbia and Toronto, Ontario. After a short stint as a skincare content creator, she graduated from the University of Toronto with a degree in psychology and criminology.

Julie Chan Is Dead is her first novel.

At Electric Lit Zhang tagged seven books that "discuss the realities of being online, and how social media impacts our lives." One title on the list:
Siri, Who Am I? by Sam Tschida

Mia has short term amnesia after an accident, and she can’t remember anything about herself–even her own name. Thank goodness her phone is on her. With one question to Siri, her phone provides her basic information, and also spills that many people seem to have a vengeance against her. Enough for Mia to question if her accident was really an accident at all. With the help of her Instagram posts, Mia starts to piece her life together, one photo of a time, in order to find the truth of what happened.

Most people have likely gone onto another person’s social feeds and tried to diagnose who they were from a few pictures and posts. This book poses an interesting question of how much of ourselves we can really learn from what we present online through a fluffy escapist novel.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Friday, May 2, 2025

Five books that shake up conventional views of school

Susan D. Blum is Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Notre Dame. She is the author of I Love Learning; I Hate School and My Word!, as well as the editor of Ungrading.

Blum's latest book is Schoolishness: Alienated Education and the Quest for Authentic, Joyful Learning.

[The Page 99 Test: Schoolishness]

At Shepherd she tagged five of the best books that shake up conventional views of school, including:
The Book of Learning and Forgetting by Frank Smith

I love this book because Frank Smith, with the forgettable name, dares to point out the unmentionable: students forget almost everything they learn in school, at least the things they learn through coercion. I love the way he takes on all the orthodoxies about the necessity of teachers and schools, and instead shows the absolutely breathtaking learning that happens through connections with others in meaningful contexts.

I love his use of language learning as an exemplar of how learning works, because we anthropologists know so much about how it really occurs, without direct instruction, and through meaningful interaction with others, and it is so contrary to widely held, erroneous beliefs.

I love books like this, which take on received wisdom, especially when written beautifully and accessibleibly—and in just about a hundred pages.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Thursday, May 1, 2025

Seven titles about unparented Gen-X heroes

Nicola Kraus has coauthored, with Emma McLaughlin, ten novels, including the international #1 bestseller The Nanny Diaries, Citizen Girl, Dedication, and The Real Real. Kraus has contributed to the Times (of London), the New York Times, Redbook, Cosmopolitan, Glamour, Town & Country, and Maxim, as well as two short story collections to benefit the War Child fund: Big Night Out and Girls’ Night Out. In 2015 she co-founded the creative consulting firm The Finished Thought, which helps the next generation of aspiring authors find their voice and audience. Through her work there, she has collaborated on several New York Times nonfiction bestsellers.

Kraus's new novel is The Best We Could Hope For.

At The Nerd Daily Kraus tagged seven favorite books about unparented Gen-X heroes, including:
How To Build a Girl by Caitlin Moran

Inspired by her own life story, Moran’s novel centers on a girl who moves to London at fifteen years old to make her fortune as a music critic. Sex, drugs, rock-and-roll and one very memorable UTI ensue. And while the book is hilarious, Moran also has some scathing insights about being “home-schooled” with seven siblings her parents could neither afford to clothe nor feed. Unsurprisingly, Moran grew up to be a vocal birth control advocate.
Read about the other entries on the list.

How To Build a Girl is among Emma Thompson's six top funny books by women.

--Marshal Zeringue