Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Eight books about (literally) divided countries

Tamar Shapiro grew up in both the U.S. and Germany and now lives in Washington, DC with her husband, two children, and the world’s best dog. Her debut novel is Restitution. Shapiro’s writing also appears in Electric Literature, Poets and Writers, and Literary Hub (forthcoming). A former housing attorney and non-profit leader, she is a 2026 MFA candidate at Randolph College in Virginia.

At Electric Lit Shapiro tagged eight novels "set in countries that have fractured, shifting our maps and our conceptions of the world. The reconfigurations covered on these pages take many different shapes, but all are born of violence, and the scars are still visible." One title on the list:
The Ministry of Pain by Dubravka Ugrešić

Dubravka Ugrešić’s narrator is a Yugoslav woman living in Amsterdam after the disintegration of her country. She gets a job teaching students who also came from Yugoslavia, and together they seek to document memories of their now fractured home. This thought-provoking novel raises many questions about displacement and loss. Is it even possible to speak of “our country”, “our people”, and “our language” in the aftermath of war and division? Can there be shared memories of a home country that no longer exists? In the narrator’s words, “with the disappearance of the country came the feeling that the life lived in it must be erased.” As the narrator’s life spirals out of control, she seeks to hold onto an identity that is no longer recognized, while building a future in a place that remains foreign.
Read about the other entries on the list at Electric Lit.

--Marshal Zeringue

Monday, September 29, 2025

Thirty legendary literary mean girls we love to hate

In 2015 at Flavorwire, Sarah Seltzer tagged thirty of literature’s most delightfully nasty mean girls. One character on the list:
Blanche Ingram, Jane Eyre

Brought over to Thornfield just to make Jane Eyre jealous, Miss Ingram rises to the occasion, sneering at the governess and flirting mightily with the master of the house. She’s exquisitely snotty, and we have to wonder what Mr. Rochester said to her when he was disguised as a Gypsy telling her fortune, because when she emerged from that room she was not pleased.
Read about the other mean girls on the list.

Jane Eyre also made Kirsten Sundberg Lunstrum's list of five top wild girls of literature, Christina Henry's list of five top novels featuring brave women in mysterious circumstances, Hannah Sloane's list of seven titles about men breaking hearts & acting despicably, Aidan Cottrell-Boyce's top ten list of novels and stories about prophets, Jane Shemilt's list of five books that trace the portrayal of mental disorders in literature, Lucy Ellmann's top ten list of gripes in literature, Elizabeth Brooks’s list of ten of the creepiest gothic novels, Kate Kellaway's list of the best romantic novels that aren’t riddled with cliches, Julia Spiro's list of seven titles told from the perspective of domestic workers, Jane Healey's list of five favorite gothic romances, Annaleese Jochems's list of the great third wheels of literature, Sara Collins's list of six of fiction's best bad women, Sophie Hannah's list of fifteen top books with a twist, E. Lockhart's list of five favorite stories about women labeled “difficult,” Sophie Hannah's top ten list of twists in fiction, Gail Honeyman's list of five of her favorite idiosyncratic characters, Kate Hamer's top ten list of books about adopted children, a list of four books that changed Vivian Gornick, Meredith Borders's list of ten of the scariest gothic romances, Esther Inglis-Arkell's top ten list of the most horribly mistreated first wives in Gothic fiction, Martine Bailey’s top six list of the best marriage plots in novels, Radhika Sanghani's top ten list of books to make sure you've read before graduating college, Lauren Passell's top five list of Gothic novels, Molly Schoemann-McCann's lists of ten fictional men who have ruined real live romance and five of the best--and more familiar--tropes in fiction, Becky Ferreira's lists of seven of the best fictional depictions of female friendship and the top six most momentous weddings in fiction, Julia Sawalha's six best books list, Honeysuckle Weeks's six best books list, Kathryn Harrison's list of six favorite books with parentless protagonists, Megan Abbott's top ten list of novels of teenage friendship, a list of Bettany Hughes's six best books, the Guardian's top 10 lists of "outsider books" and "romantic fiction;" it appears on Lorraine Kelly's six best books list, Esther Freud's top ten list of love stories, and Jessica Duchen's top ten list of literary Gypsies, and on John Mullan's lists of ten of the best governesses in literature, ten of the best men dressed as women, ten of the best weddings in literature, ten of the best locked rooms in literature, ten of the best pianos in literature, ten of the best breakfasts in literature, ten of the best smokes in fiction, and ten of the best cases of blindness in literature. It is one of Kate Kellaway's ten best love stories in fiction.

The Page 99 Test: Jane Eyre.

--Marshal Zeringue

Sunday, September 28, 2025

Top 10 fictional towns in children's books

Shane Hegarty, born and raised in Skerries, Ireland, is a children's book author. His books include the Darkmouth series.

In 2016, at the Guardian, he tagged ten of the greatest fictional towns and cities in children’s and YA writing. One setting on the list:
Emerald City from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L Frank Baum

We’re so familiar with the film version, but L Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz gave readers a greater tour of Emerald City, where Dorothy and her needful companions spend a night before meeting with the truculent Oz. It’s not just the city that is emerald. So are the people, their beards, the food, the currency. The shelves hold green books filled with green pictures. And it all shines so brightly Dorothy must wear spectacles (green, of course) at all times. She visits twice, the first time being sent to confront the Wicked Witch of the West. This ensures that “the Great and Terrible Oz” joins the likes of Willy Wonka in having questionable – maybe even borderline psychopathic - personality quirks.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Eight suspense novels set across the globe

Carolina Ciucci is a teacher, writer and reviewer based in the south of Argentina. She hoards books like they’re going out of style. In case of emergency, you can summon her by talking about Ireland, fictional witches, and the Brontë family. At Book Riot she tagged eight suspense titles that "will make you feel like you traveled thousands of miles — and in some cases, dozens of years — to get to know a new city or town." One novel on the list:
Five Nights Before the Summit by Mukuka Chipanta
Setting: Zambia

The year is 1979. Zambia brims with anticipation days before hosting the Commonwealth Heads of Government Summit. But five days before the event, a British couple is murdered just outside Lusaka. Detective Maxwell Chanda wants to find the real killer – but he’s under heavy political pressure to close the case at all costs.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, September 27, 2025

Twenty-five essential titles about the Asian American experience

At Esquire Adrienne Westenfeld and Sirena He tagged twenty-five essential books about the Asian American experience, including:
They Called Us Enemy, by George Takei

In They Called Us Enemy, George Takei tells the story of his childhood experience in Japanese internment camps. He reflects on the conditions of day-to-day life within the camp, his father’s hope for democracy, and his mother’s resilience in the face of difficult decisions. Beautifully illustrated in a style that combines Japanese and American graphic arts, Enemy is both a page-turner and a resonant reminder of the injustice that persists in America.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Friday, September 26, 2025

Six top "reboot" novels

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

At Lit Hub she tagged six notable re-tellings. One entry on the list:
Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea is a postcolonial response to Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre.

Rhys’ 1966 novel concerns Mr. Rochester’s first wife, the notorious Madwoman in the Attic. Rather than that scrappy little orphan, this “landmark of feminist and postcolonial fiction” centers Antoinette, a Creole woman whose “madness” is situated in the context of a racist, patriarchal society.

When asked about her motivations for writing the book, Rhys said, “she seemed such a poor ghost, I thought I’d like to write her a life.”
Read about the other entries on the list.

Wide Sargasso Sea is among Jennifer Cody Epstein's five top books about badass madwomen, Sophie Ratcliffe's five top books inspired by classic novels, Jane Corry's ten heroines who kept their motives hidden, Siân Phillips's six favorite books, Richard Gwyn's top ten books in which things end badly, and Elise Valmorbida's top ten books on the migrant experience.

--Marshal Zeringue

Thursday, September 25, 2025

Seven horror novels inspired by "Frankenstein"

Leah Rachel von Essen is an editor, writer, and book reviewer. She is a copyeditor and fact-checker at Encyclopedia Britannica, as well as a contributing editor, Adult Books, for American Library Association’s magazine Booklist. She writes regularly for Chicago Review of Books and is a senior contributor at Book Riot.

At Book Riot she tagged seven "horror novels [that] retell, draw from, or are inspired by Frankenstein, using its rich cultural influence and references to tell their own stories or retell it in new and exciting ways." One title on the list:
Frankenstein in Baghdad by Ahmed Saadawi

In the midst of everyday violence, bombings, and general chaos, a man furious at the way people’s bodies are being carelessly treated and discarded gathers a bunch of blasted body parts together, stitching them into a monstrous single figure that he hopes will serve as some kind of protest. The problem is (as you might guess), the monster comes alive. But even as it kills, and stories of its violence spread, some decide that the monster is a figure on their side, as it disrupts the haunting disillusionment of their day-to-day lives.
Read about the other novels on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Five of the best books about the lives of divas

Jerome Charyn is the author of more than fifty works of fiction and nonfiction, including Maria La Divina; Ravage & Son; Sergeant Salinger; Cesare: A Novel of War-Torn Berlin; In the Shadow of King Saul: Essays on Silence and Song; Jerzy: A Novel; and A Loaded Gun: Emily Dickinson for the 21st Century. Among other honors, his work has been longlisted for the Mark Twain American Voice in Literature Award and PEN Award for Biography, shortlisted for the Phi Beta Kappa Christian Gauss Award, and selected as a finalist for the Firecracker Award and PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Film Culture at the American University of Paris, Charyn has also been named a Commander of Arts and Letters by the French Minister of Culture and received a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Rosenthal Family Foundation Award for Fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He lives in Manhattan.

[The Page 69 Test: Under the Eye of God; My Book, The Movie: Big Red; Q&A with Jerome Charyn; The Page 69 Test: Ravage & Son; Writers Read: Jerome Charyn (August 2023); My Book, The Movie: Maria La Divina]

At Lit Hub Charyn tagged "five of [his] favorite books about the lives of divas." One title on the list:
Joyce Carol Oates, Blonde

Joyce Carol Oates sees the Blonde, about the life of Norma Jeane Baker aka Marilyn Monroe, as her very own “Moby Dick,” as she grapples with the White Whale of American history, while the novel weaves across the twentieth century, with the reinvention of Jack Kennedy as the Prince and Joe DiMaggio, Norma Jeane’s second husband, as the Ex-Athlete, among a trove of other characters. There’s a rage in Oates as she relates how Norma Jeane was mistreated by powerful men, including Mr. Z, Darryl Zanuck, who rapes her during their first encounter and remains her studio boss throughout the early part of her career.

We can almost feel Oates inside Norma Jeane’s flesh, as if there were a kind of echolalia throughout the novel, a mixture of maddening voices that captures what is inside Norma Jeane’s head. And Oates has accomplished a miracle; she has made Marilyn a diva and an anti-diva at the same time, someone who ripped at her own fame.

When I recently asked Oates whether she felt that she had become Norma Jeane as she worked on the novel, she answered yes—“it was a gradual, then something like a total immersion for months of increasing intensity. I did feel this was the deeper, more inward & perhaps secret—certainly unarticulated—Norma Jeane that the world rarely saw . . . I had wanted to write about ‘Marilyn Monroe’ impacting strangers’ lives—having meaning to their lives while her own life was in free fall—the irony of being an Icon for others, while helpless & doomed herself.”
Read about the other entries on the list at Lit Hub.

Blonde also appears among Nathan Smith's seven top Marilyn Monroe books, Rose Tremain's six best books, John O’Farrell's top ten celebrity appearances in fiction, Michel Schneider's top ten books on Marilyn Monroe, Ron Hansen's five best literary tales of real-life crimes, and Janet Fitch's book list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

The best sci-fi graphic novels of all time

The son of a librarian, Chris M. Arnone's love of books was as inevitable as gravity. He holds an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Missouri - Kansas City. His cyberpunk series, The Jayu City Chronicles, is available everywhere books are sold.

His work can also be found in Adelaide Literary Magazine and FEED Lit Mag. You can find him writing more books, poetry, and acting in Kansas City.

At Book Riot Arnone tagged the eight best sci-fi graphic novels of all time. One title on the list:
Akira by Katsuhiro Otomo

I was first introduced to Akira through the brilliant anime movie before reading the books. And let me tell you, this manga is just as important to the cyberpunk genre as Neuromancer. Set in a post-apocalyptic future Tokyo, the leader of a biker gang is trying to prevent his childhood friend from awakening an ancient entity called Akira. Who’s standing in the way? Corrupt politicians and towering corporations, of course.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Monday, September 22, 2025

Ten of the best good doctors in literature

In 2010, for the Guardian, John Mullan named ten of the best good doctors in literature.

One doctor on the list:
Dr Stephen Maturin

In the Napoleonic nautical yarns of Patrick O'Brian, Maturin is right-hand man to Captain Jack Aubrey. As well as being the ship's surgeon, Maturin is a part-time spy and a famous naturalist. Fluent in a dozen languages, he is something of a bohemian: a former opium addict and an accomplished cellist and flautist. Sometimes he has time to cure people.
Read about the other doctors on the list.

The Aubrey/Maturin Series appears on Andrew Taylor's top five list of historical novels, Jeff Somers's lists of five great books that will expand your vocabulary and top five books and series for old-fashioned adventure in the 19th century, the Telegraph's list of the ten best historical novels, Bella Bathurst's top ten list of books on the sea. Master & Commander is one of Peter Mayle's six best books. .

Also see Mullan's list of ten of the best bad doctors in fiction.

--Marshal Zeringue

Sunday, September 21, 2025

Five top Kiwi & Australian crime writers

Zoë Rankin grew up in a village in Scotland. She studied international relations and Arabic before going on to qualify as a primary school teacher. She spent many years traveling in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, and eventually settled in New Zealand. She has always been passionate about writing as well as spending time outdoors and exploring by bike, often with her two small children, who are equally adventurous.

Rankin's new novel is The Vanishing Place.

[Q&A with Zoë Rankin]

At CrimeReads the author tagged five favorite Kiwi and Australian crime writers, including:
J P Pomare (NZ)
My favourite of the author’s books: In the Clearing

Pomare is the absolute master when it comes to the unexpected twist.

The intricate plot and atmospheric writing in In The Clearing make it a stand out novel. It is a haunting story about two women – one a teenage member of a cult and the other, a mother hiding from her past. The structure of Pomare’s novel is one of its most stunning strengths, adding a level of intelligence and creativity to the plot that makes you want to return to page one as soon as you have finished. Pomare weaves together the stories of two characters, Amy and Freya, in a way that is both compelling and fantastically creepy and which leaves you questioning the fundamental mechanics of the human mind. The strength of Pomare’s writing, combined with his terrifying insights into human behaviour, make for a compulsive page-turner thick with twists and complex characters.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, September 20, 2025

Seven complicated titles about complicated family histories

Jeremy B. Jones is the author of the new nonfiction book Cipher: Decoding My Ancestor’s Scandalous Secret Diaries (2025) as well as the memoir Bearwallow: A Personal History of a Mountain Homeland (2014). Bearwallow was named the 2014 Appalachian Book of the Year in nonfiction and was awarded gold in the 2015 Independent Publisher Book (IPPY) Awards in memoir. His essays have been published in Oxford American, Garden and Gun, The Bitter Southerner, and Brevity, among others. He also writes frequently for Our State Magazine. Jones earned his MFA from the University of Iowa and is a professor of English Studies at Western Carolina University, in his native North Carolina. He also serves as the series co-editor for In Place: a literary nonfiction book series from WVU Press.

At Lit Hub the author tagged seven "beautifully complicated books about complicated family histories," including:
Inheritance: A Memoir of Genealogy, Paternity, and Love, Dani Shapiro

Shapiro’s memoir doesn’t reach back generations in its initial framing—she discovers through genetic testing that her father was not her biological father—but the explorations that follow are far-reaching. At the heart of her search is the age-old nature vs. nurture question, which then splinters into a thousand other questions about the stories we tell about ourselves. The book moves quickly, narrative-driven with relatively short chapters, and pieces together as a complicated and earnest origin story.
Read about the other titles on the list.

Inheritance is among Thao Thai's seven books about gripping family secrets.

--Marshal Zeringue

Friday, September 19, 2025

Seven titles that reckon with larger-than-life mothers

Karleigh Frisbie Brogan is a writer from Sonoma County, California. She is the author of Holding: A Memoir About Mothers, Drugs, and Other Comforts. She was a 2024 Oregon Literary Fellow. Her work has been published in The Atlantic, Washington Post, Vol. 1 Brooklyn, The Huffington Post, Lit Hub, and forthcoming in Poets & Writers. She lives in Portland, Oregon.

At Electric Lit the author tagged seven
fiction and nonfiction books that engage with the symbolic mother. These works push her away and pull her in, stare into her harsh reflections. They acknowledge the gifts she bears as well as the scars she’s left. They attempt to scale her outsize dimensions, to remember, in the end, that she is human.
One title on the list:
Mother as Echo

The Edge of Water by Olufunke Grace Bankole

Bankole’s debut novel follows three generations of women as they navigate trauma, tradition, independence, and desire. Beginning in Nigeria, Esther makes the first passage, leaving her husband despite cultural taboo and social ostracization, to start anew in her own flat with her daughter, Amina. Though Esther herself is headstrong and individualistic, she is unsettled to notice those same attributes in her daughter. After Amina moves to the United States, Esther writes in a letter to her: “I wanted you to be like me, yet walk a separate path. I prayed to see you become who I had hoped to be.”

In New Orleans, two pivotal events—the birth of Amina’s daughter Laila and the landfall of Hurricane Katrina—bring about tragedy and hope, forgiveness and regret, reunion and loss. The Edge of Water is a poignant portrayal of lineal ongoingness, the infinite echoing that’s passed from mother to daughter.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Five books that take on domestic violence

Stephanie DeCarolis is a USA Today bestselling author of thriller and suspense novels. She is a graduate of Binghamton University and St. John's University School of Law, and currently lives in New York with her husband and their two daughters.

Her new novel is The Wives of Hawthorne Lane.

At CrimeReads DeCarolis tagged five books that take on domestic violence in a realistic and respectful way. One title on the list:
Cul-de-sac, by Joy Fielding

Who doesn’t love a neighborhood thriller where every character has a motive to kill and a gun in their hands? But while this novel was a fun and exciting read, it also shed light on some important issues surrounding domestic violence. I thought Fielding did an excellent job of portraying the nuances of domestic abuse in Dani and Nick’s marriage. No one in the neighborhood would suspect Nick, the respected oncologist, to be an abusive husband, but Fielding skillfully depicted the smaller, often overlooked, signs of abuse: The way Nick chipped away at Dani’s self-esteem, how he mocked her accent and belittled her career. Violence is often cyclical, and abuse doesn’t always look like a black eye. Fielding also brings the topic of gun violence, and its correlation to domestic abuse, to the forefront of discussion.
Read about the other entries on the list at CrimeReads.

--Marshal Zeringue

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Six top books about books and bookstores

USA Today bestselling author Susan Coll is the author of eight novels, including The Literati, Real Life & Other Fictions, and Bookish People. Her other books include The Stager, Acceptance, Rockville Pike, and Karlmarx.com.

[Coffee with a Canine: Susan Coll & Zoe; The Page 69 Test: Acceptance; The Page 69 Test: Beach Week; The Page 69 Test: The Stager; The Page 69 Test: Real Life and Other Fictions]

At Lit Hub Coll tagged six favorite books about books and bookstores, including:
John Tottenham, Service

This gritty, bleak, nihilistic, yet darkly funny, novel contains more insight into bookseller life than the many dozens of other contemporary novels on the subject—and I say that as a person who actually loves working at an independent bookstore. Lest this wind up on any of the aforementioned display tables of books about bookstores, it perhaps ought to have a trigger warning slapped on the cover, explaining that it might shatter the reader’s illusions about the charms of bookstore life.

Set in the rapidly gentrifying Echo Park neighborhood in Los Angeles, protagonist Sean Hangland is on the cusp of turning 50, working as a bookseller, and, at least on these pages, in a perpetually foul mood. He is not just broke but has creditors at his door. He should have, could have, would have been a musician, but instead he is working on a novel and eking out a living hawking other people’s books. Or not, as it happens. Don’t call the store to ask him to find a title, because he’ll likely set the phone down, work on a crossword puzzle, and then, if you are still holding, tell you it’s not in stock.

He isn’t just cantankerous in the standard way of fictional (and in some cases, real life) booksellers. He is on the verge of going full ballistic berserk-o, and in fact in one scene he uses books as projectiles, hurling titles off the philosophy shelf.

When Sean is called out by the manager for the frequent, and cumulative bad Yelp reviews commenting on his approach to customer service, he retorts: “There have been some very difficult customers in here recently. We should start our own Yelp page to complain about them.”

Service is also a realistic story about a frustrated middle-aged former journalist and aspiring novelist idling in an ultra-low-paying job. Sean might be bookish, but he has come to loath most books—in no small part because he is jealous of their success. He complains about the laborious prose of other writers, for example, while slipping words such sesquipedalian and pleniloquence into his rants.

There’s not much of a plot here, but Tottenham had me turning the pages just to see if things could get much worse. Service is perhaps the smartest, albeit grimmest book about working in a bookstore that I’ve ever read.
Read about the other books on Coll's list at Lit Hub.

--Marshal Zeringue

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Eight titles about the transformative power of live music

M. L. Rio has been an actor, a bookseller, an academic, and a music writer. She holds an MA in Shakespeare studies and a PhD in English literature. She is the author of the internationally bestselling novel If We Were Villains and the USA Today bestselling novella Graveyard Shift. Her new novel is Hot Wax.

At Electric Lit she tagged "eight books [that] showcase how triumphant and transformative live music can be." One title on the list:
Kittentits by Holly Wilson

This is a coming-of-age novel like no other. The ten-year-old narrator, Molly, lives in a Quaker commune in the wake of a fiery tragedy until the arrival of dirt-biking ex-con Jeanie turns her whole world upside-down. Molly’s infatuation with Jeanie is inseparable from Jeanie’s heavy metal anti-heroism, and soon she takes off for Chicago to prove she, too, is a badass and—quite literally—raise the dead.

But the headbanging soundtrack to Molly’s metamorphosis is just one musical element in this raunchy, rollicking carnival ride of a novel; music becomes a secondary language for many of the characters, who fall back on sung verse, spoken lyrics, and even tap dance when more pedestrian forms of self-expression fail them. Wilson’s prose is no different, moving to a weird, wild music entirely its own.
Read about the other entries on Rio's list at Electric Lit.

--Marshal Zeringue

Monday, September 15, 2025

Eight dark tales from Spanish-speaking voices

Natalie Sierra is a Latina poet, author, and editor whose work explores themes of desire, identity, and the supernatural. She is the author of the poetry collection Medusa (2020), and the novel Charlie, Forever and Ever (2021). Sierra currently serves as the Poet Laureate of Pomona, California, and is the President of Cafe Con Libros Press, a nonprofit bookstore and literary hub. Her writing has been nominated twice for the Pushcart Prize and has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Westwind Journal of the Arts, and other literary outlets. She specializes in dark, genre-bending narratives with strong emotional and psychological undercurrents.

Sierra's new book is Beyond the Grace of God: A Story of Desire.

At B&N Reads the author tagged eight "chilling works by Spanish-speaking authors prove that horror transcends borders." One title on the list:
The Unworthy: A Novel
By Agustina Bazterrica
Translator Sarah Moses

In under 200 pages, Agustina Bazterrica gives us a harrowing look at a dystopian future through an unforgettable heroine. Cults, climate crises and extremism collide in this razor-sharp story.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Eight titles marrying climate fiction with technology

Carolina Ciucci is a teacher, writer and reviewer based in the south of Argentina. She hoards books like they’re going out of style. In case of emergency, you can summon her by talking about Ireland, fictional witches, and the Brontë family. At Book Riot she tagged eight books marrying climate fiction with technology.

One title on the list:
Noor by Nnedi Okorafor

In this novel, climate change continues to cause natural disasters, like a cyclic sandstorm called Red Eye in futuristic Nigeria. Anwuli, a disabled Igbo woman, upgrades unformed or weakened body parts with cybernetic prosthetics. But when an attack makes her a wanted woman, Anwuli’s life takes a turn.
Read about the other entries on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, September 13, 2025

Six historical novels that perfectly capture the 18th century

Laura Shepherd-Robinson is the award-winning, Sunday Times and USA Today bestselling author of four historical novels including the newly released The Art of a Lie.

At CrimeReads Shepherd-Robinson tagged six "works of fiction [that] explore the vast contradictions and extreme hypocrisies of our so-called Age of Enlightenment." (She also included one title from 1782, Les Liaisons Dangereuses by Choderlos de Laclos.) One title on the list:
A Place of Greater Safety by Hilary Mantel

A depiction of Revolutionary France by one of the greatest writers of historical fiction, the novel follows the lives of three key revolutionary figures: Danton, Desmoulins and Robespierre. It glides from the grand political stage to the intimacies of the salon with effortless ease. A tale of faction and feminism, belief and betrayal, it explores how this idealistic enterprise descended into political violence, and ultimately devoured its children. I read it around the same time as I read Simon Schama’s ‘Citizens’ and they make wonderful companions. 900 pages long, but an incredibly fast-paced read, the book plunges you into the tinderbox that is revolutionary Paris. It took me three days to recover from the emotional intensity of it all.
Read about the other entries on the list at CrimeReads.

A Place of Greater Safety is among the Barnes & Noble Review's top books on uprisings in pursuit of freedom around the world.

--Marshal Zeringue

Friday, September 12, 2025

Eight books that celebrate Black performance

Lauren Morrow studied dance and creative writing at Connecticut College and earned an MFA in fiction from the Helen Zell Writers’ Program. She was a Kimbilio Fellow and an Aspen Words Emerging Writer Fellow and is the recipient of two Hopwood Awards, among other prizes. Her writing has appeared in Ploughshares and the South Carolina Review. She worked in publicity at BAM (Brooklyn Academy of Music) and Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and is now a senior publicist at Dutton, Plume, and Tiny Reparations Books. Originally from St. Louis, she lives in Brooklyn.

Morrow's new novel is Little Movements.

At Lit Hub she tagged eight books that "explore performance in various ways—its power and pressures—beautifully exposing the talent and vulnerability of the characters, and turning the reader into an audience member, eager to give a standing ovation." One title on the list:
Percival Everett, Erasure

Thelonious “Monk” Ellison is an academic who forces himself into the performance of a lifetime when he writes (and sells for an obscene amount) My Pafology, later retitled Fuck, a book that exploits nearly every Black stereotype. He then must conceal his intellectual identity in order to present as someone who wrote such a book, contriving a new voice and a tragic “street life” backstory under the pseudonym Stagg R. Leigh (it’s worth looking into the folklore of Stagger Lee). Shockingly, 50 pages of Erasure are My Pafology, appearing midway through and testing the fictional publisher and the real-time reader. This is next-level performance as Everett forces readers to engage with some of the most offensive writing they’ve likely ever read before pulling back out to the central narrative. It’s shocking, and provocative, and genius.
Read about the other books on Morrow's list at Lit Hub.

Erasure is among Heidi Julavits's five top books on missing persons and absent figures.

--Marshal Zeringue

Thursday, September 11, 2025

Five titles that make good companions when you need emotional support

An avid bibliophile with a degree in chemistry, Karnam Vashisht spends most of her time trying to juggle all of her hobbies. She has a penchant for assigning Taylor Swift songs to people and characters. On most days, she can be found lounging with her cat, Aslan, and cozying up with her current read.

At The Nerd Daily Vashisht tagged "five books that are like a warm coffee on a rainy day." One title on the list:
Red, White, and Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston

Enemies-to-lovers? Between the son of the American President and the Prince of England? Nothing screams comfort quite like this.

Made into a famous movie, Red, White, and Royal Blue is a book that will make you laugh, cry, and scream all at the same time. Characters that are incredibly lovable and humane this book is for everyone who is looking for a silver lining.

Alex is chaotic, messy, and has a heart that is on fire. Henry is definitely not the one for him. But the Henry he knows is not the real one, and the more time the two of them spend together, the more they realise how much they have in common. What blossoms is a beautiful friendship based on late night calls and text messages turn into hour long conversations.

Soon, Alex and Henry realise what they truly mean to each other, but some romances are more difficult than others. And the one between the First Son of America and a Prince is definitely one of them.

With a beautiful ensemble of characters, the book is rife with incidents that make your heart flutter and break. The email exchanges between Alex and Henry are so imperative and make the story so much more richer. Red, White, and Royal Blue is like a comforting cup of coffee, not the one that wakes you up, but the one that calms you down.
Read about the other titles on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Eight titles that explore the love letters of literary icons

Christine Estima is an Arab woman of mixed ethnicity (Lebanese, Syrian, and Portuguese) and the author of the short story collection The Syrian Ladies Benevolent Society, which the CBC called one of the Best Fiction Books of 2023. She has written for The New York Times, The Walrus, VICE, The Globe and Mail, Chatelaine, Maisonneuve, the Toronto Star, and the CBC. Her story “Your Hands Are Blessed” was included in Best Canadian Stories 2023. She was a finalist for the 2023 Lee Smith Novel Prize and was shortlisted for the 2018 Allan Slaight Prize for Journalism. Estima has a master’s degree in interdisciplinary studies from York University and lives in Toronto.

Her new novel is Letters to Kafka.

At Electric Lit Estima tagged eight favorite books that explore the love letters of literary icons. One title on the list:
Letters to Milena by Franz Kafka, translated by Philip Boehm

Beginning in 1920, Kafka’s letters to Milena very quickly become amorous, and the frequency at which they’re sent is fast and furious. In his letters, Kafka is consumed by her charm, wit, and intelligence, but also petrified she might reject him because of his illness, his small frame, and because he is Jewish. His words are so passionate, it’s easy to see why she was willing to risk her marriage for him. Some of the most famous declarations of love are found in his turns of phrase, including “You are the knife I turn inside myself. That is love. That, my dear, is love.”
Read about the other entries on the list at Electric Lit.

--Marshal Zeringue

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Five subtly paranormal mysteries

Amanda Chapman is a lifelong mystery lover and wordsmith. An enthusiastic fan of traditional mysteries and of New York City, she found herself wondering, “What if someone recreated Agatha Christie’s personal library—even to the furnishings and architecture—in New York City? What would happen in that space?” And thus Mrs. Christie at the Mystery Guild Library—the first in a new series—was born.

At CrimeReads Chapman tagged five "subtly paranormal myster[ies], in which little more is asked of the skeptical reader except a certain suspension of disbelief." One title on the list:
The Secret Place by Tana French

This fifth book in Tana French’s superb Dublin Murder Squad series takes place in St. Kilda’s, a posh girl’s boarding school where a year earlier a boy was found murdered in a case that was never solved. A year after Chris Harper’s body was found, the investigation is cold—until a St. Kilda’s girl brings Detective Stephen Moran a photo and a note she’s found on the school’s “Secret Place” bulletin board, with the words “I KNOW WHO KILLED HIM.” Moran is thrilled to be assigned to work with Senior Detective Antoinette Conway when the case is reopened. But he is hard-pressed to see his way through the weird and claustrophobic maze of an almost-too-closely-knit group of friends, their rival clique, and the tangle of relationships that bound them all to the murdered boy.

The structure of the book—told over the course of one day, as each of the girls involved is interviewed by Moran and Conway and flashbacks provide disturbing glimpses of the past—is masterful. The girls are convinced of their shared ability to lift objects and manipulate lights with their minds, and French, a master of ambiguity, leaves it up to the reader to decide: Were these genuine supernatural occurrences or shared psychological hallucinations? Or something more tangible? Either way, it’s downright eerie.
Read about the other titles on Chapman's list at CrimeReads.

The Secret Place is among Stephanie Barron's seven great mystery novels set in academe, Davida G. Breier's nine titles featuring teens behaving badly, C. J. Cooke's eight thrillers & mysteries with underlying supernatural elements, Cambria Brockman's five thrillers featuring a small group of friends, Adele Parks's eight crime novels featuring intense female friendship, Kristen Lepionka's ten top female detectives in fiction, the B&N Reads editors' five favorite fun, fearless femmes fatales in fiction, and Kelly Anderson's seven amazing female friendships in fiction.

--Marshal Zeringue

Monday, September 8, 2025

Eight notable books about ambitious women

Eliana Ramage is the author of To the Moon and Back, a Reese’s Book Club pick. She holds an MFA in fiction from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and has received support from Lambda Literary, Vermont Studio Center, Tin House, and the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center. A citizen of the Cherokee Nation, she lives in Nashville with her family.

At Lit Hub Ramage tagged eight "truly beautiful, inventive, and powerful novels and memoirs about ambitious women—singular in desire but breathtakingly expansive in reach." One title on the list:
Allie Tagle-Dokus, Lucky Girl

Lucky Girl is a hilarious and heartbreaking exploration of the messy contradictions between art, work, and ambition. Lucy Gardiner needs to become a dancer. Dancing alone in her bedroom won’t satisfy her, especially after Hollywood claims her for a dance competition slash reality TV show. As Lucy fights to achieve her dream, she sacrifices more and more of herself: her time, her friends, and finally her family to make art the masses consume.

Lucy finds a role model and a home with Bruise, an aging pop star on her comeback who like Lucy has given up her childhood to make her dreams a reality. But the closer Lucy is drawn into Bruise’s inner life, the more she sees that Bruise’s greatness is smoke and mirrors, a mirage she will never truly reach, leaving Lucy to ask, if this isn’t success, what is?
Read about the other titles on Ramage's list at Lit Hub.

--Marshal Zeringue

Sunday, September 7, 2025

Four top books about the natural world

At Book Riot Kendra Winchester tagged four must-read books about the natural world, including:
The Backyard Bird Chronicles by Amy Tan

Amy Tan has written and illustrated this beautiful book on her relationship with one of her favorite hobbies. In 2016, Tan felt overwhelmed by the state of the world, but she found solace in nature. She began watching the birds flying in and out of her backyard. Before long, she had dozens of sketches of different kinds of birds. Tan’s new hobby gave her hope for a better world.
Read about the other titles on the list.

--Marshal Zeringue

Saturday, September 6, 2025

Eight titles about wild animal companions

Brian Buckbee has written for The Sun, The Georgia Review, The Southern Review, and other publications. He is co-founder of Missoula’s 406 Writers’ Workshop and a former creative writing and literature instructor at the University of Montana. He lives in Missoula, Montana.

Carol Ann Fitzgerald is an editor in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

Their new book is We Should All Be Birds: A Memoir.

At Electric Lit Buckbee tagged eight stories that "show how our connection to wild creatures can help us understand animals, and perhaps more importantly, ourselves and, in the process, learn to live, thrive, and heal." One title on the list:
The Soul of an Octopus by Sy Montgomery

In this exploration of the only eight-armed creature in the world, the reader will learn that the compellingly strange octopus has three hearts. The reader may need three for themselves, too, because Montgomery writes so beautifully about the mysterious cephalopod that a couple of theirs might just burst. With a background in journalism and having authored many books about other creatures (tigers, apes, dolphins, etc.), Montgomery is often referred to as a “popular naturalist,” and she has developed a writing style that is familiar and authoritative, funny and smart, and totally accessible. Over the course of the book, the popular naturalist gets to know several octopuses. (And, yes, octopuses is the plural of octopus, as is “octopodes,” which is also correct.) What stands out is Montgomery’s description of how these two creatures (human and octopus) have seemingly endless curiosity about each other. She becomes well acquainted with four different octopuses as the story progresses, and it turns out each one has its own personality. Using the term “personality,” though, is itself loaded, because animals, even the inquisitive and alluring octopus, are not people.

We learn from Montgomery that each arm of the octopus is essentially its own brain, capable of thought and emotion, and when she visits the aquarium and puts her arm in a tank, the resident octopus—whether it is Athena, Octavia, Kali, or Karma—will move its suckered arms across Montgomery’s un-suckered arm, sometimes blushing, sometimes retreating to a corner or tightening the embrace. And with each encounter, our estimation of this unique, marvelous creature grows, and we gain a greater sense of the depths of our compassion.
Read about the other entries on the list at Electric Lit.

--Marshal Zeringue

Friday, September 5, 2025

Five mysteries & thrillers set in the workplace

L.S. Stratton is an NAACP Image Award-nominated author and former crime newspaper reporter who has written more than a dozen books under different pen names in just about every genre from thrillers to romance to historical fiction. She currently lives in Maryland with her husband, their daughter, and their tuxedo cat.

Stratton's new novel is In Deadly Company.

At CrimeReads she tagged five mysteries and thrillers set in the workplace, including:
Zakiya Dalila Harris, The Other Black Girl

From office pet to threat—many black women experience this phenomenon in the working world, and Harris explores it in detail in her slow-burn, twisty novel, The Other Black Girl. The publishing world isn’t perfect, but editorial assistant Nella Rogers knows her place in it.

That is until Hazel, another black assistant, shows up in the office. Soon their budding friendship takes on a more sinister turn when Nella starts getting mysterious notes telling her to leave the company. She suspects Hazel, the new office pet, may be the one trying to get rid of her.

Is Nella being paranoid, or is there an even bigger threat Nella needs to worry about? We find out the answers as the story unfolds.
Read about the other titles on the list at CrimeReads.

The Other Black Girl is among Christina Dotson's five top books that feature toxic friendships, Mary Keliikoa's eight top workplace thrillers, Tania Malik's five unconventional office novels, Stephanie Feldman's seven novels featuring ambitious women, Caitlin Barasch’s seven novels set in the literary world, and Ashley Winstead's seven titles that explore collective guilt & individual complicity.

--Marshal Zeringue

Thursday, September 4, 2025

Six depressing novels that can lift you out of depression

Rabih Alameddine is the author of the novels The Wrong End of the Telescope; Angel of History; An Unnecessary Woman; The Hakawati; I, the Divine; Koolaids; the story collection, The Perv; and one work of nonfiction, Comforting Myths. He has won the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction and was a finalist for the National Book Award. He received the Dos Passos Prize in 2019 and a Lannan Award in 2021.

Alameddine's new novel is The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother).

At Lit Hub Alameddine tagged six "depressing novels that can lift you out of depression." One title on the list:
Bohumil Hrabal, Michael Henry Heim (Trans.), Too Loud a Solitude

Why it’s depressing:
Let’s start with the fact that the book is about a man, Haňťa, who has spent his life compacting wastepaper for recycling in a cellar. Is that not enough? He attempts to rescue banned books that are about to be destroyed. His life’s ambition is to buy the hydraulic press he uses to crush the paper, which he never achieves, of course. And when The Brigade of Socialist Workers replace him with apathetic paper crushers, he lies down in his press, holding a book by Novalis of all people, and crushes himself.

Why it will lift you out of your depression:
Because it’s fucking brilliant, of course. Haňťa is trying to survive a totalitarian dictatorship that disdains and prosecutes the arts (sound familiar?), yet he doesn’t merely survive, he transcends. The world might see him as a peon, but he sees himself as an artist. He considers every bundle of papers he creates a work of art. He wraps each bale with reproductions of paintings and places a rare book at the center of it. He dreams of the world seeing his bales the way he does. Dreams are an act of resistance.
Read about the other novels on the list at Lit Hub.

--Marshal Zeringue

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Eight folklore-inspired horror novels

Daphne Fama was born in the American South, embedded in its tight-knit Filipino community. When she’s not writing stories about monsters and the women who love them, she’s writing about video games. And when she’s not writing, she’s spending every minute adoring her partner and pup.

Fama's new novel is House of Monstrous Women.

At Electric Lit she tagged "eight unforgettable folk horrors [that] will crawl beneath your skin and make your blood run cold." One title on Fama's list:
The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

A story of three women across time, bound by a legacy of witchcraft and danger. Minerva, a graduate student in 1998, is researching horror writer Beatrice Tremblay—a woman who vanished from public record decades earlier. The deeper Minerva digs, the more she uncovers fragments of protective symbols identical to those her grandmother learned as a girl in rural Mexico, where Alba once used them to fend off a dark presence. Now, that presence may have its eyes on Minerva. The Bewitching is a powerful tale of legacy, resistance through storytelling, and the defiance it takes to survive as a woman in a world that wishes to silence them.
Read about the other novels on the list at Electric Lit.

--Marshal Zeringue