Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

The Plans I Have for You by Lai Sanders: A dark, seductive debut about revenge, race, and dangerous devotion

A viral video destroys one young woman’s future in The Plans I Have for You by Lai Sanders, and what follows is a gothic-tinged descent into revenge, obsession, and the perilous gap between justice and annihilation.

Get your copy of The Plans I Have For You from my independent online bookstore today!

Releasing March 17, 2026, Sanders’s debut has already been named one of Publishers Weekly’s Most Anticipated Thrillers of 2026, but this novel resists easy categorization. It blends psychological suspense with sharp social critique and an undercurrent of supernatural ambiguity that keeps the reader unsettled from the first page.

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Essays

State governments as change-makers: Raising standards when Washington won’t

Many Americans talk about states’ rights as if it’s a shield for inaction, but the truth is that with states’ rights come states’ responsibilities. The federal government sets minimum standards for the country, but it’s up to each state to decide when those standards don’t go far enough. States have the authority—and the obligation—to raise the bar if they believe it’s the right thing for their residents. A higher minimum wage, stronger environmental protections, or expanded healthcare access can all start at the state level before ever being considered federally.

When states take the lead, change becomes possible. Highlighting the power of local action to set higher standards and drive national progress.

It’s easy to forget the sheer size and diversity of the United States. With so many people spread across vast distances and different cultures, making nationwide change is incredibly difficult, sometimes impossible, without groundwork laid by states first. Many social issues, including marriage equality, have followed this path. By June 2015, 36 states plus Washington, D.C., had already legalized same-sex marriage—proving that federal progress often relies on state-level experimentation and leadership. States shouldn’t see this as a hindrance—they should see it as an opportunity to lead national change from their own communities.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

How to Survive in the Woods by Kat Rosenfield: A dark Appalachian Trail thriller about control, obsession, and survival

What happens when escaping your marriage means hiking into one of the most dangerous stretches of wilderness in America? In How to Survive in the Woods by Kat Rosenfield, released March 10, 2026, survival isn’t just about the forest—it’s about the stories we tell ourselves to stay alive.

Get your copy of How to Survive in the Woods from my independent online bookstore today!

Set in Maine’s infamous Hundred Mile Wilderness, the novel follows Emma Sharp, a woman raised by a doomsday prepper and later shaped by the ruthless startup world. Now trapped in a suffocating marriage to Logan Grant—a charismatic, image-conscious tyrant—Emma has come to see her relationship as both prison and protection. A cage keeps you in, but it also keeps you safe. Until it doesn’t.

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Author Interview

Michelle Maryk on writing The Found Object Society, creative routines, and finding inspiration in the supernatural

Michelle Maryk’s The Found Object Society, released February 10, 2026, invites readers into a world where memory, mystery, and the supernatural blur the boundaries of time—and her own creative journey is just as compelling as the story itself. In this interview, Maryk reflects on the unconventional childhood influences that shaped her imagination, the early-morning writing discipline that keeps her grounded, and the spark of inspiration that arrived in a single, unforgettable moment. From ghost stories and cinematic storytelling to the realities of modern book marketing, she shares an honest look at the habits, challenges, and creative instincts that continue to guide her work as an author.

Michelle Maryk’s debut novel, The Found Object Society, released February 10, 2026.

Q: What/who were your early literary influences, and how do you think their writing has shaped you as a storyteller today?
A: As a kid, I grew up with a dad who took me to Dairy Queens alongside graveyards so he could tell me ghost stories; bought tickets to Alien as I watched, enthralled, and my Swedish cousin ran to the bathroom and puked; encouraged me to consider all things supernatural and extraterrestrial—in other words, the best-worst dad ever.

Parenting skills (or lack thereof) aside, those wild, terrifying, exhilarating experiences imprinted themselves in my DNA as a human and an author. I’m drawn to stories that feature what-ifs, tales that dance within the realm of reality only to dip into the murk of what could be possible…if.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Served Him Right by Lisa Unger: A witchy revenge thriller that breaks the mold

In Served Him Right by Lisa Unger, releasing March 10, 2026, a celebratory brunch spirals into suspicion, sickness, and secrets when Ana Blacksmith’s ex-boyfriend becomes the center of shocking news—and Ana, the obvious suspect.

Get your copy of Served Him Right from my independent online bookstore today!

Ana has gathered her sister Vera and closest friends to toast her recent breakup from Paul. But when disturbing developments about Paul surface, the narrative shifts fast. Ana already has a reputation. She’s already angry. And when one of the women at the brunch falls deathly ill, it doesn’t take much for whispers to turn into accusations. What follows is a twisty, pacy thriller—apt praise from Nita Prose—but this is not your average Lisa Unger novel.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

This Story Might Save Your Life by Tiffany Crum: A twisty thriller about love, loyalty, and coercive control

What happens when your best friend—the person who helped build your life and career—vanishes, and you’re the one everyone thinks killed her? In This Story Might Save Your Life by Tiffany Crum, releasing March 10, 2026, a wildly popular podcast duo built on survival stories faces a mystery they might not survive themselves.

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Best friends Benny Abbott and Joy Moore have made a career out of telling “against all odds” survival stories on their beloved podcast. From Joy’s experience with severe narcolepsy to countless near-death tales told with irreverent humor, they’ve turned trauma into connection—and connection into a carefully managed empire, thanks largely to Joy’s husband, Xander.

Then Joy disappears.

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Ask the Author

Ask the Author: Can genre fiction be literary?

Dear Mandy,

Can genre fiction be literary?

Genre fiction isn’t trying to tiptoe past the literary gatekeepers—it’s already storming the pedestal. Depth, fun, dragons, and dystopias: all at once. Who says you can’t have it all?”

Answer: IDK, Patty, do you think works by Edgar Allan Poe and Mary Shelley are literary? If so, do you think they aren’t also genre fiction? What about Wuthering Heights (gothic/mystery), Brave New World (dystopian), or The Lord of the Rings (epic fantasy)?

Exactly.

This question comes up a lot, and it’s usually asked with the unspoken assumption that genre fiction sits a rung or two below “real” literature. As if, once you introduce a murder, a monster, a dragon, or a dystopian government, depth immediately evacuates the premises. So, let’s slow down and actually unpack what we’re talking about.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Medium Rare by A. Natasha Joukovsky: An Icarus retelling weighed down by its own ambition

In Medium Rare by A. Natasha Joukovsky, the author of The Portrait of a Mirror returns with what’s billed as a modern tragicomedy reimagining the myth of Icarus through bureaucracy, B-list fame, and college basketball. It’s a high-concept premise: a middling Washington lobbyist goes viral-adjacent after predicting a near-perfect NCAA March Madness bracket, while a woman named Cassandra—yes, that Cassandra—watches it unfold with prophetic detachment and literary ambition. The execution, however, is far less aerodynamic.

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Phil is the novel’s Icarus stand-in: an ordinary, faintly dissatisfied man who stumbles into the possibility of a billion-dollar perfect bracket during the 2019 tournament. As his predictions hold, attention snowballs. The media circles. The money looms. The ego inflates. You don’t have to be an oracle to see where this is headed. Phil will fly too high. He will burn. The arc is obvious from the start, which might have worked if the journey there had felt sharp or surprising.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Missing Sister by Joshilyn Jackson: A twisty Southern thriller about sisterhood, guilt, and revenge

What if the person avenging your sister’s death isn’t you—but someone who knows more than you ever did? In Missing Sister, Joshilyn Jackson delivers a chilling, character-driven thriller that explores the razor-thin line between justice and obsession. The novel follows Penny Albright, a rookie cop still reeling from the tragic death of her twin, Nix, five years earlier. Born three minutes apart, the sisters were inseparable—until Nix’s sudden death and a cryptic voicemail left Penny drowning in guilt and unanswered questions.

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Now working in law enforcement to honor Nix’s dream of making the world safer, Penny is called to her first murder scene and comes face-to-face with Danny Bowery, one of the three men she’s long blamed for her sister’s death. He’s sprawled in a pool of blood outside an upscale Atlanta shopping center, as if conjured by Penny’s long-harbored anger. And then there’s the blonde woman in blood-soaked clothes gripping a box cutter—a woman who hints that Bowery’s murder is only the beginning of a larger story about sisters before vanishing into thin air.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

I Did Not Kill My Husband by Linda Keir: A modern fugitive thriller fueled by hashtags, headlines, and wildfire

What happens when a social media influencer becomes America’s most hated wife and then vanishes into the mountains? I Did Not Kill My Husband, by writing duo Linda Keir, delivers a slick, high-concept thriller about reputation, perception, and what it takes to survive when the entire world thinks you’re guilty—and it hits shelves March 3, 2026.

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Cara Campbell built her brand on curated luxury and unapologetic ambition. Married to plastic surgeon Karl Campbell, she seemed to be living the rags-to-riches dream—until she was convicted of his murder and sentenced to life in prison. The evidence is stacked against her: a failing medical practice, a million-dollar life insurance policy, and a social media persona that leans hard into the gold-digger stereotype. The internet convicts her long before the jury does.

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