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The Lowe Job by Grace Alexander: Celebrity culture and feminism collide in this sharp debut

Fame has always been a commodity, but The Lowe Job by Grace Alexander asks what happens when a family decides to cash in on scandal before anyone else can profit from it first. Funny, smart, and packed with pointed observations about celebrity culture, this June 16, 2026 release transforms a viral affair into a fascinating exploration of ambition, misogyny, and the price of public attention.

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The Lowe Job begins when twenty-seven-year-old Lili Lowe is caught having an affair with her married boss, an up-and-coming politician. Overnight, she becomes the center of a media firestorm. Most people would retreat from public scrutiny. Lili’s mother Lydia has other ideas. Rather than managing the fallout, she weaponizes it, transforming Lili’s notoriety into a family brand and launching the Lowes into celebrity status.

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Vervain Hollow by Catriona Silvey: A haunting cult novel about addiction, belonging, and the price of escape

Sometimes the most unsettling horror novels aren’t about monsters lurking in the dark—they’re about the things we desperately want, even when we know they’ll destroy us. In Vervain Hollow by Catriona Silvey, a burned-out cult, a charismatic leader who may never have been human, and a young woman unable to let go of the power she once possessed combine to create one of the most compelling and emotionally complex horror novels I’ve read this year.

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Two years ago, Laura escaped Vervain Hollow after the sprawling house burned to the ground with its enigmatic leader trapped inside. Since then, she’s returned to a normal life, but “normal” isn’t the same thing as healing. She still longs for Vervain and the extraordinary power he shared with his followers. When her former friend Aliyah contacts her with shocking news—that another former acolyte has returned to the hollow after receiving a message from Vervain himself—Laura sees only one possibility. Somehow, he’s still alive.

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Obstetrix by Naomi Kritzer is a chilling cult thriller that feels uncomfortably plausible

Some dystopian novels rely on elaborate worldbuilding to make their horrors believable. Obstetrix by Naomi Kritzer doesn’t need to. Its premise is terrifying precisely because it feels only a few steps removed from reality, taking current political and religious extremism to their logical, ugly conclusion. The result is a tense, claustrophobic thriller about bodily autonomy, fanaticism, and survival that never overstays its welcome.

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I’m a sucker for a good cult novel, so this one was right up my alley. There’s something endlessly fascinating about the power dynamics inside insular religious communities, especially the relationships among women forced to survive within those systems. Kritzer taps into that fascination immediately. The novel is brief and concise, but it uses every page effectively, building constant tension as Doctor Liz navigates a nightmare situation with no safe options.

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I’ll Take the Fire by Leila Slimani: A fascinating literary excavation that never quite becomes a novel

Some novels pull you into a character’s inner life so completely that you feel as if you’ve lived beside them. Others keep you at arm’s length, asking you to observe rather than emotionally participate. I’ll Take the Fire by Leila Slimani, which releases June 9, 2026, firmly falls into the latter category. And while there’s a great deal here to admire intellectually, I often found myself wishing the book had trusted readers with less exposition and more intimacy.

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The novel follows Mia Daoud, a young Moroccan woman searching for sexual, political, and personal freedom as she moves between Casablanca, Paris, and London against the backdrop of major historical upheavals. Slimani explores feminism, class, identity, religion, colonialism, family expectations, and artistic ambition, all through a lens that feels deeply autobiographical. The book is filled with sharp observations about power and liberation, and the historical material woven throughout the narrative is genuinely compelling.

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Behind White Picket Fences by Christine Gunderson is a suspense novel caught between aspiration and reality

There’s something deeply compelling about novels that peel back the image of suburban perfection to reveal the ugliness underneath, and Behind White Picket Fences certainly knows how to build that contrast. Releasing June 9, 2026, the novel combines domestic suspense, commentary on modern motherhood, and a mystery rooted in buried neighborhood secrets. At its best, it captures the exhaustion and anxiety of contemporary parenting with sharp observational humor. At other times, though, the story feels so polished and idealized that the emotional truth underneath begins to slip away.

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The novel follows Kiersten Cleaver, who feels crushed beneath the endless expectations of modern motherhood. Travel sports, academic pressure, dyslexia accommodations, and the constant race to ensure children are “successful” have left her emotionally depleted. Alongside her neighbors Rosamund and Piper, she decides to step away from the system entirely for a year, creating a homeschool collective out of Kiersten’s kitchen. The setup taps directly into a cultural fantasy many parents probably recognize: a return to a slower, more intentional childhood where kids play outside, families gather around real dinner tables, and life isn’t dictated by schedules and screens.

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It Came from Neverland by Cynthia Pelayo is a haunting reimagining of Peter Pan that turns childhood fantasy into nightmare fuel

There’s something deeply unsettling about taking a story associated with innocence and wonder and revealing the horror that may have been lurking beneath it all along. It Came from Neverland by Cynthia Pelayo does exactly that, transforming the mythology of Peter Pan into a dark, grief-soaked horror novel that feels equally inspired by It and gothic fairy tales whispered to children who are already old enough to know monsters are real. Releasing June 9, 2026, the novel delivers both supernatural terror and an unexpectedly emotional exploration of trauma, manipulation, and survival.

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Set during World War I, the story follows Wendy Darling, now an adult working at a children’s home while also assisting wounded soldiers returned from the Western Front. One of the soldiers lies trapped in an unshakable sleep until he murmurs the words “Peter Pan,” forcing Wendy to confront memories she has spent years trying to bury. When a young girl under Wendy’s care disappears, the past comes roaring back. Wendy knows the truth no one else believes: Peter Pan is real, and he is not the whimsical boy immortalized in storybooks. He is a predator.

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The Jellyfish Problem by Tessa Yang is a haunting debut about grief, isolation, and the strange pull of belonging

Some novels hook readers with plot. Others cast a quieter spell, slowly wrapping themselves around your imagination until you realize you’ve been completely pulled under. The Jellyfish Problem blends magical realism, sea monster folklore, grief narrative, and literary mystery into an ambitious debut that will strongly appeal to readers who enjoy atmospheric, character-driven speculative fiction.

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Dr. Jo Ness is a marine biologist who has spent the last seven months barely existing after the death of her closest friend and collaborator, Aldo. Hidden away at a struggling aquarium, she immerses herself in jellyfish research and the unfinished field guide the two of them had been writing together. Aldo still exists in the margins of those pages through handwritten notes and observations, and Jo clings to them because she doesn’t know how to move forward without him. When Nadia—a woman Jo once loved during college—contacts her with stories about a giant glowing jellyfish off the coast of Maine, Jo seizes on the opportunity. Officially, she goes because of the creature. Emotionally, she goes because Nadia gives her a reason to leave her grief-stricken isolation behind, even if only temporarily.

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Our Sister’s Keeper by Jasmine Holmes is a haunting Southern Gothic that demands to be felt

Some horror novels rely on monsters lurking in the shadows. Others understand that the most terrifying things are the systems people willingly protect. Our Sister’s Keeper by Jasmine Holmes, releasing June 9, 2026, is a Southern Gothic horror novel that understands this completely. Beneath its ghostly atmosphere and supernatural elements lies a brutal examination of generational trauma, misogyny, power, and the impossible expectations placed upon women to absorb suffering quietly so that everyone else can remain comfortable.

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Recently, I’ve seen discussions online asking readers to name books they’ve loved that were written by authors of color. Inevitably, there are always people who respond with things like, “I don’t pay attention to the race of the authors I read,” as though being “colorblind” is somehow the ideal approach to literature. But stories like Our Sister’s Keeper are exactly why intentionally seeking out voices different from our own matters. This is a novel that forces readers to confront lived experiences they may never have otherwise considered. It explores generational trauma, gendered expectations, institutional abuse, and the long shadow of racism in ways that feel both deeply personal and horrifyingly systemic. It’s impossible to walk away from this novel unchanged if you are willing to truly engage with what it is saying.

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Hunger and Thirst by Claire Fuller: A haunting story about the ache to belong

Some hungers have nothing to do with food. Some thirsts cannot be quenched. In Hunger and Thirst, Claire Fuller builds a quietly unsettling novel about loneliness, guilt, and the dangerous places people wander when they want love badly enough.

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Claire Fuller has long excelled at writing stories that feel atmospheric without sacrificing emotional complexity. Readers familiar with Our Endless Numbered Days (one of my all-time favorites!), Swimming Lessons, or Bitter Orange will recognize her gift for creating settings that feel slightly unsteady, places where human relationships become as unsettling as any ghost story. Hunger and Thirst, releasing June 2, 2026, continues that tradition while leaning more openly into gothic territory.

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Man of My Dreams by Olivia Worley is a twisty thriller that may frustrate romance readers—but thriller fans looking for chaos and curveballs will probably have a blast

There’s a very specific kind of thriller setup that immediately hooks me: an intense romantic connection that feels just a little too perfect to trust. Man of My Dreams by Olivia Worley initially seemed poised to deliver exactly that kind of story. Ivy Harcourt, a bestselling romance author unlucky in love, meets Liam—an attractive British architect who eerily resembles the male lead from the novel she’s currently writing. What follows at first feels like the beginning of a glossy psychological thriller in the vein of the 1995 film Never Talk to Strangers, with mounting suspicion, romantic tension, and the creeping sense that something underneath the fantasy is deeply wrong. Then the book swerves hard.

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About a third of the way through, Man of My Dreams reveals what kind of story it actually wants to be, and that pivot will likely determine whether readers end up loving or hating the novel. For me, the transition didn’t entirely work. I didn’t feel like there was enough groundwork laid to support the shift, and several developments later in the novel left me questioning the internal logic of the narrative. By the end, there were enough loose ends dangling that I found myself more distracted than shocked.

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