Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Dollface by Lindy Ryan: PTA politics, plastic masks, and a suburban slasher that’s wickedly fun

If you’ve ever suspected the PTA might be hiding a few skeletons in its meticulously organized closets, Dollface by Lindy Ryan leans all the way into that suspicion—and then hands the skeleton a knife. Releasing February 24, 2026, Ryan’s latest horror novel drops readers into a glossy, gossip-filled suburban nightmare where fitting in might be deadlier than standing out.

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Jill is a horror author who has just relocated to suburban New Jersey, hoping to settle into a quieter life and, ideally, make a few mom friends without alienating them by waving around her Final Girl coffee mug. That goal becomes increasingly complicated when a serial killer wearing a plastic face mask begins targeting the town’s overly polished PTA moms. As the body count rises and the social hierarchy begins to crack, Jill finds herself pulled deeper into the chaos, inching closer to becoming the last woman standing.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Our Numbered Bones by Katya Balen: Grief, bog bodies, and the quiet horror of what we carry

Grief doesn’t arrive on a schedule, and it doesn’t leave when it’s inconvenient. In Our Numbered Bones by Katya Balen, an adult debut releasing February 17, 2026, that truth sits at the center of a haunting, lyrical novel about loss, memory, and the unsettling ways the past insists on being seen.

Get your copy of Our Numbered Bones from my independent online bookstore today!

Anna is a London-based novelist who can no longer write, eat, or sleep in any meaningful way. Her mother is slipping deeper into dementia, her father is already gone, and Anna herself is reeling from a recent loss so destabilizing it has fractured her sense of self. Still, her literary agent wants pages. Progress. A new book. So when a winter writer’s retreat in rural England offers “space,” Anna takes it—less to finish a novel than to escape her own mind.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Murder Will Out by Jennifer K. Breedlove: A cozy gothic mystery where the ghosts are watching

Murder Will Out by Jennifer K. Breedlove, releasing February 17, 2026, is the kind of mystery that invites you in with salt air, creaking floorboards, and the promise that something is very wrong behind the prettiest postcard façade. Set on Little North Island off the coast of Maine, this lighter, modern gothic mystery follows Willow Stone, an organist returning to the island she once loved after the sudden death of her godmother, Sue—and it doesn’t take long for memory, grief, and suspicion to start tangling together.

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Breedlove excels at atmosphere. Little North Island feels like the sort of place where everyone knows everyone else’s business and still manages to hide secrets in plain sight. The town’s cast of characters would fit right in at Stars Hollow: the super brainy librarian, the attorney-turned-café owner, the pottery shop proprietor, the crotchety church organ player, and the young woman married to the island’s elderly rich man, who is himself a near-parody of greed and indulgence. Willow is very much the Outsider—with a capital O—returning after years Away (also capitalized, as islanders do), and that social tension quietly fuels the mystery.

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Author Interview

In conversation with Marcia Argueta Mickelson: Creativity, immigration, and writing through overwhelm

Marcia Argueta Mickelson writes stories that sit right at the fault lines—between generations, between cultures, between who we’re told to be and who we’re becoming. After recently reviewing her latest young adult novel, I was eager to invite her into my writing room to talk less about plot and more about process: how she stays creative when life is loud, the habits that ground (and derail) her writing days, and why immigration continues to shape the stories she feels compelled to tell. In this interview, Argueta Mickelson reflects on creativity, persistence, and the quiet, deeply human moments that make writing—and reading—worth it.

Marcia Argueta Mickelson’s latest novel, The Writing Room, released November 4, 2025.

Q: How do you nurture your creativity when life get busy or overwhelming?
A: When life gets busy or overwhelming, I oftentimes don’t have the energy to write. However, I still want to nurture my creativity. Some things that I do are: go for a walk around my neighborhood or do housework that frees up my mind for introspection. I am also trying to teach myself to play piano. I took a few lessons years ago, but I am definitely a beginner. I have some beginning piano books that I use to teach myself a few songs. Practicing those same few songs over and over again helps nurture my creativity and helps me feel creative.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Her Last Breath by Taylor Adams: A suffocatingly tense survival thriller beneath the surface

Her Last Breath by Taylor Adams, releasing February 17, 2026, takes the author’s talent for relentless suspense and drops it hundreds of feet underground—into a setting that’s as psychologically unnerving as it is physically dangerous. Known for high-concept thrillers like No Exit and The Last Word, Adams once again proves he knows exactly how to weaponize isolation, fear, and timing.

Get your copy of Her Last Breath from my independent online bookstore today!

At first, I worried this might be the kind of survival novel that traps the reader in a single claustrophobic space for the entire book. That fear didn’t last long. While a huge portion of the story centers on the many hours Tess spends trapped in a cave, Adams smartly structures the novel around her hospital-bed interview with a detective. Tess’s account of what happened underground is intercut with revelations about her best friend Allie and the unsettling secrets she kept hidden. The result is a story that constantly moves, even when its protagonist physically cannot.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Ours is a Tale of Murder by Nora Murphy: A suburban thriller that refuses to behave

Nora Murphy’s Ours is a Tale of Murder opens in a quiet neighborhood that feels instantly familiar—and immediately uneasy. Klara and Troy live behind the white picket fence she never wanted and he always did, their marriage polished on the surface and deeply wrong underneath. Across the street from where their story unfolds, Mary prepares to sell the blue house that holds too many memories of her son and her past mistakes. Nearby, Henry, recently laid off and back in his childhood bedroom, watches everyone a little too closely. From the start, Murphy invites us into a story about observation, judgment, and the lies we tell ourselves about the people we think we know.

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About halfway through the novel, I realized Murphy was doing something quietly experimental with the structure. The storyline I was most emotionally invested in came to an abrupt halt, and my first reaction was frustration—I wanted to stay with Klara longer. But instead of bailing, I kept reading, and that choice paid off. The narrative begins to weave back around on itself in unexpected ways, reframing earlier scenes and assumptions. This is very much a book that makes you want to reread it, if only to spot the details you missed the first time—the moments that might have tipped you off that the story was never going to move in a straight line.

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Ask the Author

Ask the Author: Why don’t readers like strong female leads?

Dear Mandy,

Why don’t readers like strong female leads? Why do they only want innocent and dumb female leads in their books?

From timid beginnings to unstoppable confidence—every strong female lead starts somewhere. Follow the journey from innocence to empowerment, both on the page and in life.

Dear Reader,

To properly answer this question, we first need to clarify which readers we’re talking about—because I can assure you, not all readers want innocent or naïve female leads. In fact, I’d argue that many middle-aged women (myself included) gravitate toward books firmly planted in the strong women serving up justice to bad men genre. Those female leads are confident, capable, and unapologetically badass—and that’s exactly what this reader wants.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

The Body by Bethany C. Morrow: A brutal supernatural horror about marriage, faith, and who really owns your soul

Bethany C. Morrow’s The Body is a pulse-pounding supernatural horror novel that turns marriage, faith, and family obligation into a living nightmare—and it doesn’t flinch. Centered on a woman who has spent her entire life being told she will never be good enough, this is a story about what happens when the expectations placed on women become violent, literal, and inescapable.

Get your copy of The Body from my independent online bookstore today!

Mavis Carson broke away from her family’s church years ago, but the damage is permanent. Her mother, Marie Carson, presides over the congregation with an iron grip, demanding impossible perfection and absolute obedience. Mavis has internalized those rules so completely that even as an adult, she’s riddled with anxiety and convinced she’s one mistake away from losing everything. Her one perceived victory is her marriage to Jerrod, a man everyone—including Mavis herself—believes she doesn’t deserve. When the seven-year itch sets in and a freak car accident kicks off a string of increasingly disturbing incidents, Mavis begins to realize that the congregation she escaped may never have truly let her go.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

The Found Object Society by Michelle Maryk: When boredom, money, and grief collide in dangerous ways

What happens when you’ve already done everything—and the only thing left that still feels new is death? In The Found Object Society by Michelle Maryk, an ambitious speculative suspense debut releasing February 10, 2026, that question drives a dark, unsettling story about grief, privilege, and the moral rot that can fester when money removes consequences.

Get your copy of The Found Object Society from my independent online bookstore today!

For twenty years, Greta Davenport has lived in the shadow of the car accident that killed her parents—an accident she believes was her fault. Since then, she’s devoted her life to chasing sensation: parties, substances, experiences, anything that might briefly dull her guilt or spark a rush. When an anonymous invitation leads her to the Found Object Society—an exclusive underground organization that allows members to relive the final moments of the dead through objects they once held—Greta finally finds a high that feels new.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Eve by B.K. O’Connor: A feminist Paradise Lost retelling that leaves little room for mystery

What happens when the first woman refuses to stop asking why? In Eve by B.K. O’Connor, releasing February 10, 2026, the biblical mother of humanity is reimagined through a very explicit 21st-century feminist lens, one that trades subtlety for certainty as it follows Eve’s restless journey beyond Eden and across the ancient world.

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O’Connor’s novel begins close to familiar territory. The early sections largely mirror the biblical story, with one major deviation: Eve’s romantic attachment to Lucifer, who is framed not as a villain but as the first figure willing to question God’s opaque and authoritarian plan. Adam, by contrast, is portrayed as passive and incurious, content to remain in Eden forever, never wondering what lies beyond or what purpose existence might serve. Eve, meanwhile, cannot accept faith without understanding. She wants answers, not obedience.

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