Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

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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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Dear Monica Lewinsky asks who really owns temptation

Julia Langbein’s sharp, irreverent novel reclaims female desire from the shame imposed upon it.

Some novels arrive with a premise so startlingly original that you immediately lean closer. Dear Monica Lewinsky by Julia Langbein is one of them—a novel that is at once profound and wickedly irreverent, using the ghost of Monica Lewinsky as both witness and guide in an excavation of female desire, shame, memory, and blame. Set for release on April 14, 2026, this is a book that refuses easy moral judgments. Instead, it asks a more difficult and necessary question: when women are punished for desire, whose sin is it really?

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Forty-year-old Jean Dornan has never truly escaped the summer of 1998. While studying abroad in France as a college student, she entered into an affair with her much older professor, David—a married man and a figure of institutional authority. When he reappears decades later with an invitation to his retirement celebration, Jean is forced back into the emotional wreckage of that summer. What follows is not merely a reckoning with memory, but a confrontation with the story she has been telling herself for years.

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