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Midnight, at the War by Devi S. Laskar: A piercing look at journalism, grief, and the stories we choose not to tell

The most unsettling part of Midnight, at the War by Devi S. Laskar isn’t the violence—it’s everything that gets ignored in its wake. Releasing April 14, 2026, this literary novel follows foreign correspondent Rita Das as she chases the biggest story of her career in a war-torn Middle East, all while quietly unraveling under the weight of grief, guilt, and a life she refuses to apologize for.

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Rita is not an easy protagonist to pin down, and that’s precisely what makes her compelling. She is fiercely independent, deeply ambitious, and committed to living life on her own terms—even when those choices isolate her from nearly everyone around her. The double standard is impossible to ignore: if Rita were a man, her career-first mindset and emotional detachment would be praised. Instead, she’s judged at every turn, with only her late mother—a doctor who lived similarly on her own terms—offering any real understanding. That absence lingers, because grief is one of the novel’s most persistent undercurrents.

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Darkrooms by Rebecca Hannigan: A gripping Irish mystery with unforgettable, flawed women

On the night of the Summer Solstice in 1999, nine-year-old Roisin O’Halloran vanished into the Hanging Woods, a copse that had terrified generations of children in the small Irish town of Bannakilduf. Twenty years later, her disappearance remains a shadow over the town—and over the two women now drawn together to uncover the truth: Roisin’s older sister, Deedee, a rookie cop barely holding herself together, and Caitlin, Roisin’s childhood best friend and a petty criminal with a penchant for deception and risky behavior. In Darkrooms, Rebecca Hannigan delivers a lush, moody thriller that explores guilt, justice, and the dangerous ways past traumas shape the present.

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If you’re a fan of unlikeable characters and unreliable narrators, this novel is made for you. Caitlin lies, steals, and teeters on the edge of self-destruction, and you’re never quite sure whether to believe her confessions—or whether they hint at something even darker.

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Searching for truth and redemption in Nina by Louise Phillips

Louise Phillips’s upcoming novel Nina (releasing November 18, 2025) is an emotional, tightly woven crime story about trauma, motherhood, and the resilience of a woman who refuses to be silenced or dismissed. Elizabeth Harte has already lived through the worst thing a parent can imagine: the disappearance of her daughter Nina twenty-five years ago. On the eve of her sixty-first birthday, she decides she’s done being treated like a fragile relic by her daughter and son-in-law. Haunted by grief and determined to find answers, Elizabeth leaves home and sets out to track down Nina—and, perhaps, reclaim herself in the process.

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Her journey intertwines with the story of Nick, a disgraced detective revisiting cold cases once investigated by his father, whose failure to solve Nina’s disappearance drove him to suicide. As new murders surface and old wounds resurface, their paths converge in a way that forces both to confront the past.

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The Forest of Missing Girls by Nichelle Giraldes: A haunting story of magic, perfection, and the woods that watch us

Lia Gregg always feared the forest around her childhood home, a dark expanse whispered about in local legends and haunted by disappearances of girls like her. When a breakup forces her back into her family’s house, those fears take on a chilling immediacy: a teenage girl goes missing from their backyard, and Lia’s younger sister could be next. At first glance, The Forest of Missing Girls by Nichelle Giraldes seems like a straightforward thriller. But that expectation is misleading—and that’s both the book’s biggest marketing misstep and its hidden strength.

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The publisher’s description positions this as a standard thriller: a suspenseful story about a lurking danger in the woods, complete with disappearances and secrets. In reality, the story leans heavily into magical realism and science fiction, creating an experience far more complex and atmospheric than a typical thriller. The forest itself is a fully realized character—alive, watchful, and mysterious. Girls vanish and reappear across impossible distances, and the trees seem to hold their own consciousness, communicating with both the missing girls and those left behind.

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The Wrong Daughter by Dandy Smith is a diabolically twisty psychological thriller

What if your sister disappeared one summer night—and then walked back into your life sixteen years later? The Wrong Daughter by Dandy Smith takes this premise and spins it into one of the most anxiety-inducing psychological thrillers I’ve read this year.

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The story follows Caitlin, whose older sister Olivia was abducted when they were children. When a woman claiming to be Olivia suddenly reappears, Caitlin should feel joy. Instead, her carefully rebuilt world begins to unravel piece by piece. The tension comes not only from the mystery of whether this is truly Olivia, but also from the way she manipulates every situation to Caitlin’s detriment.

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Why Salt Bones by Jennifer Givhan is the best novel I’ve read so far in 2025

Every once in a while, a book comes along that completely captivates your imagination and refuses to let you go. Salt Bones by Jennifer Givhan is that book for me—the #1 best novel I’ve read so far in 2025.

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Set against the stark, blistering backdrop of the Mexicali borderlands and the eerie Salton Sea, Salt Bones is a darkly lyrical story of mothers and daughters, folklore and truth, justice and horror. Malamar Veracruz has lived her whole life in El Valle, raising two daughters while carrying the pain of her sister Elena’s disappearance years ago. When another girl goes missing, Mal is thrust back into that old nightmare, haunted by visions of a horse-headed woman tied to local legend. But as Mal and her daughters uncover layer after layer of family secrets, folklore, and lies, the story reveals what women have always known: men are the destroyers, and the women who try to protect others are too often turned into monsters themselves.

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The Witch’s Orchard by Archer Sullivan is a chilling Appalachian mystery

Sometimes the scariest stories aren’t about monsters at all—they’re about the damage people do to one another, and the shadows those wounds cast long into adulthood. That’s the heart of The Witch’s Orchard by Archer Sullivan, a gripping mystery set in the mountains of North Carolina.

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Private investigator Annie Gore, a former Air Force special investigator, takes on a case that pulls her back into a world she thought she left behind: the Appalachian hollers where she grew up. Ten years earlier, three young girls vanished from a tiny mountain town. One returned, but the others were never found. Now, the brother of one of the missing hires Annie to uncover the truth. The case is cold, the town is closed off to outsiders, and the mountains are filled with both folklore and secrets—but Annie needs the money, so she can’t turn down the job.

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