Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Sorry for Your Loss by Georgia McVeigh: A deliciously twisted game of obsession, grief, and control

Grief can make people do strange things—but in Sorry for Your Loss by Georgia McVeigh, releasing March 31, 2026, grief is just the starting point for a psychological duel between two people who may be far more dangerous than they first appear. What begins as a chance meeting in a grief support group quickly turns into a tense, unsettling cat-and-mouse game where the real question isn’t whether someone is lying—it’s who’s manipulating whom.

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At the center of the story is Iris, a woman who is clearly out of touch with reality. She attends a local grief group to keep herself “grounded,” but from the start it’s obvious that Iris is holding onto far more than grief. Her childhood offers clues about how she became the person she is. Iris grew up in the shadow of her twin sister, Marcie—the golden child who their mother adored. Marcie’s birth came easily, while Iris reportedly took days to arrive, a story their mother never let her forget. Even after Marcie’s tragic death at seventeen, their mother openly wished it had been Iris instead. It’s the kind of emotional wound that never quite heals, and as an adult Iris is still searching for the love and validation she never received.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Why A Good Person by Kirsten King is one of the most entertaining debuts of the year

What happens when your ex-situationship suddenly dies after you hex him? In A Good Person by Kirsten King, the answer is pure chaos, hilarity, and narcissistic delusion.

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This book was absolutely hilarious. Kirsten King throws us headfirst into the brain of Lillian, a millennial antihero who is equal parts self-absorbed, delusional, and entertaining. Reading her inner monologue feels like being stuck at brunch with that one friend who always makes themselves the main character of every story—but in the best possible way, because you can safely laugh without being their victim.

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