Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Molka by Monika Kim: A slow-burn descent into voyeurism, power, and the cost of being seen

There’s a particular kind of dread that creeps in when you realize the person watching didn’t just stumble into power—they built it themselves. In Molka by Monika Kim, that realization lands early and lingers long after the final page.

Set in a seemingly ordinary Seoul office building, the novel introduces Junyoung, an IT technician who has taken surveillance far beyond anything sanctioned or accidental. The cameras he watches aren’t part of the company’s security system—they’re his. Installed deliberately, carefully, and invasively throughout the building, including in restrooms, they give him total control over the private lives of the women around him. This isn’t passive observation. It’s calculated, obsessive, and deeply violating.

Get your copy of Molka from my independent online bookstore today!

That distinction matters. It transforms Junyoung from someone abusing access into someone who has engineered an entire ecosystem of control.

Continue reading “Molka by Monika Kim: A slow-burn descent into voyeurism, power, and the cost of being seen”
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?

Get your copy of Dear Monica Lewinsky from my independent online bookstore today!

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.

Continue reading “Dear Monica Lewinsky asks who really owns temptation”
Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

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.

Get your copy of Midnight, at the War from my independent online bookstore today!

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.

Continue reading “Midnight, at the War by Devi S. Laskar: A piercing look at journalism, grief, and the stories we choose not to tell”
Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Wife Shaped Bodies by Laura Cranehill: A strange, fungal dystopia about what marriage takes

If you’re expecting a straightforward horror novel, Wife Shaped Bodies by Laura Cranehill will catch you off guard—and that disorientation feels entirely intentional. Set in a near-future enclave cut off from a ruined outside world, the novel follows Nicole, a young woman raised in isolation and taught to fear both the world beyond her window and the fungal growths that cover her own body. When she’s married off to a man she barely knows and relocated to his decaying mansion on the edge of town, her life doesn’t expand—it contracts. What unfolds from there is less a traditional plot and more a slow, unsettling unspooling of identity, control, and buried desire.

Get your copy of Wife Shaped Bodies from my independent online bookstore today!

Let’s get this out of the way: this book is weird. Not in a gimmicky, shock-value way, but in a deeply immersive, almost disorienting sense. Cranehill builds a world shaped by plague and patriarchal control, where fungi have merged with human bodies to the point that many women are more mushroom than flesh. The men, somehow spared the worst of the infection, have constructed an insular society that positions them as protectors—though what they’re really protecting is their own authority.

Continue reading “Wife Shaped Bodies by Laura Cranehill: A strange, fungal dystopia about what marriage takes”
Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

A Killer in the Family by Amin Ahmad: Wealth, secrets, and a dynasty where no one is innocent

When Ali agrees to an arranged marriage with the daughter of a powerful New York real estate tycoon in A Killer in the Family by Amin Ahmad, he expects privilege, stability, and a glamorous life among the elite—but not the creeping suspicion that someone in his new family might be a serial killer.

Get your copy of A Killer in the Family from my independent online bookstore today!

This sweeping drama follows Ali, a charming but somewhat naïve Mumbai party boy who decides it’s finally time to grow up. His arranged marriage to Maryam, the poised daughter of real estate mogul Abbas Khan, brings him into a world of unimaginable wealth in New York City: private helicopters, glittering skyscrapers, and lavish weekends in the Hamptons. At first, Ali seems to have landed in a dream version of the American immigrant success story. But as rumors begin to swirl about Abbas Khan—whispers of corruption, secret affairs, and something darker beneath the family’s rise—Ali starts to realize that joining the Khans may have come with a cost he never anticipated.

Continue reading “A Killer in the Family by Amin Ahmad: Wealth, secrets, and a dynasty where no one is innocent”
Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Too Close to Home by Seraphina Nova Glass: When suburban perfection starts to crack

The illusion of safety is a fragile thing—and in Too Close to Home by Seraphina Nova Glass, it shatters in the most explosive way possible when a Labor Day celebration turns deadly in an upscale lakefront neighborhood that suddenly doesn’t feel so safe after all.

Get your copy of Too Close to Home from my independent online bookstore today!

Set in the pristine community of Cloverhill Lakes, the novel leans hard into the familiar rhythms of the affluent suburban thriller: PTA politics, curated friendships, and the quiet competition simmering beneath polite smiles. Life here is carefully managed, right down to the image each family presents. That illusion implodes when Regan Hoffman’s car explodes at a neighborhood party—killing the wrong person and setting off a chain reaction of paranoia, suspicion, and buried secrets clawing their way to the surface.

Continue reading “Too Close to Home by Seraphina Nova Glass: When suburban perfection starts to crack”
Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

The Ghost Women by Jennifer Murphy: Tarot, witchcraft, and the ghosts patriarchy tried to bury

On a sweltering August morning in 1972, a young art student is found hanging from a tree, posed like the Hanged Man from a tarot deck—and that image sets the tone for Jennifer Murphy’s The Ghost Women, a lush, angry, and often mesmerizing novel about power, vengeance, and the women history tried to erase. Releasing February 24, 2026, this is a book steeped in atmosphere: a remote art academy housed in a former monastery, whispers of witch trials, ancient tarot cards, and long-dead women who may not be finished speaking.

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

When Detective Lola Germany arrives at St. Luke’s Institute of the Arts to investigate the death of Abel Montague, she quickly realizes this is no straightforward suicide. An ancient Hanged Man tarot card tucked into his pocket—and his body arranged to mirror it—points toward ritual. As more students are discovered staged like figures from the deck, Lola finds herself navigating a campus brimming with secrets, ambition, and a self-proclaimed coven of young women who may know more than they’re willing to say.

Continue reading “The Ghost Women by Jennifer Murphy: Tarot, witchcraft, and the ghosts patriarchy tried to bury”
Essays

Gender roles didn’t make us partners—they made us dependent

We talk a lot about gender roles as though they’re about tradition or preference, but at their core they’re about dependency—about making sure none of us ever feels quite capable enough on our own.

Hanging her own curtains, she’s a quiet reminder that taking care of yourself is both an act of skill and an act of independence.

I’ve come to believe that women and men are both infantilized in different ways so that we remain dependent on one another. Women are told they’re bad with money, tools, cars, and anything remotely technical. Men are told they’re helpless in the kitchen, emotionally illiterate, and incapable of managing a household or nurturing relationships. The end result isn’t balance—it’s a system that quietly ensures everyone needs someone else to function.

Continue reading “Gender roles didn’t make us partners—they made us dependent”
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.

Get your copy of Ours Is a Tale of Murder from my independent online bookstore today!

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.

Continue reading “Ours is a Tale of Murder by Nora Murphy: A suburban thriller that refuses to behave”
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.

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