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.

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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.

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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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