Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

Salomé by Leslie Baird is a hypnotic literary thriller that turns a dreamy French escape into something far darker

There’s a particular kind of danger attached to reinvention, especially when it happens far from home. In Salomé by Leslie Baird, that danger arrives wrapped in heat-soaked French afternoons, magnetic attraction, conspiracy, and the seductive promise that maybe death itself can be outwitted. Releasing May 19, 2026, this gothic-tinged literary thriller moves like a fever dream, gradually tightening from atmospheric travel fantasy into something deeply unsettling.

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One of the novel’s greatest strengths is its setting. Baird captures northwestern France so vividly that even the oppressive heat and lack of air conditioning somehow feel intoxicating. The small-town atmosphere is lush, languid, and quietly claustrophobic, creating the perfect backdrop for Courtney’s growing obsession with Salomé and her family. The relationship between Courtney and Salomé mirrors that setting beautifully at first—warm, inviting, almost innocent in its intensity. Their connection feels youthful and sincere, the kind of intimacy that blooms quickly when you’re untethered from your ordinary life.

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Author Interview

Michelle Maryk on writing The Found Object Society, creative routines, and finding inspiration in the supernatural

Michelle Maryk’s The Found Object Society, released February 10, 2026, invites readers into a world where memory, mystery, and the supernatural blur the boundaries of time—and her own creative journey is just as compelling as the story itself. In this interview, Maryk reflects on the unconventional childhood influences that shaped her imagination, the early-morning writing discipline that keeps her grounded, and the spark of inspiration that arrived in a single, unforgettable moment. From ghost stories and cinematic storytelling to the realities of modern book marketing, she shares an honest look at the habits, challenges, and creative instincts that continue to guide her work as an author.

Michelle Maryk’s debut novel, The Found Object Society, released February 10, 2026.

Q: What/who were your early literary influences, and how do you think their writing has shaped you as a storyteller today?
A: As a kid, I grew up with a dad who took me to Dairy Queens alongside graveyards so he could tell me ghost stories; bought tickets to Alien as I watched, enthralled, and my Swedish cousin ran to the bathroom and puked; encouraged me to consider all things supernatural and extraterrestrial—in other words, the best-worst dad ever.

Parenting skills (or lack thereof) aside, those wild, terrifying, exhilarating experiences imprinted themselves in my DNA as a human and an author. I’m drawn to stories that feature what-ifs, tales that dance within the realm of reality only to dip into the murk of what could be possible…if.

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Book Reviews, Find Your Next Read

The Found Object Society by Michelle Maryk: When boredom, money, and grief collide in dangerous ways

What happens when you’ve already done everything—and the only thing left that still feels new is death? In The Found Object Society by Michelle Maryk, an ambitious speculative suspense debut releasing February 10, 2026, that question drives a dark, unsettling story about grief, privilege, and the moral rot that can fester when money removes consequences.

Get your copy of The Found Object Society from my independent online bookstore today!

For twenty years, Greta Davenport has lived in the shadow of the car accident that killed her parents—an accident she believes was her fault. Since then, she’s devoted her life to chasing sensation: parties, substances, experiences, anything that might briefly dull her guilt or spark a rush. When an anonymous invitation leads her to the Found Object Society—an exclusive underground organization that allows members to relive the final moments of the dead through objects they once held—Greta finally finds a high that feels new.

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