Laura Dave knows how to give readers what they crave—a thoroughly engrossing yet comforting distraction.
By Laura Dave
Laura Dave knows how to give readers what they crave—a thoroughly engrossing yet comforting distraction.
Laura Dave knows how to give readers what they crave—a thoroughly engrossing yet comforting distraction.
Full of horror and love, Sorrowland is so perfectly plotted that readers can’t predict what’s to come any better than its characters can.
Chanel Cleeton delivers a sweeping story of love and courage, as well as a sobering reminder of the power and responsibility of the media.
A man’s return to his Texas hometown sets off a chain of events as tragic as any caused by the mythological gods.
Darcy Coates will have you gripping the covers with this immediately entertaining, surprisingly funny horror novel.
Halfway through A Special Place for Women, the book you think you’re reading turns into something else entirely.
Swimming Back to Trout River is a symphony of a novel that is operatic in scope and elevated by Linda Rui Feng’s artful writing.
After their mother’s death, two adult twins grapple with the complexities of adulthood in Claire Fuller’s engaging novel.
Small talk becomes real talk in Will McPhail’s graphic novel, and the world suddenly seems all that much brighter.
Rarely is a novel of moral ideas so buoyant in spirit or so exquisitely crafted.
American actor George Newbern’s clear, unhurried narration proves to be the ideal match for Chris Whitaker’s lyricism.
Maggie Shipstead offers a marvelous pastiche of adventure and emotion as she explores what it means (and what it takes) to live an unusual life.
It takes a certain amount of chutzpah to structure The Plot the way Jean Hanff Korelitz has, but she’s an audacious writer who delivers on her promises.
Stay on top of new releases: Sign up for our newsletter to receive reading recommendations in your favorite genres.