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When you are born into a region or era where poverty, addiction and crime are the norm, is it possible to escape and start life fresh? Or are we destined to follow in the footsteps of the generations that came before us? These are the questions confronting the main characters in two gritty new mysteries from Laura Lippman and Laura McHugh.

In Lippman’s Lady in the Lake, Madeline “Maddie” Schwartz leaves her husband and a privileged lifestyle to start over in 1966 Baltimore. After essentially stumbling across the body of a missing child, Maddie uses her moment in the spotlight to worm her way into a job at the city’s newspaper, first as an assistant to a life columnist and later as a reporter. Maddie quickly learns that if she wants to get noticed, she must assert herself, and thus takes up the case of a missing black woman no one else seems to care about.

Lippman alternates chapters between Maddie’s POV and secondary characters she encounters along the way—including the ghost of the missing woman. Most of the secondary characters don’t add much in the way of plot development to the overall story, but what they do add is a unique perspective to the social, cultural and economic climate that engulfs the book.

Lippman, who is best known for her award-winning Tess Monaghan series, worked at The Baltimore Sun for 20 years, giving her a firsthand perspective on both the world of women in journalism as well as life in Baltimore. While she depicts a city in the throes of 1960s-era racism and crime, she was quick to defend the city in the wake of President Trump’s recent rant against Rep. Elijah Cummings in which he called Baltimore a “rat and rodent infested mess.” “Cities are resilient,” Lippman told NPR in response. “The fact that we survive or thrive at all in the light of terrible problems isn't to be criticized; it’s to be celebrated.”

In The Wolf Wants in, the third novel from McHugh, young Henley Pettit wants nothing more than to get out of Blackwater, Kansas, and start life over again, free of the restraints her impoverished rural surroundings have forced upon her. But when there is no money, when there is no clear escape and when family constantly pull at you from all directions, dreams can all too easily be dashed.

With crime and addiction common among Blackwater’s populace, it isn’t entirely shocking when the body of a missing 10-year-old girl is discovered in the woods outside of town. A second set of bones, believed to be those of the girl’s father, are also soon discovered.

Meanwhile, Sadie Keller, the other protagonist of the story, launches her own investigation into the death of her brother, Shane, and his connection to the recently discovered bodies. Sadie and Henley’s stories, along with those of their extended families, ultimately intertwine in a complex tale of deceit, secrets and questions perhaps best left unanswered.

Both mysteries are grim, realistic portraits of lifestyles and regions too often overlooked in today’s literary landscape. The writers weave stories that are gloomy, heart-rending and oftentimes depressing. But both writers also do what literary masters do so well: They offer a glimmer of hope.

When you are born into a region or era where poverty, addiction and crime are the norm, is it possible to escape and start life fresh? Or are we destined to follow in the footsteps of the generations who came before us? Those are the questions confronting the main characters in two gritty new mysteries from Laura Lippman and Laura McHugh.

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I love the beginning of a story. I love when the escaped droids crash-land on a sandy dessert in a galaxy far, far away or when the wizard shoves a ring into a hobbit’s hands and tells him to run. There is so much possibility, so many ways the world can change the hero, so many surprises to alter and confound my expectations. Usually I’m left wanting to go back in time to savor the adventure all over again. But sometimes we get rewarded for wanting more than a good start. We get sequels. Both of these series’ first volumes crossed my desk a year ago, and I’m happy to report that these follow-ups more than live up to their excellent beginnings.

Fonda Lee’s Jade War takes us back to the Kaul family of No Peak Clan, a crime syndicate vying for control over the city of Janloon. After the tragic events of Jade City, Kaul Hilo finds himself making a truce with his rivals, the Mountain Clan, to protect the mining and export of jade. Though he loathes the public nature of the alliance, the powers of jade are too important for the two clans to be in conflict. Hilo’s sister Shae, his second-in-command, struggles to steer the clan as international forces try to disrupt Janloon’s sovereignty over the precious jade. Their cousin Anden, banished from Janloon, starts to find his way in a new city. When aggressions finally spill over, will the clan be able to avoid an all-out war?

Lee effortlessly injects more complexity into an already-rich universe in Jade War. We get more storylines, more subterfuge and more cloak-and-dagger mafia business. But we also get some very tender and nuanced looks at what it means to be family, the meaning of community and the depths of love. And throughout it all is a sense of tenuous control, the possibility that the family could watch their success evaporate overnight. This is a maturation of the saga, an expansion in both storytelling and scale. But if you’re just craving some more jade-fueled magic, you’ll be right at home, too. There are moments when the statecraft and maneuvering between clans slowed the pace, but several scenes, including a fantastic duel in the middle of the story, picked it back up. Lee proves she’s still a master at mafia-magic storytelling, and this second volume is deeper and more ambitious than the first.

Though Rin was able to end the Third Poppy War with a massive inferno, R.F. Kuang’s The Dragon Republic finds our hero in a sorry state. Overcome with grief for her lost comrades and smoking opium in order to dull the voice of the Phoenix god in her mind, she spends her time planning revenge against the treacherous Empress. When a classmate rescues her and takes her to the powerful Dragon Warlord, she finds a new cause to believe in: democracy. With a proper army, the Dragon Warlord can establish a new government in the name of peace for all. But war with the Empress draws closer every day, and when Rin discovers that her power over fire might not be permanent, she’s left to grapple with who she really is and what she really cares about.

Rin saw more pain and more blood in The Poppy War than almost any other character I have encountered in the last year. Kuang does a wonderful job of showing the effects of that pain in the initial period of this book, as well as the impact of addiction and PTSD. Rin seems destined to find war wherever she goes, and Kuang is fantastic at putting us in Rin’s head to witness her internal conflict. Rin’s army unit serves as a source of both humor and camaraderie in a sometimes-bleak world, but Rin’s ongoing war in her own mind is the real through-line in Kuang’s powerful follow-up.

These fantasy follow-ups more than live up to their excellent beginnings.

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Three of the season’s most anticipated collections are brief, powerful and to the point.


R.L. Maizes chronicles the comedy and absurdity of the human condition in her wry, whimsical debut, We Love Anderson Cooper. In the beautifully executed title story, Markus, a seventh-grader grappling with his homosexuality, causes a stir by coming out at his bar mitzvah. (“Why didn’t you talk to us first? We would have understood,” his mother says. “We love Anderson Cooper.”) Markus is one of several characters whose emotions bring unexpected consequences or shifts in perspective, such as in “Couch,” in which therapist Penelope’s new office sofa has the power to impart optimism. Crafted without excess or stylistic extremity, Maizes’ stories have a refreshing forthrightness.

Edwidge Danticat’s Everything Inside, her first volume of short stories since the acclaimed Krik? Krack! (1995), mines the emotional and psychological landscapes of Haitian immigrants through rich narratives that explore the nature of family, identity and home. Many of Danticat’s protagonists are women living with loss or trying to make reality tally up with their expectations. In “Sunrise, Sunset,” a Haitian woman living in Miami is inured to the vagaries of life—“the whims of everything from tyrants to hurricanes and earthquakes.” As she slowly succumbs to dementia, she tries to help her daughter adjust to motherhood. In “The Gift,” a woman meets up with a former lover who lost his family in the 2010 Haiti earthquake. “The Port-au-Prince Marriage Special” tells the story of a young nanny with AIDS and the family that employs her. Powerful and poignant, heartbreaking and hopeful, these are narratives about people struggling to connect—across continents, across generations.

Rion Amilcar Scott’s electrifying The World Doesn’t Require You takes place in the fictional town of Cross River, Maryland, which provided the backdrop for his debut, Insurrections (2016). Settled by the inciters of a slave rebellion, it’s a town shaped by the forces of history and religion. In “David Sherman, the Last Son of God,” God is a Cross River native with 13 children and whose youngest, David, tries to make a place for himself in the community by heading up a gospel band. In “The Electric Joy of Service,” robot slaves are manufactured to serve wealthy masters. Scott mixes tones and moods, moving from solemn and portentous to comic and ironic with unfailing assurance. My advice: Dispense with expectations, surrender to Scott’s singular genius, and enjoy the journey.  

Three of the season’s most anticipated collections are brief, powerful and to the point.


R.L. Maizes chronicles the comedy and absurdity of the human condition in her wry, whimsical debut, We Love Anderson Cooper. In the beautifully executed title story, Markus, a seventh-grader…

The dog days of summer may be winding down, but for many of us, dogs are an integral part of each day. Two new books explore our lives with these inseparable companions.

In Our Dogs, Ourselves: The Story of a Singular Bond, canine cognition researcher Alexandra Horowitz, bestselling author of Inside of a Dog, explores a spectrum of tail-wagging topics. Some essays tackle thought-provoking issues like the legal rights of dogs, health problems caused by inbreeding and research on the impact of early sterilization.

Others are more lighthearted, such as the chapter “Things People Say to Their Dogs.” Ever the researcher, Horowitz started capturing snippets of human-to-dog conversations overheard in New York City, and here she presents them to readers who can surely relate: “‘Leave it. We have better ones at home.’ (Man to dog desperately searching for lost tennis ball.)” Another favorite: “‘Hi, honey. Did you vote?’ (Woman to pleased-looking dog outside voting center.)” If you love dogs, and even talk to them, you’re going to rejoice at this entertaining and enlightening book.

Not only do we hold conversations with our dogs, we also take them places. Inspired by John Steinbeck’s classic Travels with Charley, author Peter Zheutlin took his 75-pound rescue Lab mix, Albie, on a six-week journey across America, which he chronicles in The Dog Went Over the Mountain: Travels with Albie: An American Journey.

The travel bug flows through Zheutlin’s genes: He’s a descendant of Annie Cohen Kopchovsky, better known as Annie Londonderry, who cycled 9,000 miles in the 1890s. Zheutlin’s travels were by car, exploring back roads and scenic byways to meet and talk with ordinary Americans along the way. “I wasn’t so much interested in driving across the country as I was in diving into it,” the author explains. He wanted to experience a personal journey but also offer something to the rest of us—“to share a more lighthearted, heartfelt, and dog-friendly tour of America, and in the process remind us what remains wonderful and grand and good about it, even as it seems the country is coming apart at the seams.”

Like his cycling great-grand-aunt, Zheutlin traveled close to 9,000 miles, loosely following Steinbeck’s route from New England to California and back. While the journey itself wasn’t always easy, his easygoing writing style makes for comfortable reading. The book includes a photo section, which (naturally) features the photogenic Albie in just about every picture: enjoying the view from the Grand Canyon, posing in front of a Route 66 sign and making new friends (human and canine). 

Your own next adventure might only be as far as the dog park, but reading The Dog Went Over the Mountain may inspire you, like Zheutlin, to end the trip with an ice cream cone and a hug for the dog who is part of your journey.

The dog days of summer may be winding down, but for many of us, dogs are an integral part of each day. Two new books explore our lives with these inseparable companions.

In Our Dogs, Ourselves: The Story of a Singular Bond, canine cognition researcher…

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These new novels can be challenging and even downright harrowing, but their authors imbue them with warmth and humor.


When Hằng arrives in Texas, she has lost everything except a filament of hope. Six years before, she helped her younger brother, Linh, get out of Vietnam as the war came to a close. But when Hằng finally follows Linh to America, she discovers that he’s grown into a young man with little to no memory of his life before. Butterfly Yellow follows their halting attempts to reconnect. 

National Book Award-winning author Thanhhà Lại (Inside Out & Back Again) spares her protagonist very little. Hằng has lost nearly all of her family, she is wracked with guilt about her brother, and her journey to the U.S. on a dangerously overcrowded boat is so traumatic that she practically folds into herself with PTSD. Her unlikely friendship with a Texas cowboy named LeeRoy allows her to find some relief. Lại writes Hằng’s dialogue phonetically, and it may take readers a while to acclimate before they can easily understand her. It’s a small choice that gives this tender story that much more of an impact.

Dove “Birdie” Randolph is beginning to yearn for some independence when Carlene, an aunt she barely remembers, shows up at her Chicago home. Birdie spends her time studying ever since her parents made her quit the soccer team, but she’s emboldened to claim a little more freedom by Booker, the guy she likes but can’t bring home yet. Meanwhile, Aunt Carlene is not only enabling but even encouraging Birdie's rebellious impulses. The Revolution of Birdie Randolph is either going to shake things up or burn it all down. 

Brandy Colbert, author of the Stonewall Book Award-winning Little & Lion, has created a world that readers will want to hang out in, from the snug apartment above the family’s beauty salon to the rooftop with its view of the city. When Birdie and her sister go to Chicago Pride, the mix of excitement and claustrophobia is palpable. There’s a big twist in the story—a bombshell of a family secret—that throws Birdie’s life into disarray, and the struggle to define herself separately from the strong women in her life has the potential to pull her apart. Thankfully, her web of friends and family form a net that won’t tear so easily.

These new novels can be challenging and even downright harrowing, but their authors imbue them with warmth and humor.


When Hằng arrives in Texas, she has lost everything except a filament of hope. Six years before, she helped her younger brother, Linh, get…

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Tips for Teachers is a monthly column in which experienced teacher and children’s librarian Emmie Stuart shares book recommendations and a corresponding teaching guide for fellow elementary school teachers.


Think fast! What do Eloise, Knuffle Bunny, Lyle and Little Elliot have in common? How about some of the most memorable fictional families: Sydney Taylor’s All-of-a-Kind Family sisters, Elizabeth Enright’s scrappy and enterprising Melendy siblings and Karina Yan Glaser’s endearing Vanderbeeker clan. Each of these beloved characters and families lives a story that has (in the words of Frank Sinatra) “New York, New York . . . right through the very heart of it.” And it’s at the heart of the following books.

Offering small glimpses into the city’s bustling urban energy, dazzling lights and diverse neighborhoods, these books show students that, contrary to popular belief, they are not the center of the universe. That honor belongs to New York City.


ManhattanManhattan: Mapping the Story of an Island by Jennifer Thermes

Over the past four centuries, the island of Manhattan has experienced much transition, unrest, urban growth and dynamic shifts in both societal and city structure. Beginning with the Lenape, the island’s native inhabitants, Thermes records, explains and illustrates significant events and decisions that have shaped the island in its 400-year history. We learn about Henry Hudson’s arrival in 1609, the British occupation during the American Revolution, the significant Commissioners’ Plan of 1811, immigration, the Gilded Age, 9/11, Hurricane Katrina and more.

The detailed, watercolor-and-pencil maps, timelines and rich explanatory text demand a slow and thoughtful reading experience. Carve out a few class periods to enjoy savoring and studying it with students.

  • Urban Planning

    At the beginning of the 19th century, city commissioners realized, “The city was branching out in all directions. It needed a plan.” John Randel Jr. and his team spent more than a decade planning, pounding and laying the grid for the city.

    Most children will be unfamiliar with the concept of urban planning. The American Planning Association has an excellent downloadable curriculum that provides educators with resources for teaching the basic concepts of urban planning.

    For younger students, use the organization’s Neighborhood Scavenger Hunt. Activities vary from taking rubbings of significant city buildings to riding public transportation to interviewing an older member of the community. Use a local copy shop to print an oversize city map and hang it in the classroom. For older students, read sections of David Macauley’s City: A Story of Roman Planning and Construction.
     

  • Neighborhood Deep Dive

    As the book progresses, the neighborhoods on the island maps increase. According to the NYC Department of City Planning, the island of Manhattan has 53 distinct neighborhoods (see page 4 of this guide).

    Let each student choose a specific neighborhood to research. Using their research, they must write a “Six Hours in [fill-in neighborhood]” presentation. They can choose the significant landmarks, key historical facts, cultural hot spots, top-rated restaurants, local parks and libraries and other information they think is important in understanding the culture of the neighborhood.
     

  • Classroom City Timeline

    Change and transformation are inevitable, and as evidenced on the island of Manhattan, natural disasters, political conflict, economic fluctuations and new transportation and technologies deeply influence how and why cities develop.

    Spend a few weeks unpacking the history of your city with students. Invite a city or community historian into your classroom to discuss the city’s history. Remind students to listen for the key historical events that were responsible for shaping the city. Request resources from your local or state museum. Encourage students to interview neighbors or other longtime members of the community.

    As more history is uncovered, begin to gather the notes and photographs in one central area. Using long butcher paper, create a classroom city timeline. Fill in a few of the events and dates that were discussed in class, and then invite students to continue to add events as they uncover them in personal research.

    Keep the timeline up all year, and watch how it continues to grow as students become more interested and invested.


I Can Write the WorldI Can Write the World written by Joshunda Sanders, illustrated by Charly Palmer

Living in South Bronx, 8-year-old Ava wonders why the TV news images and stories depicting her neighborhood don’t reflect or match her feelings and experiences. “Sometimes the way the world sees us is different from how we see ourselves,” her mother explains. Ava decides to take matters into her own hands and sets out to become a journalist who will report the stories that accurately reflect her vibrant, creative and loving neighborhood.

Palmer’s vibrant brushstroke illustrations pulse with movement and emotion mirroring the characters, cultures and stories that make up the South Bronx. Not only does Ava’s gentle first-person perspective provide a child’s personal insight into a NYC neighborhood, but it also shows students that that they, too, hold the power to seek out and tell stories.

  • Sensory Language

    Written in lyrical prose, I Can Write the World is filled with rich, descriptive language. Read it aloud a second time, but this time ask students to close their eyes and focus on the sensory details. Afterward, create a class graphic organizer and fill it in with the sights, sounds, smells, and textures that Ava describes.

    Take students outside. For two minutes, they must focus on the sounds, sights, smells and textures around them. Once back inside the classroom, ask them to write words, phrases and sentences to describe their experience. Ask them to do the same thing as soon as they wake up the next morning. What are the sounds, sights, smells, tastes and textures of their morning routine? I use this activity as a calming and centering exercise on field trips. Minutes spent focusing and noticing helps students foster disciplines and habits of the mind.
     

  • Music and Art of the Bronx

    For her first story, Ava asks her mother to tell her “more about the art you and your Classmates made.” As they tour the neighborhood, Ava learns about Grandmaster Flash, Kool Herc and the music the neighbors brought when they moved from Puerto Rico, Haiti and Jamaica. The sounds of their homeland (salsa, reggae, etc.) influence modern-day hip-hop. Listen to the various types of music that are celebrated in the Bronx.

    Graffiti is another form of art that has shaped the Bronx neighborhood. While listening to the various forms of music, provide paint, pastels, sharpies, and markers and let children create their own graffiti inspired art. For further reading, check out When the Beat Was Born by Laban Carrick Hill and The Roots of Rap by Carole Boston Weatherford.
     

  • Media Literacy

    Seize the opportunity to discuss journalism, media literacy and bias reporting. It’s a hard topic, but Ava’s experience provides an excellent entry into the tricky subject. For older students, discuss conservative, liberal and middle-of-the-road reporting. Give them a working media literacy vocabulary by teaching them the meaning of the following words: bias, evidence, exaggeration, slant and claim.

    Read a short news article together. Let the students identify nouns, verbs, adjectives or phrases that appear biased. How could this article be rewritten or reframed?
     


Nelly Takes New YorkNelly Takes New York written by Allison Pataki and Marya Myers, illustrated by Kristi Valiant

For Nelly, New York City is home. Each morning, she is awakened by the city’s familiar sounds: the rumble of the subway, the rat-tat-tats of a street musician and the opening rattle of a store front gate. One morning as Nelly watches Mr. Patel, owner of the local corner cart, juggle bagels, he comments, “The Big Apple is tons of fun!” And so, Nelly and her dog, Bagel, set off on a mission to find this “big apple.” Their quest takes them all over the city, and they visit several NYC landmarks and neighborhoods before realizing “The Big Apple isn’t something you can hold or eat. The Big Apple is all of us—the Big Apple IS New York City.”

The accessible story and simple overview of a city provide a strong foundation for students familiarizing them with the terms and places they will need for further NYC study.

  • Experience Nelly’s Journey

    Prior to reading it aloud, tell students, “Some words in this book are going to look different from all the other words. Be on the lookout for words that are extra dark (this is called bold text) and in a different typeface.”

    As you read, keep a visual running list of the bold words. At the conclusion of the book, ask students to discuss the words on the list. (They are significant NYC neighborhoods and landmarks.)

    Use Google Earth (I created a tour prior to the lesson) to trace Nelly’s NYC journey. Show students Nelly’s bird’s eye view by using a 360 photo spherefrom the top of the Empire State Building.
     

  • City Nicknames and Branding

    Ask students to articulate the Nelly’s big apple and “Big Apple” confusion. Briefly tell the story behind the city’s nickname, emphasizing how it was used in the early 1970s as a marketing campaign to revive city tourism. Use this to launch a discussion about city nicknames and city branding.

    Show students the tourism home pages and magazine advertisements of several big cities, and then let them take on the role of a marketing director. Provide pencils, oversize paper and colorful drawing materials, and invite them to design a magazine ad or airport poster that encourages people to visit their hometown or city.

Tips for Teachers is a monthly column in which experienced teacher and children’s librarian Emmie Stuart shares book recommendations and a corresponding teaching guide for fellow elementary school teachers.


Think fast! What do Eloise, Knuffle Bunny, Lyle and Little Elliot have in common? How about…

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★Fleishman Is in Trouble
Taffy Brodesser-Akner’s stunning debut novel explores middle age, parenthood, divorce and the subjective nature of how we perceive other people, even those closest to us. Toby Fleishman is going through a divorce and discovers he’s a hot commodity on all the new dating apps. But when his ex-wife, Rachel, doesn’t pick up the kids when it’s her turn, he’s forced to navigate parenthood and dating while wondering what happened to his marriage—and to Rachel. He paints her as a neglectful mother and ruthless social climber with little care for his input. She makes more money, and he feels like he put his career on the back burner for her. But wait till you see her point of view. Read by Allyson Ryan with humor and attitude, Fleishman Is in Trouble is a ruthless look at class and relationships in modern-day Manhattan.

Whisper Network
A North Texas-based athletic wear company gets shaken up when the “bad man list” is passed around in Chandler Baker’s Whisper Network. When one of those bad men is up for a promotion to CEO of the company, enough is enough. Four very different women—from high-powered lawyers to a member of the custodial staff—come together to stand up to him and to the company willing to overlook his history of sexual harassment. This #MeToo revenge fantasy makes for a fun listen with a bit of mystery, exploring women’s lives, their relationships to work and how they deal with the bad men they are forced to answer to. Narrator Almarie Guerra does a nimble job portraying the different women with honesty and sympathy.

Conviction
When Anna McDonald’s husband announces he’s leaving her for her best friend, she finds comfort in true crime podcasts—until she recognizes the victim of her new favorite podcast as a man she once knew. When her best friend’s has-been rock-star husband turns up on her doorstep, he becomes the unwitting accomplice in helping her unravel the podcast’s mystery. Soon they’re jet-setting around Europe as Anna becomes entangled with assassins and uncovers a plot involving one of the richest, most secretive people in the world. Much of Conviction takes place in Scotland, and narrator Cathleen McCarron does a great job with accents and secret identities. Denise Mina’s latest thriller is a fun, edge-of-your-seat listen that feels very contemporary with its use of social media and podcasts to drive the story forward.

★Fleishman Is in Trouble Taffy Brodesser-Akner’s stunning debut novel explores middle age, parenthood, divorce and the subjective nature of how we perceive other people, even those closest to us. Toby Fleishman is going through a divorce and discovers he’s a hot commodity on all the…
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★ Bringing Down the Duke
Evie Dunmore’s Victorian romance Bringing Down the Duke is a superior debut in every way. Annabelle Archer is smart, poor and desperate. Admitted to Oxford University through a benefactress committed to the women’s suffrage movement, Annabelle meets Sebastian Devereux, Duke of Montgomery, and tries to recruit him to their cause. The sexual tension shimmers on the page, and the pair’s sensual longing and cerebral connection make this romance seem unstoppable—although the conflict between duty and desire may prove to be insurmountable. The historical backdrop is not only well done but also integral to the plot, and the characters feel true to their time and societal expectations. Readers will identify with Annabelle and root for her to achieve all her heart’s desires. 

The Blacksmith Queen
G.A. Aiken writes fantasy romance with a grin and a wink in The Blacksmith Queen, the first in a new series. When the Old King dies, a prophecy predicts a new queen, who turns out to be the sister of talented blacksmith Keeley Smythe. To claim the title, there are battles to be fought and allies to win over, forcing Keeley to make new friends (one of them a very attractive warrior). The Smythe clan will steal readers’ hearts and have them cheering for their triumph over evil. Aiken builds a world and characters that feel real despite the sexy centaurs, demon wolves and two suns in the sky. It may be laugh-out-loud funny, but at its heart this is a story of a woman who cares deeply for both the family she has and the one she creates.

Nothing to Fear
Juno Rushdan provides nonstop action and pulse-pounding suspense in her second novel, Nothing to Fear. Operative Gideon Stone of the super-secretive Gray Box organization knows there’s a mole on the team but also knows it can’t be their cryptologist/hacker, Willow Harper. To prove she’s been set up and to save her life, Gideon and Harper go on the run. Gideon is as stony as his name, but he’s falling for the brilliant and beautiful Willow, who has an autism spectrum disorder. Her vulnerabilities and strengths make her a fascinating character and a good foil for her partner, who manages, in her arms, to find his softer side. Detailed descriptions of tactics and firefights add to the authenticity and excitement of this stellar read.

★ Bringing Down the Duke
Evie Dunmore’s Victorian romance Bringing Down the Duke is a superior debut in every way. Annabelle Archer is smart, poor and desperate. Admitted to Oxford University through a benefactress committed to the women’s suffrage movement, Annabelle meets Sebastian Devereux, Duke…

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★ Dark Skies
I’d never heard of astrotourism until Dark Skies crossed my desk. At a time when 80% of the planet sleeps under light-polluted skies (make that 99% in the USA), stargazing is, more than ever, a brush with the exotic. “Less than one hundred years ago, seeing the unobscured night sky was a birthright; now it is inaccessible to urban and suburban residents across the globe,” writes Valerie Stimac. This thorough book lays out the best dark-sky spots worldwide and contains everything you need to know about astronomical phenomena like meteor showers, aurora and eclipses through 2028. There’s even a section on space tourism (the future is now!). 

One-Pot Vegetarian
“One-pot” cookbooks have popped up everywhere lately, but none has drawn me in like Sabrina Fauda-Rôle’s One-Pot Vegetarian. Why? It could be that I’m eager to incorporate more plant-based cooking into my family’s daily routine. But it might also be the nifty design of this title, which makes the most of its double-page spreads. On the left, we see the raw ingredients collected in the pot—everything neatly parceled, as if in a pie chart—and on the right, the finished, cooked dish. Wildly satisfying, this conceit. Chapters include all-veg dishes, those that mix in plant-based proteins (grains, lentils, soy and such), pasta- and rice-driven meals, soups and even desserts. Some recipes call for a fair amount of chopping and slicing, but otherwise the preparations could not be simpler.

How Your Story Sets You Free
Everybody has a story to tell. Though the line has become a bit cliché, let’s not overlook its useful truth. Personal stories are powerful stuff, and that power can be summoned in so many ways: sharing your story, listening to others, learning to craft the story itself. With How Your Story Sets You Free, co-authors Heather Box and Julian Mocine-McQueen distill the storytelling process into a tiny, bright yellow volume that feels like its own kind of golden ticket. “When you take the mic and share your story,” writes Box, “you immediately make more space in our culture for someone else.” The title is part of Chronicle’s HOW series, which all seem like jewels of compressed wisdom. 

★ Dark Skies
I’d never heard of astrotourism until Dark Skies crossed my desk. At a time when 80% of the planet sleeps under light-polluted skies (make that 99% in the USA), stargazing is, more than ever, a brush with the exotic. “Less than one hundred…

These two delicious new mysteries are a book nerd’s delight! One’s a modern-day retelling of a perennially popular short story, and the other imagines the personal lives of three women we know mainly through their published work.

Holly Watt’s To the Lions is a darkly compelling tale drawn from the real-life adventures of its British investigative journalist author. It’s also the latest take on the 1924 O. Henry Award-winning short story, “The Most Dangerous Game.”

Our heroine, Casey Benedict, is an intrepid investigative reporter at a major London newspaper. She and her colleague, Miranda, are intelligent and daring women who view immense risk as just another part of the job. When Casey (in disguise, natch) overhears a disturbing conversation at a nightclub, her interest is piqued. Why did a wealthy young man named Milo commit suicide, and what did it have to do with a recent hush-hush hunting expedition?

The women soon realize that Milo’s demise merely scratches the surface of a host of grim goings-on—namely, a group of powerful, wealthy men who go to North Africa for the most horrific of hunts. As the journalists work to infiltrate the network (with the newsroom team offering clever strategy and on-the-spot saves), the reporters find themselves confronting questions they’ve long avoided answering. Why do they do this work? Are they fearless or reckless? How far will they go to get the story?

The hunters and the hunted battle for primacy in a harrowing and exciting tale that’s at once as old as time and newly illuminating thanks to Watt’s skillfully crafted, thought-provoking examination of power, corruption and morality.

Now, let’s turn back the clock with Bella Ellis’ The Vanished Bride. It’s 1845 in Yorkshire, and the Brontë sisters—Charlotte, Emily and Anne, not yet published writers—are shocked to learn that their neighbor, Elizabeth Chester, has gone missing. A copious quantity of blood was left behind, the police don’t seem to be very concerned, and her known-to-be-violent husband isn’t pushing for answers.

The sisters decide to join forces and investigate as a way to get justice for Elizabeth, put their prodigious imaginations to good use and do something meaningful rather than sitting at home bemoaning their spinsterhood. It’s a risky undertaking in a stiflingly patriarchal time, but the sisters are determined, and more than a bit excited, ’tis true.

The Brontës venture near and far in pursuit of the truth, becoming masters of subterfuge and subtle manipulation along the way. Readers will thrill to the chase as clues reveal themselves, witnesses step forward and fade back, and the sisters’ charming and feckless brother Branwell pops up to urge them on or throw a wrench into things.

This first book in a series is an engaging, smart and inspiring read. Ellis writes with both reverence and sly humor, skillfully blending fact and fiction. In her hands, it’s pure fun to imagine what the Brontës, themselves a bit of a mystery, were really like—and to picture them sleuthing across the moors, undeterred by sexism, mortal danger or prohibitively poufy petticoats.

These two delicious new mysteries are a book nerd’s delight! One’s a modern-day retelling of a perennially popular short story, and the other imagines the personal lives of three women we know mainly through their published work.

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★ Ninth House
In Leigh Bardugo’s instantly gripping new fantasy, Ninth House, Alex Stern can see ghosts. This ability makes her perfectly suited to monitor Yale’s underground societies, which perform occult rituals under cover of darkness. When a ritual goes wrong and Alex senses the ghosts of Yale becoming restless, she must race to find out the sinister reasons why. The world of this book is so consistent and enveloping that pages seem to rush by. Bardugo, a veteran of the fantasy space with her Grishaverse series, never lets the narrative become overtaken by the lore, and she includes plenty of winking callouts to the horrors of modern collegiate experiences. Creepy and thrilling, this one deserves a place on your fall reading list.

Steel Crow Saga
Expansive yet personal, Paul Krueger’s Steel Crow Saga starts with a bang and never slows down. A soldier seeking vengeance, a prince looking for home, a detective with a secret and a thief wanting redemption unite to face an abominable evil. Saga’s magic system centers on animal familiars that can be summoned to fight alongside characters—think Pokémon meets The Golden Compass, with plenty of original and frightening twists along the way. While the influence of colonial Asian history is clear, it adds to the world building rather than taking the reader out of the action. Krueger deftly gives each character their own point of view without losing sight of the novel’s central theme: We’re stronger together than we are alone.

How Rory Thorne Destroyed the Multiverse
Sometimes a book just flat-out charms you—How Rory Thorne Destroyed the Multiverse by K. Eason is one such book. Rory is a singular woman, anointed with blessings from 13 fairies and destined to rule the interplanetary government. In a clever twist, one of the blessings gives Rory the ability to hear the truth when someone is lying. These lies and truths offer funny contrasts on the page, and lead to some wonderfully surprising moments. When Rory discovers a sinister conspiracy at the same time she is engaged to a prince from another planet, she must rely on all of her blessings to save the day. Eason’s heroine is a whirlwind, a one-woman battering ram whose tenacity is exciting and funny. This is the first in a series, and I anticipate many more pages of Rory confounding expectations (and anyone she meets).

 

★ Ninth House
In Leigh Bardugo’s instantly gripping new fantasy, Ninth House, Alex Stern can see ghosts. This ability makes her perfectly suited to monitor Yale’s underground societies, which perform occult rituals under cover of darkness. When a ritual goes wrong and Alex senses the…

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★ Once a Spy
Love and danger breathtakingly intertwine in Once a Spy by Mary Jo Putney. Following Napoleon’s abdication, world-weary soldier Simon Duval resigns from the British army and tracks down his second cousin’s widow, Suzanne. Feeling an instant connection, Simon suggests a marriage of companionship. Simon and Suzanne are mature characters who have experienced the world and its tragedies, making their growing romance both moving and sweet. When danger threatens their lives, readers will root for this couple and their hard-won wisdom and open hearts. Putney’s depiction of the days surrounding the Battle of Waterloo is thrilling and adds just the right amount of historical detail to this superlative romance.

Faker
Debut author Sarah Smith pens a fresh and charming take on enemies-to-lovers in Faker. Emmie Echavarre tries to maintain a tough persona at work, including keeping a stoic expression around her co-worker Tate Rasmussen. As much as she finds him physically appealing, he excels at annoying her from his office across the hall. But all that changes when an accident gives Tate the opportunity to show Emmie who he really is—and sparks of a different sort fly between them. Told in Emmie’s energetic voice, this romance depicts all the complexity and awkwardness of getting to know another person. Emmie and Tate must fight off misunderstandings and past hurts to truly become a couple. This egalitarian office romance feels both contemporary and classic (and the steamy love scenes give it an extra edge).

The Orchid Throne
An enchanting world awaits in The Orchid Throne by Jeffe Kennedy. It’s the story of Euthalia, queen of Calanthe, who has bought her people’s independence by promising to marry a brutal emperor. But that promise is threatened when the rebel King of the Slaves, Conrí, arrives to tell Euthalia about her part in a fateful prophecy. With detailed world building and an intriguing cast of characters—especially a warrior woman and an enigmatic and amusing wizard—this captivating story will have readers holding their breath while Lia and Con come to terms with a partnership that neither expected. This is a fantasy romance with an exciting and entertaining blend of politics, swashbuckling and sensual fire.

★ Once a Spy
Love and danger breathtakingly intertwine in Once a Spy by Mary Jo Putney. Following Napoleon’s abdication, world-weary soldier Simon Duval resigns from the British army and tracks down his second cousin’s widow, Suzanne. Feeling an instant connection, Simon suggests a marriage of…

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★ You Suck at Cooking
I had just perused several stunning cookbooks, replete with jaw-dropping dishes that made me both hungry and in want of a nap, when I picked up You Suck at Cooking and saw recipes like “Toasted Walnut Cauliflower Stuff” and “Broccoli Cheddar Quiche Cupcake Muffin-­Type Things.” This book is the antidote to precious food culture, and it’s the first cookbook to ever make me repeatedly LOL. The (anonymous) author turns the expected on its head in a voice that’s perhaps best described as Super Mock Textbook. In the “Things You Might Need” section, for example: “There are many heat sources to choose from, each more dangerous than the next. . . . Make sure you choose the heat source that is just dangerous enough for you.” Thing is, the recipes herein could become anyone’s favorite go-tos. Don’t dare miss the section on sandwiches.

Embrace Your Weird
Someone once told me I reminded her of the actor Felicia Day. I didn’t know who Day was at the time, but now I’m glad to see she’s written a book called Embrace Your Weird, a concept I can fully get behind. Building on the success of her previous title, You’re Never Weird on the Internet (Almost), Day returns with a creativity guide that positively vibrates with her bubbly comedic sensibility. If you are exclamation point- or ALL CAPS-averse, this is not the book for YOU! But she isn’t wrong when she writes, “Playfulness is the root of all creation.” Her book delights in manifesting that idea, with the help of cute illustrations, meme jokes and many parenthetical asides.

Shared Living
Our journey into the wilds of adulting begins with Emily Hutchinson’s Shared Living, which takes features of the best modern interior design books—Q&As with stylish folks around the globe, tip lists, gorgeous photography on matte stock—and applies them to spaces shared by two or more people. Communal living, after all, is on the uptick these days, with home ownership ever further out of reach. A number of lofts and open floor plans are featured here, with ideas for breaking up the space and balancing housemates’ varying styles. It’s fun to examine how these individuals bring their cherished and whimsical objects together in ways that work, and this would make a great gift for someone signing their first lease with a roomie.

★ You Suck at Cooking
I had just perused several stunning cookbooks, replete with jaw-dropping dishes that made me both hungry and in want of a nap, when I picked up You Suck at Cooking and saw recipes like “Toasted Walnut Cauliflower Stuff” and “Broccoli Cheddar…

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