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Starred Review

Son of Nobody

by Yann Martel

Booker Prize-winner Yann Martel (Life of Pi; The High Mountains of Portugal) intricately nests one story in another in the excellent Son of Nobody. Protagonist Harlow Donne narrates to a specific audience: his eight-year-old daughter, Helen, named after Helen of Troy. Harlow is, or rather was, a Homeric scholar, and he describes to his beloved, story-loving child the year he spent in postdoctoral study at Oxford University. His discovery there of a previously unknown text relating the Trojan War contained

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The Fountain

by Casey Scieszka

In Casey Scieszka's harrowing yet entrancing debut novel, The Fountain, it's 2014 and a 213-year-old Vera Van Valkenburgh has returned for the first time to where she grew up in the 1800s. She's accepted a forest ranger job in the Catskills Preserve after what she says is a stint out west working at Joshua Tree. What no one in her small town suspects is that Vera stopped aging at 26 and has a death wish that she unfortunately cannot fulfill, no matter how hard she tries. She rents a cottage adjacent to the

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Nightfaring: In Search of the Disappearing Darkness

by Megan Eaves-Egenes

At a moment in which the glow of screens is rivaled only by the ever-present "skyglow" of municipal grids, the experience of a true night has become nearly a historical relic. In Nightfaring, Megan Eaves-Egenes takes readers on a restorative journey into the few remaining pockets of the planet where sundown still signals the appearance of stars. Her focus is the profound, creeping loss of the nocturnal world, a phenomenon often accepted as merely an aesthetic casualty of progress, but which she argues is a

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Who Hid the Stars?: How Light Pollution Changes Our World

by Danio Miserocchi, Maciej Michno, trans. by Sylvia Notini, illus. by Valentina Gottardi

Valentina Gottardi, Maciej Michno, and Danio Miserocchi--the Italian trio behind 2025's The Tomorrow Tree--explore the costs of light pollution for nature in an absorbing, exquisitely illustrated picture book for middle-grade readers. Who Hid the Stars? is packed with details that will likely compel its audience to look at human-created illumination in a whole new light.

"Artificial light may be useful, but it comes at a cost to the environment." Gottardi, Michno, and Miserocchi present complex scientific

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Where No Shadow Stays

by Sara Hashem

A once popular teen, with the help of a surly school loner, must break a generational curse haunting her Egyptian bloodline in this intensely creepy YA horror novel full of sinister secrets yet buoyed by superb romcom undertones.

Seventeen-year-old Mina Mansour was only nine when her mother departed on "her first and last visit" back to her hometown in Egypt (Masr) and died in a car accident. Mina's father's silence about the matter, however, has always suggested to Mina that something is amiss. So, when she

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Shelf Discovery

The Geomagician

by Jennifer Mandula

A female fossil hunter tries to protect a baby pterodactyl while navigating tricky academic and magical politics in Jennifer Mandula's entertaining debut historical fantasy.

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The Adjunct

by Maria Adelmann

Maria Adelmann's frank, sometimes darkly funny novel is a revealing depiction of the professional and personal challenges facing a young adjunct English professor.

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The Life You Want

by Adam Phillips

In seven challenging essays, psychoanalyst Adam Phillips contrasts Freudian psychoanalysis and Rortyan pragmatism in describing the formation of human identity.

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The Celestial Seas

by T.A. Chan

A teen bent on avenging her former crew seeks to kill the sentient spaceship responsible for their deaths in this thrilling YA sci-fi inspired by Moby-Dick.

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A Good Person

by Kirsten King

This artfully written dark satire is set in contemporary Boston and follows one of modern literature's most audacious narcissists in her quest to find love at any cost.

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Daughter of Egypt

by Marie Benedict

This captivating historical novel parallels the stories of Hatshepsut, one of only a few female Egyptian pharaohs, and a determined 20th-century archeologist seeking to uncover her mysteries.

Read Full Review »

Candlewick Press (MA): Piper at the Gates of Dusk by Patrick Ness

Media Heat

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Today: Christina Geist, author of Before You Fly Away: Life Lessons from Home (Andrews McMeel, $19.99, 9798881612023).

Good Morning America: Sheldon Simeon, co-author of Ohana Style: Food from Hawai'i, for Your Family (Clarkson Potter, $35, 9780593581025).

The View: Arsenio Hall, author of Arsenio: A Memoir (Atria/Black Privilege Publishing, $28.99, 9781982191368).

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Good Morning America: Brandy Norwood, author of Phases: A Memoir (Hanover Square Press, $32.50, 9781335013279). She also appeared on The View.

Today: Woody Brown, author of Upward Bound: A Novel (Hogarth, $28, 9780593979976).

Also on Today: Remi Cruz Parsons, author of Let's Get Cooking: Everyday Meals, Tipsy Favorites and Comfort Food Cravings (S&S/Simon Element, $35, 9781668066836).

Drew Barrymore Show: Alex Aster, author of Starside: A Novel (Avon, $32, 9780063479791).

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Good Morning America: Reilly Meehan, author of A Little Bit Extra: 100 Recipes That Serve Up Something Special (Union Square & Co., $35, 9781454957881).

Also on GMA: Arsenio Hall, author of Arsenio: A Memoir (Atria/Black Privilege Publishing, $28.99, 9781982191368). He also appeared on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert.

Kelly Clarkson Show: Petra Lord, author of Queen of Faces (Holt Books for Young Readers, $22.99, 9781250362971).

Tamron Hall: Chloe Barcelou and Brandon Batchelder, authors of Tales of a Not So Tiny House (Rizzoli, $45, 9780847834280).

Monday, March 30, 2026

Good Morning America: Alex Aster, author of Starside: A Novel (Avon, $32, 9780063479791).

Drew Barrymore Show: Demi Lovato, author of One Plate at a Time: Recipes for Finding Freedom with Food (Flatiron, $34.99, 9781250393449).

Fresh Air: Josh Owens, author of The Madness of Believing: A Memoir from Inside Alex Jones's Conspiracy Machine (Grand Central, $30, 9781538757321). 

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Fresh Air: Katrina Manson, author of Project Maven: A Marine Colonel, His Team, and the Dawn of AI Warfare (W. W. Norton, $31.99, 9781324123316).

Drew Barrymore Show: Arthur C. Brooks, author of The Meaning of Your Life: Finding Purpose in an Age of Emptiness (Portfolio, $30, 9780593545423).
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