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Week of Friday, September 5, 2025

Explore the literal and metaphorical resonance of sound in poet Raymond Antrobus's "outstanding" coming-of-age memoir, The Quiet Ear. Belt out a melody in "beautiful harmony" with the marriage of David Levithan's fiction and Jens Lekman's tunes in the "stunning" Songs for Other People's Wedding. Join an experimental classroom through Jamie Sumner's "insightful and absorbing" middle-grade novel, Schooled. And laugh in the face of disaster alongside novelist Rabih Alameddine as he expounds for The Writer's Life on the quirks of the cantankerous characters at the heart of The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother). A world of enthralling literature is just one click away!

--Dave Wheeler, senior editor, Shelf Awareness

The Best Books This Week

Fiction

Whatever Happened to Lori Lovely?

by Sarah McCoy

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Sarah McCoy's charming seventh novel, Whatever Happened to Lori Lovely?, combines a lush, compelling story of young love and Hollywood glamour with a quiet, nourishing narrative of a woman who found her true vocation thousands of miles from stardom. McCoy (The Mapmaker's Children) explores the motivations that led a rising young starlet to abandon her career for a lifetime tending gardens--and her own soul--in the woods of Connecticut. Inspired by several real-life actresses turned nuns, including Mother Dolores Hart, McCoy's novel asks important questions about one's calling, love, and whose opinion really matters.

In 1990, Lori Lovely's niece and namesake, Lu, travels to the abbey where Lori lives to interview her aunt about her abrupt career change and her life as a nun. McCoy chronicles the young ingenue's transformation from Lucille Hickey to Lori Lovely. McCoy creates a thoroughly detailed mid-century world, as Lori goes out dancing at London nightclubs or shoots scenes in an Italian villa. In the later Hollywood scenes, the movie glitter is mixed with a hefty dose of darkness, a sharp contrast to the eventual peace of the convent and its bucolic setting.

As Lu presses her aunt for answers about her life, she unearths a few hard-won insights about her own--both her past and her uncertain post-college future. Meanwhile, Lori reflects on her life and the choices--large and small--that made her the woman she eventually became. Whatever Happened to Lori Lovely? draws the reader in with an unlikely gown-to-habit costume change, but its true appeal is in its quiet contemplation of choices, challenges, and how they shape a person's life. --Katie Noah Gibson, blogger at Cakes, Tea and Dreams

Discover: Sarah McCoy's charming seventh novel combines a Hollywood story of glamour and young love with a quiet narrative of a woman who found peace far from the movies' glitter and grit.

Morrow, $30, hardcover, 336p., 9780063338746

The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother)

by Rabih Alameddine

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The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother) is a novel as expansive, funny, and poignant as its title promises. With his signature wit and irreverence, Rabih Alameddine (The Angel of HistoryThe Wrong End of the Telescope) charts decades of Beiruti history and trauma through the life of his narrator, Raja, a reclusive, aging teacher of French philosophy.

The novel opens and closes in 2023, when Raja shares his apartment with his overbearing but deeply endearing mother, Zalfa. The bulk of its sections jump back in time: to the pre-civil-war 1960s, Lebanon's civil war in 1975, the banking collapse and Covid-19 epidemic, and Raja's ill-fated trip to the United States for an artists' residency in Virginia. Raja is a knowing, purposeful narrator, defending his story's chronological shifts: "A tale has many tails, and many heads, particularly if it's true." Self-aware and self-deprecating, Raja names himself the Gullible, the Imbecile, the Neurotic Clown, the Dimwit.

The reader learns of Raja's troubled childhood as a gay younger son, bullied by much of his family. During the civil war, in his teens, he is held captive for weeks by a schoolmate and soldier with whom he begins a sexual relationship that is part experimentation, part Stockholm syndrome. He describes his accidental path to teaching, 36 years of it; his care for his students and, even more, theirs for him will become gradually apparent. He and his mother bicker constantly, foul-mouthed but fiercely loving. Bawdy, rude, and impossibly sweet, with "a laugh so delightful, so impetuous, so luminous," Raja's mother is the indomitable star of this loving, heart-wrenching novel. --Julia Kastner, blogger at pagesofjulia

Discover: An especially wry, wise, comic style distinguishes this unforgettable tale of national trauma, community, familial love, and forgiveness.

Grove Press, $28, hardcover, 336p., 9780802166470

Women, Seated

by Zhang Yueran, transl. by Jeremy Tiang

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Women, Seated marks Chinese writer Zhang Yueran and notable literary translator Jeremy Tiang's third collaboration, after Ten Loves and Cocoon. Within its spare page count is an engrossing, precise exposé of the fleeting uncertainty of power and privilege in modern China, and the intricate collateral damage of potential downfall.

Yu Ling's meticulously planned spring outing with her seven-year-old charge, Kuan Kuan, is actually an impressively orchestrated kidnapping attempt to access some of Kuan Kuan's parents' impressive wealth. A breaking radio news announcement en route, however, reveals the boy's grandfather is under official investigation, which has far-reaching ramifications for the extended family. Both Kuan Kuan's parents are unreachable (for ransom or otherwise), and Yu Ling has no other option but to return to the family mansion--with a goose Kuan Kuan has acquired--even as the substantial staff has already disappeared, absconding with easily transportable valuables. Yu Ling won't abandon the child as everyone else seems to have already done. Uncertain about either of their futures, Yu Ling has little choice but to live each day, caught up in Kuan Kuan's childish needs and innocent (for now) imagination. At least in the deserted estate, she can sample some of the luxury she's only witnessed.

Zhang expertly confronts relentless social, political, economic, and gender inequity issues, blending them into a dynamic domestic drama without easy answers. Extenuating circumstances reveal people's true natures--caring, greedy, responsible, exploitative. With so much in flux, Yu Ling continues to fascinate--torn between the immediate needs of the child and a possibility of her own personal freedom. --Terry Hong

Discover: Zhang Yueran's compelling Women, Seated examines the complicated repercussions of a powerful family's downfall for his young son and devoted nanny.

Riverhead, $29, hardcover, 208p., 9780593851920

On Earth as It Is Beneath

by Ana Paula Maia, transl. by Padma Viswanathan

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Brazilian author Ana Paula Maia's slender novel On Earth as It Is Beneath is a relentlessly brutal examination of inhumanity, translated by award-winning author Padma Viswanathan, who deftly captures Maia's unblinking, haunting prose. The titular "beneath" refers to "the enslaved people living here [who] were mostly tortured and killed"--then buried--over a century ago. After farming and livestock failures, the eponymous "earth" housed "a penal colony to serve as a model to the rest of the country, and from where not a single prisoner would ever escape."

Shortly after opening, faraway orders turn the Colony "into a place of extermination." On this cursed land, a man called Melquíades plays God, hunting prisoners on a regular schedule, "slaughtering [them] like he was slaughtering cattle." When the kill orders cease in preparation for decommissioning the property, 42 men remain, but Melquíades continues his murderous culling. For a while, the few men left believe the promised official will arrive to close the Colony and arrange their transfers elsewhere (some even to freedom). These final days are what Maia spotlights, uplifting the survivors' humanity despite their heinous pasts.

Maia unflinchingly, fearlessly exposes the hypocrisies of lazy labels: morality, rules, good, evil--none of that exists. Melquíades carries his father's Bible in his uniform pocket; prison guard Taborda blindly follows Melquíades's orders. Maia uses crisp phrasing and unadorned writing to contain the terror, as if extra words might unnecessarily prolong the inhumanity. With one man standing, she leaves readers with at least a single glimmer of hope. --Terry Hong

Discover: In Ana Paula Maia's shockingly affecting On Earth as It Is Beneath,easy labels can't define the horrors that happen in the Penal Colony.

Charco Press, $17.95, paperback, 112p., 9781917260107

Tantrum

by Rachel Eve Moulton

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Tantrum is a novel to be devoured in one sitting and then pondered long after. Thea is a mother doing her best, living in the New Mexico high desert with her husband and three young children. But her baby girl is developing impossibly fast, rapidly gaining motor skills and an apparent penchant for violence, and leaving Thea wondering what, exactly, she gave birth to. Rachel Eve Moulton has written a truly strange and mesmerizing story of monstrosity and motherhood.

Moulton takes readers on a wild ride and delivers an unforgettable ending as both baby and mother develop through the story from potentially dangerous to explicitly-fanged and supernatural. Despite the next-level intensity of the novel's events and its serious underlying themes of abuse and female rage, Thea's acerbic tone lightens the mood. She spends her mornings avoiding her friendly neighbor, who speed walks with "that flappy turkey wing shit with her arms that speed walkers do, and I can tell she thinks it makes her sporty."

Moulton writes with sharp-tongued humor layered with emotional depth and honesty. The novel progressively circles Thea's childhood trauma and her damaging relationship with her own mother, exploring generational inheritance. Thea struggles with the belief that there's something deeply wrong with her and fears that her flaws might ruin the lives of her children. Tantrum poses questions about maternal guilt, depicting what happens when the monstrous thing inside one woman is finally let loose. --Carol Caley, writer

Discover: Tantrum, a novel to be devoured in one sitting and pondered for years after, explores what happens when the monstrous thing inside one woman is finally let loose.

Putnam, $28, hardcover, 192p., 9780593854600

We Loved to Run

by Stephanie Reents

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Stephanie Reents's quietly propulsive first novel, We Loved to Run, illuminates the experiences of a women's cross-country team at a small liberal arts college through the collective voices of its six top runners. Reents's narrative delves into team dynamics, body image, and the balancing act of being a student-athlete, plus the complicated feelings each team member has about running itself.

As the team plunges into an intense fall season, star runner Kristin is struggling with an experience she had over the summer, while Chloe is nudging Kristin for the top spot. Team captain Danielle is trying to keep everyone focused while hiding her own secrets, and Harriet, Liv, and Patricia are each considering their own internal challenges. All of them are weighing--sometimes literally--their constant need to go farther and faster against the limits of their abilities and the (occasional) need to rest and recover. Reents brilliantly evokes the competing priorities each girl must manage: eating enough but not too much; honing their fitness without wearing themselves out; pulling decent grades while still having a social life; and  handling everyone's expectations--their coaches', their parents', each other's, their own.

Told in a first-person-plural style, Reents's narrative examines the impossible standards young women set for themselves and sometimes impose on each other; the deep bonds of friendship complicated by competitive instincts; and the sheer exhilaration of a winning race or a satisfying workout. We Loved to Run is a sharp, bold exploration of young womanhood and a tribute to running's complex, enduring appeal. --Katie Noah Gibson, blogger at Cakes, Tea and Dreams

Discover: Stephanie Reents's bold, propulsive first novel explores the experience of running cross-country through the plural voices of six female runners at a small liberal arts college.

Hogarth Press, $29, hardcover, 336p., 9780593448069

The Old Man by the Sea

by Domenico Starnone, transl. by Oonagh Stransky

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An 82-year-old man with cataracts and a limp is bound to be in a wistful mood. Such is the case with Nico Gamurra, the narrator of The Old Man by the Sea, a bittersweet novel by Domenico Starnone (Ties; Trick; Trust), translated from the Italian by Oonagh Stransky. Yes, the title is a reference to The Old Man and the Sea; except for a young boy Nico befriends, the stories diverge, with Starnone's achievement focused on its protagonist's reminiscences. For the past 13 days, Nico, a Neapolitan author with four children, six grandchildren, and spouses he abandoned, is renting a house by the dunes south of Rome. When he isn't walking the beach, he laments the difficulties of his writing career--"by the age of twenty, every single sentence I wrote felt like an immense burden and struggle"--and remembers his dressmaker mother, a woman so refined she'd wear her own creations and "walk out of our low-income building looking like a rich movie actress."

Precipitating his beautifully rendered memories are the people he meets at the seaside town, primarily a 24-year-old shop clerk named Lu. When he sees Lu paddling her canoe, he realizes "she's more or less the same age my mother was when my father fell in love with her." Nico's other encounters include the 60-ish owner of a high-end boutique and her husband, and other denizens. "When does desire end?" Lu asks Nico late in the book. That question imbues every element of this magnificent work. --Michael Magras, freelance book reviewer

Discover: The Old Man by the Sea by Italian author Domenico Starnone follows an 82-year-old man on a holiday to the shore, where encounters with the locals lead to reminiscences about the people who shaped him.

Europa Editions, $17, paperback, 160p., 9798889661306

Bees in June

by Elizabeth Bass Parman

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Elizabeth Bass Parman's charming second novel, Bees in June, follows a 20-something woman struggling to find a path forward--with a little help from her uncle's mysterious bees.

In the summer of 1969, Rennie King Hendricks is reeling from the death of her infant son and trying to manage her husband's explosive temper. Working at the local diner, Rennie rediscovers her passion for baking and starts to dream of new possibilities. But her uncle Dixon's failing health worries her, as does the presence of his handsome new neighbor, Ambrose. When Dixon's bees start sending Rennie messages, she wonders if she's losing her sanity--or if the bees (and Dixon) can help her imagine a different life.

Parman (The Empress of Cooke County) infuses her gentle narrative with Southern charm, mouthwatering descriptions of Rennie's desserts, and fabulism in the form of Dixon's bees, which glow softly as they guide Rennie and narrate brief interludes of their own throughout the book. The small town of Spark, Tenn., is filled with women who embody quiet strength, including Rennie's boss, Arden, and her cousin and best friend, May Dean. Rennie's aunt Eugenia, now deceased, also provides a model for staying true to oneself in the face of public gossip. As the town buzzes over the impending moon landing, Rennie begins to take her own small steps forward. Brimming with summer flowers, honey cake, and sweet tea, Parman's novel is a winsome portrait of a woman finding the bravery to build the life she wants. --Katie Noah Gibson, blogger at Cakes, Tea and Dreams

Discover: Elizabeth Bass Parman's winsome second novel follows a young Southern woman taking steps toward a new life, with help from some magical bees.

Harper Muse, $18.99, paperback, 352p., 9781400342600

Mystery & Thriller

Lime Juice Money

by Jo Morey

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Jo Morey takes readers deep into the hot, tangled jungles of Belize in her mesmerizing debut novel, Lime Juice Money, creating a story with a richly imagined setting and complicated family dynamics. Laelia Wylde, named after one of the orchids her father loves so dearly that he has retired to the jungle of Belize to live near them, is losing herself. Recently divorced and experiencing hearing loss after an injury, she's just been fired from her job in an upscale London kitchen following a preventable mistake. Her doctors tell her that hearing loss can cause memory issues, and her grip on facts feels tenuous, her memories fuzzy. So when her father collapses from a stroke at his own birthday celebration, it seems the obvious choice to extend her trip to Belize indefinitely, staying on to tend to her father's jungle home and making sense of the chaos she finds there.

The jungle becomes a character unto itself in Morey's care, as she brings to life "an abundance of lush self-protection, teeming with life upon life upon life. But everything rots faster in the heat." Laelia's father's isolated house is no exception; it's falling into disrepair and surrounded by danger of both human and natural varieties: snakes, betrayal, gaslighting, jaguars, greed, violence, guns, unstable men, creeping vines, secrets, and lies. Amid all this, Laelia is the best kind of unreliable narrator, uncovering long-buried secrets about her family and herself alongside readers in a well-paced and believably convoluted narrative. Lime Juice Money is a captivating story of a woman seeking the truth and coming into her own--by any means necessary. --Kerry McHugh, freelance writer

Discover: This mesmerizing debut novel set in the hot, tangled jungles of Belize combines a past and present lush with vivid detail and complicated family dynamics.

Harper, $30, hardcover, 384p., 9780063399266

Romance

Songs for Other People's Weddings

by David Levithan and Jens Lekman

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Author David Levithan (The Lover's Dictionary; Every Day) and Swedish singer-songwriter Jens Lekman combine insightful prose with artful lyrics in Songs for Other People's Weddings.

"If you ever need a stranger/ To sing at your wedding/ A last-minute choice, then I am your man/ I know every song, you name it." J's song, "If You Ever Need a Stranger (to Sing at Your Wedding)," sums up his singular career. J creates a personalized song for every couple for their wedding, and his lyrics aim to capture what makes each relationship special. His songs highlight a charming, striking, or sometimes peculiar aspect of the love and people J encounters. Songs for Other People's Weddings highlights all different types and forms of love as J sings for couples of all ages, genders, and backgrounds.

While thinking, writing, or singing about love every day, J wants the most to figure out his own love life. J and his girlfriend V have shared witty banter and maintained a steady relationship for two years. But V's sudden move to New York for work adds distance, tension, and uncertainty to their relationship. With every day that passes without V, J tries to understand what love really is and how to navigate the obstacles separating him and V. Songs for Other People's Weddings is a celebration of love, but it doesn't fail to recognize the bittersweet, messy, and heartbreaking moments that come with it. Levithan's story and Lekman's songs join in beautiful harmony to describe, question, and dissect love. --Clara Newton, freelance reviewer

Discover: A beautiful harmony between insightful prose and creative songwriting, author David Levithan and singer-songwriter Jens Lekman create a stunning exploration of love.

Abrams Press, $28, hardcover, 320p., 9781419778124

Zomromcom

by Olivia Dade

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The Containment Zone is anything but a normal neighborhood. The compound, center of Zones A, B, and C, is where zombies are contained. Nearly 20 years ago Edie Brandstrup hid in the attic of her home while her parents died fighting off zombies in the First Breach. Now, no alarm sounds, but judging by the one running toward her, the zombies have escaped once again.

While attempting to warn her neighbor Chad, Edie fights a zombie using only a burrito to defend herself, resulting in Chad coming to her rescue instead. Confused by her ever-mysterious neighbor's strikingly calm reaction, Edie begrudgingly takes shelter in Chad's underground bunker. But things get even weirder. Edie discovers that Chad--whose real name is Gaston Maxime "Max" Boucher--is actually a super old (and super sexy) vampire. Failed attempts to reach the Containment Zone hotline to warn the other residents leave Edie with no choice but to alert others herself. Max, not wanting her to go alone, insists on joining her.

Olivia Dade's wickedly funny writing creates a remarkable and enticingly entertaining cast of characters in Zomromcom. Edie's uber-friendly personality and body-positivity draw in Max and others they meet on their journey. Dade offsets high stakes with hilarious moments, nods to pop culture, and extra scintillating intimate moments. As Edie and Max begin to uncover what caused the second breach and how they might be able to stop it, they wonder if they can make it out alive, and with each other. --Clara Newton, freelance reviewer

Discover: Zomromcom is a laugh-out-loud paranormal romance with action packed high stakes, relatable characters, and an extremely sexy vampire love interest.

Berkley, $19, paperback, 416p., 9780593818206

Biography & Memoir

The Quiet Ear: An Investigation of Missing Sound

by Raymond Antrobus

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Raymond Antrobus's first nonfiction book, The Quiet Ear, takes up the themes of his poetry--being deaf and mixed-race, losing his father, becoming a parent--and threads them into an outstanding memoir that integrates his disability and celebrates his role models.

Even with hearing aids, Antrobus (All the Names Given; Signs, Music) explains, he catches just 60% of conversations; the rest he must fill in. He was diagnosed with high-frequency deafness at age seven. "My superpower has become lip-reading and perfecting my listening face." What has he been missing? What has he gained in return? These questions drive the touching exploration of his coming to terms with Deaf identity.

The several strands of inquiry include his family history (a Jamaican father experiencing alcoholism; a matrilineal lineage of English painters and ministers), the development of deaf education (Thomas Braidwood opened the U.K.'s first deaf school in Hackney, London--where Antrobus grew up--in 1783), and teachers and Deaf public figures who have inspired him, such as singer Johnnie Ray. He recounts his hobbies of competitive swimming and performance poetry, and early dead-end jobs. As a teenager and young adult, he felt so ashamed that he would leave his hearing aids out and eschew sign language. Now, he recognizes his good fortune to have "lived between the deaf and hearing worlds" and earned not just "an art, a history, a culture" but "much hard-won strength and insight."

This frank, fluid memoir of finding one's way as a poet illuminates the literal and metaphorical meanings of sound. --Rebecca Foster, freelance reviewer, proofreader and blogger at Bookish Beck

Discover: Raymond Antrobus's first work of nonfiction, a poet's coming-of-age memoir, is an invaluable window onto the intersectional challenges of deaf and mixed-race identity.

Hogarth Press, $29, hardcover, 208p., 9780593732106

Holding: A Memoir About Mothers, Drugs, and Other Comforts

by Karleigh Frisbie Brogan

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Debut author Karleigh Frisbie Brogan has written a remarkably assured memoir with Holding, an account of her addiction and recovery that reads like a beautiful mosaic of broken glass: sharp, painful, and filled with glints of light.

Uncomfortable in her own skin from an early age and craving warmth from her emotionally distant mother, Brogan found the comfort she craved with heroin after begging her boyfriend, Dale, already a user, to inject her. Full-blown addiction followed soon after. At 20, Brogan and Dale moved into his parents' Northern California home. They intended to stay for a couple of months but lived there for two years. Along the way, Brogan developed a complicated relationship with Dale's mother, Glorianne, whom she came to love but also stole from and lied to constantly. Brogan's addiction worsened, as did the situations she found herself in trying to finance it. Brogan hit several rock bottoms before finally beginning her circuitous but ultimately successful path to recovery.

The quality of Brogan's prose and her deep understanding of her addiction and her own human condition make Holding a standout among similarly themed memoirs. She is frank and insightful about how much she loved her drug of choice and how it enabled her to disconnect from her need for anything else. Her descriptions of shooting up, working as a sex worker, and betraying her loved ones are as lyrical and exquisitely wrought as they are hard to read. That she survived and went on to thrive is a testament to her resilience, and that she was able to create this art from her experience is readers' good fortune. --Debra Ginsberg, author and freelance editor

Discover: Karleigh Frisbie Brogan's beautifully written memoir of addiction and recovery reads like a mosaic of broken glass: sharp, painful, and filled with glints of light.

Steerforth Press, $19.95, paperback, 304p., 9781586424121

No Ordinary Bird: Drug Smuggling, a Plane Crash, and a Daughter's Quest for the Truth

by Artis Henderson

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In June of 1985, a small private plane, a Piper Cub, crashed on its owner's property in northern Georgia. The pilot, Lamar Chester, was killed. His only passenger, his five-year-old daughter, AJ, sustained severe injuries but lived. In death, Lamar escaped prosecution as a marijuana smuggler. His widow, hoping to protect her child, removed the young AJ from the life she'd known, isolating them from family and friends who had been involved in the smuggling business. AJ grew up to be Artis Henderson (Unremarried Widow), and her eventual readiness to examine the truth of her father's life, their brief but loving relationship, and his end has resulted in No Ordinary Bird: Drug Smuggling, a Plane Crash, and a Daughter's Quest for the Truth, which combines investigation and personal excavation in a searing, moving memoir.

From their few years together, Henderson remembers her father as loving and beloved, and deeply charismatic, although his attitudes toward women in particular appear problematic through a modern lens. She's thoughtful about such judgments, and careful in considering her father's upbringing as a factor in his life. And a wild life it was, with a colorful career as a pilot, smuggler, and ostentatious party boy in 1970s Miami. Lamar became involved in ever-more-risky ventures, until he faced federal prosecution and the plane crash that killed him.

Henderson's work is investigatory and personal. No Ordinary Bird is both research-based inquiry--involving travel to Miami, Georgia, Colombia, Nicaragua, Iran, and beyond--and also a memoir of family, love, and risk. Henderson excels at the subtlety required by such a story, and her telling is intriguing, painful, and cathartic. --Julia Kastner, blogger at pagesofjulia

Discover: A daughter's study of her father's life and death artfully reveals intrigue, astonishing slices of world history, and a loving but flawed man.

Harper, $29.99, hardcover, 240p., 9780358650270

If You Don't Like This, I Will Die: An Influencer Memoir

by Lee Tilghman

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Prominent influencer Lee Tilghman, better known as @LeeFromAmerica, was one of the first successful influencers when the term itself was still new. Tilghman once earned nearly $300,000 a year through her Instagram feed of pictures of beautiful salads and smoothie bowls. She stepped away after increasingly critical comments on her posts severely impacted her mental health. Followers accused her of overcharging for workshops, illegally picking California poppies and posting about it, and more. In her tell-all memoir, If You Don't Like This, I Will Die, Lee documents not only the beginning and eventual downfall of her influencer career but also shares personal stories of disordered eating and substance abuse that occurred behind the camera.

Although it is unlikely to win over readers who were already critical of Tilghman and her online persona, If You Don't Like This, I Will Die is nonetheless a fascinating memoir about a distinct era in social-media culture. Readers who witnessed the inception of influencer and Internet wellness cultures in the mid to late 2010s will enjoy the peek Tilghman offers in an honest and straightforward way. Readers will see the behind the scenes of what brand deals looked like, and how much PR and gifts an influencer can receive.

Tilghman's Instagram posts and selected follower comments are scattered throughout, adding context for readers unfamiliar with the platform or with Tilghman's account, showing both the seeds of the now-ubiquitous influencer lifestyle and her unfiltered reaction to criticisms. While influencing and wellness cultures have evolved since Tilghman's heyday, If You Don't Like This shows their origins in an engaging, if sometimes enraging, manner. --Alyssa Parssinen, freelance reviewer and former bookseller

Discover: Influencer Lee Tilghman documents the rise and fall of her career and pulls back the curtain on her lifestyle in If You Don't Like This, I Will Die, an engrossing memoir.

Simon & Schuster, $29, hardcover, 240p., 9781668051504

Social Science

Anatomy of a Con Artist: The 14 Red Flags to Spot Scammers, Grifters, and Thieves

by Johnathan Walton

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In Anatomy of a Con Artist: The 14 Red Flags to Spot Scammers, Grifters, and Thieves, Johnathan Walton recounts his friendship with the charismatic Mair Smyth, who he thought was an Irish heiress until she stole his life savings and shattered his peace of mind. This harrowing experience and his long quest for justice inspired in Walton a new calling to help victims of fraud. Here, he offers critical relationship red flags to watch out for, guidance on what to do if one has been scammed, and tips on "pitching" a criminal case to the police.

Reality TV producer Walton hosts the popular true-crime podcast Queen of the Con. Each of the real-life stories he features in this book contains multiple red flags; if the victims knew to look for these warning signals, they might have prevented the fraud. When in doubt, Walton advises, a basic Internet search with a consumer background-check service is a good starting point.

Walton delves into the fascinating psychology of con artists, explaining how they use emotions to gain entry into their targets' lives. They don't "outsmart" their marks; instead, they "out-feel" them by making them care deeply about the con artist or their cause. Professional scammers can even be someone a victim has known their entire life, as in a case Walton recounts of a 50-something IT professional who was defrauded out of $365,000 by a high school friend.

Walton is an engaging storyteller, and his tools for spotting potential con artists are priceless resources because, ultimately, these dishonest individuals "don't just take your money, they take a piece of your soul." --Shahina Piyarali

Discover: A reality TV producer whose life savings were stolen by a con artist outlines critical relationship red flags and shares valuable guidance on how to avoid becoming the victim of a scam.

Rodale, $28, hardcover, 256p., 9780593797167

Science

The Secret World of Denisovans: The Epic Story of the Ancient Cousins to Sapiens and Neanderthals

by Silvana Condemi and François Savatier

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Since the discovery of a piece of a finger bone in a Siberian cave in 2010, the story of how humans populated the earth has undergone a significant change, ultimately revealing an entirely unknown group of hominins--the Denisovans--related but distinct from both Neanderthals and Sapiens.

In The Secret World of Denisovans, paleoanthropologist Silvana Condemi and Pour la Science (the French edition of Scientific American) journalist François Savatier present a compelling investigation into details of the Denisovans' emergence and their contributions to the scientific understanding of human history. The authors meticulously piece together genetic analysis, archeological evidence, and comparative studies with Neanderthals and early modern humans, illustrating the physical ways (such as their teeth) in which they differed from other early humans, and their interesting genetic legacy in modern human populations, most particularly in Asia and Oceania.

Condemi and Savatier explore with insight and depth the implications of Denisovans interbreeding with Neanderthals and Sapiens, challenging previous understandings of human migration and interaction. The Secret World also delves into the daily lives of the Denisovans, drawing inferences from the sparse archeological record to paint a picture of the ways they used tools, their hunting strategies, and their other adaptations to the environment.

Beyond the scientific revelations and debates, The Secret World of the Denisovans conveys the sense of excitement and intellectual detective work that underpins paleoanthropology. It's an excellent read for anyone with an interest in human evolution, genetics, or simply a good scientific mystery. --Elizabeth DeNoma, executive editor, DeNoma Literary Services, Seattle, Wash.

Discover: A paleoanthropologist and journalist present a fascinating account of previously unknown human cousins--the Denisovans--who share a common ancestor with Neanderthals.

The Experiment, $30, hardcover, 272p., 9798893030709

Poetry

Shedding Season

by Jane Morton

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The title of Jane Morton's Shedding Season insists upon change, evoking the idea in both the cyclical nature of a season and in the shedding of one's skin, like a snake. The poems in Morton's beguiling collection similarly insist on the idea of evolution, of one thing unwittingly becoming another. In "Tiktaalik," she uses the 375-million-year-old fossil of a creature somewhere between a fish and a four-legged animal to make the concept concrete, saying, "we know/ only what we have// become: the eaters of flesh./ We are famished./ We swallow whole all things// we don't know, a slow digestion/ of the self." Hunger, too, and desire--these all sound like an alarm throughout Morton's work, a confident debut from a poet unafraid to use language like a sharpened blade.

In the first "Snake Lore" (there are three poems with this title, one in each section), the poem's speaker likens her body to a snake: "Now watch: I'll open up/ past the edges, unhinge// from my body like a snake's jaws." But the desire captured here does not feel rooted in pleasure; instead, fear and pain live inside it, just as they live inside so many of the poems. Morton draws heavily upon nature, but she is no pastoral poet, urging readers toward some peaceable kingdom. Instead, the natural world is held close, a suffocating, menacing thing--the cut of a thistle, the peck of a rooster, the venomous bite of a cottonmouth. Like desire itself, the poems stretch out in wanting, Morton tapping into something hard and true like a stone. --Sara Beth West, freelance reviewer and librarian

Discover: A confident debut from a poet unafraid to use language like a sharpened blade, Shedding Season explores change, hunger, and the natural world.

Black Lawrence Press, $19.95, paperback, 88p., 9781625571762

Children's & Young Adult

Schooled

by Jamie Sumner

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Sixth graders get a taste of college life in Schooled, an insightful and absorbing coming-of-age middle-grade novel by Jamie Sumner (Roll with It).

Six months ago, 11-year-old Lenny's mom died of skin cancer. Since then, Lenny and his dad, Professor Benjamin Syms, have struggled to navigate their relationship. Now, they are moving from New Jersey to Lewis Hall on the campus of Arrington University in Tennessee, where his dad teaches. At the college Lenny attends the experimental "Copernican School," composed entirely of four other sixth graders who are the children of Arrington faculty. The classes and "hippie-dippie meetings"--which include subjects like philosophy and group visualization--are led by the kids' parents. As can be expected from a school with no chairs, tables, or desks, the teachers "aren't here to hand you the answers"--Lenny and his classmates are expected to take charge and lead their own studies. Lenny does form tentative friendships and learn about topics that interest him, but he also struggles with his grief and finding his place in a lonely world.

Schooled is a fascinating exploration of education, sorrow, and the tensions of adolescence. Lenny loves the freedom his mostly unsupervised education allows, but despite the school's lofty goals, Lenny and the other kids all still struggle. Sumner brilliantly imagines a caring alternate educational path yet highlights the universal nature of insecurity and stress; Schooled is a heartfelt reminder that growing up can be painful but, luckily, it doesn't have to be done alone. --Kyla Paterno, freelance reviewer

Discover: Eleven-year-old Lenny begins sixth grade as part of an experimental school on a college campus in this insightful coming-of-age middle-grade novel.

Atheneum Books for Young Readers, $17.99, hardcover, 224p., ages 10-14, 9781534486058

Dream On

by Shannon Hale, illus. by Marcela Cespedes

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Shannon Hale, whose Real Friends graphic memoir series (illustrated by LeUyen Pham) has sold more than two million copies, collaborates with illustrator Marcela Cespedes for the first time to introduce Cassie Carpenter, an imaginative and upbeat girl, in the satisfying and spirited middle-grade graphic novel, Dream On.

It is 1984, and Cassandra "Cassie" Lucinda Carpenter usually sees the bright side of everything. But as one of six auburn-haired kids, getting Mom and Dad's attention feels impossible. Worse, her best friend Vali, the sole person who "really gets" Cassie, has befriended Stesha, a girl in their grade who calls Cassie and Vali's pretend fairyland fun "a baby game." When a magazine sweepstakes form arrives in the mail with promises of grand prizes (a waterbed, a VHS player, a 15" color TV), Cassie fills it out, imagining everyone will go crazy over her winnings. Instead of fabulous prizes, though, Cassie gets teased by Stesha, ignored by Vali, called "sensitive" by her family, and a subscription bill for $19.95.

Hale's remarkably relatable, comforting graphic novel fantastically captures that confusing time in childhood when kids transition to older play. Cespedes, with colors by Lark Pien, illustrates Cassie's beautiful imagination through curvy-lined panels that overlap and break into the "real life" grid of neatly lined panels; Cassie's emotional lows are made exceptionally clear by Pien's use of angry reds, sad blues, and lonely grays. Cassie knows she has big emotions but also loves "that wonder feeling" born of her sensitivity. Dream On is a luminous reminder that feeling things strongly also means truly enjoying the good parts. --Samantha Zaboski, freelance editor and reviewer

Discover: A daydreaming girl must figure out what to do when her best friend starts ignoring her in this delightful and reassuring middle-grade graphic novel.

Roaring Brook Press, $22.99, hardcover, 240p., ages 8-12, 9781250843067

The Unlikely Aventuras of Ramón and El Cucuy

by Donna Barba Higuera, illus. by Juliana Perdomo

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For Latinos and Hispanic people across the world, El Cucuy is a shadowy monster who will eat young children whole if they don't listen to their parents. In The Unlikely Aventuras of Ramón and El Cucuy, the titular creature is one of many, this one rendered as a monster-in-training: a cute, tiny, and fanged furball on his first mission to scare a boy who won't go to bed. Ramón, new to Seattle, however, is more scared of his first day of school than any monsters hiding under his bed. Newberry Award-winner Donna Barba Higuera (The Last Cuentista) balances literal potty humor and deep emotional resonance in this charming chapter book dotted with Spanish phrases and brimming with cultural appreciation.

El Cucuy, unable to scare the boy at bedtime, joins Ramón at school to learn what the child finds scary. Higuera's convincing world, where cucos and cucas revel in the stinky, rotten, and horrible, uses the monster's perspective to hilarious effect. "On the teacher's desk at the front of the room sat a vase filled with bright yellow... flowers! What a dump!" It's these silly moments that bring levity to the parallel narratives of new kid Ramón and the inexperienced Cucuy, both of whom are searching for a place to belong in worlds they don't quite understand. Together Ramón and El Cucuy find the courage to face the unknown and try something new.

Juliana Perdomo illustrates Higuera's whimsical scenes with a black, white, and purple palette and a scratchy line, depicting both fearsome monsters and giggle-worthy activities. Both text and illustration find a comfortable harmony between silly and sweet in this charming book that feels tailor-made for--what else?--bedtime. --Luis G. Rendon

Discover: Laughs and unexpected bonds are in excess in this spirited tale of a newly minted monster who is sent out on his first mission to scare a young boy.

Amulet Books, $14.99, hardcover, 160p., ages 7-12, 9781419777424

Victor and the Giant

by Rafael Yockteng, transl. by Elisa Amado

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A fantastical tale of empathy, Victor and the Giant by Rafael Yockteng (Lion and Mouse, with Jairo Buitrago) imagines what happens when a city-sized giant takes an ill-placed nap. Victor's day begins quietly with "milky hot chocolate" and his mother sprinting out the door to work. Once he is alone, a sudden quake sends Victor to the window; there he discovers a giant sprawled across his ruined city, "having a peaceful nap." The colossal giant, green and hairy, dominates the landscape, his groin modestly veiled by clouds. Victor remains calm. He downs his cocoa, marches into the wreckage, and tugs on a nose hair to wake the slumbering giant.

Rather than cowering, Victor questions the giant: "Why did you eat the whole city?" He patiently explains that a city is for living in, not for snacking on. Yockteng uses humor rooted in exaggeration and absurdity to deliver visual gags (a city recovered via giant vomit) and emotional weight (Victor's tears when he misses his mother). The illustrations play inventively with scale: one dramatic spread shows Victor dwarfed in a ruined landscape, a swirl of tornadoes and the curve of the giant's body engulfing the scene.

Victor is an unforgettable protagonist, small but unshaken, practical, and compassionate. Yockteng's text, smoothly translated from the Spanish by Elisa Amado, strikes a balance between the surreal and the sincere. There's humor in the gross-out moments, but readers will also recognize the quiet bravery it takes to speak truth to power, even when that power has nose hairs the size of tree trunks. --Julie Danielson

Discover: In Victor and the Giant, a boy confronts a sleeping giant in a playful story about courage, empathy, and the power of one small voice.

Greystone Kids, $19.95, hardcover, 56p., ages 4-8, 9781778400841

The Blue Velvet Chair

by Rio Cortez, illus. by Aaron Marin

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The Blue Velvet Chair combines eloquent language with cozy illustrations to deftly convey a child's view of the world outside their window, perceived from the comfort of a favorite chair.

When a Black child wakes in the morning, the first thing they do is "streeeeetch [their] arms up beside [their] ears and climb the blue velvet chair" located by a window in the living room. Today, it's winter in the city, and the child sees white snow, brown branches, and their own "tiny cloud" of breath on glass. Sometimes it's spring and "the roof across the street is wet with rain." Sometimes a "black cat licks its paws"; other times, people are dancing. When the glass is warm, "that's summer." In autumn, the trees in the garden "turn orange and yellow and make crunchy piles," but the "roof across the street is quiet." As day winds down, the child stretches their arms up beside their ears and imagines "all the little ways the world might change tomorrow."

Poet and picture book author Rio Cortez (Golden Ax; The ABCs of Women's History) writes a flowing text that is a pleasing tumble of child-friendly musings. Sensory descriptions emphasizing the variable nature of the outside world tenderly express the message that time is always changing, and so are we. In Aaron Marin's sophomore work of picture book illustration (Amoya Blackwood Is Brave) he uses fully saturated colors with few outlines to highlight the warmth of the home and the closeness of its family. The Blue Velvet Chair offers an excellent excuse to snuggle up with a loved one for storytime or some world-watching. --Lynn Becker, reviewer, blogger, and children's book author

Discover: The Blue Velvet Chair offers a poetic rumination on the world outside a child's window, from the familiar comfort of a favorite chair.

Denene Millner Books/S&S, $19.99, hardcover, 40p., ages 4-8, 9781665912594

In the Media

The Writer's Life

Rabih Alameddine: In an Insane World

Rabih Alameddine
(image: Oliver Wasow)

Rabih Alameddine is the author of Comforting Myths: Concerning the Political in Art; novels including The Angel of History, The Wrong End of the Telescope, and An Unnecessary Woman; and the story collection The Perv. He divides his time between his bedroom and his living room. His latest novel, The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother) (Grove Press; reviewed in this issue), considers the life of a high school philosophy teacher in Beirut and his fractious relationship with his overbearing mother.

You are a painter as well as a writer--what is the relationship between the two?

I'm not very good at painting, which is fine, because part of the reason I enjoy it is I don't ask of myself a lot. It's as if I no longer enjoy writing; I put so much pressure on myself.

I started taking piano lessons at around 58, and I can't say I am the worst piano player ever, but it's close. I love that there's no requirement. Removing the pressure, painting allows me to play.

It takes two to three years for something to grab a hold of me for a writing project. It might be interesting for a month or for an hour, but to sustain interest for the three to four years that it takes to write, is a big thing. Whereas with painting--ooh! That's a lovely tree! It's expressing a feeling at that time. It's not necessarily instantaneous, but it's not a long-term obsession. Writing is all about obsession, what will not leave my head.

It's the pressure of making something good that troubles me. I watched a documentary on Meredith Monk the other day, and I was fascinated. She does a lot that is just experimental. It might work, it might not, people might see it, they might not. And I started thinking, when was the last time I did something like that? I don't know.

Painting and bad piano playing allow me to relax. To allow play back into my work. I make it sound like my work is serious, which it isn't, but my intention is serious. And I think that's the problem. One of the worst things an artist can do is take themselves seriously. You have to take it a little seriously, but there has to be some part of me that always goes, ha ha! You think that's good! Otherwise it becomes too earnest. There has to be a part of me that wants to change the world and a part of me that says, fuck it.

Does your wonderful humor come naturally?

Humor is my defense mechanism. How can one live in this world and be conscious of all the traumas that we cause and still be sane if one didn't have a sense of humor? How do we deal with the Trump years? One of my ideas was to write this book where this woman gets distracted by two men, one who's all sex and the other who's all patriotism. I'm trying to see, would that work as distraction? Would having a lot of sex counter the guilt of being part of a genocide? Or cutting Medicaid on millions of people? How do we deal with these things? What is the distraction? For me, it's humor. In an insane world, being insane is quite normal.

Raja the Gullible starts and ends in 2023 but jumps timelines in the middle.

I did not want to deal with Gaza, so it had to stop in 2023. There's no way anybody living in Lebanon or, for me, in the United States, could not deal with it if it goes past 2023. Hakawati ended in 2003, right before the Iraq invasion. You can't not deal with it, and dealing with it would take over the book.

I wanted this parabolic look at life, and the center of it is the kidnapping, if you want to call it that. I was interested in how we looked at trauma, and how trauma has become identity. We have prescribed ways of dealing with trauma; I sometimes think that it might be better if we go back to not dealing with trauma. We forget that two people might have the same experience and have completely different outlooks. We tend to think this person is this way because such and such happened to them. This is not just wrong, it's insane! Not even Freud ever suggested that this would explain everything. It has become a cliché: my father did not pay any attention to me and that's why I fall for men who are such and such. That's bullshit! I went to see this movie, one of the Marvel superhero movies, and it had a talking racoon. And the movie actually went back to how the raccoon was tortured as a baby raccoon, and I thought, wait, am I supposed to become attached to a raccoon?! This book is sort of the anti-raccoon. Yes, yes, Raja could go back and deal with [his trauma], but dealing with this is not his primary concern. He's functioning. That's what I was going for... and then I started writing, and the mother took over.

I did want to write about love. Whether you want to call what was between the two boys Stockholm syndrome--I hate these terms, because it assumes the syndrome is the same for everybody. It isn't. I wanted to show different kinds of love. It turns out that the weirdest was Raja and his mother. They're completely devoted to each other, and they want to kill each other. There's one line: Raja says, "I want to kill my mother. I don't want to hurt her!" If you live through a civil war and you're kidnapped, how much would you want the world to be orderly and controlled? He's a control queen. His mother is, what is the opposite of a control queen? A chaos queen. That was the primary tension.

What do you hope your writing offers to the world?

I am both still shocked that anybody reads me--What?! You don't have anything better to do with your time?--and shocked that I am not read by absolutely every single person on earth. It is in this tension between 'you must listen to me' and 'why would you listen to me' that I think art resides. This tension of narcissist megalomania and, I don't want to call it self-loathing, but feelings of utter incompetence. I hope that tension makes something good.

A book doesn't exist without a reader, but we're all different. If you write in every detail, down to the knot in your shoelaces, that leaves little to the reader's imagination. I tend to write just enough description to be believable, but readers fill in the rest. Because we're all so different, each reader brings something different. I used to think if we could just empathize--but a book can never do that, in my mind. If this romantic notion were true, that a book can change a life... there are so many amazing books, and we still commit genocide. It is my perspective that what you get out of it is yours--it's not from the book. Maybe what books do is light a fire under you. What you already had. --Julia Kastner, blogger at pagesofjulia

Book Candy

Book Candy

Merriam-Webster shared a longest long words list, noting: "Don't read this if you have hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia (fear of long words)."

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CrimeReads investigated why "the future of technology makes it harder to solve fictional crimes."

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Pop quiz: "Can you match the literary fart joke to its source?" Mental Floss challenged.

Breathe In, Bleed Out

by Brian McAuley

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Breathe In, Bleed Out follows a protagonist who is tough but deteriorating, as she travels into the southern California desert with a group of old friends for what should be a relaxing retreat. It turns out to be anything but. Brian McAuley (Curse of the Reaper; Candy Cain Kills) brings horror, snarky humor, and an array of increasingly inventive deaths to this reunion-turned-nightmare road trip.

"Dragging a body through six inches of snow is even harder than I expected," begins Hannah's narrative. This is only the first in a series of nightmares, flashbacks, and hallucinations in which she will revisit her fiancé's demise on a winter hiking trip gone wrong. Ben was the outdoorsy one, who had introduced Hannah to experiences like their last one together, with crampons and ice axes and an enigmatic end. It will take most of the book for Hannah to reveal what exactly went wrong, leaving the reader wondering what secrets she's keeping.

As a first-person narrator, Hannah raises questions for her audience. When is she hallucinating? What really happened to Ben? How many Xanax has she had today? (She's not sure, either.)

The morning after her opening-sequence nightmare revisiting Ben's death, Hannah heads off to a shift as a medical intern at a Los Angeles hospital. Treating her grief, anxiety, and insomnia with prescribed medication, she makes an error that nearly kills a patient and gets her suspended indefinitely. It's also her birthday, and her longtime best friend Tess has been trying to reach her, although Hannah's been avoiding her friends. Now, newly freed from employment, Hannah finds her defenses weakened, and agrees to spend a weekend near Joshua Tree at a swank "healing retreat." It's so exclusive that there's no web presence at all, just a shadowy leader who calls himself Guru Pax. "There are few things more gross than the G-word in LA wellness culture, where self-appointed experts prey upon the insecure and the vulnerable," Hannah confides to the reader; nonetheless, off she goes.

Tess, "the emo girl turned Wicca woman," is recently off yet another breakup, furthering her "serial-relationship status." The best friends are joined by Luna, formerly Lauren, a "certified trauma-informed yoga instructor." Hannah sees her as a chameleon, who passes off "disordered eating as a 'health-conscious lifestyle.' " Luna's boyfriend Jared is worse still, a boozing frat boy turned boozing digital ad salesman. And then there's Miles, a hot and successful DJ with whom Hannah has longstanding, unresolved sexual tension. The fivesome heads into the desert toward the mysterious Avidya Healing Retreat.

Along the way, they stop at a little desert town for a drink, and an altercation with a local. The bad vibes stack up, complete with the purported ghost of a 19th-century bank robber-turned-gold miner (hat, pickax, and all) and an Indian burial ground. Then they are truly off-grid: upon entering Avidya, the friends must give up their phones to a young Native American woman holding a burlap sack. Tess has billed this weekend as being all about "the hot springs and sauna, the yoga and sound baths, the nature hikes and stargazing," but amid Jared's whining, Luna's posturing, and Miles's flirting, Hannah is having trouble relaxing. Her dreams and her demons have followed her into the desert, and she struggles to tell them apart from reality. And then people start dying.

Breathe In, Bleed Out opens with Ben's dead body, but his cause of death remains unexplained for much of the novel, even as the body count rises. Ben's demise, and the obvious question about Hannah's involvement, plays neatly against the puzzle of the killer at the new-age retreat. In this way, gore bookends the story, with dry wit and playful humor along the way.

McAuley takes the time to give each of Hannah's friends a backstory, developing them beyond type. While the bulk of the novel is told in Hannah's first-person perspective, other characters enjoy brief sections in the spotlight, in close third person. As the Avidya retreat turns bloody and then bloodier, readers' sympathies will be expertly turned one way and then another through a series of ever-more-elaborate kills worthy of any slasher flick--the sauna, the hot spring, and the crystal in the center of the pool each offer unique and cinematic opportunities for fans of a gruesome and imaginative death scene. The killer's identity remains unknown through masterful twists and turns, with one character after another appearing to be the villain. The key elements of the horror genre are all accounted for, but secrets persist: McAuley keeps his readers guessing until a final dramatic reveal.

For fans of slasher flicks with a touch of satirical wit and a sense of fun amid the bloodbath, Breathe In, Bleed Out offers an entertaining escape that will have readers rethinking the yoga prop. --Julia Kastner

Poisoned Pen Press, $17.99, paperback, 304p., 9781464238208

Throw a Murder into the Mix

An Interview With Brian McAuley

Brian McAuley

As a WGA screenwriter, Brian McAuley has written everything from family sitcoms (Fuller House) to psychological thriller films (Dismissed). He is teaches screenwriting at Arizona State University's Sidney Poitier New American Film School. His debut novel, Curse of the Reaper, was named one of the Best Horror Books of 2022 by Esquire and is in development for a film adaptation. His holiday slasher novella Candy Cain Kills earned praise from several publications, leading to the sequel, Candy Cain Kills Again: The Second Slaying. McAuley's Breathe In, Bleed Out, a cinematic horror novel set in the remote southern California desert, is out now from Poisoned Pen Press.

How did this book begin for you--with character, setting, or a scene?

The setting was the key for me. What's a location that would lend itself to a spooky story, where people feel trapped? And the props and the milieu of the location should lend themselves to very specific death set pieces. Once I know it's a wellness healing retreat, I know that my protagonist is someone who needs healing, and I reverse engineer, finding the personal, deeper emotional well that's always hiding. I think I'm writing a fun slasher, and then I get deep into the book, and I'm like, oh, I'm working on some heavy emotional stuff. I want it to be an immersive experience. What's a setting where you feel like you can go with the characters, journey there and then end up trapped with them?

How does the book format differ from the classic slasher film?

I plot my stories the same way that I do with my feature film screenwriting work, in terms of character arcs. I have a corkboard here where I'm plotting my next book, and I put my index cards up and arrange them in a three-act structure the same way whether it's a script or a book. But for me the joy of the novel is the depth of character that I get to go into, because screenwriting is all "show, don't tell." You can't get into the characters' heads, because the script is only what the camera can film--it's like a blueprint for the camera. In a novel, you go directly into a character's experience. Writing from Hannah's first-person perspective allowed me to get into her emotions and her thought processes, both as she's processing trauma and trying to heal, and also as she's trying to figure out what's happening and put clues together. The novel allows a much greater depth of interiority. Similarly, the characters that don't survive the story in slasher movies tend to be pretty one-dimensional, because there isn't much opportunity to flesh them out. In a book, I try to embrace the opportunity to give them three-dimensional lives before I end their three-dimensional lives.

Why give those other characters their own brief POVs?

In movies, you'll often cut away to peripheral characters and see them get killed off while our protagonist has no idea what's happening. We'll cut back to our protagonist and they'll be none the wiser. It creates that dramatic irony where we know something that the protagonist doesn't, so our anxiety is especially piqued. It's a tricky balance, right? You don't want an audience too far ahead of the protagonist--you want them to be figuring things out with the character. But it pulls you in deeper if you have a piece of the puzzle that they don't, and you're trying to figure it out together.

What makes Hannah a captivating protagonist?

I love flawed and messy characters. That's just my reality as a human on this planet. And it's a way I try to play with common slasher tropes, like the final girl in the old-school films--Laurie Strode in Halloween is this very pure, virginal character while her friends are off having sex and doing drugs, and therefore they get killed. And that's a very boring and problematic trope to keep doing. I'm more interested in characters who have made mistakes and are riddled with guilt, or who have trauma they are trying to work through. Hannah really needs support, and yet she's been pushing people away, and that's a very relatable dynamic. I wanted a character who was deeply in need of healing, and trying, and failing, at the start of the book, through different avenues like working too much and leaning on medication too heavily. It turned into an interesting journey, especially writing in first person. She came alive very quickly on the page. I was really grateful to have her as my north star through the story.

What is the role of humor in horror?

For me it's essential. One of the first horror movies that I saw growing up was Evil Dead, and it's so over the top, gory, and slapstick humor is mixed in, and it's just fun. How fun horror can be is really a guiding principle. A modern idol for me is Jordan Peele. Every film he makes balances humor with horror so very well. In horror you have to build up tension and release it, over and over again, and humor can do that so well. Or use comedy to disarm them and then throw a scare in unexpectedly. That, for me, is part of the joy of playing in this genre: to mix those two up.

Why the wellness retreat?

I lived in L.A. for 10 years and I saw a lot of this culture firsthand. I try to write books about things that I have mixed feelings about. Yoga is amazing, meditation, so many aspects of the healing wellness culture are genuinely beneficial. And also there are people who use that as an opportunity to exploit people who are in a desperate place or who need healing. That's where it can get sticky, as with anything: when somebody with bad intentions gets mixed in. It felt like a prime opportunity to throw murder into the mix of that world.

What do you enjoy about teaching?

To be able to talk about story and character as my day job is a dream. I mostly teach writing workshops, and working with college age students who are not just finding their creative voice but finding their identity in the world is such a privilege. And a writing workshop is such a great place to explore that. You're trying to find stories that feel personal and are in tune with the genres that you like. I don't take lightly the responsibility to try and tap into a connection with each student and see: What are you trying to tell in a story? What matters to you? Can we focus that so that you can take it with you into the world, whether you pursue writing or not? I think writing is such a perfect outlet to get to know yourself better. --Julia Kastner

Poisoned Pen Press: Breathe In, Bleed Out by Brian McAuley

Shelf vetted, publisher supported.

Rediscover

Rediscover: Vivian Ayers Allen

Vivian Ayers Allen, a poet, playwright and cultural activist "who vigorously promoted minority artists and had three children who had consequential careers in the arts," died August 18 at age 102, the New York Times reported. Her death was confirmed by her daughter, the actress Phylicia Rashad.

In 2002, the Times described Ayers Allen as "a Renaissance woman" for her wide-ranging expertise--from Greek classical drama to African American folk art. She also "had a direct influence" on the artistic lives of three of her children: Rashad, a Tony Award-winning Broadway actress; Debbie Allen, a Broadway actress, director and choreographer; and Andrew "Tex" Allen, a jazz trumpeter, pianist, and composer.

"As children, we were privy to great intellectual and artistic debates," Rashad told the Los Angeles Times in 2012. "My mother included us in everything that she did, and I mean everything. I remember as a child collating pages for her second book. It was wonderful."

Ayers Allen "forged a career in the arts at a time when Black women such as herself were largely invisible to mainstream cultural institutions," the New York Times wrote. Her debut poetry collection, Spice of Dawns, was published in 1953, and four years later saw the release of her verse novel Hawk, which explored racial freedom from the perspective of a hawk that ventures into outer space (available from Clemson University Press). In an interview, she called the book a "documentation of the process of transcendence." Her first play, Bow Boly, was "structurally up and out of the Greek drama," she told the Houston Post in 1962. 

Ayers Allen became a fixture in the Houston arts scene, and her work "grew in its urgency and activism as the civil rights movement expanded across the South," the Times wrote, adding that in 1964, with help from the young novelist Larry McMurtry, she launched Adept, a short-lived literary quarterly that published verse by Vassar Miller, the future poet laureate of Texas, and paintings by the Trinidadian-American actor and artist Geoffrey Holder. She later founded the Adept Gallery for New American Folk Art, focusing on mixed-media works by Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic Americans. 

In 1984, she moved to Mount Vernon, N.Y., to serve as director-curator of the Adept New American Museum. "When my heart gets tired of the intellectual work," she told the Mount Vernon Argus, "I can go out and dig in the garden and plant flowers."

Born in 1923 in Chester, S.C., Ayers Allen attended the Brainerd Institute, a boarding school founded in the late 19th century for the children of formerly enslaved people, and was part of its last graduating high school class in 1939.

In 1999, Phylicia Rashad bought the Brainerd Institute property and Ayers Allen converted it into the Brainerd Institute Heritage, which "has since been the site of Workshops in Open Fields, a program based on an initiative that Ms. Ayers Allen had started in Houston to promote the literacy and the arts among low-income minority youth," the Times noted.

From her poem "On Status" (read by Rashad):

So they've got no
tall skyscrapers!
--clowns and nightclubs
cutting capers--

Its home--
the Folk are warm;
And most important--
I belong!

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GUESS WHO?: BOOK COVER REVEAL!

Little People, BIG DREAMS is excited to welcome its newest member on January 13, 2026! In honor of the occasion, we're revealing the cover of this trailblazing entertainer, businessperson, and global icon in a BIG way! Read the clues below, and see if you can guess whose story we're celebrating next!

This little person with big dreams...

  • grew up between Mississippi, Wisconsin, and Tennessee
  • lived in poverty as a child and studied hard enough to earn a scholarship to university
    became a news anchor at nineteen years old for her local TV station and eventually went on to host a show on television named after them where they interviewed other heroes and trailblazers
  • has enjoyed reading and performing since they were a young child and grew up to form their own book club to share their love of reading with the world (bonus hint: they also named the book club after themself!)
  • is one of the most powerful voices and businesspeople in media, working as an actor, producer, interviewer, and television host
  • is a philanthropist and advocate for education and social justice

Do you think you know who Little People, BIG DREAMS is publishing on January 13, 2026? Click here to reveal the cover for this special Little People, BIG DREAMS book!

Frances Lincoln Ltd: Guess Who?: Book Cover Reveal!

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