Spring reading season is just around the corner with so many amazing books that will be published over the next couple of months and I can’t wait to dive into them!
My recommendations for the best books to read spring 2026 include recently or soon to be published historical fiction, romance, literary fiction, and mysteries/thrillers that I have already read or that are on my TBR for this spring.
Happy spring reading!!
Note: I read across a lot of genres and I only choose books that I have already read or plan to read over the coming weeks for my book lists. If I haven’t yet read the book when I publish the book list then I include the blurb provided by the publisher and update the article with my own thoughts after I read it. I also make a conscious effort to try and include diversity in the books I choose to read. Some of the buzziest books of the season are on my lists but I hope I also introduce you to some titles that you might not have heard of otherwise.
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1. Love By the Book by Jessica George

Setting: London, England
Remy’s debut novel based on her three best friends was an instant bestseller but now she’s struggling to come up with an idea for a second novel at the same time as her friends have become less present in her life due to changing circumstances. Then an ill-advised one night stand further complicates her life leaving Remy feeling completely alone.
Simone is a passionate kindergarten teacher with a well-paying side hustle that helps her afford all the nice things in life but she’s so busy that there’s no time for a social life. Her close-knit family is all she needs but, when they cut her off after discovering the true nature of her work, Simone realizes how isolated she actually is.
When Simone and Remy bump into each other at a bookshop, it isn’t soulmates at first sight but they might be what each other is searching for.
Love By the Book is a heartfelt exploration of the importance of female friendship/platonic love. It has some great characters and I enjoyed how the author wrote Remy and Simone’s relationship like a romance with a meet-cute, tropes (grumpy/sunshine) and even a third act break-up. It’s slow-moving though and it took a while for me to get into the rhythm of the book – partly I think because there are long excerpts from Remy’s fictionalization of her friendship with Simone as she tries to work through her writer’s block which made the story a bit disjointed. I liked the author’s debut novel Maame better but overall this was still a good read.
Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for providing a digital ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
2. Mad Mabel by Sally Hepworth

Setting: Melbourne, Australia
Publication Date: April 21, 2026
FROM THE PUBLISHER: Elsie Mabel Fitzpatrick is eighty-one years old. She’s lived on her idyllic street, Kenny Lane, for sixty years–longer than anyone else. Aside from being a curmudgeon who minds everyone else’s business, few would suspect that Elsie has a past that she has worked exceedingly hard at concealing. Because when it comes to murder, no one ever suspects little girls or old ladies. And Elsie Mabel Fitzpatrick, once a little girl and now an old lady, has a strange history of people in her life coming to a foul end.
When a new little girl (talkative, curious, nosy) moves into the neighborhood and stops at nothing to befriend Elsie, her carefully-constructed life threatens to come crashing down as the secrets in Elsie’s past start coming to light. Who was “Mad Mabel” fifty years ago? Who is Elsie Fitzpatrick today? And if the past has a habit of repeating itself, who has the most to lose?
3. Everyone In This Bank Is a Thief by Benjamin Stevenson

Setting: Australia
While visiting a rural Australian bank to apply for a loan to open a detective agency, Ernest Cunningham and his fiancée find themselves in the middle of a bank heist and are taken hostage by a masked bank robber along with a priest, a patient and her caregiver, the receptionist, the bank manager, the security guard, a teenage boy, and a film producer. The doors are chained shut and nobody can get in or out so when someone in the bank is murdered then everyone is a suspect.
This spin on the classic bank heist is the 4th installment in the Ernest Cunningham series and is as much fun as the first three were! If you’re new to the series, the author (and Ernest) adhere to the rules for Golden Age Mysteries which emphasize fair play and require that clues be transparent so the reader has the opportunity to solve the mystery along with the detective. The fun quirk of this series is that Ernest addresses the reader to explain things along the way. Well-written, entertaining and witty, Everyone In This Bank Is a Thief is a thoroughly satisfying locked room (bank) mystery!
Previous books in the series are: Everyone In My Family Has Killed Someone, Everyone On This Train Is a Suspect, and Everyone This Christmas Has a Secret (a holiday novella).
4. The Brink of Something Beautiful by Bobbi French

Setting: Newfoundland
Publication Date: April 21, 2026
FROM THE PUBLISHER: Ruby Nolan is a new widow. Hidden in her grief and guilt for her husband, Joe, is a sense that she is free from a marriage she never wanted. But how can she possibly begin again? An encounter with Maxine, a pregnant teen who reminds Ruby of her own sorry past, and a shocking revelation from her mother, Vera, send Ruby on a collision course with old truths and regrets and on a mission to help Maxine whether she wants it or not. While a friend warns Ruby that you can’t help anyone until you help yourself, it’s a lesson Ruby has to learn the hard way if she’s going to find any real peace.
Set over the course of one winter in 1990s St. John’s and infused with the rich culture and characters of the Rock, The Brink of Something Beautiful is the life-affirming, ultimately hopeful story about how women lift each other up and figure themselves out.
5. A Far-Flung Life by M.L. Stedman

Setting: Australian Outback
Patriarch Phil MacBride, his wife, Lorna, and their three children, Warren, Rosie and Matt, are the current residents of Meredith Downs, a vast sheep station with a million acres of land in remote Western Australia, where the MacBride family have lived and worked for generations. In 1958, on an ordinary day on a lonely road, Phil swerves to avoid a kangaroo and the lives of the entire MacBride family are forever altered. The aftermath of this family tragedy reverberates through the following decades with the actions of one character resulting in a secret that becomes a burden to carry for a lifetime.
Spanning decades, A Far-flung Life is a story about the aftermath of a family tragedy that asks the question how do you go on living when you have done something that can’t be undone. It’s not possible to say much without spoiling the story but there are plot points which are uncomfortable to read. Storygraph lists a number of content warnings for anyone who wants to know prior to reading.
A well-written and thought-provoking story about grief, secrets, memories and forgiveness of self. The book has a very strong sense of place with the author’s writing bringing to life the vastness of the Australian Outback and its harsh and isolated beauty. This is a grim, heartwrenching story – slow at times, unbearably sad yet difficult to put down. I’m glad I read this but it won’t be for everyone as the premise makes for very uncomfortable reading at times.
Thank you to NetGalley and Simon & Schuster Canada for providing a digital ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
6. American Fantasy by Emma Straub

Setting: Cruise Ship
FROM THE PUBLISHER: When the American Fantasy cruise ship sets sail for a four-day themed voyage, aboard are all five members of a famous, nineties-era boy band and three thousand screaming women who have worshipped them since childhood.
Feeling slightly out of place amid this crowd is Annie, newly divorced, turning fifty with an empty nest, and here on a lark to appease her sister. Yet when the lights come up and the idols of her youth begin to sing, something is unlocked. Call it memory. Call it nostalgia. Call it the chemical reaction of hormones, hope, and sexual reawakening. Between the slushy alcoholic drinks, the familiar music, and the throngs of middle-aged women acting like lovesick teenagers, Annie finally reconnects to a long-submerged part of herself. By the time she meets one of the band members—not just a celebrity but someone in need of a friend—she has accessed a new sense of possibility.
In a smart and incisive book packed with laugh-out-loud reflections on fame, aging, marriage, and middle age, Emma Straub delivers a richly textured story that shows us real passion is never truly lost, that what we love makes us who we are, and that deep meaning can sometimes be found in a sea of screaming fans.
7. Go Gentle by Maria Semple

Setting: New York City
Publication Date: April 14, 2026
FROM THE PUBLISHER: Adora Hazzard has it all figured out. A Stoic philosopher and divorcée, she lives a contented life on New York City’s Upper West Side. Having discovered that the secret to happiness is to desire only what you have, she’s applied this insight to blissful effect: relishing her teenage daughter, the freedom of being solo, and her job as a moral tutor for the twin boys of an old-money family. She’s even assembled a “coven”—like-minded women who live on the same floor in the legendary Ansonia—and is making active efforts to grow its membership. Adora’s carefully curated life is humming along brilliantly until a chance meeting with a handsome stranger.
Soon, her ordered world is upended by black-market art deals, secret rendezvous, and international intrigue . . . and her past—which she has worked so hard to bury—lands like a bomb in her present. Inflamed by unquenchable desire, Adora finds herself a woman wanting more: and she’ll risk everything to get it.
Adora Hazzard’s journey of self-discovery will grip you from the start. Romantic, hilarious, intelligent, and bursting with the stuff of life, Go Gentle is a thrilling story of one woman’s mid-life transformation, cementing Maria Semple in the pantheon of our most exciting and important contemporary writers.
8. The Chambermaid’s Key by Genevieve Graham

Setting: Toronto, Canada
Publication Date: April 21, 2026
FROM THE PUBLISHER: Welcome to the Dominion, where secrets lurk behind every locked door.
1929: Rosie Ryan wants nothing more than to escape the poverty of The Ward, Toronto’s roughest neighbourhood, and become a chambermaid at the brand-new Dominion Hotel. Until she meets Damien, that is—a charming and ambitious waiter who promises her a better life—and adds him to the top of her list. The Dominion offers her a chance to do well, but behind the gleaming chandeliers and polished marble lurk dangerous secrets involving its most notorious guest, a wealthy gangster who’s about to profit from The Crash that will decimate the economy. When a friend is murdered, Rosie finds herself tangled in a web of betrayal—one that just might cost her everything.
Present Day: City building Inspector Bridget Kelly is assigned to scrutinize the recent renovations at the elegant old Dominion Hotel, a task she relishes as a lover of history and architecture, and that gets even better once she starts working with a brilliant and fascinating archivist. But when a routine inspection uncovers mysterious boxes, locked doors, and secret corridors, bringing to light a long-buried clue to a decades-old murder, her inspection is thwarted, and threats rise round her on every side. Bridget soon realizes someone doesn’t want the truth to surface—and they’ll do anything to keep it buried.
Spanning nearly a century, The Chambermaid’s Key is a gripping dual-timeline novel about ambition, betrayal, and the secrets that bind us across generations.
9. Last Night in Brooklyn by Xochitl Gonzalez

Setting: Brooklyn, New York
Publication Date: April 21, 2026
FROM THE PUBLISHER: SPRING, 2007
At twenty-six, Alicia Canales Forten feels smothered by her future. She’s in a long-distance relationship, living at home with her mother’s beliefs, saving up for her wedding to a future doctor. But after Alicia ventures out one night in the neighborhood of Fort Greene, Brooklyn, she finds herself lured by the siren song of youth and possibility that the striving crowd of creatives holds, and moves in.
No one embodies this milieu more than La Garza, a larger-than-life, up-and-coming fashion designer whose epic house parties fuel neighborhood lore. La Garza’s life, observed by Alicia from her apartment across the street, seems to hold the allure and fearlessness Alicia has never dared to imagine for herself.
But when Alicia’s wealthy banker cousin moves to the neighborhood, she finds herself increasingly drawn into both his and La Garza’s precarious lives.
Against the backdrop of a potentially life-changing presidential election and a looming once-in-a-generation fiscal crisis, Last Night in Brooklyn explores the dark compromise of the American Dream for people of color living, unknowingly, in the twilight of a cultural moment. It is a story about everything money can buy―and the destruction of what it can’t.
10. The Shock of the Light by Lori Inglis Hall

Setting: England and France
Twin siblings Theo and Tessa from Cambridge, England are both eager to do their part for the war effort despite the views of their pacifist father. In 1942, Theo has joined the RAF as a pilot and, unbeknownst to her family, Tessa has been recruited by the Special Operations Executive (SOE). After undergoing an intense training period, Tessa parachutes into France where she joins a cell of the Resistance in Nazi-occupied territory. Two years later, Theo comes home but Tessa does not. Decades later in 2003, Edie, a PhD candidate researching female agents in the SOE, contacts Theo and works with him to uncover the truth of what actually happened to Tessa in France.
A well-written historical fiction debut, this novel has a different angle than previous World War II novels that I have read as it’s the story of two siblings – one a pilot and the other a spy. There’s a great deal of historical information woven into the story about the brave English women who became SOE agents and lost their lives serving their country, life in Nazi-occupied France, the Nuremburg trials and how gay men were treated at the time when homosexuality was illegal but mostly it’s a story about the unbreakable bond between two siblings and wartime love and loss.
11. Lake Effect by Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney

Setting: Rochester, New York
In Rochester, New York in 1977, Nina Larkin, mom to teenage daughters, Clara and Bridie, is gifted a copy of The Joy of Sex from a newly divorced friend forcing her to face the absence of intimacy in her marriage. Unbeknownst to Nina, Clara is falling in love for the first time just as her mother becomes involved with their neighbour, Finn Finnegan, risking the reputation of both families and completely unravelling seventeen year-old Clara’s world.
Years later, Clara is working as a food stylist in New York City but has never moved on from the scandal that upended her life in her senior year of high school. When she returns home to Rochester for a wedding all those old feelings rise to the surface resulting in her doing something that will turn their lives upside down again.
A well-written and enjoyable read, Lake Effect is a multiple POV family drama about the repercussions of an affair between neighbours in upper-middle-class Rochester in the ’70s and how it impacts the members of the two families. Told over three timelines, it’s a nuanced portrayal of messy family dynamics with flawed characters the reader can empathize with even when they’re making really bad decisions.
12. In My Tudor Era by Kate Bromley

Setting: England
Lily’s trip to England with her best friend was meant to be a reset after a stressful year of grad school and disastrous dates. But when a visit to Hampton Court Palace ends with the full Tudor experience, Lily needs a plan to make it back to the 21st century stat.
Everyone is calling her Catherine, and to her dismay, Lily learns that she’s caught the eye of the King—none other than Henry VIII. Lily’s PhD is in psychology, not history, but even she knows that being married to Henry does not bode well for her life expectancy.
As she navigates her precarious position, Lily can’t seem to stay away from Simon Gainsford, the king’s champion jouster. A jock with a heart of gold, Simon understands Lily better than any guy she’s met, and every dark corridor presents a new opportunity to continue their dangerous, white-hot affair.
Meanwhile, smoldering courtier Francis Dereham (who seems to think they are secretly married?!) won’t stay away, and the king’s sinfully handsome groom, Thomas Culpeper, is also quite…persistent.
In the Tudor era, rumors can get you killed. Lily is determined to change her fate, but everyone knows how this story ends…right?
13. The News from Dublin by Colm Tóibín

Setting: Ireland
Celebrated as “his generation’s most gifted writer of love’s complicated, contradictory power” (Los Angeles Times), Colm Tóibín is a master of short fiction as well as the novel, able to summon an extraordinary intensity of emotion in a brief tale. The eleven stories transport readers across continents and eras.
In “The Journey to Galway,” a mother who has learned of the death of her son, a fighter pilot in World War I, travels to Galway to inform his wife and their three now fatherless children. “Sleep,” originally published in The New Yorker, explores the rift between two lovers as one of them cannot reckon with his grief and fear after the death of his brother. Death, again, is a central character in the title story, “The News from Dublin,” as Maurice Webster travels to Dublin to try to save his younger brother who is dying of tuberculosis. Maurice must petition the health minister for access to a new experimental drug, and this is the only hope.
Tóibín’s stories are rich with the complexities of family dynamics, the haunting pull of the past, and the quiet revelations that define our lives. His characters, whether navigating the aftermath of war, or forbidden love, or the desires of a girl in Catalan, or the quiet struggles mundane life, are rendered with illuminating, unforgettable empathy and insight.
14. The Name Game by Beth O’Leary

Setting: Fictional island in the UK
Charlie couldn’t be happier to take the job of farm-shop manager on the remote, wild Isle of Ormer. She’s grieving, a little lost, and in desperate need of a fresh start.
Jones has come out of a difficult breakup and is looking forward to some peace away from the noise of his city life. Moving to Ormer couldn’t have come at a better time.
But when Charlie Jones and, ahem, Charlie Jones both turn up at Ormer’s one and only farm shop, claiming to have been offered the role of manager, everyone is baffled. How could this have happened? And just who is the real Charlie Jones?
15. Wild People Quiet by Tara Gereaux

Setting: Saskatchewan, Canada
Torduvalle, Saskatchwan, 1946 – Florence Banks has created a beautiful life for herself in this small prairie town where she has been working as a secretary in an insurance office for the past 11 years. She’s a model employee and resident of the town, keeps an immaculate home filled with beautiful objects and her hair is the perfect shade of movie-star blonde because she’s meticulous about never letting her brown roots show. But one morning at the end of summer, Florence sees a group of Métis men hired for seasonal farm work and recognizes one who has a connection to her past that threatens to shatter her carefully-constructed life.
This dual timeline historical fiction novel set in a fictional small town in Saskatchewan (with flashbacks to the main character’s childhood and early adulthood) is a deeply personal novel. The author’s grandfather was Métis but when she was growing up her family told people they were French. As an adult, she sought to explore Métis history to better understand the decision her grandfather and others made to hide their heritage and also to reconnect to the Métis culture herself.
This is a gentle yet thought-provoking exploration of identity and the repercussions of one young woman’s decision to live her life as someone else. I also appreciated the history lesson woven into this novel as I didn’t know about much of what the Métis people endured during this shameful chapter of Canadian history. Tara Gereaux puts a very human face on the history by introducing us to characters living with the discrimination, mistreatment and pressure to assimilate and by showing the impact that government policy had on them.
Wild People Quiet is a beautifully-written, extraordinary story of one unforgettable woman finding her way back to her family and reclaiming her culture but also a story of the history, culture and resilience of the Métis people.
Thank you to Simon & Schuster Canada for providing an ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
16. John of John by Douglas Stuart

Setting: Scotland
Publication Date: May 5, 2026
Out of money and with little to show for his art school education, John-Calum Macleod takes the ferry back home to the island of Harris to find that little has changed except for him. He returns to the windswept croft where he grew up and the two pillars of his childhood: his father John, a sheep farmer, tweed weaver, and lay preacher in the local Presbyterian church, and his maternal grandmother Ella, a profanity-loving Glaswegian whose steady warmth helped Cal weather the sudden departure of his mother.
Cal privately wonders if any lonely men might be found on the barren hillsides of home, while John is dismayed by his son’s long hair, strange clothes, and seeming unwillingness to be Saved. But Cal isn’t the only one in the croft house keeping secrets. As lambing season turns to shearing season, everything seems poised to change as the threads holding together the fragile community become increasingly frayed, and nothing will remain as it was before.
John of John is a singular novel about duty, passion, and the transformative power of the truth. It is a magnificent literary work that cements Douglas Stuart’s reputation as one of our greatest working novelists.
17. The Things We Never Say by Elizabeth Strout

Setting: Massachusetts, United States
Publication Date: May 5, 2026
Artie Dam is living a double life. He spends his days teaching history to eleventh graders, expanding their young minds, correcting their casual cruelties, and lending a kind word to those who need it most. He goes to holiday parties with his wife of three decades, makes small talk with neighbors, and, on weekends, takes his sailboat out on the beautiful Massachusetts Bay. He is, by all appearances, present and alive. But inside, Artie is plagued by feelings of isolation. He looks out at a world gone mad—at himself and the people around him—and turns a question over and over in his mind: How is it that we know so little about one another, even those closest to us?
And then, one day, Artie learns that life has been keeping a secret from him, one that threatens to upend his entire world. Once he learns it, he is forced to chart a new course, to reconsider the relationships he holds most dear—and to make peace with the mysteries at the heart of our existence.
Elizabeth Strout, as we have come to expect, delivers a moving exploration of the human condition—one that brims with compassion for each and every one of her indelible characters. With exquisite prose and profound insight, The Things We Never Say takes one man’s fears and loneliness and makes them universal. And in the same breath, captures the abiding love that sustains and holds us all.
18. Daughter of Egypt by Marie Benedict

Setting: Egypt
In the 1920s, archeologist Howard Carter and Lord Carnarvon of Highclere Castle made headlines around the world with the discovery of the treasure-filled tomb of the boy Pharaoh Tutankhamun. But behind it all stood Lady Evelyn Herbert―daughter of Lord Carnarvon―whose daring spirit and relentless curiosity made the momentous find possible.
Nearly 3,000 years earlier, another woman defied the expectations of her time: Hatshepsut, Egypt’s lost pharaoh. Her reign was bold, visionary―and nearly erased from history.
When Evelyn becomes obsessed with finding Hatshepsut’s secret tomb, she risks everything to uncover the truth about her reign and keep valued artifacts in Egypt, their rightful home. But as danger closes in and political tensions rise, she must make an impossible choice: protect her father’s legacy―or forge her own.
Propelled by high adventure and deadly intrigue, Daughter of Egypt is the story of two ambitious women who lived centuries apart. Both were forced to hide who they were during their lifetimes, yet ultimately changed history forever.
19. Yesteryear by Caro Claire Burke

Setting: United States
My name was Natalie Heller Mills, and I was perfect at being alive.
Natalie lives a traditional lifestyle. Her charming farmhouse is rustic, her husband a handsome cowboy, her six children each more delightful than the last. So what if there are nannies and producers behind the scenes, her kitchen hiding industrial-grade fridges and ovens, her husband the heir to a political dynasty? What Natalie’s followers—all 8 million of them—don’t know won’t hurt them. And The Angry Women? The privileged, Ivy League, coastal elite haters who call her an antifeminist iconoclast? They’re sick with jealousy. Because Natalie isn’t simply living the good life, she’s living the ideal—and just so happens to be building an empire from it.
Until one morning she wakes up in a life that isn’t hers. Her home, her husband, her children—they’re all familiar, but something’s off. Her kitchen is warmed by a sputtering fire rather than electricity, her children are dirty and strange, and her soft-handed husband is suddenly a competent farmer. Just yesterday Natalie was curating photos of homemade jam for her Instagram, and now she’s expected to haul firewood and handwash clothes until her fingers bleed. Has she become the unwitting star of a ruthless reality show? Could it really be time travel? Is she being tested by God? By Satan? When Natalie suffers a brutal injury in the woods, she realizes two things: This is not her beautiful life, and she must escape by any means possible.
20. Hooked by Asako Yuzuki

Setting: Japan
Eriko’s life looks perfect—from her prestigious job at a Japanese trading firm to her spotless apartment and devoted parents. Her newest project, to reintroduce the controversial Nile Perch into the Japanese market, is as ambitious as she is. But beneath her flawless surface lies a consuming loneliness. Eriko has never been able to hold on to a real friend.
Enter Shoko: a popular lifestyle blogger whose work Eriko follows obsessively. Shoko lives a life of controlled chaos—messy apartment, take-out dinners, a kind, easy-going husband. She writes about daily contentment, though her fractured relationship with her father gnaws at the edges of her happiness.
When Eriko orchestrates a “chance” meeting with Shoko, the two women strike up an unlikely connection. For a fleeting moment, Eriko believes she’s finally found what she’s always longed for. But as her fascination turns to fixation and Shoko’s carefully balanced life begins to dissolve, both women are pushed to breaking points neither of them saw coming.
Deftly translated by Polly Barton, Hooked is a taut, provocative novel about modern womanhood, the hunger for connection, and the quiet, ordinary ways our lives can spiral out of control. With razor-sharp insight and disarming empathy, Asako Yuzuki explores how far we’ll go to be seen and what happens when the ones who see us don’t like what they find.
21. The Island Club by Nicole Harrison

Setting: Balboa Island, California
Publication Date: April 28, 2026
1956: On idyllic Balboa Island, just off the California coast, life seems peaceful and welcoming. But when the lives of three women begin to unravel in shockingly different ways, an unlikely friendship―and the game of tennis―may be the only thing that can save them.
Milly Kinkaid’s plan to fix her crumbling marriage seems to be falling apart before it even begins. She believed that moving her young family from Hollywood to Balboa Island might entice her increasingly distant husband to come home earlier after work. Instead, he’s barely coming home at all.
Society matriarch Sylvia Johnson and her husband have been pillars of their community for decades, and have just recently begun a new business venture: The Island Club, a place for members to swim, play tennis and dine in style. But when she learns that he has been risking their financial security and putting their family’s future in grave danger, she’s not only poised to lose the club, but the entire community she holds dear.
Meanwhile, standoffish loner Adele Lambert’s entire world is on the brink of being destroyed if the dark secrets of her past and her hidden identity is revealed. Twenty years ago, she ran from a shameful scandal and left behind the only thing she ever loved. Now, terrified that the anonymity she’s spent decades guarding will be exposed, but desperate to stay afloat, she risks everything to return to the game that brought her to her knees all those years before.
Set against the sun-drenched beaches of Balboa Island, with its prim and proper 1950s facade, The Island Club is a story of love, loneliness and the lies we tell ourselves―and what can be gained when the truth is finally revealed.
Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for providing a digital ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
22. The Complex by Karan Mahajan

Setting: United States and India
FROM THE PUBLISHER: In a sprawling complex in Delhi, the sons and daughters of SP Chopra, one of India’s political architects, live together vying for influence in a family shaped by the great man’s legacy. By the late 1970s, the siblings are scrambling to define their own futures in a still-young nation on the brink of transformation.
Sachin Chopra leaves for America, with his bride Gita following not long after, as the newlyweds are eager to forge their own lives beyond the pressures of the family compound. Yet Delhi remains an inescapable force, one that keeps pulling them back, even as Gita is menaced by Sachin’s predatory uncle, Laxman. A man of ruthless ambition, Laxman ascends through the ranks of a rising Hindu nationalist movement, caught between his political aspirations and his personal transgressions. Meanwhile, Vibha, his sister, tries to keep the peace and the reputation of the family intact, even as she wrestles with her own exile.
As India erupts in violence and long-buried secrets come to light, the embattled Chopras must reckon with the cost of power, the weight of tradition, and the shifting nature of love and allegiance. Equal parts brilliant family saga and piercing political drama, The Complex is a virtuosic novel of revenge and redemption, ambition and undoing, loyalty and love, by one of the most lauded voices in contemporary fiction.
23. This Story Might Save Your Life by Tiffany Crum

Setting: United States
FROM THE PUBLISHER: Benny Abbott and Joy Moore host one of the most beloved podcasts in the world. Each week, they delight listeners with a different “against all odds” survival story, gleefully finding the weird, life-affirming humor in near-death experiences. Since their first episode on Joy’s experience with severe narcolepsy, they’ve been the best friends everyone wants to befriend―and thanks to the meticulous management of Joy’s husband, Xander, they’ve built a lucrative empire.
The problem is, their next survival story may be their own. When Benny arrives at Joy and Xander’s one morning to record, he finds shattered glass and an empty house. The one clue shedding light on the couple’s disappearance is the incomplete, previously unseen first draft of Joy’s memoir. Benny is desperate to find them, even when the police soon zero in on him as their prime suspect.
Millions of devoted listeners think they know the “real” Benny and Joy. But as the hours tick by, and the odds seem increasingly stacked against Joy and Xander being found alive, not even the most devoted fans could guess the terrible secrets their favorite famous BFFs have hidden from the world―and from each other.
24. The Paris Match by Kate Clayborn

Setting: Paris, France
FROM THE PUBLISHER: Physician Layla Bailey has spent over a year telling herself she’s moved on from a painful but amicable divorce from her college sweetheart. Staying friends with her ex seemed like the mature thing to do, but when Layla is invited to her former sister-in-law’s destination wedding in Paris—where Layla once spent her own romantic honeymoon—she knows her commitment to maturity might be her worst enemy…especially since her ex isn’t attending alone.
The only thing that could make the week more difficult is getting through it without the distraction of the wedding…. But when what Layla thought was a harmless conversation about the choices of her younger self leads to the bride getting cold feet, Layla finds herself facing down the groom’s mysterious, taciturn best man, Griffin, who will do anything to make sure this wedding happens.
Since she broke it, Griff demands she help him fix it. Going along with his plan to alleviate the engaged couple’s doubts seems like Layla’s best chance at maintaining a good relationship with a family she once called her own. But as she learns more about the past heartbreak that’s driving Griff to help his friend, she gets closer and closer to confronting the true depth of her own pain…while finding herself more and more willing to risk it all again for Griff.
25. Leave Your Mess at Home by Tolani Akinola

Setting: Chicago, Illinois
Publication Date: April 14, 2026
FROM THE PUBLISHER: The Longe siblings are really botching their parents’ American Dream.
Sola Longe, eldest daughter, estranged from the family, is secretly back home in Chicago for the first time in a decade. She’s a newly single and recently disgraced influencer trying to quietly put her life back together again. The other three Longe siblings aren’t doing much better.
Anjola is in love with her best friend, who just got engaged to someone else; Karen, a college junior and the baby of the family, is grappling with her sexuality and self-image; and Ola, the golden child with a baby of his own on the way, is questioning his marriage and how to raise a Black son in America.
Sola’s unexpected return sets them on a crash course towards each other, and when the four siblings find themselves together again at their Nigerian immigrant parents’ Thanksgiving table, a decade’s worth of secrets and a lifetime of resentments explode to the fore.
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