Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Beth Is Dead

 


What if Little Women opened with a murder? Forget the scarlet fever. In this timeline, the tragedy is far more sinister.


In Beth Is Dead, Katie Bernet takes the beloved bones of Little Women and transplants them into a high-stakes contemporary mystery. When Beth March is found murdered on New Year’s morning, her sisters don't just mourn. They act.


Even before the tragedy, the March family was already reeling. Their father, an author, published a controversial book detailing his daughters' private lives. The fallout was immediate. Robert became a target of cancel culture, and the girls were thrust into a harsh, unasked-for spotlight. Between the public vitriol and physical threats, Robert was forced into hiding, leaving the family fractured and vulnerable long before the first drop of blood was spilled.


Bernet does a fantastic job modernizing the March girls while keeping their core spirits intact. Meg is a focused pre-med student, Jo is the headstrong writer we adore, and Amy is a "wild child" artist with a sharp edge. The plot centers on a web of suspects that includes everyone from Meg’s boyfriend, to their missing father, to the sisters themselves. It explores deep themes of sisterhood, the weight of grief, and the secrets we keep within a family.


For a debut novel, this is incredibly polished. The pacing is tight and it’s filled with emotion. While I easily guessed the killer and their motive, it didn't take away from my enjoyment. This book is less about a shocking twist and more about the heart and the character dynamics that made the original so enduring. It’s an impressive, seamless update to a classic.


The full-cast narration by Caitlin Kelly, Emily Tremaine, Ferdelle Capistrano, and Piper Goodeve is excellent. Having distinct voices for each sister is essential for a story with four teenage protagonists. They perfectly capture the balance between the sisters' classic roots and their modern struggles.


This is an interesting, heart-filled take on a classic that fans of the original novel or movie adaptations will love.


Many thanks to Simon Audio for the complimentary listening copy! Beth Is Dead is available now. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️


QOTD: Which classic would you actually want to see turned into a mystery?


#yamystery

#littlewomenretelling

#audiobooklover

#bookstagrammystery

#simonaudio


About the Author

Katie Bernet lives in Dallas, Texas. As one of three sisters, she’s a diehard fan of Little WomenBeth Is Dead is her debut novel.


Monday, January 19, 2026

The Fair Weather Friend

 



Faith Richards was Detroit’s favorite TV meteorologist. Murder was the one thing she never saw in the forecast.


In The Fair Weather Friend by Jessie Garcia, Faith’s sudden disappearance and shocking death rock her loyal viewers and the newsroom she left behind. The story is told through a revolving door of narrators. Carol is an ardent fan who feels like she truly knows Faith. Olivia is Carol’s niece and a college intern at the station with a front-row seat to the chaos. Matthew is the disgruntled weekend weatherman who’s tired of living in Faith’s shadow. Steve is a super fan who claims to be Faith’s secret boyfriend.

With the police closing in and "armchair detectives" Carol and Olivia digging for the truth, everyone is a suspect.


Garcia perfectly captures that eerie, one-sided bond fans form with celebrities, especially the one’s in our living rooms every night. I liked the behind-the-scenes peek at a newsroom. It added a lot of tension especially where Matthew was concerned. The multiple POVs kept the pace moving and the tension high.


Gail Shalan’s narration was spot on. She gave each character a distinct voice, which is crucial for a multi-POV story. She navigated the transition from the grieving fan to the bitter colleague easily. 


While the "big reveal" was a little over the top and a smidge unrealistic, I totally rolled with it. It was just too much fun to put down. The final twists at the very end were icing on the cake. This is an entertaining popcorn thriller that’s easy to binge.


Thanks to Macmillan Audio for the complimentary listen. The Fair Weather Friend is out January 20. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️


QOTD: what’s the weather like in your little corner of the world right now?


#macaudio2025 #popcornthriller

#audiobookreview

#workplacethriller #newrelease2026


About the Author

Jessie Garcia is an award-winning sports journalist who has risen the ranks in television news, first as an anchor/reporter, then to newsroom management. She is the News Director at the CBS affiliate in Milwaukee. Her non-fiction books My Life with the Green and Gold: Tales from 20 Years of Sportscasting and Going for Wisconsin Gold: Stories of our State Olympians won Midwest Book Awards, and her documentary Leaps and Bounds: The Men Who Changed Track and Field was featured in over a dozen film festivals. She also taught journalism at four universities.

Friday, January 16, 2026

Five for Friday: backlist gems

 








Bestseller lists miss a lot.

These backlist thrillers are proof.


Backlist books are where some of the best reading experiences hide.


QOTD: Do you actively seek out backlist books or mostly new releases?


#thrillerbooks

#crimefiction

#backlistbooks

#bookrecommendations

#mysteryreads

Thursday, January 15, 2026

The Secret Lives of Murderers’ Wives

 


What if the sharpest insight into a serial killer came from the women who married them?


Elizabeth Arnott’s The Secret Lives of Murderers’ Wives is a sharply written take on crime fiction that shifts the spotlight away from the killer and onto the women left in the wreckage.


Set in 1966, it follows Beverley, Margot, and Elsie. They’re three very different women bound by one horrifying fact: they were all married to notorious serial killers. Their shared trauma forges an unlikely but powerful friendship, built on survival and an understanding no one has.


When several young women turn up dead, Beverly, Margot, and Elsie realize something chilling. Their intimate knowledge of their husbands’ habits, patterns, and psychology gives them unique insight the police are missing. They launch their own investigation. What they uncover are connections between the victims that law enforcement has overlooked, along with a trail of false leads and unsettling truths.


This is a character-driven novel first and foremost. The mystery matters, but the real heart of the story is the friendship between these women and the way that suspicion, fear, guilt, and loyalty constantly test their bond. Their investigation forces them into a man’s world of crime-solving, where they refuse to sit politely and quietly on the sidelines. That choice puts them in real danger and forces each of them to confront the emotional aftermath of their marriages and their limited place in society.


Arnott’s blend of historical fiction and crime fiction works well. The 1960s setting adds layers and tension, especially as the women push against social expectations that tell them to stay quiet and invisible. I loved watching these women insert themselves into the male-dominated field of investigation.


At its core, this novel is about female friendship, agency, and reckoning. Unforgivable tragedies brought these women together, but their bond empowers them and ultimately helps them heal. It’s a smart, twisty, emotionally resonant read that proves the most compelling crime stories don’t always belong to the killers. They belong to the women who survived them.


Thank you Berkley and NetGalley for the ARC. Out March 3. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️


QOTD: Who would you trust more in a crime novel-the police or the people who know the killer intimately?


book review | book recommendation | literary thriller 


#crimefiction #arcreads

#historicalcrime #literarythriller

#femalefriendship #mysterybooks 


About the Author

Elizabeth Arnott is an award-winning writer and journalist and has written critically acclaimed historical fiction as Lizzie Pook. Her work—covering everything from true crime to Arctic exploration—has featured in publications including The Sunday TimesNational GeographicThe New York Times Book Review, and The Guardian. She lives with her husband and their young daughter in London.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

The Future Saints

 


What if the thing that destroys you is also the thing that makes you unforgettable?”

That’s the emotional gut-punch at the heart of The Future Saints by Ashley Winstead  and it pulled me right in. 


This is a character-driven story centered on a talented but unraveling indie band in the aftermath of devastating loss. Hannah, a brilliant singer-songwriter, is spiraling after the death of her sister Ginny, who also happened to be the band’s manager. Enter Theo, a record executive tasked with salvaging one last album while carrying his own long-buried grief. What unfolds is messy, intimate, and devastating.


Yes, Hannah and Theo are both fascinating, well-drawn characters who pull you in fast. Hannah’s talent is undeniable, but so is her self-destruction. Theo comes in polished and professional, but beneath that is a man who built his entire career around unresolved childhood abandonment. Their slow-burn romance is earned and tender.


But the true driving force of this book is grief. Grief saturates everything: every relationship, every decision, every note of music. Hannah, Ripper, and Kevin are all grieving Ginny in different ways, and the story never rushes or sanitizes that pain. It lets grief be honest and consuming.


The full-cast narration by Ali Andre Ali, Brittany Pressley, Vikas Adam, and Tayla Collier is outstanding. Each voice adds texture and emotional depth, making the story feel raw and immersive. This is one of those audiobooks where the performances don’t just support the story. They enhance it. 


This is a beautifully written, emotionally rich novel about music, love, ambition, and the wreckage grief leaves behind. I loved it. Highly recommended.


Many thanks to Simon Audio for the early listen. The Future Saints drops Jan. 20. This is a book you want at the top of your tbr. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 


Qotd: Do you think grief ever really goes away? Or do we just learn how to live alongside it?


#thefuturesaints #ashleywinstead #audiobookreview #bookstagramreads #characterdrivennovels


About the Author

Ashley Winstead is an academic turned novelist with a PhD in contemporary American literature. She lives in Houston with her husband, three cats, and beloved wine fridge.

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Oxford Blood

 



Dark academia, secret societies, and murder at Oxford? Yes, please. 


Oxford Blood by Rachael Davis-Featherstone is an entertaining, binge-able YA thriller that leans hard into the dark academia vibes readers are absolutely devouring right now. And it works.


Eva arrives at Oxford for interview week. She’s trying to win a coveted spot at the most exclusive and academically rigorous college Oxford has to offer. When her boyfriend George dies under mysterious circumstances, she quickly finds herself tangled in a dangerous web of secret societies, power games, and buried truths. What starts as an elite academic dream spirals into something far more sinister, where knowledge is currency and loyalty comes at a steep cost. After all, the unofficial school motto is slay or be slain. 


The Oxford setting is incredibly atmospheric with its ancient buildings, intellectual elitism, and a constant sense that history is watching. Eva is a standout protagonist. She’s smart, headstrong, and genuinely brave, not reckless-for-plot-convenience brave.


The story thoughtfully weaves in social justice themes including race, class, and privilege without feeling preachy or bolted on. These elements feel organic to Eva’s character and the world she’s navigating. If you love dark academia with teeth, this absolutely scratches that itch.


On audio, narrator DΓ©dΓ© Davi does a wonderful job bringing the tension, emotion, and personalities to life, keeping the pace tight and the stakes clear.


This is a great pick for fans of smart YA thrillers that mix suspense with social commentary.


Huge thanks to Macmillan Audio for the early listen. Oxford Blood is out today.

Dark academia fans, this one’s worth queuing up. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️


QOTD: Are you a dark academia reader because of the vibes or despite the danger?


#darkacademia #macaudio2025 

#audiobookreview

#yathriller#bookstagramthriller


bookstagram | thriller | book reviews | bookish community | book recommendations 


About the Author 

Rachael Davis-Featherstone  is a mixed-raced, Black-British, multi-award-nominated author, literary agent, and cofounder of Creative Roots Studio, which helps writers and illustrators build sustainable careers. She grew up in a low-income, single-parent family and studied mathematics at Oxford University before receiving a master’s in English literature at Surrey University. Rachael has published more than twenty books, ranging from picture books to commercial fiction, and her works have been translated into seven languages. I Am NOT a Prince, illustrated by Beatrix Hatcher, was shortlisted for the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize. Rachael was also longlisted for the Diverse Book Awards and shortlisted for the Inclusive Books for Children Awards. Rachael champions diversity in literature and was a judge for the inaugural Jericho Prize.



Monday, January 12, 2026

All the Little Houses

 


Welcome to a small Texas town where the gossip is flowing, the drinks are strong, and everyone has something to hide. Pull up a lawn chair. This one is pure chaos. 


All the Little Houses by May Cobb is set in a 1980s Texas neighborhood that looks tidy on the outside and is an absolute mess underneath. Think secrets layered on lies, family drama simmering just below the surface, scheming teens pushing boundaries, and housewives who know far more than they’re letting on. And they love talking about it.


They say everything’s bigger in Texas, and that definitely applies here. The antics are big and unapologetically over the top in the best way. Every character seems to be hiding something, drinking something, and trying to hook up with someone they probably shouldn’t be. It’s messy, dramatic, and wildly entertaining.


The story unfolds through multiple POVs, which keeps the pace steady and the momentum strong. I was fully invested, happily binge-reading my way through the neighborhood shenanigans. This is popcorn fiction at its finest. It’s a twisty, soapy ride that knows exactly what it’s doing.


My only small quibble? The ending felt a bit abrupt. But, fingers crossed, maybe that means Cobb has a sequel in mind, because I’d absolutely go back to this town.


Huge thanks to Sourcebooks Landmark for the ARC. All the Little Houseshits shelves January 20. If you love scandal, secrets, and suburban drama turned up to eleven, this one’s calling your name. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️


Would you rather read about gossiping housewives or scheming teens? πŸ‘€


bookstagram | whodunnit | bookish community | 1980s vibes


#bookstagram #thrillerreads

#popcornfiction #arcreview

#smalltowndrama


About the Author


May Cobb is an award-winning author of The Hunting WivesMy Summer DarlingsA Likeable Woman, and Big Woods. Her books have received attention from Book of The Month, The Today Show, and Oprah Daily and have been optioned for film/TV. She has an M.A. from San Francisco State University and her essays and interviews have appeared in The Washington Post and Good Housekeeping. She currently lives in Austin with her family. 

Beth Is Dead

  What if Little Women opened with a murder? Forget the scarlet fever. In this timeline, the tragedy is far more sinister. In  Beth Is Dead ...