Friday, April 24, 2026

This Story Might Save Your Life

A popular podcaster disappears. Her best friend is the suspect. I couldn’t stop listening.


Benny and Joy are best friends and co-hosts of one of the most popular podcasts around. It’s a show built on survival stories. Then Joy disappears, and Benny is the prime suspect.


I loved everything about this one. Joy and Benny feel like real people, and their friendship is the heart of the story. The dual POV worked beautifully. You get both of them fully, and it makes the tension hit harder. The audiobook production is something special too. The sound effects aren’t overdone. They just give it this perfect podcast atmosphere that pulls you right in. And the bonus episode at the end is delightful, and exactly the right note to end on after some heavy subject matter.


Julia Whelan is, as always, flawless. Sean Patrick Hopkins brings Benny to life with humor and real emotion. Together they’re a perfect match.

Also worth noting, this podcast isn’t a true crime show, which honestly felt like a breath of fresh air.


This Story Might Save Your Life is a fantastic debut. Tiffany Crum is someone to watch. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️


⚠️ Trigger warnings apply — check before you read.


Interested in another thriller featuring a podcaster? Check out my review of Tell Me What You Did


Thursday, April 23, 2026

The Last Mandarin

 


I almost skipped this one. I was so wrong. 


Thank you Macmillan Audio for the gifted early listen!


Louise Penny writing about AI and global terrorism wasn’t on my 2026 bingo card. Neither was enjoying every second of it.


I almost talked myself out of this one. A political thriller co-written by Louise Penny and journalist Melissa Fung? I was bracing for something slow and dense. Instead, I got a very propulsive listens I’ve had in months.


The Last Mandarin opens with a bang — security and fire alarms going off simultaneously all over the world, the signal traced back to China.  In the chaos, mother and daughter Vivien and Alice Li are called to the White House. Vivien is a Tiananmen Square dissident turned world-renowned human rights activist. Alice is a first-generation Chinese-American food blogger who has spent most of her life in her mother’s shadow. They can barely stand each other. Now they have to save the world together.


The globe-trotting pace kept me locked in: the Oval Office, the noodle shops of Hong Kong, the necropolis of the first emperor.  The blend of ancient Chinese history, from the Terracotta Warriors to a secret language invented by women,

woven into a modern AI techno-thriller was genuinely clever and fun. Is every plot point totally believable? No. But that’s not really the point. This is pure entertainment done well.


What I loved most was watching Alice grow into herself. She starts the story completely in Vivien’s shadow and ends it somewhere very different. The mother-daughter dynamic felt real even when everything around them was wild.


And narrator Eunice Wong is exceptional. Large cast, multiple languages, constant tension and she handled all of it. This is exactly the kind of audiobook that makes you wish your commute was longer. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Out May 12th.


If you enjoyed this review, you might be interested in State of Terror by Louise Penny and Hillary Rodham Clinton. 


Wednesday, April 22, 2026

5 Books to Break Your Reading Slump







Reading slumps are real, and sometimes the only cure is a book that grabs you by the collar and refuses to let go.

These five did exactly that for me. Different vibes, different genres, but every single one of them made me forget what time it was.

Whether you’re in the mood for a sweeping emotional thriller, a twisty legal mystery, or something atmospheric and dark, there’s a book on this list for you. 


All the Colors of the Dark — Chris Whitaker

1975, a small Missouri town, girls going missing, and a one-eyed boy named Patch who does something brave and pays a price for it for decades. This one is part serial killer thriller, part love story, part gut punch. It spans 25+ years and somehow gets more gripping as it goes. Warning: you will ugly cry.


The Violin Conspiracy — Brendan Slocumb

A Black violinist from rural North Carolina discovers the beat-up fiddle his grandmother gave him is actually a Stradivarius worth millions — and then someone steals it days before the most important competition of his life. It’s a mystery, it’s a coming-of-age story, and it’s a look at racism in classical music that will stick with you. The author is an actual violinist, and it shows.


Those Empty Eyes — Charlie Donlea

A teenager is found holding a shotgun at the scene of her family’s massacre. She didn’t do it — but the media dubs her “Empty Eyes” and decides she did. Ten years later, she’s changed her name and is working as a legal investigator when a new case starts connecting to her own unsolved past. Fast-paced and twisty, with an ending I genuinely did not see coming.


The Return of Ellie Black — Emiko Jean

A girl vanishes without a trace. Two years later, she’s found wandering out of the woods — alive, but refusing to talk. Detective Chelsey Calhoun is desperate to find out why, partly because she lost her own sister to violence years ago. Atmospheric, dark, and the twist will drop your jaw. Stephen King called it a “page-turning suspense novel.” He’s not wrong.


The Marsh King’s Daughter — Karen Dionne

Helena has a normal life — husband, kids, jam business. Then she hears on the news that the Marsh King has escaped from prison. Her father. The man who kidnapped her mother and raised Helena in a remote Michigan marsh, completely off the grid. Now she knows the police can’t catch him. But she can. This one is deeply unsettling in the best way.


Looking g for more recommendations? Check out 5 Fast Paced Thrillers You Can Read in a Weekend


Follow me on Instagram for book reviews and recommendations. 



 

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Reality Bites

 


A scientist walks onto a reality dating show. No, this isn’t a joke. It’s her only shot at saving her lab.


Thank you Harper Perennial and NetGalley for the gifted ARC.


Reality Bites by Amy Mass is the romcom your beach bag is waiting for. 🐸


Grace Lambert is a serious scientist dedicated to saving an endangered frog species from extinction. Her entire family? A bunch of influencers. Her mom has an HGTV-style Instagram, her dad runs a yoga YouTube channel, and her brothers are all over TikTok and Twitch. Grace has never had social media a day in her life, and she’s perfectly fine with that.


Then her lab loses its funding and suddenly the cash prize on a reality dating show looks a lot more appealing.


So Grace shows up on set with zero idea what a reality show is and no interest in the other contestants. And absolutely no intention of falling for anyone. Especially not Andrew, the show’s attorney, who she immediately annoys and who immediately annoys her right back.


You can probably guess where this is going. And it’s a blast getting there. Reality Bites hits every romcom trope you love: fish out of water, nerdy girl who doesn’t realize she’s gorgeous, enemies to lovers, the third act breakup, the grand gesture, the HEA. It hits them well. The banter between Grace and Andrew is sharp and genuinely funny. But my favorite part was watching Grace’s family, the influencers she never quite understood, rally around her when she needed them most and use their skills to fight for her lab. That family dynamic gave the book a little extra heart.


This is a debut novel, and Amy Mass (a TV comedy writer who worked on Last Man Standing and The Goldbergs) clearly knows how to write funny. It shows. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Out May 12. 


If you liked this review, you might enjoy my review of Fangirl Down



About the Author 

Amy Mass began her career in advertising in New York City. She moved to Los Angeles, where she wrote for hit television comedies, including Last Man Standing and The Goldbergs, for twelve years. During the pandemic, she moved to rural Georgia, where she writes romcom novels and films and lives with her family.

Monday, April 20, 2026

The Counting Game

 


The woods have taken girls before. When it happens again, the only witness is a boy. And he won’t talk. 


Thank you Simon Audio for the gifted audiobook. 


The Counting Game, SinΓ©ad Nolan’s debut novel, is more psychological thriller than police procedural. If you go in knowing that, you’re going to love it.


Southwest Ireland, 1995. Saoirse Kellough goes missing from a forest that has swallowed girls before. The only witness is her little brother Jack and he’s not talking. The village whispers about hauntings. 


The GardaΓ­ are desperate. So they bring in Freya Hemmings, a psychotherapist carrying her own grief, to gently coax the truth out of the traumatized nine-year-old who has sworn to protect the forest’s secrets.


What really worked for me were the characters. Jack is heartbreaking. Freya is complex and compelling. She’s the one who ultimately drives the investigation forward, not just the detectives. And the family dynamics are complicated. The oldest sibling Kate had to leave college to raise Jack and Saoirse after their mother’s death, and that trauma comes through on every page. This family was already carrying so much before the woods took Saoirse.


The atmosphere is thick and genuinely eerie. Nolan grew up in the forests of County Dublin, and it shows. These woods feel alive in all the wrong ways.


My one honest critique: the pacing. I’m more of an action-oriented reader, so slow-burn psychological thrillers require a little patience from me. This one asks for it. If you read Tana French and love lingering in a mystery, you’ll be completely in your element.


I did figure out the whodunit before the end, but I stayed invested anyway, which says something.


The audiobook narration from Alana Kerr Collins and Jessica Regan is excellent. Their dual narration gives Freya and Jack distinct voices and makes it easy to track the shifting perspectives. The emotional weight of this story lands differently when you can hear it. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Out now. 


If you find this book intriguing, you might like Imposter.


About the Author

SinΓ©ad Nolan grew up playing in the forests and on the beaches of leafy County Dublin, Ireland. She was a regular freelance feature writer for the Sunday World and the Irish Independent and has had short stories shortlisted for the Momaya Press Awards and the Francis McManus Awards for RTE Radio. Apart from writing, she works in private practice as a BACP Registered Counsellor seeing clients in central London.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Best Offer Wins

 


Zillow obsession, but make it unhinged. 🏑


Best Offer Wins by Marisa Kashino is one of the most fun, chaotic listens I’ve had in a while. What starts as a painfully relatable housing market struggle quickly spirals into something much darker and a lot more unhinged.


Margo Miyake has lost 11 bidding wars and she is done. When she gets a tip about an off-market house in the perfect neighborhood, she inserts herself into the sellers’ lives and things spiral fast. 


Watching her scheme and plot and rationalize increasingly unhinged behavior is equal parts hilarious and unsettling.

What makes Margo work as a character is that Kashino uses the house-hunting obsession to subtly examine the issues of race and class. This gives Margo more depth than you’d expect and makes her easier to root for than you probably should.


Narrator Cia Court is exceptional here. Her performance is controlled and sharp, which perfectly mirrors Margo’s increasingly desperate spiral. The pacing had a few uneven moments, but they didn’t derail my enjoyment at all. This was a bookstagram FOMO read for me and it lived up to the hype. It’s is a terrific debut. I’ll be looking forward to what comes next from Kashino. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️


If you’re a fan of complicated, hard-to-root-for women, go read my review of In Her Defense next.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

5 Books that Made Me Cancel Everything








20 years recommending books. These 5 made me cancel everything else.


I am not a fast reader. Never have been. But every once in a while a book comes along that just locks you in and won’t let go. These five did exactly that.


Alias Emma by Ava Glass — a British spy has 12 hours to get her asset across London while Russia watches every camera in the city. The whole book is one long chase scene and I was out of breath the entire time.


Lucky by Marissa Stapley — a con artist on the run wins the lottery but can’t cash the ticket without getting arrested. It sounds like a movie because it’s becoming one. Anya Taylor-Joy. Apple TV+. This summer. Read it first.


The Witch’s Orchard by Archer Sullivan — three little girls went missing from an Appalachian town ten years ago. One came back. Two didn’t. A PI heads into the mountains to find out what happened. Atmospheric, unsettling, and I did not guess the ending.


Family of Spies by Christine Kuehn — the author got a letter from a screenwriter asking about her family’s role in WWII. Her father wept when she asked him about it. Her grandparents were Nazi spies who helped plan Pearl Harbor. This is nonfiction. 


Worst Case Scenario by T.J. Newman — a nuclear power plant. A dam. Real time. That’s all I’ll say.


Five completely different books. One thing in common — I didn’t put any of them down.


Which one are you adding to your TBR?


Looking for more recommendations? Try 5 Backlist Thrillers that Deserve a Second Chance.