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The Anniversary

Alex Finlay. Minotaur, $29 (336p) ISBN 978-1-250-36075-5

A pair of high school classmates are bonded by their brush with a serial killer in this intriguing if predictable standalone from Finlay (Parents Weekend). On May 1, 1992, popular teenager Jules Delaney leaves a concert and is assaulted in her car by a man who she assumes is the May Day Killer, an elusive rapist and murderer who’s been striking annually across the Midwest since the late ’80s. On the same day, Jules’s classmate, Quinn Riley, whom she’s attracted to despite his lower social status, manages to scrape up enough money to attend the same concert for his birthday. Afterward, Quinn intervenes in a fight and almost kills the aggressor, landing him in prison. While Quinn is serving his sentence, his mom is bludgeoned to death at home. A year later, Quinn is released, and he dedicates himself to finding his mother’s killer—an effort that puts him in contact with Jules, who’s still distraught over her attack. Each of the novel’s sections take place on consecutive May Days, with dark secrets slowly dripping out as the bond between the leads develops. Though Finlay’s concept is strong, Jules and Quinn feel more like ciphers than fully developed characters, and the plot offers few surprises. This fails to stand out from the pack. (May)

Reviewed on 03/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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The Counting Game

Sinead Nolan. Scout, $30 (416p) ISBN 978-1-6680-9940-7

Nolan’s twisty if overlong debut opens with a 13-year-old girl vanishing in the woods outside a small Irish town in 1995. Saoirse Kellough, the middle child of a family riven by tragedy, disappears while playing in the woods with her nine-year-old brother, Jack, who emerges too shaken to reveal that his sister is missing. The next morning, Saoirse’s absence sets off a manhunt that puts the village on edge; it’s the fourth disappearance of a girl in the same forest since 1975. Freya Hemmings, a Dublin psychotherapist with a background in childhood trauma, is brought in to consult on the case, working with Jack to uncover what happened. Nolan alternates narration duties among her large cast, but the most effective chapters are told by Freya and focus on how her demons mirror those of the Kellough siblings, who have been under the care of their aunt since their mother’s apparent suicide. Though the narrative picks up some steam the deeper Freya gets into her investigation, her slow march to the truth is likely to test readers’ patience. Still, fans of Irish crime fiction will admire Nolan’s regional detail and gift for atmosphere. Agent: Stacy Testa, Writers House. (June)

Reviewed on 03/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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The Lost Soldiers (The Kyiv Mysteries #3)

Andrey Kurkov, trans. from the Russian by Boris Dralyuk. HarperVia, $30 (320p) ISBN 978-0-06-348867-0

The difficulty of solving crimes in a war-ravaged city is at the core of Ukrainian novelist Kurkov’s excellent third mystery featuring novice police investigator Samson Kolechko (after The Stolen Heart). It’s 1919, and Bolsheviks have a precarious hold on power across Ukraine. Samson is ordered to investigate the inexplicable disappearance of 100 Red Army soldiers who vanished from a bathhouse without their clothes or their rifles. Not only is it a bizarre and baffling case, but Samson receives little cooperation from bathhouse workers and endures intense pressure from his superiors to solve it quickly. The pace of the investigation picks up as Samson seeks sources from the streets of Kyiv, including a poet who writes about the corrupt and violent city. Kurkov excels at capturing the profound political instability of war-torn Kyiv, where citizens walk around with three forms of currency in their pockets: czarist kopecks, Kerensky rubles, and Soviet rubles. These details, and lingering questions about whether daily life under such circumstances might snuff out Samson’s tenderness, deepen the tension of the impossible crime at the novel’s core. This series continues to impress. (May)

Reviewed on 03/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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Missing in Soho

Holly Stars. Berkley, $19 trade paper (384p) ISBN 978-0-593-81673-8

London drag queen Misty Divine (aka Joe Brown) tries to track down a missing man in Stars’s breezy sequel to Murder in the Dressing Room. An out-of-place customer at Soho’s Lady Bar turns out to be a private eye with an urgent message for Misty. The PI gets stabbed on his way to deliver it, but he manages to croak out “find Jeremy” before dying. Though Misty’s boyfriend Miles and Lady Bar owner Mandy don’t want her to get in harm’s way, and though Misty is worried that the dead man’s message might be connected to drag queen Auntie Susan’s shady scheme to keep Lady Bar out of the hands of a corporate buyer, Misty feels obliged to investigate. She soon learns that Jeremy is an American photographer, and finding him puts her in the crosshairs of a frightening London megachurch. Stars’s drag queen characters are brash and bold, but they skirt caricature because the author never loses sight of the ways they wield their drag personas to boost their own self-confidence. Readers seeking a well-executed, queer-centered mystery will have fun with this one. Agent: Hayley Steed, Janklow & Nesbit U.K. (June)

Reviewed on 03/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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Holy F*ck

Joseph Incardona, trans. from the French by Sam Taylor. Bitter Lemon, $16.95 trade paper (224p) ISBN 978-1-916725-25-6

Swiss novelist Incardona’s audacious but underwhelming English-language debut centers on Stella Thibodeaux, a 19-year-old American prostitute gifted with a supernatural ability to heal her clients. After Georgia family man Robert Smith explains to his priest, Father Brown, how his carnal relations with Stella cured his psoriasis, the Vatican decides that Stella is better off being a martyr than a living, breathing miracle worker, and sends a pair of assassins to kill her. A farcical cross-country chase ensues, with Stella fleeing both certain death and hordes of desperately ill Americans who flock to her after word of her powers spreads. Meanwhile, Savannah reporter Luis Molina tries to find and interview Stella himself. Incardona’s premise is as attention-grabbing as they come, but all the wacky action wears thin, with the chase plot losing steam and the quirky cast devolving into little more than a series of irritating tics. What begins as a promising picaresque about America’s absurdities turns into a wild goose chase. (May)

Reviewed on 03/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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Night Objects

Eli Raphael. Grand Central, $29 (384p) ISBN 978-1-5387-7587-5

A woman reflects on the suspicious death of her boarding school classmate in Raphael’s riveting debut. In chapters titled “Before,” 15-year-old Lenny Winter describes her childhood on a houseboat in Port Angeles, Wash., with her mother and stepfather. After her mother’s untimely death, Lenny is accepted to the ritzy Blanchard School on scholarship, where she struggles to fit in with the offspring of the Pacific Northwest’s rich and privileged. To remedy that, she befriends members of Blanchard’s secretive Pascalianum Club, setting her on a course that ends with the violent death of one of the club’s members—and Lenny insisting she’s not responsible for it. Chapters titled “After” and set in the present feature an adult Lenny reflecting on her experiences at Blanchard, with Raphael doling out tantalizing clues about what happened all those decades ago, and why it might still be on a grown-up Lenny’s mind. The core mystery helps the author maintain steady suspense, but she delivers more than thrills, probing potent themes of grief, classism, and the slippery nature of memory. Readers will be eager to see what Raphael does next. Agent: Danya Kukafka, Trellis Literary. (May)

Reviewed on 03/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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It Could Have Been Her

Lisa Jewell. Atria, $29 (384p) ISBN 978-1-6680-3390-6

Jane Trevally, a supporting character in Jewell’s 2025 thriller, Don’t Let Him In, takes center stage in this chilling gothic suspense tale. At the outset, Jane is twice divorced and living in a ramshackle house in Dorset she can’t quite summon the courage to leave. Her life changes after she finds a lost dog that neighbors tell her was last seen with a now missing young woman named Rose White. Jane decides to return the dog to the London home registered on its ID chip. When she arrives, the house—situated in the Vale of Health near Hampstead—reminds her of a haunting incident from her past. Then Stuart Tucker, the man who answers the door, claims not to know Rose, and Jane grows increasingly suspicious. She digs into Rose’s background with the help of her youngest stepson, Dexter, and together, they unravel the dark history of the family who occupies the Vale of Health house, dredging up Jane’s own buried traumas in the process. With a shrewd command of the narrative, Jewell turns a chance encounter into a disturbing treatise on the past’s ability to assert itself in ways both unwelcome and unlikely. The author’s fans will relish this pitch-black spine-tingler. Agent: Jonny Geller, Curtis Brown U.K. (June)

Reviewed on 03/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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The Divorce

Freida McFadden. Poisoned Pen, $18.99 trade paper (368p) ISBN 978-1-4642-4963-1

Bestseller McFadden (Dear Debbie) proves marriage can be hell in this muddled tale of misplaced love. Naomi, a 42-year-old housewife, is happily married to hedge fund manager Jeremy and mom to four-year-old son Teddy. She’s secure in her belief that she’s cultivated true domestic bliss until she arrives home one afternoon to find the locks changed. The next day, Jeremy tells Naomi he wants a divorce, and she shuffles off to a small apartment, hoping to hide her marital failure from the nosy moms at Teddy’s school. Jeremy, meanwhile, hires a team of ruthless divorce lawyers, cleans out Naomi’s bank accounts, and starts dating beautiful 28-year-old Veronica. Naomi blames Veronica for her ordeal, but, in chapters that cycle between the trio’s perspectives, McFadden gradually reveals the toxic foundations of Jeremy and Naomi’s marriage. As the three leads become increasingly unhinged, their power struggle turns violent. By then, however, McFadden has weighed down the plot with too many far-fetched twists and undermotivated double-crosses. The result is a domestic battle royale that’s more exhausting than entertaining. Agent: Christina Hogrebe, Jane Rotrosen Agency. (May)

Reviewed on 03/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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Safari Murder Party

Rachel Moore. Berkley, $30 (352p) ISBN 978-0-593-95453-9

Why is media scion Waylon Cartwright threatening to slit the throat of his father’s executive assistant in the middle of the jungle? This giddy adult thriller from YA author Moore (Us in Ruins) poses that question in a prologue, then flashes back to fill in the blanks. Waylon has been tasked with arranging the annual corporate retreat for top performers at his father Dyer’s magazine empire, on a private island off Madagascar. Despite her devoted labor, Dyer’s assistant, Fletcher, doesn’t initially receive an invitation and is appalled that Waylon, who hasn’t worked at Cartwright Media for years, has. Fletcher manages to worm her way onto the guest list, only to receive a shock when, after the group lands on Lydell Island, Dyer announces in a pair of videos that he’s been afflicted with a fatal heart condition. Then he tells the group that he’s sent all support staff away and cut off communication with the outside world, isolating the 14 guests so they can battle for control of Cartwright Media’s multibillion-dollar portfolio—help will come in five days, at which point only one person will be able to claim the company. The ensuing carnage is darkly funny, with plenty of smart surprises along the way. This is a sleek and entertaining ride. Agent: Claire Friedman, InkWell Management. (May)

Reviewed on 03/13/2026 | Details & Permalink

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Frame 37

Nicholas Shakespeare. Viking Canada, $19.95 trade paper (336p) ISBN 978-1-0378-0314-7

In Shakespeare’s shrewd fourth thriller featuring former British journalist John Dyer (after The Sandpit), the death of Dyer’s old friend has international implications. At the outset, Dyer is in Tasmania hoping to finish a manuscript. His dreams of tranquility are dashed when photographer Miguel Girondo de Belew, a friend from grad school, approaches him with bad news: their mutual acquaintance, Lia Bignardi, has been killed in a hit-and-run that her sister, Nova, thinks was intentional. Though Dyer hasn’t been in touch with Lia for decades (“He felt only a collection of overlapping memories, he could not assemble her face”), he’s moved to look into Nova’s suspicions. What he finds makes him suspect that Lia’s death is connected to a crime he witnessed decades earlier, committed by a man who has since gained powerful political allies across the world. By investigating, Dyer knows he is putting a target on his own back. Shakespeare doles out backstory gradually, but the slow burn pays off in the end, and vibrant prose (“The wind gnawing the clouds, the pulse beating in his head, the shivery coincidence”) is a plus. This is a winner. Agent: Clare Alexander, Aitken Alexander Assoc. (May)

Reviewed on 03/13/2026 | Details & Permalink

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