Four years ago, an unthinkable disaster occurred. In what was later known as the Low-Probability Event, eight million people were killed in a single day, each of them dying in improbable, bizarre ways: strangled by balloon ropes, torn apart by exploding manhole covers, attacked by a chimpanzee wielding a typewriter. A day of freak accidents that proved anything is possible, no matter the odds. Luck is real now, and it’s not always good.
Vera, a former statistics and probability professor, lost everything that day, and she still struggles to make sense of the unbelievable catastrophe. To her, the LPE proved that the God of Order is dead and nothing matters anymore.
When Special Agent Layne shows up on Vera’s doorstep, she learns he’s investigating a suspiciously—and statistically impossibly—lucky casino. He needs her help to prove the casino’s success is connected to the deaths of millions, and it’s Vera’s last chance to make sense of a world that doesn’t.
Because what’s happening in Vegas isn’t staying there, and she’s the only thing that stands between the world and another deadly improbability.
GRADE: A
REVIEW:
This book was bonkers—in the best way possible. One of the things I absolutely love about Chuck Tingle’s writing is how the horror hits fast and out of nowhere. You’re not easing into dread; you’re slammed into it headfirst, just like the characters. It’s chaotic, terrifying, and ridiculously fun.
The story follows Vera, a woman who survived a catastrophic disaster that wiped out 8 million people in a single day—including her own mother. She’s been living as a recluse for the past four years, until Agent Layne knocks on her door with a wild proposition: help him investigate a suspiciously lucky casino that might be tied to the tragedy that changed her life.
Mara Wilson nails the narration. She brings so much emotion and complexity to Vera, making the character feel fully alive—even as the world around her spirals into total madness.
This book is like Final Destination meets The X-Files, with a heavy dose of surreal, queer chaos. It’s gory, strange, and bursting with Tingle’s signature imagination. And in true Chuck Tingle fashion, amidst all the horror and sci-fi mayhem, there’s a powerful, affirming message: Bisexuals exist. Loudly, proudly, and yes—right in the middle of a conspiracy-laced nightmare.
If you love horror that’s fast-paced, weird, and unapologetically queer, this one’s a must-read. Highly recommend.
*Thank you so much to NetGalley & Macmillan Audio for the audiobook copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!
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He pretended to be human for seven years. Until he couldn’t.
PLOT SUMMARY:
He’s a traveling salesman named Paul Cattaneo, except he isn’t. He’s a Mirror Person–a hyper-empathetic eldritch abomination. He found the human Paul Cattaneo’s mangled corpse seven years ago and decided to mimic it. It’s just what Mirror People do. Mimic. Absorb. Control.
But breeding season for Mirror People comes around every seven years, inducing a sociopathic state… and Paul’s time is up. Unable to avoid the reality of what he truly is, Paul has a mental breakdown, goes on a cross-country road trip…and runs afoul of something far, far more inhuman and dangerous than himself.
GRADE: B+
REVIEW:
I’ll start by saying this is the first book I’ve read by this author—and I’m not usually drawn to cosmic horror. But the premise was just too compelling to pass up, and I’m so glad I gave it a shot.
The story follows Paul, who has lived for seven years as a human… until his dormant parasite instincts awaken. Suddenly, he’s forced to choose between embracing his true nature or continuing to pretend to be something he’s not. It’s a fascinating, unsettling concept—what does identity mean when your biology tells you you’re something else entirely?
There’s plenty of horror and gore for fans of the genre (which I definitely am), and the writing is sharp and confident. I won’t spoil the plot—this is a short novella, and I really think it’s best experienced with as little context as possible. Going in blind made the experience all the more intense and unpredictable.
After this, I’ll absolutely be checking out Huff’s earlier work and anything she releases next. If you’re into cosmic horror with a sci-fi twist, this is one to put on your list.
*Thank you so much to NetGalley & the publisher for a digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!
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When the mutilated body of a young woman is discovered in the desert on the outskirts of Los Angeles, the detective assigned to the case can’t deny the similarities between this murder and one that occurred a year prior. Media outlets are quick to surmise this is the work of a budding serial killer, but Detective Bill Renney is struggling with an altogether different scenario: a secret that keeps him tethered to the husband of the first victim.
What do you hear…?
Maureen Park, newly engaged to Hollywood producer Greg Dawson, finds her engagement party crashed by the arrival of Landon, Greg’s son. A darkly unsettling young man, Landon invades Maureen’s new existence, and the longer he stays, the more convinced she becomes that he may have something to do with the recent murder in the high desert.
What do you feel…?
Toby Kampen, the self-proclaimed Human Fly, begins an obsession over a woman who is unlike anyone he has ever met. A woman with rattlesnake teeth and a penchant for biting. A woman who has trapped him in her spell. A woman who may or may not be completely human.
GRADE: A
REVIEW:
Senseless was my first Ronald Malfi book, and I was hooked from page one! The story is told through three distinct narratives—Renny, Toby, and Maureen—and the audiobook narrators really brought each of them to life. These storylines don’t intersect until the very end, which keeps the tension building throughout.
Renny is a detective still grieving the loss of his wife, Linda, while investigating two eerily similar murders that happened a year apart. His chapters are steeped in emotional weight and slow-burning suspense. Maureen seems to have it all—she’s engaged to a successful movie producer—but things take a dark turn when she meets her soon-to-be stepson, Landon, whose presence immediately feels off. Then there’s Toby, a troubled man who believes he’s a fly. His descent into obsession is both bizarre and tragic, especially when he becomes fixated on a girl he believes is a vampire.
Each point of view brings its own unique horror: psychological, supernatural, and deeply personal. The mystery of the murders ties them all together in a way that’s both surprising and satisfying.
I really enjoyed this one and will definitely be diving into more of Malfi’s work. If you like eerie, layered horror with strong characters, give Senseless a try!
*Thank you so much to NetGalley & Tantor Media for the audiobook copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!
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Whether it took days or months or years, I would come for him. And I would savour the moment.
PLOT SUMMARY:
It’s the summer before high school, and Ronny Nguyen finds herself too young for work, too old for cartoons. Her days are spent in a small backyard, dozing off to trashy magazines on a plastic lawn chair. In stark contrast stands her brother Tommy, the pride and joy of their immigrant parents: a popular honor student destined to be the first in the family to attend college. The thought of Tommy leaving for college fills Ronny with dread, as she contemplates the quiet house she will be left alone in with her parents, Me and Ba.
Their parents rarely speak of their past in Vietnam, except through the lens of food. The family’s meals are a tapestry of cultural memory: thick spring rolls with slim and salty nem chua, and steaming bowls of pho tái with thin, delicate slices of blood-red beef. In the aftermath of the war, Me and Ba taught Ronny and Tommy that meat was a dangerous luxury, a symbol of survival that should never be taken for granted.
But when tragedy strikes, Ronny’s world is upended. Her sense of self and her understanding of her family are shattered. A few nights later, at her first high school party, a boy crosses the line, and Ronny is overtaken by a force larger than herself. This newfound power comes with an insatiable hunger for raw meat, a craving that is both a saving grace and a potential destroyer.
GRADE: A+
REVIEW:
This past autumn, a publicist emailed me insisting I had to read What Hunger, saying it was totally up my alley, and even sent me an early ARC. I decided to give it a try—and once I finally picked it up, I devoured it in just two days. I couldn’t believe how spot-on this total stranger was about my reading taste!
Catherine Dang’s What Hunger is a powerful and poignant exploration of identity, family, and the deep emotional struggles that define our lives. Through lyrical prose, Dang crafts a narrative that navigates the complexities of cultural displacement, particularly the immigrant experience, while also diving into personal and societal expectations.
The novel follows Ronny, a young woman torn between her Asian heritage and the pressures of assimilation into a Western society while she’s trying to navigate her grief over the loss of her older brother. Dang’s depiction of hunger—both literal and metaphorical—becomes a central theme. It reflects the protagonist’s yearning for connection, understanding, and acceptance, while also highlighting the pain of not feeling “enough” in any space. It also centers her rage, as she leans into it in ways that we as women don’t always allow ourselves to do at times.
Dang’s writing is striking in its intimacy, offering a raw look at the inner turmoil of its characters. Each chapter feels like peeling back another layer of self-awareness, with Ronny’s desires and fears laid bare for the reader. The narrative unfolds slowly but steadily, building a sense of tension and urgency that keeps you engaged until the last page.
What Hunger is a book that stays with you long after finishing it, its exploration of hunger not just as a physical need, but as an emotional and existential longing, deeply resonating in today’s complex world.
If you love books that explore female rage and grief, then this may be a book that you too will devour as easily as I did.
*Thank you so much to NetGalley & Simon & Schuster for a digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!
Short Q & A with Author:
You mentioned that your mother’s cannibal story was the inspiration behind What Hunger. Is the story based on true events or is it more like a folktale?
Originally, I thought the story was an urban legend. My mom first heard the rumors of a Vietnamese refugee-turned-cannibal at her refugee camp in the Philippines. Fleeing Vietnam was incredibly dangerous at the time, so it made sense that people would share wild stories with each other. I figured the tale was a culmination of multiple stories fused together: of people surviving boat wrecks, others washing up onto deserted islands in the Philippines, and other survivors getting returned back to the Vietnamese Communist government. But I assumed the cannibalism part was pure fiction.
But as I was writing What Hunger, I was shocked to find real news reports of cannibalism among Vietnamese boat people. These incidents almost always took place out at sea when survivors were desperately trapped in a boat, deliberately not rescued, and out of resources.
In one 1988 article, The Washington Post reported multiple incidents, including one where 15 people ate the body of a dead refugee. Another incident involved the forced drowning of a man, woman, and 11-year-old child, so the other refugees could eat them.
What’s especially unsettling is what the man implored in his interview: “I am a Christian. I killed this man on the boat to help the living. Personally, I think it’s wrong, but so many people needed to eat.”
In total, five people had been eaten on this boat: two people who’d been killed to be eaten, and three others who had already passed away. Interestingly, the rest of the 52 survivors did not want to talk about their time on the boat.
When people were put in these hopelessly dire situations, they adapted in the most brutal of ways.
I’ve always believed our urban legends are borne out of a hint of truth. Writing What Hunger has completely cemented this belief for me.
I truly loved Ronny and the fact that she wouldn’t simply “get over” what was done to her. I saw her new appetite as a means to view her assaulter as “meat” just like he had viewed her. Is that the theme you were going for?
Your interpretation is a good one! Maybe I’m weird, but I’ve noticed that in American English, our euphemisms involving human genitalia are so often… meaty. The penis is likened to a hotdog “wiener.” A gathering of mostly men is called a “sausage fest.” The act of a man’s masturbation can be violently referred to as “beating his meat.” Then we have some very graphic euphemisms to describe the appearance of vulva, like “meat curtains” or “roast beef.”
When it comes to sexual assault, the victims are routinely viewed as objects of sexual pleasure. It wasn’t hard, then, to use meat as a metaphor for these unfeeling sexual objects. As “meat,” the victims have been “conquered” and prepped to be “consumed” by another. The metaphor is so brutal and animalistic, yet it’s as apt as the violence itself.
But I’m a grim optimist. At the end of the day, we’re all vulnerable sacks of human flesh. If you reduce your fellow human being down to an unfeeling object, then you’re also condemning yourself to be an object. In a warped way, I wanted Ronny’s assaulter to know what it was like to be treated like a piece of “meat”: as something to be consumed and tossed aside. But Ronny takes it quite literally, doesn’t she?
Asian horror seems to tap into a more psychological, almost ancestral aspect of an individual. Do you feel that what occurs in the past generations finds a way to haunt someone in the present?
Absolutely. The concept of “generational trauma” has grown mainstream for a reason. Who hasn’t been a bit scarred by the way their parents raised them? Our parents raised us based on their own experiences and what they knew from their parents. And their parents learned from their parents and so on.
So much of our behaviors, our habits, and our coping mechanisms have been passed down from previous generations. Even when we try to course correct (e.g. refusing to spank our kids), we’re still reacting to what had happened in the past (like previous generations of parents spanking their kids).
Physically, the human body is itself a record of past events. We know of inherited diseases like sickle cell disease and cystic fibrosis getting passed down through generations, but we can also recognize family histories of mental illness and addiction.
I guess I’m fascinated by how these inherited diseases had originated. What had happened to Patient Zero in the family line? Had they simply been born with the disease and passed it on? Had it randomly developed one day and then been passed down among generations?
Or had something traumatic happened—something so traumatic that their own cells had been changed by it, which forever altered the genetic makeup of their descendants?
Though this last idea sounds crazy, there are studies being done on epigenetics, the science of how our environment and behaviors can affect the way our genes work, and whether these epigenetic changes can be inherited. For instance, some pregnant women developed PTSD from being near the collapse of the Twin Towers during 9/11. The babies they delivered were later shown to be smaller than average and had lower cortisol levels. While we can’t say for sure that the babies were directly traumatized by 9/11, there does seem to be a correlation between the mothers’ downswing in health and the poorer health outcomes for their babies.
As the daughter of Vietnamese refugees, I’ve always had a vested interest in generational trauma and how it can manifest itself in a person. I see my own history of anxiety and depression in my relatives, both young and old. But the question remains: are these simply hereditary diseases that have always existed within my family lineage? Or are these illnesses that my ancestors have picked up in response to the trauma around them (like colonialism, war, rape, poverty, etc.)?
I wanted to explore generational trauma in a book one day, but I figured I would write about it when I was older, wiser, and more established in my career. I never thought I’d do so in a book about a teenage cannibal, but here we are!
Female rage is often downplayed or not taken seriously – and I absolutely love how Ronny leans into this rage. Do you think that women have finally reached a moment in their lives where they’re finally leaning into this rage rather than repressing it like in the past?
Hell yes! I think female rage has always lurked in our cultural landscape, but I was never fully cognizant of it until Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl blew up. I had never seen a female character like Amy Dunne before, a woman who was so wholly unhinged, enraged, and open about it. The character fascinated me as much as she made me uncomfortable.
But more than anything, I felt this weird sense of companionship. It was crazy to hear all these women taking Amy Dunne’s side and arguing that the husband got what he deserved. And it was even crazier to hear women openly talking about how they, too, were pissed off. That cultural moment made me realize that wow, maybe I wasn’t alone for feeling so awfully resentful sometimes. Maybe I wasn’t psychotic. Maybe it was a perfectly normal part of being a woman—walking around with all this pent-up rage that we were told not to express.
As a young creative, I also appreciated how Gillian Flynn had brought such a nasty, vengeful woman character into the mainstream. I think it inspired a lot of female creatives to be more open and honest in their work. Why censor the ugliness of womanhood when we could lean into it instead? And let it inspire us.
Now I think female rage is the norm in our pop culture: books, movies, music, you name it. Women are pissed, and we have the urge to express it, no matter how bloody or nasty or gross it may be.
Are you working on anything new at the moment?
Yes. I don’t want to jinx myself, so that’s all I’ll say!
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What has eight arms, two tentacles, and one gnarly appetite? A Vampire Squid.
While enjoying a much-needed cruise vacation, Nora and her friend Tori spend their days downing endless umbrella cocktails and their nights rockin’ out to gnarly bands—mainly Vampire Weekend. The 24-hour buffet is constantly calling their names, but unfortunately, something answers the call—a giant squid with an appetite for cruise passengers. But Nora and Tori have other problems.
Their status as BFFs is hanging on by bikini thread, and this vacay should have given them time to repair it. But no. Of course, an annoying monstrous creature from the depths of the dark ocean just had to rise up to the surface, feast on terrified humans, and ruin their girl bonding time.
Thanks a lot, Captain Sucky Legs.
GRADE: A
REVIEW:
What I love about Nico Bell’s books is how she perfectly balances fun and fear—her stories are packed with creepy thrills and genuinely well-written characters. This one is no exception, and honestly, it’s the ideal summer beach read (though fair warning: it might make you think twice about cruise ships and squids).
Best friends Tori and Nora are living it up on a cruise, jamming to Vampire Weekend, when things take a wild turn—they’re attacked by a giant vampire squid. Yes, really. From there, it’s nonstop action, packed to the gills (pun absolutely intended) with horror, heart, and high-stakes survival.
The friendship at the center of it all keeps you grounded, even when the gore starts flying—and there’s plenty of that too. It’s the kind of gory, scary fun that begs to be made into a movie. I’d be first in line for it!
If you’re looking for a horror story that’s fast-paced, original, and just a blast to read, this one’s a must.
*Thank you so much to the author for a digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!
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Sister Rafaela, a newcomer to the cloistered Sisters of Divine Innocence, yearns for redemption from her horrific past. However, her new abbey, bound by a vow of silence and a disturbing burial ritual, hides its own sinister secrets.
When a mysterious stranger arrives and dies soon after, her body resists decomposition, sparking fevered claims of sainthood among the nuns… but Rafaela suspects something far darker.
As the abbey teeters on the edge of madness, Rafaela and local priest Father Bruno race to uncover whether the Sisters of Divine Innocence are graced by a divine miracle—or consumed by unspeakable evil.
GRADE: A-
REVIEW:
This was my first time reading Viggy Parr Hampton and wasn’t sure what to expect. However, I’ve been on a historical horror kick lately and I truly enjoyed this novel. The Rotting Room is an unrelentingly bleak and atmospheric horror novel that grips the reader from the first page. The setting, an isolated convent swallowed by shadows and unspeakable secrets, seeps into every scene with suffocating dread. Hampton masterfully crafts a world where time feels suspended, and every toll of the bell or flicker of candlelight becomes a harbinger of something deeply wrong. The rot isn’t present solely in the literal rotting room, but it’s in the characters, the history, and the very air.
The novel’s sense of unease is nearly unbearable at times, but in the best way. Hampton sustains a tone of quiet terror, opting for psychological unraveling over cheap scares. As the protagonist Rafaela explores deeper into the Sisters of Divine Innocence and the newcomer Berta, the line between reality and hallucination begins to blur. The narrative plays heavily with isolation, guilt, and memory, keeping the reader on edge throughout.
If there’s a flaw, it lies in the repetition of certain scenes, but seeing that a nun’s life is very repetitive, there was no way around it. Still, this minor issue doesn’t undercut the novel’s power. The Rotting Room is a compelling, claustrophobic descent into rot and ruin that lingers long after the final page.
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Honor seems to have everything: she adores her bright and beautiful daughter, Chloe, and her charming, handsome husband, Tom, even if he works one hundred hours a week. Yet Honor’s longing for another baby threatens to eclipse all of it―until a shocking event changes their lives forever.
Years later, Tom makes a decision that ripples through their families’ lives in ways he could never have foreseen. As the consequences of that fateful choice unfold, two women’s paths become irrevocably intertwined. But when old love clashes with new, who will be left standing? And what happens when your secrets come back to haunt you?
Blending a page-turning moral dilemma with satisfying emotional poignancy, Finding Grace is a sweeping love story that explores the price of a new beginning, how the ghosts of our past shape our future, and whether redemption can be found in the wreckage of what we’ve lost.
GRADE: B-
REVIEW:
Loretta Rothschild’s debut novel opens with a gripping, almost cinematic first chapter that immediately pulls the reader into the heart of chaos. A tragic accident, a mysterious letter, and a haunting revelation promise a story charged with emotion and suspense. Rothschild demonstrates a strong command of atmosphere and intrigue in the opening pages, leaving readers eager to unravel the threads of the protagonist’s troubled past.
Unfortunately, that momentum doesn’t carry through the rest of the novel. As the chapters unfold, the story loses its intensity, gradually slipping into a meandering pace. What begins as a compelling mystery fades into a slow-moving narrative filled with underdeveloped plotlines and repetitive introspection. The characters, especially Grace herself, become increasingly difficult to connect with often making choices that feel inconsistent or frustratingly opaque. Secondary characters are similarly underwhelming, lacking depth or relatability.
While Rothschild clearly has a talent for setting the stage, Finding Grace ultimately fails to deliver on the promise of its opening. The emotional resonance and urgency of the first chapter dwindle as the book progresses, leaving a sense of disappointment. For readers who crave character-driven stories with a strong, sustained arc, this novel may not fully satisfy.
*Thank you so much to NetGalley & Macmillan Audio for the audiobook copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!
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Rise and shine. The Evans women have some undead to kill.
PLOT SUMMARY:
It’s 1999 in Southeast Texas and the Evans women, owners of the only funeral parlor in town, are keeping steady with…normal business. The dead die, you bury them. End of story. That’s how Ducey Evans has done it for the last eighty years, and her progeny—Lenore the experimenter and Grace, Lenore’s soft-hearted daughter, have run Evans Funeral Parlor for the last fifteen years without drama. Ever since That Godawful Mess that left two bodies in the ground and Grace raising her infant daughter Luna, alone.
But when town gossip Mina Jean Murphy’s body is brought in for a regular burial and she rises from the dead instead, it’s clear that the Strigoi—the original vampire—are back. And the Evans women are the ones who need to fight back to protect their town.
As more folks in town turn up dead and Deputy Roger Taylor begins asking way too many questions, Ducey, Lenore, Grace, and now Luna, must take up their blades and figure out who is behind the Strigoi’s return. As the saying goes, what rises up, must go back down. But as unspoken secrets and revelations spill from the past into the present, the Evans family must face that sometimes, the dead aren’t the only things you want to keep buried.
GRADE: A
REVIEW:
This was my first time reading a book from Lindy Ryan and it was absolutely fun! Bless Your Heart is an absolute gem, a Southern Gothic romp packed with horror, heart, and hilarity. At the center of it all are the Evans women, who are nothing short of a delight. They’re sharp-tongued, fiercely loyal, and totally unapologetic about their witchy ways. But it’s Great-Grandmother Ducey who absolutely steals the show. She’s tough as nails, wise in that wonderfully unfiltered elder way, and has more sass in her pinky finger than most people have in their whole body. Honestly, I’d read a whole spinoff just about her.
The story mixes scares and snark effortlessly. One minute you’re shivering from a ghoul attack, the next you’re laughing out loud at a perfectly timed one-liner or sarcastic spell. Speaking of ghouls, Ryan gives them a fresh twist that feels original and creepy in all the best ways. They’re not your garden-variety undead; there’s a lore here that’s genuinely cool and elevates the horror.
What makes this book really work is the sense of family and love that grounds all the supernatural chaos. The Evans women might fight monsters, but they do it together—and with style. It’s spooky, it’s funny, and it’s got heart. Highly recommend, especially for fans of Grady Hendrix.
I strongly recommend diving into this one as an audiobook—the narrator doesn’t just read the story, she brings it to life. Every character leaps off the page (or speaker), from Ducey’s razor-sharp wit to the eerie growl of the ghouls. It’s an electrifying performance that pulls you straight into the heart of the chaos. You won’t just listen—you’ll live it.
*Thank you so much to NetGalley & Macmillan Audio for the audiobook copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!
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There’s something magical about summer reading. Whether you’re poolside with a fizzy drink, on a breezy porch swing, or curled up in a too-cold, over-air-conditioned café, a good book just hits differently in the summer.
So if you’re wondering what to read—or what everyone else will be reading—this summer, here’s your guide to the biggest reading trends of Summer 2025. Spoiler: it’s a juicy mix of cozy, thrilling, romantic, and surprisingly real.
Let’s dive in 📚☀️
1. Romantasy Is Still Ruling Our Hearts (and Bookshelves)
If you thought the romantasy wave (that perfect blend of romance + fantasy) was over, think again. It’s booming. Think mythical creatures, powerful heroines, forbidden love, and world-building so rich you’ll miss it when you close the book.
Books with “grumpy mage + sunshine warrior” dynamics? Obsessively bookmarked. Enemies-to-lovers across kingdoms? Can’t get enough.
Hot sub-trend: Retellings of classic myths and fairy tales with a romantic twist.
2. Cozy Fiction & “Low-Stakes Drama” Is on the Rise
After years of high-intensity thrillers and heavy topics, readers are craving comfort. Enter: cozy fiction. Small-town settings, quirky characters, and plots where not much happens—but in the best way.
Think:
A recently divorced baker finding herself (and maybe a handsome florist).
A bookshop by the sea with a mysterious owner and a slow-burn romance.
A 70-year-old woman solving crimes with her cat and a cup of tea.
It’s feel-good, no-pressure, “just one more chapter” reading.
3. Nonfiction That Reads Like Fiction
This summer, readers want to learn and be entertained. Cue the rise of narrative nonfiction—true stories told in a way that reads like a page-turner.
Top picks:
Personal memoirs with humor, honesty, and heart (think: modern Nora Ephron vibes).
True crime, but with thoughtful reflection rather than shock value.
Science, psychology, and history books that explain the world in bite-size brilliance.
4. Global Voices & Translated Lit Are Taking Center Stage
Readers are expanding their horizons—literally. More people are reaching for translated fiction, stories from underrepresented cultures, and non-Western narratives. Expect to see buzz around books originally written in Korean, Spanish, and Arabic, along with Indigenous authors finally getting their spotlight.
It’s the summer of fresh perspectives—and it’s long overdue.
5. Books That Feel Like TikToks (in a good way)
Short chapters. Snappy pacing. Messy but lovable main characters. Welcome to the age of internet-influenced fiction.
These are the books that go viral for a reason:
Fast, funny, relatable.
Perfect for short attention spans.
Full of emotional moments you will highlight and post about.
And yes, they still hit you in the feels.
6. AI, Time Travel & “Almost Sci-Fi” Are Heating Up
Summer 2025’s wildcard genre? Speculative fiction that feels just one step ahead of reality.
Stories about near-future tech, AI gone rogue (or falling in love?!), climate-adapted societies, and time travel with emotional consequences are everywhere—and surprisingly addictive.
If you love Black Mirror, The Midnight Library, or anything that makes you go “wait… could this actually happen?”—this is your summer genre.
Lastly, Read What Feels Good
Whether you’re team fantasy, nonfiction nerd, or a sucker for soft romances, this summer is all about finding your comfort read. There’s no pressure to be “caught up” or reading what everyone else is. But if you are curious what’s trending—these are the titles and vibes making waves.
So, grab your sunglasses, a blanket, and maybe an iced latte. Summer 2025 is stacked with stories just waiting for you to crack them open.
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After a heart-wrenching breakup with her girlfriend and a shocking incident at her job, Cassie flees her life as an overworked assistant in New York for her hometown in New Jersey, along the Delaware. There, she reconnects with her high school best friend, Eli, now a widowed father of two. Their bond reignites, and within a few short months, Cassie is married to Eli, living in his house in the woods, homeschooling the kids, and getting to know her reserved neighbor, Joan.
But Cassie’s fresh start is less idyllic than she’d hoped. She grapples with harm OCD, her mind haunted by gory, graphic images. And she’s afraid that she’ll never measure up to Eli’s late spouse, who was a committed homemaker and traditional wife. No matter what Cassie does, Beth’s shadow still permeates every corner of their home.
Soon, Cassie starts hearing a voice narrating the house’s secrets. As she listens, the voice grows stronger, guiding Cassie down a path to uncover the truth about Beth’s untimely death.
GRADE: B-
REVIEW:
Kerry Cullen’s House of Beth offers a fresh and compelling twist on the ghost story genre, blending elements of gothic mystery with psychological depth. The novel follows Cassie Jackson, a bisexual woman grappling with obsessive-compulsive disorder, who returns to her New Jersey hometown after a traumatic event in New York. There, she reconnects with her high school best friend, Eli, now a widowed father of two. As their relationship deepens, Cassie becomes entangled in the lingering presence of Eli’s late wife, Beth, whose ghost seems to haunt their home and Cassie’s psyche.
Cullen’s portrayal of Cassie’s internal struggles is poignant and evocative, capturing the complexities of identity, grief, and the search for belonging. The narrative’s dual perspectives—Cassie’s and Beth’s—add layers of intrigue and ambiguity, blurring the lines between reality and the supernatural. The atmospheric setting and the gradual revelation of Beth’s story create a hauntingly immersive experience.
However, as the novel progresses, some readers may find the plot’s developments increasingly implausible and disjointed. The introduction of late-stage twists can feel abrupt, detracting from the story’s earlier emotional resonance. Despite these narrative shifts, House of Beth remains a thought-provoking exploration of the boundaries between the living and the dead, and the stories we inherit and create.
*Thank you so much to NetGalley & Simon & Schuster for a digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!
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