Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks.
*
Riley Sager, Survive the Night
(Dutton)
“Sager excels at playing with reader expectations and in concocting plausible, gut-wrenching twists.”
–Publishers Weekly
John Galligan, Bad Moon Rising
(Atria)
“As the pages turn, the author prompts readers to consider a range of timely issues (climate change, homelessness, corrosive wealth) via masterfully executed and action-packed storylines that coalesce in a shockingly memorable final act sure to leave readers eager for the next Bad Axe County thriller.”
–BookPage
Tracy Clark, Runner
(Kensington)
“Exceptional…The action builds to an exciting showdown. Those who like their crime novels with a social conscience will be amply rewarded.”
–Publishers Weekly
Heather Levy, Walking Through Needles
(Polis)
“A midnight exercise in noir fiction that is carefully executed and fascinating in a reptilian way…a dark success.”
–Booklist
Kate Carlisle Little Black Book
Khurrum Rahman, Homegrown Hero
(HQ)
“A timely addition to the new breed of socially committed British thrillers.”
–The Guardian
Gabriel Krauze, Who They Was
(Bloomsbury)
“Who They Was is a powerful, challenging, and fearless debut from an author with a story to tell and the talent to tell it. And if you let yourself get swept away by this narrator, you may just find yourself reconceptualizing your reading process.”
–Chicago Review of Books
Francine Prose, The Vixen
(Harper)
“Prose ingeniously takes on publishing, the fallout of WWII, and McCarthyism in a gloriously astute, skewering, and hilarious bildungsroman.”
–Kirkus Reviews
F. Paul Wilson, Double Threat
(Forge Books)
“F. Paul Wilson is the master of making the unbelievable believable.”
–Steve Berry
Nicole Trope, The Boy in the Photo
(Grand Central Publishing)
“[An] exceptional psychological thriller… Trope pulls no punches in this tightly wound, emotionally harrowing story of parental abduction and the unhappy collision of hope with reality.”
–Publishers Weekly
Kate White, The Fiancee
(Harper)
“A skillfully constructed page-turner. . . .Expert pacing, characters readers can love to hate, and an intelligent heroine make this a winner. White consistently entertains.”
–Publishers Weekly