Starred Review

Skipshock

by Caroline O'Donoghue

Time travel. Politics. Science fiction. Cultural conflict. Romance. Skipshock, the first title in a planned duology, is a gripping, mind-bending novel, layered in multiple genres, about a girl who accidentally slips through a portal and is now expected to save the world--"Or some of them."

Pale, redheaded, 16-year-old Margo is headed to a boarding school in Dublin, Ireland, for a "fresh start" after her father's death, when "a weird situation" occurs. Margo has inadvertently "bounced... undetected" through

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Harmattan Season

by Tochi Onyebuchi

In Harmattan Season, Tochi Onyebuchi (Goliath; Riot Baby) has created a fantasy noir tale perfect for fans of brooding sleuths and speculative magic. Onyebuchi's spare prose tells the story of Boubacar, a private detective in an alternate colonial West Africa where the French are very much still in charge. Bouba can move between the worlds of the colonizer and the colonized more easily than most, since he is a deux-fois, both Indigenous dugu and French.

But business has still been tough, and it's the beginning

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Fifty Fifty

by Steve Cavanagh

Fifty Fifty, the fifth book in Steve Cavanagh's Eddie Flynn series (The Defense; The Plea; Thirteen), is an exhilarating hair-raiser that combines the moral seriousness of a legal thriller with the blood-drenched villainy of a horror novel.

Late one night, 20-something Alexandra Avellino calls 911 and says that her sister, Sofia, has stabbed their father, a former mayor of New York, in his Manhattan home. Seconds later, Sofia calls 911 and tells the same story, but with Alexandra as the stabber. Which sister

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Transplants

by Daniel Tam-Claiborne

"Each of us has been uprooted from one place and, through a great series of chance and circumstance not entirely our own, been made to reinvent ourselves somewhere else." Transplants, the first novel by Daniel Tam-Claiborne, is a mesmerizing study of the immigrant experience told with warmth, nuance, and quiet beauty.

Chapters alternate between the perspectives of Lin He, a college student in China, and Liz Chen, a Chinese American teacher of the English language. Lin, who has long felt more kinship with her

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Family Force V: Book One

by Matt Braly, illus. by Ainsworth Lin

Thai American Matt Braly, creator of Disney's Amphibia animated series, debuts with the marvelously energetic Family Force V. Chinese American character designer Ainsworth Lin vividly illustrates Braly's kaiju-filled contemporary Los Angeles.

"Decades ago, alien invaders attacked Tokyo." Their "demonic appearance" earned them the moniker the Mazoku, meaning devil tribe. The universe sent mankind the "Moon Computer [which] gifted five young Japanese siblings incredible powers" that transformed them into "the

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Love, Coffee, and Revolution

by Stefanie Leder

Romancing the Stone meets Eat Pray Love in Love, Coffee, and Revolution, TV show runner Stefanie Leder's debut novel, a rom-com mash-up with gravitas. The rambunctious bildungsroman follows naive 21-year-old college dropout Dee Blum from the unfulfilling groves of academe at the University of California, Berkeley, to the steamy underbelly of the coffee farms of Costa Rica.

Dissatisfied with looming law studies, suffocated by a "close-knit" Jewish family, and trapped in a relationship with a domineering boyfriend,

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Welcome

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Learn more about Shelf Awareness.

Shelf Discovery

Weepers

by Peter Mendelsund

The humane and darkly comic story of a group of professional mourners and the enigmatic character who enters their midst provides the backdrop for a meditation on grief and loss.

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Strange Houses

by Uketsu, trans. by Jim Rion

Japan's enigmatic YouTube personality Uketsu returns with another perplexingly horrific mystery, Strange Houses, likely to unnerve yet certain to engross.

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The Passengers on the Hankyu Line

by Hiro Arikawa, trans. by Allison Markin Powell

The Travelling Cat Chronicles creator Hiro Arikawa returns with The Passengers on the Hankyu Line, which gathers poignant glimpses of train travelers in Japan's Kansai region.

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Marguerite by the Lake

by Mary Dixie Carter

A young woman grows increasingly disturbed after a style icon dies and she begins an affair with the icon's husband in this deliciously creepy thriller.

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We Carry the Sun

by Tae Keller, illus. by Rachel Wada

Newbery Medalist Tae Keller's illuminating first picture book, We Carry the Sun, celebrates the unlimited potential of solar power.

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The Brittle Age

by Donatella Di Pietrantonio, trans. by Ann Goldstein

Italian author Donatella Di Pietrantonio's third translated title, The Brittle Age, potently examines intense relationships between women, particularly when haunted by violence.

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We Don't Talk About Carol

by Kristen L. Berry

We Don't Talk About Carol is Kristen L. Berry's debut novel of family and personal trauma brilliantly layered over a thrilling investigation of the long-unsolved disappearances of six Black girls.

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The Möbius Book

by Catherine Lacey

Catherine Lacey's experimental breakup book blends elliptical autofiction and stylish memoir as it meditates on faith, memory, betrayal, and male violence.

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The Life of Those Left Behind

by Matteo B. Bianchi, trans. by Michael F. Moore

The Life of Those Left Behind is Italian author Matteo B. Bianchi's moving autobiographical novel about his attempts to deal with his grief after the suicide of his former partner.

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Sourcebooks Landmark: The Ghostwriter by Julie Clark

Media Heat

Thursday, June 19, 2025

CBS Mornings: Kellie Carter Jackson, author of We Refuse: A Forceful History of Black Resistance (Seal Press, $30, 9781541602908).

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Today: Claire Lynch, author of A Family Matter: A Novel (Scribner, $25.99, 9781668078891), which is a Read with Jenna Pick.

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Fresh Air: Larry Charles, author of Comedy Samurai: Forty Years of Bloods, Guts, and Laughter (Grand Central, $32.50, 9781538771549).

Good Morning America: Elyce Arons, author of We Might Just Make It After All: My Best Friendship with Kate Spade (Gallery, $28.99, 9781668069073).

Late Show with Stephen Colbert: Nate Bargatze, author of Big Dumb Eyes: Stories from a Simpler Mind (Grand Central, $30, 9781538768464).

Late Night with Seth Meyers: Meredith Hayden, author of The Wishbone Kitchen Cookbook: Seasonal Recipes for Everyday Luxury and Elevated Entertaining (Ten Speed Press, $35, 9780593835951).

Monday, June 16, 2025

Late Night with Seth Meyers: Barry Diller, author of Who Knew (Simon & Schuster, $30, 9781668096871).

Jimmy Kimmel Live: Steve Martin, author of Steve Martin Writes the Written Word: Collected Written Word Works by Steve Martin (Grand Central, $30, 9780306835735).

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Today: Matt Groark, author of The Meat Teacher Cookbook: The Ultimate Backyard BBQ Guide for an A+ in Pitmastery (Harper Influence, $36, 9780063288416).

The View: Bob the Drag Queen, author of Harriet Tubman: Live in Concert (Gallery Books, $27.99, 9781668061978).

Kelly Clarkson Show: Prabal Gurung, author of Walk Like a Girl: A Memoir (Viking, $32, 9780593493274).

Jimmy Kimmel Live: Glennon Doyle, co-author of We Can Do Hard Things: Answers to Life's 20 Questions (The Dial Press, $34, 9780593977644).

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