Jake Sommers lives on a houseboat called Honeysuckle Rose, moored at Fisherman’s Wharf in Victoria, BC—inherited from his Great-aunt Dierdre, once a successful artist and sixties flower child. He plays piano in a bar, loves the jazz of the 1920s and ’30s, and drinks more than he probably should. He is, by his own assessment, a bit of a lost soul. He is not a private investigator. This fact is about to become professionally relevant. 🚢
A beautiful woman appears at his floating home believing, incorrectly, that Jake is a qualified and experienced PI, and begging him to take her case. The little voice in his head recommends declining. Jake never listens to his little voice. He agrees to what sounds like a straightforward internet search for a missing young woman, and finds himself pulled into a convoluted world of DNA ancestry testing, danger, intrigue, and murder—none of which he has any formal training to navigate. 🔍
Jay Allan Storey builds the Houseboat Detective series on the specific pleasures of the accidental amateur sleuth premise—a protagonist whose qualifications are entirely fictional but whose analytic mind, love of puzzles, and determination to find answers make him effective despite the gap between his credentials and his capabilities. The Victoria, BC setting gives the series its particular atmospheric quality: a beautiful harbor city with a specific character that distinguishes it from generic Pacific Northwest settings, and a Fisherman’s Wharf community that feels genuinely inhabited. The piano-playing, jazz-loving houseboat owner is a distinctly appealing protagonist. 💛
What makes this charming: Jay Allan Storey launches The Houseboat Detective with an amateur sleuth mystery of genuine appeal—a jazz-loving houseboat pianist mistaken for a real PI, a missing woman, and a Victoria, BC investigation that turns out to involve considerably more danger than a simple internet search. 🌟
Scientists working in the Arctic have made an extraordinary discovery beneath the icy tundra—and then gone silent. A strange distress call is received. An elite team is assembled and dispatched to check on the facility and find out what happened to the researchers. What they find turns everything they know upside down. Whatever the scientists discovered has escaped the facility and is loose in the Arctic, leaving a trail of blood in temperatures where no one can hear you scream. ❄️
It is up to Cryptid Force Six to track down and stop it—before it stops them. The team is specifically assembled for encounters with cryptids: creatures whose existence sits at the boundary between scientific classification and myth, between documented biology and the inexplicable. The Arctic setting gives the hunt its particular brutality—extreme cold, limited visibility, isolation from any backup, and a creature that has had time to learn the terrain before its pursuers arrive. 💀
Lucas Pederson writes science fiction adventure with the monster-hunter momentum and creature-feature energy that makes the Cryptid Force Six concept work as a series foundation—an elite team with a specific mandate facing escalating threats in extreme environments. The Arctic Snare opening establishes both the team’s capabilities and the specific kind of threat that the series is built around: not alien invasion or robot apocalypse but something older and stranger, the kind of thing that lives in the boundary zone between what science has catalogued and what it has not yet explained. ⚡
What makes this propulsive: Lucas Pederson launches Cryptid Force Six with an Arctic monster-hunter thriller of relentless pacing—a silent research station, a something that has escaped into the tundra, an elite team dispatched to stop it, and blistering cold where no one can hear you scream. 🌟
Small towns look a certain way in the movies—welcoming, comforting, slow-paced, full of community. Lexi Mason was counting on that version when she applied to Tuckerville’s remote work program after a devastating heartbreak. She needed distance from her ex, distance from city life, and the specific healing that a fresh start in a place that operates at a different speed is supposed to provide. She got Tuckerville. The welcoming, comforting part is a work in progress. 💛
Ivan Mathis was a successful fitness trainer in Turner City until his mother called asking him to come home and help revitalize Tuckerville—the kind of request that pulls a person back to where they started and requires them to reckon with who they have become in the meantime. Neither Lexi nor Ivan expected that the small town they both arrived at for their own reasons would give them their greatest challenges alongside their sweetest rewards. The challenges and the rewards turn out to be connected in the specific way that small-town romance manages best: proximity, community, and the impossibility of running from anything in a place where everyone knows everyone. 🌅
J. Nichole launches the Greetings from Tuckerville series with the small-town romance premise that works best when both protagonists arrive carrying their own reasons for being there—two people who chose Tuckerville independently and who discover that the town has its own agenda for what happens next. The remote work program backdrop gives the series a contemporary relevance that grounds the small-town setting in recognizable present-day circumstances. 🌟
What makes this heartwarming: J. Nichole launches Greetings from Tuckerville with a small-town romance of genuine warmth—a heartbroken city woman seeking a fresh start, a fitness trainer answering his mother’s call to help revive a struggling town, and a place that turns out to have challenges and rewards neither of them planned for. 🌟
I Stole Your Family (The Hunt Family)
She opens the door and kisses her handsome man and watches the children run into the home she has spent all day making perfect. She still cannot believe this is her life—warm and safe, full of laughter, everything she ever wanted. She is also always looking over her shoulder, because she knows exactly what it cost to get here and exactly who has every reason to take it away. 💔
The title tells the structural truth: this family belonged to someone else first. The woman watching and waiting, biding her time, looking for the moment the narrator makes a mistake—she is not a stranger or an abstraction. She has a specific claim. The thriller operates in the space between the domestic idyll the narrator has constructed and the woman circling it, and between the narrator’s knowledge of what she has done and the reader’s slowly accumulating understanding of the full picture. Daniel Hurst writes from the perspective of a woman defending something that is genuinely wonderful and genuinely stolen, which gives the novel its particular moral texture. 💀
Hurst—one of the most prolific and widely read domestic thriller writers working in the British market—builds the Hunt Family series on the specific claustrophobic tension that domestic thrillers generate when the unreliable narrator is the one telling the story: a woman who knows she is not innocent, narrating her own threat with the specific desperation of someone who has too much to lose to be objective. The first-person intimacy makes the reader complicit in exactly the right way. ⚡
What makes this gripping: Daniel Hurst delivers a new domestic thriller of exceptional psychological tension—a woman living in a perfect life that belonged to someone else first, the woman circling her waiting for the mistake, and the question of whether knowing you stole something is enough to make you deserve to lose it. 🌟
In the remote Irish village of Ardnakelty, on a cold night, a young woman goes missing. Rachel Holohan was about to be engaged to the son of the local big shot. Instead, she is found dead in the river, and her death does not arrive as a simple tragedy—it comes wrapped in generations-old grudges and power struggles that the village has been managing for years, and it splits the community down lines that have always been there, now suddenly exposed. 🔍
Retired Chicago detective Cal Hooper has built something in Ardnakelty: friends, roots, a life he chose after the one he left behind. His fiancée Lena wants nothing to do with the tangles that Rachel’s death is generating. As the investigation deepens and the feud becomes more vicious, their settled peace starts to crack. When Cal and Lena uncover a scheme that reframes everything about how Rachel died and threatens the whole village, they find themselves in the line of fire of forces that have been operating in Ardnakelty long before Cal arrived. 💀
Tana French—whose Dublin Murder Squad series established her as one of the finest crime writers working in the English language—returns to Cal Hooper’s world with a novel that expands the specific texture of rural Irish community that makes her work so distinctive. French writes Irish landscape and Irish social dynamics with the authority of a writer who has spent years understanding how both of them work, and how both of them can kill. The Keeper delivers everything French’s readership comes to her for—psychological depth, gorgeous prose, and a mystery whose solution implicates everyone. 🌿
What makes this essential: Tana French delivers a new Cal Hooper novel of exceptional power—a young woman dead in the river of a close-knit Irish village, generations of grudges surfacing around the investigation, and a retired Chicago detective whose hard-won peace is being pulled apart by a scheme that threatens everything he has built. 🌟
Rebecca Solnit’s Hope in the Dark argued in 2003 that hope is not naivety but a practice—the decision to act in uncertainty because the future is genuinely open. The Beginning Comes After the End returns to that argument with the perspective of additional decades and surveys a world that has changed dramatically since 1960 in ways that the dominant cultural narrative—focused on backlash and regression—consistently fails to recognize at their full scale. 📖
The transformation Solnit documents is civilizational in scope: the dismantling of old structures and the building of new ones whose newness is often a return to older, wiser ways of understanding interconnection. The rising worldview she traces embraces antiracism, feminism, expanded understandings of gender, environmental thinking, Indigenous and non-Western knowledge systems, and scientific breakthroughs—all pointing toward a more relational, less extractive way of organizing human life. The white nationalist and authoritarian backlash that drives individualism and isolation is, in this framing, not evidence that transformation is failing but evidence that it is succeeding enough to provoke serious resistance. 💡
Solnit writes with the essayistic grace and intellectual range that has made her one of the most important public intellectuals working in American nonfiction—a writer who can move between political analysis, cultural history, and personal reflection without losing the thread of the larger argument. The sequel to Hope in the Dark arrives at a moment when readers who need it most will find it most useful: a reminder that the arc of change is longer than the news cycle, and that what looks like endings often precede what comes next. 🌅
What makes this essential: Rebecca Solnit delivers a new sequel to Hope in the Dark—a survey of the civilizational transformation underway since 1960, the interconnected worldview rising alongside the authoritarian backlash, and the argument that what looks like an ending is where the beginning actually comes from. 🌟





