Constable Nora Sommer is investigating a burglary in the Cayman Islands when she recognizes the victim—someone connected to a past she has been working very hard to forget. Nicholas Harvey sets up the central complication immediately and efficiently: a routine crime that becomes personal before Nora can maintain professional distance, and a guilty man living a comfortable life behind a lie that nobody has thought to question until now. 🏝️
As the thefts continue and consume the department’s resources, Nora can’t set aside what she now knows. The investigation splits her attention and her conscience in ways that Harvey handles with real psychological specificity—this isn’t a hero who simply decides to pursue justice regardless of consequences, it’s a woman working out in real time how far she’s willing to go and what she’s willing to risk. The Cayman Islands setting gives the crime fiction a specific, sun-drenched atmosphere that contrasts productively with the darker currents underneath. 🌊
The missing girl subplot adds further strain to an already stretched investigation, and Nora’s improbable theory—developed on thin evidence and pursued against institutional momentum—gives the plot a forward drive that keeps the pacing tight. Harvey is skilled at the international crime fiction milieu, and the Nora Sommer series uses the Caribbean setting with more specificity than the genre typically delivers. The moral weight of the central question—how far will Nora go to right a wrong that everyone else has accepted?—gives the series its distinctive character. 🔍
Why this compels: A burglary investigation, a victim from Nora’s past, a guilty man living freely, and a missing girl adding urgency—Stolen Sommer is Cayman Islands crime fiction with genuine moral bite.
When Emma Daniels’ family falls into destitution, she takes work with the Gilbert Company—an organization that places young women in hotel restaurants along remote western railroad lines, with strict rules and absolutely no courting permitted. The rules present no problem for Emma, who came West for financial necessity rather than romance. Then she meets Monroe Hartley, the hotel’s builder, and the rules start to feel considerably more constraining. Cat Cahill builds the historical western romance on the genuinely interesting real-world context of the Harvey Girls system. 🌾
Monroe is a man using relentless work to avoid drowning in guilt over his wife’s death, and Emma’s arrival both complicates and illuminates his situation. Cahill handles the widower’s grief with real delicacy—Monroe’s reluctance to act on his feelings isn’t simple caution but a specific fear that Emma might suffer the same fate his wife did, which gives his resistance genuine emotional weight rather than manufactured obstacle energy. The summer of growing closeness is rendered with the warmth that the best sweet historical romance achieves. 🏔️
The antagonist who discovers their secret and threatens to expose them gives the romance genuine external stakes—both Monroe’s career and Emma’s position with the Gilbert Company are real things they stand to lose, and Cahill makes the cost of their choices feel specific rather than abstract. The collection format gives readers multiple stories in this world, and the western railroad setting is atmospheric and specific throughout. ⭐
Why this charms: A Gilbert Girl with rules she can’t break, a builder burying his guilt in work, and a summer that changes everything—The Gilbert Girls is sweet historical western romance with a beautifully built world.
Hilda Mae Palmer is a landscaper living on Florida’s Gulf Coast—not a detective, not a law enforcement officer, just someone with skills, determination, and the bad luck to find herself pulled into a search for a missing woman. Andi Lodge grounds the series in an unusual professional background that gives Hilda Mae a distinctive way of moving through the world and observing it. The Gulf Coast setting is rendered as a place of genuine beauty with a darker underbelly—paradise with a pattern of disappearances that nobody has connected until Hilda Mae starts looking. 🌴
The investigation that begins as a search for one missing woman reveals something considerably more disturbing: multiple disappearances, a pattern that has been hiding in plain sight beneath the idyllic coastal surface. Lodge uses the escalation carefully, letting Hilda Mae discover the scope of the problem incrementally rather than dumping the full horror early. The sun-soaked Florida setting contrasts productively with the darkness of what’s actually happening there, and that tension gives the thriller its atmosphere. 🌊
With her own life increasingly at risk as the investigation deepens, Hilda Mae becomes a protagonist defined by stubborn determination rather than conventional heroics. Lodge gives her enough specific professional knowledge and personal history that she feels like a fully realized character rather than a generic amateur sleuth. The Gulf Coast landscape—its beauty and its isolation and its capacity for concealment—is used with genuine atmospheric effect throughout. ⚠️
Why this grips you: A landscaper, a missing woman, a disturbing pattern beneath the Gulf Coast paradise, and a heroine whose own life is now on the line—Missing on the Gulf Coast is suspenseful crime fiction with a distinctive protagonist.
Butts: A Backstory
Heather Radke’s cultural history of the human backside is exactly as seriously researched and as genuinely funny as that sentence implies. *Publishers Weekly* gave it a starred review and called it whip-smart, which is accurate—this is not a novelty book but a rigorous examination of why a body part unique to humans, critical to our evolution, has come to signify so much in cultural terms: sex, desire, comedy, shame, and in the specific case of women’s bodies, relentless assessment and objectification. 🎶
The historical sweep is remarkable. Radke moves from the performance halls of 19th-century London to the aerobics studios of the 1980s, from the music video set of Sir Mix-a-Lot’s “Baby Got Back” to the mountains of Arizona where humans and horses race annually in a feat of gluteal endurance. She meets evolutionary biologists who study how the butt first developed, models whose measurements defined jean sizing for millions of women, and the fitness gurus who created Buns of Steel. Each chapter is both its own satisfying essay and part of a larger argument. 🏃
The race dimension is central rather than peripheral—Radke examines how the bodies of Black women in particular have been idolized, envied, appropriated, and despised through figures including Sarah Bartmann, Josephine Baker, and Jennifer Lopez. The book is honest about the ways in which cultural obsession with certain body types has been inseparable from racism, and that honesty gives the cultural history genuine moral weight alongside its considerable wit. RadioLab’s contributing editor clearly knows how to construct a story that holds together across a wide range. 📚
Why this is essential pop culture history: A whip-smart cultural history spanning two centuries—funny, rigorous, and saying something genuinely important about bodies, race, and the stories we tell ourselves.
A prominent Sacramento businessman is killed and his wife injured in what looks like a home invasion gone wrong. Detective Emily Hunter and her partner Javier Medina take the case, and from the beginning Emily senses something off about the crime-of-opportunity theory. The dead man, it turns out, is more complicated than his public profile suggests, and the investigation quickly moves into territory that the city’s political elite would prefer stayed closed. James L’Etoile builds the procedural with real institutional tension from the first pages. 🔍
The complication that gives Emily’s character genuine depth is the simultaneous personal pressure: she’s caring for a mother with early-onset Alzheimer’s, and the constant negotiation between her professional obligations and her family responsibilities gives the procedural an emotional texture that straight crime fiction often sacrifices for plot momentum. L’Etoile handles the caregiver dimension with specificity and care—it’s a real factor in Emily’s life rather than background color. 💙
As the investigation reveals connections to gang violence and retribution beneath the veneer of a wealthy neighborhood crime, the darker forces wanting the case buried become more active and more threatening. Emily’s position becomes increasingly precarious: political pressure from above and genuine danger from below, with the truth somewhere in the middle that she has to reach without becoming the next victim. L’Etoile writes the Sacramento setting with local specificity, and the Emily Hunter series has a procedural authenticity that rewards readers who want their police fiction grounded in real investigative work. ⚖️
Why this grips you: A detective balancing a complex investigation with a mother’s Alzheimer’s care, a dead businessman with dangerous secrets, and political forces wanting the truth buried—Face of Greed is procedural crime fiction with real depth.
Roy Baumeister’s approach to evil is deliberately counterintuitive: instead of examining violence from the victim’s perspective—where most popular accounts locate themselves—he examines it from the perpetrator’s. How do ordinary people find themselves beating their spouses, murdering for gang loyalty, torturing political prisoners, betraying colleagues to secret police? The question is not rhetorical. Baumeister’s answer, developed through rigorous psychological research, is both more disturbing and more useful than the standard explanations. 🧠
The gap between how victims experience acts of violence and how perpetrators understand the same acts is the book’s central analytical tool. Perpetrators almost never see themselves as doing evil—they see themselves as responding to provocations, pursuing legitimate goals, or defending important values. This disconnect, Baumeister argues, is not a bug in human cognition but a structural feature, and understanding it is essential for anyone who wants to understand why cycles of revenge escalate rather than resolve. 🔬
The four roots of evil Baumeister identifies—egotism, idealism, high self-esteem gone wrong, and sadism—complicate the conventional wisdom in productive ways. The finding that most violence comes not from low self-esteem but from threatened high self-esteem is particularly useful and counter to most popular psychology. The implications for law, governance, and personal relationships are substantial, and Baumeister draws them out with the clarity of a researcher who has thought seriously about practical application rather than purely academic contribution. 📖
Why this matters: A rigorous psychological examination of evil from the perpetrator’s perspective—unsettling, illuminating, and essential for understanding why ordinary people do terrible things.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





