Murphy Drummer was jinxed from birth with mystifying bad luck—the kind that isn’t simply unfortunate but actively, creatively catastrophic in ways that have kept him confined to his backyard since childhood to spare the surrounding world from the collateral damage. He has compensated by becoming the master of a thousand hobbies, which is one solution to the problem of a life that cannot safely expand beyond its perimeter. Benjamin Laskin builds the premise with the commitment to absurdist logic that humorous literary fiction requires to function—the rules have to be internally consistent for the comedy to land. 🍀
The collision course with Joy Daley—an incurable optimist who has always remembered to thank her lucky stars—is the novel’s central engine, and Laskin plays the encounter between maximum bad luck and maximum good luck with genuine comic invention. The topsy-turvy effects on everyone in their orbit give the story a cast of secondary characters whose lives are upended in various directions depending on whether Murphy’s jinx or Joy’s optimism is currently winning the local probability battle. 😂
The literary dimension sits comfortably alongside the humor—Laskin is interested in what Murphy’s situation reveals about identity, limitation, and the relationship between external circumstances and internal character. The closing observation that Murphy’s victims first question who he is before eventually questioning who they aren’t gives the novel its moral dimension without making it heavy-handed. For readers who want their comedic fiction to have genuine substance underneath the jokes, Murphy’s Luck delivers on both levels. ✨
Why this delights: A man so catastrophically unlucky he hasn’t left his backyard in years, an incurable optimist on a collision course with him, and mayhem for everyone in their orbit—Murphy’s Luck is humorous literary fiction with genuine wit and heart.
When her younger brother’s name is drawn in the lottery for life-long service in the most dangerous army in the kingdoms—and she knows her ruthless stepfather arranged it—she doesn’t deliberate long. She takes the binding spell on herself, cuts her hair, and walks through the fae ring to the Black Tower in her brother’s place. Women are forbidden in the Black Tower, which means discovery means death, which means staying invisible and unremarkable in the most dangerous environment she has ever entered. Tessa Cole opens the Desperate Disguise series with a premise that stacks urgency on urgency from the first page. 🏰
The immediate disaster of walking through the fae ring at night—drawing shadow monsters and barely surviving—establishes that the deception is not going to be quietly maintained. Every guardsman is now watching her, and the hostility of the Black Tower’s existing soldiers gives the ongoing tension a specific social texture beyond the supernatural threats. Cole handles the gender-disguise setup with the propulsive pacing that romantasy readers come for rather than dwelling on the mechanics of concealment. ⚔️
The cursed ability to sense impending death gives the protagonist an unusual relationship with danger—she knows when it’s coming, which makes the moments when she cannot prevent it particularly devastating. The ability also gives her investigative access to threats that no conventional guard would have, which Tessa Cole uses to integrate the supernatural element into the plot rather than treating it as decorative. The Desperate Disguise series has built strong readership momentum, and this first volume demonstrates why. 🌙
Why this grips you: A woman disguised as her brother in the most dangerous army in the kingdoms, shadow monsters on day one, and an ability to sense death that makes everything worse—Lies Within the Darkest Tower is romantasy with genuine momentum.
After a decade of bullying, the Alpha Heir discovers she’s his fated mate—and his response is to reject her publicly and then hunt her down when she tries to leave. She flees anyway. He gives chase. Death, as it turns out, isn’t the end—the afterlife is considerably more fiery than anticipated, but she has been surviving hostile environments her whole life, and literal Hell is at least a change of scenery. Vasilisa Drake opens the Shifted Fates series with the particular energy of a heroine who has been pushed past every limit and is done being pushed. 🔥
The underworld setting gives the second act genuine creative freedom—minotaurs, murderous mermaids, and an abandoned castle inhabited by the most dangerous creature in the realm are considerably more interesting obstacles than the pack politics that drove the first act. The dangerous creature who agrees to train her in exchange for her continued presence in his castle gives the romance its central tension: someone genuinely threatening who is, nonetheless, protecting her. Drake handles the power dynamic with the specific attention that this subgenre requires. 🌙
The enemies-to-lovers arc operates on multiple levels simultaneously—the heroine’s relationship to the Alpha Heir who killed her, her relationship to the underworld trainer who won’t let her leave, and her relationship to her own capacity for strength in a world that has only ever demanded her weakness. Drake keeps all three threads active throughout the novel, which gives the series opener more structural complexity than the premise might initially suggest. The Shifted Fates readership is devoted and substantial. ⚔️
Why this pulls you under: Killed by her fated mate, resurrected in Hell, trained by the underworld’s most dangerous creature—Forsaken Mate is paranormal enemies-to-lovers romance with genuine fire.
The Second Deadly Sin
A bear hunt across the wilderness of Northern Sweden ends with a grisly discovery that the hunters were not prepared for. Across in Kurravaara, a woman is murdered with frenzied brutality—crude abuse scrawled above her bloodied bed, her young grandson vanished. The connection between these two events is something only Rebecka Martinsson can see, and Åsa Larsson deploys the isolation and cold of the Swedish Arctic as both atmosphere and active plot element throughout. The Rebecka Martinsson series is among the finest in Scandinavian crime fiction, and this installment is one of its most atmospheric. 🐻
The complication that makes the investigation personal rather than procedural is Rebecka’s removal from the case—dropped by a jealous rival, she must pursue what she knows alone, without institutional support, against a killer who has already demonstrated an appetite for extreme violence against the vulnerable. Larsson handles the isolation of Rebecka’s position with real psychological precision, and the northern Swedish community she navigates has the specific social texture that distinguishes the best Scandinavian crime from generic thriller territory. ❄️
The crime that festers after a hundred years on ice—the historical dimension that Larsson reveals to be at the root of the present violence—gives the novel the layered structure that her work characteristically delivers. The Arctic landscape is rendered with the authority of someone who understands the region’s specific relationship between geography, community, and the long memory of violence. Larsson’s prose, even in translation, has a distinctive quality that makes the Martinsson series essential reading for the genre. 🔍
Why this chills you: A bear hunt’s grisly discovery, a frenzied murder, a missing child, and a hundred-year-old crime connecting them all—The Second Deadly Sin is Scandinavian crime fiction at its most atmospheric and most haunting.
Liza Miller never expected anyone to want the story of her life—the years she spent posing as a millennial to restart her career—but *Younger* became a bestselling novel, and now her old friend Kelsey wants to adapt it for television. On the eve of her fiftieth birthday, Liza finds herself heading to Los Angeles to write the pilot, which means leaving behind Josh, her pregnant daughter, and her fiercely loyal best friend Maggie in New York. Pamela Redmond continues the *Younger* universe with the particular pleasures of a sequel that deepens rather than repeats. 🌟
The Hollywood dimension gives this installment a new social world to navigate—writers’ rooms, studio notes, the intoxicating pull of a life in which everything is possible and nothing is quite real. Hugo Fielding, the charming British actor whose professional chemistry with Liza blurs toward something else, provides the romantic complication that makes the novel more than a fish-out-of-water Hollywood story. Redmond handles the on-again off-again Josh situation with the honesty of a writer who understands that real relationships don’t resolve cleanly. 💕
The New York vs. Los Angeles tension gives *Older* its structural axis—everything Liza has built on one coast against everything she might build on another, with the television show as both opportunity and catalyst. The question of what she truly wants, and who, is given enough genuine complexity that the answer doesn’t feel predetermined. For readers who loved *Younger* or the television series it inspired, this continuation is a warm and satisfying return to Liza’s world. 🎬
Why this draws you in: A fifty-something woman whose life story became a TV show, Hollywood beckoning, and a choice between the life she built and the one she might still have—Older is warm, funny, and genuinely human.
Why do meerkats care for one another’s offspring? Why do babbler birds in the Kalahari form colonies where only a single pair breeds? How do reef-dwelling fish punish each other for harming members of other species? Nichola Raihani’s investigation into the evolutionary origins of cooperation begins with these questions and builds toward a fundamental insight: cooperation is not an anomaly in the competitive Darwinian world but the very mechanism by which life became complex in the first place. The biologist’s precision of her argument gives the popular science book genuine intellectual substance. 🦎
Raihani’s counterintuitive central finding is that the animals whose cooperative behavior most resembles ours tend not to be other apes—our nearest relatives—but birds, fish, and insects on far more distant branches of the evolutionary tree. The convergent evolution of similar cooperative strategies across wildly different species tells us something important: the problems that cooperation solves are universal enough that multiple independent evolutionary lineages arrived at similar solutions. This insight reframes the question of what makes human cooperation distinctive. 🐦
The human application of the evolutionary framework gives the book its broader relevance—why we cooperate, when we defect, why we punish free-riders even at cost to ourselves, and what the evolutionary logic of our social instincts reveals about the conditions under which cooperation thrives or breaks down. Raihani writes for general readers without sacrificing the rigor of the underlying biology, which is the difficult balance that the best popular science achieves. 🌍
Why this illuminates: A biologist’s account of how cooperation shaped all life on Earth—and what meerkats, reef fish, and babbler birds reveal about why humans cooperate the way we do.
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