The Dahlia Suite by Carinn Jade

Rating: * (1/5)

Published: Atria Books, July 2026

Format: ARC

Genre: Mystery

Source: Publisher

I was initially drawn to this book because of the cover, the title, the locale, and because one of the main characters was a writer.  The story alternates between three women’s first person perspectives.  Paige is hoping for some inspiration for her book while she’s staying at the exclusive Beck Island resort of Suenos.  Actress Lindsay Law is hiding out there after a devastating Oscar loss.  The third character is the resort’s concierge, Gabby.  Oh, and Beck Island used to be owned by Oscar-winning actress Mara Morgan who tragically died when her house burned down.

Get ready for a hot mess.  I knew as soon as they started referencing Zodiac signs and had psychic readings done that this was going to be a bit ridiculous.  I had no idea how bad it was going to be (“divine feminine power,” eyeroll).  Mediums and tarot cards aside, the plot holes and inconsistencies were infuriating.  The way the characters interacted was frustrating, too.  One chapter they are encouraging and empowering each other, the next they are backstabbing and condescending, then they’re besties again. 

If this had been a straightforward murder mystery in a beautiful location, it would have been successful.  But Jade tried incorporating too many elements, including the supernatural mumbo jumbo, and the storytelling was just convoluted and bad.  I literally kept looking up from reading to declare, “This is so stupid.” 

I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher.

When I Kill You by B.A. Paris

Rating: **** (4/5)

Published: St. Martin’s Press, February 2026

Format: ARC

Genre: Mystery

Source: Publisher

Nell Masters is an unreliable narrator.  15 years previously, she was Elle Nugent.  Elle witnessed a woman getting in a stranger’s car and the next day that woman was found murdered.  As a potential witness, Elle is sure she identified the stranger and that he is the woman’s killer.  Taking maters into her own hands, her actions have devastating consequences, so devastating that she has to change her name and assume a new identity.

Nell is convinced her past is back to haunt her and that someone who knows who she was is stalking her.  Her paranoia borders on delusional, and the unassuming life she thought she created starts to crack.  But is Nell really being targeted, or is she just being obsessive?

I liked how the first half alternated between Then and Now to establish Elle/Nell’s unreliability.  She becomes suspicious of everyone in her small social circle, even her boyfriend Alex.  When she learns that Alex’s last two relationships ended in tragedy, she becomes even more paranoid and we can’t entirely trust her rationality.  I enjoy British domestic thrillers and though Elle/Nell’s behavior is sometimes exasperating, it was overall entertaining.

I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher.

Also by B.A. Paris:

The New Neighbors by Claire Douglas

Rating: **** (4/5)

Published: Harper Perennial, February 2026

Format: ARC

Genre: Mystery

Source: Publisher

I love a good British domestic thriller and this was my first encounter with Douglass. I was not disappointed.  She sucked me in to the multilayered story of Lena and her growing suspicion of her new neighbors, the Morgans.  Marielle and Henry Morgan are just a bit too polished and when Lena overhears a conversation between them that she thinks is “sus,” everything they do going forward arouses even more distrust. 

Yes, Lena is a flawed and nosey character with too much time on her hands to snoop on the Morgans.  With her estranged husband having moved out and her teenage son busy with college courses, she takes it upon herself to learn more about the Morgans and the lies she thinks they’re telling. It wasn’t super suspenseful, but it was entertaining to see how wrong Lena was in some aspects and how right she was in others.  I enjoyed how the mystery incorporated Lena’s past as a midwife-in-training and how all the threads tied together in the end. 

I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher.

1491 by Charles C. Mann

Subtitle: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus

Rating: **** (4/5)

Published: Vintage, 2005

Format: Trade Paperback

Genre: Nonfiction

Source: Personal Collection

I’m not particularly a connoisseur of American history, but I did appreciate learning about the pre-Columbian Americas.  Considering how many different cultures and communities evolved on the two continents, Mann makes the vast scope of this history accessible.  I was impressed by how sophisticated these societies were and how they shaped the land to their benefit.  From Peru to Bolivia, the Yucatan to Atlantic Northeast, I was fascinated to see how the people lived before they were exposed to the disease and degradation of European explorers.  This is far beyond anything I ever learned from my text books!

Also by Charles C. Mann:  1493 

The Fair Weather Friend by Jessie Garcia

Rating: *** (3/5)

Published: St. Martin’s Press, January 2026

Format: ARC

Genre: Mystery

Source: Publisher

The city of Detroit adores their channel 9 meteorologist Faith Richards.  Her coworkers, however, not so much.  Her charming on camera persona certainly clashes with her diva antics in the studio and when she’s found murdered, Detroit is shocked, but not everyone is surprised.

Told from multiple perspectives, we can see how the weekend meteorologist, a station intern (and her fangirl aunt), a creepy stalker, and others perceived her.  I had a pretty good idea that Faith’s death was not as straightforward as we were led to believe.  Then again, how straightforward is being strangled in your car?  And of course, you have the annoying characters who think they can solve a murder investigation better than the police.  Despite the clunky dialogue and a few cliché plot points, it was a decent domestic mystery with a predictable twist.

I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher.

Tombland by C.J. Sansom

Rating: **** (4/5)

Published: Mulholland Books, 2018

Format: Trade Paperback

Genre: Historical Fiction

Source: Personal Collection

Matthew Shardlake is back in what I thought would be a Tudor-era murder mystery.  But historical events intervene and put Matthew and his compatriots in the greatest dangers they have yet faced.  Initially, Matthew is summoned by Lady Elizabeth to investigate the murder of a distant Boleyn cousin’s wife.  When they get to Norfolk and start making inquiries into the lady’s death, they are swept up in a rebellion.

This is a relatively unheard-of episode of Tudor history that I was previously unfamiliar with.  During Edward VI’s minority reign, the head of his council, his uncle Duke of Somerset Edward Seymour, promises reform for landowners who are illegally enclosing sheep pastures and evicting their poor tenants.  When these lower classes revolt against Somerset’s inaction despite his guarantees, Matthew, Nicholas, and Jack are swept up in the hysteria.  They are taken into the rebels’ camp to provide legal guidance to their leader who is putting captured gentlemen to trial in the name of the king and Protector.  What follows is not concession, but a series of horrible battles. 

I’m not going to lie, it was a long, demanding book, but incredibly detailed and involved, considering Matthew is in the thick of things.  Even as he is entrenched with the rebels, he pursues the mystery of the true murderer.  I was really pleased with how things turned out for Matthew, but I am disappointed this will be the last of the Shardlake books upon Sansom’s death.  I am curious how Matthew’s life will fare beyond the rebellion now that he is much changed.

Also by C.J. Sansom:

The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich by William L. Shirer

Subtitle: A History of Nazi Germany

Rating: **** (4/5)

Published: Simon & Schuster, 1960

Format: Hardcover

Genre: Nonfiction

Source: Personal Collection

It took me over a year to finish it, but I finally got through the most comprehensive book of the Nazi regime ever written.  I learned more about the Rise than anything else and took the most notes about the pre-war ascent of Hitler and his cronies.  I have a better understanding about how strategic and patient Hitler had been to achieve his unfathomable goals.  But it was a slog, with nearly 300 pages of posturing for power before achieving totalitarian leadership. 

The most successful part of this narrative was how Shirer outlined the specific chains of events that had to occur so precisely for Nazi success.  Additionally, I was previously unaware of how many missed opportunities there were to avoid Hitler’s dominance, war, and mass murder.

I don’t need to summarize the bulk of this behemoth, but I do feel quite proud of having tackled it! It was challenging, it was incredibly detailed, and it was an accomplishment…

Queen Esther by John Irving

Rating: *** (3/5)

Published: Simon & Schuster, November 2025

Format: Hardcover

Genre: Fiction

Source: Personal Collection

As much as I adore Irving, I was mildly disappointed in Queen Esther.  It is not a prequel to Cider House Rules.  Dr. Larch is merely a vehicle in which our titular character is delivered to the Winslow family to be a nanny for their youngest daughter, Honor.  Esther isn’t even our main character – the story primarily focuses on Jimmy Winslow and the complexities of his origin.  Jimmy is Esther’s son, and though she gave birth to him, she gives him to adult Honor to raise and skedaddles to Israel to fulfill her obligations to her Jewish heritage.

The first part of the book was standard Irving hilarity and I loved getting to know the Winslows and Esther’s backstory as an orphan in Dr. Larch’s institution.  When Jimmy is in college, he spends a year abroad in Vienna, and that is the bulk of the book.  We meet his roommates and an array of other characters he encounters in the city.  They spend most of their time pondering who Jimmy should knock up so he can be exempt from the Viet Nam draft.  Not much happens for a couple hundred pages and it’s not as charmingly anecdotal as Irving’s other novels.

When he returns to the States, the rest of Jimmy’s life is quickly summarized in the last few chapters. I thought it was rather anticlimactic and lacked the clever Irving-esque punchlines I have come to expect.  I never thought Irving could let me down, and as much as I liked his characters, I didn’t love the story.

Also by John Irving:

Best Offer Wins by Marisa Kashino

Rating: **** (4/5)

Published: Celadon Books, November 2025

Format: ARC

Genre: Mystery

Source: Publisher

Margo Miyake and her husband Ian have been stuck in a rented apartment while house hunting in the highly competitive D.C. suburbs.  She’s pushing forty and desperate to settle into her dream home so she can finally have a baby.  But losing a dozen bidding wars over the past year and a half has made Margot desperate until she learns about a perfect house in a perfect neighborhood that hasn’t yet hit the market.  Is there a chance she can persuade the sellers to accept an offer before ever listing publicly?

To say that Margo is unhinged is an understatement.  Her ruthlessness is practically super-villainous.  The whole plot was borderline ridiculous and psychotic and actually kind of fun.  It’s Gone Girl meets House Hunters in this over-the-top first-person mental meltdown.

I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher.

Where He Left Me by Nicole Baart

Rating: *** (3/5)

Published: Atria, November 2025

Format: Trade Paperback

Genre: Mystery

Source: Publisher

Professors Sadie and Felix meet-cute on the college campus where they both teach.  Not long after their whirlwind romance and marriage, they decide to take sabbatical so Felix (astronomy) can work on his brown dwarf research and Sadie (English) can write and edit her novel.  They hunker down on his family’s homestead in the Pacific Northwest.  But living in his childhood home, a cabin called Hemlock House, changes something in Felix. 

When Felix fails to return from a conference, Sadie is unnerved by her surroundings, especially when trail cams show her there is someone lurking in the woods nearby.  As the days drag on with no contact from Felix and the weather deteriorates, Sadie’s isolation is complete.  I don’t want to give too much away about how the week unfolds, but it is certainly a high-anxiety situation.

The book had good elements, especially the suspense and the atmosphere.  I didn’t click with the characters or feel emotionally vested in them.  The writing was a little too overreaching for a thriller, and that was a bit distracting to the overall plot. It was a good story, but I felt it wasn’t fully realized.

I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher.