The Animators explores a partnership through success and subsequent trials, examining how they push one another as a found family.
There are stories that entertain, and then there are stories that rearrange you. The Unmaking of June Farrow is the latter. It delivers a mesmerizing rural fantasy that proves love, legacy, and identity can defy even the laws of time.
In a genre that thrives on tension, twists, and the unsettling thrill of not knowing who to trust, A Talent for Murder offers the opposite: all the answers served up halfway through—and not enough intrigue to keep the rest hot.
A high-stakes, no-breaths-taken finale that delivers redemption, heartbreak, and triumph in equal measure—A Conjuring of Light is fantasy at its finest.
Power is seductive—but balance is essential. In this dazzling sequel to A Darker Shade of Magic, V.E. Schwab ups the stakes with a whirlwind of magic, identity, and ambition that refuses to be put down.
Like its spiritual ancestors I Know What You Did Last Summer or Scream, Riley Sager’s first thriller is a fun romp that’ll keep you entertained.
Like a pair of locomotives barreling toward one another—each whistling more desperately for the other to yield lest they cause an awesomely terrible disaster—I couldn’t look away.
A skinny novel with heavy themes of returning home and pursuing goals despite seemingly insurmountable odds—quite enjoyable.
“I thought I knew what monsters were.” Flicker in the Dark opens and then weaves a chilling tale of how the scariest monsters can be those closest to us.
At first glance, it’s a magical academic fantasy set in 1830s Oxford. By the end, it’s a furious, razor-sharp takedown of colonialism, language, and the stories we’re told to keep us compliant. Babel is R.F. Kuang’s masterwork of dark academia—ambitious, unflinching, and unforgettable.