Though political reformation takes center stage, discerning readers will find a rich sprinkling of passion throughout Sen’s stories, wrought through the intense but tragic love story found in “An Unfulfilled Love,” or in “My Paradise,” where Shukumar, a family’s sole survivor of a religious riot, is able to rebuild his life by adopting a deceased friend’s daughter. There are more gentle portrayals of love’s healing power as well, in the gradual reconnection between father and son in “Remembrance,” when Amar reflects on his father’s love “taking away the anger and resentment that had been buried deep in my mind all these years.” Sen also writes starkly of religion’s power and destruction, drawing parallels in “Invisible Bond” between an affluent American man dying from colon cancer and a refugee child caught in the crosshairs of Burmese religious wars.
A yearning for equality powers these fictions, as Sen examines unsettling but critical issues, including tragedies in the Indian penal system and the far-reaching effects of Britain’s historic treatment of India. The themes are moving, and they illuminate the deeper meaning behind life’s tragedies and triumphs: “Our dreams are built around life, yet we don’t consider that the web we are creating is standing on quicksand that could collapse at any time.”
Takeaway: Striking tales of contemporary conflict, celebrating hope and equality.
Comparable Titles: Viet Thanh Nguyen’s The Refugees, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s The Thing Around Your Neck.
Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: B
Marketing copy: A
Ever an empath, Faire writes this memoir as a mindful examination of the heart and soul, and its interconnection with the divine, nature, and mystery. In his quest for Robert’s healing, Faire remains otherworldly in his careful attention to the dance between the earthly and ethereal with his lush portrayal of England’s landscape, savory descriptions of their shared meals, and exquisite taste in home interiors when they decided to leave Wimbledon and relocated to a Kent farmhouse—what they always wanted. "Our planet is the ultimate symphony of consciousness," Faire writes. Not a bird, a lamb, or a fox, escapes Faire’s attention. “Oddly, I’m not surprised to come downstairs and the man I live with is holding a bird in his hands,” Robert says.
Readers looking for traditional page-turners may find Faire’s memoir elegant but meandering, but this is precisely the book’s beauty. Faire can capture the intimacy in the mundanity of tending to sickness, sharing meals, and moving houses with his lover. A redemption of the dying-artist soul, a second chance at love, and pursuit of transcendence despite fear and shame, this memoir explores the unorthodox ways of loving, and how a conscious and mindful relationship is the ultimate relationship worth having.
Takeaway: Moving account of a couple’s second chance at a transcendent life together.
Comparable Titles: Will Schwalbe’s We Should Not Be Friends, Peter M. Nardi’s Gay Men’s Friendships.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
The story’s reverse chronology begins when time and tragedy have distanced the friends and concludes when they are in high school, relying heavily on each other for solace as they navigate their families, their futures, their budding sexual desires, and their own relationships. While readers may initially have to work to catch up with fifty years of history, the story’s backwards progression offers a gradual but compelling initiation into the group by steadily unraveling the friends’ shared experiences and uncovering the roots of their complicated bonds.
Stout also seamlessly weaves together the story's narrators as chapters alternate among the friends’ points of view (adult-Adie’s cryptic reference to an incident involving Jude’s mother’s car is eventually explained by high school-Breck). Their distinct but overlapping perspectives offer deep insight into each character and a multifaceted lens on their network of relationships, with Sebastian at its center. While he is the group’s guiding light, he is more than just a symbol, struggling with his family’s alcoholism, his sexuality, and his own mortality. Darker themes like sexual abuse, illness and death feature prominently, but they are handled with sincerity and empathy, and are balanced by Stout’s strong feel for exuberant teenage antics, plus her gentle emphasis on the hidden value of our connections.
Takeaway: Compassionate, unflinching look at deep friendships through life.
Comparable Titles: Kristin Hannah; J. Courtney Sullivan’s Commencement.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A-
Perone’s story twists into unexpected directions from there, eventually becoming a science-fiction thriller with a terrifying conclusion reminiscent of Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Throughout, though, Déjà View is attentive to character and the everyday impact of the fantastic on real lives, with engaging prose and sharp, funny dialogue. Nobody else can see these visions, so Bobby’s mother sends him to a therapist, Dr. Pann, to assist with what she believes are hallucinations brought about by hormonal changes. Though compassionate at first, Dr. Pann eventually reveals true intentions that will jolt Bobby’s life, as Perone ties the thriller elements into the everyday.
That attention to life as it’s lived, though, comes at the cost of narrative momentum, as much of the novel is dedicated to exploring the dynamics within Bobby’s friend group as the enticing mysteries percolate. Still, the climactic battle to save the fate of humanity, when it comes, is exciting and surprising, a mind-bender complete with lasers, evil scientists, and even love at first sight.
Takeaway: Character-driven sci-fi mind-bender centered on the pains of growing up.
Comparable Titles: Rae Carson’s Any Sign of Life, Katherine Paterson’s Bridge to Terabithia.
Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
Of course, a woman in Victorian England venturing as a writer “into the gullet of science” stirred controversy. George crafts scenes of novelist Samuel Butler upbraiding Buckley (“You are a woman of no real education”) and of Buckley’s own mother suggesting that perhaps she should write under a pseudonym. (Touchingly, Buckley’s vicar father proves awed by his daughter’s correspondence with Darwin.) Throughout, George weaves history, fiction, and science into a compelling narrative, excerpting the real Buckley’s books and letters, while exploring her relationships (she’s fallen for an older, married doctor) and enthusiasm (her interest in spiritualism brings her to a marvelously described séance with a personal connection).
The novel’s drama, though, tends to be heady, the story of a woman engaging with ideas that are shaking the world—and finding a way to explicate and even in some ways clarify them. Buckley’s writings emphasize, as the initial question suggests, the collaborative aspects of natural selection. George, too, excels at illumination, conjuring Buckleys life in polished, appealing prose that moves quickly while honoring the Victorians’ plummy verbosity. Extensive backmatter is engaging. Readers who love science and trailblazing women will revel.
Takeaway:Stimulating novel of the woman who explained Darwin to the world.
Comparable Titles: Tracy Chevalier’s Remarkable Creatures, Sara Sheridan’s The Fair Botanists.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: A-
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
The result: a life in sales focused on connections, authenticity, and meeting clients’ needs—helping them rather than just selling to them. Karmic Selling is ultimately about building trust, cultivating long-lasting business/client relationships, and "meeting people where they are…[and] about adapting to their style in a way that makes them comfortable." To that end, Gwizdak offers practical tips and guidance, covering the hard and soft follow up, how to demonstrate trust and credibility, steps to ensure that business conversations “matter,” and what to do when facing problems like "alligator arms” (which describes a prospect’s increasing reluctance the closer they get to signing).
Sharing personal anecdotes, case studies, much actionable advice, and reflective exercises guiding readers to understand their own powers, Karmic Selling is an inviting guide to closing the deal and building lasting partnerships. Readers who enjoy personable yet informative business guides will find inspiration and nuts-and-bolts know-how here.
Takeaway: Insightful guide to authentic connections and building trust in sales.
Comparable Titles: Colleen Stanley's Emotional Intelligence for Sales Success, Jeff Shore's Follow Up and Close the Sale.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
In the midst of Ellie’s outbursts, meltdowns, and “complete chaos,” Kerswell shares her empathy, her love, her patience, her frustration, and her grief. “I can't imagine what it must be like to spend one's life in a body and mind that play tricks on you all day, every day," Kerswell writes. Kerswell reflects with power on her role as a mother, her relationship with her husband, and more, though such thoughtfulness must come second to navigating the everyday challenges Ellie faces at school, in their neighborhood, and at hospital appointments.
This gripping memoir illuminates its subject with courage and clarity, documenting the day-to-day life of mother and daughter’s journey, from Ellie’s birth to her preteen years. Kerswell’s scenecraft and storytelling are piercing, but it’s her frankness that makes this book a triumph—and likely to give relief to parents and caregivers, as she addresses self-doubt, guilt, her own coping methods, the persistent feeling of having done something wrong, and what it takes to try “to forgive myself for drifting so far from who I used to be.”
Takeaway: Unforgettable memoir of a mother’s life with a child with profound autism.
Comparable Titles: Kate Swenson'sForever Boy, William Harrington's Just There.
Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
Filled with adventure, heroic leading characters, budding romances, and a spirit of play that never undercuts the narrative’s stakes, this spirited supernatural caper follows an eclectic band of offbeat adolescents into the ominous world of magic, monsters (wraiths, shades, vampires), and the kind of spooky magic that’s as fun as it is shiver-inducing: here’s a creepy castle whose scale the heroes can’t fathom, an inn of lost souls, and a tome untouched by human hands for millennia. The reluctant hero and his friends—some of whom don’t know the extent of the danger they face—must agree to "be magical guinea pigs" for the Bureau of Supernatural Investigations (BSI), as part of a top-secret mission whose secrets even they are not privy to.
With exciting twists and turns, sharp-witted characters whose jokes pepper the pages, and immersive imagery and world-building, Gracely offers the exciting thrill ride full of intrigue and mystery that readers hope for from the genre. Continually inventive, this fast-paced, action-packed sequel will keep young readers entertained until a satisfying conclusion that tests its heroes, a relatable and wholly unique band of the unique and socially awkward who throughout display bravery, moral fiber, and a bit of recklessness.
Takeaway:Delightful offbeat fantasy of unlikely heroes and inventive magic.
Comparable Titles: Rainbow Rowell’s Carry On, Chris Rylander’s Epic Series of Failures series.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
Adi’s school is as extraordinary as it is instructional, and Luzina’s kaleidoscopic illustrations are a perfect fit for the animals’ varied personalities. Reginald the chameleon, an escape artist in his own right, is drawn with oodles of character (and the star of a multi-page seek and find), while other notables are pictured enjoying their daily routines alongside interesting scientific facts—like Squishy, a sulcata tortoise, who can live longer than a century, or a wealth of octopuses, including a “flapjack” variety too big for a school aquarium but still fun to learn about. Equally immersive are the kids’ experiences at Adi’s school, including an annual underwater dive trip.
Just as the animal tidbits are a delight, the story’s pictures are a feast for the eyes—an inviting montage of delightful creatures and diverse characters, all working together in a gentle, unhurried rhythm. The students obviously have their work cut out for them, between refilling aquarium tanks and completing animal health checks, but the story portrays learning as an exciting journey that will inspire readers of any age. Lyford closes with real photos of animals from Adi’s school, and backmatter includes an entertaining animal scavenger hunt that younger readers will adore. This is a treat.
Takeaway: A kaleidoscopic animal journey overflowing with science and fun.
Comparable Titles: Laura Gehl’s Odd Beasts, Debra Kempf Shumaker’s Freaky, Funky Fish.
Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
With lessons on the importance of friendships and companionship with those who truly know you, about being courageous and true to your truest self, and being grateful for the good things and people in your life, Fiercely Joyful is a first-hand account of learning how to thrive and be comfortable in your own skin even in the face of adversity and pain. Durkins shares “11 Keys to Living Authentically & Creating a Life You Love” and the steps she took to heal from her past and fully live in the present by learning forgiveness, opening her heart to those around her by being true to herself, and giving with a kind heart and loving spirit.
From facing and understanding one’s self to giving it a polish to present it most powerfully, Fiercely Joyful lays out clear steps to playing to one's strengths (“understanding our superpowers,” as Durkins puts it) and being confident and intentional with who you are and how you connect with others. Fans of motivational memoirs with clear, upbeat, pragmatic life lessons will enjoy this impactful self-help book.
Takeaway: Rousing self-help guide to being your best and truest self.
Comparable Titles: Stephen Joseph's Authentic, Jennifer Hunt's Unlocking Your Authentic Self.
Production grades
Cover: B
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
With hard-won insight, Dirkby weaves together a resonant story of mental health, family, and learning to accept oneself and that which cannot be controlled. Through both the uncertain gaze of Sarah’s childhood and the clarifying reflections of later life, as Sarah deals with romance and making a living, Dirkby immerses readers in her mind and life. Constantly being misdiagnosed as having post traumatic stress disorder from her childhood experiences, the adult Sarah often finds herself facing her mind alone, depressed and afraid. Dirkby's characters feel true, as do their experiences, which resonate with telling detail, not just about schizophrenia and anosognosia—the condition of being unaware of one’s psychiatric condition—but the worlds of music and dance.
"The stigma that a mentally ill person is entirely to blame for anything going wrong in their life and that they are dangerous to know is ubiquitous but rarely accurate," Sarah states. The Overlife is a touching story that, with vivid detail and welcome frankness, shreds such misapprehensions throughout its often heartbreaking story of family, unconditional love, forgiveness, and unquiet minds. During its many bleak or tense moments, the book’s very existence offers a feeling of hope.
Takeaway: Revealing novel steeping readers in the experience of mental illness.
Comparable Titles: Arnhild Lauveng’s A Road Back from Schizophrenia, Han Nolan’s Crazy.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
The world of Birpus and Bulbus, while imaginative and original, is presented with little exposition, with readers’ understanding of what exactly the original “Tree-Wees'' are coming from the illustrations and from the many magical and delicious foods the Tree-Wees love to eat—weenut toast, worm waffles, pootie fruits, etc. Discovering new fantastical creatures that don’t correspond to the traditional ones is fun and encourages imaginative reading. Still, since the rules of this world and culture aren’t particularly clear, readers don’t really have enough information to understand the Tree-Wees’s response to the dragon: have they been trained to believe dragons will eat them, or are they just making an assumption about a strange creature?
Indre Ta’s muted and earthy color palette for the digital illustrations helps to flesh out the world of the Tree-Wees and the Forest of Fine Repute. In fact, the illustrations and character design work are the strongest part of the book, giving inviting and often comic life to funny words and names that don’t on their own conjure anything specific. The Tree-Wees’ village, in particular, is a delight. Despite its sparse worldbuilding, The Adventures of Birpus & Bulbus will certainly find an audience with imaginative adventurers unafraid to face down sour milk dragons and any other unlikely friends they may find along the way.
Takeaway: Brothers discover looks may be deceiving in the forest.
Comparable Titles: Scott Rothman’s Attack of the Underwear Dragon, Christopher Denise’s Knight Owl.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A-
Illustrations: A-
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A
From the first page, talking animals alert the reader that this is no ordinary drama. Personified nature has a voice and adds an allegorical element. Even an oak tree makes itself known by literally knocking sense into Ghost. Hints of mystery surround the environment: why do characters experience unhappiness when standing near the wall? Why does Ghost wane in and out of view? Conversations among the three characters help each find greater purpose in their lives. But nothing can help Ghost reach afterlife peace unless he at last digs into his painful past.
Contrast’s compact length and conversational prose make it readable and keep the pace rigorous despite its searching, sometimes heady qualities, especially lengthy flashbacks and frequent passages of inner dialogue. Plot here is subordinate to characters’ thoughtful exploration of personal philosophies—Contrast is very much a novel of the mind, though Coussement never over-intellectualizes the topics. And even though mortality is a major theme of the book, everyday humor keeps the mood light. “An existential crisis is much more useful when you actually exist,” one character muses. Coussement’s style allows readers to feel like they are hanging out with familiar friends, somewhere between this world and the beyond.
Takeaway: Thoughtful, surprising existential adventure between life and death.
Comparable Titles: Pik-Shuen Fung’s Ghost Forest, Michael Thompson’s How to Be Remembered..
Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
Eklof digs deep into the Puritanical roots of the U.S., like fulminations against masturbation from preachers like 19th century preacher Sylvester Graham, and into the harrowing histories of slavery, Reconstruction, and more, to make the case that “obsessively prudish morality … made blacks the targets of particularly fearful prejudice.” In this, his project echoes one of its sources, the 1944 report by Gunnar Myrdal titled An American Dilemma, which noted, among other hard truths, “a close relation between lynching and thwarted sexual urges.”
Like Myrdal, Eklof is Swedish, and brings an intimate outsider’s view to his survey, writing with an unsparing directness about hatred, haters, and their enablers. “It was becoming increasingly difficult to be oblivious and unconcerned,” he writes, after describing the acquittal of Emmett Till’s murderers, one of many 1960s incidents examined at length in the book’s back half, an exhaustive, beat-by-beat examination of the Civil Rights Era. There’s not much here covering the complexities of the last fifty years, or mass incarceration and contemporary efforts to suppress history, though the book stands as a clear-eyed, upsetting work of moral integrity.
Takeaway: Outraged, deeply researched history of the roots of American racism.
Comparable Titles: Ibram X. Kendi’s Stamped from the Beginning, Anne Warfield Rawls and Waverly Duck’s Tacit Racism.
Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A-
As Thorn and Bright discover, of course, their mission will reveal even more deadly secrets than were hinted at in their briefing, plus some surprisingly personal ones. With their lives at risk from threats known and mysterious, this action-packed thriller offers up suspense and surprising twists and turns as the couple delves behind enemy lines—and Dyer steeps readers in this impossibly tense moment in French and Algerian history with an eye for culture, language, and vivid descriptions. Illuminating the darkest shadows of complex alliances, Dyer immerses readers in daring infiltrations, military secrets, dirty politics, and the unexpected.
Crisply told, alive with intrigue and telling detail, Trust No One will please espionage fans who favor historical accuracy but also a ripping yarn. The couple’s dialogue imbues the suspense with welcome warmth, and a cliffhanger will keep fans of the series eagerly awaiting the next installment of Thorn's story.
Takeaway: Gripping WWII espionage thriller rich in history and suspense.
Comparable Titles: Samuel Marquis, Alan Furst.
Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A
Written in rhymed quatrains, the fifth installment in Tatchell’s series has a lyrical flow engaging for kids and adults alike, but in addition to style, the author also seamlessly fills the lines with an impressive amount of facts about the animals featured. For example, the plot centers on the cotton-top tamarin’s grooming behavior, which is common among this species and other primates, and Tatchell also makes mention of the cotton-top tamarin’s complex language: “With thirty-eight different sounds // they chirp and squeal and squeak.” With the support of Ivan Sulima’s textured, vibrant illustrations, Tatchell’s narrative strikes a balance between effective storytelling and educational enrichment.
The charming illustrations, blending grand cartoonish expressiveness with eye-pleasing polish suggesting the best of Pixar, also maintain the animals’ anatomy and educate readers visually. Toucan’s beak jumps off the page, and finer details, like sloth’s fur, snails climbing on tree branches, and flowers blooming on almost every page, serve to depict the jungle as a home radiating with life and abundance. Children passionate about animals, and specifically endangered ones, will learn about the cotton-top tamarin and the importance of respecting differences between people, between animals, and hair-dos.
Takeaway: Delightful story of a tamarin’s vow to fix the hair of everyone in the jungle.
Comparable Titles: Justin Anderson’s Snow Leopard: Ghost of the Mountains, and Chelsea Clinton’s Don’t Let Them Disappear.
Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: B
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A