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Our 20 Most Anticipated Books of 2024

November 27 2023
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The coming year is shaping up to be a jackpot for book lovers everywhere. Get ready to clear some shelf space, because 2024 is delivering a treasure trove of new reads and there’s a story for every kind of reader hitting the shelves. We’ve peeked behind the curtain to find the tales that are worth the hype—and the wait. So whether you’re looking to beat your reading record or just find your next great escape, our list of 2024’s most anticipated books is the perfect place to start. Grab your bookmarks; it’s going to be an exciting year.

Expiration Dates
by Rebecca Serle

Karen’s Pick: I was so excited to read Rebecca Serle’s new novel EXPIRATION DATES. I am a fan of her previous novels including ONE ITALIAN SUMMER and IN FIVE YEARS. In EXPIRATION DATES, we meet thirty-three-year-old Daphne Bell. She is waiting in a bar for a man named Jake. Daphne has not met him before; she does not know much about him but still she hopes that he will be the one. The one to win her heart, the one to be with her always, the one who will simply be her love. In her pocket she holds the reason why she believes Jake is meant for her. A piece of paper that says his name and nothing else, no expiration date. Ever since Daphne was in fifth grade, she has received pieces of paper with a name and a number. The name is for the next person she will be with, and the number tells her how long they will be together: Martin for three days in Paris, Noah for five weeks in San Francisco, Hugo for three months in LA, and Jake. What is the significance of the lack of expiration date on the paper with Jake’s name? For Daphne, each paper tells a story, her story—and she will have to look deep inside her heart to find the truth. Serle has given us another magical story of love, bravery, and hope.

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Expiration Dates
Rebecca Serle

Being single is like playing the lottery. There’s always the chance that with one piece of paper you could win it all.

From the New York Times bestselling author of In Five Years and One Italian Summer comes the romance that will define a generation.

Daphne Bell believes the universe has a plan for her. Every time she meets a new man, she receives a slip of paper with his name and a number on it—the exact amount of time they will be together. The papers told her she’d spend three days with Martin in Paris; five weeks with Noah in San Francisco; and three months with Hugo, her ex-boyfriend turned best friend. Daphne has been receiving the numbered papers for over twenty years, always wondering when there might be one without an expiration. Finally, the night of a blind date at her favorite Los Angeles restaurant, there’s only a name: Jake.

But as Jake and Daphne’s story unfolds, Daphne finds herself doubting the paper’s prediction, and wrestling with what it means to be both committed and truthful. Because Daphne knows things Jake doesn’t, information that—if he found out—would break his heart.

Told with her signature warmth and insight into matters of the heart, Rebecca Serle has finally set her sights on romantic love. The result is a gripping, emotional, passionate, and (yes) heartbreaking novel about what it means to be single, what it means to find love, and ultimately how we define each of them for ourselves. Expiration Dates is the one fans have been waiting for.

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Interesting Facts about Space
by Emily Austin

Holly’s Pick: Emily Austin sucked me in with her debut novel, EVERYONE IN THIS ROOM WILL SOMEDAY BE DEAD, which is why I am so excited for the publication of her next book, INTERSTING FACTS ABOUT SPACE. This novel, publishing in late January, is packed with Austin’s signature dark humor and charm. The main character, Enid, is obsessed with space but terrified of bald men. When the irrational idea enters Enid’s mind that her bald neighbor is stalking her, Enid is consumed with paranoia. It doesn’t help that she spends spare time binging true crime podcasts. As Enid grapples with her growing fear, she is also navigating the dating world and forging a new relationship with her estranged half sisters after the death of her absent father. INTERSTING FACTS ABOUT SPACE reminds readers that we are more than obsessions and fear, and how humanly beautiful it is to figure out one’s own mind.

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Interesting Facts about Space
Emily Austin

A fast-paced, hilarious, and ultimately hopeful novel for anyone who has ever worried they might be a terrible person—from the bestselling author of Everyone in This Room Will Someday Be Dead.

Enid is obsessed with space. She can tell you all about black holes and their ability to spaghettify you without batting an eye in fear. Her one major phobia? Bald men. But she tries to keep that one under wraps. When she’s not listening to her favorite true crime podcasts on a loop, she’s serially dating a rotation of women from dating apps. At the same time, she’s trying to forge a new relationship with her estranged half-sisters after the death of her absent father. When she unwittingly plunges into her first serious romantic entanglement, Enid starts to believe that someone is following her.

As her paranoia spirals out of control, Enid must contend with her mounting suspicion that something is seriously wrong with her. Because at the end of the day there’s only one person she can’t outrun—herself.

Brimming with quirky humor, charm, and heart, Interesting Facts about Space effortlessly shows us the power of revealing our secret shames, the most beautifully human parts of us all.

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Our 20 Most Anticipated Books of 2024

By Off the Shelf Staff | November 27, 2023

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The Other Valley
by Scott Alexander Howard

Jordyn’s Pick: If you’ve been waiting for a new dystopian novel and are looking for some light time travel, THE OTHER VALLEY is exactly what you need. In THE OTHER VALLEY, people can apply to travel between their valley and a neighboring one that exists twenty years earlier to visit loved ones who have passed. Of course, things get complicated when our main character Odile recognizes some visitors to her valley and realizes it means her classmate is about to die. What follows is a captivating story of identity, responsibility, and the cost of making a choice.

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The Other Valley
Scott Alexander Howard

For fans of David Mitchell, Ruth Ozeki, and Kazuo Ishiguro, an elegant and exhilarating literary speculative novel about an isolated town neighbored by its own past and future, and a young girl who spots two elderly visitors from across the border: the grieving parents of the boy she loves.

Sixteen-year-old Odile is an awkward, quiet girl vying for a coveted seat on the Conseil. If she earns the position, she’ll decide who may cross her town’s heavily guarded borders. On the other side, it’s the same valley, the same town. Except to the east, the town is twenty years ahead in time. To the west, it’s twenty years behind. The towns repeat in an endless sequence across the wilderness.

When Odile recognizes two visitors she wasn’t supposed to see, she realizes that the parents of her friend Edme have been escorted across the border from the future, on a mourning tour, to view their son while he’s still alive in Odile’s present.

Edme––who is brilliant, funny, and the only person to truly see Odile––is about to die. Sworn to secrecy in order to preserve the timeline, Odile now becomes the Conseil’s top candidate. Yet she finds herself drawing closer to the doomed boy, imperiling her entire future.

A breathlessly moving “unique take on the intersection of fate and free will” (Nikki Erlick, author of The Measure), The Other Valley is “a stellar debut, full of heartbreak and hope wrapped up in gorgeous prose” (Christina Dalcher, author of Vox).

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The Ministry of Time
by Kaliane Bradley

Heather’s Pick #1: Reading THE MINISTRY OF TIME was a foregone conclusion the instant I learned it mixed time-travel romance with spy-thriller shenanigans and cultural criticism. And having gotten my hands on an early copy, I can confirm Kaliane Bradley’s genre-bending debut novel is as compelling as it sounds. Set in a near future where time travel is being tested, THE MINISTRY OF TIME is the story of a government agent, whom we know only by her job title as a “bridge,” and her charge, a Victorian-era explorer, Commander Graham Gore. The two live together so that Gore’s bridge can help him adjust to modern life, except their feelings don’t stay purely professional. As if that weren’t messy enough, the pair begin to realize the time-travel experiment they’re participating in may not be as altruistic in intent as they were led to believe . . .  

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The Ministry of Time
Kaliane Bradley

A time travel romance, a speculative spy thriller, a workplace comedy, and an ingeniously constructed exploration of the nature of truth and power and the potential for love to change it all: Welcome to The Ministry of Time, the exhilarating debut novel by Kaliane Bradley.

In the near future, a civil servant is offered the salary of her dreams and is, shortly afterward, told what project she’ll be working on. A recently established government ministry is gathering “expats” from across history to establish whether time travel is feasible—for the body, but also for the fabric of space-time.

She is tasked with working as a “bridge”: living with, assisting, and monitoring the expat known as “1847” or Commander Graham Gore. As far as history is concerned, Commander Gore died on Sir John Franklin’s doomed 1845 expedition to the Arctic, so he’s a little disoriented to be living with an unmarried woman who regularly shows her calves, surrounded by outlandish concepts such as “washing machine,” “Spotify,” and “the collapse of the British Empire.” But he adjusts quickly; he is, after all, an explorer by trade. Soon, what the bridge initially thought would be, at best, a seriously uncomfortable housemate dynamic, evolves into something much more. Over the course of an unprecedented year, Gore and the bridge fall haphazardly, fervently in love, with consequences they never could have imagined.

Supported by a chaotic and charming cast of characters—including a 17th-century cinephile who can’t get enough of Tinder, a painfully shy World War I captain, and a former spy with an ever-changing series of cosmetic surgery alterations and a belligerent attitude to HR—the bridge will be forced to confront the past that shaped her choices, and the choices that will shape the future.

An exquisitely original and feverishly fun fusion of genres and ideas, The Ministry of Time asks the universal question: What happens if you put a disaffected millennial and a Victorian polar explorer in a house together?

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Wandering Stars
by Tommy Orange

Heather’s Pick #2: Tommy Orange’s THERE THERE is one of the most memorable books I’ve read, and I still think about the complicated characters I met within its pages. Obviously I need his follow-up, WANDERING STARS, which continues the story of Opal Viola Victoria Bear Shield and her nephews, Orvil and Lony, in the wake of a violent event that has shaken them all. But as THERE THERE masterfully illustrated, families are shaped as much by the past as by their current circumstances, if not more so. WANDERING STARS returns to that theme by exploring how the trauma of the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864 and being forced to attend the Carlisle Indian Industrial School can still be felt generations later by Opal and her loved ones in Oakland, California, in 2018.

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Wandering Stars
Tommy Orange

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Our 20 Most Anticipated Books of 2024

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The Silence in Her Eyes
by Armando Lucas Correa

Emily’s Pick #1: What I love the most about a thriller is how heightened my senses get. Every little detail in the setting or dialogue makes me sit up and take notice. And the unique narrator in THE SILENCE IN HER EYES promises a reading experience that’ll force me to pay even more attention. The main character, Leah, has motion blindness. For decades, she’s been unable to see movement, but she can see things more like a snapshot; she’s instead acquired an enhanced sense of smell and hearing. When an intruder with a particular scent of bergamot enters her apartment, and she continues to smell him everywhere, she decides to take action—working together with her new neighbor who might be in danger as well. Armando Lucas Correa is known for his emotional, riveting historical fiction novels, so I can’t wait to read his journey into the psychological thriller realm.

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The Silence in Her Eyes
Armando Lucas Correa

In the vein of Paula Hawkins and Ruth Ware, a bold and suspenseful psychological thriller about a young woman with a rare neurological condition who is convinced her neighbor is going to be murdered.

Leah has been living with akinetopsia, or motion blindness, since she was a child. For the last twenty years, she hasn’t been able to see movement. As she walks around her upper Manhattan neighborhood with her white stick tapping in front, most people assume she’s blind. But the truth is Leah sees a good deal, and with her acute senses of smell and hearing, very little escapes her notice.

She has a quiet, orderly life, with little human contact beyond her longtime housekeeper, her doctor, and her elderly neighbor. That all changes when Alice moves into the apartment next door and Leah can immediately smell the anxiety wafting off her. Worse, Leah can’t help but hear Alice and a late-night visitor engage in a violent fight. Worried, she befriends her neighbor and discovers that Alice is in the middle of a messy divorce from an abusive husband.

Then one night, Leah wakes up to someone in her apartment. She blacks out and in the morning is left wondering if she dreamt the episode. And yet the scent of the intruder follows her everywhere. And when she hears Alice through the wall pleading for her help, Leah makes a decision that will test her courage, her strength, and ultimately her sanity.

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Worry
by Alexandra Tanner

Emily’s Pick #2: When a book is given any comparison to Frances Ha, that’s an immediate pick up for me. WORRY is Alexandra Tanner’s debut novel, and it sounds like an utterly enthralling mishmash of relatable characters and comedic details. Jules has enough troubles of her own—job searching, and soul-searching in Brooklyn—but when her sister, Poppy, needs a place to stay, she has to fulfill her sisterly obligations and let her in. And then Poppy brings home a possibly diseased rescue dog named Amy Klobuchar. And then their Floridian mom starts falling for deep-state conspiracy theories. And soon, the worries of the modern age multiply and intensify, highlighting the absurd, ugly, real sides of life. I can’t wait to laugh and nod at every page, and perhaps see if the antics of Poppy and Jules makes me feel better about my own worries.

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Worry
Alexandra Tanner

Frances Ha meets No One Is Talking About This in a debut that follows two siblings-turned-roommates navigating an absurd world on the verge of calamity—a Seinfeldian novel of existentialism and sisterhood.

It’s March of 2019, and twenty-eight-year-old Jules Gold—anxious, artistically frustrated, and internet-obsessed—has been living alone in the apartment she once shared with the man she thought she’d marry when her younger sister Poppy comes to crash. Indefinitely. Poppy, a year and a half out from a suicide attempt only Jules knows about, searches for work and meaning in Brooklyn while Jules spends her days hate-scrolling the feeds of Mormon mommy bloggers and waiting for life to happen.

Then the hives that’ve plagued Poppy since childhood flare up. Jules’s uterus turns against her. Poppy brings home a maladjusted rescue dog named Amy Klobuchar. The girls’ mother, a newly devout Messianic Jew, starts falling for the same deep-state conspiracy theories as Jules’s online mommies. Jules, halfheartedly struggling to scrape her way to the source of her ennui, slowly and cruelly comes to blame Poppy for her own insufficiencies as a friend, a writer, and a sister. And Amy Klobuchar might have rabies. As the year shambles on and a new decade looms near, a disastrous trip home to Florida forces Jules and Poppy—comrades, competitors, constant fixtures in each other’s lives—to ask themselves what they want their futures to look like, and whether they’ll spend them together or apart.

Deadpan, dark, and brutally funny, Worry is a sharp portrait of two sisters enduring a dread-filled American moment from a nervy new voice in contemporary fiction.

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Our 20 Most Anticipated Books of 2024

By Off the Shelf Staff | November 27, 2023

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Fruit of the Dead
by Rachel Lyon

Juliet’s Pick #1: As a sucker for mythological retellings (Hadestown, anyone?), I’m on the edge of my seat waiting for Rachel Lyon’s FRUIT OF THE DEAD. Truly, I think you’d be hard-pressed to find a book that sounds more enticing—I mean, a literary recasting of the Hades and Persephone tale infused with the raw realities of our world? Sign me up. Set on an intoxicating private island, the story navigates the turbulent waters of addiction, desire, and the quest for autonomy under the shadow of a modern-day Hades. We’ll follow Cory, an aimless camp counselor caught in the web of a charismatic pharmaceutical CEO, and Emer, her desperate mother, who fears for her daughter. It promises to be a journey into a fever-dream where myth meets life in an unflinching examination of love and control, destruction and rebirth. Can March come any sooner?

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Fruit of the Dead
Rachel Lyon

An electric contemporary reimagining of the myth of Persephone and Demeter set over the course of one summer on a lush private island, about addiction and sex, family and independence, and who holds the power in a modern underworld.

Camp counselor Cory Ansel, eighteen and aimless, afraid to face her high-strung single mother in New York, is no longer sure where home is when the father of one of her campers offers an alternative. The CEO of a Fortune 500 pharmaceutical company, Rolo Picazo is middle-aged, divorced, magnetic. He is also intoxicated by Cory. When Rolo proffers a childcare job (and an NDA), Cory quiets an internal warning and allows herself to be ferried to his private island. Plied with luxury and opiates manufactured by his company, she continues to tell herself she’s in charge. Her mother, Emer, head of a teetering agricultural NGO, senses otherwise. With her daughter seemingly vanished, Emer crosses land and sea to heed a cry for help she alone is convinced she hears.

Alternating between the two women’s perspectives, Rachel Lyon’s Fruit of the Dead incorporates its mythic inspiration with a light touch and devastating precision. The result is a tale that explores love, control, obliteration, and America’s own late capitalist mythos. Lyon’s reinvention of Persephone and Demeter’s story makes for a haunting and ecstatic novel that vibrates with lush abandon. Readers will not soon forget it.

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Our 20 Most Anticipated Books of 2024

By Off the Shelf Staff | November 27, 2023

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Fervor
by Toby Lloyd

Juliet’s Pick #2: I’m eagerly counting down the days until I can get my hands on Toby Lloyd’s FERVOR. It’s got all the makings of a book that’ll keep me up at night: a tight-knit family, ancient mysticism, and that creeping sense that something’s not quite right. The Rosenthals are not your average family, and when they start suspecting their own daughter of witchcraft, you just know it’s going to be a page-turner. Set in London, with a backdrop of Jewish tradition and the haunting history of the Holocaust, Lloyd intertwines personal drama, historical secrets, and the supernatural. I’m ready to be plunged into the Rosenthals’ world, where the lines between faith and madness get blurry.

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Fervor
Toby Lloyd

A chilling and unforgettable story of a close-knit Jewish family in London pushed to the brink when they suspect their daughter is a witch.

Hannah and Eric Rosenthal are devout Jews living in North London with their three children and Eric's father Yosef, a Holocaust survivor. Both intellectually gifted and deeply unconventional, the Rosenthals believe in the literal truth of the Old Testament and in the presence of God (and evil) in daily life. As Hannah prepares to publish a sensationalist account of Yosef's years in war-torn Europe—unearthing a terrible secret from his time in the camps—Elsie, her perfect daughter, starts to come undone. And then, in the wake of Yosef’s death, she disappears. When she returns, just as mysteriously as she left, she is altered in disturbing ways.

Witnessing the complete transformation of her daughter, Hannah begins to suspect that Elsie has delved too deep into the labyrinths of Jewish mysticism and gotten lost among shadows. But for Elsie's brother Tovyah, a brilliant but reclusive student struggling to find his place at Oxford, the truth is much simpler: his sister is the product of a dysfunctional family, obsessed with empty rituals, traditions, and unbridled ambition. But who is right? Is religion the cure for the disease or the disease itself? And how can they stop the darkness from engulfing Elsie completely?

Alive with both the bristling energy of a great campus novel and the unsettling, ever-shifting ground of a great horror tale, Fervor is at its heart a family story—where personal allegiances compete with obligations to history and to mysterious forces that offer both consolation and devastation.

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Our 20 Most Anticipated Books of 2024

By Off the Shelf Staff | November 27, 2023

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Habitations
by Sheila Sundar

Juliet’s Pick #3: I’m so looking forward to Sheila Sundar’s upcoming novel HABITATIONS. I already know I’m going to cry and my body is ready. It tells the story of Vega Gopalan, an academic who leaves India for the United States, capturing the essence of starting anew and the search for home in a deeply personal and relatable way. From first loves to a green card marriage and the trials of single motherhood, it’s a tale that promises layers of love, loss, and self-discovery and early reviews note dry humor, sharp insight, and a candid look at the immigrant experience and womanhood as a whole. I can’t wait to see how Vega’s story unfolds and what “making a home” means through her eyes!

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Habitations
Sheila Sundar

A young academic moves from India to the United States, where she navigates first love, a green card marriage, single motherhood, and more in this “delightful novel, written with immediacy, warmth, and wry humor” (Ha Jin, National Book Award-winning author of Waiting).

Vega Gopalan is adrift. Still reeling from the death of her sister years earlier, she leaves South India to attend graduate school at Columbia University. In New York, Vega straddles many different worlds, eventually moving in and out of a series of relationships that take her through the striving world of academia, the intellectual isolation of the immigrant suburbs, and, ultimately, the loneliness of single motherhood. But it is the birth of Vega’s daughter that forces the novel’s central question: What does it mean to make a home?

Written with dry humor and searing insight, Habitations is an intimate story of identity, immigration, expectation and desire, and of love lost and found. But it is also a universal story of womanhood, and the ways in which women are forced to navigate multiple loyalties: to family, to community, and to themselves.

A profound meditation on the many meanings of home and on the ways love and kinship can be found, even in the most unfamiliar of places, Habitations introduces Sheila Sundar as an electrifying new voice in literary fiction.

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Our 20 Most Anticipated Books of 2024

By Off the Shelf Staff | November 27, 2023

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The Things We Didn't Know
by Elba Iris Pérez

Bianca’s Pick: Coming-of-age stories are fascinating to me because each and every reader can relate, up to a certain extent, about the challenges we all face as growing young people. This is why I can’t wait for everyone to read about the powerful childhood experiences in Elba Iris Pérez’s debut novel. In THE THINGS WE DIDN’T KNOW, we are swept into the experience of Andrea and her little brother as they navigate being a part of a family that is crumbling because they have a mother who isn’t interested in mothering. A domino effect of events transpires, reminding us all that it is often the things we don’t know that make us who we are.

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The Things We Didn't Know
Elba Iris Pérez

The inaugural winner of Simon & Schuster’s Books Like Us contest, Elba Iris Pérez’s lyrical, cross-cultural coming-of-age debut novel explores a young girl’s childhood between 1950s Puerto Rico and a small Massachusetts factory town.

Andrea Rodríguez is nine years old when her mother whisks her and her brother, Pablo, away from Woronoco, the tiny Massachusetts factory town that is the only home they’ve known. With no plan and no money, she leaves them with family in the mountainside villages of Puerto Rico and promises to return.

Months later, when Andrea and Pablo are brought back to Massachusetts, they find their hometown significantly changed. As they navigate the rifts between their family’s values and all-American culture and face the harsh realities of growing up, they must embrace both the triumphs and heartache that mark the journey to adulthood.

A heartfelt, evocative portrait of another side of life in 1950s America, The Things We Didn’t Know establishes Elba Iris Pérez as a sensational new literary voice.

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The Year of the Locust
by Terry Hayes

Sue’s Pick: I am an insatiable reader of thrillers—spy or political thrillers to be specific. I’ve read most of the works of Clancy and le Carré and have enjoyed more recent books by Jason Matthews (RED SPARROW), Jack Carr (IN THE BLOOD), and Kyle Mills/Vince Flynn (CODE RED). If the author doesn’t grab me on page one, I’m likely to move on—I’ve gotten that selective. I can say with complete confidence and excitement that Terry Hayes is as good as those I’ve mentioned and as he writes more might even get better. As an award-winning writer and producer of movies—Road Warrior and Dead Calm are among his credits—he has honed his craft so well that reading his novels is like being treated to a 360-degree entertainment experience. Book to movie to book again. I read his first novel I AM PILGRIM ten years ago and it passed the page-one test with flying colors, keeping me on the edge of my seat until the last word. He writes characters that you care about, respect—even if they’re bad guys—and come to understand on a very human level. I am rereading I AM PILGRIM now as a refresher in anticipation of his new book THE YEAR OF THE LOCUST, coming February 2024. Based on the amazing reviews already coming in from authors such as Brad Thor and Nelson DeMille, I expect it to be another epic espionage tale, and a wild roller-coaster ride that will grab me on page one. And I can’t wait!

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The Year of the Locust
Terry Hayes

Terry Hayes, author of the #1 global bestseller I Am Pilgrim, returns with a terrifying and eagerly awaited new thriller.

If, like Kane, you’re a Denied Access Area spy for the CIA, then boundaries have no meaning. Your function is to go in, do whatever is required, and get out again—by whatever means necessary. You know when to run, when to hide—and when to shoot.

But some places don’t play by the rules. Some places are too dangerous, even for a man of Kane’s experience. The badlands where the borders of Pakistan, Iran, and Afghanistan meet are such a place—a place where violence is the only way to survive.

Kane travels there to exfiltrate a man with vital information for the safety of the West—but instead he meets an adversary who will take the world to the brink of extinction. A frightening, clever, vicious man with blood on his hands and vengeance in his heart...

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A Short Walk Through a Wide World
by Douglas Westerbeke

Katya’s Pick #1: In Paris, in the late nineteenth century, a bold young girl, Aubry Tourvel, happens upon a mysterious wooden puzzle ball that will come to change the course of her life. Not long after finding the ball, Aubry starts bleeding to death and, after alternating periods of grave sickness and wellness, finds a pattern: she can only stay in one place for a few days (if she’ lucky) before she starts to die, and she can never return to a place she’s already been. What ensues is a magical, wistful, emotional, and page-turning adventure around the world with one of the most wise, witty, and loveable characters I’ve ever read. Oh, and did I mention the secret magical library where Aubry retreats in between her adventures? (Book lovers, seriously, you don’t want to miss this one). I fully expect people to be talking about this masterpiece for the foreseeable future, and I’m eagerly awaiting Westerbeke’s next book! 

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A Short Walk Through a Wide World
Douglas Westerbeke

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue meets Life of Pi in this dazzlingly epic debut that charts the incredible, adventurous life of one woman as she journeys the globe trying to outrun a mysterious curse that will destroy her if she stops moving.

Paris, 1885: Aubry Tourvel, a spoiled and stubborn nine-year-old girl, comes across a wooden puzzle ball on her walk home from school. She tosses it over the fence, only to find it in her backpack that evening. Days later, at the family dinner table, she starts to bleed to death.

When medical treatment only makes her worse, she flees to the outskirts of the city, where she realizes that it is this very act of movement that keeps her alive. So begins her lifelong journey on the run from her condition, which won’t allow her to stay anywhere for longer than a few days nor return to a place where she’s already been.

From the scorched dunes of the Calashino Sand Sea to the snow-packed peaks of the Himalayas; from a bottomless well in a Parisian courtyard, to the shelves of an infinite underground library, we follow Aubry as she learns what it takes to survive and ultimately, to truly live. But the longer Aubry wanders and the more desperate she is to share her life with others, the clearer it becomes that the world she travels through may not be quite the same as everyone else’s...

Fiercely independent and hopeful, yet full of longing, Aubry Tourvel is an unforgettable character fighting her way through a world of wonders to find a place she can call home. A spellbinding and inspiring story about discovering meaning in a life that seems otherwise impossible, A Short Walk Through a Wide World reminds us that it’s not the destination, but rather the journey—no matter how long it lasts—that makes us who we are.

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Greta & Valdin
by Rebecca K Reilly

Katya’s Pick #2: An international bestseller, GRETA & VALDIN is big, gay, heart-filled fun presented in hilarious, wise prose. Greta and her brother, Valdin, are twenty-somethings living together in Auckland, New Zealand, and navigating love, family life (their family is a bit messy but in the best way), careers, and their identities as Māori (the Māori people are native to New Zealand and a minority). While Valdin is still reeling from a breakup, a work trip offers him the opportunity to reconnect with his ex-boyfriend (who, by the way, happens to be the brother of his uncle’s husband). And Greta, who has been nursing an unrequited crush for some time, meets a delightful Scottish lass at a party who might just help her move on. Knit between the laugh-out-loud “oh no, they didn’t” moments and heartwarming scenes (I cried, and I never cry when reading books) are reminders of the value of family (no matter how outrageous said family may be). I cannot overstate how much I love, love, love this book. Also, have you seen this cover? I will forever want to display this gorgeous book face-out on my bookcase. 

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Greta & Valdin
Rebecca K Reilly

For fans of Schitt’s Creek and Sally Rooney’s Normal People, an irresistible and bighearted international bestseller that follows a brother and sister as they navigate queerness, multiracial identity, and the dramas big and small of their entangled, unconventional family, all while flailing their way to love.

It’s been a year since his ex-boyfriend dumped him and moved from Auckland to Buenos Aires, and Valdin is doing fine. He has a good flat with his sister Greta, a good career where his colleagues only occasionally remind him that he is the sole Maaori person in the office, and a good friend who he only sleeps with when he’s sad. But when work sends him to Argentina and he’s thrown back in his former lover’s orbit, Valdin is forced to confront the feelings he’s been trying to ignore—and the future he wants.

Greta is not letting her painfully unrequited crush (or her possibly pointless master’s thesis, or her pathetic academic salary...) get her down. She would love to focus on the charming fellow grad student she meets at a party and her friendships with a circle of similarly floundering twenty-somethings, but her chaotic family life won’t stop intruding: her mother is keeping secrets, her nephew is having a gay crisis, and her brother has suddenly flown to South America without a word.

Sharp, hilarious, and with an undeniable emotional momentum that builds to an exuberant conclusion, Greta & Valdin careens us through the siblings’ misadventures and the messy dramas of their sprawling, eccentric Maaori-Russian-Catalonian family. An acclaimed bestseller in New Zealand, Greta & Valdin is fresh, joyful, and alive with the possibility of love in its many mystifying forms.

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By Off the Shelf Staff | November 27, 2023

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Come and Get It
by Kiley Reid

Sharon’s Pick #1: My best friend and I both read Kiley Reid’s first book SUCH A FUN AGE back in 2021, and it has become a bit of a tradition for us to text the other person and say “just thought about SUCH A FUN AGE again.” Reid’s debut novel was an absolute standout for both of us with the way that she candidly discussed white fragility and coming of age in your mid-twenties through an unforgettable cast of characters. Given the impact of SUCH A FUN AGE on my psyche, I am elated to read Reid’s sophomore novel, COME AND GET IT, when it is released on January 30, 2024. I was already going to read whatever she put out next, but the fact that COME AND GET IT is a campus novel makes me even more excited to pick it up. The book is set in 2017 at the University of Arkansas and follows Millie Cousins, a residential assistant in her senior year who just wants to graduate, get a job, and buy a house. However, her tidy plans are thrown into upheaval when a visiting professor offers Millie an unusual opportunity and her dorm is beset by vengeful pranksters.

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Come and Get It
Kiley Reid

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Here We Go Again
by Alison Cochrun

Sharon’s Pick #2: Ever since I read Alison Cochrun’s debut romance THE CHARM OFFENSIVE, she has become an auto-read author for me, and I am ecstatic to pick up her third novel, HERE WE GO AGAIN, in April 2024. In HERE WE GO AGAIN, we follow Logan and Rosemary, former best friends turned bitter rivals who end up as teachers at their former high school. Try as they might to avoid each other, they keep crashing into each other—figuratively and literally. When their beloved former English teacher announces he has months left to live, Logan and Rosemary are forced to come together to fulfill his last wish: a cross-country road trip.

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Here We Go Again
Alison Cochrun

The author of the “sexy, insightful, and utterly charming” (BuzzFeed) Kiss Her Once for Me returns with a new queer rom-com following once childhood best friends forced together to drive their former teacher across the country.

A long time ago, Logan Maletis and Rosemary Hale used to be friends. They spent their childhood summers running through the woods, rebelling against their conservative small town, and dreaming of escaping. But then an incident the summer before high school turned them into bitter rivals. After graduation, they went ten years without speaking.

Now in their thirties, Logan and Rosemary find they aren’t quite living the lives of adventure they imagined for themselves. Still in their small town and working as teachers at their alma mater, they’re both stuck in old patterns. Uptight Rosemary chooses security and stability over all else, working constantly, and her most stable relationship is with her label maker. Chaotic and impulsive Logan has a long list of misguided ex-lovers and an apathetic shrug she uses to protect herself from anything real. And as hard as they try to avoid each other—and their complicated past—they keep crashing into each other. Including with their cars.

But when their beloved former English teacher and lifelong mentor tells them he has only a few months to live, they’re forced together once and for all to fulfill his last wish: a cross-country road trip. Stuffed into the gayest van west of the Mississippi, the three embark on a life-changing summer trip—from Washington state to the Grand Canyon, from the Gulf Coast to coastal Maine—that will chart a new future and perhaps lead them back to one another.

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By Off the Shelf Staff | November 27, 2023

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The Wives
by Simone Gorrindo

Mackenzie’s Pick: I don’t typically pick up memoirs, but when I heard the pitch for THE WIVES I was instantly intrigued. Simone Gorrindo is a writer in New York City when her new husband reveals his desire to join an elite Army unit based in Georgia. Upon arrival, Simone finds herself in a place so foreign it might as well be the moon. The Army wife life quickly starts taking a toll on Simone’s mental health . . . until she starts meeting the wives. Even though I have no experience or real understanding of what military life is like, I found so many connection points to Simone’s story as she tells it. I walked away from THE WIVES with a deeper understanding of our country and the people who sacrifice so much of their lives to participate in our military. I also appreciated the diversity of friendships and relationships throughout the story. Simone’s writing is visceral and gorgeous. This is the first memoir I read in one sitting. There is really no reason not to pick up this book!

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The Wives
Simone Gorrindo

A powerful, intimate memoir of marriage and friendship that traces one woman’s experience joining a tightknit community of fellow army wives after leaving her New York City job to follow her enlisted husband.

When her new husband joins an elite Army unit, Simone Gorrindo is uprooted from New York City and dropped into Columbus, Georgia—a town so foreign she might as well have landed on the moon. With her husband frequently deployed, Simone is left to find her place in this new world, alone—until she meets the wives.

Gorrindo gives us an intimate look into the inner lives of a remarkable group of women and a tender, unflinching portrait of a marriage. A love story, an unforgettable coming-of-age tale, and a bracing tour of the intractable divisions that plague our country today, The Wives offers a rare and powerful gift: a hopeful stitch in the fabric of a torn America.

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By Off the Shelf Staff | November 27, 2023

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Medea
by Eilish Quin

Dayna’s Pick: One of the most thrilling experiences as a reader is when an author breathes fresh life into a classic tale, and I couldn’t wait to discover what Eilish Quin would do with her take on Medea. The sorceress Medea may be one of the most reviled women in Greek mythology. The tale of exacting revenge on her duplicitous husband, Jason of the Argonauts, through the brutal act of killing her own children, is hard to forget. But what if there’s more to the story? Quin’s stunning debut novel has weaved together a gorgeous retelling in the tradition of CIRCE and ELEKTRA. No matter if you’re familiar with the story of Medea or coming to it with fresh eyes, her writing will cast a spell on you. With each turn of the page, I felt completely enraptured with this world. There is genuine emotion and yes—even surprise—throughout the novel. This is one you’ll want to discuss with friends. I can’t wait to see what Eilish Quin does next!

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Medea
Eilish Quin

Discover the full story of the sorceress Medea, one of the most reviled and maligned women of Greek antiquity, in this propulsive and evocative debut in the tradition of Circe, Elektra, and Stone Blind.

Among the women of Greek mythology, the witch Medea may be the most despised. Known for the brutal act of killing her own children to exact vengeance on her deceitful husband, the Argonauts leader Jason, Medea has carved out a singularly infamous niche in our histories.

But what if that isn’t the full story?

The daughter of a sea nymph and the granddaughter of a Titan, Medea is a paradox. She is at once rendered compelling by virtue of the divinity that flows through her bloodline and made powerless by the fact of her being a woman. As a child, she intuitively submerges herself in witchcraft and sorcery, but soon finds it may not be a match for the prophecies that hang over her entire family like a shroud.

As Medea comes into her own as a woman and a witch, she also faces the arrival of the hero Jason, preordained by the gods to be not only her husband, but also her lifeline to escape her isolated existence. Medea travels the treacherous seas with the Argonauts, battles demons she had never conceived of, and falls in love with the man who may ultimately be her downfall.

In this propulsive, beautifully written debut, readers will finally hear Medea’s side of the story through a fresh and feminist lens.

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Our 12 Most Anticipated Historical Fiction Books of 2024

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The Familiar
by Leigh Bardugo

Sara’s Pick #1: Leigh Bardugo is back with another magical tale of intrigue and strife, this time set in the Spanish Golden Age. Luzia Cotado is a servant in the house of a minor noble who is suddenly elevated to the court of the king of Spain due to her ability to create little miracles. And with the king reeling from the recent loss against England, despite his impressive armada, he is willing to do whatever it takes to secure a victory. As she gains more notoriety, Luzia will need allies, including Guillén Santángel, an embittered immortal familiar that could be the death of her. Historical fiction meets dark fantasy, THE FAMILIAR is sure to enchant readers, for good or for ill.

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The Familiar
Leigh Bardugo

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Our 12 Most Anticipated Historical Fiction Books of 2024

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Icarus
by K. Ancrum

Sara’s Pick #2: Love can find you anywhere. In a coffee shop, at school, while you’re stealing art from their father who was responsible for your mother’s death. You know, your classic meet-cute. For Icarus Gallagher, life revolves around stealing from Mr. Black, replacing his priceless artwork with forgeries his father made, a foolproof revenge plan. What he doesn’t plan on is getting caught by Mr. Black’s son, Helios, and then falling in love with him. But will flying too close to the sun prove just as deadly for this Icarus as his Greek mythology counterpart, or will Icarus and Helios find a way to be together in spite of their parents’ history? 

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Icarus
K. Ancrum

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