Abigail Savitch-Lew. Simon & Schuster, $29 (368p) ISBN 978-1-6680-7523-4
An ambitious journalist chases a big scoop and seeks to understand her Brooklyn roots in Savitch-Lew’s impressive debut. The story hinges on events from decades earlier, when Lina Rodriguez Armstrong, a Black Puerto Rican community organizer, ran a Freedom School to empower children of color out of ... Continue reading »
Thomas Dunne. Blackstone, $29.99 (352p) ISBN 979-8-8748-6383-8
St. Martin’s vice president Dunne’s first novel since 1978’s The Scourge is an entertaining satirical thriller centered on a wealthy family’s power plays following the death of their patriarch. The passing of 95-year-old Werther Maybach Meyer, CEO of media conglomerate Omnium and a “powerfu... Continue reading »
Mike Chen. Saga, $20 trade paper (448p) ISBN 978-1-6680-8379-6
Chen (A Quantum Love Story) shows off his worldbuilding chops in this ingenious 24th-century space opera. Humanity is now in contact with multiple intelligent extraterrestrial life-forms, including the Lumersians, whose bodies are comprised of “planes of pink light” and who have shared thei... Continue reading »
Alexis Hall. Montlake, $16.99 trade paper (384p) ISBN 978-1-6625-0941-4
The glimmering and surprisingly gritty latest from Hall (Audrey Lane Stirs the Pot) is a queer historical romance that tends slightly darker than the average genre fare. In 19th-century London, Michael “Micha” Dashwood is a sex worker whose addiction to opium has led him to illness and dest... Continue reading »
Joe Ollmann. Drawn & Quarterly, $25 trade paper (216p) ISBN 978-1-77046-823-8
Nothing comes easy for the denizens of Hamilton, Ontario, in these wry, bruising, and mordantly funny stories from Ollmann (Fictional Father). In “Nestled All Snug,” a toppled pile of boxes traps a bookstore employee in a dingy staff bathroom. In “Meat,” a security guard at a meat-packing f... Continue reading »
Michael Ondaatje. Knopf, $35 (240p) ISBN 978-0-593-80501-5
Ondaatje (A Year of Last Things) presents a superb and comprehensive collection of selected works, or “condensary of time,” that crystallizes for devotees and new readers alike the poet’s lifelong devotion to place. “From now on I will drink my landscapes,” he writes, “here, pour me a cup o... Continue reading »
Marcus Brotherton and Tosca Lee. Revell, $26.99 (400p) ISBN 978-0-8007-4275-1
In this tour de force from Brotherton (A Bright and Blinding Sun) and Lee (A Single Light), four friends’ lives change irrevocably when America becomes embroiled in WWII. In 1930s Mobile, Ala., preacher’s son Jimmy Propfield shares an idyllic upbringing with childhood sweetheart Cl... Continue reading »
Andrew Graham-Dixon. Norton, $45 (496p) ISBN 978-1-324-12411-5
Bold new claims about Dutch artist Johannes Vermeer and why he painted are at the core of this exemplary biography from art historian Graham-Dixon (Caravaggio). Drawing from a wealth of historical documents, the author argues that Vermeer (1632–1675) did most of his work for two patrons: hu... Continue reading »
Spring Council. Countryman, $29.99 (248) ISBN 978-1-324-11132-0
Council devotes her warmhearted debut to the culinary heritage passed down by her mother, Mildred Council, the restaurateur behind North Carolina’s Mama Dip’s Kitchen, which closed in 2025 after a 50-year run. Drawing on food traditions from Chapel Hill’s Northside Black community, these 100 recipes... Continue reading »
Kristin T. Lee. Broadleaf, $27.99 (256p) ISBN 979-8-88983-502-8
In her penetrating debut, physician Lee uses the Japanese art of kintsugi, the practice of mending broken pottery with gold lacquer, to illustrate how she repaired a faith fractured by a childhood steeped in Western theology. Lee grew up in an immigrant church in Iowa that practiced Chinese customs ... Continue reading »
Howard W. Reeves, illus. by Duncan Tonatiuh. Abrams, $19.99 (40p) ISBN 978-1-4197-7649-6
A straightforward and inclusive message distinguishes this powerfully wrought narrative definition of “we” from Reeves, making his picture book debut, and Tonatiuh (Game of Freedom), which opens with the U.S. Constitution’s Preamble. A clear concept serves as the work’s opening and concludi... Continue reading »




