Book Riot Launches New Release Index for Mystery & Thriller Fans
Book Riot’s New Release Index is a searchable database that lists upcoming mystery and thriller titles by release date, letting readers filter by sub‑genre and add titles to a personal Watchlist. The tool is bundled with the All Access membership, which costs $6 per month and also unlocks premium articles. Users can scroll cover images and click for descriptions to stay ahead of new releases.

AM Belsey’s debut crime novella *Six Mile Store* arrives on March 19, 2026, delivering a rural‑noir tale set in a 1998 Arkansas hamlet. The story follows Honey, a university student working weekend shifts at a local shop, whose quiet observation replaces the typical detective role. Drawing on Belsey’s own Arkansas upbringing, the book blends Southern gothic atmosphere with themes of female survival amid conservative cultural constraints. A follow‑up thriller, *Razor’s Edge*, is already in development, promising another glimpse into the same stark landscape.

My new book is available for pre-order 🎉 "Life in Perspective: The Art and Power of the Annual Life Review" comes out Nov. 3 in hardcover, ebook, and audiobook This book distills nearly two decades of practicing annual reviews into a...

Ryan Coogler’s film *Sinners* is celebrated as a genre‑bending masterpiece that blends vampire lore, blues music, and Black spirituality. The essay argues the film transcends traditional Afrofuturism by introducing “Rust Belt Gothik,” a framework that captures the harsh industrial reality of the...

Jonathan Bernstein’s newly released authorized biography, "What Do You Do When You’re Lonesome," chronicles the turbulent life of singer‑songwriter Justin Townes Earle. The book uncovers his early immersion in Nashville’s underground Swindlers scene, chronic addiction battles, and fraught relationship with...

Women Without Men, Shahrnush Parsipur’s late‑1970s novella, was banned in Iran and its author imprisoned for its frank treatment of women’s sexuality. After decades of censorship, the book has been released in English for the first time, translated by Faridoun...
The Carol Shields Prize for Fiction unveiled its 2026 longlist of 15 titles, including Katie Kitamura’s *Audition* and Megha Majumdar’s *A Guardian and a Thief*, with a $150,000 award slated for June. Author Sarah J. Maas announced she has reclaimed the TV‑adaptation rights to...

Jennifer Breheny Wallace’s *Mattering* examines how the pursuit of significance can shift from empowerment to obsession. The book club highlight zeroes in on the chapter “Mattering Too Much,” revealing the hidden costs of tying self‑worth to external validation. Wallace blends...

The March Book Club spotlighted *Mattering* by Jennifer Breheny Wallace, a deep dive into the paradox of feeling overly important. Wallace argues that excessive self‑importance can erode authentic connections and mental wellbeing. The author blends personal anecdotes, Enneagram insights, and...
A reader recalls a 1980s Harlequin or Mills & Boon medical romance set in South India, featuring an Indian‑origin nurse adopted by an American couple and a doctor who recently returned from the United States. The nurse seeks to reconnect...

Fly angling author Kirk Deeter and writer Matthew Supinski have just released "A Fishable Feast – Fly Fishing & Eating Your Way Around the World" through Rizzoli. The coffee‑table book pairs travel‑rich fly‑fishing narratives with 20 region‑specific recipes, illustrated with...
Therapist and nonfiction author Oona Metz was a guest on over 50 podcasts prior to her book's launch. Here's what she learned: https://janefriedman.com/how-to-use-podcast-guesting-to-promote-your-nonfiction-book/

Since mid-2023, I’ve been working on a book about everything—from the Big Bang to the end of the universe. I’m currently in the drawing phase and will be doing them publicly today—sharing my screen on an all-day livestream starting at...

In this episode, the host shares a personal strategy for overcoming writer's block by committing to a daily 20‑minute writing sprint, reinforced with a supportive partner and a simple gold‑star reward system. The metaphor of each writing session as a...

IndyBest has released its 2026 Best New Books list, featuring fourteen titles across a range of publishers. Highlights include Jennette McCurdy’s “Half My Age,” Ian McEwan’s “What We Can Know,” and Asako Yuzuki’s “Hooked.” The selection spans literary fiction, memoir and genre works, with Fourth Estate...

Jon M. Chu’s sequel "Wicked: For Good" retools the original Wicked narrative, replacing its bleak commentary on fascism with an optimistic, almost whimsical resolution. The film expands CGI‑driven Animal characters and adds new songs, yet it downplays the irreversible damage...

Melania Trump has released a memoir titled *Melania*, chronicling her journey from a modest upbringing in socialist Slovenia to the White House. The book combines personal anecdotes, previously unseen photographs, and a defense of her public initiatives such as the...
Oyinkan Braithwaite’s novel *Cursed Daughters* was selected by several prominent book clubs in late 2024, earning a spot on the year’s most popular book‑club list. The story follows three cousins trapped by a generational curse, mixing saga‑like scope with contemporary...
In this episode of Poured Over, Isabel McConville chats with debut novelist Patricia Finn about her new book *The Golden Boy*. Finn shares the emotional roller‑coaster of seeing her manuscript become a physical book, the intensive editorial process, and the...

Ajay Mankotia, a former Indian Income Tax commissioner turned author, releases *Not Just Rock ’n’ Roll*, a memoir that chronicles his lifelong obsession with rock music and his rare backstage encounters with legends like David Gilmour, Robert Plant and Ian...

Dave Ramsey, a leading personal‑finance voice, repeatedly recommends ten core books that shape his teachings on money, leadership, and personal growth. The list spans classics like Dale Carnegie’s *How to Win Friends and Influence People* and Jim Collins’s *Good to...

Two spouses turned a shared dream into a Penguin multi‑book deal by co‑authoring a mystery series under the pseudonym J. D. Brinkworth. Their process combined complementary strengths—dialogue and humor versus plot mechanics—and relied on exhaustive outlining and a relay drafting...

Nick Petrie reflects on the joys and hurdles of sustaining his ten‑book Peter Ash series. He highlights the comfort of writing familiar protagonists while stressing the need for continual character evolution. New antagonists and distinct settings, such as Seattle’s tech...

The article argues that traditional publishing and music industries were built on physical scarcity—limited shelf space and record‑store capacity—shaping distribution strategies. Digital platforms like Amazon and streaming services removed that scarcity, slashing print runs from tens of thousands to a...

Alex Kadis’s debut novel *Big Nobody* follows Connie Costa, a Greek‑Cypriot teen navigating 1970s London’s music‑obsessed culture while fleeing an abusive patriarchal family. The narrative blends vivid period details—Marc Bolan, David Bowie, platform shoes—with a darker exploration of PTSD stemming from familial...
Karan Mahajan’s new novel, The Complex, follows the fortunes of a powerful Indian political family anchored by the late patriarch S.P. Chopra, a fictional stand‑in for real‑world dynastic leaders. The story unfolds in a sprawling Delhi apartment complex that houses more...

Week two of the literary series examines Edith Wharton’s The House of Mirth through the lens of Bellomont, the country estate where leisure becomes a performance of wealth. The post argues that the estate functions as a social theater, where...
Interlink Books has released Iman Humaydan’s novel *Songs for Darkness* in English, translated by Michelle Hartman. The book celebrates Syrian women’s oral traditions, weaving harvest songs into a narrative of memory and resistance. Excerpts reveal protagonist Shahira’s journey from rural...

Lady Tremaine, Rachel Hochhauser’s debut, retells Cinderella from the stepmother’s perspective, portraying Etheldreda as a desperate survivor navigating medieval oppression. The novel blends gritty realism—illegal hunting, falconry, and bartering—with fairy‑tale motifs, revealing a shocking villain reveal that reframes familiar scenes....

The Tale of Princess Fatima, Warrior Woman, translated by Melanie Magidow, brings the only known Arabic epic named for a woman to English readers for the first time in 2021. The narrative follows Dhat al‑Himma, a sword‑wielding heroine who commands armies, battles...

Darcy Steinke’s new memoir "This Is the Door: The Body, Pain, and Faith" explores how chronic physical ailments intersect with emotional suffering and religious belief. Drawing on personal back pain, family illness, and interviews with artists and thinkers, she argues...

Six years ago, I released Power Shift into the world… Six years later, the message still stands: You don’t wait for power. You build it. You don’t chase opportunity. You position yourself for it. I’m grateful for every reader who didn’t just read the...
Published authors: what’s your best piece of advice? I’m starting to enter writing contests using fragments of essays and passages I’ve written over the past couple of years. Binding them together into one cohesive essay is a challenge, but I’d love...
*Reality Check* applies the Delphi method to fifty‑plus future questions, offering expert dates and averaged forecasts. The reviewer praises its accuracy for most technology predictions but finds the space‑related forecasts mixed: the ISS came online earlier than expected, Mars landing...
I just published Gleamer’s $270M Acquisition, Investing as a Radiologist, and My First Exit — It All Started with a LinkedIn message ... https://t.co/uwm9lCUsdm
Ursula K. Le Guin on change, menopause as rebirth, and the civilizational value of elders https://t.co/F7JRCwG833

Netflix’s Stranger Things franchise expands with Dark Horse’s new comic anthology, Volume 10: Tales from Hawkins 2, hitting shelves on March 10. The 96‑page hardcover compiles four issues written by Derek Fridolfs and illustrated by Sunando C, Bradley Clayton, Mack Chater, and Vincenzo...
It seems like this story gets repeated every few years. Someone writes a memoir. The book publisher does no due diligence to determine the story's credibility. Oprah and other celebrities heavily promote the book. Then questions arise. https://t.co/zCywhXJble

I still give the book Understanding Deep Learning by Simon J.D. Prince a good recommendation, but chapter 21: Deep learning and Ethics was sloppy. It could have been a chapter to really dig in on case studies, but it was...
Behavioral economics promised that nudging individuals could solve major societal problems. In *It’s on You*, Nick Chater and George Loewenstein argue that nudges rarely work and serve as a distraction from needed systemic reforms. They claim elites use behavioral science...
There's actually a whole YIMBY book wrestling with this question—it's called Stuck by Yoni Appelbaum and it's fantastic—and the answer is that freedom of movement is a core value of American political life.
Beyond Belief, Nir Eyal’s new book, explores the science of how our beliefs shape perception, emotion, and behavior. It distinguishes evidence‑based effects—like the placebo response—from unfounded optimism that claims belief alone can alter reality. The author links belief systems to...

Francis Spufford’s new novel *Nonesuch* reimagines World War II by introducing time‑travel magic into the heart of London’s Blitz. The story follows Iris Hawkins, a lower‑middle‑class secretary, who clashes with aristocratic fascist sympathiser Lady Lalage “Lall” Cunningham, whose scheme aims to...
It's a kind of interesting literary development that one of the most popular kinds of LLM-written content is fiction about LLMs replacing all the jobs. These stories reliably do numbers, and apparently their audience doesn't notice or care that it's...

George Packer’s "Short American Century" frames U.S. dominance from 1945 to 2016 in four distinct eras, ending with Donald Trump’s 2016 election that shattered the belief in perpetual American hegemony. Liberals initially dismissed Trump as an anomaly, hoping Joe Biden’s...

What are we reading? Title: “The leaders toolkit - Tools, strategies and tactics they never teach you at business school” Author: Dave Berkus @daveberkus #Books #Sales #Marketing #SocialSelling #leadership https://t.co/qHyodV8wap https://t.co/1l5eP8RF1O

The weekly bestseller roundup for March 9 2026 highlights three new titles—Aurora Ascher’s *Beauty and the Demon* (ranked as high as #8), Elizabeth Helen’s *Broken by Daylight* (#12) and Cameron Sullivan’s *The Red Winter* (#13). The most prominent news is the announcement...
Sometimes the greatest gift you can give someone isn’t advice or money but the right book at the right time.

Romantasy, a blend of romance and fantasy, is experiencing rapid growth. The Romantasy Substack tracks genre trends, offering paid members immersion series, cultural commentary, genre decoding guides, and weekly readership data. Subscription benefits include deep analysis of flagship titles like...
Alice Cooper’s third memoir, *Devil on My Shoulder: A Memoir*, arrives on Oct. 6, 2026 as the promised definitive autobiography. The book will chart his “evilution,” contrasting the shock‑rock persona with the sober, religious man behind the mask. It also promises...

Renowned Portuguese novelist António Lobo Antunes, whose gritty war‑filled narratives defined a generation, died at 83. The post‑colonial author’s oeuvre, marked by psychological depth and political critique, reshaped modern Portuguese literature. The piece also revisits Franz Rosenzweig’s WWI‑born philosophical system...