1. "The Heiress" by Rachel Hawkins
A mysterious heiress is the
focus of this new novel by best-selling gothic thriller author Hawkins. When Ruby McTavish
Callahan Woodward Miller Kenmore dies, she leaves her fortune to
her adopted son Camden, who refuses it, instead becoming a teacher and marrying
Jules. After his uncle dies a decade later, the couple arrives at the family
estate. Family secrets are exposed, including the circumstances of Cam’s mother’s
kidnapping as a child, what happened to her four husbands and how Cam came
into her life.
2. "Shut Up, This Is Serious" by Carolina Ixta
Belén is just
trying to get through high school in East Oakland and maybe get a boyfriend, but
it’s complicated. Her father has left, she might not graduate and her best
friend Leti is pregnant by a secret boyfriend. To rebel, Belén helps
Leti, hangs out with an older guy and cuts class, but she realizes her peers
are moving on without her. Leti is becoming a mom and her classmates are off to
college. Can Belén create her own path forward and break generational
cycles?
3. "The Night of the Storm" by Nishita Parekh
On the eve of Hurricane Harvey, Jia needs to find shelter for
her and her son, Ishaan.
The family has been going through it, with a recent divorce and a school
suspension on their minds. They flee to Jia’s sister Seema’s house, despite Seema’s
overly-friendly husband, Vipul. Then Vipul's brother and wife arrive. Before
the end of the night, the storm is raging and there’s been a murder in the house.
Jia must protect herself and her son from the storm, as well as the killer in
their midst.
4. "The Fury" by Alex Michaelides
Eliot is here to tell you
the lurid tale of a Greek island, an ex-movie star and her friends and a
murder. He knows because he was there. In this suspense novel, a narrator tells
of an Easter holiday gone wrong, with hatred, revenge and twists and turns at
the core.
5. "Come and Get It" by Kiley Reid
In this comedy of manners and tense character study, Millie, a
senior resident assistant at the University of Arkansas, jumps at a unique opportunity
for betterment with visiting professor Agatha. A group of unruly students and a
tragic prank threaten everything Millie has worked for.
6. "Only If You're Lucky" by Stacy Willingham
Lucy and Margot are an unlikely pair – Lucy, charismatic and
popular; Margot, shy and in the shadows. They form an alliance with a pair of
other girls and live off-campus together, becoming close friends. Then, one of
the frat boys next door is murdered and Lucy is missing in this taut thriller.
7. "Everyone on This Train Is a Suspect" by Benjamin Stevenson
A meeting for the Australian Mystery Writers' Society aboard a train goes
off the rails when one of them is murdered. It’s up to the other writers to put
their detective hats on and solve the case in this locked-room mystery.
8. "Family Family" by Laurie Frankel
India Allwood has risen through the ranks from awkward teen
to Broadway ingenue to TV superhero, but when she publicly criticizes her new trite
but prestige film about adoption, she sets off a media storm and wave of public criticism. India just has
to look at her own family to know that as an adoptive parent, no matter what the public is saying, the
truth is always more nuanced and complicated than it seems.
9. "Womb City" by Tlotlo Tsamaase
Set in a futuristic surveillance state in Botswana, this techno-punk horror novel tells the story of Nelah, monitored by her husband via
tracking chip and waiting for her daughter to be grown in a lab. A night of bad
decisions leads to a crime that Nelah attempts to hide, but the ghosts of Nelah's deeds hunt
Nelah down and threaten to expose her and harm her loved ones. She must help unravel
a political conspiracy if she wants to save everyone else.
10. "Argylle" by Elly Conway
Soon to be a major motion picture starring Bryce Dallas
Howard, Sam Rockwell and Henry Cavill, this spy novel follows agent Argylle, who may be the key to saving the world from chaos. Word on the
street is this novel was actually penned by Taylor Swift, but it’s probably just
meta-promotion for the film, and a clever one at that.