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Eye of the Needle
Eye of the Needle is one of those thrillers that grabs you from the first chapter and doesn’t loosen its grip until the very last page. Follett blends espionage, tension, and human vulnerability so well that the story feels both cinematic and deeply personal. The novel follows “The Needle,” a ruthless German spy operating in Britain during World War II. He’s sharp, cold, and terrifyingly efficient—one of the most memorable villains you’ll meet in a thriller. But what makes t

Lesley Goldthorpe
Dec 13, 20251 min read


Evalina
Evalina is one of those books that sneaks up on you—quiet at first, almost delicate—and then suddenly you realize you’re completely wrapped up in the story. The author does a beautiful job balancing atmosphere and emotion, creating a world that feels both intimate and unsettling. Evalina herself is a compelling character. She’s layered in a way that feels real: strong but unsure, curious but cautious, and carrying more weight than she lets on. Watching her navigate the secre

Lesley Goldthorpe
Dec 12, 20251 min read


Gone In The Storm
Gone in the Storm is another tense, emotionally charged entry in B.R. Spangler’s Casey White series, and it delivers exactly what fans of the series come for: a fast-moving investigation, a chilling mystery, and that constant undercurrent of danger that keeps you flipping pages. The book opens with a body discovered after a brutal storm, and right away Spangler uses the weather as more than just a backdrop — the atmosphere feels heavy, unpredictable, and a little claustropho

Lesley Goldthorpe
Dec 11, 20251 min read


X: A Novel
X: A Novel is a powerful, deeply personal coming-of-age story that traces Malcolm X’s early life before he became the figure we know from history. Co-written by his daughter, Ilyasah Shabazz, along with author Kekla Magoon, the book feels both grounded in fact and emotionally rich—never preachy, never stiff, just honest and deeply human. The novel focuses on Malcolm’s teenage years and young adulthood, a time marked by loss, anger, drifting, and searching for purpose. What m

Lesley Goldthorpe
Dec 9, 20251 min read


Night Music
Night Music by JoJo Moyes is one of those quiet, atmospheric novels that sneaks up on you. It’s not flashy or overly dramatic—instead, Moyes builds a story that feels lived-in, grounded, and full of warmth, even as the characters stumble through some messy, painful places. At the center is Isabel Delancey, a recently widowed violinist who suddenly finds herself uprooted from her comfortable London life and thrown into the crumbling, once-grand Spanish House. The house is pr

Lesley Goldthorpe
Dec 7, 20251 min read


The Gallagher Place
The Gallagher Place is one of those mysteries that wraps you up slowly, letting you sink into its atmosphere before the real weight of the story hits. It follows Marlowe, who returns to her family’s large, slightly eerie estate in the Hudson Valley after a body is found on the property — a discovery that stirs up everything she’s avoided since her best friend Nora vanished years earlier. What really stands out is the setting. The house and the land feel heavy with history, a

Lesley Goldthorpe
Dec 7, 20251 min read


Friends and Liars
Friends and Liars is one of those novels that taps into the complicated, unshakeable pull of childhood friendships—the ones that shape you, wound you, and never fully let go. Kaela Coble blends mystery with emotional depth, creating a story that’s as much about identity and forgiveness as it is about secrets. The book centers on Ruby, who returns to her Vermont hometown after one of her childhood friends dies, leaving behind letters that expose the group’s darkest secrets. I

Lesley Goldthorpe
Dec 6, 20251 min read


The House We Grew Up In
The House We Grew Up In is one of those novels that sneaks up on you emotionally. Lisa Jewell trades her usual suspense-driven plots for something quieter but deeply affecting—a story about a family unraveling, rebuilding, and learning how to carry the weight of their shared past. The Bird family seems picturesque from the outside: a cozy Cotswolds home, four children, quirky traditions, and an eccentric but warm mother, Lorelei. But Jewell peels back the layers slowly, and

Lesley Goldthorpe
Dec 5, 20251 min read


Breaking The Dark
Breaking the Dark pulls you in the way only Lisa Jewell can—quietly at first, then suddenly, with a grip that doesn’t let go. This one has a slightly different flavor from her usual domestic-suspense style, blending mystery with a touch of the paranormal, and it works better than you’d expect. The story follows Ruby Fox, a woman with an unsettling mix of intuition and darkness in her past, as she becomes entangled in a case involving missing children and a family hiding more

Lesley Goldthorpe
Dec 4, 20251 min read


The Shooters Sister
This is one of those books that grips you from the very first chapter—not because of shock value, but because of its quiet, devastating honesty. The story follows Tara, a woman forced to confront the unthinkable: her brother has committed a horrific school shooting. Overnight, she becomes a target, a symbol, and a scapegoat, even though she had nothing to do with the violence. What makes the book so compelling is its focus not on the crime itself but on its fallout. Tara beco

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 28, 20251 min read


There's Been an Accident
There’s Been an Accident is a tough, emotionally charged read that dives deep into the kind of trauma most people never talk about out loud. It follows a young boy, Peter, whose world is shaped by violence, neglect, and a family that’s unraveling around him. When he learns that his mother has been badly injured in an “accident,” the story slowly reveals what really happened—and the truth is far more painful than the tidy excuse the adults offer. Leigh Byrne writes with a raw

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 27, 20251 min read


The Tenant
The Tenant is classic Freida McFadden—quick, addictive, and packed with twists that make you question every single character. The story follows a couple who rent out part of their home to a new tenant, and from the moment she moves in, things start feeling… off. McFadden takes the everyday fear of letting a stranger into your space and slowly turns it into something much darker. What I liked most is how fast the tension builds. Even the quiet moments feel uneasy, like someth

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 26, 20251 min read


Sanctum
Sanctum continues the story that started in Asylum , but instead of repeating the same haunted-asylum setup, it pushes things further—and honestly, it feels darker this time. Dan, Abby, and Jordan are trying to move on with their lives, but the past keeps slipping back in, almost like Brookline never really let go of them. The horror isn’t just about ghosts; it’s about the weight of what happened and the feeling that someone out there is still pulling strings. What I liked m

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 23, 20251 min read


The Hunting Party
The Hunting Party is a classic closed-circle mystery with a modern edge. A group of old college friends gather at a remote Scottish lodge for New Year’s Eve—champagne, snow, secrets—and by the time the storm cuts them off from the world, one of them is dead. Lucy Foley leans hard into atmosphere, and it works. The blizzard, the isolation, the uneasy friendships—all of it builds a slow, claustrophobic tension. The story unfolds through multiple perspectives and timelines, whi

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 22, 20251 min read


The Bookshop Below
The Bookshop Below feels like stepping into a dimly lit, dust-scented bookstore at midnight—one where every spine on the shelf watches you back. It follows Cassandra Fairfax, a former magical bookseller turned thief, who’s dragged home after the death of her mentor to take over the secret underground shop she once abandoned. The twist? These bookshops aren’t just cozy little havens—they’re connected to a hidden river of ink and magic, and keeping one alive is almost a sacred

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 22, 20252 min read


Sourdough
Robin Sloan’s Sourdough is a warm, quirky story about Lois Clary, a burned-out software engineer who inherits a mysterious bread starter that changes her life. What begins as casual baking turns into a strange adventure through San Francisco’s underground food scene, where technology and fermentation mix in surprising ways. Funny, thoughtful, and a little magical, Sourdough is really about finding joy and meaning in the small, creative things that keep us human. It’s a light,

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 20, 20251 min read


Missoula
Jon Krakauer’s Missoula is a difficult but vital read — a deep, unflinching look at how sexual assault cases are handled (and often mishandled) in America, using the college town of Missoula, Montana, as a lens. Known for his narrative journalism in books like Into the Wild and Into Thin Air, Krakauer turns his investigative eye toward real women’s stories of assault, trauma, and the failures of the legal system meant to protect them. The book is both journalistic and deeply

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 20, 20251 min read


Perfume
Perfume is one of those books that feels impossible to shake off once you’ve read it. It’s strange, dark, and completely absorbing. Set in 18th-century France, it tells the story of Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, a man born with no scent of his own but an almost supernatural sense of smell. What starts as fascination quickly turns into obsession—he becomes determined to capture the essence of beauty itself, no matter the cost. The writing is rich and sensory—you can practically sm

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 19, 20251 min read


Buckeye
Buckeye is one of those books that feels small at first, then suddenly hits you in the chest. Patrick Ryan writes in a way that feels easy and real—like someone quietly telling you the truth while you’re both sitting on a porch swing. The story follows Jack, a kid trying to make sense of his family, his town, and all the confusing, tender parts of growing up. Nothing in the book is over-the-top. It’s the little moments—awkward conversations, things left unsaid, the way kids

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 18, 20251 min read


Beyond That, The Sea: A Captivating Journey of Life and Loss
In contemporary literature, few books manage to intricately explore the themes of life, loss, and the human experience as movingly as Beyond That, The Sea . This novel, written by Laura Spence-Ash, invites readers on an emotional journey that stretches beyond time and places. With its rich narrative and deeply relatable characters, it encourages us to reflect on our lives and the connections we form along the way. Set in a picturesque coastal town, the sea acts as both a back

Lesley Goldthorpe
Nov 17, 20251 min read
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