Book previews

Anticipated Books: The Lookahead 2 – Later in 2026

We are past the halfway part of the year now, and almost all the books that I mentioned in my anticipated books post at the start of the year have come out – even if I haven’t read all of them – and we have a better sense of what’s coming in the autumn. And so today: we have the stuff I didn’t know about back in January and that I’m desperate to read!

Let’s start with some continuations of other author’s series because there are two that I’m really interested in. The first is a new Miss Marple novel, written by Lucy Foley and comimg out in early September. Foley wrote one of the stories in the Marple short story collection a few years back and has now written a full length novel called Murder at the Grand Alpine Hotel. According to the blurb there’s a murder in a gondola on the way to the top of a mountain at a ski resort in the Swiss Alps and as cracks and tensions among the remaining guests emerge, Miss Marple is there in the shadows to work out what happened. Given that the Sophie Hannah Poirot continuations have been sucessful, it’s perhaps unsuprising that they’d try the same thing with Marple. I had mixed feelings about the short story collections, but that was mostly because there was no internal continuity among them – and then the last story did something unforgivable. But Foley was right at the start of that collection so I’ll definitely read this.

The other interesting continuation is a bit more unexpected: Georgette Heyer. I know. It’s being billed as “An official Georgette Heyer Regency Romance” and I would love to know how this came about. It’s called Henrietta and it’s written by Sophie Irwin, who wrote A Lady’s Guide to Fortune Hunting, which I really liked, A Lady’s Guide to Scandal which I liked less, and How to Lose a Lord in Ten Days, which I have on the shelf waiting to be read. The blurb for this has a soldier returning from three years away to find everything changed, and a heroine who has been in love with him for years and is trying to make herself the society success she has always dreamed of and is hoping that he will notice in the process. This one is out next month.

Also out in August is a new book from Lissa Evans. My Name is MacKenzie Bly is being billed as a coming of age novel “perfect for fans of Sue Townsend” so it feels like a bit of a step change from things like Old Baggage and Small Bomb at Dimperley. It’s about a 14 year old boy whose best friend has just moved to New Zealand and is struggling through the trials of teenage life. Evans has written for middle graders before, but this isn’t specifically being marketed as YA and it’s under the Transworld Digital imprint rather than a specialist so I’m interested to see what it is like to read style-wise.

Coming up in under a week (so maybe I shouldn’t even be including it?) is the new Rachel Lynn Solomon Extra Curricular about a former popstar who enrolls in college and discovers she’s got chemistry with one of her professors. I’ve got a mixed record with professor-student romances – I loved the movie Never Been Kissed as a teenager but these days I only notice the ick – but the heroine in this is 26 and the blurb says that her past comes calling for her so I’m optimistic this is going to be on the right side of my tastes. Looking further ahead again to October and we have a second novel from Bonnie Garmus. I loved Lessons in Chemistry (I really should get around to watching the adaptation of that) back in 2022 and now this autumn we have her follow up: Peck & Peck following a new grad in the 1980s getting a job in the literary world. I can’t wait.

I’m expecting the Garmus to be very buzzy and very everywhere – and although I will be reading that one, there are a bunch more buzzy books coming out this autumn that I probably won’t be (because they’re likely to end in tears and/or devastation) but I’m going to mention because I know other people will be reading. Firstly there’s the sequel to The Time Traveller’s Wife, Life Out of Order (also in October) featuring the daughter of Henry from the original and according to the blurb “a kaleidoscopic story of love, resilience and hope when time is running out.” Then there’s the new book from John Green Hollywood, Ending, which is about a behind the scenes love story between two actors and the blurb calls it “tender, heartbreaking, and shrewdly funny,” and given I’m not over The Fault in Our Stars yet, I just can’t risk it even though I love a Hollywood-set novel, but if you can, that’s out in late September.

And because it wouldn’t be a second half preview without some non-fiction (because we all know most of that comes out timed for Christmas), there’s Lucy Worsley’s Kings and Queens: An Unusually Personal History using her experience from her years as Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces to look at the royalty who lived in the palaces she worked in. There’s also new books from Dan Jones whose Castles looks at history through twelve iconic strongholds from around the world and Simon Sebag Montefiore’s The Cauldron about the making of the modern Middle East.

And finally to report back on a few loose ends from that January post: Dark Reading Matter has moved again – but only slightly – to October. The fourteenth Frances Brody did slide again – to March 2027, but it does at least have a title now: Death at the Yorkshire Show.

Have a great weekend – and come on England!

Book previews

Anticipated Books: The 2026 Lookahead

It’s the first day of 2026, and instead of doing the stats for last month, I’ve decided I’m doing my lookahead to the books that are being published this year that I’m looking forward to reading, many of which are already pre-ordered! There is no real order to this and I’m going to start with the standalone stuff, because as always there are loads of series books coming out but you know what I read in series, so I’m starting with the less predictable bits!

First up, is the one and only non fiction book in this post: Liza Minnelli’s memoir. It’s called Kids, Wait Til You Hear This! and it’s out in March just around the time that she turns 80. You may remember from my review of the documentary about her Liza: A Trully Terrific Absolutely True Story that Liza’s public persona is so ingrained in her that she doesn’t really show you anything behind that in the doc. And so I’m fascinated to see whether this is any different. But even if she’s still got the public face on, her life is still so incredible that I’m looking forward to reading about it in more depth. I pre-ordered this back in September and I can’t wait.

To the fiction: Emma Straub’s new book American Fantasy which is set on a cruise ship with all five members of a 90s boyband on board along with thousands of their fans. I’ve really enjoyed a bunch of books that have featured famous people and normies and this looks like it’s doing something similar but in a more lit-fic way than some of the ones I’ve read. The bar here is Curtis Sittenfeld’s Romantic Comedy though and that is high. This is out in April in the US and May in the UK.

Next up is Star Shipped which is Cat Sebastian’s first contemporary romance. This is an enemies to lovers deal about Simon and Charlie, two costars on a popular sci-fi TV show. As someone who was a massive Star Trek fan back in the day, I look forward to figuring out which shows (or franchises) this is pulling from as well as seeing what Sebastian’s writing looks like in a contemporary setting. This is out in early March in ebook and late April in paperback. Also in March is a new book from Sarah T Dubb. I loved Birding with Benefits which was one of my best books of 2024 and so I’m looking forward to Honey Bee Mine which has a bee keeper and a bad boy restauranteur who end up working together on a honey festival. Sounds sweet right? (sorry, terrible pun)

Another April release is Cherry Baby, the new Rainbow Rowell. This is about Cherry, whose husband has gone off to Hollywood to make a movie based on his comic strip which features a character based on her. However what no-one in her town knows is that he isn’t coming home leaving her to figure out who she is without him. But then on a night out to see a band she runs into someone who knew her way back when and even better – has never heard of the comic strip. I love a second chance romance and I like Rainbow Rowell so I’m really looking forward to this.

And now the series: the first to arrive is The Mysterious Affair Of Judith Potts, which is the fifth Marlow Murder Club Book from Robert Thorogood and is coming in two weeks time in mid January. We have a new Hawthorne and Horowitz coming in April. And A Deadly Episode sounds like it’s taking the series even more meta as the first book in this series (where a fictional version of the author is solving mysteries) is now being turned into a film and a murder takes place on set. I’m very interested to see how this works out! In July we have the next Three Dahlias mystery, Death on a Lively Sea, which sees Posy, Caro and Ros on a super yacht belonging to a billionaire who is convinced he’s going to be murdered! And there’s another Dahlia novel due in December – Murder on the Mistletoe Express.

The tenth Veronica Speedwell, A Ghastly Catastrophe, is out in March, There’s also a 14th Kate Shackleton book which allegedly is coming in April, but has already slid from March and still has no title, so I am fully expecting it to slide again! Away from murder mysteries, there is a sixth Before the Coffee Gets Cold book coming in May called Before I Knew I Loved You. We also have the sixth and final Heartstopper coming in July with Nick heading off to university – can he and Charlie make long distance work? There is also the series finale to Jen DeLuca’s Ren Faire series, Well Versed, which is out in September and Caitlin is the same age Emily was when she rushed home to help Caitlin and her mum in Well Met. This time it’s Caitlin who is back in her home town, back in her childhood bedroom and back at the Ren Faire where her teenage heart was broken – only to find that the guy who did the breaking is back too. I don’t want the series to be over, but one more visit to Willow Creek is better than no more.

And finally there is one book out in 2026 that I have been waiting a long, long time for. And that is Jasper Fforde’s Dark Reading Matter. The final Thursday Next book has been more than a decade in the waiting for. And I have been very patient and I mentioned this in last year’s anticipated books and the release date slid into 2026, and it’s slid again in the last few weeks to September, but I have it pre-ordered and so eventually it will turn up. I have faith.

And that’s your lot. It’s quite a bit isn’t it? And the good news is that the majority of them are either pre-ordered or I have copies already via NetGalley so the chances of me reporting back in on some of them is high!

Happy New Year everyone!

Book previews, books

Anticipated books 2023: second half of the year!

Back in January I did an anticipated books post here – and almost all the ones that i mentioned have now been published. So I’m coming back around for the stuff that’s still to come this year!

There is a new Alexis Hall coming in October, the cover is very Boyfriend Material-sque but it’s don’t let that fool you – Ten Things That Never Happened has a new couple and has a fake amnesia plot line… Staying with contemporary romance, I love a theatre-set book, so I’m looking forward to Amelia Jones’s The Stage Kiss which comes out in December. And they’re closer to inspirational than plain romance, but the next in Beverly Jenkin’s Blessings series, A Christmas to Remember finally arrives in mid-October. I haven’t read Love in the Time of Serial Killers yet, but Alicia Thomson’s next book is out in a couple of weeks at the start of August – With Love, from Cold World is about two workers at a Florida tourist destination where it’s always winter.

Moving to historical, and Sarah Vaughn has written a Regency-era graphic novel called Ruined about a marriage of convenience, and I love a marriage of convenience story (although I realise I still haven’t finished that recommendsday post about them I’ve been writing for years so have a link to the one about fake relationships instead ) so I’m really looking forward to reading that – it’s out in at the end of November. Staying with historical fiction, Mary Jo Putney has a new historical romance series set in Cornwall starting with Silver Lady which comes out at the end of November. It’s promising swashbuckling adventure – and the first one also has an amnesia plot although I’m not sure she’s faking it in this one! I think it’s already out in the US, but here in the UK we have to wait until the end of August for A Lady’s Guide to Scandal which is the sequel to Sophie Irwin’s A Lady’s Guide to Fortune Hunting, which I really enjoyed last year.

There’s a few series with autumn releases – like the fourth in Richard Osman’s Thursday Murder Club series, The Last Devil to Die, which arrives in mid September. Then there is the seventh book in the Vanderbeeker series also arriving in September. It’s called The Vanderbeekers Ever After and as the title suggests it’s the final book in the series. Luckily (!) for me the sixth book isn’t out in paperback here yet, so I’m going to be able to make the series last a little longer despite that. There’s a new Sarah MacleanKnockout is the third in the Hells Belles series. And unexpectedly there is another Shades of Magic novel coming too. I thought VE Schwab was done with the world at the end of the trilogy, but The Fragile Threads of Power is taking it to the next generation as well as giving you another look at the original characters. And there’s a fourth in the Before the Coffee Gets Cold series too – called Before We Say Goodbye.

There are always a slew of memoirs in the run up to Christmas – the one I’m excited about this year is Patrick Stewart’s, but I’m going to need to read some more of the ones I already have before I buy it. And finally there is of course the Lucy Parker – which I mentioned in that post at the start of the year – Codename Charming arrives on Kindle next month (the paperback doesn’t hit the UK until September). I may reread Battle Royal to prepare!

What riches we have to come…