
With a unique premise and plucky, likable main character, How To Solve Your Own Murder by Kristen Perrin is a strong start to what is sure to be a popular new cozy mystery series for many.

With a unique premise and plucky, likable main character, How To Solve Your Own Murder by Kristen Perrin is a strong start to what is sure to be a popular new cozy mystery series for many.

Anatomy: A Love Story, by Dana Schwartz, was really enjoyable! I will say the big “reveals” were easy to piece together early in the book, which diminished a lot of the suspense for me. Still, getting there was fun.

I want Kate Racculia’s Tuesday Mooney Talks to Ghosts to be a movie. I want to see the characters in the flesh – they were each so totally distinct and full and fun. And I want to see Boston come alive on the screen as a love letter to the city plays out in this fantastic book.

For a book with a far-fetched premise, Rebecca Stead’s When You Reach Me has a very real and believable quality about it.

When one character accuses another of being a “horrible little…rodent…[a] nasty little vermin!” in Michael Hoeye’s Time Stops for No Mouse, on some level, there’s a bit of truth to it. That’s because this delightful middle-grade book is populated by mice, rats, moles, squirrels, minks, and other assorted furry creatures.