SPEC.FIC

all about diverse, debut, and indie sci-fi & fantasy books written by women and nonbinary authors

Category: new releases

  • March 2026: Most Anticipated Fantasy, Sci-Fi, and Horror Book Releases

    March 2026: Most Anticipated Fantasy, Sci-Fi, and Horror Book Releases

    March is stacked!! I read ARCs for many of them so have linked separate reviews for each below:

    Intergalactic Feast by Lavanya Lakshminarayan

    Flavour Hacker #2

    Intergalactic Feast by Lavanya Lakshminarayan

    384 pages – Edition Pub Date: 10 Mar 2026

    Publisher: SOLARIS

    Read my review here!

    I LOVED book #1 in this series, however did not enjoy the second as much. Mostly because it was a lot more horny which put me off a bit and I really couldn’t get back into the plot.

    Wayward Souls by Susan J. Morris

    Harker & Moriarty #2

    Wayward Souls by Susan J. Morris

    400 pages – Edition Pub Date: 17 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Inky Phoenix Press, Bindery

    Read my review here!

    Again, LOVED the first book but didn’t enjoy this as much…I became quite frustrated with one of the characters. The book is still good though and I’d recommend it.

    Where No Shadow Stays by Sara Hashem

    Where No Shadow Stays by Sara Hashem

    336 pages – Edition Pub Date: 31 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Holiday House

    Review coming soon! I’ll be reading this late Feb/early March.

    Aicha by Soraya Bouazzaoui

    Aicha by Soraya Bouazzaoui

    368 pages – Edition Pub Date: 24 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Orbit

    Read my review here!

    This is like a symphony that builds to a tragic crescendo. It involves a mythological creature but it’s so subtle you might not even realize it. Brutal, but an important read, I think.

    Ruinous Creatures by Jessi Cole Jackson

    Ruinous Creatures by Jessi Cole Jackson

    370 pages – Edition Pub Date: 10 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Atria Books

    When I Was Death by Alexis Henderson

    When I Was Death by Alexis Henderson

    386 pages – Edition Pub Date: 10 Mar 2026

    Publisher: G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books For Young Readers

    The Midnight Muse by Jo Kaplan

    The Midnight Muse by Jo Kaplan

    370 pages – Edition Pub Date: 10 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Clash Books

    These Shattered Spires by Cassidy Ellis Salter

    These Shattered Spires by Cassidy Ellis Salter

    464 pages – Edition Pub Date: 10 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Bloomsbury YA

    Green and Deadly Things by Jenn Lyons

    Green and Deadly Things by Jenn Lyons

    432 pages – Edition Pub Date: 03 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Tor Books

    Bitterbloom by Teagan Olivia King

    Bitterbloom by Teagan Olivia King

    288 pages – Edition Pub Date: 10 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Keylight

    Black as Diamond by U.M. Agoawike

    Black as Diamond by U.M. Agoawike

    496 pages – Edition Pub Date: 03 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Bindery Books

    Read my review here!

    Midnight on the Celestial by Julia Alexandra

    Midnight on the Celestial by Julia Alexandra

    320 pages – Edition Pub Date: 03 Mar 2026

    Publisher: St Martin’s Press

    Heiress of Nowhere by Stacey Lee

    Heiress of Nowhere by Stacey Lee

    352 pages – Edition Pub Date: 17 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Sarah Barley Books

    Event Horizon by Balsam Karam

    Event Horizon by Balsam Karam

    250 pages – Edition Pub Date: 31 Mar 2026

    Publisher: The Feminist Press at CUNY

    The Quarter Queen by Kayla Hardy

    The Quarter Queen by Kayla Hardy

    384 pages – Edition Pub Date: 31 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Ballantine Books

    Read my review here!

    This is a horrifying but excellently told story.

    River of Bones and Other Stories by Rebecca Roanhorse

    River of Bones and Other Stories by Rebecca Roanhorse

    256 pages – Edition Pub Date: 03 Mar 2026

    Publisher: S&S/Saga Press

    Nobody's Baby by Olivia Waite

    Dorothy Gentleman #2

    Nobody’s Baby by Olivia Waite

    112 pages – Edition Pub Date: 10 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Tordotcom

    The Fortune Tellers of Rue Daru by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore

    The Fortune Tellers of Rue Daru by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore

    416 pages – Edition Pub Date: 24 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Berkley

    Seasons of Glass and Iron by Amal El-Mohtar

    Seasons of Glass and Iron by Amal El-Mohtar

    240 pages – Edition Pub Date: 24 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Tordotcom

    Read my review here!

    Beautiful collection of shorter stories 🙂

    Wolf Worm by T. Kingfisher

    Wolf Worm by T. Kingfisher

    288 pages – Edition Pub Date: 24 Mar 2026

    Publisher: Tor Nightfire

  • Aardvark Book Box Subscription – February 2026 Selections

    Aardvark Book Box Subscription – February 2026 Selections

    I hadn’t a clue what the selects would be this time around from the Hints except for The Poet Empress…but ever since I signed up for Aardvark last year, their selections have NOT MISSED.

    I’m so grateful for Aardvark existing because none of the other book box subscriptions fit what I’d look for…

    Membership is $17.99 USD/month for 1 book and $9.99 for each extra book up to 3 books. When you first join, there is a deal, $4-5 (last I checked) for the first book!

    So what are their February selections and what am I picking??

    I would have picked The Poet Empress if it wasn’t already on the way from Fae Crate! So I picked TRAD WIFE intead. I almost went for Superfan and was also thinking of Burn Down Master’s House, but those include trigger warnings that I try to avoid. So TRAD WIFE is it!

    This is a horror novel and Aardvark has it as an early release as well as signed.

    I LOVE that Aardvark gives you all of the following when selecting books: Synopsis, Content Warnings, Spice Ratings, and a Preview of the first page. I love reading the first page preview because I can tell immediately if it is for me or not!

    While I wouldn’t have picked TRAD WIFE on my own, it sounds interesting and it’s good to branch out every now and then.

    SYNOPSIS

    This is the beginning from Aardvark’s site:

    “A “traditional wife” influencer allows a demonic creature to impregnate her in this unnerving horror novel, perfect for fans of Nightbitch and Mary, from the author of Serial Killer Support Group.

    Every #tradwife needs a baby. She’ll get one at any cost.”

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR

    This is directly from their website:

    “Saratoga Schaefer (they/them) is an author who was born and raised in NYC. Saratoga is represented by Amy Giuffrida of Belcastro Agency.

    Besides being an avid reader and writer, Saratoga is also sober, and in their spare time, teaches yoga, climbs rocks, and hikes mountains.

    Connect with Toga on social media @saratogaishere.”

    Also, I should add that Aardvark is not paying me at all to say these nice things about them haha. They are just that fabulous!

    A quick word on Fae Crate (since I mentioned it above), this is the first month for me and I’m already thinking of canceling. Firstly, the way my brain works, their emails and system and process of getting waitlisted, then subscribing, then confirming and shipping is very confusing and messy.

    I was offered a spot mid January, signed up and paid and haven’t received a confirmation or shipping notification since. They mentioned the books ship in the last week of the month (which would have been last week). So, we’ll see what happens but I didn’t see any shipping notifications yet.

    While the Fae Crate selections for February were ones I was interested in (The Poet Empress and Queen of Faces), March’s are not. I think they might be too romantasy focused for me, so I’ll likely vacate the spot.

    Aardvark is so much better organized and engaging for me! They post A LOT on social including Tiktok which I LOVE. They make it super clear every step of the way AND they have a really cool underutilized app that features a book club and discussion posts for all the selects.

    I’m excited to add Trad Wife to the shelf and we’ll do this again next month!

  • February 2026: Most Anticipated Fantasy, Sci-Fi, and Horror Book Releases

    February 2026: Most Anticipated Fantasy, Sci-Fi, and Horror Book Releases

    Here are my most anticipated releases during February 2026, in no particular order!

    The Library of Amorlin by Kalyn Josephson

    The Age of Beasts #1

    The Library of Amorlin Kalyn Josephson

    448 pages • Fantasy

    Edition Pub Date: 24 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Erewhon Books

    Cleopatra by Saara El-Arifi

    Cleopatra by Saara El-Arifi

    384 pages • Historical Fantasy-Magical Realism

    Edition Pub Date: 26 Feb 2026

    Publisher: The Borough Press

    Carnival Fantástico by Angela Montoya

    Carnival Fantástico by Angela Montoya

    394 pages •Fantasy – YA

    Edition Pub Date: 03 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Joy Revolution

    Past me preordered this – would I make the same decision now? I’m not sure but I’ll definitely be writing a review on this site so stay tuned!

    She Who Devours by Bea Bustamante

    She Who Devours by Bea Bustamante

    304 pages • Fantasy

    Edition Pub Date: ??? – This one has been a bit elusive but I think it’s coming out in Feb.

    Publisher: Penguin Randome House SEA

    The Iron Garden Sutra by A.D. Sui

    The Cosmic Wheel #1

    The Iron Garden Sutra by A.D. Sui

    384 pages • Science Fiction

    Edition Pub Date: 24 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Erewhon Books

    The Gods Must Burn by T.R. Moore

    The Gods Must Burn by T.R. Moore

    386 pages • Fantasy

    Edition Pub Date: 24 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Solaris

    Call of the Dragon by Natasha Bowen

    Call of the Dragon by Natasha Bowen

    368 pages • Fantasy – YA

    Edition Pub Date: 10 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Random House Books for Young Readers/Random House, Inc..

    Saltswept by Katalina Watt

    The Earthsalt Duology #1

    Saltswept by Katalina Watt

    320 pages • Fantasy

    Edition Pub Date: 05 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton

    A Forest, Darkly by A.G. Slatter

    A Forest, Darkly by A.G. Slatter

    356 pages • Fantasy

    Edition Pub Date: 10 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Titan Books

    The Forest on the Edge of Time by Jasmin Kirkbride

    The Forest on the Edge of Time by Jasmin Kirkbride

    368 pages • Science Fiction

    Edition Pub Date: 03 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Tor Books

    3* – This didn’t hit well for me but see my full review here! That doesn’t mean you won’t like it though, it’s an intriguing premise.

    The Obake Code by Makana Yamamoto

    The Obake Code by Makana Yamamoto

    336 pages • Science Fiction

    Edition Pub Date: 17 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Gollancz

    4* – recommend! Especially if you like a queer normative mostly women from marginalized communities cast taking on rich evil men. rawr.

    See my full review here.

    She Made Herself a Monster by Anna Kovatcheva

    She Made Herself a Monster by Anna Kovatcheva

    288 pages • Historical Horror – Literary

    Edition Pub Date: 10 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Mariner Books

    The Legend of the Nine-Tailed Fox by Katrina Kwan

    The Legend of the Nine-Tailed Fox by Katrina Kwan

    320 pages • Fantasy – Adventure – Dark

    Edition Pub Date: 24 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Saga Press

    A Day of Breath by Darby Cox

    A Day of Breath by Darby Cox

    352 pages • Fantasy

    Edition Pub Date: 10 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Angry Robot

    Weavingshaw by Heba Al-Wasity

    Weavingshaw by Heba Al-Wasity

    464 pages • Fantasy

    Edition Pub Date: 24 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Del Rey

    5* – LOVED THIS BOOK SO MUCH.

    I have a full review here if you’d like to hear more but really trust me on this one! For anyone who likes a moody dark fantasy with ghosts and representation for refugees.

    The People's Library  by Veronica G. Henry

    The People’s Library by Veronica G. Henry

    303 pages • Sci-fi / Fantasy

    Edition Pub Date: 03 Feb 2026

    Publisher: 47North (Amazon unfortunately)

    Agnes Aubert's Mystical Cat Shelter  by Heather Fawcett

    Agnes Aubert’s Mystical Cat Shelter by Heather Fawcett

    368 pages • Fantasy

    Edition Pub Date: 17 Feb 2026

    Publisher: Del Rey

    Queen of Faces by Petra Lord

    Queen of Faces by Petra Lord

    432 pages • Fantasy – LGBTQIAP+

    Publisher: Henry Holt Books for Young Readers

    Edition Pub Date: 03 Feb 2026

    february most anticipated sci-fi horror fantasy releases

    Ok there we go! Roll on February & Black History Month celebrations!

  • January 2026: Most Anticipated Fantasy, Sci-Fi, and Horror Book Releases

    January 2026: Most Anticipated Fantasy, Sci-Fi, and Horror Book Releases

    These are my most anticipated book releases by category. Of course, these aren’t all of the books coming out this month, only the ones I am most interested in.

    I have read ARCs of some of these releases so check out the links below to longer reviews.

    There are quite a number of releases that topically I am interested in but have content and trigger warnings that I avoid. You won’t find these on this list either!

    Fantasy

    January 6 – The Swan’s Daughter by Roshani Chokshi

    I was pleasantly surprised to be approved for the audio ARC or the ALC rather last minute on NetGalley. This audiobook was AMAZING.

    Demelza escapes her abusive home situation and tries to hide in the only place her father can’t get to her. It just so happens to be a kingdom and palace where there is a prince trying to find a bride through an unorthodox way, a competition. Demelza bargains with the prince to let her stay and she’ll help him find out which contenders secretly want to kill him or not. In order to do this, she has to compete in the competition herself…

    Some of the content bothered me a bit, especially when it came to the end, but read my full review here for more details! It’s absurd, funny, and beautifully written.

    Roshani Chokshi is the author of commercial and critically acclaimed books for middle grade and young adult readers that draw on world mythology and folklore. Her work has been nominated for the Locus and Nebula awards, and has frequently appeared on Best of The Year lists from Barnes and Noble, Forbes, Buzzfeed and more. Her New York Times bestselling series include The Star-Touched Queen duology, The Gilded Wolves, and Aru Shah and The End of Time, which has been optioned for film by Paramount Pictures.

    January 6 (US), 8 (UK) – Tidespeaker by Sadie Turner

    A girl with the power to command the tides has her life changed when she secures a job serving a wealthy noble family–only to learn upon arrival that the last person to fill her post mysteriously died, and her new employers are hiding dark secrets–in this haunting and lush debut fantasy.

    I might pick this one up unless my library has it soon!

    Sadie Turner grew up in the Welsh Borders and now lives in Hampshire, not far from the former home of one of her biggest inspirations: Jane Austen. She is a copywriter, mother of two, and author of gloomy, romantic, neurodiverse YA Fantasy. When she can find the time, she loves reading, cooking, and classic CRPGs, and is rarely seen without a cup of tea on hand. She is the author of the Tidespeaker duology.

    January 13 – The Age of Calamities by Senaa Ahmad

    I read an eARC of The Age of Calamities and LOVED it. Highly recommend if you are looking for a short story collection that is as absurd as it is imaginative and beautiful. Senaa applies her creativity to historical figures and events for a whirlwind of plots and characters as we’ve never thought of them before.

    See my full review here.

    Senaa Ahmad’s short fiction has appeared in The Paris Review, McSweeney’s, Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy, Best Canadian Stories, and elsewhere. She has received the generous support of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the Toronto Arts Council, the Speculative Literature Foundation, and the Carl Brandon Society’s Octavia Butler Scholarship. Her work was also the recipient of a Pushcart Prize and the Sunburst Award and a finalist for the National Magazine Award for Fiction. The Age of Calamities is her first book.

    January 13 – Fire Sword & Sea by Vanessa Riley

    This one had me at pirates…and I’ve just ordered myself a copy!

    In addition to being a novelist, Vanessa Riley holds a doctorate in mechanical engineering from Stanford University and both a BS and MS in mechanical engineering from Penn State. She currently juggles mothering an architect, baking her Trinidadian grandmother’s desserts, hugging her retired military husband, and speaking at women’s and STEM events. You can often find her writing from the comfort of her Georgia porch, tea or latte in hand. – Bookshop.org

    January 20 – A Wild Radiance by Maria Ingrande Mora

    A searing and romantic fantasy adventure about an oligarchic state on the verge of a magical industrial revolution—perfect for fans of Arcane, Wicked, and Iron Widow!

    I wasn’t sure about the romantic part of this but the comp to Iron Widow means I am REQUIRED to try it.

    Maria Ingrande Mora (they/she) is the acclaimed author of Fragile Remedy, a Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection, the Ranger Academy series, and The Immeasurable Depth of You, an Amelia Elizabeth Walden Book Award finalist, which earned three starred reviews, with Kirkus Reviews calling it “raw and compassionate.” A queer, AuDHD single parent, Mora lives in Florida with their two teenagers and three cats. Instagram: @MariaMoraWrites.

    Click to unhide Community Content Warnings per StoryGraph (Potential Spoilers Warning!):

    Click here to see content warningsGraphic – Death, Violence, Fire/Fire injury; Moderate – Death of parent, Child abuse, Injury/Injury detail; Minor – Sexual assault, Sexual harassment

    January 27 – To Ride A Rising Storm by Moniquill Blackgoose

    I read this one as an eARC – read my review here! It’s a great series with fantastic characters; my only complaint is info-dumping.

    This is a series about a young indigenous woman and the baby dragon that choses her. She is forced by threat of violence and death to attend an Anglish (colonizers/imperialists/invaders) academy to teaches future dragon riders.

    Book 1 – To Shape A Dragon’s Breath is the first year or semester of school and focuses a lot of the differences in cultures. Book 2 is the second and more of a fight for independence.

    Moniquill Blackgoose is the bestselling author of To Shape a Dragon’s Breath, which has won both the Nebula and Lodestar Awards. She began writing science fiction and fantasy when she was twelve and hasn’t stopped writing since. She is an enrolled member of the Seaconke Wampanoag Tribe and a lineal descendant of Ousamequin Massasoit. She is an avid costumer and an active member of the steampunk community. She has blogged, essayed, and discussed extensively across many platforms the depictions of Indigenous and Indigenous-coded characters in sci-fi and fantasy.

    January 27 – A Spell for Drowning by Rebecca Ferrier

    A stunning historical fantasy debut steeped in the salt and superstition of the Cornish coast. Perfect for readers of Circe and Godkiller.

    Forgotten sirens, mischievous sea gods, and the lore from days long since passed weave an irresistible tale.

    Sounds right up my alley so I think I will be grabbing a copy of this especially since it is releasing paperback at the same time, YAY.

    Rebecca Ferrier is an award-winning writer based in Edinburgh, Scotland. Her speculative fiction reveals her obsessions with class, power, and death. She teaches creative writing and is a PhD student at Northumbria University. A Spell for Drowning is her debut novel. Since writing it, she has been inundated with hagstones, whether they be gifted by loved ones or hurled from the sea.

    Sci-Fi

    January 6 – Starseekers by Nicole Glover

    This was such a fun read! It could also go under Fantasy as well. I read an eARC and would definitely recommend it.

    It has so many elements that Glover weaves into the story including mystery, celestial magic, treasure hunting, family, found family, adventure, a dash of romance,

    Click here to see my full review.

    Nicole Glover is the author of The Conductors and The Undertakers as well as The Improvisers in the Murder and Magic series. When she’s not writing, she’s working as a UX researcher in Virginia where her knowledge about murder and other mysteries is surprisingly useful.

    Horror

    January 27 – This House Will Feed by Maria Turead

    A January Aardvark box pick! Cannot recommend this book box subscription enough. They are active on TikTok (LOVE to see), engaging, and their picks are incredible. They lean more Horror, Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Mystery, and Literary, often with early releases.

    This story follows a young woman who is taken from a horrible fate during the time of Ireland’s “Famine” by a rich older woman to impersonate her late daughter so that the Lady can continue to receive her widow’s pension and care for her village. Of course, as she moves into the widow’s remote manor house, the horrors don’t stay behind.

    Billed as gothic horror and supernatural suspense!

    Maria Tureaud is an editor and acclaimed author of middle grade and adult fiction. Born and raised in County Clare on the west coast of Ireland, she now lives with her husband and son in New Jersey and can be found online at AuthorMariaTureaud.com.

    Other

    January 13 – Is this a Cry for Help? by Emily Austin

    I picked this one up slightly early thanks to Aardvark Book Club (highly recommended!! – check it out here).

    While a bit outside of what I typically gravitate towards, it sold me on the power of libraries, fighting book banning, queer identity, and coming back from a mental breakdown.

    Emily Austin is the author of We Could Be RatsEveryone in This Room Will Someday Be DeadInteresting Facts About Space, and the poetry collection Gay Girl Prayers. She was born in Ontario, Canada, and received two writing grants from the Canadian Council for the Arts. She studied English literature and library science at Western University. She currently lives in Ottawa, in the territory of the Anishinaabe Algonquin Nation.

    The Bookshop.org links above are indeed affiliate so I may make a few pennies if you purchase something following those. It helps me buy more books to review of course! Or potentially offset the costs of this website (which will probably never be enough lol), or fuel my reviews and reading with coffees. Thank you if you do make a purchase through the links!!

    Happy reading 🙂

    ~M

  • December 2025 – Most Anticipated Releases

    December 2025 – Most Anticipated Releases

    These are my most anticipated releases for the month of December 2025:

    Dawn of the Firebird by Sarah Mughal Rana

    Highly recommend! (See my ARC Review here)

    Publisher’s Synopsis: For fans of The Poppy War, She Who Became the Sun and The Will of the Many, a breathtaking fantasy novel about the daughter of an overthrown emperor from an exciting new voice Khamilla Zahr-zad’s life has been built on a foundation of violence and vengeance. Every home she’s known has been destroyed by war.

    As the daughter of an emperor’s clan, she spent her childhood training to maintain his throne. But when her clansmen are assassinated by another rival empire, plans change. With her heavenly magic of nur, Khamilla is a weapon even enemies would wield—especially those in the magical, scholarly city of Za’skar.

    Hiding her identity, Khamilla joins the enemy’s army school full of jinn, magic and martial arts, risking it all to topple her adversaries, avenge her clan and reclaim their throne.

    To survive, she studies under cutthroat mystic monks and battles in a series of contests to outmaneuver her fellow soldiers. She must win at all costs, even if it means embracing the darkness lurking inside her. But the more she excels, the more she is faced with history that contradicts her father’s teachings. With a war brewing among the kingdoms and a new twisted magic overtaking the land, Khamilla is torn between two impossible vengeance or salvation.

    The Library of Fates by Margot Harrison

    Publisher’s Synopsis: When its librarian keeper mysteriously dies, two former classmates must race to locate a rare book from their college years that can foretell your future if you confess a secret from your past—but someone is intent on protecting what’s hidden inside. It can write the story of your future…and hide the secrets of your past.

    The Library of Fates was designed to show you who you are—and who you could become. Its rarest book, The Book of Dark Nights, holds a when you write an intimate confession on its pages, you’ll receive a prediction for your future, penned in your own handwriting.

    For Eleanor, whose childhood was defined by a senseless tragedy, the library offers a world where everything makes sense. She’s spent most of her life there as an apprentice to the brilliant librarian, showing other people how to find the meaning of their lives in stories.

    But when her mentor dies in a freak accident and The Book of Dark Nights goes missing—along with the secrets written inside—Eleanor is pulled out of the library and into a quest to locate it with the last person she the librarian’s estranged son, Daniel, who Eleanor once loved.

    Together, as they hunt down clues from Harvard to Paris, Eleanor and Daniel grow closer again, regaining each other’s trust. But little do they know that they’re entangled in a much larger web. Someone else wants the book, and they’ll go to dark lengths to get it…

    Canticle by Janet Rich Edwards

    Publisher’s Synopsis: Set in thirteenth-century Bruges, this debut novel follows a young woman’s explorations of faith, agency, and love among a community of fiercely independent women.

    Aleys is sixteen years old and serious, stubborn, prone to religious visions. She and her only friend, a young scholar, have been learning Latin together in secret—but just as she thinks their connection might become something more, he abandons her for the monastery.

    When her family falls on hard financial times, her father promises her in marriage to the unctuous head of the weavers’ guild, and in desperation she runs away from home, eventually finding shelter within a community of religious women who do not answer to the church.Among the hardworking and strong-willed Beguines, Aleys glimpses for the first time the joys of a life of song, friendship, and time spent in the markets and along the canals of Bruges.

    But forces both mystical and political are afoot. Illegal translations of scripture, the women’s independence, and a sudden rash of miracles all draw the attention of an ambitious bishop—and bring Aleys and those around her into ever-increasing danger, a danger that will push Aleys to a new understanding of love and sacrifice.

    Introducing a spirited, indelible heroine and a major new talent, Canticle is a luminous work of historical fiction, vividly evoking a world on the verge of transformation.

    An Arcane Inheritance by Kamilah Cole

    Publisher’s Synopsis: A modern-day dark academia speculative fantasy with a twist, perfect for fans of Babel and A Deadly Education.

    Warren University has long stood amongst the ivy elite, built on the bones—and forbidden magic—of its most prized BIPOC students…hiding the rot of a secret society that will do anything to keep their own powers burning bright, no matter the cost to those lost along the way.

    The Once and Future Queen by Paula Lafferty

    Publisher’s Synopsis: Vera always knew she didn’t fit in. When she learns that she is meant to be in another time, she leaps at the chance to embrace a new life in a world of valor, intrigue, and unexpected magic in this bold and romantic retelling of Arthurian legend . . .

    22-year-old Vera is at a crossroads: waiting tables, grieving her previous relationship, and jogging aimlessly each morning as if toward an uncertain future. Then an odd man shows up at her workplace, insisting that she was once the legendary Queen Guinevere of Camelot, and that her lost memories hold the key to changing both the past and the present.

    Somehow, it all feels like the direction she’s been looking for. But when she asks the mysterious man to tell her more about Lancelot, Arthur, and a faithless queen, he can only say that much of what she’s heard about Camelot is wrong. The truth, he claims, is something she must see for herself.

    After jumping through a portal in Glastonbury’s historic center, Vera is not prepared for what she finds. Magic is everywhere, but a curse on the kingdom means it dwindles every day. She has no idea how to perform a queen’s duties. Her fast friendship with Lancelot sets gossip flowing, and the stranger she must call “husband” often refuses to meet her eye.

    Arthur is a puzzle: cold, forbidding, and, while angry to her face, keeps leaving secret tokens of tenderness in her chambers. Worst of all, Vera’s memories—and the answers locked within them—show no signs of returning. If Vera is truly destined to save Camelot, she’ll have to trust her instincts. And her king will have to trust her . . .

    Persephone’s Curse by Katrina Leno

    Publisher’s Synopsis: The Hazel Wood meets Laini Taylor in this gorgeous speculative tale of sisterhood, ghosts and old family curses.

    Are the four Farthing sisters really descended from Persephone? This is what their aunt has always told that the women in their family can trace their lineage right back to the Goddess of the Dead. And maybe she’s right, because the Farthing girls do have a ghost in the attic of their Manhattan brownstone —a kind and gentle ghost named Henry, who only they can see.

    When one of the sisters falls in love with the ghost, and another banishes him to the Underworld, the sisters are faced with even bigger questions about who they are. If they really are related to Persephone, and they really are a bit magic, then perhaps it’s up to them to save Henry, to save the world, and to save each other.

    Disclaimer: This blog is part of the Bookshop.org affiliate program and I may earn a very small amount for each purchase made using the links in this post.

  • 2025 – November Releases

    2025 – November Releases


    It’s cozy season. Snuggle up with your limitless TBR for the winter and feel free to tack on these new releases if you haven’t heard of them yet!

    New releases I am interested in coming out November 2025.

    November 4, 2025:

    • The Burning Queen by Aparna Verma
      • Book #2 in The Ravence Trilogy
      • Published by Orbit Books
    • Coldwire by Chloe Gong
      • Book #1 of 2058
      • Dystopian, YA, Sci-fi
    • The House Saphir by Marissa Meyer
      • Published by Feiwel & Friends
      • Standalone
      • Fairytale Retelling of Bluebeard
      • Murder mystery, ghosts, YA “romantasy”
    • Fallen City by Adrien Young
      • Published by Saturday Books
      • Book #1 in the Fallen City Duology
      • Not super spicy (YES) per author’s socials
      • Epic Fantasy

    November 6, 2025:

    November 11, 2025:

    • The Merge by Grace Walker
      • Standalone
      • Published by Mariner
      • Dystopian, merging minds