New Release Round Up: What to Read & What to Skip
This week's new releases had me jumping from dystopian sci-fi wars and prophecy-fueled romance to cozy small-town charm, chaotic corporate horror, sharp historical fiction, and a mystery that felt like curling up with a detective board and red string.
Some absolutely consumed my life for a few days. A couple didn’t fully come together for me. And one reminded me that atmosphere alone can’t always save a story.
Let’s get into it 👇
⚔️ Seek the Traitor’s Son
Read or skip: READ
Rating: 4.5 stars, Spice: 1/5
This book completely hijacked my attention.
It’s dystopian sci-fi. It’s political fantasy. It’s prophecy-driven romance. It’s war, grief, loyalty, fate, and impossible choices all tangled together in a world that feels cinematic from page one.
And honestly? I think what surprised me most is how big this story feels.
The setup alone is incredible: Elegy and the ruthless Talusar general Rava Vidar are bound by a prophecy that says one of them will destroy the other… and somehow both are tied to the same man.
Immediately messy. Immediately my thing.
What really worked for me here is the tension between destiny and choice. Everyone in this story feels trapped by expectation: political roles, prophecy, family obligations, national survival. Even the romance feels heavy with consequence instead of existing purely for vibes.
And the pacing? Wildly addictive. This is one of those books where you say “one more chapter” and suddenly it’s 2 a.m.
The worldbuilding is layered without becoming overwhelming, and the relationships are messy in a way that feels believable rather than dramatic for the sake of drama. Elegy and her sister especially fascinated me because their relationship feels shaped as much by politics as love.
My one hesitation is the romance arc with Theren. There’s emotional groundwork missing in one specific area that kept me from fully emotionally buying in when things escalated between them. I wanted more confrontation, more accountability, more processing before the romance accelerated.
But outside of that? This was incredibly immersive.
Final thought: A sweeping dystopian sci-fi fantasy with prophecy, political warfare, grief, longing, and a heroine trying to survive the weight of everyone else’s expectations.
💋 Reality Bites
Read or skip: READ
Rating: 4 stars, Spice: 3/5
This one was just fun.
Sharp, messy, romantic chaos with characters that feel deeply human even when they’re making objectively terrible decisions.
The dialogue especially worked for me because it felt natural and quick without trying too hard to be witty. It’s the kind of romance where the chemistry carries you through even the frustrating moments.
Final thought: A charming, emotionally messy romance perfect for readers who like tension, banter, and characters figuring themselves out in real time.
⚓ Hart’s Landing
Read or skip: READ
Rating: 4 stars, Spice: 3/5
This felt like stepping into a small coastal town and immediately wanting to stay there forever.
There’s something very comforting about this book. The atmosphere, the relationships, the emotional warmth… it all feels intentionally cozy without losing emotional depth.
If you love character-driven stories where community matters just as much as romance, this one will probably work for you.
Final thought: A warm, heartfelt read with small-town charm and the kind of emotional comfort that sneaks up on you.
🔎 A Very Vexing Murder
Read or skip: MAYBE
Rating: 3.5 stars
This one had all the ingredients I normally love.
A layered mystery, quirky energy, strong atmosphere, suspicious characters everywhere… and honestly? I did have fun with it.
But I never fully connected emotionally in the way I wanted to. The mystery kept me reading, but the overall execution felt slightly distant for me personally.
That said, I can absolutely see this being someone else’s perfect rainy-day murder mystery.
Final thought: A cozy-ish mystery with clever moments and strong atmosphere, even if it never fully clicked emotionally for me.
🎬 The Franchise
Read or skip: SKIP
Rating: 2 stars
Oof.
This is one of those books where the premise sounds significantly more interesting than the actual reading experience.
There are ideas here about image, performance, identity, and the machinery behind public perception that could have been fascinating, but the execution felt strangely flat. I kept waiting for the emotional punch or sharper commentary to land, and it just… never really did.
And unfortunately when a character-driven story lacks emotional investment, it starts to feel very long very quickly.
Final thought: A strong concept that never fully develops the emotional or thematic depth needed to make it memorable.
🌊 Abyss
Read or skip: READ
Rating: 3.75 stars
This was such a fun little corporate horror surprise.
Imagine anxiety-fueled workplace satire mixed with AI horror, capitalism dread, and increasingly unhinged corporate nonsense.
The tone honestly worked best for me when it leaned into the absurdity because some moments genuinely made me laugh while also making me deeply uncomfortable. Which feels very appropriate for a story about productivity culture and technological dependence.
I do think the story could have benefited from being longer because the concept is strong enough to support deeper exploration, but I still had a good time with it.
Final thought: A fast, weird, darkly funny horror story about capitalism, convenience, and the terrifying logic of productivity culture.
🥂 The Foursome
Read or skip: READ
Rating: 4.25 stars
This one surprised me emotionally.
At first it feels like a story about friendship, privilege, and complicated relationships, but underneath that there’s a lot happening about aging, identity, resentment, nostalgia, and the versions of ourselves we carry into adulthood.
The character dynamics are where this really shines. Everyone feels layered, imperfect, and believable in ways that sometimes made me uncomfortable because the emotional tensions feel so recognizable.
This is definitely more character-driven than plot-driven, so if you need constant momentum this may not fully work for you, but I loved sitting inside these relationships and watching old dynamics unravel.
Final thought: A thoughtful, emotionally layered literary fiction novel about friendship, marriage, aging, and the stories we tell ourselves about who we used to be.
🌧️ The Anniversary
Read or skip: READ
Rating: 5 stars
Okay this is the one that emotionally wrecked me this week.
And somehow it’s also one of the smartest thrillers I’ve read in a while.
This was my first book by this author and now I completely understand why people keep screaming about their work because the plotting here is genuinely impressive. The kind of plotting where every tiny detail matters, every timeline thread connects, and suddenly you realize the author has been quietly building something devastating right in front of you the entire time.
The story follows Jules and Quinn, whose lives first intersect in high school before two tragedies on May 1st change everything forever. Years later, women begin disappearing. Survivors emerge after horrific attacks. And every single incident traces back to the same date.
The media calls him the May Day Killer.
What worked so beautifully for me though is that beneath the thriller structure, this is deeply a story about grief, loneliness, trauma, survival, and two damaged people trying to find something steady in a broken world.
Jules and Quinn absolutely carried this book for me. The characterization is phenomenal. They feel messy and real and heartbreakingly human in ways that made me ache for both of them constantly. I didn’t just want answers by the end…I wanted peace for them.
And the atmosphere? Incredible. The 90s nostalgia layered throughout the story adds this emotional texture that makes everything feel even more haunting somehow.
But truly, the standout here is the structure itself. This book demands your attention because the author is constantly laying details that seem insignificant until suddenly they’re not. There were multiple moments where I stopped and realized something from way earlier had quietly clicked into place.
That ending? Perfect.
Final thought: A beautifully constructed psychological thriller with emotional depth, layered timelines, unforgettable characters, and a twist that feels both shocking and completely earned.
And that’s this week’s reading stack 👀
Honestly, this might be one of the strongest release weeks I’ve had in a while because even the books that didn’t fully work for me still had something interesting going on.
But the standouts? The Anniversary, Seek the Traitor’s Son, and The Foursome completely took over my brain for entirely different reasons. One emotionally wrecked me, one reminded me why I love expansive dystopian fantasy, and one made me want to go down a history rabbit hole.
Exactly the kind of reading week I want.
If you pick any of these up, PLEASE come scream at me afterward because I have thoughts. Especially about that ending in The Anniversary.
❓Which of these is immediately going on your TBR?
And if you’ve already read any of them, tell me: Which new release has been your favorite lately? 👀
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