New Release Roundup: What to Read & What to Skip
One of my goals this year is to help you spend less time wondering what to read next and more time actually reading.
This week's releases took me everywhere.
I traveled on a twelve-day wilderness trek, fake-married my way across the globe on a reality TV show, got tangled up in Egyptian-inspired court politics, and returned to a small Florida town where long-buried secrets refused to stay buried.
As always, these are just my personal reactions. A book that didn't work for me may end up being your next five-star read, and a book I loved might completely miss the mark for someone else.
Let's get into it.
❤️ Good at Being Alive
Read or Skip: READ
Rating: 4 stars
I went into this expecting a fake-dating rom-com.
What I got was a surprisingly emotional story about grief, healing, and learning how to move forward after losing people you had complicated relationships with.
After the death of her family, Bex inherits half of her father's struggling travel company and is forced to work alongside Theo, her serious and perpetually exasperated British business partner. When an opportunity arises to save the company through a travel reality show, the two agree to pretend to be newlyweds for the cameras.
The fake marriage premise hooked me immediately, but what kept me reading was the emotional depth underneath it.
One of my favorite aspects of the novel was its exploration of grief. Not just grief in general, but the specific kind that comes from losing someone who wasn't always easy to love. The book handles those complicated emotions with a lot of honesty and nuance.
I was also completely invested in Bex and Theo. Their banter is fantastic, their chemistry feels natural, and watching Theo fall for Bex long before he's willing to admit it was easily one of my favorite parts of the story.
Final thought: Come for the fake marriage and travel adventures. Stay for the emotional depth, sharp banter, and surprisingly thoughtful exploration of grief.
🏔️ The Great Outdoors
Read or Skip: READ
Rating: 3.75 stars
This is the kind of romance that takes a character completely out of their comfort zone and then makes you cheer for them every step of the way.
After being dumped for being "too high maintenance," Sadie signs up for a twelve-day wilderness trek through the High Sierras to prove she can handle anything. Enter Thorn, the rugged trek leader who may or may not be exactly what she needs.
What worked best for me was Sadie's character growth.
It would have been easy to make her the stereotypical fish-out-of-water heroine who spends the entire book complaining, but instead she adapts, grows, and learns that she doesn't have to control every detail of her life to be happy.
The romance between Sadie and Thorn is sweet, heartfelt, and develops naturally throughout the journey. Their opposites-attract dynamic worked really well for me, and I found myself rooting for them almost immediately.
The wilderness setting also adds a lot of charm.
Did this book make me want to spend twelve days hiking through the mountains Absolutely not.
Did I enjoy experiencing it from the comfort of my couch and air conditioning? Very much yes.
Final thought: A sweet summer romance with strong character growth, forced proximity, outdoor adventure, and plenty of heart.
👑 The Shrouded Queen
Read or Skip: READ (with one caveat)
Rating: 3.75 stars
The Shrouded Queen came incredibly close to being a five-star read for me.
When a rival clan attacks the palace, Princess Amunet escapes while her maid, Samira, is mistaken for the princess and taken into enemy territory. As both women embark on separate journeys, questions of identity, destiny, power, and leadership begin to emerge.
The Egyptian-inspired mythology immediately pulled me in.
The worldbuilding feels fresh, the political intrigue is compelling, and the magical elements kept me fully invested throughout the novel.
The standout character for me was Samira. Her chapters were consistently fascinating, and I found myself deeply invested in both her growth and the mysteries surrounding her identity.
Unfortunately, I struggled with Amunet's perspective. While I understood what the author was trying to accomplish, I never fully connected with her character and often found myself impatient to return to Samira's storyline.
Thankfully, the strength of the worldbuilding, mythology, and overall plot more than made up for it.
Final thought: If you love mythology-inspired fantasy, hidden identities, political intrigue, and complex female characters, this is absolutely worth picking up. Just be prepared to have a favorite POV.
🔪 Nasty Little Secrets
Read or Skip: READ
Rating: 4.25 stars
This was a debut?!
Because if it is, I cannot wait to see what this author does next.
More than a decade after her brother was convicted of murdering his high school girlfriend, Rose returns to her Florida hometown when her younger sister suddenly disappears. As the search unfolds, old secrets begin resurfacing, and it becomes clear that the past may not be as settled as everyone believed.
This book had me hooked from the very first chapter.
The dual timelines are handled incredibly well, with each reveal adding another layer to the mystery. The combination of family drama, small-town secrets, and long-buried lies kept me turning pages long past my bedtime.
Rose is also a wonderfully complicated protagonist. She's flawed, stubborn, messy, and entirely understandable given everything she's endured.
Final thought: A gripping debut packed with family drama, small-town secrets, strong character work, and enough twists to keep thriller readers happy.
🔪 The Summer Fun Massacre
Read or Skip: SKIP
Rating: 3 stars
This may be my biggest case this year of a book not matching the version I created in my head.
Based on the title, cover, and premise, I expected a campy summer slasher packed with creepy campgrounds, ridiculous camp activities, folklore-fueled horror, and all the chaotic energy of an '80s horror movie.
That is not the book I got.
The novel opens strong, with a gruesome attack, a lone survivor, and the promise of a bloody mystery. For a brief moment, I thought I was about to get exactly the kind of summer horror read I'd been craving.
Instead, the story quickly shifts into a police procedural focused on small-town politics, sheriff's department drama, investigations, and interpersonal conflicts.
Now, that's not necessarily a bad thing. If you enjoy police procedurals, there may be a lot here for you. The problem is that the marketing, title, and premise all led me to expect something very different.
There are absolutely horror elements throughout the novel, including some genuinely gruesome scenes, but they felt secondary to the investigation. I also found myself wishing the folklore and mythical horror aspects had been explored much more deeply. The story introduces some intriguing ideas, then largely pushes them into the background.
I also struggled with the cast. There are a lot of characters, many of whom are law enforcement officers, and I had a difficult time keeping track of who was who. The main character never fully clicked for me either, which made it harder to stay invested in the slower sections of the story.
To the book's credit, it is incredibly readable. I flew through it in just a few sittings because the pacing moves quickly and there's always something happening.
Final thought: If you're looking for a police procedural with horror elements and small-town intrigue, this may work much better for you than it did for me. But if you're hoping for a campy summer slasher packed with campground chaos, folklore horror, and classic horror-movie energy, I'd probably point you elsewhere.
Also Hitting Shelves This Week
Didn't see your next read above? Here are a few other releases arriving today that caught my attention.
🔫 Three Hitmen and a Baby by Rob Hart
If you enjoy found family, action-comedy, and stories that somehow manage to be both heartfelt and completely ridiculous, this one sounds like a blast.
The premise alone sold me: three reformed assassins are tasked with babysitting a toddler while their friend searches for her missing brother. Naturally, everything immediately goes wrong. Add a Russian mob boss, fabricated identities, a police manhunt, and a group of killers desperately trying not to kill anyone, and you've got what looks like a chaotic, high-stakes crime caper.
Pick this up if you enjoy: found family, action-comedy, quirky crime novels, and The Hitman's Bodyguard-style energy.
🌊 Meet Me at the Seaside Cottages by Jenny Colgan
This sounds tailor-made for readers who want comfort in book form.
A mother rebuilding her confidence after divorce. A daughter returning home after her life falls apart. Rescue dogs, seaside renovations, pub quizzes, and a second-chance romance.
Everything about this screams cozy, heartwarming summer read.
Pick this up if you enjoy: women's fiction, small-town settings, family relationships, found community, and uplifting stories about fresh starts.
☀️ The Lake Club by Lina Patton
Give me wealthy people behaving badly and I'm already interested.
Set in an exclusive lakeside country club, this debut follows two women whose lives become increasingly entangled with a charming male nanny. As tensions rise, long-buried scandals begin surfacing and threaten the carefully curated image of the community.
This feels like it could be the perfect beach read for fans of messy people making questionable decisions.
Pick this up if you enjoy: domestic drama, wealthy communities, gossip, scandals, and books that feel like binge-worthy television.
🖤 Such a Lucky Girl by Wendy Heard
When a successful influencer leaves her former best friend behind, a chance encounter with an occult self-help book unleashes something far darker than either of them expected.
This sounds like it could land somewhere between YA horror, social commentary, and supernatural revenge story.
Pick this up if you enjoy: horror with modern themes, influencer culture, dark magic, friendship betrayals, and books with strong Tiffany D. Jackson energy.
🥃 The Pinnacle by Abir Mukherjee
An aging Hollywood actor wakes up beside his murdered wife in a luxury Mumbai apartment.
If that premise doesn't hook you, I don't know what will.
Part murder mystery, part international thriller, part examination of fame and privilege, this one sounds packed with tension. The Bollywood setting also gives it a backdrop that feels refreshingly different from many thrillers hitting shelves right now.
Pick this up if you enjoy: murder mysteries, unreliable narrators, international settings, celebrity scandals, and stories where absolutely nobody is having a good time.
Final Verdict
🏆 My favorite of the week: Nasty Little Secrets
💔 Most emotionally surprising: Good at Being Alive
🏕️ Best summer escape: The Great Outdoors
👑 Most intriguing worldbuilding: The Shrouded Queen
If you've read any of these, I'd love to know where you landed. Did we agree? Or am I about to be politely yelled at in the comments?
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