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10 New Books Coming Out This Week


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Another week, another batch of books for your TBR pile. Happy reading, folks.

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Hugh Lessig, Fadeaway Joe
(Crooked Lane)

“[This] debut catches fire . . . [For] those who read for intriguing characters.”
–Library Journal

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Jesse Q. Sutanto, I’m Not Done With You Yet
(Berkley)

“This is a wickedly enjoyable treatise on the dark sides of female friendship.”
–Publishers Weekly

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Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child, Dead Mountain
(Grand Central)

“Down-to-earth action tackles an otherworldly mystery in this devilishly plausible yarn.”
–Kirkus

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Erin Flanagan, Come With Me
(Thomas & Mercer)

“Edgar winner [Erin] Flanagan (Blackout) explores the dark side of female friendship in this nail-biting thriller…It’s another strong outing…”
–Publishers Weekly

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Karen Slaughter, After that Night
(William Morrow)

“[G]rueling, pitiless, yet compassionate…. It’s a signal achievement of Slaughter that the climactic revelations add still another layer of horror to her tale.”
–Kirkus Reviews

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D.W. Buffa, Lunatic Carnival
(Polis)

“Buffa’s characters are compelling; the dialogue authentic and well crafted.”
–Library Journal

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Andrea Lankford, Trail of the Lost
(Hachette)

“A gut-wrenching and compelling investigation of long-distance treks gone wrong.”
–Kirkus

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Jonathan Maberry, Long Past Midnight
(Kensington)

“Maberry supplies plenty of chills, both earth-bound and otherworldly.”
–Publishers Weekly

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Robert Swartwood, The Killing Room
(Blackstone)

“If you’re craving nonstop action, multiple high-speed chases, all kinds of lethal weapons, and surprise plot twists galore, pay a visit to The Killing Room by Robert Swartwood. And bring your bulletproof vest, just in case.”
–Jason Rekulak

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Kevin O’Brien, The Enemy at Home
(Kensington)

“Equally excellent as historical fiction as it is a mystery…A richly detailed, wonderfully compelling tale set in Seattle in the midst of the second World War.”
–Brian Kenney, firstCLUE

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Michael Neff
Algonkian Producer
New York Pitch Director
Author, Development Exec, Editor

We are the makers of novels, and we are the dreamers of dreams.

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