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

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Austin Kelley, The Fact Checker
(Atlantic Monthly)

“In his sort-of-mystery debut, with understated humor and zippy prose, former New Yorker fact-checker Kelley is a fluid and funny writer, divertingly digressing on the nature of fact-checking and filling out a backstory for the narrating fact-checker, who, both well-informed and hilariously unaware, is as charmingly pedantic as a character could be.”
–Annie Bostrom, Booklist

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Bailey Seybolt, Coram House
(Atria)

“Seybolt blends true crime and fiction in this absorbing debut. Seybolt skillfully blends points of view. Part Gothic novel (with creepy Coram House playing a role) and part investigative reporting procedural, this will both disturb and fascinate readers.”
–Booklist

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Abbi Waxman, One Death at a Time
(Berkley)

“Full of the witty banter and laugh-out-loud scenarios readers have come to expect from Waxman, this raucous romp around Tinseltown with an odd couple of sleuths will delight readers.”
–Library Journal

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Jeneva Rose, The Perfect Divorce
(Blackstone)

“Rose has a lot of fun with her characters’ attempts to implicate each other in the book’s overlapping criminal investigations and maintains wicked tension from the opening pages…A ride worth taking.”
–Publishers Weekly

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Matthew Sullivan, Midnight in Soap Lake
(Hanover Square)

Midnight in Soap Lake hooked me from page one. This twisty, smart thriller is brimming with complex characters, a page-turning plot and big questions of science, nature, marriage and murder. Matthew Sullivan expertly blends fact, fable and the evocative setting of Soap Lake in rural Washington state to create a spellbinding novel—I adored it.”
–Tara Conklin

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Jonathan Coe, The Proof of My Innocence
(Europa Editions)

“A smart yarn with biting humor, ingenious clues, and a satisfying twist.”
–Booklist

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Abigail Dean, The Death of Us
(Viking)

“This wonderful novel is a page-turner par excellence, written with unobtrusive brilliance, [and] full of sharply observed lines…. Dean has taken a case that closely resembles California’s Golden State Killer and combined it with the story of Isabel and Edward, a couple whose love is put under a breaking strain by an almost unimaginable tragedy…. The Death of Us lives up to the hype. Read it for story, always appreciating the no-showing-off clarity of its prose.”
—Stephen King

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Lindy Ryan, Another Fine Mess
(Minotaur)

“Sometimes the dead can ruin your life. Lindy Ryan’s Another Fine Mess is a rich and captivating story about family legacy, history, lore, and of course murder. Delightfully alluring and richly suspenseful.”
–Cynthia Pelayo

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C.S. Harris, Who Will Remember
(Berkley)

“Harris does her usual superior job of combining a page-turning fair-play plot with plausible period detail. Both series fans and newcomers will be captivated.”
–Publishers Weekly

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Michael Amos Cody, Streets of Nashville
(Madville Publishing)

“Cody’s Streets of Nashville is a lyrical love letter to the musicians who built the city as well as a powerful exploration of friendship and brutality. With his authentic, empathetic voice, Cody is a welcome addition to Southern crime fiction. I look forward to more Ezra MacRae stories to come!”
–Heather Levy

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