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THE GRIFFIN WARRIOR

BOOK TWO OF THE BOCAGE SERIES

A highly original adventure that overflows with lively historical material.

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Birmingham’s time-traveling thriller follows eco-terrorists and an elite team trying to stop them.

The author picks up after his WWII-era historical novel Bocage (2025) with another mission featuring the group known as Jed Team Hugo. At the beginning of this installment, former professional football player and Jed Team member Charley Montgomery is recovering from wounds he incurred during a bizarre attack at Charles de Gaulle Airport. Charley and the “love of [his] life,” Jane, had an encounter with foes who included “two beautiful hippie girls with hatchets” and a “disheveled Frenchman” barking commands. Jane was killed in the attack. After Charley tells the Jed Team Hugo members the details, Rory, “an accomplished MI6 agent,” deduces that a group of eco-terrorists was behind the encounter. The group is run by a young woman with “iridescent red hair” who calls herself Red Medusa. Red Medusa is indeed trouble—she’s behind the destruction of an oil rig in the North Sea. Targets like oil rigs are merely the tip of the iceberg; the eco-terrorists may have control of a microbe that “will make the population effects of Covid-19 look like a mild sniffle.” Jed Team Hugo has their work cut out for them. The plot includes wild and disparate elements, such as characters who are demigods, a brief treatise on London’s historically poor air quality, and time travel through something called “Time Dilations.” It is, in short, not a typical thriller; it is also, at least initially, temporally confusing. For instance, when readers are first introduced to Rory, Charley explains that she is “the warrior princess from MI6 whom I carried on my shoulders as a toddler when I raced her father around the Serpentine in London”; he goes on to mention a “Nazi attack at Archangel in Hyde Park” in 1942. Though readers may not know what all this means at the outset, much excitement is in store as the narrative constantly zigs and zags in different directions.

A highly original adventure that overflows with lively historical material.

Pub Date: March 31, 2026

ISBN: 9798317823634

Page Count: 316

Publisher: BookBaby

Review Posted Online: March 23, 2026

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THE CALAMITY CLUB

Fans of Stockett’s bestselling debut will love this engaging follow-up.

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Stockett heads to Mississippi for another historical novel about feisty women.

This time, perhaps recalling criticisms of cultural appropriation in The Help (2009), she sticks to feisty white women, with one exception. The setting is Oxford in 1933. For two miserable years, 11-year-old Meg has lived in “the Orphan,” a county asylum for parentless girls. Chairlady Garnett—a villain so one-note she’d twirl a mustache if she had one—makes it her mission to ostracize the older girls she deems unadoptable, stigmatizing them as offspring of the “feebleminded” mothers who abandoned them. She particularly has it in for smart, sassy Meg, who refuses to believe her mother’s mysterious disappearance was deliberate. Elsewhere in Oxford, Birdie Calhoun comes to visit her sister Frances, who married a wealthy banker, to ask for money on behalf of their mother and grandmother back in Footely. Frances isn’t thrilled by this reminder of her impoverished small-town origins. But she’s trying to climb up in Oxford society by volunteering at the Orphan, the asylum’s books need to be done before the state inspector shows up in a few weeks, and Birdie is a bookkeeper. Having neatly arranged to keep Birdie in town and draw these two storylines together, Stockett goes on to spin a compulsively readable yarn with enough plot for a half-dozen novels. Birdie and Meg become friends, Meg is adopted despite Garnett’s best efforts, Meg’s mother turns up at the Orphan demanding to know where her child is—and that’s less than a quarter of the way through a long, winding narrative that keeps piling on more dramatic developments until all loose ends are neatly, if hastily, wrapped up in the final pages. Stockett might be making a point about Southern women facing facts and standing up for themselves, but mostly this is just a satisfyingly twisty tale that should make a great miniseries.

Fans of Stockett’s bestselling debut will love this engaging follow-up.

Pub Date: May 5, 2026

ISBN: 9781954118812

Page Count: 656

Publisher: Spiegel & Grau

Review Posted Online: Feb. 2, 2026

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2026

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THE BOOK CLUB FOR TROUBLESOME WOMEN

A sugarcoated take on midcentury suburbia.

A lively and unabashedly sentimental novel examines the impact of feminism on four upper-middle-class white women in a suburb of Washington, D.C., in 1963.

Transplanted Ohioan Margaret Ryan—married to an accountant, raising three young children, and decidedly at loose ends—decides to recruit a few other housewives to form a book club. She’s thinking A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, but a new friend, artistic Charlotte Gustafson, suggests Betty Friedan’s brand-new The Feminine Mystique. They’re joined by young Bitsy Cobb, who aspired to be a veterinarian but married one instead, and Vivian Buschetti, a former Army nurse now pregnant with her seventh child. The Bettys, as they christen themselves, decide to meet monthly to read feminist books, and with their encouragement of each other, their lives begin to change: Margaret starts writing a column for a women’s magazine; Viv goes back to work as a nurse; Charlotte and Bitsy face up to problems with demanding and philandering husbands and find new careers of their own. The story takes in real-life figures like the Washington Post’s Katharine Graham and touches on many of the tumultuous political events of 1963. Bostwick treats her characters with generosity and a heavy dose of wish-fulfillment, taking satisfying revenge on the wicked and solving longstanding problems with a few well-placed words, even showing empathy for the more well-meaning of the husbands. As historical fiction, the novel is hampered by its rosy optimism, but its take on the many micro- and macroaggressions experienced by women of the era is sound and eye-opening. Although Friedan might raise an eyebrow at the use her book’s been put to, readers will cheer for Bostwick’s spunky characters.

A sugarcoated take on midcentury suburbia.

Pub Date: April 22, 2025

ISBN: 9781400344741

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Harper Muse

Review Posted Online: Feb. 1, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2025

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