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NICK AND LORRAINE WERE LOVERS

A collection of elegant and open-hearted short stories.

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Metz probes the mysteries of love, friendship, and parenthood in this debut fiction collection.

Sometimes even the people you love can be a total mystery. That’s what a college boy learns in the title story of Metz’s collection when the girl he’s fallen in love with—his first real romance—abruptly leaves him for an older man. “I know what you love, and it isn’t me,” she tells him, a line that will haunt him as he embarks on an ill-fated mission to win her back. Such confusion abounds across these 13 stories. In “Knowing”, a grieving mother attempts to understand the “angry” suicide of her daughter. In “Everything Will Be Fine,” a divorced dad is pulled away from an impulsive hookup when one of his sons lands in the hospital, forcing him to confront his failures as a husband and father. In “No One Left Behind,” a boy tries to understand why he has to be nice to his best friend’s brother and what it has to do with his best friend’s father’s service in the war. “Objects in Motion,” one of the book’s strongest stories, follows a teenage boy as he discovers a secondary father figure in his neighbor, an ex-high school football star, and an unexpected friendship with the man’s daughter. The neighbor changes the boy’s understanding of his own father, a quiet, unathletic man from whom he has begun to drift. Metz tells these tales, many of which take place in the small towns and suburbs of southern Illinois, in unfussy yet precise prose. Here he describes a mourning mother after the death of her daughter: “She was aware of going through each day, of seeing people at work and the grocery store and in her neighborhood. She heard herself speaking, but conversations had become collections of sounds.” Metz is weakest with endings, which are often a bit too neat to resolve the many fascinating dynamics he sets in motion. Regardless, he captures something of the quiet melancholy of middle American life.

A collection of elegant and open-hearted short stories.

Pub Date: April 22, 2025

ISBN: 9781627205818

Page Count: 230

Publisher: Apprentice House

Review Posted Online: March 7, 2025

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REMINDERS OF HIM

With captivating dialogue, angst-y characters, and a couple of steamy sex scenes, Hoover has done it again.

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After being released from prison, a young woman tries to reconnect with her 5-year-old daughter despite having killed the girl’s father.

Kenna didn’t even know she was pregnant until after she was sent to prison for murdering her boyfriend, Scotty. When her baby girl, Diem, was born, she was forced to give custody to Scotty’s parents. Now that she’s been released, Kenna is intent on getting to know her daughter, but Scotty’s parents won’t give her a chance to tell them what really happened the night their son died. Instead, they file a restraining order preventing Kenna from so much as introducing herself to Diem. Handsome, self-assured Ledger, who was Scotty’s best friend, is another key adult in Diem’s life. He’s helping her grandparents raise her, and he too blames Kenna for Scotty’s death. Even so, there’s something about her that haunts him. Kenna feels the pull, too, and seems to be seeking Ledger out despite his judgmental behavior. As Ledger gets to know Kenna and acknowledges his attraction to her, he begins to wonder if maybe he and Scotty’s parents have judged her unfairly. Even so, Ledger is afraid that if he surrenders to his feelings, Scotty’s parents will kick him out of Diem’s life. As Kenna and Ledger continue to mourn for Scotty, they also grieve the future they cannot have with each other. Told alternatively from Kenna’s and Ledger’s perspectives, the story explores the myriad ways in which snap judgments based on partial information can derail people’s lives. Built on a foundation of death and grief, this story has an undercurrent of sadness. As usual, however, the author has created compelling characters who are magnetic and sympathetic enough to pull readers in. In addition to grief, the novel also deftly explores complex issues such as guilt, self-doubt, redemption, and forgiveness.

With captivating dialogue, angst-y characters, and a couple of steamy sex scenes, Hoover has done it again.

Pub Date: Jan. 18, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-5420-2560-7

Page Count: 335

Publisher: Montlake Romance

Review Posted Online: Oct. 12, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2021

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WRECK

A heartbreaking, laugh-provoking, and absolutely Ephron-esque look at the beauty and fragility of everyday life.

A woman faces a health crisis and obsesses over a local accident in this wonderful follow-up to Sandwich (2024).

Newman begins her latest with a quote from Nora Ephron: “Death is a sniper. It strikes people you love, people you like, people you know—it’s everywhere. You could be next. But then you turn out not to be. But then again, you could be.” It sets an appropriate tone for a story that is just as full of death and dread as it is laughter. Two years after the events of Sandwich, Rocky is back home in Western Massachusetts and happily surrounded by family—her daughter, Willa, lives with her and her husband, Nick, while applying to Ph.D. programs; her widowed father, Mort, has moved into the in-law apartment behind their house. When a young man who graduated from high school with Rocky’s son, Jamie, is hit by a train, Rocky finds herself spiraling as she thinks about how close the tragedy came to her own family. She’s also freaking out about a mysterious rash her dermatologist can’t explain. Both instances are tailor-made for internet research and stalking. As Rocky obsessively googles her symptoms and finds only bad news (“Here’s what’s true about the Internet: very infrequently do people log on with their good news. Gosh, they don’t write, I had this weird rash on my forearm? And it turned out to be completely nothing!”), she also compulsively checks the Facebook page of the accident victim’s mother. Newman excels at showing how sorrow and joy coexist in everyday life. She masterfully balances a modern exploration of grief with truly laugh-out-loud lines (one passage about the absurdity of collecting a stool sample and delivering it to the doctor stands out). As Rocky deals with the byzantine frustrations of the medical system, she also has to learn, once more, how to see her children, husband, father, and herself as fully flawed and lovable humans.

A heartbreaking, laugh-provoking, and absolutely Ephron-esque look at the beauty and fragility of everyday life.

Pub Date: Oct. 28, 2025

ISBN: 9780063453913

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Harper/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: July 17, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2025

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