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SOMETHING TO DO WITH PAYING ATTENTION

A valediction for Wallace’s fans. Accountants will enjoy it, too.

The final finished work by the late, widely influential novelist and essayist.

The present novel, which clocks in at 136 pages, was first published as part of Wallace’s unfinished book, The Pale King. Unlike much of the larger work, it is a finished whole, an onrushing confessional set in an IRS processing center in Peoria, Illinois. The narrator, named Chris Fogle in The Pale King but unnamed here, begins his saga as an aimless young adult who lives at home in Libertyville, a North Side suburb of Chicago. His frustrated father tells his mother that their son “couldn’t find [his] ass with both hands,” and though dad has a point, Chris waxes analytical in classic Wallace form: “From what I understand of basic psychology, this is a fairly typical dynamic—son is feckless and lacks direction, mother is sympathetic and believes in son’s potential and sticks up for him, father is peeved and endlessly criticizes and squeezes son’s shoes but still, when push comes to shove, always ponies up the check for the next college.” Chris eventually comes around and signs up to join “the Service,” the IRS become a quasi-religious institution, driven to do so in part out of remorse for a grisly accident that kills his father. Wallace, as Chris' interviewer, is really a stenographer, recording his subject’s every offhand remembrance of his early years in the 1970s: “Acapulco Gold versus Colombia Gold,” disco, the bankruptcy of New York, the “Uncola,” and other cultural touchstones of an unsettled time. Much can be read as roman à clef, with mental illness, drugs, and misdirection at the heart of the book, brimming over with irony and obsessive attention to the tiniest detail (“the Advanced Tax students had multiple pencils lined up on their desks, all of which were extremely sharp”). Not much happens outside Chris’ head, but what’s going on there is darkly fascinating.

A valediction for Wallace’s fans. Accountants will enjoy it, too.

Pub Date: April 5, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-946022-27-1

Page Count: 136

Publisher: McNally Editions

Review Posted Online: Jan. 18, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2022

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THIS STORY MIGHT SAVE YOUR LIFE

This mystery’s foremost puzzle? The human heart.

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  • New York Times Bestseller

A Los Angeles–based podcaster is AWOL in Crum’s debut, a thriller-romance mashup.

Joy Moore, one half of the chart-topping “comedy survival podcast” This Story Might Save Your Life, is acting strange. She privately tells her co-podcaster and best friend, Benny Abbott, that she wants to take a break from podcasting and will explain why later. The next day, when Benny arrives to record at the home Joy shares with her husband, Xander, who handles podcast business, the couple isn’t there and the house appears vandalized. Benny phones Joy and Xander, but they don’t pick up. He summons the cops and reminds them that Joy is being stalked by someone who “claims to be our biggest fan” and demonstrates this by secretly snapping her picture and posting the images on social media. When it comes to Joy’s stalker, the police have been useless—“They say it doesn’t fit the definition of harassment or something,” Benny grouses—so what’s a podcaster to do but ask his listeners for help? Crum has a smart solution to the problem of how to maintain the mystery of Joy’s whereabouts without sacrificing the character’s viewpoint: The novel’s first half largely alternates between Benny’s present-day narration and Joy-authored chapters pulled from the memoir she and Benny are cowriting. This way, the novel’s readers hear from both parties on the matter consuming Joy’s and Benny’s listeners: As Joy puts it, “Everyone, literally everyone, asks if we were ever romantically involved.” The novel’s did-they-or-didn’t-they/will-they-or-won’t-they tease goes down like a fizzy drink until the story takes a surprising turn at the midpoint. Here the plot sheds much of its mystery and a bit of its allure, although by book’s end, Crum has reconstituted that initial sizzle.

This mystery’s foremost puzzle? The human heart.

Pub Date: March 10, 2026

ISBN: 9781250395238

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Pine & Cedar/Flatiron Books

Review Posted Online: Dec. 6, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2026

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THIS BOOK MADE ME THINK OF YOU

The perfect cozy read for book lovers, sure to break and heal hearts.

A widow receives a year’s worth of books from her late husband and learns to live again in the process.

Matilda “Tilly” Nightingale always loved reading. It was her constant as a child, it led to her job as an editor in London, and she even met her beloved husband, Joe Carter, in a bookstore. But when Joe is diagnosed with cancer, Tilly stops reading altogether. After Joe dies, Tilly finds herself going through the motions at work and at home—until she gets a call from a local bookstore owner, Alfie Lane, saying he has a special gift for her from Joe. It’s a copy of Matilda by Roald Dahl, the classic children’s book about a girl who loves to read, and a letter from Joe. Before he died, he’d visited Alfie at Book Lane and set up a year of books for Tilly—one for each month, each with some sort of instruction or encouragement. Even though Tilly has no intention of getting back into reading, she finds herself drawn to the pages and the bookstore. Soon, the monthly books are encouraging her to cook, travel, and see a horizon beyond the pure grief she’s been living with. As the bookstore becomes a second home, Alfie becomes a treasured friend. Page creates a cozy world that shimmers with whimsy even as she delicately explores grief. It’s easy to understand why Tilly is reticent to open up her life, but that makes it all the more satisfying when she learns to let people in—whether those people are her family members or new friends. Alfie faces his own challenges in owning a bookstore, and the scenes in Book Lane are delightfully reminiscent of You’ve Got Mail. The novel serves as a reminder that books have the power to shape lives, and, as Tilly puts it, “Adventures are waiting for you. It’s time to open the page.”

The perfect cozy read for book lovers, sure to break and heal hearts.

Pub Date: Feb. 3, 2026

ISBN: 9798217186990

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Berkley

Review Posted Online: Oct. 25, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2025

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