by Helen Cooper ‧ RELEASE DATE: Dec. 5, 2023
A clever plot, richly characterized, that explores how choices can cascade to unravel a seemingly happy life.
When Lucy looks at photos of her colleague’s honeymoon in the Maldives, she’s shocked to notice the husband of one of her best friends, arms entwined with an unknown woman.
Over the last 15 years, Lucy has created a perfect life for herself in Leicester, England. A teaching job at a local school; a husband, Adam, whom she loves; two children, Fran and Tilly, who couldn’t make her happier; and family friends who are their match: Cora, Scott, Ivy, and Joe. Cora, Scott, and Adam were all housemates at university, and Ivy and Joe arrived around the same time as Lucy’s own children. The families are inseparable, the children friends, and impromptu barbecues and midweek dinners have evolved into a jointly purchased seaside cottage in Norfolk, which the adults are renovating on the weekends. It is this idyllic life and family network that Lucy feels is threatened by clear evidence that Scott is having an affair. Why else would he be in the Maldives rather than in Japan on a business trip as he claimed? Adam tells her to leave it alone, but she keeps digging, especially when the woman in the picture turns out to be Juliet Noor, a journalist-turned-novelist who goes missing on the island where she was writing, eventually turning up dead. While the novel starts with what appears to be a typical obsessive-wife-won’t-stop-digging-even-though-her-husband-tells-her-to-stop storyline that feels a little worn, it unexpectedly unfolds into far, far more as Lucy races to discover who has killed Juliet—and just how many people in her close circle are involved.
A clever plot, richly characterized, that explores how choices can cascade to unravel a seemingly happy life.Pub Date: Dec. 5, 2023
ISBN: 9780593544907
Page Count: 368
Publisher: Putnam
Review Posted Online: Oct. 7, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2023
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by Dan Brown ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 9, 2025
A standout in the series.
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New York Times Bestseller
The sixth adventure of Harvard symbology professor Robert Langdon explores the mysteries of human consciousness, the demonic projects of the CIA, and the city of Prague.
“Ladies and gentlemen...we are about to experience a sea change in our understanding of how the brain works, the nature of consciousness, and in fact…the very nature of reality itself.” But first—Langdon’s in love! Brown’s devoted readers first met brilliant noetic scientist Katherine Solomon in The Lost Symbol (2009); she’s back as a serious girlfriend, engaging the committed bachelor in a way not seen before. The book opens with the pair in a luxurious suite at the Four Seasons in Prague. It’s the night after Katherine has delivered the lecture quoted above, setting the theme for the novel, which features a plethora of real-life cases and anomalies that seem to support the notion that human consciousness is not localized inside the human skull. Brown’s talent for assembling research is also evident in this novel’s alter ego as a guidebook to Prague, whose history and attractions are described in great and glowing detail. Whether you appreciate or skim past the innumerable info dumps on these and other topics (Jewish folklore fans—the Golem is in the house!), it goes without saying that concision is not a goal in the Dan Brown editing process. Speaking of editing, the nearly 700-page book is dedicated to Brown’s editor, who seems to appear as a character—to put it in the italicized form used for Brownian insight, Jason Kaufman must be Jonas Faukman! A major subplot involves the theft of Katherine’s manuscript from the secure servers of Penguin Random House; the delightful Faukman continues to spout witty wisecracks even when blindfolded and hogtied. There’s no shortage of action, derring-do, explosions, high-tech torture machines, attempted and successful murders, and opportunities for split-second, last-minute escapes; good thing Langdon, this aging symbology wonk, never misses swimming his morning laps. Readers who are not already dyed-in-the-wool Langdonites may find themselves echoing the prof’s own conclusion regarding the credibility of all this paranormal hoo-ha: At some point, skepticism itself becomes irrational.
A standout in the series.Pub Date: Sept. 9, 2025
ISBN: 9780385546898
Page Count: 688
Publisher: Doubleday
Review Posted Online: Sept. 9, 2025
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2025
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SEEN & HEARD
by Ashley Elston ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 13, 2026
This mystery’s promising premise bogs down in an overloaded cast.
When one woman takes on another’s identity to uncover a crime, they both become suspects in a murder.
Aubrey Price and Camille Bayliss come from different worlds, only crossing paths because of the discovery that Camille’s husband, powerful lawyer Ben Bayliss, is hiding something terrible that affects them both. As the novel opens, Aubrey is driving Camille’s Range Rover, then teetering into a bar on Camille’s high heels, with Camille’s dress and credit cards and a wig that mimics Camille’s hair, pretending to be her because Ben tracks his wife’s every move and expenditure, and Camille wants to create a smokescreen while she sneaks into his office in search of evidence of that unnamed secret. But the scheme goes awry, and the women become each other’s alibis after Camille finds Ben murdered in their home. The first part of the book builds suspense and misdirection well, with Aubrey and Ben’s straight-arrow partner, Hank Landry, serving as first-person observers in some chapters while others track Camille. She’s a wealthy and privileged woman but not a happy one, stuck under the thumbs of her husband and her tyrannical father, Randall Everett, who pretty much runs their small Louisiana town. Aubrey was orphaned as a teen when her parents died in a car crash and has proudly fended for herself ever since, coming to depend on her four roommates, who have become friends. But as the cast of characters grows, it seems as if almost everyone in town has a motive for killing Ben, and the piling up of suspects and movements among different timelines can sometimes be confusing. And it all comes to a frustrating end when, after a whole school of red herrings, the solution to Ben’s murder arrives out of far left field.
This mystery’s promising premise bogs down in an overloaded cast.Pub Date: Jan. 13, 2026
ISBN: 9780593834459
Page Count: 352
Publisher: Pamela Dorman/Viking
Review Posted Online: Dec. 10, 2025
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2026
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