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ANYWHERE YOU RUN

Tense plotting and an authentic historical setting enhance a thriller about racial violence.

Two sisters find danger when they try to run from their secrets in the civil rights–era South.

Violet Richards is in trouble. As a young Black woman in Jackson, Mississippi, in 1964, she knows she’s courting danger by dating a White man, a rich man’s son she doesn’t really love. Then another White man rapes her. The police don’t care. When the rapist threatens her again, she kills him and goes on the run, unknowingly taking something of her boyfriend’s that turns out to be a powder keg. Violet’s younger sister, Marigold, also has a boyfriend she doesn’t love, and a secret lover as well. The lover abandons her when she tells him she’s pregnant, just about the time police come to the family home looking for Violet. Marigold sees little reason to stay in Jackson—the oldest Richards sister, Rose, died years before in an accident, and both of their parents have died recently. So Marigold gives in to her boyfriend’s marriage proposal and plan to move to Cleveland. Neither sister’s escape goes as expected, especially after Violet’s abandoned beau hires a man named Mercer Buggs to find her. Buggs is an inept detective, but he manages to put both Violet and Marigold in mortal danger. As their stories converge in the small town of Chillicothe, Georgia, Morris builds the tension, alternating the narrative among Violet, Marigold, and Buggs. She deftly ties the sisters’ situation to a real-life tragedy of the civil rights movement—the murders of Freedom Summer volunteers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner—and to the inherent violence of the racism behind it. Despite a somewhat rushed ending, this thriller offers complex characters and a well-crafted portrait of time and place.

Tense plotting and an authentic historical setting enhance a thriller about racial violence.

Pub Date: Oct. 25, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-06-308250-2

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Dec. 13, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2023

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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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WANT TO KNOW A SECRET?

Recommended reading for every paranoid suburbanite who’s considering a move to the city, or to the Arctic wilds.

Character assassination reigns supreme, if not uncontested, in a Long Island suburb.

April Masterson loves her husband, corporate attorney Elliott; their 7-year-old, Bobby; and her YouTube channel, “April’s Sweet Secrets.” What she doesn’t love is whoever’s texting her warnings about how Bobby isn’t really in their backyard while she’s busy filming her videos or withering critiques of her baking show or veiled accusations about her past and threats about her present. Her best friend, former prosecutor Julie Bressler, may be bossy and opinionated, but surely she’d never turn on April this way. Who else might know enough to send April goodies like a picture of her kissing Mark Tanner, Bobby’s soccer coach? Though April struggles to get Elliot to take her ordeal seriously, even when she shows up at his office for a lunch date, he’s protected by his receptionist, Brianna Anderson, whose attachment to her boss goes far beyond loyalty. Then Julie turns on her; Maria Cooper, her friendly new next-door neighbor, turns on her; and in the most mind-boggling scene, Doris Kirkland, April’s mother, whose dementia has brought her to a nursing home, turns on her. McFadden releases an escalating series of toxins so deftly into the suburban atmosphere that it’s practically an anticlimax when someone gets killed and April instantly becomes the prime suspect. But that’s only a setup for the tale’s boldest move: switching its narrator from April to a fair-weather friend who frames the whole nightmare in dramatically different terms. As a special gift to her savviest fans, the author throws in an even more jolting epilogue that’s as hard to forget as it is to believe.

Recommended reading for every paranoid suburbanite who’s considering a move to the city, or to the Arctic wilds.

Pub Date: March 3, 2026

ISBN: 9781464249600

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Poisoned Pen

Review Posted Online: Dec. 6, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2026

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