Category: Fiction Books
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Review: The Things We Never Say
The Things We Never Say is Artie’s story, a history teacher asking if life is worth staying for. A light read, heavy with all we never say.
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Review: Yesteryear
Yesteryear follows a tradwife influencer pulled into the life she markets online. A bold take on gender and faith.
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Review: Audition
Audition by Katie Kitamura is a literary fiction about identity, performance, and the cost of the roles we play.
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Review: The Correspondent
One woman. Letters that say everything. Guilt, love, and grace hidden between every line and it is entirely yours to piece together.
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Review: The Names
A son. A name. A single moment that reshapes an entire family’s fate. The Names will make you take a look back at your own life differently.
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Review: The Sentence
Erdrich wrote a ghost story that will make you laugh and break your heart on the same page. The Sentence is funny and devastating at once.
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Review: The Lion Women of Tehran
A theme-rich novel spanning decades and two worlds, soaked in friendship, freedom, and everything women have always fought for.
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Review: The Book of Disquiet
The Book of Disquiet is a book with no plot, no ending, written for the restless souls who feel everything a little too deeply.
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Review: The Wall
Can a woman ever truly be free? The Wall is a haunting dystopian novel that will make you rethink every wall you have ever survived behind.
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Review: Broken Country
A buried secret, a shocking murder, and a love story nothing like you expect. Broken Country is the unputdownable read you did not see coming.
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Review: Wild Dark Shore
Wild Dark Shore pulls you into a fragile world where survival, love, and human vulnerability collide in the most unexpected ways.
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Review: Theo of Golden
Theo of Golden is about a mysterious old man and the lives connected to a wall of portraits, told through heartfelt stories.
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Review: The Rest of Our Lives
A man acts on a decision he has carried for twelve years and drives away to reflect on his thoughts about family tension and life choices.
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Review: Autumn
Ali Smith’s Autumn captures the raw and unsettled feeling of post-Brexit Britain through two characters whose bond will break heart a little.
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Review: Remarkably Bright Creatures
Through a giant Pacific octopus’s voice, Remarkably Bright Creatures explores grief, healing, and the beauty of unexpected bonds.
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Review: Change
Change by Édouard Louis reflects on social mobility, personal transformation, and the emotional tension between past and present.
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Review: 10 Minutes 28 Seconds in This Strange World
Leila’s final minutes unfold into a powerful story of love, belonging, and chosen family—told through memory and friendship.
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Review: Prophet Song
What happens when a peaceful family life is shattered by one knock at the door? Prophet Song is a warning about the world we live in.
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Review: One Golden Summer
Love classic ’80s–2000s rom-com vibes? One Golden Summer is a summer romance novel with a strong start and heartfelt moments.
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Review: The Safekeep
A Dutch home in 1961 turns tense when Isabel is forced to host her brother’s girlfriend. A story where desire and friction rise in every page.
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Review: The Island of Missing Trees
The Island of Missing Trees by Elif Shafak is a moving story of love, war, exile, and a fig tree that remembers what history tries to erase.
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Review: In Ascension
In Ascension follows a marine biologist as climate change, deep-sea research, and space exploration collide.
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Review: The Wedding People
A woman at her lowest checks into a hotel and unexpectedly walks into a wedding. The Wedding People shows how strangers pull her back.
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Review: The Forty Rules of Love
The Forty Rules of Love by Elif Shafak tells a layered story of love, faith, and transformation across centuries.
























