Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Members' Most Anticipated Spring Books

Spring is Mother Nature¡¯s way of saying, ¡°Oof¨Clet¡¯s try this again.¡± The last 12 months have been, well, challenging is the polite term. But the tide is turning! With buds on the trees and hope on the horizon, it¡¯s time to start lining up our spring-reading strategies.
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Here we¡¯ve assembled 31 of the most anticipated books of spring, each with a release date between March 20 and June 20¡ªthe actual calendar dates of the season. How did we do it? Glad you asked. Starting with a big list of books to be published in the U.S., we tracked early reviews and crunched the numbers on how many readers are adding these books to their Want to Read shelves. All of that data generated our curated list of the most anticipated new releases of the season.
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We¡¯ve got new fiction from Chris Bohjalian, Kirstin Valdez Quade, and Zakiya Dalila Harris. New climate fiction from Jeff VanderMeer, and science fiction from Andy Weir and Nghi Vo. New mysteries from Joshilyn Jackson, Sally Hepworth, and Alex Michaelides. Plus hot new releases in YA and romance, and some really intriguing stuff in nonfiction¡ªincluding a kind of live report from the front lines of the pandemic.
Be sure to add anything that catches your eye to your Want to Read shelf, and let us know what you're reading and recommending in the comments.
Happy hunting! Happy reading!
Set in 1970s Detroit and New York, ¡¯s much-anticipated debut introduces Opal, a pioneering Afro-punk musician who teams with Nev, a British songwriter, for a run at fortune and glory. Decades later, a journalist assembles their story, which Walton presents in a kind of meta oral history format.
Release date:?March 30
Release date:?March 30
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Author , renowned for her award-winning short fiction, presents her debut novel about a year in the life of a beguiling New Mexico family. It¡¯s Holy Week in the small town of Las Penas, and Amadeo Padilla has just discovered his 15-year-old daughter is pregnant. It¡¯s going to be an interesting year¡
Release date:?March 30
Release date:?March 30
¡¯s debut novel follows multiple generations of Cuban women through a sprawling narrative designed to push the boundaries of the typical diaspora tale. With everything from 19th-century cigar factories to modern-day ICE detention centers in Miami, Garcia¡¯s book is enjoying generous advance notices and good critical vibes.
Release date:?March 30
Release date:?March 30
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From the acclaimed author of The Flight Attendant, is a historical thriller set in the environs of 1662 Boston. Mary Deerfield, stuck in an abusive marriage, must make her escape by confronting a psychotic religious culture in an era when witch hunts were not just metaphorical.
Release date:?May 4
Release date:?May 4
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Malibu, California: The wealthy and troubled Riva family is preparing their annual end-of-summer party, the talk of the town in the long, hot August of 1983. Nina, surfer and supermodel, has just been dumped. Her various siblings bring about additional drama. Just add alcohol and mix!
Release date:?June 1
Release date:?June 1
Billed as a cross between Get Out and The Devil Wears Prada, this debut thriller spotlights 20-something Nella Rogers, the only Black employee at her New York City publishing house. Nella is initially happy when newcomer Hazel (the other Black girl) arrives. But things soon get weird, then weirder.?
Release date:?June 1
Release date:?June 1
(Never Have I Ever) is back with a twisted and twisty tale about a desperate mother, a kidnapped infant, and a mysterious black-clad stalker who appears to be, well, a witch. To get her baby back, Bree Cabbat will have to enter a world of darkness and danger.
Release date:?April 6
Release date:?April 6
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Rose and Fern are as close as sisters can be. But the siblings share a secret. Years ago, Fern did something terrible, and sister Rose has never told a soul. Author (The Mother-in-Law) explores the genetics of madness and the dark side of family secrets.
Release date:?April 13
Release date:?April 13
From the author of The Paris Wife and Circling the Sun comes a new thriller about Anna Hart, a San Francisco missing-persons detective currently on retreat in her tiny hometown of Mendocino. When a local girl goes missing, Anna¡¯s skills are needed. Looks like this is going to be a working vacation.
Release date:?April 13
Release date:?April 13
When sisters Cat and El were kids, they invented an imaginary kingdom called Mirrorland in their creepy Gothic house in Edinburgh, Scotland. Now El is missing. Cat flies in from L.A. to investigate. Someone is leaving clues. It¡¯s possible, just possible, that Mirrorland wasn¡¯t imaginary after all.
Release date:?April 20
Release date:?April 20
The Maidens, a secret society of students at Cambridge University, are devastated when one of their own is murdered. Stranger still, the killing appears to reference the Greek myth of Persephone and the underworld. Author ?won a 2019 Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Choice Award with his debut mystery, The Silent Patient.
Release date:?June 15
Release date:?June 15
Alpha weird-fiction author (Annihilation) specializes in a kind of ultra-spooky ecological sci-fi. His new book is being billed as a ¡°speculative thriller¡± concerning climate change and endangered species. Knowing VanderMeer, you can expect twists, turns, conspiracies, mysteries, cosmic awe, and taxidermy.
Release date:?April 6
Release date:?April 6
, author of the ginormous book-to-film success story The Martian, returns with the saga of astronaut Ryland Grace, who has just awoken from an extremely long cryogenic sleep. Using a patched-together spaceship, two corpses, and his very fuzzy memory, he must try to save Earth from an extinction-level event.
Release date:?May 4
Release date:?May 4
One of the year¡¯s most talked-about releases in the realm of speculative fiction, is being billed as a genre-bending work of Gothic fantasy. Young mother Vern escapes her oppressive religious compound to raise her kids in the woods, where she undergoes a remarkable metamorphosis. Allegory may be involved. Avoid spoilers with this one.
Release date:?May 4
Release date:?May 4
How¡¯s this for a literary project? Teleport The Great Gatsby into the spec-fic realms of alternate history and magic. Jordan Baker is rich, beautiful, and connected. She¡¯s also Asian, queer, and marginalized. Rethinking F. Scott Fitzgerald is a serious flex, and early reviews suggest that this is a must-read. ?
Release date:?June 1
Release date:?June 1
Inspired by classic fairy tales concerning little girls and wolves, sets out to chart new territory in dark fantasy. As the only Second Daughter in centuries, Red is doomed to be sacrificed. But what if the Wolf is not what it seems? Recommended for readers of Uprooted and The Bear and the Nightingale.
Release date:?June 1
Release date:?June 1
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Poet, essayist, and cultural critic (They Can¡¯t Kill Us Until They Kill Us) tracks the history of Black performance in American and world culture. His series of insightful essays addresses the concept of performance with open eyes and open heart, ¡°from midcentury Paris to the moon, and back down again to a cramped living room in Columbus, Ohio."
Release date:?March 30?
Release date:?March 30?
The Light of Days: The Untold Story of Women Resistance Fighters in Hitler's Ghettos
by Judy Batalion
by Judy Batalion
Recently optioned by Steven Spielberg for a movie adaptation, ¡¯s astonishing book excavates the lost stories of Jewish women who fought back against the Nazis in World War II. The so-called ghetto girls ambushed Gestapo officers and bombed German trains while at the same time caring for the sick and spiriting refugees out of danger.
Release date:?April 6?
Release date:?April 6?
, a.k.a. The Bloggess, is back with a collection of writing that¡¯s being called her most personal yet¡ªand her funniest ever. Lawson gets real about her depression and details her experience with experimental treatments. She also tackles the really tough questions, like ¡°How do dogs know they have penises?¡± Fearless. Persistent. Uncompromising. Lawson.
Release date:?April 6?
Release date:?April 6?
For author , raised in the infamous Children of God cult, breaking free of her childhood was just the beginning. Frank, courageous, and often very funny, Hough¡¯s new book of essays bounces from fraught to funny and details ¡°notions of ecstasy, queerness, and what it means to live freely.¡±
Release date:?April 13
Release date:?April 13
Writer-musician , founder of the experimental indie project known as Japanese Breakfast, looks back on her upbringing as a Korean American kid trying to find her way in the ongoing cyclone that is 21st-century America. Zauner¡¯s story really is amazing. She¡¯s also really into Korean cooking.
Release date:?April 20?
Release date:?April 20?
From the author of The Big Short and Moneyball, this audacious ¡°nonfiction thriller¡± is likely to be one of the biggest books of the year. Lewis gets right in the middle of the unfolding pandemic, telling the true stories of heroic dissenters in China and the U.S. who tried¡ªand are still trying¡ªto save millions of lives.
Release date:?May 4
Release date:?May 4
In ¡¯s heartfelt memoir, , a bright new voice enters the national conversation. Ford grew up poor and deprived by the absence of her father, who was in prison for reasons she didn¡¯t know or understand. Family love, as anyone can tell you, is the most complicated kind of love. ?
Release date:?June 1
Release date:?June 1
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Ah, the deep dark woods¡ªan enduring destination in literature of all eras. The setup: Children are disappearing from the small coastal town of Astoria. The twist: Five years ago, Wendy and her brothers went missing in those same woods. Wendy made it back. Her brothers didn¡¯t. The bottom line: Time to go back into the deep dark woods.
Release date:?March 23
Release date:?March 23
returns readers of?King of Scars?to the land of Fjerda, where a king, a general, and a spy must work together to forge a new future for their people. Bonus trivia: won a 2019 Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Choice Award for her breakout book Ninth House.
Release date:?March 30
Release date:?March 30
Winner of this spring¡¯s informal Coolest Book Title Award, is a Jamaican-inspired fantasy novel about two enemy witches who form a rickety alliance to confront a common threat. British author ¡¯s debut is recommended for fans of Killing Eve, Furyborn, and Ember in the Ashes.
Release date:?April 20
Release date:?April 20
Fans of will be hyped to hear that amateur sleuth Stevie Bell is back on the case in a new standalone mystery. Stevie has been invited to work on a true-crime podcast about the infamous Box in the Woods Murders in 1978, which claimed the lives of four camp counselors. The killer couldn¡¯t still be out there. Right?
Release date:?June 15
Release date:?June 15
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The new romantic comedy (comedic romance?) from author (The Hating Game) has an interesting setting: the Providence Luxury Retirement Villa. Can the retirees help facility manager Ruthie Midona remember that she is still young and beautiful and unattached? This new hire, Teddy Prescott, is kind of hot. And he¡¯s the owner¡¯s son? Matchmaking time!
Release date:?April 13
Release date:?April 13
Falling in love with your best friend is a mixed blessing. History tells us this. On the one hand, if everything goes right, it¡¯s a shortcut to happiness. But if things go sideways, well, it¡¯s a double tragedy. Alex and Poppy have one last chance to get it together in this new romance from (Beach Read).
Release date:?May 11
Release date:?May 11
Dating is a hopeless tangle of messy emotions, personal baggage, and unknowable chemistry. Can science crack the code? (The Unhoneymooners) returns with an intriguing romantic premise concerning the efficacy of DNA-based matchmaking¡ªrecommended for fans of The Rosie Project and One Plus One.
Release date:?May 18
Release date:?May 18
More science! Author ¡¯s new book is being billed as ¡°a queer spin on Kate & Leopold¡± and features a compelling time-travel twist. Twentysomething waitress August has her eye on this gorgeous punk-rock girl Jane. Unfortunately, Jane is displaced in time from 1970s Brooklyn. Finding love is hard enough without breaches in the time-space continuum. No fair.
Release date:?June 1
Release date:?June 1
Which books are you most excited to read this season? Let us know in the comments!
Check out more recent articles, including:
Meet the Authors of Spring's Biggest Mysteries
Ah, Yes, I Remember It Well¡ª48 New and Upcoming Memoirs
42 New and Upcoming Historical Fiction Novels
Check out more recent articles, including:
Meet the Authors of Spring's Biggest Mysteries
Ah, Yes, I Remember It Well¡ª48 New and Upcoming Memoirs
42 New and Upcoming Historical Fiction Novels
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TMR
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Mar 11, 2021 12:06AM

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Yippeee !!!! Box in the woods !!! Man,that purple is killing me.





Not a joke: give sci-fi and fantasy their own section you cowards!


even worse when the kindle price is the same LMFAO

and the saddest part is, most of that money is not even going to the author.



Please do not take this as a criticism, but you are sending out the wrong message to the universe. Why not say "I'm going to keep entering the giveaways and one day I will win!" Trust me, it works! Peace and happy reading :)
ÈçÒâ wrote: "Added For the Wolf to my To Read list, but I'm the most excited about Dial A for Aunties by Jesse Q. Sutanto, which sadly didn't make it to this list but is sitting pretty atop of m..."

2. Lost in the Woods - award-worthy simple description
3. Of Women and Salt - multi-generation
4. Sorrowland - sounds in many ways like ...
5. Becoming Leidah
I already read it once, but when you ask what books we're excited to read, truth is I want to read this again.

While reading, I wondered: What am I ¡®becoming¡¯ as I read? Will I ever-after be more alive than I¡¯ve ever been? In the end, some of that excitement was lost - replaced with something deeper.
How many dimensions of literary delight exist? I think I experienced all here: surprise after surprise - micro to macro - subtle yet electrifying.
Both innocence and experience are in full bloom. Not just a fantasy, it¡¯s very grounded in reality. Magical realism with an emphasis on both magical and real.
It did not fulfill my wishes. It brought me somewhere more nuanced, more mature - an integration that made magic more real. It invited self-reflection, and brought some of my life into greater perspective.
I saw Becoming Leidah on a list of historical fiction. Fair enough. It certainly presents a deeply-researched time and place, and adds layers beyond factual or even speculative histories, so although it is not about famous people or events, it is historical and it is fiction. I¡¯d also call it a mythical folktale, and family drama. And (perhaps like all family dramas, beneath the surface) it's a mystery. It's not only a mystery to discover what happened / what's really happening in this story - it's a mystery into humanity's greatest mysteries.
The book jumps between time periods and narrators, and although I have read books where that bothered me, here I loved weaving the story together. Still, I can imagine some readers finding it a challenge. Unreliable narrators and intentionally undeclared travel between worlds can make it seem like the story is inconsistent, when it¡¯s actually just more layered than you might assume.
Reading the jacket description, I wondered if it would present a stereotype of religion or men. Turned out I was the one doing the stereotyping. (I came to identify with both husband and wife.)
The ending is highly poetic, and ambiguous - which might not work for people who want a clear ending / definitive closure. It¡¯s not a cliffhanger - it is complete in itself - and yet, I would love to read a follow-up book - I want to explore where these characters go after growing to this point. Perhaps that exploration is up to me.
I used to wonder to what extent / in what ways it would be true to say "With imagination, anyone can be rich." Well, I've never been richer.
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Becoming Leidah
