Anonymous wrote:Currently reading This Time Tomorrow, by Emma Straub. I like it.
Straub uses time travel as a hook for the main character to revisit some earlier life decisions, but it's not actually sci-fi or overdone on the time-hopping front. (I didn't like Oona Out of Order for that reason. Too much / not done well, IMHO.)
Anonymous wrote:OP--have you read The Whisper Network by Chandler Baker? I have a penchant for feminist thrillers, and I loved it. Her second one (The Husbands) wasn't quite as good, but still a fun read.
I also sped through Counterfeit, about a Chinese American woman who gets sucked into the counterfeit trade in high end purses/bags. Light, but fun.
Others:
Janelle Brown's I'll Be You about a pair of identical twins who become tween stars.
Finlay Donovan is Killing It (and the sequel) are both hilarious--about a single mom who accidentally becomes a hit woman.
Real Easy by Marie Rutkowski: set among dancers/sex workers, a great pro-woman mystery.
56 Days by Catherine Ryan Howard -- two people thrown together at the beginning of the pandemic in Dublin--but each has a secret history that comes out over the course of the book.
Girls with Bright Futures--a quick and often funny mystery about cutthroat competition in the college application process
Anonymous wrote:OP--have you read The Whisper Network by Chandler Baker? I have a penchant for feminist thrillers, and I loved it. Her second one (The Husbands) wasn't quite as good, but still a fun read.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Guest List by Lucy Foley was a good little thriller. It’s about a murder at a weekend wedding reception. Set in Ireland.
Loved this one, too!
Anonymous wrote:The Guest List by Lucy Foley was a good little thriller. It’s about a murder at a weekend wedding reception. Set in Ireland.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved The Alice Network by Kate Quinn. She has another book, The Huntress, that is in my queue but haven’t read yet.
The Rose Code is even better than these other two.
Anonymous wrote:
I love the types of books on this thread. One that I'll throw out to you all is "The Heart's Invisible Furies." It's modern Irish history through the eyes of a quirky kid growing up gay.