Books I Recently Added to My TBR

I love that my last post was about cleaning up my TBR and here I am with a list of books I recently added to it. It is a vicious cycle!

Six friends.
One college reunion.
One unsolved murder.

A college reunion turns dark and deadly in this chilling and propulsive suspense novel about six friends, one unsolved murder, and the dark secrets they’ve been hiding from each other—and themselves—for a decade.

Ten years after graduation, Jessica Miller has planned her triumphant return to southern, elite Duquette University, down to the envious whispers that are sure to follow in her wake. Everyone is going to see the girl she wants them to see—confident, beautiful, indifferent—not the girl she was when she left campus, back when Heather’s murder fractured everything, including the tight bond linking the six friends she’d been closest to since freshman year. Ten years ago, everything fell apart, including the dreams she worked for her whole life—and her relationship with the one person she wasn’t supposed to love.

But not everyone is ready to move on. Not everyone left Duquette ten years ago, and not everyone can let Heather’s murder go unsolved. Someone is determined to trap the real killer, to make the guilty pay. When the six friends are reunited, they will be forced to confront what happened that night—and the years’ worth of secrets each of them would do anything to keep hidden.

Dark academia? Yes please! I am intrigued by the fact that In My Dreams I Hold a Knife is told in dual timelines- one during the characters’ college years and the other ten years later at their college reunion. I have seen some great reviews and it sounds like the kind of thriller that I love!

Ambassador Mahit Dzmare arrives in the center of the multi-system Teixcalaanli Empire only to discover that her predecessor, the previous ambassador from their small but fiercely independent mining Station, has died. But no one will admit that his death wasn’t an accident—or that Mahit might be next to die, during a time of political instability in the highest echelons of the imperial court.

Now, Mahit must discover who is behind the murder, rescue herself, and save her Station from Teixcalaan’s unceasing expansion—all while navigating an alien culture that is all too seductive, engaging in intrigues of her own, and hiding a deadly technological secret—one that might spell the end of her Station and her way of life—or rescue it from annihilation.

A Memory Called Empire is the first book in a SciFi series and the second book came out earlier this year. I love a good space opera and the world that Martine has created seems interesting.

When twenty-nine-year-old Sunday Brennan wakes up in a Los Angeles hospital, bruised and battered after a drunk driving accident she caused, she swallows her pride and goes home to her family in New York. But it’s not easy. She deserted them all—and her high school sweetheart—five years before with little explanation, and they’ve got questions.

Sunday is determined to rebuild her life back on the east coast, even if it does mean tiptoeing around resentful brothers and an ex-fiancé. The longer she stays, however, the more she realizes they need her just as much as she needs them. When a dangerous man from her past brings her family’s pub business to the brink of financial ruin, the only way to protect them is to upend all their secrets—secrets that have damaged the family for generations and will threaten everything they know about their lives. In the aftermath, the Brennan family is forced to confront painful mistakes—and ultimately find a way forward, together.

We Are the Brennans has been all over Bookstagram the last few months and I have decided to finally add it to my TBR. I really do love family sagas and this one has been highly rated by some of my most trusted sources!

Sefia knows what it means to survive. After her father is brutally murdered, she flees into the wilderness with her aunt Nin, who teaches her to hunt, track, and steal. But when Nin is kidnapped, leaving Sefia completely alone, none of her survival skills can help her discover where Nin’s been taken, or if she’s even alive. The only clue to both her aunt’s disappearance and her father’s murder is the odd rectangular object her father left behind, an object she comes to realize is a book—a marvelous item unheard of in her otherwise illiterate society. With the help of this book, and the aid of a mysterious stranger with dark secrets of his own, Sefia sets out to rescue her aunt and find out what really happened the day her father was killed—and punish the people responsible.

I was recently recommended The Reader and could not believe I had never heard about it before. It sounds like something I would love! I have also read reviews that said the audiobook is fantastic!

At its center are two sisters—Eri, a fashion model slumbering her way into oblivion, and Mari, a young student soon led from solitary reading at an anonymous Denny’s toward people whose lives are radically alien to her own: a jazz trombonist who claims they’ve met before, a burly female “love hotel” manager and her maid staff, and a Chinese prostitute savagely brutalized by a businessman. These “night people” are haunted by secrets and needs that draw them together more powerfully than the differing circumstances that might keep them apart, and it soon becomes clear that Eri’s slumber—mysteriously tied to the businessman plagued by the mark of his crime—will either restore or annihilate her.

After Dark 
moves from mesmerizing drama to metaphysical speculation, interweaving time and space as well as memory and perspective into a seamless exploration of human agency—the interplay between self-expression and empathy, between the power of observation and the scope of compassion and love. Murakami’s trademark humor, psychological insight, and grasp of spirit and morality are here distilled with an extraordinary, harmonious mastery.

I have been wanting to read something by Haruki Murakami for years and The Storygraph keeps recommending After Dark to me based on my reading taste, so I trust them. It is also under 200 pages, so I think it would be a good place to start with Murakami.

What books have you added to your TBR recently?

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24 thoughts on “Books I Recently Added to My TBR

  1. We are the Brennans sounds good. I’ve added quite a few to my TBR – I wasn’t supposed to be doing that until I’d knocked a few off ha, ha, ha. I’m very quickly making my through Magpie by Elizabeth Day, gripping

  2. Out of this list I’ve only read The Reader, and though I wasn’t that big a fan then, thinking back I do think the entire concept was really intriguing! Hope you enjoy it, and all of the others too!!

  3. Oh, A Memory Called Empire is fantastic! Our taste doesn’t always match up, but I think you’ll really like that one. It’s one I had to read slowly because every paragraph (and sometimes, every sentence) evokes new ideas, and I wanted to mull over them properly instead of rushing through.

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