Check out these highly anticipated new releases featuring fiction and nonfiction titles. Click on the title to request a copy or get your name on the waitlist. Don’t forget to watch for more featured releases next month!
FICTION

Salt Bones by Jennifer Givhan. Set on the edge of California's Salton Sea, the latest novel from poet and novelist Givhan (River Woman, River Demon) is hard-to-put-down literary suspense about families living through the unexplained generational disappearances of their daughters. The sister of Malamar "Mal" Veracruz was one such disappearance, and it tore their family apart. Now, 20 years later, Mal begins to have dreams of a horse-headed woman, blurring the lines between reality and the supernatural. Shortly after, Mal's own teenage daughter goes missing. Mal is determined to find her daughter before it's too late, but to do so requires digging up the secrets in her close community, her family, and even her own past. Steeped in the Mexican and Indigenous folklore of the shapeshifter La Siguanaba, the novel deftly creates an atmosphere creeping with dread, plus unexpected twists and family drama. Givhan perfectly balances the supernatural with human themes of grief and love. VERDICT A timely novel that deals with the treatment of Latina women. For fans of character-driven suspense and the magical realism of Isabel Allende, Silvia Moreno-Garcia, and Victor LaValle.—Mara Shatat. Copyright 2025 Library Journal.

Jamaica Road by Lisa Smith. Two young people navigate their personal lives and social turmoil in Thatcher-era England. When Daphne, the narrator of Smith’s debut novel, meets a new boy named Connie at the South London secondary school she attends, it isn’t exactly love at first sight. Connie, 12, has recently moved to England from Jamaica with his mother, Althea; Daphne, a London native with a Jamaican mother, isn’t quite sure what to make of him. But the two eventually become friends, and Connie tells Daphne that he and his mother are “nuh land”—in England illegally. Daphne’s mother, Alma, welcomes Connie, allowing him to spend time at their crowded house when Althea’s abusive partner, Tobias, is in a bad mood. Daphne helps Connie adjust to life in London, while dealing with a family problem of her own: She has tracked down her absent father. Meanwhile, both characters are forced to deal with racist taunts and attacks, and Daphne finds herself interested in a white boy with both a crush on her and a virulently racist brother. Smith’s novel covers 12 years in the lives of the two families, beginning in 1981, shortly after the New Cross house fire that killed 13 Black people and led to that year’s Brixton riot, continuing through 1985, when another riot rocked Brixton, and concluding in 1993.Smith does an amazing job detailing the atmosphere of Thatcher’s England and the immigrant experience. Copyright Kirkus 2025 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.

A Resistance of Witches by Morgan Ryan. Lydia Polk is a rising star at the Royal Academy of Witches, thanks to her powerful magic and her privileged position as apprentice to the head of the academy. British witches have traditionally stayed under the radar. However, the threat of Hitler forces them to make a key alliance with Churchill and pledge their magic to the defense of Britain. The resulting shake-up at the academy makes Lydia reevaluate everything in her life, especially key relationships with her mentor, her friends, and her estranged mother. Lydia's abilities make her the ideal person to track down magical artifacts such as the Grimorium Bellum, and she is determined to find it before the Nazis can. A cat-and-mouse game of betrayal and lies leads to an explosive chase for the dangerous artifact. Lydia will need the help of new allies Rebecca and Henry to navigate the perils of occupied France, where there are enemies at every turn. The exploration of Lydia's complicated relationship with her mother adds depth to the novel. VERDICT Ryan debuts with this alt-Britain historical fantasy that is an enjoyable read.—Laurel Bliss. Copyright 2025 Library Journal.
NONFICTION

The CIA Book Club: The Secret Mission to Win the Cold War With Forbidden Literature by Charlie English. Vivid history of a CIA-funded program to introduce subversive literature to Eastern Europe during the Soviet bloc era. British author English’s book opens with an image of a simple-looking book, computer scientists on the cover, seemingly a technical manual. Had Polish security agents opened it, however, they would have discovered a copy of George Orwell’s 1984, smuggled into the country from Paris. The French capital served as an entrepôt for books funded by the CIA, which, brought to Warsaw and other Polish cities by travelers to the West during the brief thaw following Stalin’s death, were circulated via a “system of covert lending.”. . . Eventually the book smugglers became more daring, publishing samizdat editions through a carefully coordinated series of safe rooms scattered across the country. English celebrates homegrown heroes such as Miroslaw Chojecki, trained as a physicist, who had been arrested 43 times by March 1980 but kept it up all the same. Romanian-born George Minden, also honored, concocted a series of ploys to get books and money inside the Iron Curtain, including, daringly, simply mailing banned literature to recipients chosen at random from the phone book. The program was highly effective; as English notes, “By 1962 at least 500 organizations were sending books on the CIA’s behalf.” By the program’s end, thousands of books had been circulated, to the gratitude of their readers, one of whom exalted, “We read poetry and literature. It showed us that there are likeminded people who are above nationality, who we can empathize with, who admire beauty, who admire virtue.” A well-crafted book about books—and spooks, skullduggery, and a time when ideas mattered. Copyright Kirkus 2025

Monopoly X: How Top-secret World War II Operations Used the Game of Monopoly to Help Allied Pows Escape, Conceal Spies, and Send Secret Codes by Philip E. Orbanes. In this thrilling account, game historian Orbanes (
Tortured Cardboard) revisits a little-remembered episode of WWII when the Allies concealed POW escape kits inside Monopoly game sets distributed by the Red Cross. British military intelligence first came up with the scheme, employing Waddington Ltd., a maker of games and playing cards, to reconstruct Monopoly boxes to hold lockpicks, tiny saws and compasses, maps printed on silk, fake identification papers, and Reichsmarks. With cinematic flair, Orbanes narrates the clandestine meetings between spies that led to the false game sets’ development and later adoption by the U.S., along the way touching on many fascinating historical tangents. . . The author also describes a daring escape utilizing the false game set undertaken by two Allied prisoners at Colditz Castle near the Baltic Sea. Throughout, Orbanes intriguingly surfaces other ways in which games, especially Monopoly, were used for Allied spycraft. (The Monopoly game board was the cypher used to decode a warning that Stalin had spies in the White House.) While some of the stylishly written scenes are clearly speculative, it’s all so gripping that readers won’t mind suspending a bit of disbelief. Copyright 2025 Publishers Weekly.

Shade: The Promise of a Forgotten Natural Resource by Sam Bloch. Hiding from the heat. Excessive heat kills more people every year than floods, hurricanes, and tornadoes combined. The solution to this international concern, says environmental journalist Bloch, is a simple one: more shade. But simple doesn’t mean easy. Putting even a small dent in the amount of heat absorbed by the earth involves a multinational commitment to complex changes in the way we design not only cities but also neighborhoods, public spaces, and homes. Bloch begins each chapter with a story capturing various ways that lack of shade affects segments of the world’s population, including passengers at bus stops in Los Angeles, travelers to desert oases, and residents of big-city high-rises, all seeking relief from the heat. The challenges are many: Homeowners want windows for light, property developers find it cheaper to rely on air conditioning to cool buildings, and city planners have a hard time justifying the cost of barriers and shade trees in public spaces. Ideas to reduce excessive heat range from planting trees to brightening clouds to solar-radiation management to using space shades and other tactics to reduce the amount of sunlight the earth absorbs. The simplest option is also the most obvious. As Bloch writes, “It’s understandable that Americans have forgotten how sweet shade can be. As air-conditioning has become the default method of cooling down, the shade tree has disappeared from the lexicon….There is still no technology known to man that cools the outdoors as effectively as a tree.” . . . A thoroughly documented and thought-provoking book, certain to spark attention and discussion. Copyright Kirkus 2025.
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