Jul 01, 2023
26 Fall Books to Snuggle Up with in Your Favorite Armchair
A new novel from the master of suspense arrives September 5: Holly by Stephen King, a supremely creepy story featuring Holly Gibney from a few of the author’s other fantastically creepy books (Mr.
A new novel from the master of suspense arrives September 5: Holly by Stephen King, a supremely creepy story featuring Holly Gibney from a few of the author’s other fantastically creepy books (Mr. Mercedes, The Outsider). King’s chilling latest revisits the private detective, who’s now on the case of a string of disappearances and contending with twisted husband-and-wife professors with some very dark secrets.
Another fixture on the bestseller list, James Patterson, features three thrillers in one book in 23½ Lies (September 12). The trio of stories concern some awfully mean characters; “Fallen Ranger” is about a Texas Ranger hunting down thieves, one of whom might be a formerly esteemed fellow Ranger gone bad. AARP members can get a free sneak peek at the first two chapters online, as well as full access to his novella The Trial.
There’s also The Exchange: After The Firm by John Grisham (October 17), a sequel to his famous novel The Firm that will return to the story of Mitch and Abby McDeere, who, in the first book (and the 1993 film starring Tom Cruise), fled the country after revealing the crimes of a Memphis law firm. In The Exchange, Grisham reconnects with them 15 years later in Manhattan, where Mitch is an international lawyer who ends up in Libya trying to thwart the threatened execution of his kidnapped associate.
On the lighter side is The Last Devil to Die by Richard Osman (September 19), where the four septuagenarian English sleuths from Osman’s Thursday Murder Club mystery series (the basis for a planned film from Stephen Spielberg) return for a fourth fun caper, following the bestselling The Bullet That Missed. This time they’re contending with a dangerous package gone missing and a killer on the loose.
Other writers offer new installments in popular series, including The Raging Storm by Ann Cleeves (September 5), the third in the author’s mystery series featuring detective Matthew Venn, and The Longmire Defense, the 19th book in Craig Johnson’s Longmire series (September 5). Dirty Thirty by Janet Evanovich (October 31) is the 30th installment in Evanovich’s series featuring New Jersey bounty hunter Stephanie Plum and a colorful cast of characters. And Unnatural Death by Patricia Cornwell (November 28) is Cornwell’s 27th Kay Scarpetta novel.
The Reformatory by Tananarive Due (October 31) arrives just in time for Halloween. On my to-read list for sure, this one sounds like a truly scary story that Library Journal calls “a masterpiece,” about a boy in Jim Crow-era (1950) Florida who’s sent to a frightening, haunted reform school. Due told Publishers Weekly that she spoke with many survivors of such punishing schools to inform her novel, and she dedicates it to “Robert Stephens, my great-uncle who died at the Dozier School for Boys in Marianna, Florida, in 1937. He was fifteen years old.”
Tess Gerritsen, the author whose books inspired the Rizzoli & Isles TV series, is launching a new series called The Martini Club with The Spy Coast (November 1). The thriller stars a retired CIA operative, Maggie Bird, who has settled in for a quiet life as a chicken farmer in small-town Maine when she’s alerted to a breach that compromised the secrecy of her involvement in a long-ago case. She’s been targeted for murder and sets out to find out who wants her dead and why with the help of her fellow retired spies. Fun fact: Gerritsen, 70, is a former physician who started writing fiction while on maternity leave.
And, briefly: The River We Remember by William Kent Krueger is a literary murder mystery set in 1958 Minnesota (September 5); Resurrection Walk by Michael Connelly (November 7) brings back Lincoln lawyer Mickey Haller and retired LAPD detective Harry Bosch; and The Mystery Guest by Nita Prose (November 28) features Molly Gray, the maid at the center of the huge 2022 bestseller The Maid.
Christina Ianzito covers scams and fraud, and is the books editor for aarp.org and AARP The Magazine. Also a longtime travel writer and editor, she received a 2020 Lowell Thomas Award for travel writing from the Society of American Travel Writers Foundation.
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