Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl! This week, it’s my biannual least-favorite topic: upcoming releases I’m looking forward to! I always have a hard time with these, I really prefer to wait for reviews to start coming in before I decide what I’m really amped for. But here are ten that look good coming out before the end of June (all of which I am fortunate enough to have gotten digital advance copies of)! And I did not realize it until I was almost finished writing the post, but all of these are by female authors!
The Wife Upstairs: Rachel Hawkins has been a favorite Twitter follow of mine for a while, but I’ve never read one of her books before! I love a twist on a familiar story, so I’m super interested in her take on Jane Eyre!
All Girls: This promises to blend three of my favorite sub-genres…closed scholastic environment, coming-of-age, and female friendship.
Forget Me Not: I loved Oliva’s debut The Last One so much I was automatically on-board for her next work! That it’s about the life of a little girl raised in isolation who escapes into the wider world and then has to continue to deal with the fallout of her upbringing is even better.
The Babysitter: One of the things I find fascinating about serial killers is that they aren’t just, like, out doing bad things all the time. Most of them have something resembling a normal life with people who would find it hard to believe their friend would do wrong. Some would even leave their children with them, and this is the true story of a girl coming to terms with the fact that her beloved childhood babysitter killed people.
The Rebel Nun: Historical fiction based on the true story of a nun in the Middle Ages who led a group of sisters in a rebellion against ecclesiastical authority? Yes please!
There’s No Such Thing As An Easy Job: This story of a young woman looking for the least taxing job she can find seems like a brand of weird I can get behind.
The Final Revival of Opal & Nev: This seems Daisy Jones-esque in that it’s a story about a musical act that broke up, but it has the added layer of complexity of dealing with issues of race in the 1970s, which seems like it’ll make for a compelling read!
A Special Place For Women: I have found the dialogue about the exclusive female-only coworking/collective franchise The Wing to be really interesting, so the idea of a book that mines the idea of a place like that having an actively nefarious side seems right up my alley.
Madam: I am always looking for books to scratch my The Secret History itch, and this one, about a boarding school in Scotland harboring dark secrets, would seem to be right in that kind of dark academia wheelhouse.
Everyone Knows Your Mother Is A Witch: Another Middle-Ages-set historical fiction, this one about a small town beset with fear, a woman accused of witchcraft and the scientist son who tries to defend her.