Charlotte (Chet), preoccupied by death, secretly pens newspaper obituaries under their brother Graham’s name, while sister Cecile, a bitter woman with potential gangster ties, remains their father’s favorite. At twenty, their half-sister, Marjorie, a whimsical dreamer and aspiring designer, is the recipient of Chet and Graham’s caring protection and her stern father’s everlasting shame.
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| Pub. by Ballantine Books (May 26, 2026) |
To escape his ire, Marjorie jumps at the chance to covertly enroll in an artist’s residency in Detroit, especially since the debonair, elusive Charles Bonafante is the sponsor. She craves the structure and space to pursue her craft. These she gets, and she befriends two other women (both as charmingly peculiar as Marjorie). However, the residency has strict rules about self-isolation and locked doors. Marjorie also glimpses a disturbing message scratched into her bathroom mirror.
The storyline of this original mystery, bestselling YA novelist Sepetys’ adult debut, is utterly wild in the best way. With its outsize personalities, heaps of arch dialogue, and Gatsbyesque atmosphere oozing out its pores, it could easily lead to sensory overload, but the overall effect dazzles rather than overwhelms.
Marjorie makes a vivid first impression: brought to the police station for indecent exposure (she draped herself in leaves to amuse a tree-loving friend), she also can’t cook for herself; someone fun to observe, though perhaps not relatable. That proves incorrect as she works within and without her residency’s confines to discover what’s going on.
A hugely entertaining novel about the glamour and darkness of Prohibition-era Detroit, led by a heroine who comes into her own with impressive style.
A Fortune of Sand was published in the US and Canada by Ballantine on May 26th, and I reviewed it initially for the Historical Novel Society. Although I’m aware of Sepetys’ award-winning historical novels for YAs, and have purchased many for the library, this was the first of hers I’d read. Going by the plotlines of her books for younger readers, and the Goodreads reviews of this one by fans of her earlier work, A Fortune of Sand is pretty different in content and style. The book concludes with a wonderful author’s note detailing Sepetys’ knowledge of Detroit, her birthplace, and the elements of the story that were drawn from history.
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Among other happenings:
Thanks to Booklist’s Susan Maguire for interviewing me for the May issue of Corner Shelf, the magazine’s bimonthly e-newsletter on readers’ advisory. She asked some great questions about the changes in the blogging world over the last 20 years, trends in historical fiction, advice for librarians interested in establishing a review platform, some favorite blogging moments, and more.
My life over the past week has been rest and recovery since I had surgery on Friday the 22nd and am still pretty wiped. My directives include no exertion and no bending, which means no looking down to read print books, but I can read straight on via my iPad and watch TV (the newest episode of The Other Bennet Sister awaits). These novels have been keeping me entertained:
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Anna Belfrage, Queen of Shadows (Timelight Press, 2026)—I love reading about historical royalty, and if it’s a story I don’t know well, so much the better. Queen of Shadows whisked me back to 14th-century Castile in its evocation of the longtime affair between King Alfonso XI and his beloved mistress Leonor de Guzmán, who adored him and gave him many children; and how this relationship caused turmoil for his much-ignored wife, Maria of Portugal, and his country’s foreign policy. It’s a powerful rendition of the competing forces of political responsibilities and personal desires, playing out at a national level. Each of the three has unique vulnerabilities and ambitions, which give the novel and its characters significant depth, and each exercises their will in different ways. Added to the mix are two invented characters, part-Moorish Alma Ponce de León, a midwife’s daughter, and the upper-class Rodrigo de Altamar, whose viewpoints add valuable perspectives on the country’s class distinctions and diverse cultures. It’s an epic, compelling, but far from cozy read, reflecting the real history behind it.
Katherine Webb, The Promise of Wonder (Lake Union, 2026)—An Amazon First Reads option that’s also a family saga by an author whose previous work I’ve enjoyed? I grabbed it. The setting is late 19th-century Dorset. As the story opens, Theodora Hallewell, a fifteen-year-old dreamer, has arranged for a secret midnight meeting that, she hopes, will finally convince university-bound Toby Meriwether, a young man of lower social station, to see her in a new light. A tragic event derails the lives of everyone there. The novel’s title is a bit misleading since this is a dark and melancholy tale about lost opportunities and regrettable decisions which seem impossible to escape. It’s all pretty heavy, emotionally speaking, but I found it involving nonetheless. This is the first in a trilogy.
I also breezed through Caro Claire Burke’s Yesteryear (Knopf, 2026), which I’d been curious about after learning the initial premise: a “traditional homemaker” Instagram celebrity with a not-so-perfect actual family life on an Idaho ranch wakes up, to her horror, in the 19th century and has to cope without modern conveniences. Then I read multiple (spoiler-free) critiques of the novel’s historical and religious aspects and got even more intrigued. While “enjoy” may not be the right word to describe my reaction to the book (the main character, Natalie, is an awful person, deliberately so), it was an addictive story with many surprising plot turns. Yesteryear is over the top, wacky, and very effective in its biting commentary on tradwife influencer culture. Now that I’ve finished the book, I understand the critiques, which have merit, but also appreciate and understand the writer’s choices – and that’s all I’ll say there.
Maybe these weren't the calmest reads, lol, but they were excellent distractions during my time off.













