As autumn edges in, an early season’s look at fiction releases beckons with suspense, magic and deeply human reckonings. New titles and new authors invite readers to step into hidden corners of small towns, cross broken realms, face ghosts seen and unseen, and to wrestle with legacy and love. Whether you prefer a page-turning thriller, a lyrical journey of identity or a fantasy rich with myth, this month’s crop offers solace and surprise in equal measure.

Please Don’t Lie (Thomas & Mercer) by Christina Baker Kline & Anne Burt
Hayley Stone moves with her husband to an isolated Adirondack home, hoping to leave tragedy in her past — but the mountains carry darker secrets than she expected. Two years earlier, she lost her parents in a fire and watched her sister succumb to an overdose; now her husband becomes distant, neighbors whisper accusations and trusted friends reveal hidden motives. As winter closes in, Hayley is trapped not just by the landscape, but by the growing sense that someone is watching. What’s the appeal: for readers who relish atmospheric tension and intimate psychological twists.

Livewire (Blackstone) by Sarah Raughley
Amanda McKee is a psiot who can command machines and peer into a secret digital realm, but her adoptive father, Toyo Harada, wants to keep that latter power private. When Matsuoka Sho arrives from the future to stop her from destroying humanity, Amanda must decide whether to resist his warning or embrace her full potential. After Harada is kidnapped and dragged into the Digital World, Amanda ventures after him, forced to confront hidden truths. What’s the appeal: for sci-fi readers who love power struggles, moral dilemmas and romantic tension.

Tracer (Blackstone) by Brendan Deneen
In a post-virus world where plastic is transformed into oil, resource wars rage and citizens live atop giant landfill cities. Tracer, adopted and raised as a mercenary, is dispatched on a mission to a distant domain, only to discover she’s part of a deeper conspiracy. As she navigates shifting loyalties and hidden danger, her journey becomes one of self-discovery and survival. What’s the appeal: for fans of dystopian speculative fiction with action and intrigue.

Into the Storms: A Hell Divers Prequel (Blackstone) by Nicholas Sansbury Smith
Centuries before the Hell Divers, the Machine War lays waste to Earth and three men confront its aftermath: Tyron Red inherits his father’s industrial empire and fights to reverse the devastation; Santiago Rodriguez returns to family life only to be drawn back into conflict in Korea; and Cecil Pepper and his wife retreat to the North Carolina mountains, unaware that dormant machines are stirring. When peace collapses and ancient threats awaken, these three must face enemies that seek humanity’s extinction. What’s the appeal: for lovers of high-stakes sci-fi and world-building origin tales.

The Board (Blackstone) by Katy Farber
Liv relocates with her daughter to a small New Hampshire town after divorce and job loss, only to find local school politics more hostile than she anticipated. Her daughter struggles under a strict, army-like regime, and Liv begins to suspect that the school board is using intimidation and coercion to silence dissent. When she digs deeper, she faces legal battles, personal grief and community resistance. What’s the appeal: for readers interested in domestic thrillers, conspiracies in small towns and maternal resolve.

Tiger’s Trek (Blackstone Publishing) by Colleen Houck
In the second volume of the Tiger’s Tale series (set in the Tiger’s Curse universe), five companions enter the dreamworld filled with shadow monsters and magical threats. To stop the ruthless Draughtsman, they must confront their fears, forge alliances, and unlock the secret power of tigers. Their quest becomes a race against time to restore balance to both their empire and the natural world. What’s the appeal: for fans of fantasy epics, magical beasts and devotion in the face of danger.

The Grave Artist (Thomas & Mercer) by Jeffery Deaver and Isabella Maldonado
At a wedding reception, one newlywed dies under suspicious circumstances, but what seems an accident is part of a darker pattern. Carmen Sanchez and Jake Heron unravel clues pointing to a serial killer who crafts macabre installations from graves, targeting both survivors and the bereft. As the “Honeymoon Killer” turns his attention toward them, they must race to stay one step ahead of a killer who treats grief as art. What’s the appeal: for readers of forensic thrillers, psychological suspense and chilling twists.

Waseem (Arcade) by Lilas Taha
In a Lebanese refugee camp, Waseem, disabled and mostly nonverbal, builds a world of small routines and deep feelings, especially for his friend, Ameena. They share hope and quiet dreams of returning to Palestine, even as reality presses in. Their bond is tested by obstacles both internal and external in a story that blends pain, wit and resilience. What’s the appeal: for readers who value emotional depth, stories of exile, and the strength found in human connection.

You Are the Detective: The Creeping Hand Murder (Ten Speed Press) by Maureen Johnson and Jay Cooper
London, November 1933: seven strangers receive cryptic letters and gather in a grand home, where one is fatally stabbed in front of the group — and none claim responsibility. The reader is invited to parse letters, witness statements and clues to unmask a murderer who seems to have acted invisibly. The format weaves narrative and puzzle, urging readers to become the sleuth themselves. What’s the appeal: for mystery fans who love interactive stories, classic whodunits and theatrical intrigue.

Veil (Blackstone) by Jonathan Janz
Strange vanishings begin at night and in daylight — people ripped from homes, parks and the skies with bodies never again seen. John Calhoun loses his wife, then his son and then fights to save his daughter alongside a group of survivors with unusual perceptive abilities. They believe a brain injury can open vision into a hidden realm, giving them a chance to detect and fight unseen invaders. What’s the appeal: for those who relish creeping terror, supernatural threat and emotional urgency.

Fiend (Putnam) by Alma Katsu
The powerful Berisha family has long seemed untouchable — but their wealth is bound to an ancient, malevolent force. As cracks in their legacy emerge, each sibling must reckon with secrets, ambitions and a curse that might undo them all. What once seemed a blessing now threatens everything they hold dear. What’s the appeal: for readers drawn to family drama intertwined with horror, moral ambiguity and symbolic evil.

Circle of Days (Grand Central Publishing) by Ken Follett
Amid Bronze Age Britain, Seft the flint miner journeys across plains in hope and fear; Joia, his beloved’s sister, is a priestess with a vision to bring people together. As drought looms and tribes quarrel, Joia dreams of uniting them through the building of a monumental stone circle … a la Stonehenge? But tensions escalate into violence and betrayal, and the dream of unity teeters on disaster. What’s the appeal: for historical fiction readers with an appetite for epic scope, mythic ambition and deep human stakes.

The Mysterious Bookshop Presents the Best Mystery Stories of the Year 2025 (Penzler) edited by John Grisham
From more than 3,000 eligible stories published in the past year, John Grisham curates 20 of the finest mystery and suspense tales, spanning styles from classic detective puzzles to psychological thrillers. The anthology includes both celebrated names and emerging voices, capped by a “bonus story” from the bookshop’s rare archives. What’s the appeal: for those who enjoy short mysteries, discovering new authors and seeing how varied a single genre can be.

Crooks (William Morrow) by Lou Berney
The Mercurio clan’s crime legacy drives this multi-decade saga: siblings wrestle with identity, ambition, escape and blood ties across settings from Las Vegas to Moscow. Buddy and Lillian begin as small-time criminals; their children — Jeremy, Tallulah, Ray, Alice and Piggy — each must navigate their role in the family and decide whether they can break free. Betrayal, loyalty and the seductive pull of power ripple through generations. What’s the appeal: for readers who favor sprawling crime sagas, morally complex characters and family secrets.

Shadowman (Blackstone) by Shola Adedeji
Jack Boniface abandons his voodoo-rooted New Orleans past for rationalism in New York — until supernatural visions force him home. Beneath the city lies the Deadside, warred over by voodoo gods. When Freda, a central Lwa, disappears, the balance between worlds falters and Jack discovers he may hold the mantle of Shadowman, charged with maintaining equilibrium. He must control new powers and face spiritual conflict to save his city. What’s the appeal: for urban fantasy lovers and readers drawn to mythic lore and cultural depth.

The Secret of Orange Blossom Cake (Berkley) by Rachel Linden
Jules Costa, a social media chef, returns to her family’s olive farm in Italy when professional disaster forces her to rely on her roots. Her Nonna’s magical cookbook reveals only one recipe at a time, concealing the lost orange blossom cake recipe tied to family secrets and her future. Amid heartbreak, reconciliation and gastronomic magic, Jules must decide whether she can heal old wounds — and reclaim her dreams. What’s the appeal: for readers who savor food, heartwarming transformation and a touch of enchantment.

The Formidable Miss Cassidy (Harper Perennial) by Meihan Boey
A Scottish governess in 1890s Singapore, Miss Cassidy carries extraordinary skills in languages, crisis management — and the uncanny ability to face supernatural forces. When hired by a Chinese widower whose family is cursed, she confronts demonic influences, spirits and unexpected feelings of the heart. Her wit, bravery and inherent mystery guide her through. What’s the appeal: for fans of historical fantasy, strong female leads and stories where societal constraints meet the supernatural.

Play Nice (Berkley) by Rachel Harrison
Clio Louise Barnes, a stylist and influencer with a carefully curated life, inherits her childhood home after her mother’s sudden death. While her sisters view the house as the site of old wounds, Clio sees a chance to turn it into a glossy renovation project for her brand. But as she digs into her mother’s writings and the family’s past, she begins to suspect the house may hold darker forces than she ever admitted. What’s the appeal: for readers who enjoy a blend of psychological suspense, family drama and supernatural chills.

Reacher: The Stories Behind the Stories (Mysterious Press) by Lee Child
Lee Child pulls back the curtain on his Jack Reacher series with a collection of essays tracing the origins of each novel he wrote solo. From the debut of “The Killing Floor” in 1997 to “Blue Moon” in 2019, Child shares the inspirations, personal moments and global events that shaped his enduring action hero. The book also features a brand-new Reacher short story, the first entirely written by Child in years, along with reflections from crime fiction authority Otto Penzler. What’s the appeal: for longtime Reacher fans as well as readers curious about the craft and career of one of crime fiction’s biggest names.

Sisters in the Wind (Henry Holt and Co.) by Angeline Boulley
Lucy Smith has spent years dodging the foster system, clinging to the idea of freedom even as it keeps her rootless and alone. When a determined caseworker and his formidable ally track her down, they reveal long-buried truths about her Ojibwe heritage, her siblings and the family she never knew she had. But with dangerous figures from her past closing in, Lucy must decide whether to keep running or fight for the home and future she has always longed for. What’s the appeal: for readers who are drawn to fast-paced stories of identity, resilience and the enduring strength of family bonds.