Are you ready for a lengthy Treasures in My Closet post? I have a number of forthcoming books to add to your TBR lists. Please let me know what titles I’ve missed. I’m sure you have some on your own lists. Don’t forget to go back and look at Treasures for March to see what’s coming out this month. Since I wasn’t at home to look at the physical books when I wrote the first of last month’s blogs, I had two Treasures then. One was at https://tinyurl.com/2xtpm6ak. The other was here, https://tinyurl.com/55nbujwc.
As I kick off the April Treasures, I’m noticing how my reading has changed over the last couple years. I still read and love police procedurals and traditional mysteries. But, I think the political climate has set me on a course for stories about books and bookstores along with fantasies involving spells, witchcraft, and, again, bookshops. Some of this month’s titles reflect that.

The first book, The Lost Book of Elizabeth Barton, by Jennifer N. Brown, reflects both my interests, mysteries and books. It’s a dual-timeline murder mystery set in an English country manor, when an ambitious professor discovers the long-lost manuscript of a Reformation-era prophetess. Historian Alison Sage has made a groundbreaking archival discovery—she found a manuscript containing the prophecies of a 16th century nun, Elizabeth Barton. Barton’s prophecy condemning Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn led to her execution and the destruction of all copies of her prophecies—or so the world believed. With Alison’s discovery, she is catapulted to academic superstardom and scores an invitation to the exclusive Codex Consortium, a week of research among a select handful of fellow historians at a crumbling manor in England, located next to the ruins of the priory where Elizabeth herself once lived. What begins as a promising conference turns into a nightmare as the eerie house becomes the site of a murder. Suddenly, everyone is a suspect, and it seems that answers lie at the root of a local legend about centuries-old hidden treasure. Alison’s research makes her best-suited to solve the mystery—but when old feelings resurface for a former colleague, and the stakes of the search skyrocket, everyone’s motives become murky. (Release date is April 14.)

The summary of Marie Bostwick’s The Book Club for Troublesome Women reminds me of a book I loved from 2004, Angry Housewives Eating Bon Bons by Lorna Landvik. By 1960s standards, Margaret Ryan is living the American woman’s dream. She has a husband, three children, a station wagon, and a home in Concordia–one of Northern Virginia’s most exclusive and picturesque suburbs. She has a standing invitation to the neighborhood coffee klatch, and now, thanks to her husband, a new subscription to A Woman’s Place–a magazine that tells housewives like Margaret exactly who to be and what to buy. On paper, she has it all. So why doesn’t that feel like enough? Margaret is thrown for a loop when she first meets Charlotte Gustafson, Concordia’s newest and most intriguing resident. As an excuse to be in the mysterious Charlotte’s orbit, Margaret concocts a book club get-together and invites two other neighborhood women–Bitsy and Viv–to the inaugural meeting. As the women share secrets, cocktails, and their honest reactions to the controversial bestseller The Feminine Mystique, they begin to discover that the American dream they’d been sold isn’t all roses and sunshine–and that their secret longing for more is something they share. (Release date is April 22.)

I’ll admit that the main character of Caro Claire Burke’s Yesteryear sounds like someone I would dislike when the book starts. I’m curious to see what becomes of her. A traditional American woman, a beautiful wife and mother who sells her pioneer lifestyle of raw milk and farm-fresh eggs to her millions of social media followers, suddenly awakens cold, filthy, and terrified in the brutal reality of 1855—where she must unravel whether this living nightmare is an elaborate hoax, a twisted reality show, or something far more sinister in this debut novel. (Release date is April 7.)

Amy Coombe’s Stay for a Spell is my new kind of escape reading. A cursed princess must discover what her heart truly longs for in this charmingly cozy romantic fantasy for everyone who’s ever lost – or found – themselves in a bookshop. Princess Tanadelle of the Widdenmar is disillusioned with life as a princess. She longs for real conversation, the chance to build a life of her own making, and uninterrupted reading time. During a routine royal visit to the town of Little Pepperidge, Tandy’s dream comes true when she finds herself cursed to remain in a run-down bookshop until she unlocks her heart’s desire. Certain that someone will figure out how to break the curse eventually, and delighted by the prospect of an entire bookstore of her own, Tandy settles into life among the stacks. She finds it easy to exchange balls and endless state dinners for teetering piles of books and an irritatingly handsome pirate who seems bent on stealing her stock. She even starts to believe she’s stumbled into her very own happily ever after. There’s just one, minor problem: as Tandy’s royal duties go unfulfilled, her frantic parents start sending princes to woo her, each one of them certain their kiss will break the curse. After all, what more could a princess want but a prince? (Release date is April 14.)

The summary of Moorea Corrigan’s Thistlemarsh says Faeries disappeared over one hundred years ago, as suddenly as slipping through a doorway. It was only the very foolish, or the very determined, who held out hope for their return. Welcome to Thistlemarsh—a ramshackle estate where an impoverished orphan and a beguiling Faerie collide in an enchanting novel of love, revenge, and ruin. In the wake of The Great War, the world is a decidedly unmagical place for Mouse Dunne. She once dreamed of becoming a Faerie anthropologist, but with one telegram, her world shattered. At the Battle of the Somme, her cousin’s body disappeared into the mud, and her brother was left with debilitating shell shock. It was time, she knew, to put aside childish dreams. When Mouse receives news that her uncle has left her the Faerie-blessed Thistlemarsh Hall, a dilapidated manor in the English countryside, she must leave her brother’s side and return to her childhood home to claim her birthright. But there is a catch in her uncle’s offer: If Mouse does not rehabilitate the crumbling house in one month’s time, she will forfeit her inheritance and any hope of caring for her brother. (Release date is April 21.)

Authors Carlo Furttero and Franco Lucentini were a well-known literary duo in Italy. Gregory Dowling translated their mystery, An Enigma by the Sea. In an exclusive resort on the Tuscan coast, the wealthy elite gather at their luxurious second homes for Christmas. Amid this frosty holiday idyll, a husband and wife vanish from their heavily guarded villa, and the body of Count Delaude, a dubious aristocrat, washes up on the shore, battered to death. The ensemble cast brims with intrigue: The count, a sponger and a sham had arrived under cover of dark with a beautiful young woman scheming to be a top model. Two comedians seclude themselves as they try to overcome a writing block. One depressive, Signor Monforti, a retired academic, tries to woo a beautiful divorcee, while another, a woman this time, prepares to leave her husband. Two elderly spinsters and their Filipina maid are aghast at the awful predictions of their Tarot pack. With the local police floundering, it falls to Monforti to unravel the mystery, triumphing as an amateur detective. (Release date is April 24.)

Honey in the Wound by Jiyoung Han is a lyrical and suspenseful debut novel about a mysteriously gifted Korean family confronting the brutality of the Japanese empire, an epic tale of survival and the reclamation of power. A sister disappears and returns as a tiger. A mother’s voice compels the truth from any tongue. A granddaughter divines secrets in others’ dreams. These women are all of one lineage—a Korean family split across decades and borders by Japanese imperialism. At this saga’s heart is Young-Ja, a girl who infuses food with her emotions. She revels in her gift for cooking, nourishing the people she loves with her cheerfulness. But her sunny childhood comes to an end in 1931 when Japanese soldiers crush her family’s defiance against the Empire. Young-Ja is cast adrift, her food turning increasingly bitter with grief. When a Korean rebel fighter notices her talents, however, she is whisked off to Manchuria to join a secretive sisterhood of beautiful teahouse spies. There, Young-Ja finds a new sense of belonging and starts using her abilities for the resistance. But the Imperial Army is not yet finished with her… Decades later, Young-Ja lives alone in Seoul, withdrawn from the world until her Tokyo-born granddaughter Rinako bursts into her life with the ability to see into dreams. In cultivating a tentative bond, they confront the long-buried past in a stunning emotional climax. (Release date is April 7.)

I’ll always take a chance on one of Jane Harper’s novels. Last One Out is her latest, a story set in a modern ghost town. Carralon Ridge, a once vibrant village in rural New South Wales, has become a shell of itself, its houses and buildings bought up and left to rot by the mining company operating at its borders. A decade into its slow death, surrounded by industrial noise and swathed in thick layers of dust, the skeletal town is all but abandoned, with just a handful of residents clinging onto what remains. After years of scorning those who left the Ridge behind as it fell into ruin, Ro never imagined she’d become one of them. But everything changed when she lost her son. Five years ago, Sam vanished while visiting during a break from college, leaving behind a rental car with his belongings inside. Sam had loved Carralon Ridge, and had been working on an oral history of the town to preserve its legacy before it vanished altogether. It wasn’t long after his disappearance that the rest of the family began to crumble away too. But when Ro returns to Carralon Ridge to be with her husband and daughter on the anniversary of Sam’s disappearance, she begins to suspect that something important was overlooked in his case. Because while nothing can stop Carralon Ridge from dying, someone seems to want to make sure that its secrets die with it. (Release date is April 14.)

Anthony Horowitz’ latest Hawthorne and Horowitz mystery is A Deadly Episode. Ex-Detective Inspector Daniel Hawthorne is dead. Or, rather, the actor playing him in the film adaptation of The Word is Murder is. Rising star David Caine has been stabbed, and it seems that everyone on the set had a motive. Caine had just fired his PA. He had fallen out with his director, slept with the screenwriter, humiliated his co-star and dropped his agent days before he was about to sign a multi-million-dollar deal to appear in the next Spider-Man movie. But what if Caine’s murderer had made a mistake? What if it was the real Hawthorne who was the intended victim? For it turns out that the brilliant detective may have got it wrong ten years earlier. An innocent man has died in jail. And perhaps someone has decided that Hawthorne must pay the price. (Release date is April 28.)

I think several of you might be interested in Blood Bound by Ellis Hunter. It’s a debut high-stakes fantasy romance trilogy set against a once-in-a-generation duel to the death between rival witches and dragon riders as they battle to control the source of all magic in their kingdoms. You duel or you die. Astrid has always known she is destined to die. She is the last Nachstern witch and heir to the Queendom of Arturea, cursed by a centuries-old covenant to duel the heir to the Kingdom of Vatra for the source of all magic: the Heart. And now Astrid’s time is up. She is heading into enemy territory to face Prince Zryan, the most powerful dragon rider in eons, with only her familiar, her potions, and her wits to aid her. She is going to die, and any chance her queendom has of curing the Blight that’s ravaging the lands and killing her people will die with her. Meanwhile, deep in dragon country, Skylar and her travelling troupe arrive in Vatra’s capital, ready to profit off the legions of spectators swarming to the city ahead of the duel. She despises the royals and all they stand for, especially as the King’s guard murdered her mother. But when her best friend disappears, suspected to have been taken in the conscription, her search takes her closer to the royals than she ever could have imagined. As the duel looms over the kingdom, Skylar and Astrid’s fates intertwine. (Release date is April 28.)

From Marcus Kliewer comes The Caretaker, a supernatural horror about a young woman who accepts a caretaking job from Craigslist, only to discover the position has consequences far greater—and more dangerous—than she ever could have imagined. EXCITING OPPORTUNITY: Caretaker urgently needed. Three days of work. Competitive pay. Serious applicants ONLY. Macy Mullins can’t say why the job posting grabbed her attention—it had the pull of a fisherman’s lure, barbed hook and all—vaguely ominous. But after an endless string of failed job interviews, she’s not exactly in the position to be picky. She has rent to pay, groceries to buy, and a younger sister to provide for. Besides, it’s only three days’ work… Three days, cooped up in a stranger’s house, surrounded by Oregon Coast wilderness. What starts as a peculiar side gig soon becomes a waking nightmare. An incomprehensible evil may dwell on this property—and Macy Mullins might just be the only thing standing between it, and the rest of humanity. (Release date is April 21.)

This Weekend Doesn’t End Well for Anyone is the third in Catherine Mack’s series that began with Every Time I Go on Vacation, Someone Dies. Eleanor Dash can never catch a break. Not only has she had to solve two real-life murder plots in the past year, but both times it was when she was meant to be on vacation. Now she’s finally got a ticket to a relaxing weekend―an all-inclusive resort at the Bahamas where she’s speaking at a conference for murder mystery writers―but she arrives to find a body on the floor of her hotel room. Because of course she does. (Release date is April 28.)

In Beth O’Leary’s The Name Game, a man and a woman with the same name are looking for a fresh start only to discover they have landed the same job. Charlie couldn’t be happier to take the job of farm-shop manager on the remote, wild Isle of Ormer. She’s grieving, a little lost, and in desperate need of a fresh start. Jones has come out of a difficult breakup and is looking forward to some peace away from the noise of his city life. Moving to Ormer couldn’t have come at a better time. But when Charlie Jones and, ahem, Charlie Jones both turn up at Ormer’s one and only farm shop, claiming to have been offered the role of manager, everyone is baffled. How could this have happened? And just who is the real Charlie Jones? (Release date is April 7.)

Unrelentingly scary and thrilling, Dark Is When the Devil Comes is an ambitious and chilling novel from acclaimed horror author Daisy Pearce. The woods are known as the place to avoid. What goes in, doesn’t come out. Hazel has been gone from her small hometown of Idless in the English countryside for years. Now returned in the wake of a traumatic divorce and crumbling personal life, her simple plans are to lay low at her parents’ vacated house, reconnect with her prickly sister Cathy, and slowly get back on her feet. Cathy is surprised when Hazel doesn’t show. Their relationship strained from a fallout half a decade ago, she didn’t expect them to get back into a sisterly rhythm…though she hadn’t counted on Hazel bailing, either.But something isn’t adding up. Other people in town whisper of a threat that can’t be shaken. The woods are known for being restless. And Cathy knows the old saying. If you go looking for trouble, you just might find it. (Release date is April 28.)

I love a good memoir and collections of essays. I hope Jayne Anne Phillips’ Small Town Girls fits the bill. In essays, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author reflects on her origins and the mysteries of memory. “The painful thing about adolescence is that everything seems absolute, and the painful thing about adulthood is that nothing does.” Jayne Anne Phillips grew up in the small town of Buckhannon, West Virginia. The distinctly American landscape of Appalachia—dense with forests and small churches, rich in history and misunderstandings—has been the great setting for her fiction, even as she and her boundless imagination have traveled to other times and places. In these pieces, and in her singular first-person voice, at once intimate and wide-ranging, Phillips brings us into her childhood and family, most movingly her mother. She re-creates the place she calls home, its foundational truths and the densely woven ties between the women of the town. She traces her journeys across the country and her discovery of writing and reading as tools for both survival and revelation, offering insights into the fellow writers and touchstones that moved and influenced her. From the local beauty salon to the legendary Hatfield–McCoy feud, from Jean Shrimpton and Barbara Stanwyck to Stephen Crane and Breece D’J Pancake, Phillips ponders her relationship with inspiration, spirituality, culture, and the troubled annals of the last American centuries. (Release date is April 21.)

Chet and Bernie return in Spencer Quinn’s Cat on a Hot Tin Woof. Chet the dog is less than enthusiastic about the Little Detective Agency’s next case. Chet and his human partner, PI Bernie Little, have been hired to find a missing person―only the missing person is a cat. Miss Kitty, an internet sensation, has disappeared, and Chet and Bernie have been hired to find her before her many followers realize something is wrong. Miss Kitty belongs to Bitty, a sweet teenage girl who lives with her mom. Bitty and her mother are struggling financially, but the arrival of Miss Kitty and the chance discovery of her social media appeal has changed everything. Bitty now has sponsors, a high-powered agent, and all the tools needed to thrive online, and real money is flowing in. At least, it was. With Miss Kitty gone, the family’s income is on the line. (Release date is April 14.)

Virgil Flowers is my favorite John Sandford character, but I’ll try Revenge Prey. Leonard Summers—not his real name—is on the run. A former high-ranking Russian intelligence officer who defected to the U.S. after providing critical information about Russian spies in U.S. government service, Leonard, his wife Martha, and son Bernard have spent the past year holed up in a CIA facility near Washington. After the CIA makes a deal with the U.S. Marshal Service’s Witness Protection Program (WPP), Leonard’s family is transported to Minneapolis. The plan is to hide them in a wooded Minneapolis suburb that resembles their former home and dacha near Moscow. The Summers are received at their destination by Lucas Davenport and fellow marshal Shelly White. Unbeknownst to them, the WPP group has been tracked by a Russian hit team. And while nobody in the WPP has ever been attacked…Leonard might be the first victim. As shots are fired and enemies dodged, Lucas must move quickly to uncover where the leak is coming from, before the hit team can strike again. (Release date is April 7.)

It seems so many authors are right where I am right now, ready to escape into books. Meg Shaffer’s latest is The Book Witch. Rainy March is a proud, third-generation Book Witch, sworn to defend works of fiction from all foes real and imaginary. With her magical umbrella and feline familiar, she jumps in and out of novels to fix malicious alterations and rogue heroes like a modern-day magical Nancy Drew. Book Witches live by a strict code: Real people belong in the real world; fictional characters belong in works of fiction. Do not eat, drink, or sleep inside a fictional world, lest you become part of the story. Falling in love with a fictional character? Don’t even think about it. Which is why Rainy has been forbidden from seeing the Duke of Chicago, the dashing British detective who stars in her favorite mystery series. If she’s ever caught with him again, she’ll be expelled from her book coven—and forced to give up the magical gifts that are as much a part of her as her own name. But when her beloved grandfather disappears and a priceless book is stolen, there’s only one person she trusts to help her solve the case: the Duke. Their quest takes them through the worlds of Alice in Wonderland, King Arthur, and other classics that will reveal hidden enemies and long-buried family secrets. (Release date is April 7.)

In 1998, Jane Smiley introduced readers to Lidie Newton in The All-True Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton. I just put it on hold at the library so I can read it before the sequel, Lidie: The Further Travels and Adventures of Lidie Newton. The new book follows two young women fleeing a divided America: one running toward a dazzling future and the other running from a troubled past. Christmas, 1857. America’s future is precarious; civil war looms on the horizon. After her abolitionist husband is murdered in the lawless Kansas Territory, Lidie Newton returns, in mourning, to her hometown of Quincy, Illinois. But her sisters have little comfort to offer, and Lidie is haunted by the memories of her failures—until she takes an interest in her niece, Annie. Beautiful, self-assured, and mischievous, Annie sticks out in Quincy. She becomes an actress at the local theater, and when she is offered the opportunity to perform abroad, she decides to run away. But travel is dangerous for a young unmarried woman, so Lidie, armed with her pistol and her wit, goes with her. (Release date is April 21.)
Are there enough books for you in this list? What did I miss? What books are you anticipating? Let me know!



Good morning. I have three ARCs for April thatI’m looking forward to.
The Museum of Unusual Occurrence by Erica Wright
The Subtle Art of Folding Spaces by John Chu
Countdown by Sara Driscoll
Good morning, Sandy! I think April has some interesting sounding books. Thanks for sharing your picks!
Nice list. The Jane Harper and Jayne Anne Phillips are musts for me, but I was – surprisingly – also taken with the plot of YESTERYEAR.
Other April books (there are a lot this month):
4/7 Vaseem Khan, The Edge of Darkness (Persis Wadia/Malabar House)
4/7 Evelyn Clarke, The Ending Writes Itself (sounds like a Christie-like setup)
4/7 Tim Sullivan, The Monk (DS George Cross #5) I already read and really enjoyed this one
4/7 Alan Parks, Gunner (Glasgow, 1941)
4/7 Ed Lin, The Dead Can’t Make a Living (Taipei’s Night Market)
4/7 Leonie Swann, Agnes Sharp and The Wedding to Die For (more octogenarian sleuths)
4/7 Ally Condie, The Girls Trip (3 women from online book club meet)
4/7 Connor Martin, The Silver Fish (Ghana; spies)
4/7 Tracy Hunter Abramson, Staged Evidence (Pen & Dagger)
4/14 David Baldacci, Hope Rises (Walter Nash)
4/14 C. S. Harris, When the Wolves Are Silent (St. Cyr; 1816)
4/14 Anne Perry, Death Times Seven (Daniel Pitt)
4/14 Carsten Dusse, Murder Mindfully
4/14 Allison Winn Scotch, The Insomniacs
4/14 James Wolff, Spies and Other Gods (British Intelligence)
4/21 Matt Goldman, Liars Creek
4/21 Brad Taylor, Shadow Strike (Pike Logan)
4/21 Sally Hepworth, Mad Mabel (little old lady murderer?)
4/21 Jean-Luc Bannalec, The Secrets Of the Abbey (Brittany)
4/28 Rick Mofina, One Second Away
4/28 Kristen Perrin, How To Cheat Your Own Death (Castle Knoll)
Also, don’t know if this is her last posthumous book, but Anne Perry died in 2024.
Great list, Jeff! Thank you. We need more days in our lives to read. The Ally Conde sounds good. A book club! I’ll have to look for that one. I slowed down on the DS Cross books only because I didn’t want to get too far ahead of people. I have The Monk.
I love all Spencer Quinn books and there have been more of above that I would love to read. I have out for two days with a TIA in the ER. There were no hospital rooms so I was in a cubby hole for long time and had endless tests. Glad to be out!!!
Carol, take it easy and feel better! Both my parents had TIAs but they didn’t cause major problems.
Scary Carol! I hope you’re alright!
It’s glad you’re home, Carol. Take care of yourself!
You have a lot to answer for Lesa. My book shelves at home are already overfull and now you give me your April Treasures list. Sigh.
Stay for a Spell sounds perfect. I wouldn’t mind being locked in a bookstore for a while. And eight of the other titles are also on my radar now.
On my own list I also have:
– The Chambermaid’s Key (Genevieve Graham)
– Miss Burnham and the Loose Thread (Lynn Knight)
– Mrs. Shim is a Killer (Kang Jiyoung)
Oh, Lindy! You have a lot to answer for, too. I always watch for the books you’re reading. Enjoy that TBR pile. Variety!
Great List!!!
i have one book to add. I’m looking forward to The Original: A Novel by Priya Parmar based on the life of Katharine Hepburn
Oh, I can see you reading a book based on Hepburn’s life, Kaye.
Afternoon….. I have read REVENGE PREY and THE MONK by way of NetGalley and have my reviews set up. I laughed out loud several times reading Revenge Prey, but I also have a twisted sense of humor.
My current read is an April release. Two Truths and a Lie: A Thriller is the second book in the Flynn Martin Thriller series. No Lie Lasts Forever was a good one. I am three chapters in and it picks up after that one so one should definitely read in order. Reading through NetGalley.
The Lost Angels: A Thriller by Michele Domínguez Greene comes out at the end of April. This is the second book in the Cassidy Clark series. I enjoyed the first one once I got by the fact that it was NOT the police procedural it was marketed as. So, I went ahead and picked this up on NetGalley when it came up awhile back.
By the way, in May IRONWOOD by Michael Connelly comes out. I have been waiting a month now on NetGalley and no joy. I am seeing folks on social media stating they are already reading it or have finished it, got their reads by way of NetGalley, and here I sit.
Blah. I’m a nice guy. I have a participation ratio on there of over ninety percent. Yet, no joy.
And for those of you battling cold and snow, please know we are hitting mid 80s here in NE Dallas, weeds are flowering, trees are leafing out, and hornets and fire ants are here. Also, severe storms are now in the forecast for every single day from Wednesday on and a flood threat is possible Friday through the weekend.
Your spring is coming.
KRT
Kevin, Kevin. I’m sorry about your weather. I know the upcoming months mean lousy weather for you, while we’re all celebrating. Your parents just picked the wrong spot in the country.
I’m happy to hear Revenge Prey made you laugh. I’m sorry you can’t get Ironwood.
Just one to add – THE PATCHWORK PLAYERS by Jennifer Chiaverini.
I have stocked up on books since I’ll be house bound for awhile after knee replacement surgery!
Knee replacement surgery, Cindy? Lots of exercises and, hopefully, time to read. Sending hugs and good wishes!
That sounds painful! I hope it all went as smoothly as possible.
Take it carefully, Cindy. One thing: it is better and easier even than it was 10 years ago when my wife had hers done. My cousin just had a knee replacement here in Florida and he went home the same day and is walking pretty comfortably a couple of weeks later, not even needing a cane. His only problem is with sleeping.