I have to start this list a little early since I’ll be on vacation the first of November, but if anything arrives before then, I’ll add it to the list at the bottom. So, don’t forget to check for other titles! December releases aren’t as numerous as October and November ones. Thank heavens! It gives all of us a chance to catch up with end-of-the-year reading. Here are the December book releases I already have, Treasures in My Closet. Please add any books you’re anticipating!
Let’s start with a debut, “a time-crossed romance”, Melissa Baron’s Twice in a Lifetime. Isla has fled the city for small-town Missouri in the wake of a painful and exhausting year. With her chronic anxiety at a fever pitch, the last thing she expects is to meet a genuine romantic prospect. And she doesn’t. But she does get a text from a man who seems to think he’s her husband. Obviously, a wrong number—except when she points this out, the mystery texter sends back a picture. Of them—on their wedding day. Isla cautiously starts up a texting relationship with her maybe-hoax, maybe-husband Ewan, who claims to be reaching out from a few years into the future. Ewan knows Isla incredibly well, and seems to love her exactly as she is, which she can hardly fathom. But he’s also grieving, because in the future, he and Isla are no longer together. Ewan is texting back through time to save her from a fate he is unwilling to share—and all she can do to prevent that fate is to learn to be happy, now, in the body she has, with the mind she has. (Release date is Dec. 6.)
I like the combination of contemporary mystery and historical one is V.M. Burns’ Mystery Bookshop mysteries. In Bookclubbed to Death, the local library in North Harbor, Michigan, is flooded in a storm, so Sam Washington offers her bookstore as a new venue for the Mystery Mavens Book Club. Unfortunately, she immediately runs afoul of the club leader, Delia Marshall, a book reviewer who can make or break careers—something Sam can ill afford with her debut historical mystery soon to be published. But the next morning, Sam opens her shop to find the unpleasant woman dead on the floor, bashed with a heavy—apparently lethal—tome: the Complete Works of Agatha Christie. While Sam is busy writing her latest British historical mystery in which the queen mother is suspected in the murder of a London Times correspondent, a pair of ambitious cops suspect Sam of the real-life crime. When she gathers Nano Jo and their friends from the Shady Acres Retirement Village to review the case, they discover every one of the Mavens had a motive. With her novel about to hit the stores, Sam must find out who clubbed Delia before a judge throws the book at her . . . (Release date is Dec. 27.)
In Lily Brooks-Dalton’s The Light Pirate, Florida is slipping away. As devastating weather patterns and rising sea levels wreak gradual havoc on the state’s infrastructure, a powerful hurricane approaches a small town on the southeastern coast. Kirby Lowe, an electrical line worker, his pregnant wife, Frida, and their two sons, Flip and Lucas, prepare for the worst. When the boys go missing just before the hurricane hits, Kirby heads out into the high winds in search of his children. Left alone, Frida goes into premature labor and gives birth to an unusual child, Wanda, whom she names after the catastrophic storm that ushers her into a society closer to collapse than ever before. As Florida continues to unravel, Wanda grows. Moving from childhood to adulthood, adapting not only to the changing landscape, but also to the people who stayed behind in a place abandoned by civilization, Wanda loses family, gains community, and ultimately, seeks adventure, love, and purpose in a place remade by nature. (Release date is Dec. 6.)
Searing social commentary meets chilling suspense as public defender Julia Geary takes a case destined to rock her small town to the core in Gwen Florio’s The Least Among Us. Public defender Julia Geary’s star is rising, and now she’s got her first murder case defending local denizen Ray Belmar in the death of a homeless man. But Julia’s professional and personal challenges are mounting. First, she’s assigned an intern whose arrogance is insufferable. Then, her widowed mother-in-law, whose home Julia and her son Calvin share, announces her plans to re-marry, meaning they’ll have to find a new place to live. And to top things off, Julia’s boss removes her from the case, saying that she’s lost perspective, replacing her with an attorney who advises Ray to plead guilty.
Julia can’t shake the suspicion that the murder, and the subsequent killing of a homeless woman, is linked to the death of a state legislator who had been crusading for political reform. With the help of Duck Creek’s homeless community and her old friend, Sheriff’s Deputy Wayne Peterson, she launches her investigation—but then the anonymous threats start pouring in. (Release date is Dec. 6.)
Inspired by a real-life female spy, Michelle Gable’s The Lipstick Bureau is a WWII-set novel about a woman challenging convention and boundaries to help win a war, no matter the cost. 1944, Rome. Newlywed Niki Novotná is recruited by a new American spy agency to establish a secret branch in Italy’s capital. One of the OSS’s few female operatives abroad and multilingual, she’s tasked with crafting fake stories and distributing propaganda to lower the morale of enemy soldiers. Despite limited resources, Niki and a scrappy team of artists, forgers and others—now nicknamed The Lipstick Bureau—find success, forming a bond amid the cobblestoned streets and storied villas of the newly liberated city. But her work is also a way to escape devastating truths about the family she left behind in Czechoslovakia and a future with her controlling American husband. As the war drags on and the pressure intensifies, Niki begins to question the rules she’s been instructed to follow, and a colleague unexpectedly captures her heart. But one step out of line, one mistake, could mean life or death… (Release date is Dec. 27.)
The theater is no place for murder—but a case of backstage betrayal drags library director Amy Webber into a case that could mean curtains in critically acclaimed author Victoria Gilbert’s latest Blue Ridge Library mystery, Death in the Margins. It’s early summer, and while Richard Muir and his dance partner, Karla, are preparing their new choreographic piece, Richard’s wife, Amy, is gathering the dance’s source materials. Based on folktales and the music of the Blue Ridge Mountains, the production is set to premiere at an old cinema that has been converted to a theater. But when dancer Meredith Fox—Richard’s former fiancé—is found dead backstage, Amy is once again propelled into a murder case that threatens the careers and lives of those she loves. After Amy teams up with Chief Deputy Brad Tucker and the sheriff’s department to discover the killer, they find that there’s no shortage of suspects: Meredith’s wealthy ex-husband, several fellow dancers, a romantically spurned accompanist, and others whom the talented but haughty dancer dismissed or betrayed over the years. With Richard and Karla’s help, and information gleaned from locals who know a wealth of small-town secrets, Amy desperately tries to unveil the killer before the premiere. (Release date is Dec. 6.)
Blackmail in the Big Easy turns to cold-blooded murder in this debut cozy mystery, A Streetcar Named Murder by T.G. Herren. When the mysterious letter arrives by courier, Valerie Cooper doesn’t know what to make of it. She’s become the beneficiary of her late husband’s estranged uncle’s will—a man she never knew—and inherited a majority partnership in the family’s company, New Orleans Fine Antiques. Valerie knows nothing about antiques, but she decides to learn the business and become an active partner. She’s also got her hands full fending off Collette, a woman who wants to sell the huge old house in the Irish Channel neighborhood Valerie and her husband painstakingly renovated. Valerie isn’t interested in selling—but when her best friend Lauren, drags her to a costume party for the women’s Mardi Gras club, the Krewe of Athena, she stumbles over Collette’s body, a jeweled dagger sticking out of her chest. In a rush of panic, Valerie recognizes the dagger from her shop—and before she knows it, she’s become murder suspect number one. (Released date is Dec. 6.)
From debut author Alex Kenna comes a pulse-pounding tapestry of secrets, retribution, and greed, What Meets the Eye. Kate Myles was a promising Los Angeles police detective, until an accident and opioid addiction blew up her family and destroyed her career. Struggling to rebuild her life, Kate decides to try her hand at private detective work—but she gets much more than she bargained for when she takes on the case of a celebrated painter found dead in a downtown loft. When Margot Starling’s body was found, the cause of death was assumed to be suicide. Despite her beauty, talent, and fame, she struggled with a host of demons. But as Kate digs deeper, she learns that Margot had a growing list of powerful enemies—among them a shady art dealer who had been selling forged works by Margot. Kate soon uncovers a dirty trail that leads straight into the heart of the city’s deadly underworld. (Release date is Dec. 6.)
Winter’s End is the fourth book in Paige Shelton’s Alaska Wild series. It’s springtime in Benedict, Alaska, and with the warmer weather comes an unseasonably somber local tradition…the annual Death Walk. At the end of each brutal winter, citizens gather downtown and then break into groups to search the community for those who might have somehow gotten stuck at home. Beth Rivers sets off with her friend Orin and dog Gus, toward the cabin of an elderly resident, intending to check on him. When they reach the cabin, the old man is alive, but not in the best shape. Beth stays with him while Orin hurries to town for help, but it’s not Orin who returns. Gril comes back with shocking news, and it soon becomes clear that Orin has also vanished. Personal note – I already read Winter’s End, and my complaint about all the summaries of the book fail to mention that Beth is actually looking for a friend, a woman who failed to show up for the Death Walk. Consider it mentioned because it’s actually the biggest mystery of the book. (Release date is Dec. 6.)
From, Jane Smiley, the beloved Pulitzer Prize-winning and best-selling author of A Thousand Acres:, A Dangerous Business is a rollicking murder mystery set in Gold Rush California, as two young prostitutes follow a trail of missing girls. Monterey, 1851. Ever since her husband was killed in a bar fight, Eliza Ripple has been working in a brothel. It seems like a better life, at least at first. The madam, Mrs. Parks, is kind, the men are (relatively) well behaved, and Eliza has attained what few women have: financial security. But when the dead bodies of young women start appearing outside of town, a darkness descends that she can’t resist confronting. Side by side with her friend Jean, and inspired by her reading, especially by Edgar Allan Poe’s detective Dupin, Eliza pieces together an array of clues to try to catch the killer, all the while juggling clients who begin to seem more and more suspicious. (Release date is Dec. 6.)
There’s nothing like a good con when the subject is so deserving. When a day at the races reveals sabotage and subterfuge, Elizabeth Miles must use every ounce of her craftiness to even the score in City of Fortune, the new Counterfeit Lady novel from Victoria Thompson. Wealthy but uncouth Sebastian Nolan has invited his lawyer, Gideon Bates, and his lovely new wife, Elizabeth, to attend the famous Belmont Stakes. Nolan is anxious for Gideon and Elizabeth to help his daughter, Irene, acquire a bit of polish, now that his venture into thoroughbred racing has allowed them entry into society. He is also hoping to find her a rich potential suitor. Elizabeth is not exactly the society girl Nolan believes her to be, but she is eager to attend the races. Her con artist family has made a lot of money at racetracks, although not from betting on the horses, and she enjoys the excitement of the track. Irene Nolan seems more interested in horses than husbands, and she jumps at the chance to show Elizabeth her horse, Trench, and introduce her to his rider, Cal Regan. Elizabeth soon realizes there is more than just a working relationship between Irene and Cal. But she also knows that Irene’s father would never allow his only daughter to marry a jockey. When Cal takes a terrible tumble injuring both himself and Irene’s beloved Trench, Elizabeth and Gideon learn that the mishap was not simply bad luck—the horse and rider are victims of sabotage. It turns out that Sebastian Nolan has more than a few skeletons in his closet and someone is out to get their long sought-after revenge. Elizabeth knows that to help Irene and Cal, she is going to need some help in creating the quintessential con. With the ever honest Gideon at her side, she enlists those closest to her to come up with a scheme that will either ensure young Irene and Cal a first-place finish or have disastrous consequence. (Release date is Dec. 6.)
Don’t forget these additional titles!
Andersson, Liv – Little Red House (12/6)
Brown, Amber & Danielle – Someone Had to Do It (12/27)
Dumas, Luke – A History of Fear (12/6)
Flower, Amanda – Honeymoons Can Be Hazardous (12/27)
Hardy, Mina – We Knew All Along (12/6)
Harris, Sherry – Rum and Choke (12/27)
Higashino, Keigo – A Death in Tokyo (12/13)
Hoffmeister, Pedro – American Afterlife (12/6)
Lipsyte, Sam – No One Left to Come Looking for You (12/6)
Morgan, Alexis – Death by Arts and Crafts (12/27)
Morrissey, Hannah – The Widowmaker (12/6)
Ohlert, Kelly – To Get to the Other Side (12/6)
Parks, Adele – One Last Secret (12/27)
Parlato, Terri – All the Dark Places (12/27)
Samuel, Amber D. – The Many Dates of Indigo (12/6)
Wilde, Darcie – The Secret of the Lost Pearls (12/27)
I’ve already read Rum and Choke so the only one on that list I’m still interested in is Honeymoons Can be Hazardous. I need a few months of light releases to try and catch up at least a bit with my tbr piles.
I agree with you, Sandy! A few light months would be helpful!
Thank you, Lesa. I only have the following to add: Secrets Typed in Blood by Stephen Spotswood and Ms. Demeanor by Elinor Lipman.
Hmm, that time travel books sounds possible. Not a lot in December, though. Here are more:
6 John Straley, BLOWN BY THE SAME WIND
6, Peter Lovesey, SHOWSTOPPER (Peter DIamond; he is still going strong more than 50 years later)
6 S. A. Cosby, MY DARKEST PRAYER (this is a new reprint of his first novel, which I already have)
6 Max Allan Collins,, THE BIG BUNDLE (Nate Heller)
6 James W. Ziskin, BOMBAY MONSOON
6 Robin Cook, NIGHT SHIFT (I’m not a fan of his)
7 Christopher Fowler, PECULIAR LONDON (Bryant & May)
Treasures! Thank you!!
I’ve read the Smiley book and can happily recommend it. Not at all what we’ve come to expect from this author.
I’ve just purchased the first book you mentioned – time travel always interests me. I was so disappointed when Amazon rung up this Kindle book as a pre-order. I wanted to start today! Ah, I’ll just have to wait. So many books sound appealing this month