I’ll admit I’m more eager to read the books listed in Part 1 than the ones in Part 2. There’s always an exception, though. Is there any book that you’re looking forward to reading in this second pile of March releases?

I’ll start off with The Adjunct by Maria Adelmann. From the acclaimed author of How to Be Eaten, a fresh take on the campus novel that follows an adjunct professor gigging her way through academia’s poor job market when she crosses paths with her old PhD adviser whose new novel might be about her. Meet Sam, an adjunct professor at a public university in Baltimore who takes a last-minute gig at the private liberal arts college down the road. Overworked and underpaid, her life is a blur of back-to-back classes, side hustles, and job applications as she attempts to claw her way toward a full-time position. But her already precarious existence is thrown into disarray when she runs into her former grad school adviser, Dr. Tom Sternberg, on campus. Tom and Sam have a complicated history, the lasting impact of which has haunted her academic career, and it’s the last thing she wants to think about as she navigates academic politics, institutional hurdles, and romantic entanglements with men and women that further complicate a sexuality not even she can define. Then she learns that Tom left his old job for undisclosed reasons—and his long-awaited second novel is about a professor’s reckoning with his checkered past. As whispers spread that Sam is the inspiration behind a central character, she fights to regain control of the story while questioning everything she thought she knew about her future—and herself. (Release date is March 31.)

I hope Robbie Couch’s Bloom has a happy ending. I am looking forward to this one. From the New York Times bestselling author of If I See You Again Tomorrow comes a delightful and heartwarming novel about family, love, grief, and one precocious houseplant, that reminds us of the beauty of living a life in full Bloom. Morris Warner is withering away. After the sudden death of his husband, Fred, he has shut himself off from the world. No more going to movies with friends, or swims in Lake Michigan, instead preferring the quiet loneliness of his history books and Jeopardy episodes with only the cat to hear his answers. Morris’s stepdaughter, Sloan, feels like she has nowhere to grow. She’s about to get married to the man of her dreams, if only her mother will let her actually plan her own wedding and trust her to build her own life after her father’s death. Jade is drying out. Literally. As a plant in Morris’s home, she and her plant housemates have been slowly wasting away, leaf by falling leaf, since Fred’s death and Morris’s lack of care. She needs to come up with a plan to make her new owner come back to life, no matter what it takes. (Release date is March 3.)

I usually don’t read novels involving the legal system, but I’m taking a chance on Judge Stone by Viola Davis and James Patterson. All rise… for Judge Stone. The most respected citizen in Union Springs, Alabama (population 3,314), is Judge Mary Stone. She holds two responsibilities sacred: running her family farm and presiding over her courtroom. It’s there she draws the most controversial case in the history of the South. Criminally, it’s open-and-shut. Ethically, there is no middle ground. Essentially, it’s a choice between life and death. No judge can satisfy everyone. It would be dangerous to try. But Judge Stone is willing to fight to bring justice to the people and place she loves. (Release date is March 9.)

In Almost Life by Kiran Millwood Hargrave, two young women meet in Paris one sultry summer in a decades-spanning tour de force about the enduring power of young love and the poignant heartbreak of missed chances. Erica and Laure meet on the steps of the Sacré-Coeur in Paris, 1978. Erica is a student, relishing her first summer abroad before beginning university at home in England. Laure is studying for her PhD at the Sorbonne, drinking and smoking far too much, and sleeping with a married woman. The moment the two women meet, the spark is undeniable, but their encounter turns into far more than a summer of love. It is the beginning of a relationship that will define their lives and every decision they have yet to make… (Release date is March 24.)

Ruinous Creatures is Jessi Cole Jackson’s debut romantasy. For fans of One Dark Window and T. Kingfisher, comes a standalone romantasy debut about a woman who accidentally awakens the power to siphon magic from two phoenix skulls, binding her fate to a vengeful stranger and forcing them to navigate the devastating cost of their unbreakable bond. In a sanctuary for magical creatures hidden deep within a valley, magic is born from the bones of extraordinary creatures. For generations, a privileged few have siphoned this magic by wearing the skulls of these creatures and wielding their power. Adela spends her days meticulously preparing these skulls to be matched, ensuring the magic endures and the valley sustains. But when she discovers two phoenix skulls—creatures she had believed only legend—she can’t resist the pull of their dormant magic. Defying the warnings of her mentor, Adela awakens the skulls, unleashing a shockwave of power that throws the valley into chaos. Meanwhile, determined novitiate Kian prepares for the upcoming matching ceremony, but harbors a secret: he is only participating in order to destroy the magic of the skulls to avenge the death of his parents at the hands of this tradition of power. (Release date is March 10.)

Said Khatabi’s The End of the Sahara takes readers to Algeria. On an early autumn morning in 1988, on the outskirts of an unnamed Algerian city, a shepherd stumbles upon the lifeless body of Zaza Zaghouani, a stunning nightclub singer who left her hometown seeking a brighter future. The story is set in 1988 Algeria. It takes place in just forty days, ending as mass protests erupt in the country. In a small town on the edge of the desert, plagued by a locust infestation and a food shortage, teetering on the brink of uprising, the body of Zakia Zaghouani—the singer at the Sahara Hotel—is discovered. Suspicion immediately falls on her lover, who is thrown into prison. The incompetent and greedy Inspector Hamid begins an investigation. So does the defense lawyer of the main suspect. Family, friends, and close ones give their testimonies, finding themselves confronted with their past. Secrets, betrayals, grudges, but also dreams and hopes shed light on their connection to the victim: each person harbors, for one reason or another, the desire to take revenge on her. (Release date is March 26,)

A Defiant Woman by Karen E. Olson is subtitled A Modern Tudor Mystery. Kate Tudor’s marriage to billionaire Hank Tudor continues to fray when his ex-wife resurfaces in the wake of their daughter’s kidnapping, in the latest novel in this genre-defying crime series. Eight years ago, Nan Tudor escaped her husband, billionaire businessman Hank Tudor, afraid for her life and leaving a dead body behind—but in doing so, she abandoned her three-year-old daughter, Lizzie. Still wracked with guilt for that decision, she is living a quiet life as a restaurant cook in France with her son when she receives a mysterious text: “We have your daughter.” Lured back to the scene of the crime on Martha’s Vineyard by a threat against Lizzie’s life, Nan believes the kidnapper is exacting revenge against her, stopping at nothing to do so—and discovers that she and her daughter may not be the only targets. Kate Parker—Hank’s sixth and latest wife—is also on the island and drawn into the kidnapper’s elaborate web of retaliation. (Release date is March 3.)

M.L. Stedman is the author of The Light Between Oceans. A Far-Flung Life is Stedman’s second novel. This one is described as a breathtaking and epic novel set in the vast outback of Australia—about tragedy, family secrets, and the enduring power of love. Remote Western Australia, 1958: here, for generations, the MacBrides have lived on a vast sheep station, Meredith Downs. It is a million acres, an ocean of arid land. On an ordinary day, on a lonely road, under the unending blue sky, patriarch Phil MacBride swerves to avoid a kangaroo. In seconds the lives of the entire MacBride family are shattered. And then, tragedy revisits when a twist of consequences claims the life of one sibling, and leads another to give up everything for the sake of an innocent child. Matt, the youngest MacBride, is plunged into a moral and emotional journey for which there is no map, no guide. The secrets at the heart of this gutting and beautiful story force him to choose between love and duty, sacrifice and happiness. (Release date is March 3.)
Well, what do you think? Anything here you want to read?



Don’t know if I’d read any, but THE ADJUNCT’s setting and premise interests me. And, of course, anything set in the wilds of Australia is worth consideration.
“Romantasy”? Not for me, the word or the genre.
PS – So glad (yet again) we’re here, as today’s New York forecast is for wind chills as low as -20 and even some more snow. This truly has been the Winter From Hell.
Yes, it has been a winter from Hell, Jeff, although 1978 in Ohio was really bad. I’m thinking about reading a couple of these, but there were more in Part 1 that appealed to me.
The only one I’ve been aware of is A Far-Flung Life. Think I saw that one on another blog. I’m going to watch for it. Like the Australian setting. Hope you like these!
We’ll see, Kay. I don’t read every book I post here. Not enough time in life! The Stedman is a possibility.
Definitely A Far- Flung Life. I loved The Light Between Oceans. And possibly The Adjunct, since I’ve been one 😉.
Melanie, I thought of you when I saw A Far-Flung Life. I don’t think you were this type of Adjunct, though. (smile)
The Bloom book made think of when my mother and I visited my aunt and uncle in South Bend many years ago. They had an enormous plant that grew up to the ceiling of the front room and then continued into the ceiling of the next room, when every one sat and talked! We all loved the plant that wanted to join us.
Carol, I love that story of the plant! I’m thinking I may have to try Bloom because of the plant!
Thanks, Lesa. I’ll be interested in seeing reviews of these. The new Stedman sounds heavy, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t excellent.
You’re right, Kim. And, I never know what books I’m a going to read from these selections.
I think I might like Bloom, as the average rating on NetGalley is 5 stars–and it’s only 240 pages long! What’s not to like? I just requested it, but Gallery is the publisher, so I might not have any luck. I’m looking forward to what you all think of it if you read it.