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    Patricia Lockwood, Kiran Desai, Ian McEwan, and more: 24 new books out today!

    Julia Hass

    September 23, 2025, 4:00am

    Another week of hell in America. Dark times shade even darker, and yet through it all, in ways both uplifting and stupefying, life goes on. At the very least, be it for edification, or self-help, escapism, or grounding, books continue to be there for us.

    And this week, we welcome a hefty selection of new titles: Patricia Lockwood’s much anticipated novel on her experience with long Covid (amongst much else, too zany and myriad to get into here), Mona Awad’s sequel to Bunny, a new Ian McEwan novel, and a long awaited Kiran Desai novel. In nonfiction, we welcome a definitive biography of Muriel Spark, Kamala Harris’s obligatory campaign recap, a look at the genre of true crime, and a cultural history of “societal collapse” (timely). Me, I’ll be diving into Lockwood, Desai, and the Spark biography, but I believe there will be something for everyone in this week’s stack.

    Happy reading!

    *

    Patricia Lockwood, Will There Ever Be Another You

    Patricia Lockwood, Will There Ever Be Another You
    (Riverhead)

    “So singular … Her ability to tease out the absurdity of ordinary communication is magnificent, even infuriating … Lockwood manages to explicate the harried, nonsensical, grief-soaked timeline with acrobatic skill.”
    The New Republic

    Kiran Desai, The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny
    (Hogarth)

    “Not so much a novel as a marvel … Here is sweet validation of the idea that to create something truly transcendent — a work of art depicting love, family, nature and culture in all their fullness — might take time.”
    The New York Times

    Ian McEwan, What We Can Know

    Ian McEwan, What We Can Know
    (Knopf)

    “A philosophically charged tour de force by one of the best living novelists in English.”
    Kirkus

    Frances Wilson, Electric Spark: The Enigma of Dame Muriel

    Frances Wilson, Electric Spark: The Enigma of Dame Muriel
    (FSG)

    “Frances Wilson revels in her sublimely contrary subject … Wilson borrows Spark’s own mystical whimsy about the relationship between her life and her work.”
    The Atlantic

    we love you, bunny

    Mona Awad, We Love You, Bunny
    (Marysue Rucci)

    “[A] dark, twisted satire of academia and the cultlike world of writers.”
    The New York Times

    On Antisemitism, Mark Mazower

    Mark Mazower, On Antisemitism: A Word in History
    (Penguin Press)

    “Mazower soberly describes how and why the politics of anti-Semitism have metastasized in such maddening ways.”
    Harpers

    Circle of Days, Ken Follett

    Ken Follett, Circle of Days
    (Grand Central)

    “A dramatic, complex imagining of the origins of Stonehenge.”
    Kirkus

    You Must Live, Poetry from Palestine

    Sherah Bloor and Tayseer Abu Odeh, You Must Live: New Poetry From Palestine
    (Copper Canyon Press)

    “A light beam of a collection in our dark hours. These poets managed the seemingly impossible: to build life-affirming yet daring linguistic nodes among the rubble of our world and our world’s imagination.”
    —Ocean Vuong

    Jonathan Lethem, A Different Kind of Tension
    (Ecco)

    “A revelatory career-spanning collection of 30 fantastical and speculative stories … The repeating motifs—claustrophobia, desire, malevolent chaos—provide keys to understanding Lethem’s often elliptical tales.”
    Publishers Weekly

    107 Days, Kamala Harris

    Kamala Harris, 107 Days
    (Simon and Schuster)

    “The diaristic organization permits her to give a play-by-play of those grueling 107 days, moving through events as they happened, issuing her rebuttals.”
    The New York Times

     

    Awake, Jen Hatmaker

    Jen Hatmaker, Awake
    (Avid Reader Press)

    “Reading Awake is like being offered a lifeline when you’ve drifted too far out to sea—it’s warm, witty, wise, and wide awake to what matters most. Jen Hatmaker is proof that we can change our own stories.”
    —Lori Gottlieb

    Luke Kemp, Goliath's Curse: The History and Future of Societal Collapse

    Luke Kemp, Goliath’s Curse: The History and Future of Societal Collapse
    (Knopf)

    “An invigorating look at big picture history across continents and millennia, and a survival manual to boot.”
    Kirkus

    Abdi Nazemian, Exquisite Things
    (HarperCollins

    ” powerful, epic love letter to queer longing, chosen family, and the ache of wanting to belong—in any era.”
    —Daniel Aleman

    The Killer Question, Janice Hallett

    Janice Hallett, The Killer Question
    (Atria)

    “Hallett continues to stretch the limits of the epistolary mystery in this playful tale of murder at a weekly trivia night … Hallett is at the top of her game. It’s a wickedly satisfying ride.”
    Publishers Weekly

    Ilana Masad, Beings

    Ilana Masad, Beings
    (Bloomsbury)

    “The alien abduction meets lesbian yearning novel that will restore your faith in the universe. Ilana Masad excavates the juiciness of historical archives and the otherworldly mysteries of the everyday in her most brilliant work yet.”
    —Ruth Madievsky

    Distinguished Office of Echoes, Lisa Olstein

    Lisa Olstein, Distinguished Office of Echoes
    (Copper Canyon)

    “Olstein’s profound and attentive poems reveal her formal dexterity and knack for spotting modernity’s absurdities.”
    Publishers Weekly

    John J. Lennon, The Tragedy of True Crime: Four Guilty Men and the Stories That Define Us

    John J. Lennon, The Tragedy of True Crime: Four Guilty Men and the Stories That Define Us
    (Celadon)

    “A haunting and innovative blend of memoir and true crime… There are no easy answers, but The Tragedy of True Crime offers a rich and nuanced look at a population that’s often made invisible and is sure to become a classic of the genre.”
    Booklist

    Water Mirror Echo, Jeff Chang

    Jeff Chang, Water Mirror Echo: Bruce Lee and the Making of Asian America
    (Mariner)

    “Thrives not just as an ode, or a tome of cultural appreciation, but also as a rich analysis of the history within, and the landscape upon which a cultural icon can be formed, can be shaped, can be beloved. This book is as celebratory as it is incisive, as it is, at times, heartbreaking. A massive achievement.”
    —Hanif Abdurraqib

    Dan Chaon, One of Us

    Dan Chaon, One of Us
    (Henry Holt)

    “Chaon dazzles with his vision of family, strangeness, and the tension between care and exploitation. This captivating adventure is not to be missed.”
    Publishers Weekly

    Humanish, Justin Gregg

    Justin Gregg, Humanish: What Talking to Your Cat or Naming Your Car Reveals about the Uniquely Human Need to Humanize
    (Little Brown)

    “Filled with intriguing stories and astute explanations, this is a superb work of popular science.”
    Publishers Weekly

    Softly As I Leave You, Priscilla Presley

    Priscilla Beaulieu Presley, Softly, As I Leave You: Life After Elvis
    (Grand Central)

    “Presley remains an endearing, conversational storyteller whose focus on the positive…rings true. It’s a heartfelt record of stepping into one’s own.”
    Publishers Weekly

    When Everyone Knows That Everyone Knows, Steven PInker

    Steven Pinker, When Everyone Knows That Everyone Knows: Common Knowledge and the Mysteries of Money, Power, and Everyday Life
    (Scribner)

    “One of the most insightful books I’ve read about what makes us human and how we understand each other. It changed how I think about the interactions I have, and I bet it will do the same for you.”
    —Bill Gates

    Amanda, HS Cross

    H S Cross, Amanda
    (Europa)

    “About two lovers driven apart by secrets and brought together again by irrepressible need … A scintillating historical novel about the potential revival of a star-crossed love.”
    Foreword Reviews

    On Drugs, Justin Smith

    Justin Smith-Ruiu, On Drugs: Psychedelics, Philosophy, and the Nature of Reality
    (Liveright)

    “An insightful work of philosophy supported by a surprisingly powerful memoiristic arc, Justin Smith-Ruiu’s new book works better than any psychedelic could to reopen the doors of perception and cast humanity’s long-standing hunger for mind-altering experiences in a new and thrilling light.”
    —Kristen Roupenian

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