A third adult fiction compilation post?! I’m surprised,
too!
<This is
a standalone novel.>
You know it’s bad when you wake up in a
partially-destroyed workshop with no memories and no eyebrows. There’s an
abducted princess in a cell of the evil wizard’s castle and the goblin
workforce fatalistically expects to one day be immolated on the whim of the
evil wizard. Also, the evil wizard is ... him. What is his name? Others refer
to him as Dread Lord Gavrax, but as he has no memories of the time before, he
refers to himself as Gav. He plans to fake it until he makes it, but he might
still die a horrible death at the hands of the evil wizard leader, Zarconar. Or
maybe the moat squid will succeed in eating his face. Or he’ll self-immolate
accidentally. He doesn’t want to die, and he also doesn’t want to be like
Gavrax. He wants to be a, well, not a good wizard, but also
not an evil wizard. He wants to be a wizard Orla will talk to about a hosting
menu in her gamboling monster kitty apron that her granddaughter made her. And
a wizard that Grrribeetle isn’t afraid of and will do more than mumble to. And
a wizard that Princess Eliasha (apprentice name Wren) wants to be friends with.
There is something truly evil at work. The princess is definitely only there
for a nefarious purpose, which will assuredly mean her death. There’s a
gathering of evil wizards, an upcoming summoning of demon evil, the arrival of
hero types doing Artharno the White Wizard’s bidding and a village garlic
festival. Candied garlic or garlic brittle, anyone? Gav has lots more to worry
about than his flames-adorned cloak. He needs to decide who he wants to be
going forward.
I
definitely judged this book by its sprayed edges, which are black and include
skulls in the decorative edge-work, but I only bought it after I read the
jacket copy and found myself intrigued. This adult fiction novel is a comedic
fantasy with splashes of violence. There’s even a little gore, but it’s a quick
scene, so it can therefore be sometimes spicy with dashes of darkness. Gav,
with his missing memories, is more a bumbling fool than any threat to anyone –
except the guy he turned into a chicken – so the story’s more entertaining than
anything and not scary. I don’t know that I’d call it cozy, but it is genuinely
funny. It contains wit, self-awareness and empathy, giving a fresh take on
fantasy tropes. This book won’t bite, but if you’re not careful, something from
the story might, so beware!
Gone Before Goodbye (Oct. 21, 2025) by Reese
Witherspoon & Harlan Coben.
<This is
a standalone novel.>
A renowned combat surgeon with a renowned combat surgeon
husband and co-founder of a successful medical mission called WorldCures,
Maggie McCabe was making a positive impact, and she had it all. Her
reality now is a life where her medical license has been revoked, her husband
is dead, her sister is going through a messy divorce, and both sisters are
struggling financially. She’s thrown a mighty lifeline, and when she accepts,
debts are erased, litigation against her is suddenly resolved, and she has a
whole lot of money in her bank account, and that’s only half the payment.
Absolute discretion is imperative, but she knows HIPAA. She arrives at a remote
location in Russia. It’s a palace, and one of her clients is a reclusive
oligarch. When he goes missing while he should still be under her care, Maggie
becomes a fugitive herself around people who can afford Bugatti Tourbillons
that cost $4.1 million (starting) and can jet-set in their own private
planes with their own Michelin-star-level personal chefs. Her combat training
as well as her medical expertise are going to be tested, and the truths she
might uncover may cost her her life.
There’s
cutting-edge technology, state-of-the-art equipment and people who can live in
gluttonously opulent luxury in this adult fiction, mystery and medical thriller
by Academy Award-winning actress Reese Witherspoon and internationally
bestselling thriller author Harlan Coben. The novel is action-packed, though it
really didn’t pick up for me until an intense escape about 150 pages in. It’s
also part globe-trotting adventure, part psychological thriller. The story
contains twists and suspense, the plot is high-stakes, and the story is dynamic
and pedal to the metal. It has me wondering what I’ve been missing out on since
this is my first Coben novel, and I don’t know how much of the writing
Witherspoon did, but this collab really works.
The Second Chance Convenience Store (June 17,
2025/US edition) by Kim Ho-Yeon.
Janet Hong, translator.
<This is
a standalone novel.>
The owner of the Second Chance Convenience Store, Mrs.
Yeom, is a retired history teacher who keeps her store open in Cheongpa-dong to
keep her few employees employed. She’s distraught over the loss of her
purse until she receives a call from Seoul Station. Dokgo is an unhoused man
who can’t remember his past or his actual name due to alcohol-related dementia.
To thank him for returning her purse, she invites him to come to her store
every day to receive an unexpired boxed lunch free of charge. He comes, but
insists on only eating the expired boxed lunches. He even cleans up the picnic
table, though it’s wintertime and very cold. When Dokgo saves the store from a
robbery attempt, Mrs. Yeom offers the big, bear-like Dokgo the night shift. She
requires him to stop drinking alcohol, but she buys him new clothes and a
haircut. He learns fast and quickly wins over the denizens of the neighborhood,
though his coworkers are slower to warm up to him. He’s grateful to his new
boss, and business sees an uptick with his customer service, slow and
methodical though it may be. The better business upsets Mrs. Yeom’s ne’er-do-well
son, Minsik, who wants to try to convince his mom to back his latest venture (and
they either tend to fail or turn out to be scams). Minsik hires a man to look
into Dokgo’s past, because his mom’s convenience store is an inconvenience store
to him.
In this
adult, cozy, urban fiction story, already an international bestseller from
Korea, readers will find a broken man who gets his life back, a store owner
with a kind soul and a wayward son, a caustic morning shift employee and a
mid-shift employee who’s questioning what to do next. The fiction is realistic
and sometimes unpleasant, but it’s encouraging and compassionate, too. It’s a
story of community and healing. Overall, it’s a soft, heartfelt novel.


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