Categories
Book Radar

THE GLASS HOTEL by Emily St John Mandel Will Be a Series and More Book Radar!

Hello, starbits! How’s your September going so far? Mine is filled with books, which is just how I like it. I have a lot of great things to tell you today, what with there being no newsletter last Monday and all. I hope you have a great rest of your week, and remember to be kind to yourself and others.  I’ll see you again on Monday! – xoxo, Liberty

P.S. More fun news: be sure to enter Book Riot’s giveaway of the year’s 10 best mystery/thrillers so far!

Trivia question time! What actor was originally cast as Aragorn in Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings film trilogy? (Scroll to the bottom for the answer.)

Deals, Reals, and Squeals!

the glass hotelEmily St John Mandel’s upcoming novel, The Glass Hotel, is being adapted for television, with Mandel herself writing the pilot.

The trailer for Just Mercy with Jamie Foxx and Michael B. Jordan has arrived.

Hulu is already developing the Handmaid’s Tale sequel based on The Testaments by Margaret Atwood, which comes out next week.

Buenos Aires-based author K Ferrari has sold his first novel in English, Like Flies from Afar, to Canongate.

Kate Mulgrew has joined the cast of Mr. Mercedes.

Nic Stone is writing a Black Panther novel about Shuri, to publish next year. And former Rioter Preeti Chhibber is writing about the Avengers!

Rooney Mara has joined Guillermo Del Toro’s Nightmare Alley adaptation.

Will Poulter has been cast in the lead of the Lord of the Rings series.

a woman is no manAuthors Jenny “The Bloggess” Lawson and Etaf Rum are opening bookstores, in San Antonio and Rocky Mount, respectively!

Ursula Le Guin’s Earthsea Cycle is being adapted for television.

The 2019 Booker Prize shortlist has been announced.

Here’s the trailer for the third season of Anne with an E on Netflix.

Daniel Henney will play al’Lan Mandragoran in the Wheel of Time series.

The New York Times talked to the Stanford assault victim, Chanel Miller, who is publishing her memoir on September 24. (TW: sexual assault.)

BJ Novak is releasing a companion edition to The Book with No Pictures.

Book Riot Recommends 

At Book Riot, I work on the New Books! email, the All the Books! podcast about new releases, and the Book Riot Insiders New Release Index. I am very fortunate to get to read a lot of upcoming titles, and learn about a lot of upcoming titles, and I’m delighted to share a couple with you each week so you can add them to your TBR! (It will now be books I loved on Mondays and books I’m excited to read on Thursdays. YAY, BOOKS!)

Excited to read:

redhead by the side of the roadRedhead by the Side of the Road by Anne Tyler (Knopf, April 7, 2020)

NEW ANNE TYLER. I read everything she writes. She is my go-to comfort read. I have always loved her, since I was a kid. Favorite Tyler novel? Saint Maybe. There was something a few years ago in an interview where I swear I heard that she said she wasn’t going to publish anymore novels after she reached her twentieth one, but I am glad that has turned out not to be true. This one is about a meticulously organized tech programmer whose life is tipped into chaos when a teenager arrives, claiming to be his son. I can’t wait! Tyler is so good at human nature.

What I’m reading this week.

docile k.m. szparaDocile by K.M. Szpara

The Knockout Queen: A Novel by Rufi Thorpe

Last Couple Standing: A Novel by Matthew Norman

Think Black: A Memoir by Clyde W. Ford

The Silvered Serpents by Roshani Chokshi

And this is funny.

Hahahaha.

Trivia answer: Stuart Townsend. 

You made it to the bottom! High five. Thanks for reading! – xo, L

Categories
Giveaways

090419-PrettyGuiltyWomen-Giveaway

We’re giving away 10 copies of Pretty Guilty Women by Gina LaManna to 10 lucky Riot readers!

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the cover image below!

Here’s what it’s all about:

Something has gone terribly wrong at the Banks wedding. A man is dead. Four different women rush to offer confessions, each insisting that they committed the crime—alone. Ginger’s life is coming apart at the seams, and this wedding weekend is not the fabulous getaway she anticipated. Kate has enough money to buy her way out of anything. Well, almost anything. Emily can’t shake her reputation or her memories, and she’s planning to drown this whole vacation in a bottle. Lulu’s got ex-husbands to spare, and another on the way—as soon as she figures out what the devil the current husband is up to behind her back. Why would they confess to the same murder? Only they know—and they’re not telling.

Categories
Today In Books

Excerpt from THE TESTAMENTS by Margaret Atwood: Today In Books

Excerpt from The Testaments by Margaret Atwood

Thirty-four years after the release of The Handmaid’s Tale, the sequel–already short-listed for the Booker Prize for Fiction–will publish on September 10th. Can’t wait even one more week? Here’s an excerpt! Or you can pre-buy The Testament–which Amazon shipped out early causing a lot of upset.

Hell Of A Story, Hell Of A Cast

The trailer for the film adaptation of Bryan Stevenson’s memoir looks amazing! Starring Michael B. Jordan, Jamie Foxx and Captain Marvel–er, Brie Larson, the film tells the true story of a young lawyer’s fight for justice. Have all the popcorn ready for its December release and watch the trailer here!

Bye Bye Bye

In great news: As of September 1st the Detroit Public Library system is eliminating overdue fines! While not applicable to damaged or lost items it will also erase past overdue fines. “Fine free is a growing trend in American libraries, resulting in increased visits and circulation. With no fines, the Detroit Public Library will be more accessible and welcoming than ever before.”

Categories
Kissing Books

Kickass Space Princesses and All the Faire Feels

The past week has been…something…on both sides of the Atlantic (and in the Pacific) and goodness knows we need romance novels right now. We’ll talk news on Monday; let’s just hold onto the happy.

Over on Book Riot

Annika has a lot of questions about illustrated covers and their connection to romcoms.

It was anchored in the bottom of last Thursday’s newsletter, but in case you go banner blind, I neglected to mention that When in Romance aired last week, so if you rely on me to remind you it exists…well, don’t because I’m terrible at it.

Have you read these romantic suspense novels? Some of them are a little more on the suspense end than romance, but they have both thrills and kissing, so we’ll let that slide.

Deals

a young woman in leather body armor faces away from the viewer holding up a ray gun. she's facing a blue-tinted scene with a firing space ship and a Saturn-like planet in the skyIf you’ve been feeling bereft of kickass space princesses, Polaris Rising by Jessie Mihalik is 1.99. Fighting in the dark, snark up the wazoo, and developing trust regardless of terrible circumstances are just the highlights of this first book in a cool space opera series.

Speaking of romantic suspense, have you checked out anything by Piper J. Drake yet? If you want to check out something I can guarantee is worthwhile—equal explosions and *explosions*—try Hidden Impact, which is also 1.99 right now.

New Releases

This week has been a veritable smorgasbord when it comes to new releases, and I’ve gotten my hands on a couple or three.

cover of Well Met by Jen DeLucaWell Met
Jen DeLuca

What could possibly send me running faster than hearing the words “Renaissance faire romance”? Lots of GIFs featuring everyone’s favorite Captain Guyliner, Colin O’Donoghue. Obviously, I was curious enough to dig in.

And man, so many Faire feels.

Some of us grew up going to renfaires. In my case, it was one of the ones mentioned in Well Met, the Maryland Renaissance Festival (though the one they put on also reminded me of the New York Renaissance Festival, which I’ve only been to once but from which I have basically the only photographic evidence of my ever having gone to one). But we’re getting way off track. Basically, if you love participating in Renaissance festivals in any role, you’re going to enjoy the hell out of this book.

Another thing you’re probably going to love, as a romance reader, is living in Emily’s head. She can be a touch annoying, but it’s great to watch her grow over the course of the summer, to see how she connects the dots and figures out her own life, even as she’s dealing with a terrible past betrayal and the psychological and general life-related repercussions of said betrayal. But it’s not all sad, because she’s got a delightful sister and niece, some rambunctious new friends, and of course, Simon, the Faire coordinator who…might also be a pirate…

So yeah. Have at it.

(I will note that while Jen DeLuca’s universe is delightful, there was a significant lack of POC and queer characters. One might argue that it’s a small town…but it’s a small town outside of Baltimore, so I’d expect a little less homogeneity.)

Cover of Work for It by Talia HibbertWork for It
Talia Hibbert

This was almost a surprise release; Talia announced it about a month ago, as we all thought we’d have to wait for Get a Life, Chloe Brown in October before we’d get a new Talia Hibbert book, and I’m glad to have gotten my hands on an eARC. Which I devoured.

I have a confession to make: I haven’t read Bad for the Boss or the other Just for Him books. I have been saving them for a rainy day, because too much time without a TH book is just a travesty. (How did we survive before?) But luckily, we don’t need to have met Olu in those books to dive deep into his soul in this one. Having reached a point in his life where he needs to reset, be alone with his thoughts and his journals, Olu decides to go out into the country and join an elderberry harvest. Which is where he meets Griff, the farm manager and town weirdo (according to the town, anyway). They don’t start off on the right foot, but eventually they sort of figure each other out. But not themselves—so there’s a lot of grief that each has to deal with before they’re in the right place to be together.

Don’t worry though; if you’ve read anything else by her, you know she treats her readers well. Just prepared for an exhausted, feelings-heavy nap when you’re done.

I also started Lord of the Last Heartbeat by May Peterson, and I didn’t want to stop to write this. I haven’t felt pulled in by worldbuilding like this in a while, and I want to know everything about everyone. I have no idea what’s going to happen, but I’m all in for the magical opera and the moon children.

Other books I’m looking forward to picking up:

Cover of Black Tie Billionaire by Naima SimoneBlack Tie Billionaire by Naima Simone
Island Fling with the Tycoon by Therese Beharrie
Bringing Down the Duke by Evie Dunmore (I started but got distracted by this guy with humongous eyes climbing El Capitan with no ropes or anything…)
The Lady and the Highwayman by Sarah M. Eden
Guarding the Countess by Jess Michaels (apparently, the swords cross—it’s a requirement in MMF, you know)
How to Belong With a Billionaire by Alexis Hall
To Break a Vow by Chencia C. Higgins
Return to Me by Farrah Rochon
Netherfield Must Go! By Nikki Payne (Pride and Prejudice retelling with black protagonists, what?!)

As usual, catch me on Twitter @jessisreading or Instagram @jess_is_reading, or send me an email at jessica@riotnewmedia.com if you’ve got feedback, bookrecs, or just want to say hi!

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 9/4

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.

Looks like we maaaade iiiitttt. Yes y’all, I have finally, actually, no-really-I-mean-it-this-time moved all the way to Portland! I may not have all of my furniture and my clothes may still be in trash bags, but the books have all been put away and that, my friends, gives me peace.

Speaking of books, let’s talk about em. To the club!!


Today’s theme is very simple: Sh*t I Like. I took more than one warm and fuzzy trip down memory lane while packing up and shelving some of my favorite reads and thought I’d share a few with great club potential.

Let’s Pretend this Never Happened by Jenny Lawson – I’m a big fan of funny books that make me cry and “The Bloggess” Jenny Lawson has that combo on lock. One minute she’s talking about a taxidermied mouse, the next she’s sharing her struggles with mental health. I heart her so much for those candid conversations.

  • Book Club Bonus: We don’t all have a story about our fathers and taxidermied mice, but we do have funny stories of our own. I, for example, thought Madonna was not a Material Girl but a Cheerio Girl and DEMANDED to snack on the cereal while dancing to it in our living room as a kid. Your turn! Get real with the club and share funny childhood memories! Read your story aloud, or to make it even more interesting: have everyone write or type theirs up, put them in a bowl, then designate someone to read them aloud at random. See if the club can guess who each memory belongs to!
  • Related: Jenny Lawson recently announced that she’s opening a bookstore and bar in San Antonio!

We Are La Cocina: Recipes in Pursuit of the American Dream by Caleb Zigas, Leticia Landa – If you don’t know about La Cocina, look into this amazing nonprofit now: based in San Francisco’s Mission District, they provide affordable commercial kitchen space, technical assistance and even job placement for women of color and immigrant communities in the food business. This cookbook is a collection of stories and recipes from 40 of the talented women who got their start with La Cocina and I can personally vouch for their food’s deliciousness. All proceeds from sales of the book go right back into helping other women entrepreneurs and the fight for equity in the culinary industry.

  • Book Club Bonus: If you’re wanting to get away but can’t quite swing a group vacay right about now, dive into this cookbook to take a trip with book club through food. That braised fish recipe from Hang Truong of Noodle Girl Restaurant is the Vietnamese comfort food I didn’t know I needed in my life.
  • Bonus: Hold your club gathering at a woman-owned restaurant or eatery; if you’re in Northern California’s bay area, go support one of the women from the book!

And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie – I re-read this for what has got to be the 20th time recently and its genius strikes me every time (though some bits are problematic; yikes, that original title!). The premise: a bunch of strangers get a mysterious invite to an island mansion and guess what: they die. Shocking! They’re picked off one by one as bits of their shady pasts are revealed. It’s so unsettling and creepy and one of my favorite Christie works to date.

  • Book Club Bonus: Discuss whether any of the characters were likeable; if they’re awful, did they deserve to die?!  Did you see the ending coming? What books or films do you now recognize as drawing from this Chrisie classic?

Suggestion Section

Some more musings on what celebrity book clubs do for writers.

September celebrity book club picks from Reese Witherspoon, PBS, Emma Watson, and Emma Roberts.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

More Resources:
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page

Categories
Giveaways

090319-TheHive-Giveaway

We have 5 copies of The Hive by Barry Lyga and Morgan Baden to give away to 5 Riot readers!

Go here to enter for a chance to win, or just click the cover image below!

Here’s what it’s all about:

New York Times bestselling authors Barry Lyga and Morgan Baden have teamed up for the first time to create a novel that’s gripping, terrifying and more relevant every day. The Hive follows seventeen-year-old Cassie, who, after being “condemned” on social media, is on the run from a deadly state-sanctioned mob seeking to exact IRL punishment.

Aided by a shadowy underground network, Cassie becomes an unlikely heroine, as her search for the truth makes her a threat to the entire unjust system. The Hive is a breathless race through the day after tomorrow, where online and real life are blurred beyond recognition, and social media casts ever-darker shadows.

Categories
True Story

10 New Nonfiction Books Out This Week

Hello and happy September, nonfiction friends! As sad as I am to see this summer start to wind down, there’s been something very soothing about the slide into fall this year. The air feels crisp, I’m eating a lot of apples, and the fall publishing season is kicking off.

This week, I have 10 interesting new books to put on your radar. Let’s go!

My Time Among the Whites: Notes from an Unfinished Education by Jennine Capó Crucet – A collection of essays on being an “accidental” American and “her family’s attempts to fit in with white American culture.”

Axiomatic by Maria Tumarkin – A look at “the ways we understand the traumas we inherit and the systems that sustain them.”

How To: Absurd Scientific Advice for Common Real-World Problems by Randall Munroe – The creator of the webcomic xkcd is back with an “entertaining and useless” self-help guide of ridiculous solutions to common problems.

Elements of Fiction by Walter Mosley – A guide to writing fiction that “transcends convention and truly stands out.”

Fentanyl, Inc.: How Rogue Chemists Are Creating the Deadliest Wave of the Opioid Epidemic by Ben Westhoff – An investigation into the world of synthetic drugs, from factories in China to dealers in the United States, and how they’re part of the next wave of the opioid crisis.

The Ungrateful Refugee: What Immigrants Never Tell You by Dina Nayeri – A memoir by a refugee that also shares “the stories of other refugees and asylum seekers in recent years, bringing us inside their daily lives and taking us through the different stages of their journeys.”

Scan Artist: How Evelyn Wood Convinced the World that Speed-Reading Worked by Marcia Biederman – A true-life con story about a woman with no background in education and little classroom experience who became a renowned teacher of speed reading.

Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber by Mike Isaac – An inside peek at Uber during 2017, a dramatic year when the company rose to the top of the tech world and removed its CEO in a boardroom coup.

Unbreakable: The Woman Who Defied the Nazis in the World’s Most Dangerous Horse Race by Richard Askwith – “The courageous and heartbreaking story of a Czech countess who defied the Nazis in a legendary horse race” in 1937.

Whose Story Is This?: Old Conflicts, New Chapters by Rebecca Solnit – New essays from Rebecca Solnit! This collection explores who gets to shape the narrative of our times.

One last thing for this week: Don’t forget to enter our giveaway of the year’s 10 best mystery/thrillers so far! It’s such a good list!

You can find me on Twitter @kimthedork, on email at kim@riotnewmedia.com, and co-hosting the For Real podcast here at Book Riot. In this week’s episode, Alice and I chatted about books about school. Happy reading! – Kim

Categories
Unusual Suspects

Hawai’i Mystery 🔪

Hello mystery fans! This week I have for you a mystery set in Hawai’i that I loved, a Swedish novel about a P.I. that I found really interesting, and a bunch of women at a retreat where things are gonna go real wrong!

Hawai’i Mystery (TW addiction/ sick parent/ past stalking incident mentioned)

Iced in Paradise cover imageIced in Paradise (A Leilani Santiago Hawai’i Mystery) by Naomi Hirahara: This was so good and I really hope there is a lot more to come. Leilani Santiago moves back to Hawai’i, after living in San Francisco for years, to help out her family. She’s working in their shave ice shack and mostly trying to figure out where she wants to be and what exactly she wants to be doing. The “what” gets answered for her when her dad, who she has a difficult relationship with, is accused of murdering the man found dead in their business. Of course she starts trying to figure out what happened, and not because she automatically thinks her dad is innocent, she isn’t so sure. This was such a a great mystery read that is filled with family, culture, food–and if you didn’t already want to go to Hawai’i you certainly will now. I think this one works really well for fans of cozy mysteries but also for those who shy away from cozy mysteries thinking they’re too slow.

Interesting P.I. In Sweden (TW past self harm/ past attempted suicide on page with detail/ pedophile/ human trafficking)

The Truth Behind The Lie cover imageThe Truth Behind the Lie (Kouplan #1) by Sara Lövestam: This was so different from most P.I. novels I’ve read and I really enjoyed that. It also reminded me of the Israeli Avraham Avraham series that I love in its care and kindness from the main character. Kouplan is an Iranian refugee living in Sweden and learning to be a P.I. by taking on cases from people who can’t, for whatever reason, call the police. He takes on the case of a woman, Pernilla, whose six-year-old daughter is missing. This very much takes you through all his steps as he gets to know Pernilla, questions people, and sets himself tasks to find the girl. It’s also a meditation on life, self, and mental illness and it felt like a quiet mystery in a lovely way. I’ve been thinking about this one sporadically since I finished and really look forward to more of this series, and crime publishing more novels like this.

What Could Go Wrong At A Retreat? Everything! (TW hair pulling disorder/ past pedophile on page/ brief mention past suicide, with detail)

The Retreat cover imageThe Retreat by Sherri Smith: This was a ride! It starts out feeling like a novel about four struggling women, all trying to find their footing, and then the suspense begins and by the end it might just feel like a horror novel. Which is to say I really enjoyed it! I also really liked the premise, which starts with a once famous child actor, now a grown woman, who almost had her comeback until she tweeted a homophobic “joke” and got cancelled. Now she’s at a weekend retreat with her soon to be sister-in-law who she needs to build a relationship with for the sake of her relationship with her brother and her two college friends. The book rotates chapters between the four women as they deal with their pasts, the secrets they’re currently still holding, their relationships with each other, and what exactly they want–and is a valid option–from life. Did I mention one wakes up covered in blood and holding a knife? And then one member from the retreat is missing? That’s just the beginning–about halfway through–of all that is to come!

And if you want a chance to win 10 of the best mystery and thrillers of this year we’ve got a giveaway! Enter here.

Browse all the books recommended in Unusual Suspects previous newsletters on this shelf. And here’s an Unusual Suspects Pinterest board.

Until next time, keep investigating! And in the meantime, come talk books with me on Twitter, Instagram, and Litsy–you can find me under Jamie Canavés.

If a mystery fan forwarded this newsletter to you and you’d like your very own you can sign up here.

Categories
Today In Books

HARRY POTTER Book Ban Like It’s 1999: Today In Books

HARRY POTTER Book Ban Like It’s 1999

Today in “I had to check the date on this article several times”: Rev. Dan Reehil has had the Harry Potter book series removed from St. Edward Catholic School’s library because “These books present magic as both good and evil, which is not true, but in fact a clever deception.” The decision was not made lightly, though, as he consulted exorcists, several of whom recommended the books’ removal.

Library “Check Out” A Dog Event

If you’re recovering from the three-day weekend and/or are on hurricane watch and need something to awwwwwww about: on September 14th, the Vancouver Public Library, the Vancouver Park Board, and St. John Ambulance will be hosting an event where you can “check out” a dog and read poetry to it. “At Canine Library, all the dogs will be assigned a book of poetry that relates in some way to animals or parks.”

2019 Booker Prize for Fiction Shortlist Announced!

6 books are now in the running for the 2019 Booker Prize of £50,000 as the fiction shortlist was announced. Two authors may not surprise you, in name at least, but can you guess the other four?

Categories
Read This Book

One Book Dev Post — Thrillers are Having a Moment

Thrillers are having a moment. Twisty, suspenseful stories about mistaken identities, missing girls, unreliable narrators, and domestic bliss that isn’t what it seems are all over the bestseller charts. You know the books I mean: everything from The Girl on the Train to Ruth Ware’s latest, The Turn of the Key. This style of crime fiction is often called a domestic thriller, which can best be described as a “psychological thriller that focuses on interpersonal relationships,” often those between husbands and wives or parents and children.

The domestic thriller has a particular focus on and association with women (perhaps that’s why the publishing industry seems to have saddled an entire sub-genre with such an eyeroll-inducing name). Many bestselling thriller authors are women. Many of the narrators of these novels are women, too. And many of the problems in these novels are those which concern women in particular: domestic violence and other forms of violence against women, including abduction and rape; husbands who aren’t who they claim to be; troublesome neighbours; gaslighting and emotional abuse; the demands of motherhood.

Freefall by Jessica Barry book coverAt CrimeReads, thriller writer Jessica Barry (author of Freefall) explores the ties women have to this genre, arguing that for women, thrillers can be heroic narratives. “The narrative is not—or at least not only, and not always—that bad things happen to women,” she writes. “It’s that women have the ability to survive when bad things happen.” And at Bustle, Mary Widdicks calls thrillers “a safe space” where women can encounter their fears in a controlled environment. Both are compelling arguments. If one half of the population regularly experiences violence and abuse, it only makes sense that that group of people would be drawn to stories where characters overcome similar behaviour or are offered some form of justice.

The thing is, women’s love for domestic thrillers isn’t anything new. Erin Kelly points outthat marriage-gone-bad narratives, a staple of the genre, are as old as the Ancient Greeks and Shakespeare. And the domestic thriller as we know it today was born in the 19th century, with the rise of sensation fiction.

Sensation fiction was a popular genre of fiction that peaked in the 1860s. It was a fusion of genres including Gothic fiction, romance, and realist fiction; that fusion was a significant reason for its widespread popularity. Sensation fiction blended the juiciest, most sensational romantic and Gothic plot lines—think secret babies, kidnapping, poisoned spouses, and adultery, like Victorian-era soap operas. These topics all sound fantastic, but when they appear in familiar domestic settings, like a cozy family parlour, they take on a newly thrilling, threatening quality.

Sensation novels were meant to provoke intense emotion in readers, and boy did Victorian readers love that blend of crime and everyday life. Realism was already a popular form of fiction at the time, as seen in Dickens’s novels inspired by his experiences growing up in a workhouse (Little Dorrit) and by a real-life court case that dragged on for years (Bleak House). Sensation novels took the most salacious newspaper headlines, those about divorces, crimes, and murder cases, and made them as familiar to middle-class readers—the people who had money to spend on books and libraries—as a family sitting down to tea. Both domestic thrillers and sensation fiction have that ripped-from-the-headlines quality that we pretend we don’t love.

cover of Lady Audley's Secret by Mary Elizabeth BraddonWilkie Collins, author of The MoonstoneThe Woman in White, and other books now considered to be classics, is probably the most well-known sensation fiction author. But, and this may not surprise you, it was a genre primarily associated with women. Authors such as Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Ellen Wood were hugely popular. Even the Brontës borrowed from sensation fiction. Braddon was known for Lady Audley’s Secret, a novel about, in the words of Matthew Sweet, “a murderously ambitious Pre-Raphaelite beauty who secures a fortune by shoving her husband down the garden well.” Published in 1862, it was one of the first sensation novels. Braddon’s books, and those by other sensation fiction authors, were very popular with female readers.

Serious Literary Critics, of course, were no fans of the sensation novel, and many worried that young women in particular would be corrupted by reading these tales of murder and mayhem. As you probably already know, Victorian society was strictly divided along gender lines, with men responsible for the public sphere and women confined to a private, domestic world. It’s no surprise that stories about women murdering their husbands, committing bigamy, having secret babies, and stealing jewels were looked upon with suspicion by critics and excitement by female readers. These novels threatened the very fabric of orderly middle-class Victorian life by allowing women to feel emotions and imagine situations far beyond their daily experiences.

Fast forward to 2019, and we have our own version of sensation fiction: the domestic thriller. Domestic thrillers aren’t quite as threatening to the fabric of our society. To me, they seem to reflect the worst bits of it back at us with a few distortions, like a funhouse mirror. Domestic thrillers can be an escape, but I think they’re also something of a punishment: look how bad we’ve let things get.

What domestic thrillers and sensation fiction both do so well is portray the crimes and betrayals experienced by women, from major violence to the everyday indignity of having a man belittle your opinion. Like female characters in Victorian sensation fiction, female protagonists in domestic thrillers may be unreliable; they may drink too much or withdraw from public life; they may have suspicions no one believes. They have a tragic incident in their pasts or a secret they can’t reveal. They definitely have a man in their life gaslighting them.

All of these are things that happen in real life. We think they’re just newspaper headlines, but they’re happening all around us behind closed doors. Domestic thrillers and sensation fiction—both shine light on a world that we think can’t touch us. It’s been there all along.