Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, January 25, 2026?

Just finishing The Feast by Margaret Kennedy. This little masterpiece is so funny, and sad. Amazing to think it was written over 75 years ago.
Listening to An Easy Death, a dark fantasy by Charlaine Harris. "A taut new thriller (2018); the first in the Gunnie Rose series. Set in a fractured United States, in the southwestern country now known as Texoma." Quite entertaining. I always thought the HRE was Holy Roman Empire. Silly me.
I hope you all are safe with ample heat, food, and books. Fortunately for me, I am west of the storm.
Bristlecone
(11,029 posts)The Dan Brown book is the usual Robert Langdon formula. Its decent.
Started reading Charles Dickens last Fall starting w/ David Copperfield,(which was excellent). tThen read A Christmas Carol over a couple of days during Xmas week. Now, Hard Times. Oliver Twist or Great Expectations next.
cbabe
(6,317 posts)Reread. Have you ever chosen a book for fantasy travel? Escaping winter to Florida sun and sand.
Also a top notch Lucas and Virgil thriller.
Bayard
(28,857 posts)I recommend all the Prey books.
hermetic
(9,157 posts)reading stories about Florida and the Keys when it's all icy outside. That one's on my list.
cbabe
(6,317 posts)The Alvin Maker series by Orson Scott Card?
Nephew called it seriously good.
From Goodreads:
From the author of Enders Game, an unforgettable fantasy tale about young Alvin Maker. In this alternative history of frontier America, folk magic actually worksdowsers find water and second sight warns of true dangersand that magic has colored the entire history of the colonies. Alvin, the seventh son of a seventh son, is a Maker, the first to be born in a century. He must learn to use his gift wisely. But dark forces are arrayed against Alvin, and only a young girl with second sight can protect him.
hermetic
(9,157 posts)Sounds good. I see there are 6 books with a new one due out this year, Master Alvin.
Bayard
(28,857 posts)Sounds good. I will look for it. "Ender's Game," the movie, was interesting.
Bayard
(28,857 posts)Its a good one, with interesting twists and turns. "Twenty years ago, four teenagers disappeared in the woods at summer camp. Two decades later, everything changes. Paul Copeland's sister was one of the missing teenagers. Now raising a daughter alone after the death of his wife, he balances family life with a career as a prosecutor. But when a body is found, the well-buried secrets of the past threaten everything."
I'm thinking another Child & Preston will be up next from my new stash.
hermetic
(9,157 posts)Don't think I've ever read a Coben book. Put it on the list, I will.
Bayard
(28,857 posts)I've read several of his.
MIButterfly
(2,228 posts)Most of his books are very good, but a few were disappointing to me. Is "The Woods" a recent one? I don't seem to recall that one. Off I go to look it up.
Edited to add: It's from 2007. I dont know how I missed it. I'm going to check if my library has it.
I like his Myron Bolitar series a lot and there were several stand-alone novels that were excellent.
MIButterfly
(2,228 posts)I just started it. I got it from the library a couple of months ago and am just now getting around to it.
hermetic
(9,157 posts)About an "ethically adventurous Philadelphia lawyer who usually ends up doing the right thing, but, as his law partner says, often for all the wrong reasons."