The Mystery Guest – Nita Prose

In the four years since the events outlined brilliantly in the best-selling The Maid, Molly has been promoted to Head Maid at the Regency Grand Hotel. Her dedication to superior cleanliness and etiquette has to be balanced with her atypical abilities, with both observed and hidden behavioural quirks. What will happen when a renowned author is murdered in the hotel? Will secrets be revealed? What is unique about this new novel is that a major element is Molly’s backstory when she was 10-years-old and living with her Gran. This mystery is a delight to read.

Roaming – Jillian and Mariko Tamaki

The Tamaki cousins have created a brilliant graphic novel about 5 days in New York city in 2009, experienced by three 19-year-old Canadian women. Initial euphoria is tempered by reality as friendships are tested. Overall, an immersive slice-of-life, in part a love letter to a great city. This book was a chance discovery at the October Word Fest, a true find.

Superfan – How Pop Culture Broke My Heart – Jen Sookfong Lee

A non-linear memoir of Ms. Lee’s search for a Chinese-Canadian identity, where pop culture (Anne of Green Gables, Bob Ross, etc.) is used as an escape from her fractious family life and as a means of fitting in. She has provided a candid account of her struggles and failures; her insights are tender, often hilarious and always profound.

Starling House – Alix E. Harrow

This is an excellent modern gothic fantasy. There is a spooky mansion that may be sentient. Can dreams and nightmares create monsters? What constitutes bad luck? Opal is a 26-year-old survivor who is fighting to create better future opportunities for her younger brother. And finally, the Kentucky setting provides a sinister background to a tale of worlds within worlds. Highly recommended.

The Spoon Stealer – Lesley Crewe

Be advised: this is an emotional tear-jerker so have tissues nearby, especially for the end of the story. The book is presented in two parts. In 1968, 74-year-old Emmaline reads her poignant life story to a group of English women as part of a memoir-writing class. In the second half, Emmaline returns to Nova Scotia to confront her fractured family. Her personality is a fascinating blend of brassiness and abrasiveness, but also generosity. The core of the story, however, is friendship between women.

The Future – Catherine Leroux

A superb depiction of an alternative dystopian story for Detroit, with urban decay and ecological disasters. In particular, feral children leave their homes to live wild in a park. Gloria arrives after the death of her daughter (an unsolved murder) to search for her two missing grand-daughters. What follows is a brilliant portrayal of family resilience. This book should be a powerful contender in the upcoming Canada Reads competition, championed by the brilliant Heather O’Neill.

Hang the Moon- Jeannette Walls

Previously, Ms. Walls has written autobiographical (The Glass Castle) and biographical (Half Broke Horses) books. This new book is a novel that follows the trials and tribulations of Sallie Kincaid in 1920s Virginia. At ages 17-20, Sallie has to deal with family secrets in rural areas dealing with the prohibition. There are conflicts between what is right and wrong, and legal and illegal. Sallie is both clever and quick, but how will she operate in  a world that devalues women?

Girlfriend On Mars – Deborah Willis

A chance discovery at an October Word Fest event, Ms. Willis has written a superb relationship book. Amber and Kevin have enjoyed/endured a 14-year relationship even though they have very different personalities. Secretly, she decides to enter a billionaire-funded competition to travel to Mars, and amazingly becomes one of 24 contestants on a reality show to choose two “winners”. How does Kevin cope with Amber’s decision to leave him for a one-way trip to Mars? What is Amber’s motivation? The story is in part funny with a satirical treatment of fame, billionaire-funded space travel together with a quest for love. Highly recommended.