Upcoming: SLOW GODS by Claire North (Orbit)

I’ve been a fan of Claire North‘s books ever since The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August (2014), and have eagerly looked forward to each new title. This winter, the author turns to space opera with Slow Gods, a “galaxy-spanning tale ​of one man’s impossible life charted against the fate of humanity amongst the stars”. Really looking forward to this. Here’s the synopsis:

My name is Mawukana na-Vdnaze, and I am a very poor copy of myself.

In telling my story, there are certain things I should perhaps lie about. I should make myself a hero. Pretend I was not used by strangers and gods, did not leave people behind.

Here is one truth: out there in deep space, in the pilot’s chair, I died. And then, I was reborn. I became something not quite human, something that could speak to the infinite dark. And I vowed to become the scourge of the world that wronged me.

This is the story of the supernova event that burned planets and felled civilizations. This is also the story of the many lives I’ve lived since I died for the first time.

Are you listening?

Claire North’s Slow Gods is due to be published by Orbit Books in North America and in the UK, on November 18th.

Also on CR: The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August, Touch, The Gamehouse, The Sudden Appearance of Hope, and Sweet Harmony

Follow the Author: Website, Goodreads, Instagram

Upcoming: THE FINAL SCORE by Don Winslow (William Morrow)

Later this year, readers will get a new book from Don Winslow! The Final Score is a collection of six never-before-published, all-new short novels. Learning about this book was a very nice surprise, because I had been under the impression that Winslow had retired from writing, after the publication of his Danny Ryan trilogy. I guess, as in the case with Stephen King, retirement is rather difficult for some authors… A long-time fan of Winslow’s, it’s great that we’ll be getting more fiction from him; and this is easily one of my most-anticipated books of the year. Here’s the synopsis:

In six all-new short novels written with the trademark literary style, trenchant wit, and incisive characterization that have made Don Winslow “America’s greatest living crime writer” (Providence Journal), this repeat New York Times bestselling author serves up a collection of tales sure to delight Winslow’s most devoted fans and first-time readers.

The multi-million-dollar casino heist is impossible — it can’t be done. That’s what makes it irresistible to a legendary robber facing the rest of his life in prison for his “Final Score.” An ambitious, hard-working college-bound teenager has a side job delivering illegal booze to “The Sunday List” until a crooked cop, a seductive customer, and a fake guru threaten to end his dreams. Two wise guys tell each other a “True Story” over breakfast at a diner. It’s all bullshit and laughs until someone else has to pick up the check. An otherwise honest patrolman has to make an excruciating choice between his loyalty to the job and his love for a ne’er-do-well cousin in “The North Wing.” The entitled, substance-addicted movie star that surfer/PI Boone Daniels and his crew are hired to babysit in “The Lunch Break” is a problem. She also has a problem — someone wants her dead. Finally, the one terrible, momentary mistake that a devoted family man makes sends him to prison and on a “Collision” course between the man he wants to be and the killer he’s forced to become to survive.

With a foreword written by award-winning crime author Reed Farrel Coleman, The Final Score is a propulsive, perceptive, and deeply immersive collection of crime writing — the ultimate testament to Don Winslow’s prowess as a living legend of the genre.

Don Winslow’s The Final Score is due to be published by William Morrow in North America (September 16th) and Hemlock Press in the UK (October 23rd).

Also on CR: Reviews of The Force, Broken, City on Fire, City of Dreams, and City in Ruins

Follow the Author: Website, Goodreads, Instagram, BlueSky

Upcoming: LAKE EFFECT by Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney (Ecco)

Some great news: there’s a new novel on the way from Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney! Some bad news: it’s not out until March 2026! I’ve been a fan of D’Aprix Sweeney’s work since her debut, the internationally-bestselling The Nest, and also very much enjoyed her second novel, Good Company. Ever since finishing the latter, I’ve been eagerly anticipating whatever D’Aprix Sweeney wrote next; so, I was very happy when I saw Lake Effect announced. I just have to be patient, now… Pitched as “a wry and tender portrait of two families forever changed by one lovestruck decision that will reverberate for decades”, here’s the full synopsis:

It’s 1977 and an air of restlessness has settled on the residents of Cambridge Road in Rochester, New York, a place long fueled by the booming fortunes of Kodak and Xerox and, for some, the mores of the Catholic church. When Nina Larkin is given a copy of The Joy of Sex by her newly divorced friend, she can no longer dismiss the nearly nonexistent intimacy of her marriage. Just as her oldest child, Clara, is falling in love for the first time, Nina finds herself longing for the forbidden: a midlife awakening. An intoxicating fling with a prominent neighbor brings Nina a freedom she never thought possible — but also risks the reputations of both families and unravels Clara’s world, just as she stands on the threshold of adulthood.

Years later, Clara, now a successful food stylist in New York City, has never been able to move past the long-ago scandal. Drawn back home by the pull of a family wedding and wrestling with her own demons, she makes a pivotal decision that turns her life upside down. Written with Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney’s signature humor and insight, Lake Effect is a wise and probing look at love and desire, mothers and daughters, loss and grief, and what we owe the people we love most.

Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney’s Lake Effect is due to be published by Ecco in North America (March 3rd, 2026) and Borough Press in the UK (March 12th).

Also on CR: Review of Good Company

Follow the Author: Website, Goodreads, Instagram

Upcoming: THE LAST KINGS OF HOLLYWOOD by Paul Fischer (Celadon)

Early next year, Celadon Books are due to publish The Last Kings of Hollywood by Paul Fischer: a new biography of Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas, and Steven Spielberg, “and the Battle for the Soul of American Cinema”. As a movie-lover born in the early-1980s, these three directors have been responsible for an incredible number of movies that I have watched many, many times. So this, combined with my love for behind-the-scenes books, means Fischer’s new book became a must-read as soon as I saw it in the publisher’s catalogue. I really can’t wait to read this.

Here’s the synopsis:

The untold, intimate story of how three young visionaries—Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas, and Steven Spielberg — revolutionized American cinema, creating the most iconic films in history while risking everything, redefining friendship, and shaping Hollywood as we know it.

In the summer of 1967, as the old Hollywood studio system was dying, an intense, uncompromising young film school graduate named George Lucas walked onto the Warner Bros. backlot for his first day working as an assistant to another up-and-coming, largely unknown filmmaker, a boisterous father of two called Francis Ford Coppola. At the exact same time, across town on the Universal Studios lot, a film-obsessed twenty-year-old from a peripatetic Jewish family, Steven Spielberg, longed to break free from his apprenticeship for the struggling studio and become a film director in his own right.

Within a year, the three men would become friends. Spielberg, prioritizing security, got his seven-year contract directing television. Lucas and Coppola, hungry for independence, left Hollywood for San Francisco to found an alternative studio, American Zoetrope, and make films without answering to corporate capitalism.

Based on extensive research and hundreds of original interviews with the inner circle of these Hollywood icons, The Last Kings of Hollywood tells the thrilling, dramatic inside story of how, over the next fifteen years, the three filmmakers rivaled and supported one another, fell out and reconciled, and struggled to reinvent popular American cinema. Along the way, Coppola directed The Godfather, then the highest-grossing film of all time, until Spielberg surpassed it with Jaws — whose record Lucas broke with Star Wars, which Spielberg surpassed again with E.T. By the early 1980s, they were the richest, best-known filmmakers in the world, each with an empire of their own. The Last Kings of Hollywood is an unprecedented chronicle of their rise, their dreams and demons, their triumphs and their failures — intimate, extraordinary, and supremely entertaining.

Paul Fischer’s The Last Kings of Hollywood is due to be published by Celadon Books in North America and in the UK, on February 2026.

Follow the Author: Website, Goodreads, BlueSky

Upcoming: WE THE RAPTORS by Eric Smith & Andrew Bricker (Simon & Schuster)

Later this year, Simon & Schuster are due to publish a new book about the Toronto Raptors: We the Raptors by Eric Smith and Andrew Bricker. As the team turns 30 years old, the authors have conducted interviewed thirty players from across the team’s history, to paint a picture of an organization, a team, and what it means to the players and fans. They also managed to get a foreword from the GROAT,* Kyle Lowry! Very much looking forward to this one. Here’s the synopsis:

We the Raptors: Thirty Players, Thirty Stories, Thirty Years is about the grinders, glue guys, bench heroes, and more. Alvin Williams, José Calderón, T. J. Ford, Jonas Valanciunas, Danny Green — whether regular or part-time starters, role players, key cogs, or even short-term stars — all of them felt blessed to call Canada home.

Foreword by Kyle Lowry

Amir Johnson immediately fell in love with the diversity of the country. From special events with fans to Zombie Walks down Yonge Street, few players connected with Toronto — on and off the floor—more than Amir. At the age of thirty, Anthony Parker — known as the “Michael Jordan of EuroLeague” — finally found his place in the NBA with the Raptors, a role that had eluded him as a young draftee and during his six seasons overseas. NBA vet and Toronto native Jamaal Magloire mentored younger players in the shadow of his brother’s murder in Regent Park. Bismack Biyombo, a fan favourite for his big, burly play and endless energy, couldn’t decide which team to sign with as a free agent, until a phone call from Masai Ujiri made the choice easy. The Junkyard Dog, Jerome Williams, drove himself to Toronto in a snowstorm, becoming in the process one of the most recognizable players in franchise history. Matt Bonner, dubbed the Red Mamba by none other than Kobe Bryant, emerged as a national hero after going toe to toe in the post with Kevin Garnett. Jorge Garbajosa, a superstar in Italy and his native Spain, gambled on a second career at the age of twenty-eight, becoming the hustle and heart of a playoff-bound Raptors squad only to see his NBA dreams crumble in a career-ending on-court injury.

Every team has unheralded but dogged players but none more so than the expansion-era Raptors, a team that many NBA players and free agents often ignored — until the Raptors became one of the most interesting and winningest teams in the league.

This rich tapestry comes alive in We the Raptors, as told by Raptors radio voice Eric Smith and Andrew Bricker through thirty exclusive interviews with former and current Raptors. Every bounce, every rebound, every elbow to the face — this is a rare view of the NBA through the eyes of those who made it to the pinnacle of their profession.

Eric Smith & Andrew Bricker’s We the Raptors is due to be published by Simon & Schuster in North America, on November 4th.

Follow the Author (Smith): Website, Goodreads, Instagram, BlueSky
Follow the Author (Bricker): Goodreads

* “Greatest Raptor Of All Time”

Upcoming: A HOLLYWOOD ENDING by Yaron Weitzman (Doubleday)

Later this year, Doubleday Books are due to publish the second book by Yaron WeitzmanA Hollywood Ending. Weitzman’s Tanking to the Top was one of the first books about the NBA that I read (it’s excellent, and is a must-read for anyone interested in whatever it is that the 76ers have been trying to do). The new book takes a look at LeBron James’s move to the Los Angeles Lakers, and everything that has happened since. Here’s the official synopsis:

NBA journalist Yaron Weitzman lays out the high stakes drama happening inside the Lakers’ organization at a crucial juncture in their history, as they try to juggle the warring priorities between Lebron James and the Buss family.

When LeBron James signed with the Los Angeles Lakers in 2018, the match looked like one made in heaven. Here was a living legend, the preeminent athlete of his generation, joining forces with one of the most iconic teams in all of sports. The Lakers, in the midst of their worst stretch in franchise history and reeling from the death of their legendary owner Dr. Jerry Buss, needed a savior. LeBron, fresh off ending Cleveland’s 50-year title drought, needed a new challenge to help further burnish his legacy. The script wrote itself.

A little over two years later, LeBron and Dr. Buss’ daughter, Jeanie, were standing shoulder to shoulder, hoisting the NBA finals trophy into the air. Having won their record-tying 17th NBA title, the Lakers had reclaimed their accustomed perch on top of the basketball world and seemed destined to dominate the NBA for years to come.

Traditionally, the Lakers’ didn’t celebrate championships, they celebrated dynasties. But this was a different Lakers’ organization, one beset by infighting. A single title wouldn’t be enough to cement Lebron James status as a Lakers’ legend or help him surpass the ghost of Michael Jordan. Both parties needed sustained success, but for that to happen they needed to be on the same page. Sadly, the 2020 title would represent the pinnacle of their pairing, and the beginning of a precipitous decline.

Drawing from over 250 interviews, Yaron Weitzman takes readers on a riveting, behind the scenes journey of this fraught partnership. From the Succession-like power struggle between the Buss children, to the rise of LeBron’s landscape-altering talent agency and its attempts to assert its own power within the Lakers’ walls, to the evolution of LeBron’s priorities and political voice, “A Hollywood Ending” is the definitive story of an American icon’s final years on stage, one portraying him, a fabled NBA franchise, and the world of modern professional sports in a light never seen before.

Really looking forward to reading this. Yaron Weitzman’s A Hollywood Ending is due to be published by Doubleday Books in North America, on October 21st.

Follow the Author: Website, Goodreads, Instagram, BlueSky

Upcoming: EXILES by Mason Coile (G. P. Putnam’s Sons)

I hadn’t heard about the second novel from Mason Coile, Exiles, until the publisher reached out about it a couple of weeks ago. Coile is a pseudonym for acclaimed, best-selling Canadian horror author Andrew Pyper, who sadly passed away in January 2025. This posthumous release is “a terrifying, taut” blend of “science fiction and psychological horror”. Set on Mars. I’ll be reading this very soon. Here’s the synopsis:

A terrifying locked-room mystery from the author of William – this time set on a remote outpost on Mars.

The human crew sent to prepare the first colony on Mars arrives to find the new base half-destroyed and the three robots sent to set it up in disarray — the machines have formed alliances, chosen their own names, and picked up some disturbing beliefs. Each must be interrogated. But one of them is missing.

In this barren, hostile landscape where even machines have nightmares, the astronauts will need to examine all the stories – especially their own – to get to the truth.

Mason Coile’s Exiles is due to be published by G. P. Putnam’s Sons in North America (September 16th) and Baskerville in the UK (September 18th).

Follow the Author: Goodreads

Upcoming: THE BONE RAIDERS by Jackson Ford (Orbit)

Late this summer, Orbit are due to publish the first book in a new, “no-holds-barred, action-packed” fantasy series from Jackson FordThe Bone Raiders! A long-time fan of Ford’s work (who also publishes as Rob Boffard — also recommended), this sounds great. Here’s the synopsis:

A group of charmingly-named Bone Raiders harness the power of gigantic, fire-breathing lizards to defend their homeland from an invading enemy.

You don’t mess with the Rakada. The people living in the Great Grass call them the Bone Raiders, from their charming habit of displaying the bones of those they kill on their horses and armor.

But being a raider is tough these days. There’s a new High Chieftain ruling the Grass. He’s had it with the raider clans, and plans to use his sizeable military to do something about it. And then there are the araatan: fire-breathing lizards the size of elephants – one of which happens to turn up in a cute little settlement the Rakada are in the middle of raiding.

Sayana is a Rakada scout, and in the chaos of the raid-gone-wrong, she finds herself on the back of a rampaging araatan. Whoops. In a panic, she discovers she can steer it, like you would a horse. It’s frankly amazing she survives any of this. Once Sayana gets an idea into her head, it’s awful hard to dislodge. And now she has a doozy: what if the Rakada could swap their horses for araatan? Train the lizards to act as mounts? That would even the odds against the High Chieftain, no?

Really looking forward to the one. (Luckily, I already have a DRC of it, via NetGalley, so I won’t have to wait long to get to it.)

The Bone Raiders, the first in the Rakada series, is due to be published by Orbit Books in North America and in the UK, in August 12th.

Also on CR: Interview with Jackson Ford (2020); Interview with Rob Boffard (2015); Guest Posts on “What to Do if You’re Set Adrift in Space”

Follow the Author: Website, Goodreads, Instagram, BlueSky

Upcoming: IN A DISTANT VALLEY by Shannon Bowring (Europa Editions)

In October, Europa Editions are due to publish In a Distant Valley, the third Dalton novel by Shannon Bowring. The first two novels — The Road to Dalton and Where the Forest Meets the River — were superb, and I’ve been eagerly anticipating Bowring’s third novel ever since finishing the second. Easily one of my most-anticipated novels of the year. Here’s the synopsis:

Both a love letter and a window into the rural places that have shaped many, In a Distant Valley sets the stage for a final act to play out across a deep winter in snowy Maine.

For a while, Rose Douglas believed life had given her a break. She was enjoying a steady job at the local clinic in Dalton; her two young boys, Adam and Brandon, were doing well in school; and their little family had found an easy friendship with widower Nate Theroux and his daughter, Sophie. The possibility of something deeper even hung between her and Nate—until the day Tommy Merchant, her ex and the father of her sons, showed up without warning on her doorstep. While Rose knows all too well his erratic and abusive nature, he swears he’s clean, and ready to turn over a new leaf.

Tommy isn’t the only one who’s found his way back to the town that defined him. Lost after a disastrous stint living down south with her father, Angela Muse has returned home to Dalton. There she runs into Greg Fortin, the friend who once saved her life when they were children and finally starts to believe there may be someone who understands her in a world that offers more questions than answers.

But secrets are the lifeblood of a small town, and everyone in Dalton soon finds themselves part of a chain of events hurtling towards outcomes beyond their control, where more than one future will be decided. Brimming with compassion and heart, In a Distant Valley is the remarkable conclusion to the story readers have been following since Shannon Bowring’s debut novel, The Road to Dalton.

Shannon Bowring’s In a Distant Valley is due to be published by Europa Editions on October 7th.

Also on CR: Reviews of The Road to Dalton and Where the Forest Meets the River

Follow the Author: Website, Goodreads, Instagram, BlueSky

Upcoming: MASTERS OF THE GAME by Sam Smith & Phil Jackson (Penguin Press)

Later this year, Penguin Press are due to published a (surprise) new book by Sam Smith and Phil Jackson: Masters of the Game. It’s “a conversational history of the NBA in 75 players”; written by the best-selling chronicler of the Michael Jordan-era Chicago Bulls, and Jordan and Kobe’s coach, with 11 championships under his belt (as coach and player)… That’s a pretty enticing pairing and premise. Definitely one of my most-anticipated books of the year, now. Here’s the synopsis:

The legendary sportswriter and the Hall of Fame, eleven-time NBA champion coach separate the music from the noise in the stories of the greatest who ever played and their impact on the game

Sam Smith and Phil Jackson grew to know and respect each other in the late 1980s, when Smith was a Chicago Tribune sportswriter and Jackson was an assistant coach for the Chicago Bulls. Forty years later, the two remain close friends. In 2021, Smith helped the NBA arrive at a list of the seventy-five greatest players of all time in celebration of its seventy-fifth anniversary. Phil Jackson was asked to participate too, but he’s not a big fan of ranking greatness. They’ve been enjoying the argument ever since.

In Masters of the Game, Smith and Jackson chop it up about the basketball life, the sport, and the genius and the shadow side of the all-time greats: Jordan, Kobe, Shaq, Magic, Bill Russell, Wilt, Jerry West, Bird, LeBron, KD, Steph Curry, Bill Walton, and more. In a conversation full of high-grade analysis and high-grade gossip, we meet the stars of long-ago eras of basketball and see the mark race left on players and the business of the game — and we get a master class on character and the alchemy of a good team. And of course, inevitably, these two old heads get into the GOAT debate.

There are so many huge characters here, and Smith and Jackson can hold their own with any of them. Their spirit — sharp, wise, irreverent, honest, respectful of the lore and legacy of the game but never pious — and the clash of their different perspectives combine to make this book a joyous ride, a short course in greatness open to all students.

Sam Smith & Phil Jackson’s Masters of the Game is due to be published by Penguin Press in North America and in the UK, on November 4th.