Anticipated Reads

Books to Look Out For in 2023 Q1

Each year, I like to look ahead to all the wonderful, exciting books that we have to look forward to in the coming months. I normally do this at the start of the year to cover the next 12 months, but it’s usually quite biased towards the earlier months of the year – I don’t always know what’s coming out later in the year, and there’s always something that takes me by surprise.

So, I’m going to do it slightly differently this year, and will look at forthcoming publications by quarter. This post covers January to March, and (if I remember!) there will be posts later in the year to cover April to June, July to September, and October to December.

As ever, there are lots of wonderful books to look forward to, and these are just a few of the ones that I’m particularly excited about. Publication dates are correct at time of writing.


Now She is Witch by Kirsty Logan (Harvill Secker, 12 Jan)

She dug her mother’s grave in the poison garden so it would stay hidden…

From the snowy winter woods to the bright midnight sun; from lost and powerless to finding your path, Now She is Witch conjures a world of violence and beauty – a world where women grasp at power through witchcraft, sexuality and performance, and most of all through throwing each other to the wolves.

Lux has lost everything when Else finds her, alone in the woods. Her family, her lover, her home – all burned. The world is suspicious of women like her. But Lux is cunning; she knows how to exploit people’s expectations, how to blend into the background. And she knows a lot about poisons.

Else has not found Lux by accident. She needs her help to seek revenge against the man who wronged her, and together they pursue him north. But on their hunt they will uncover dark secrets that entangle them with dangerous adversaries.

This is a witch story unlike any other.


Exiles by Jane Harper (Macmillan, 2 Feb)

A mother disappears from a busy festival on a warm spring night.

Her baby lies alone in the pram, her mother’s possessions surrounding her, waiting for a return which never comes.

A year later, Kim Gillespie’s absence still casts a long shadow as her friends and loved ones gather to welcome a new addition to the family.

Joining the celebrations on a rare break from work is federal investigator Aaron Falk, who begins to suspect that all is not as it seems.

As he looks into Kim’s case, long-held secrets and resentments begin to come to the fore, secrets that show that her community is not as close as it appears.

Falk will have to tread carefully if he is to expose the dark fractures at its heart, but sometimes it takes an outsider to get to the truth…

An outstanding novel, a brilliant mystery and a heart-pounding read from the author of The Dry, Force of Nature, The Lost Man and The Survivors.


The Whispering Muse by Laura Purcell (Raven Books, 2 Feb)

Be careful what you wish for… it may just come true.

At The Mercury Theatre in London’s West End, rumours are circulating of a curse.

It is said that the lead actress Lilith has made a pact with Melpomene, the tragic muse of Greek mythology, to become the greatest actress to ever grace the stage. Suspicious of Lilith, the jealous wife of the theatre owner sends dresser Jenny to spy on her, and desperate for the money to help her family, Jenny agrees.

What Jenny finds is a woman as astonishing in her performance as she is provocative in nature. On stage, it’s as though Lilith is possessed by the characters she plays, yet off stage she is as tragic as the Muse who inspires her, and Jenny, sorry for her, befriends the troubled actress. But when strange events begin to take place around the theatre, Jenny wonders if the rumours are true, and fears that when the Muse comes calling for payment, the cost will be too high.


The Heroines by Laura Shepperson (Sphere, 9 Feb)

In Athens, crowds flock to witness the most shocking trial of the ancient world. The royal family is mired in scandal. Phaedra, young bride of King Theseus, has accused her stepson, Hippolytus of rape.

He’s a prince, a talented horseman, a promising noble with his whole life ahead of him. She’s a young and neglected wife, the youngest in a long line of Cretan women with less than savoury reputations.

The men of Athens must determine the truth. Who is guilty, and who is innocent?

But the women know truth is a slippery thing. After all, this is the age of heroes and the age of monsters. There are two sides to every story, and theirs has gone unheard.

Until now.


Other Women by Emma Flint (Picador, 23 Feb)

In a lonely cottage on a deserted stretch of shore, a moment of tragedy between lovers becomes a horrific murder. And two women who should never have met are connected for ever…

Six years after the end of the Great War, a nation is still in mourning. Thousands of husbands, fathers, sons and sweethearts were lost in Europe; millions more came back wounded and permanently damaged.

Beatrice Cade is an orphan, unmarried and childless – and given the dearth of men, likely to remain that way. London is full of women like her: not wives, not widows, not mothers. There is no name for these invisible women, and no place for their grief. Determined to carve out a richer and more fulfilling way to live as a single woman, Bea takes a room in a Bloomsbury ladies’ club and a job in the City. Then a fleeting encounter changes everything. Bea’s emerging independence is destroyed when she falls in love for the first time.

Kate Ryan is an ordinary wife and mother who has managed to build an enviable life with her handsome husband and her daughter. To anyone looking in from the outside, they seem like a normal, happy family – until two policemen knock on her door one morning and threaten to destroy the facade Kate has created.

From the author of Little Deaths, longlisted for the Bailey’s Women’s Prize for Fiction, comes the sensational Other Women. Mesmerising, haunting and utterly remarkable, this is a devastating story of fantasy, obsession inspired by a murder that took place almost a hundred years ago.


Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton (Granta Books, 2 Mar)

Birnam Wood is on the move…

Five years ago, Mira Bunting founded a guerrilla gardening group: Birnam Wood. An undeclared, unregulated, sometimes-criminal, sometimes-philanthropic gathering of friends, this activist collective plants crops wherever no one will notice, on the sides of roads, in forgotten parks, and neglected backyards. For years, the group has struggled to break even. Then Mira stumbles on an answer, a way to finally set the group up for the long term: a landslide has closed the Korowai Pass, cutting off the town of Thorndike. Natural disaster has created an opportunity, a sizable farm seemingly abandoned.

But Mira is not the only one interested in Thorndike. Robert Lemoine, the enigmatic American billionaire, has snatched it up to build his end-times bunker – or so he tells Mira when he catches her on the property. Intrigued by Mira, Birnam Wood, and their entrepreneurial spirit, he suggests they work this land. But can they trust him? And, as their ideals and ideologies are tested, can they trust each other?

A gripping psychological thriller from the Booker Prize-winning author of The Luminaries, Birnam Wood is Shakespearean in its wit, drama and immersion in character. A brilliantly constructed consideration of intentions, actions, and consequences, it is an unflinching examination of the human impulse to ensure our own survival.


Clytemnestra by Costanza Casati (Michael Joseph, 2 Mar)

Mother. Monarch. Murderer. Magnificent.

You are born to a king, but marry a tyrant. You stand helplessly as he sacrifices your child to placate the gods. You watch him wage war on a foreign shore and comfort yourself with violent thoughts of your own.

You play the part, fooling enemies who deny you justice. Slowly, you plot.

You are Clytemnestra.

But when the husband who owns you returns in triumph, what then?

Acceptance or vengeance – infamy follows both. So you bide your time and wait, until you might force the gods’ hands and take revenge. Until you rise. For you understood something that the others don’t. If power isn’t given to you, you have to take it for yourself.

A blazing novel set in the world of Ancient Greece and told through the eyes of its greatest heroine, this is a thrilling tale of power and prophecies, of hatred, love, and of an unforgettable Queen who fiercely dealt out death to those who wronged her.


Old Babes in the Wood by Margaret Atwood (Chatto & Windus, 7 Mar)

A dazzling collection of fifteen stories from Margaret Atwood, the internationally acclaimed, award-winning author of The Handmaid’s Tale and The Testaments.

Margaret Atwood is celebrated as one of the most gifted storytellers in the world.

These stories explore the full warp and weft of experience, from two best friends disagreeing about their shared past, to the right way to stop someone from choking; from a daughter determining if her mother really is a witch, to what to do with inherited relics such as World War II parade swords.

They feature beloved cats, a confused snail, Martha Gellhorn, George Orwell, philosopher-astronomer-mathematician Hypatia of Alexandria, a cabal of elderly female academics, and an alien tasked with retelling human fairy tales.

At the heart of the collection is a stunning sequence that follows a married couple as they travel the road together, the moments big and small that make up a long life of love – and what comes after.

The glorious range of Atwood’s creativity and humanity is on full beam in these tales, which by turns delight, illuminate and quietly devastate.


These are just a few of the wonderful books coming out in the next few months that I’m really excited about. Anything here take your fancy? Anything you’re particularly looking forward to? Let me know in the comments!

21 comments

  1. I’m eagerly anticipating The Whispering Muse. And one that is not on your list: The Space Between Us by Doug Johnstone.

    1. Oooh – I like the sound of The Space Between Us and I’ve added it to my list! Thanks, Kelly x

    1. There isn’t much I miss about Twitter, but finding out about the books that are coming out was one of the benefits of the platform! I’d missed the new Libby Page, and I’m adding it to my wish list now!

  2. Jo I’ve been a bit absent recently but just spotted you’re off Twitter!!!! Hope all well. I have Exiles to read so looking forward to reading that x

    1. Hi Mairéad, and Happy New Year.

      All well here, thank you – and trying to get back into the swing of blogging regularly after a break of my own.

      That break did lead me to leaving Twitter, rightly or wrongly, I’ve not yet decided! I found that I was fed up with the algorithms and promoted tweets, the potential for doom scrolling, and a feeling that it’s sometimes not safe to say anything at all without inviting conflict, trolls, etc. I have made the move over to Mastodon to see how that goes.

      Hope all is well with you – I’m only mildly jealous that you have Exiles already! 😀

      1. I had a Twitter moment myself and set up a Mastodon account but tbh I’m rooted on Twitter for now. Hope it works out for you there! Glad all well Jo (and yes delighted to have Exiles 😊) x

    1. Don’t they?! There are more great Greek myth adaptations later in the year as well, I am so excited! x

    1. Oooh – how exciting! I hope you enjoy it! I’m going to see her at this year’s Hay Festival, and I can’t wait! x

        1. Well, I can get to the UK, easy. But I’d probably have to rent a car and that with the cost of accommodation might be beyond my budget. Maybe one day!

        2. Also… I wouldn’t want to do it on my own – I don’t like the idea of renting a right-hand drive car without someone with me, even if they don’t drive.

        3. It is possible without a car. There are good train connections to Hereford, and shuttle buses run between Hereford and Hay during the festival. Accommodation can be problematic though. Hope you make it one day!

Comments are closed.