Anticipated Reads

Books to Look Out For in 2026 Q1

I love looking at all the wonderful books we have to look forward to, and that’s particularly true at the start of the year. Here are a few of the titles that I’m particularly excited about from the next three months. Covers and publication dates are correct at time of writing.


Into the Dark by Ørjan Karlsson, translated by Ian Giles
(Orenda Books, 15 January)

I really enjoyed the first novel in this series, Into Thin Air, I’m looking forward to revisiting the Arctic and catching up with these characters.

In Norway’s far north, something unspeakable is surfacing…

When a mutilated body rises from the icy waters off the jetty in Kjerringøy, it shocks the quiet coastal village – and stirs something darker beneath. Not long after, a young woman is found dead in a drab Bodø apartment. Suicide, perhaps. Or something far more sinister.

Detective Jakob Weber and former national investigator Noora Yun Sande are drawn into both cases. Then a hiker reports a terrifying encounter in the nearby wilderness: a solitary cabin … and a man without a face.

As the investigation deepens, the clues grow more disturbing – and the wild, wintry landscape closes in. Jakob is certain of one thing: if they don’t find the killer soon, he’ll strike again.

Second in the dark, addictive Nordic Noir series set in Norway’s unforgiving Arctic north.


The Bone Queen by Will Shindler
(Minotaur Books, 3 February)

I really like the sound of The Bone Queen, weaving together supernatural horror and a claustrophobia island setting.

A chilling horror-thriller debut where a mother’s search for her missing daughter battles against the shadows of a historic, dangerous legend.

Single mother Jenna arrives on the tranquil shores of Athelsea fueled by the desperate hope to find Chloe, her teenage daughter who’s disappeared from their London home. She has no idea why-all she knows is that Chloe had changed in the previous two weeks, haunted by something, or someone, and the ferry ticket here is the only clue she has.

As she explores the village and interacts with the locals, Jenna soon realizes a macabre secret is being hidden in plain sight. A dark legend of a vengeful woman called the Bone Queen is spoken of in hushed tones amongst the villagers, some of whom are frantically trying to suppress the tale that has long terrorized their lives.

As Jenna starts to learn more about the Bone Queen and her previous victims, the village’s grip on reality begins to loosen and no one can say for sure who, or what, is responsible for the deaths and disappearances on Athelsea. Suffering from what she can no longer distinguish between paranoid hallucinations or real manifestations, Jenna must act quickly before Chloe is next…

The Bone Queen has left her mark, and one day she’ll collect.


Nonesuch by Francis Spufford
(Faber & Faber, 26 February)

Historical fiction with a fantasy twist? I’m in. (I also LOVE the cover!)

It’s the summer of 1939. London is on the brink of catastrophic war. Iris Hawkins, an ambitious young woman in the stuffy world of City finance, has a chance encounter with Geoff, a technical whizz at the BBC’s nascent television unit.

What was supposed to be one night of abandon draws her instead into an adventure of otherworldly pursuit – into a reality where time bends, spirits can be summoned, and history hangs by a thread. Soon there are Nazi planes overhead. But Iris has more to contend with than the terrors of the Blitz. Over the rooftops of burning London, in the twisted passages between past and present, a fascist fanatic is travelling with a gun in her hand.

And only Iris can stop her from altering the course of history forever.


The Shark by Emma Styles
(Sphere, 12 March)

A psychological thriller with a bit of a twist as two women take matters into their own hands? Colour me intrigued!

Every monster has a weakness.

At the height of Australian summer, a serial killer known as The Shark stalks a coastal suburb, hunting young female swimmers.

Afraid and furious at the failure of the police to protect them, two women fight back. Raych is grieving someone she’d have died to save, while Carmen hides her own disturbing connection to the murders.

In desperation, they form an uneasy alliance. And when another girl vanishes, they take matters into their own hands – by kidnapping the prime suspect. But as their interrogation spirals, horrifying truths surface on both sides of the table.

The clock is ticking to save the missing girl. And in their quest for justice, Raych and Carmen must face the darkest question of all: have they caught a monster – or become one?

The Shark is a propulsive psychological thriller about fear, vengeance and the thin line between predator and victim.


Children of Strife by Adrian Tchaikovsky
(Tor, 26 March)

I love this series!

They thought they’d found refuge.
But this paradise became their prison.

Centuries ago, a maverick terraforming team played God with a distant planet. Out of their vanity and spite, something terrible and unexpected arose.

Generations later, tormented scientist Alis is among the crew of the research vessel that rediscovers this lost outpost. But Alis wakes from nightmares of her own making to an all-too-real catastrophe on board. The rest of the crew has vanished – leaving only Cato, the belligerent mantis-shrimp captain, and Kern, the ship’s AI.

Searching for their lost fellows, Alis and Cato must venture into the darkness of the planet below. What did those ancient terraformers unleash? And will their last surviving crewmate become a greater threat than the world itself?


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!

5 comments

  1. Looking forward to the Will Shindler novel, I think I read some of his mystery/thrillers so it will be fun to see how he moves into horror!

    So much to look forward to it is easy to lose track…I am , off the top of my head, looking forward to Jeanette McCurdy’s debut novel,’Half His Age’ , ‘Dark Rooms’ by Rebecca Hannigan, ‘Meet The Newmans’ by Jennifer Niven, ‘The Burning Library’ by Gilly McMillan and ‘Midnight In Soap Lake’ by Matthew Sullivan x

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