In an effort to keep my “To Write About” pile from getting out of control (I’ve got another post coming up in the first week in January…or maybe later in the year about the older stuff), I’ve set a requirement to myself to write a catch-up post at the end of the following month (e.g., At the end of February, write about January books; at the end of June, write about the May books I haven’t gotten to yet; etc.). As always, the point of these quick-takes is to emphasize pithiness, not thoroughness.
Dear Committee Members
by Julie Schumacher, read by Roberston Dean
DETAILS: Series: Jason Fitger, #1 Publisher: Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group Publication Date: August 19, 2014 Format: Unabridged Audiobooks Length: 3 hrs., 55 min. Read Date: January 3-5, 2026
Professor Jason Fitger is a delightful character (in fiction, please don’t sit next to him at a dinner or stand near him at a party. Or maybe don’t be in the same room with him). He’s full of himself, a little self-deluded, put-upon, and (probably) past his prime with a career going nowhere (but hey, tenure!).
We learn about him through a series of letters of recommendation he’s sending to various businesses, schools, programs, and scholarships for his students; interdepartmental emails; emails to old friends/ex-lovers/ex-wife; and maybe one or two others. I like a good epistolary novel, and this is one of them. We learn about Fitger, and a couple of his students, the moves his University is making to gut itself of the liberal arts, and more, in a way that feels incredibly authentic and very entertaining.
Still, I don’t think I could take it if the book was much longer, and I don’t know that I want to read the rest of the trilogy (but I kind of do).

All the Best Dogs
DETAILS: Publisher: Yearling Publication Date: November 4, 2025 Format: Hardcover Length: 208 pg. Read Date: January 5, 2026
This middle-grade novel about a bunch of kids (and a few adults) who bring their dogs to a neighborhood dog park is just delightful. Not just because the dogs are as cute and silly and loving as you want them to be. But the kids and their situations are, too. Even the ones that start off in conflict or sadness get a good dose of resolution and hope by the end (generally tied to one of these dogs). It was cute, heartwarming, and filled with good dogs—the best dogs, actually. What more do you want?

Children of Time
DETAILS: Publisher: Orbit Publication Date: December 11, 2018 Format: Paperback Length: 416 pg. Read Date: January 14-19, 2026
I didn’t write a full post on this because I can’t write a sentence about what I think about it without writing one contradicting it. And then one defending the first sentence. And then one defending the second. And then…
I love the concept of this book. Think the execution was wonderful. There’s so, so, so many cool things and ideas packed in here. But it’s also slow and plodding. It could be argued that 80% of the book is setup and only the last 20% is the story. That 20% (an estimate, I didn’t really do the math) is pretty cool and almost makes up for the rest.

Everyone in the Group Chat Dies
by L.M. Chilton, Kimberley Capero
DETAILS: Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio Publication Date: December 9, 2025 Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 9 hrs., 36 min. Read Date: January 15-16, 2026
I enjoyed (and apparently didn’t write about) Chilton’s Swiped a couple of years ago. Almost none of the charm or zaniness of that book made its way here. I’m not saying I expected a carbon copy, obviously, but this could almost have been written by someone else.
A lot of the framing of this story was well done—and the way it was ordered was, too. But I could practically see that all of the heart and character were sacrificed for the sake of clever plotting and telling. And if I have to go on without one of those pairs, I know which one it should be.
I’m not saying that I’m done with Chilton, but I won’t be in a rush for whatever’s next.

Lit
by Tim Sandlin
DETAILS: Publisher: Brash Books Publication Date: October 22, 2025 Format: eBook Length: 254 pg. Read Date: January 20, 2026
This is quotable, clever, and filled with interesting characters. It’s also a little too convoluted; it’s hard to believe some of the interpersonal relationships with the characters, and the solution is a bit of a letdown.
That said, from the first page to the last I was hooked and couldn’t stop reading it. Most of it worked in the moment, or was something I could shrug off while reading it. But when I was done and started thinking about it, I the doubts and quibbles kept growing.
Maybe Sandlin couldn’t really figure out the book he was trying to write—tone, characters, and/or outcome—he wouldn’t be the first author to do that. As much as a lot of the passages sang—the book, in retrospect, was just good enough. Read this one to enjoy the journey, not necessarily the destination.

The Librarians
by Sherry Thomas, read by Louisa Zhu
DETAILS: Publisher: Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group Publication Date: September 30, 2025 Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 13 hrs., 45 min. Read Date: January 21-26, 2026
Individually, these characters were just fantastic—plenty of quirk, plenty of heart, plenty of “I just want to live a quiet life with books and nice people” kind of energy. Sign me up for that! The murder mysteries were intriguing enough, too. But combining the characters and the murders—with too many amateur detectives running around—it all felt very soapy. Very melodramatic.
I flitted back and forth between “Oh, I really like Character X and want to see what happens to them” and “Oh, please, shut up and return to reality! Cut the melodrama!” so often I got whiplash.
I’d recommend it with several caveats and a stress on low-expectations. Then again, I could name worse.

Through the Ashes
by Irene Hill
DETAILS: Series: Joe Higgins, #1 Publication Date: April 18, 2025 Format: Paperback Length: 239 pg. Read Date: January 24-26, 2026
This is a solid series premiere and debut novel about a former deputy who used to serve on his area’s search-and-rescue team. Years after personal tragedy struck, he’s called on to leave his drunken stupor behind and find a missing boy. Naturally, it’s not long before this search becomes so much more.
This is Hill’s debut, and it’s not that hard to tell (particularly as she introduces characters early on). But she can tell a good story, and the characters are winners.
It’s a little on the rough side, but this is a good read, and I’m ready for the second book (and probably the third and fourth).

Memes & Mayhem II: A Comedy of Horrors
DETAILS: Series: Memes & Mayhem, #2 Publication Date: September 11, 2025 Format: Paperback Length: 249 pg. Read Date: January 24, 2026
Before I get into this, I thought I had posted about the first book, and I’m more than a little annoyed to find out that I didn’t. I did chat with the author briefly a couple of years ago. (I’m really bothered, I remember working on it) Anyway, this is exactly like the first book—just done a little better and is a little funnier. Experience is a good thing.
DeLeon has picked some great creepy ghost stories and tells them well—even better, she does it with a good (and oftentimes silly) sense of humor.
This is well worth your time (so is its predecessor). I had a blast with this and will do so again.

The Serial Killer Guide to San Francisco
by Michelle Chouinard, read by Stephanie Németh-Parker
DETAILS: Series: The Serial Killer Guide to San Francisco, #1 Publisher: Macmillan Audio Publication Date: September 24, 2024 Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 9 hrs., 51 min. Read Date: January 26-28, 2026
This really fits in the Finley Donovan demographic. It’s a little more grounded, a little slower on the romance burn (okay, a lot slower), a little less zanier. But the same overall feel. I didn’t get as into all of the plotlines as I was supposed to—and I’d figured out the whodunit, with a pretty good (but growing) confidence in the whydunit early on. But watching our semi-intrepid investigator, Capri Sanzio, wind her way through the investigation was entertaining enough.
I didn’t buy her podcast recording at all (and it would’ve been good to see her do something other than record episodes). But the rest was okay.
It was as entertaining as you’d want this to be—not an inch more. But good enough.

That’s a Great Question, I’d Love to Tell You
by Elyse Myers
DETAILS: Publisher: William Morrow Publication Date: October 28, 2025 Format: Unabridged Audiobook Length: 5 hrs., 32 min. Read Date: January 28-30, 2026
This is such a strange, comforting, hilarious, and relatable collection of short pieces. Some are memoirs, some are humorous pieces, some are hard to define. All are absolutely worth your time. They will warm your heart, bring a smile to your face, and make you feel all sorts of things.
I think this would work well on the page—but do yourself a favor and get it on audio. Myers’ delivery is so good (as anyone who’s watched her videos knows), hearing her words in her voice really captures the intangibles of the book in a way that I don’t think that the page is fully capable of.
This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase from any of them, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, opinions are my own.
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