THE PRESIDENT AND THE FROG by Carolina De Robertis - Publishers Weekly Review

Publishers Weekly | June 29, 2021

De Robertis (Cantoras) meditates on the fight for democracy in her pleasing latest. An unnamed 82-year-old former president of a “near-forgotten” Latin American country “at the bottom of the world” answers a journalist’s probing questions: How did the former guerrilla fighter rise from obscurity and imprisonment to become “The Poorest President in the World,” and how can his country serve as an international symbol of hope? As he considers his replies, he recalls lessons from his darkest hours: 40 years before, he was captured after a failed revolution and condemned to isolation in a dirty pit, where his only companion was a talking frog. To satisfy the creature’s demand for “true stories,” the narrator recalls memories that inspired his love of his country and his care for its people, such as strangers coming together during the initial military crackdowns to dig underground tunnels and free prisoners. Though he understands the frog is a manifestation of madness, the president ruminates on the sacrifices of the poor and abuses of the powerful as the narrative strands of past and present become one. While the allegorical aspects can feel a bit pat, the tale’s simplicity belies considerable depth and resonance: “Even horror is an opening, every moment a new beginning, until we reach the end.” In such a charged political moment, this lands as both a balm and a paean to national pride and unity.

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Deena Warner
THE PRESIDENT AND THE FROG by Carolina De Robertis — Publishers Weekly 'Carolina De Robertis Seeks a Greater Truth in Fiction'

Publishers Weekly | June 11, 2021

I’ll be frank—there were times working on this book when I definitely felt like I was just diving into the water in the dark,” admits novelist Carolina De Robertis. She’s seated in front of a wall of books—“just a fraction, of course, of the books in the house”—in the home she shares with her wife and their two school-age children in Oakland, Calif., for a Zoom call. “At times, the only way I could continue to work on the book and really give it my best as a writer was to secretly call it the Weird Book.... Yes, just put a neon sign over the metaphorical door, it’s weird.”

In The President and the Frog (Knopf, Aug.), her sixth book, the 45-year-old writer says she’s seeking something greater than truth, or, as she puts it, the ability of fiction to “use invention to more freely explore the truth.”

It opens with an 82-year-old former leader of an unnamed Latin American country being visited by a Norwegian journalist for an interview. Noticing in her something the narrator calls “the listening gift,” he wonders if he should finally reveal a long-kept secret: that talking to a frog during his time in solitary confinement when he was imprisoned for inciting revolution was what kept him alive.

The basis for the character of the aging politician was Uruguayan president and former guerrilla José Mujica, who spent 12 years in prison and later became known for his quest for human rights. Mujica, president from 2010 to 2015, donated most of his salary to charity and stayed in his own humble home, where he continued to work the land himself. And the frog is inspired by, well, a frog.

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Deena Warner
THE STRANGER IN THE MIRROR by Liv Constantine — Booklist Review

Booklist | June 1, 2021

Another twisty and unsettling domestic psychological thriller (following The Last Time I Saw You, 2019) from established book-club favorite Liv Constantine, the pen name of sisters Lynne and Valerie Constantine. Their previous titles are in development for both TV and film. So who is Addison Hope? She doesn’t even know. Two years ago, she was rescued by a kind driver who found her injured on the side of the road. She does not remember anything that happened before that, but is tortured by intermittent violent images from what she assumes is her earlier life. Addie has made a new life for herself in Philadelphia and is engaged to be married. Her wealthy prospective mother-in-law hires a private investigator to investigate what she fears is feigned amnesia. Meanwhile, a man in Boston wonders what happened to his wife, who disappeared without a trace, leaving him and their seven-year-old daughter behind. At the intersection of their lives there is a shattering truth that unfolds in a toney drama, certain to appeal to fans of the genre.

Deena Warner
THE HUNTING WIVES by May Cobb - Fresh Fiction Review

Fresh Fiction | May 27, 2021

Sophie had all she wanted: a loving husband, a beautiful son, and a lovely home in a town she chose.  But, she is bored and feels like something is missing. That changed when she met Margot, a local socialite. Sophie found everything about Margot alluring and she became obsessed with her. Sophie was thrilled when Margot invited her to join her exclusive club. As it turned out, her relationship with Margot could cost Sophie all she held dear.

In The Hunting Wives by May Cobb, readers are launched into a world of seduction, debauchery, excessive drinking, and worst of all: murder. Margot and her inner circle are all about excesses and loyalty to each other, but any other redeeming characteristics seem to be missing. Margot is clearly the glue that keeps them together, but why? Even Sophie was conflicted about her feelings and attraction towards Margot but didn't have the strength to walk away when her world began to spiral out of control. What was the secret to her magnetism?

The Hunting Wives is a skillfully told, haunting, and memorable tale. From start to finish it is totally engrossing. I couldn't put it down. Highly recommended. 

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Deena Warner
THE HUNTING WIVES by May Cobb - theSkimm '19 Can’t-Miss Beach Reads For Summer 2021'

the Skimm | May 25, 2021

A frothy page-turner and the beach go together like peanut butter and jelly. There’s simply nothing better. And you can always go for more. So we rounded up the best new reads you’ll want to bring to the ocean, the pool, or wherever you’re hunkering down for some sun and good vibes this summer.

“The Hunting Wives” by May Cobb

For when your book club exclusively reads thrillers…

Add this one to the queue. A woman leaves behind big-city life to settle down with her husband and son in Texas. It at first seems like the perfect idyllic community. But she soon feels boredom start to kick in...until she meets the Hunting Wives — an alluring secretive group of women that lead her directly into trouble. The plot twists? They keep on coming.

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Deena Warner
THE HUNTING WIVES by May Cobb - BookPeople Review

Book People | May 24, 2021

Bookseller and mystery/crime fiction aficionado Scott M. reviews the “perfectly executed and deliciously satisfying” (Chandler Baker) new novel from local author May Cobb.

May Cobb’s attention-getting debut, Big Woods, showed promise as her being a writer to watch. She has delivered on that promise in her follow up, The Hunting Wives. Here the subject matter is much more lurid and fun.

Lifestyle writer Sophie O’Neil uproots her family to Mapleton, TX for a quieter life. It soon becomes too quiet and she yearns for some excitement. She finds it in a group of housewives headed by the alluring and oil-rich Margot. They meet up to drink, skeet shoot, and flirt with men. The one rule is that it never goes beyond talk. That rule and several others get broken, leading to Sophie becoming a murder suspect.

Cobb doesn’t back away from the lurid aspects of the story. She uses small details to build mood and pull you in as she captures these woman and the wild lives they hide and become addicted to. The author creates the literary equivalent of the Goodfellas steadicam shot through the Copa, building up the indulgences until they crash into the jagged-cut aftermath.

The Hunting Wives is full of great twists and reveals. May Cobb grounds them in believable emotions from Sophie’s point of view. You could argue that the book ends up being a morality tale, but it enjoys its immorality before it gets there.

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Deena Warner
FALSE WITNESS by Karin Slaughter — Publishers Weekly starred review

Publishers Weekly | May 21, 2021

In 1998, teen sisters Callie and Leigh, the heroines of this superb thriller from bestseller Slaughter (The Silent Wife), murder Buddy Waleski, who sexually abused them for years while they babysat his son, Trevor, in Chicago. They leave the Waleski kitchen spotless after cleaning up any evidence of the murder and hide Buddy’s body. In 2021, Callie, who became addicted to heroin after a gymnastics accident left her in constant pain, and Leigh, a defense attorney, unexpectedly confront the past after Leigh’s boss assigns the case of an alleged serial killer to her. During their first meeting, Andrew Tenant tells Leigh he’s actually the little boy she once babysat—Trevor Waleski—and implies that he knows the sisters killed his father. Callie and Leigh work urgently to determine how and what he knows. Breaking into the abandoned former Waleski house, Callie finds a crawl space with cameras aimed both at the kitchen where Buddy’s murder occurred and the living room couch where Callie was repeatedly raped as a 12-year-old by Buddy. If Leigh doesn’t secure a not guilty verdict, the pathological Andrew threatens to retaliate by releasing his father’s videos to the media and murdering her 16-year-old daughter. A shocking tragedy at the end will keep readers transfixed. Slaughter is writing at the top of her game.

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Deena Warner
THE PRESIDENT AND THE FROG by Carolina De Robertis — Book Riot '24 Must-Read New Books of Spring And Summer 2021 '

Book Riot | May 20, 2021

I’ve assembled a list of the best new books of Spring and Summer 2021 for your delight. Here are the best and the buzziest, from new books in translation to powerful contemporaries to twisting thrillers and romances to some incredible fantasy and sci fi. Get your wallets ready and your library holds list on standby: here are 24 books you’ll want to be first in line to read this summer.

The President and the Frog by Carolina de Robertis (August 3)

The former president of an unnamed Latin American country has stories that are infused with legend. Before he was a man talking about his legacy and the state of democracy, he was known as the Poorest President in the World, and before that, he was a guerrilla imprisoned for helping to start revolution. But now, as he tells these often-retold stories to a journalist, he just might reveal the secret of how he survived the solitary confinement of his imprisonment — by having long, philosophical conversations with a frog. De Robertis, the author of Cantoras and The Gods of Tango, has crafted a tale of resilience, of the power of the human spirit to survive—a story set in a jail cell and rooted in the fantastic.

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Deena Warner
THE PRESIDENT AND THE FROG by Carolina De Robertis — Kirkus Review

Kirkus | May 19, 2021

A former Latin American president reminisces on his remarkable life.

In Kirkus Prize finalist De Robertis’ new novel, the unnamed former president of a Latin American country is interviewed by a journalist. Inspired by the life of José Mujica, the former president of Uruguay, the novel’s 82-year-old protagonist—affectionately dubbed the “Poorest President in the World”—lives in a humble home with his wife and dogs and tends his infamous garden. As he sits down with the Norwegian interviewer, the former president finds himself drawn to her and wonders if he should share the deepest secret of his life, which he dubs “the story of the frog.” The narrative oscillates between the present-day interview (set shortly after the 2016 U.S. election) and memories of his past. A former guerrilla and revolutionary, he spent years of his life as a political prisoner in solitary confinement. Kept in a deep underground hole, the former president endured unspeakable torture and struggled to mentally persevere through the isolation. Unwilling to let the dictatorship win, he fought the urge to retreat from reality: “Every time temptation slunk toward him, he found himself rattled by and yet.” Just when he feels on the edge, a raucous frog appears in his cell begging to hear his memories (“I want stories. Want to eat your stories”). Reluctantly, the protagonist tells the frog about his past, including losing his father, learning to garden, falling in love, and organizing a revolution. In stunning, cleareyed prose, De Robertis writes beautifully about storytelling, justice, and hope amid brutality. In one particularly moving section, the protagonist tells the frog about the youth-led revolution born from a dream of justice. They wonder what their beloved country, on the verge of a dictatorship, could be if it was remade in a new image: “What if, what if, what if was the refrain of their great song.” In this slim novel, De Robertis sketches a portrait of a man who never stopped fighting for the betterment of himself, his country, and the world.

A timeless and timely exploration of power, revolution, and survival.

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Deena Warner
THE HUNTING WIVES by May Cobb — Crime by the Book review

Crime by the Book | May 18, 2021

The Verdict: juicy and unputdownable summer suspense

Summer reading just got a whole lot spicier. May Cobb’s deliciously juicy and wickedly entertaining THE HUNTING WIVES might just be the most gossip-worthy suspense novel of Summer 2021. Centering around an elite clique of wealthy housewives with secrets as big as their home state of Texas, THE HUNTING WIVES invites readers into an exclusive and glamorous world with a dark side. When Sophie relocates her family from Chicago to a small East Texas town, she hopes to give them the kind of peaceful, stable upbringing that was missing from her own childhood. But Sophie’s world is turned upside down when she meets charismatic and mysterious Margot, the ringleader of a group of local affluent housewives who call themselves “The Hunting Wives.” As Sophie falls under Margot’s spell, she is drawn into a dark and dangerous world of parties and hookups. And when someone close to the group turns up dead, and suspicion falls on Sophie, her world threatens to be destroyed forever. THE HUNTING WIVES is dripping with glamour and excess, a razor-sharp thriller about the complexity of female relationships wrapped up in an irresistible, reality-TV-worthy package. Fans of Desperate Housewives and Liane Moriarty’s Big Little Lies will relish this irresistible story of wealthy women behaving very badly, and the (maybe not-so-) innocent woman caught in their crosshairs. 

THE HUNTING WIVES is a delicious story of juicy, sexy drama that morphs into a murder mystery while never losing its glitzy, glamorous edge.. Pick this one up for a sizzling summer read best paired with a cocktail and a book club discussion with your best friends.

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Deena Warner
THE HUNTING WIVES by May Cobb — Buzzfeed '12 New Books You Should Read ASAP'

Buzzfeed | May 18, 2021

The Hunting Wives by May Cobb

Do you ever find yourself following a character’s journey as they make a series of terrible decisions and, yet, find that you cannot look away? That’s how it felt reading The Hunting Wives, which made it ridiculously hard to put down. Sophie O’Neill moves out of Chicago to a small East Texas town with her small son and husband and soon finds herself bored, but incredibly intrigued by Margot Banks. Margot is rich, gorgeous, and rules an exclusive clique called the Hunting Wives. But when a teenage girl’s body is found in the woods where the clique meets, Sophie’s life begins to spiral out of control.

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Deena Warner
BUBBLE by Jordan Morris, Sarah Morgan, and artist Tony Cliff — Polygon 'The new science fiction and fantasy books to read this summer'

Polygon | May 15, 2021

Summer is upon us, and whether you’re looking to finally get outside to the beach (please do so responsibly) or if you just want to escape the apocalyptic year that we’ve just endured, there’s no better way to escape than into the pages of a new science fiction or fantasy book.

This summer is brimming with good books arriving in stores in the coming months — stories of strange cults, interstellar adventures, fantastical robots, fantasy wonderlands, and quite a bit more — all perfect portals to briefly escape into a new world.

Here are 16 new novels coming out this summer to add to your to-read list.

Bubble by Jordan Morris (July 13)

Back in 2018, comedian and TV writer Jordan Morris had an idea for a series about a hip, futuristic city after thinking about the challenges of living in a place like Brooklyn or Portland — the high rents, roommates, and so forth — and decided to put a but of a science fictional spin on it. The result was a podcast called Bubble, and it followed a young woman named Morgan, who was born in the Brush (hostile, natural world outside of the city), and who makes a living hunting monsters to break in thanks to an app called Huntr.

The series was a lot of fun, and now Morris has gone and adapted the podcast as a graphic novel, along with fellow writer Sarah Morgan and artist Tony Cliff.

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Deena Warner
FALSE WITNESS by Karin Slaughter — Booklist Starred Review

Booklist | May 15, 2021

Slaughter shines an intense spotlight on a new normal laced with COVID-19 protocols and a cast of survivors battling a ruthless pandemic, a serial sadist, and a lifetime of unbeatable odds. When Andrew Tenant, the heir to Atlanta’s most prestigious auto empire, asks Leigh Collier to lead his defense against rape charges, she feels her suburban fantasy life being snatched away, tossing her back into her squalid childhood home, ducking punches and plotting her escape. As teens, Leigh and her younger sister, Callie, babysat Andrew. They also killed his father, Buddy, when he attempted to kill Callie after years of sexual abuse. Andrew doesn’t waste time revealing his agenda: he knows what they did, and he plans to continue preying on women while he draws a torturous penance from them. Leigh immediately springs Callie from her latest flophouse to strategize how they’ll keep what they did hidden. Leigh, haunted by survivor’s guilt over Callie’s abuse, and Callie, struggling to resist the comfort of a heroin binge, begin using their street smarts and working courtroom angles to wage war against Andrew and finally find peace in their unbreakable connection. Slaughter doesn’t save her twists for the end, instead peppering them throughout the intricately layered story amid stomach-churning near misses and gripping character revelations. Equal parts hyperrealistic thriller and epic tragedy, Slaughter’s latest is pitch-perfect storytelling.

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Deena Warner
THE HUNTING WIVES by May Cobb — Texas Monthly "'The Hunting Wives' Is an East Texas Thriller That Takes Women’s Relationships Seriously"

Texas Monthly | May 10, 2021

It should come as no surprise that May Cobb’s new novel, The Hunting Wives, begins with a dead body. If thrillers promise us anything, it’s blood. The East Texas native’s second novel, out this month from Penguin, joins a growing cadre of books by Texas women writers who are bending genre conventions to reveal the harder edges of the world—including Attica Locke, who uses the detective story to explore being Black in rural Texas, and Amy Gentry, who uses the art of suspense to illuminate female trauma. Because are women not always in danger? Because is being Black in America not a constantly unfolding horror story? When you frame it that way, suspense and horror just seem fitting. 

Where, exactly, does The Hunting Wives fit into this? Well, it’s complicated. The lipstick-and-bullet-casings cover and the promo copy (“sultry, salacious, and utterly unpredictable”) make it clear that one of the book’s primary goals is to be a steamy good time, with plenty of sex, drugs, guns, and oil money. The narrator, Sophie O’Neill, has recently left her job as a lifestyle editor at a magazine in Chicago to move with her family to a small town in rural East Texas. As one does. But gardening, parenting, and hashtagging her new “slow” life on social media aren’t cutting it for Sophie, and she becomes embroiled in a secret women-only shooting club revolving around the rich, beautiful, and possibly dangerous Margot Banks. Cue the sex, drugs, and guns.

The Hunting Wives vaguely gestures toward feminism, but rather than using the genre to take on the patriarchy, it is really just a thriller that takes women’s relationships seriously—the complicated ways they love and betray and protect one another. And that is radical in its own way.

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Deena Warner
THE HUNTING WIVES by May Cobb - Bustle 'The 20 Best Beach Reads Of 2021'

Bustle | May 5, 2021

With the COVID-19 vaccination campaign well underway, it’s beginning to look like vacations — albeit socially distanced ones — could be feasible for summer 2021. If you’re building a new TBR with beach season in mind, you can’t go wrong adding a few of the best beach reads of 2021 to your list. These romances and thrillers are the perfect kind of books to enjoy while you take in the sun, sand, and surf.

The Hunting Wives by May Cobb
The transition from the hustle and bustle of Chicago to the quiet laziness of small-town Texas isn’t easy for Sophie, who finds herself itching for something, anything, to do. Enter Margot: one of the most infamous socialites around, and a member of the elite women’s club known as the Hunting Wives. Joining the clique to drink and go target shooting in the wee hours, Sophie finally feels like she may have found her place in Texas. But when a girl’s body turns up near the Hunting Wives’ stomping grounds, she begins to realize that her new friends may be who she thought they were.

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Deena Warner
THE HUNTING WIVES by May Cobb - Popsugar 'The 12 Best Thriller and Mystery Books of May Will Leave You With Chills'

Popsugar | May 3, 2021

The Hunting Wives by May Cobb

In The Hunting Wives by May Cobb, a woman named Sophie O'Neill moves from Chicago to a small town in Texas with her husband and son. Soon, she falls in with a clique of women who love martinis and target practice. But there's more to the Hunting Wives than just sharing drinks and gossip — these women can be deadly, as Sophie finds out firsthand when a teenage girl is discovered dead in the woods.

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Deena Warner