Book Riot highlights six standout new releases arriving on February 24, 2026, spanning fiction, short stories, and historical reimaginings. The list features works by authors including Tayari Jones and Lauren Groff, alongside nonfiction titles. These books explore themes from family dynamics in the American South to ancient Egyptian history.
The article from Book Riot, published on February 24, 2026, selects six of the best new book releases for that week. Among them is Kin by Tayari Jones, from the bestselling author of An American Marriage. It follows two motherless girls, Vernice and Anne, who grow up as best friends in Honeysuckle, Louisiana. Their paths diverge: Vernice attends Spelman College and enters a world of affluent Black women, while Anne embarks on a journey marked by love and hardship. The story examines the complexities of women and girls in community.
Lauren Groff's Brawler: Stories marks her first short story collection since the award-winning Florida in 2018. This volume includes nine stories set from the 1950s to the present, spanning Florida to California. They delve into human nature and "the ceaseless battle between humans’ dark and light angels," with Groff's signature beautiful and quotable prose, according to contributor Emily Martin.
Saara El-Arifi's Cleopatra reimagines the life of the Queen of the Nile, addressing how her legacy has been reduced to seduction due to sexism. Managing Editor Vanessa Diaz praises it for fleshing out Cleopatra's story in fiction, appealing to fans of reimagined historical women like Circe and Kaikeyi.
Other releases include Where the False Gods Dwell by Denny S. Bryce, inspired by choreographer Katherine Dunham's 1930s trip to Jamaica. It centers on four women's sisterhood amid personal struggles and an approaching hurricane. Mario Vargas Llosa's final novel, I Give You My Silence, translated by Adrian Nathan West, is set in Peru and follows writer Toño Azpilcueta's encounter with guitarist Lalo Molfino, highlighting the vals genre's cultural importance.
Finally, Floodlines by Saleem Haddad reunites sisters Mediha, Zainab, and Ishtar through their late father's painting, alongside Zainab's son Nizar, a war correspondent. They confront traumas from the US invasion of Iraq. The article also notes additional releases like the queer YA romance Limelight by Andrew Keenan-Bolger and nonfiction titles such as Stuff Every Bird Lover Should Know by Alice Sun.