Today in Bookish and Literary History, July 15



2014 World of Trouble by Ben H. Winters | United States | 320 | 🏆🏆

2025 An Inside Job by Daniel Silva | US | 416 |

2025 If You Love It, Let It Kill You by Hannah Pittard | US | 304 | 🏆

2025 The Greatest Possible Good by Ben Brooks | UK | 336 |

2025 A Witch's Guide to Magical Innkeeping by Sangu Mandanna | United Kingdom | 336 | 🏆

2025 My Train Leaves at Three by Natalie Guerrero | United States | 288 | 🏆



💡 Did you know?

⭕ Ben H. Winters' World of Trouble concludes his Edgar Award-winning apocalyptic trilogy with a police detective who continues to solve mysteries even as a massive asteroid looms days away from ending humanity, proving that our search for truth remains a fundamental human drive regardless of impending doom.

⭕ Hannah Pittard wrote If You Love It, Let It Kill You as a daring, razor-sharp piece of autofiction that plays with the boundaries of creative writing and ownership of personal history, incorporating hilarious, surreal interactions with a talking cat to comment on the nature of truth in storytelling.

⭕ This unique blend of reality and imagination pairs beautifully with Sangu Mandanna’s cozy, heartwarming world-building in A Witch's Guide to Magical Innkeeping, where she crafted a detailed Lancashire setting to explore second chances, healing, and found family.



“Today in History (July),” on Fable.

https://fable.co/list/e57c57be-7d9f-49bc-bf34-ba6cab34f191/share


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