If you want a book that will make you smarter, calmer, and a little harder to fool, How to Read Numbers is one you shouldn’t miss.
Aunty Lee’s Chilled Revenge proves that some grudges age poorly — and some sleuths only get better with time.
Seichō Matsumoto has crafted more than a mystery—it’s an inquiry into order, memory and movement.
A tender, philosophical, and unexpectedly moving book about presence, loneliness, and the quiet power of simply being there.
Convenience Store Woman is a modern classic that dares to imagine a life outside the script — and treats that life with profound respect.
A beautiful, devastating, and profoundly human memoir that deserves its place among the most important books of recent years.
It does what the best self-help books rarely manage: it connects the emotional with the existential.
This story is as emotionally devastating as it is suspenseful, proving that the most powerful mysteries are the ones that live inside us.
A luminous, heartbreaking, and unforgettable novel about love, ambition, and the stories we tell to survive.
For emotionally resonant fiction with unforgettable characters and narrative twists, her bibliography is one of the richest places to begin.