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MER – Mom Egg Review
You are at:Home » MER Bookshelf – January 2026

MER Bookshelf – January 2026

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By Mom Egg Review on January 20, 2026 Bookshelf

MER Bookshelf – January 2026

Curated by Melissa Joplin Higley

 

Forthcoming books with flair!

Susan L. Leary, More Flowers, Trio House Press, February 2026, poetry

With lyrical acuity, philosophical insight, and deep reverence for girlhood, womanhood, and the wildly intelligent spirit that is the female imagination, Susan L. Leary’s newest collection, More Flowers, unfolds as self-interrogation, tribute, and template for survival. At its center is the figure of the mother, whose fierce brutality in navigating the world offers the speaker ambition, tender affirmation, and a necessary understanding of her origins. In particular, images of nature abound: at each turn, animals, weather patterns, changing landscapes, and the strength and fragility of flowers mirror life’s emotional complications and teach the will to outlast. Most of all, these poems celebrate the idea of excess, that sensation of always wanting more—more time, more meaning, more love, more flowers—because despite every trial and every sadness, this life, quite simply, is never enough.

 

Jaclyn Desforges, Weird Babies, Gordon Hill / The Porcupines Quill, April 2026, literary fiction (short stories)

Weird Babies is a short story collection about weird babies: a miraculous set of reincarnated quadruplets, babies born from the bellies of trout, babies who are destined to molt like tarantulas, babies who hatch from piles of warm clothes. It’s also about the weird baby living in each of us—the tenderest part of ourselves that longs, at whatever the cost, to be loved.

 

Jennifer LoveGrove, The Tinder Sonnets, Book*hug Press, April 2026, poetry

Unabashedly confessional and radically vulnerable, The Tinder Sonnets rallies against the long-standing demand that “women of a certain age” politely accept being rendered non-sexual. Each poem is based on a date, relationship, or contemporary dating insight, and highlights how misogyny impacts the way we connect in the modern world–or don’t. Juxtaposing folklore and the natural world against the digital sphere of texting and dating apps, this is poetry that defies invisibility and instead confronts and subverts it through a discerning feminist lens. While experimenting with the traditional form of the sonnet, these sonically textured poems are playful and wry, erotic and joyful, all while refusing to shy away from palpable anger, frustration, and disappointment.

 

Liz Johnston, The Fall-Down Effect, Book*hug Press, April 2026, literary fiction (novel)

Exploring protest, climate change, and fractured family relationships, Liz Johnston’s eagerly anticipated debut novel, The Fall-Down Effect, asks what we really owe people in our lives when we are fighting for a greater cause. As a child in the late 1980s, Fern is the wild heart of her tree-hugging family—quick-tempered and yearning to spend every minute in the woods of the small Pacific Northwest logging town where they live. She is also most like her environmental activist mother, Lynn, who chafes against the demands of motherhood and yearns for the protests of her youth. As tensions escalate, Lynn leaves her partner, Tom, and their three children, telling herself she will devote her life more fully to fighting for the earth.

 

 

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