Most Anticipated March 2025 Releases

Daylight saving time is here! We are so excited to go out and enjoy the longer days with one of the many great books releasing this month. Take a look at our list of most anticipated books to find a good book to fill your daylight hours.

 

Like a Hammer: Poets on Mass Incarceration Edited by Diana Marie Delgado

Like a Hammer is an anthology of poems that seeks to address the US prison-industrial complex and the often negative and long-lasting impact it has on the imprisoned and their communities. The book presents hope for a better future and aims to organize communities to demand change.

Contributors include: Hanif Abdurraqib, Rhionna Anderson, Brian Batchelor, Reginald Dwayne Betts, Marina Bueno, Cody Bruce, Marcelo Hernandez Castillo, Natalie Diaz, Tongo Eisen-Martin, Nikky Finney, Kennedy A. Gisege, Gustavo Guerra, Jessica Hill, Vicki Hicks, Randall Horton, Sandra Jackson, Catherine LaFleur, Ada Limón, Sarah Lynn Maatsch, Christopher Malec, Eduardo Martinez, John Murillo, Angel Nafis, Kenneth Nadeau, Leeann Parker, James Pearl, Christina Pernini, Roque Raquel Salas Rivera, Patrick Rosal, Nicole Sealey, Evie Shockley, Patricia Smith, Sin á Tes Souhaits, Vanessa Angélica Villarreal, Erica "Ewok" Walker, Candace Williams, and SHE/p>

 

The Tokyo Suite by Giovana Madalosso | Translated by Bruna Dantas Lobato

It's a seemingly ordinary morning when Maju, a nanny, boards a bus with Cora, the young girl she's been caring for, and disappears. The abduction, an act as impulsive as it is extreme, sets off a series of events that will force Maju and Cora’s parents to confront their deepest fears and desires.

The Tokyo Suite is the anticipated English-language debut of acclaimed Brazilian writer Giovana Madalosso. It explores themes of maternal guilt, societal expectations, and the search for personal identity.

 

Dichos En Nichos by Sage Vogel | Illustrated by Jim Vogel and Christen Vogel

Sage Vogel's debut story collection features ten interconnected stories inspired by original dichos--pithy folk sayings and proverbs. The dichos offer guidance, caution, and comfort as the townsfolk of an archetypal 1950s Northern New Mexico village navigate themes of identity, community, loss, and love.

Created in collaboration with each story is a nicho--an oil painting set in an antique frame--created by renowned Southwestern artists Christen Vogel and Jim Vogel. These fine artworks serve as both vibrant altars and vivid windows into a village brimming with the dynamic rhythms of life, from poetry and music to tragedy and scandal.

 

The Anatomy of Magic by J. C. Cervantes

Lilian Estrada seemingly has it all: an ob-gyn star on the rise, a master at balancing work with whirlwind romances and part of a family of fiercely loyal and exceptional women, all bound together by an extraordinary secret. The Estrada women each possess a unique power, and Lily shines with the rare gift to manipulate memories. Yet not even her mystical abilities can shield her from a harrowing event at the hospital, one that sends her powers--and her confidence--spiraling out of control.

Seeking solace, Lily retreats to her family's ancestral home in Mexico, only to find herself face-to-face with a ghost from her past--Sam, the first love she never forgot. Nearly a decade since she last saw him, Sam is hardly the boy she once knew, and as old flames spark to life, Lily must navigate the mysteries of their shared history and the depths of her own heart if she hopes to control her unpredictable magic.

 

The Latina Anti-Diet: A Dietitian's Guide to Authentic Health that Celebrates Culture and Full-Flavor Living by Dalina Soto

As a registered dietitian, Dalina Soto understands the pros and cons of intuitive eating. As a first-generation Dominican American, she’s also seen firsthand how this movement has only catered to a certain demographic. With her easy-to-follow CHULA method, Soto teaches us how to

Challenge negative thoughts
Honor our bodies and health
Understand our needs
Listen to our hunger
Acknowledge our emotions

She gives us tools to confront diet culture and the whitewashing of food so we can go back to eating what we love while managing our health.

Engaging and incisive, The Latina Anti-Diet is for everyone who’s been told to lay off the tortillas and swap their white rice for brown. Soto shows us that food is so much more than calories; it’s about celebrating our culture and living a life full of flavor.

 

The Search Committee by José Skinner

When Minerva Mondragón, candidate for a tenure-track Border Studies position at Bravo University, suggests Professor Quigley take her across the border for lunch before the interview, he acquiesces uneasily. He can't afford to scare her off, so doesn't mention he hasn't crossed over in more than a year because of the drug cartel-related violence.

But lunch in the fictional border town of La Reina leads to shocking consequences for the candidate and her hapless guide. Minerva never returns from the restaurant's bathroom and Quigley, feeling guilty, convinces himself that she has decided to disappear.

He returns to the United States without reporting her missing or mentioning the trip to his colleagues. Meanwhile, the applicant finds herself bound and gagged in the back of a taxi, victim of a kidnapping.

A long-time professor of literature and creative writing in South Texas, José Skinner writes darkly comedic scenes with an insider's understanding of university and border life and the narco violence that has disrupted them.