New Books in 2026!

Hey hi hello friends, and welcome back to my blog!

I went back and forth on if I wanted to make a post about my anticipated releases for the year and I decided in the end to do it (obviously, ha). This will probably only go until June, since a lot of the later releases haven't been announced yet, or they don't have covers/summaries/release dates. I feel like every year there are less and less books that I'm super excited about. For this post, I have about 25 books over the next 6 months that I'm really interested in. 

Okay, without any further ado, let's get into my most anticipated releases for the first half of 2026!

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January

Through Gates of Garnet and Gold by Seanan McGuire
Published Jan. 6th

After Nancy was cast out of the Halls of the Dead and forced to enroll at Eleanor West's School for Wayward Children, she never believed she'd find her door again, and when she did, she didn't look back. She disappeared from the school to resume her place in the Halls, never intending to return. Years have passed. A darkness has descended on the Halls, and the living statues who populate them are dying at the hands of the already dead. The Lord and Lady who rule the land are helpless to stop the slaughter, forcing Nancy to leave the Halls again, this time on purpose, as she attempts to seek much-needed help from her former schoolmates. But who would volunteer to quest in a world where the dead roam freely? And why are the dead so intent on adding to their number?

This is book 11 of the Wayward Children series. In fact, I already have a copy on my shelves, waiting for me! But even though this has already been published, I felt I needed to add it to this list since it is one of my most anticipated books of the year. 


Gumshoe by Brenna Thummler
Published Jan. 13th

In the hot, gossipy town of Stony Lonesome, shy eleven-year old Willa interacts with others the only way that feels right to her—the mail. She loves the mail so much that she hopes to become a mail carrier herself one day. But her dreams of delivering birthday cards, thank-you notes, and love letters come crashing down when she’s mistaken for the notorious Two Gum Tilly, a bandit rumored to be stealing mail for as long as folks can recall. Now an outlaw herself, Willa realizes the only way to clear her name is to bring the real crook to justice. But when a chance encounter introduces her to the Gumshoe Gang, a group of runaways looking to right the wrongs of the letter-looting thief, she finds that human connection might be her only path to freedom. Can Willa clear her name and revive her dreams of postal glory, or has she stamped her last letter . . . forever? 

It's been a while since I've been excited about a graphic novel, but Brenna Thummler is the author/illustrator of one of my favorite graphic novels, Sheets and it's sequels, Delicates and Lights. I really love her art style, and she has the most unique ideas, so I'm excited to see what she has in store for us next!


To Ride a Rising Storm by Moniquill Blackgoose
Publishing Jan. 27th

Anequs has not only survived her first year at Kuiper’s Academy but exceeded all of her professors’ admittedly low expectations—and passed all her courses with honors. Now, she and her dragon, Kasaqua, are headed home for the summer, along with Theod, the only other Native student at the Academy. But what should have been a relaxing break takes a darker turn. Thanks to Anequs’s notoriety, there is an Anglish presence on Masquapaug for the first time ever: a presence which Anequs hates. Anequs will always fight for what she believes in, however, and what she believes in is her people’s right to self-govern and live as they have for generations, without the restrictive yoke of Anglish rules and social customs. And fight she will—even if it means lighting a spark which may flare into civil war.

This is the sequel to one of my favorite fantasy books, To Shape a Dragon's Breath. I've been waiting for this sequel for three years! I thought this day would never come, genuinely. I'm completely obsessed with the characters in this series. I think this might be my absolute most anticipated release of 2026.


February

A Forest, Darkly by A.G. Slatter
Publishing Feb. 10th

Deep in the forest lives Mehrab the witch, coping with loneliness in her own strange ways and quietly battling her demons. One evening, a young woman appears on her doorstep seeking shelter, pursued by godhounds who wish to destroy all those practising magic, and Mehrab's solitary existence is disrupted as she teaches the girl how to control her powers. Together they forge a cure for their isolation with heartbreaking consequences... Meanwhile, in the local village, children begin to disappear, sometimes returning forever changed – or not returning at all. Sinister offerings appear on Mehrab's doorstep, and a dark power pursues her through the trees. As the villagers turn hostile and the godhounds close in, Mehrab finds herself at the centre of a struggle to save the soul of the forest, the life of an old love – and her own new-formed family.

I know that this book is part of a larger, interconnected series, but I haven't read any of the other books. This one just seems particularly up my alley. It seems equal parts dark and cozy, which is honestly the only way I like cozy books, so I'm not complaining. 


She Made Herself a Monster by Anna Kovatcheva
Publishing Feb. 10th

In nineteenth-century Bulgaria, Yana rides from one desolate town to the next, staging grisly displays while the villagers animal corpses in the public square, eggs filled with blood in the chicken coop. She tells the stricken villagers stories of vampires that stalk the night. Then Yana eliminates the threat, and leaves seeds of hope in her wake. The village of Koprivici, however, is plagued by exceptional illness and misfortune, its children rarely surviving infancy. There, Yana meets a headstrong orphan who the villagers blame for their curse. As Anka approaches womanhood, the village Captain is grooming her for marriage against her will. Anka is powerless against him—that is, until Yana arrives. Together, the orphan and the vampire slayer hatch a to conjure a monster so vile, it might provide cover for Anka to escape. But their plan quickly takes on a horrifying life of its own...

This book caught my eye because it's based on Slavic folklore, a branch of folklore that I don't know much about and would like to learn about more. And it seems like it might be queer? And I mean, say less. A queer folklore reimagining, that is everything I want in a book.


The Red Winter by Cameron Sullivan
Publishing Feb. 24th

In 1785, Professor Sebastian Grave receives the news he fears most: the terrible Beast of Gévaudan has returned, and the French countryside runs red in its wake. Sebastian knows the Beast. A monster-slayer with centuries of experience, he joined the hunt for the creature twenty years ago and watched it slaughter its way through a long and bloody winter. Even with the help of his indwelling demon, Sarmodel – who takes payment in living hearts – it nearly cost him his life to bring the monster down. Now, two decades later, Sebastian has been recalled to the hunt by Antoine Avenel d’Ocerne, an estranged lover who shares a dark history with the Beast and a terrible secret with Sebastian. Drawn by both the chance to finish the Beast for good and the promise of a reconciliation with Antoine, Sebastian cannot refuse. But Gévaudan is not as he remembers it, and Sebastian’s unfinished business is everywhere he looks. Years of misery have driven the people to desperation, and France teeters on the edge of revolution. Sebastian’s arcane activities – not to mention his demonic counterpart – have also attracted the inquisitorial eye of the French clergy. And the Beast is poised to close his jaws around them all and plunge the continent into war.

Guys, I am so excited about this, I can't even begin to describe it to you. A retelling of La Bete? Goddamn, sign me up! The reason I'm so psyched for this particular werewolf story is because of a simple little TV show by the name of Teen Wolf. Yes, it's been well over ten years since I watched it for the first time, but Teen Wolf has left the best impression in my head (and I've rewatched it multiple times). For those who don't know, a character in Teen Wolf is descended from the hunter that eventually killed the Beast of Gévaudan. But also, the actually history of La Bete is incredibly fascinating and I have a special interest in it, so this book is hitting all the marks for me.


March

You Did Nothing Wrong by CG Drews
Publishing Mar. 17th

Single mother Elodie’s life has become a fairy tale. She’s met Bren, equal parts golden-retriever devoted and sinfully handsome. He’s whisked her and her autistic son, Jude, to the crumbling family house he’s renovating. She has a new husband, a new house, and a new baby on the way. Everything is perfect. Then Jude claims he can hear voices in the walls. He says their renovations are “hurting” the house. Even Elodie can’t ignore it–something strange is going on. The question is, is it with the house, or with her son? Then the one secret Elodie has been hiding is revealed, and no one is safe anymore.

I read both of CG Drews's YA books last year, Don't Let the Forest In and Hazelthorn. This is their adult debut and seems entirely different from their previous works, so color me intrigued. I like haunted house stories a lot but they never quite work for me, so I'm hoping that this will be the novel that finally gives me my perfect haunted house. 


Almost Life by Kiran Millwood Hargrave
Publishing Mar. 24th

Erica and Laure meet on the steps of the Sacré-Coeur in Paris, 1978. Erica is a student, relishing her first summer abroad before beginning university at home in England. Laure is studying for her PhD at the Sorbonne, drinking and smoking far too much, and sleeping with a married woman. The moment the two women meet, the spark is undeniable, but their encounter turns into far more than a summer of love. It is the beginning of a relationship that will define their lives and every decision they have yet to make… Erica and Laure’s love story spans decades, marriage, children, secret trysts, and the agonizing changes—both personal and political—that might mean they can be together, after all. But when life brings them within touching distance again, will they be brave enough to seize a future together?

Kiran Millwood Hargrave writes wonderfully sapphic historical fictions and I love it. Her previous books, The Mercies and The Dance Tree, are both based on actual events in history, but this one seems entirely fictional so I'm interested to see how she does that. 


Wolf Worm by T. Kingfisher
Publishing Mar. 24th

The year is 1899 and Sonia Wilson is a scientific illustrator without work, prospects, or hope. When the reclusive Dr. Halder offers her a position illustrating his vast collection of insects, Sonia jumps at the chance to move to his North Carolina manor house and put her talents to use. But soon enough she finds that there are darker things at work than the Carolina woods. What happened to her predecessor, Halder’s wife? Why are animals acting so strangely, and what is behind the peculiar local whispers about “blood thiefs?” With the aid of the housekeeper and a local healer, Sonia discovers that Halder’s entomological studies have taken him down a dark road full of parasitic maggots that burrow into human flesh, and that his monstrous experiments may grow to encompass his newest illustrator as well.

At this point in time, I've read a lot of T. Kingfisher, and if there is one thing I'm confident on, it's that she really likes creepy crawlies. So it's no surprise to me that her new book also has some insect aspect to it. I get the heebies from most insects, but I suppose that's the whole point. I'll read pretty much everything she puts out, at this point.


Seasons of Glass and Iron: Stories by Amal El-Mohtar
Publishing Mar. 24th

Full of glimpses into gleaming worlds and fairy tales with teeth, Seasons of Glass and Iron: Stories is a collection of acclaimed and awarded work from Amal El-Mohtar. With confidence and style, El-Mohtar guides us through exquisitely told and sharply observed tales about life as it is, was, and could be. Like miscellany from other worlds, these stories are told in letters, diary entries, reference materials, folktales, and lyrical prose.

There isn't much in the way of detail for this book, but that's because it's a short-story collection and therefore you can't really give a proper summary. Oh well. I don't usually have the best of luck when it comes to short story collections, but I'm willing to give this one a try because of the author. She co-wrote This is How You Lose the Time War and then last year she published The River Has Roots which was an instant fav. I have high hopes for this!


No Man's Land by Richard K. Morgan
Publishing Mar. 24th

The Great War was supposed to be the war to end all wars-and maybe it would have been, had an even greater, otherworldly foe not arisen to extinguish the conflict. Overnight, as guns blazed away in France and Flanders, village after village in the quiet British countryside were swallowed by the Forest. And within the Forest lurk the Huldu-an ancient fae race, monstrous in their inhumanity, who have decided that mankind's ascendency over the world can endure no longer. Enter Duncan Silver. Scarred by the war, fueled by a rage deeper than the trenches in which he once fought, Duncan is determined to show the Huldu that the world is not theirs for the taking. Armed with a cut-down trench gun filled with iron shot and a deadly iron knife, Duncan will stop at nothing to return the children the Huldu have stolen from the arms of their families. No matter how many Huldu he may have to slaughter along the way. But when he is hired by a mother to return her four-year-old daughter, Miriam-taken by the Huldu six months past and replaced with a Changeling-all hell breaks loose. Miriam is a pawn in a much bigger game for dominance than Duncan ever expected, and several long-buried secrets from his past are about to be violently resurrected.

WWI with fairies. I love it, no notes. I'm sat. But in all seriousness, this does seem like a book I'll really enjoy. I love folklore-accurate fairy realms. I'm really interested to see how the author is going to combine that with WWI. It seems like such an odd combination that it just might work.


April

The Goblin Crown by Brenna Raney
Publishing Apr. 7th

When shapeshifter Aren's foster mother is killed in a mysterious disaster, he must infiltrate a foreign court to learn what caused the same disaster the last time it happened-three hundred years ago in the elfland. Aren is a shapeshifter, able to run with a centaur herd, fly on a hawk’s wings, and scurry through the kitchens to the screams of the innkeeper’s wife. At age six, she’s a human foundling, abandoned to the care of the village hedgewitch. With refugees fleeing a strange upheaval in the north, spirits singing to her from a haunted forest, and the hedgewitch working to stop a looming disaster, she won’t escape her childhood unchanged. At nineteen, he’s an elf, flirting his way through the Queen’s Court to find out what killed his mother and cursed his village. Unfortunately, it only takes one misstep to alert the elves to the shapeshifter in their midst. With the palace hunting the imposter and a human delegation arriving at Court—including a too-familiar human prince—Aren must walk a careful line to piece together the truth of what happened all those years ago. 

Another fantasy release, hooray! This one seems like it could go either way, for me. There isn't much here that makes me think it'll be a no-brainer favorite for me, but I also think it could be if I give it a chance. So I put it on this list so I don't forget about it. And, let's be honest here. That cover is gorgeous!


Japanese Gothic by Kylie Lee Baker
Publishing Apr. 21st

October, 2026: Lee Turner doesn’t remember how or why he killed his college roommate. The details are blurred and bloody. All he knows is he has to flee New York and go to the one place that might offer refuge—his father’s new home in Japan, a house hidden by sword ferns and wild ginger. But something is terribly wrong with the house: no animals will come near it, the bedroom window isn't always a window, and a woman with a sword appears in the yard when night falls.
October, 1877: Sen is a young samurai in exile, hiding from the imperial soldiers in a house behind the sword ferns. A monster came home from war wearing her father’s face, but Sen would do anything to please him, even turn her sword on her own mother. She knows the soldiers will soon slaughter her whole family when she sees a terrible omen: a young foreign man who appears outside her window. One of these people is a ghost, and one of these stories is a lie. Something is hiding beneath the house of sword ferns, and Lee and Sen will soon wish they never unburied it.

Kylie Lee Baker seems to be everywhere lately, but I haven't been able to read her books yet! I'm very interested in Bat Eater but it's been practically impossible to get it from the library. But this book...this seems like my exact taste. We all know I have a soft spot for Japanese literature and mythology. 


The Velvet Knife by Maureen Johnson
Publishing Apr. 28th

Stevie might be the greatest teenage detective Ellingham Academy and the world has ever seen, but even she can’t figure out what happened with her boyfriend, David. What she needs is a distraction: a good old-fashioned murder. Stevie is much happier dealing with dead people. They’re a lot less confusing—they don’t send cryptic texts and make out with other girls in British pubs. But then Stevie gets exactly what she wanted when a dead body turns up in the middle of a Manhattan apartment complex, and this one is . . . complicated. Caught in a web of messy alive-people feelings, Stevie finds herself questioning all human connection. Is magnetism only manipulation? Can you trust anyone? Does anyone realize that they’re joining a cult—before it’s too late? And are things with David really over?

This is book six in the Truly Devious series! It's one of the few YA series that I'm still reading. In fact, I think I'll need to do a reread of the whole series soon. I know that the later books are more companions than actual sequels, but still. It's been eight years or so since the first book came out, and I haven't read it since then. 


May

A Long and Speaking Silence by Nghi Vo
Publishing May 5th

On the banks of the Ya-lé River, the town of Luntien gathers to celebrate the start of the rainy season, but the celebration is marred by the arrival of refugees from the sea. Everyone has a story about the foreigners newly in their midst—lazy, violent, unwanted—while the refugees themselves grieve the loss of the home they loved. Cleric Chih, very recently still Novice Chih, is also a stranger in Luntien. A moment of carelessness and bad luck leaves them waiting tables as they struggle to establish themself as a real cleric. A cleric’s job is to listen and record, but the stories emerging in Luntien are ugly and violent, as hard to predict as the river itself. With their hoopoe companion Almost Brilliant by their side, Chih must help the refugees while also unraveling a mystery that may have roots in their own faraway home in the abbey of Singing Hills.

This is book 7 in the Singing Hills Cycle, another one of my favorite series. I could read a hundred of these novellas, following Chih and Almost Brilliant in their adventures, and never get tired of it. Nghi Vo has some of the coolest ideas. This one is more a prequel, following Chih in their very early years of being a wandering cleric recording the land's stories for posterity. 


The Tapestry of Fate by Shannon Chakraborty
Publishing May 19th

Amina al-Sirafi thinks she’s struck gold. Tasked with hunting down arcane artifacts for the council of immortal peris, she can savor the occasional rollicking adventure on the high seas with her cherished criminal companions while still returning home to raise her beloved daughter, Marjana. But when Raksh, the spirit of discord with whom she is reluctantly wed, provokes the council’s wrath, Amina is charged with a seemingly impossible quest: steal a spindle capable of rewriting fate from a mysterious sorceress on an island no one can escape. Forced to leave Marjana—who is increasingly frustrated at being peddled what are clearly lies about her mother’s life and her own past—Amina finds her mission almost immediately thrown into peril. But deadly storms, an erratic poison mistress, and old enemies are the least of her worries. For the peris’ story is unraveling, hinting at a far deadlier game whose rules Amina must swiftly puzzle out. A game that sets her against an adversary more cunning and powerful than she has ever faced. A game that not everyone on her crew wants her to win.

This is the sequel to The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi which came out a couple of years ago. Shannon Chakraborty is again one of those authors that just has such a strong writing style and such wild ideas. I'll need to reread book one, I think, before I read this, however. There are bound to be a thousand little details that I'll have forgotten about, and would be totally lost if I tried to go into book two straight away. 


Behind Five Willows by June Hur
Publishing May 19th

As the dutiful second-eldest daughter of a poor family, society would have Haewon believe that her only hope of a decent life is to marry well. But during a time of rampant government censorship and book banning, she instead works as an illegal book transcriber in order to make a little extra money. It's dangerous work, but she loves it - especially when she gets to transcribe the work of her favourite author, known as Black Lotus. When her older sister becomes smitten with a wealthy young gentleman, Haewon is roped into chaperoning them during their courtship. Which wouldn't be so terrible, if it weren't for the young man's uptight and annoying best friend who also accompanies them. As the only son of a noble, Seojun has a lot expected of him. Wealth. Status. Respectability. Certainly not frivolous and often illicit activities such as reading fiction. But Seojun loves to do something even more scandalous: writing. He's kept his work secret from his father and friends, but with each passing day, the pressure of being his father's son and the dispiriting actions of the government make Seojun question the purpose of it all. The only thing keeping him going are the encouraging letters he receives from his transcriber, known only as Magpie. When his best friend falls hard for a girl of lower social status, Seojun finds himself forced to act as chaperone to the infatuated couple - along with the girl's younger sister, who is as irritating as she is judgmental. But as Haewon and Seojun spend more time together, they begin to suspect they may have judged each other too quickly...

June Hur is probably my favorite YA author at the moment. I've loved every single one of her historical mysteries. Korean history is fascinating beyond belief to me, so every time she announces a book I'm there on release day with money in hand. Like Kiran Millwood Hargrave, June Hur bases her books on actual historical figures or events, so I'm interested to see what the historical context for this book will be. 


June

The Unicorn Hunters by Katherine Arden
Publishing Jun. 2nd

Anne of Brittany was a child when her realm was invaded, her home besieged, and her royal father driven to his death. Now her treasury is empty, her land occupied by her enemies, and she is ordered, under threat of renewed war, to become queen of her conquerors and marry the King of France. This marriage means her country’s annexation. But Anne promised her father that Brittany would never be conquered. Defiantly, she betroths herself in secret to France’s greatest enemy. But in a world where courts may spy on each other by magic, there is only one way to solemnize this illicit union. Anne takes her court deep into a legendary forest, where the court diviners’ skill cannot reach. The world thinks they are only a hunting party, coursing after unicorns. But that is a lie, a trick, a feint. No one in living memory has seen a unicorn. All Anne wants is this secret wedding, which is her only hope of salvation. But when against all hope a unicorn appears and a stranger out of legend stumbles from the trees and falls at her feet, Anne is plunged into a world of enchantment where a doomed sovereign might find the power to change her own and her country’s destiny—or be lost in the shadows forever.

I don't know how I feel about unicorns, but I do know how I feel about Katherine Arden. I've never read a book from her that I didn't adore, and I've read her entire backlist (except the picture book she published in 2024). If there is anyone who can make me care about unicorns, it's Katherine Arden. 


A Fortune of Sand by Ruta Sepetys
Publishing Jun. 2nd

Detroit, 1927. A city of smoke and ambition, where glittering wealth conceals a graveyard of secrets. Marjorie Lennox is the youngest daughter of a powerful automotive dynasty, a family known for money, not manners. Artistic, impulsive, and always slightly out of step, Marjorie has long been dismissed by her controlling father and self-absorbed siblings. But when she secretly applies to an exclusive arts program funded by an elusive benefactor, she sees a chance to redefine herself on her own terms. The building is grand. The participants are gifted. But something…is off. The program is uncomfortably restrictive. Doors lock at odd hours. Strange sounds echo through the halls amid whispers that women are disappearing. And the handsome benefactor’s presence—mostly absent, yet somehow everywhere—begins to unnerve her. As Marjorie’s sense of self begins to slip, so does her grip on the truth. What happens to women who don’t fit neatly into a gilded frame?

More historical fiction based on real events, yay! My favorite kind of historical fiction, clearly. Ruta Sepetys always finds obscure events throughout history and then makes me care deeply about them. I'll be honest, the fact that this is set in the '20s isn't making me feel all that excited, but I trust Ruta Sepetys enough to give it a fair shot. (Side note, I'm miffed that this cover doesn't match all of her other covers. Sigh.)


Inkpot Gods by Seanan McGuire
Publishing Jun. 9th

More than a century has passed since Asphodel Baker refined the process allowing her to imbue alchemically created life with power in a way no one else had ever been able to achieve. More than a century since she built the Impossible City on the ruins of Olympus, forging it from nothing more than imagination and spite, and penned it in plain view, enabling it to be read and cherished and believed by children the world over. And now, so long after her exit from the world, the descendants of her dark alchemy―who exist in a reality that inches ever closer to the hellscape of her imagination―step into a place of birth, of discovery, of horror, to make amends for the sins of the past. Can the gods of today defeat the evils of their maker, or will the legacy of the most powerful alchemist the world has ever known prove to be their undoing?

Book four in the Alchemical Journeys series, and as far as I know, the final book in the series. At least, I hope it's the final book, since each one is based on the elements as well as the cardinal directions. I could see the series being five books with ether being the final element (since this series has to do with alchemy) but I'd rather it get tied up here. I adored Middlegame, but books two and three were kind of let downs for me. I want to see this series completed, though, so I'll definitely still be reading this one. 


This Immortal Heart by Jennifer Saint
Publishing Jun. 9th

From the moment Aphrodite emerges fully formed from the sea, she is devastatingly beautiful and imbued with ancient power. Driven by passion yet strategic in how she moves through the halls of Olympus and the earthly realm alike, the free-willed goddess wields unparalleled influence over every living being. When fate brings her face to face with Ares, she bristles at this surly, hot-tempered warrior who’s seemingly her disliked by everyone and devoted to stirring up conflict. Yet these gods are no more immune to the dizzying highs and lows of love and loss than anyone else, and soon, they are irresistibly drawn to one another. As their love affair spans mortal lifetimes, Aphrodite begins to question the gods’ games and her role in them. But there’s only so much room for fire and passion in Zeus’s kingdom. Before long, she must test her devotion to her own divine purpose—and to a love that can only lead to ruin.

Jennifer Saint is the queen of Greek myth retellings. I trust her, implicitly. But again, why does this cover not match her other four books?! It frustrates me to no end, truly. I'm super excited to see what Jennifer Saint does with Aphrodite, though. She's honestly one of the most complicated gods in the Greek pantheon and I really hope that the novel reflects that. 


The Shape of Monsters by Tessa Gratton
Publishing Jun. 16th

Iriset—prodigy, outlaw, now sunderer—has broken the Moon-Eater god’s prison at the heart of the empire. But the consequences of her actions land her in a city of monsters where the heretical magic of human architecture is freely practiced, and the only person she knows—and can trust—is Lyric, the emperor she’s lied to and loved in equal measure. As scheming kings and capricious gods drive them towards different extremes, they soon realize that to find their way home, they must remake the world…at the risk of breaking it forever.

This is the sequel to The Mercy Makers, which came out last year. It was one of my favorites for the year (though there was a little too much smut for my liking). I nearly screamed out loud when I saw that the sequel was already being published, less than a year after book one. I feel like that doesn't happen very often in publishing, anymore, but I am certainly not complaining. It seems to me that Tessa Gratton had this story in her head for a long time and is only now able to get it down on paper. Either way, I'm here for it!

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Whew, what a list! It took me forever to get everything down, let me tell you. At least I managed to get through a decent number of episodes of Fire Force season 2, which I'm rewatching in order to get to season 3. 

What are your most anticipated releases for 2026? I'd love to know! Leave a comment below, or DM me on Instagram (link in sidebar under the heading "Socials"). 

Until next time, friends!

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