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Tag: my mother the mermaid chaser

  • THP’s Top 12 Favorite Book Releases Of 2025

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    THP’s book team has been eager to share our year-end roundup with you all, a tradition we started just last year! Our book content keeps getting better and better. And 2025 was another year for the books (pun intended). Be sure to check out our top 5 genre-specific roundups as well!

    Now, in one of the most fun yet challenging decisions we’ve had to make all year, we’ve narrowed down our reading lists to bring you THP’s top 12 favorite book releases of 2025. We have everything from historical fiction and contemporary drama to dark fantasy and coming-of-age stories.

    Content warning: The Honey POP encourages mindful reading and checking the author’s website for content warnings.

    A Traitorous Heart By Erin Cotter

    Image Source: Simon & Schuster

    If you had asked us back in January whether we knew Erin Cotter’s A Traitorous Heart would ultimately be one of our favorite 2025 books, we would say yes. This historical fiction novel takes us to the French court in the 16th century, starring a lady-in-waiting playing matchmaker between the French princess (her ex) and the King of Navarre. There’s political intrigue, a twisty love triangle, espionage, plenty of drama to go around, and even a bit of sorcery.

    Order A Traitorous Heart here!

    Onyx Storm By Rebecca Yarros

    Onyx Storm by Rebecca Yarros
    Image Source: Entangled Publishing

    Released January 21, Onyx Storm plunges you deep into a dragon-rider world where magic, war, and high-stakes danger collide, and the romance is just as fierce! The tension between love and survival, combined with intense action and betrayal, gives you the kind of emotionally charged conflict that makes enemies-to-lovers and forbidden-love tropes sing. It’s raw, dramatic, and immersive; a perfect pick if you love fantasy romance with danger and angst.

    Order Onyx Storm here!

    Sunrise On The Reaping By Suzanne Collins

    Sunrise on the Reaping by Suzanne Collins
    Image Source: Scholastic

    If you were a fan of the original Hunger Games books, you’ve surely already read this one. We never doubt a Suzanne Collins release, and this one was every bit as genius as her others. Expanding the Hunger Games universe with Haymitch’s perspective, we understand everything better now. Somehow, even though we didn’t think it was possible, everything is more heartbreaking now. But it just makes the Mockingjay payoff even more satisfying.

    Order Sunrise on the Reaping here!

    Get Real, Chloe Torres By Crystal Maldonado

    Get Real, Chloe Torres by Crystal Maldonado
    Image Source: Penguin Random House

    This is a perfect read for anyone looking for a quick, easy coming-of-age story, and who also, you guessed it, loves music. Get Real, Chloe Torres follows a girl celebrating her high school graduation as she attempts to bring together her two ex-best friends. Their ex-favorite band is playing a once in a lifetime concert across the country, which could be the perfect time for a road trip! Or it could be a disaster. This book expertly captures the feelings of a teenage girl: the end-of-the-world urgency of growing up, the butterflies-in-your-stomach passion of young love (especially queer love), and of course the all-consuming love for your friends and your favorite band. Perfect for a fangirl.

    Order Get Real, Chloe Torres here!

    Roar Of The Lambs By Jamison Shea

    Roar of the Lambs by Jamison Shea
    Image Source: Macmillan Publishers

    Mix an apocalyptic prophecy, a sweet queer romance, and a spooky sentient box, and you get Roar of the Lambs! This story follows teen psychic Winnie Bray, who wants nothing more than to escape her small town. But after a vision leads her to finding a mysterious whispering box in the remains of her burnt-down family home, she can see nothing but a vision of death and destruction.

    To make matters worse, Cyrus, a stubborn rich kid, and his cousin Apollo seem to be the cause of it. Apollo is skeptical of Winnie, but they know Cyrus is up to something sinister, and they’re determined to stop it. Together, Winnie and Apollo race to discover where the box came from and how to stop the end of the world, or they’ll die trying. We loved how Jamison Shea cleverly balanced dark and scary scenes with a heartwarming romance subplot. If you love complex characters and mysteries that span generations, you have to pick this up!

    Order Roar of the Lambs here!

    Legendary Frybread Drive-In Edited By Cynthia Leitich Smith

    Legendary Frybread Drive-In by Cynthia Leitich Smith
    Image Source: HarperCollins Publishers

    We love a good short story anthology, and Legendary Frybread Drive-In has the perfect blend of heartwarming vibes, valuable life lessons, and beautiful relationships that any reader can enjoy. Each of the stories in this anthology connects to a place called Sandy June’s Legendary Frybread Drive-In. It’s a magical place that seems to travel through every rez, finding those who need it most. Offering great food and a place to connect, it’s the setting of movie and game nights, family reunions, and so much more. We couldn’t get enough of how dynamic and engaging the stories were! Each of the characters was relatable in their own way, and we couldn’t get enough of how they tugged at our heartstrings. This anthology is also a great way to discover amazing Indigenous authors and storytellers. We’ll be recommending this for a long time to come!

    Order Legendary Frybread Drive-In here!

    Hot Wax By M.L. Rio

    Hot Wax by M.L. Rio
    Image Source: Simon & Schuster

    M.L. Rio’s Hot Wax is an essential read for all music lovers, which we know all of our readers are. Following two different timelines, our main character Suzanne grows up following her father on tour. We see the less glamorous side of rock and roll through ten-year-old eyes, and then grapple with the effects as she looks back decades later. As Suzanne comes to terms with her past, she is finally able to understand who she is, and to fall in love with life. A brilliant look at everything life can be, Hot Wax is unapologetically passionate, healing, and introspective.

    Order Hot Wax here!

    Alchemised By Sen Lin Yu

    Alchemised by SenLinYu
    Image Source: Penguin Random House

    Published September 23, Alchemised delivers a dark, haunting fantasy romance: exploring memory loss, trauma, and rebirth against a backdrop of war and magic. Its morally gray romance and emotionally heavy stakes offer a more bittersweet, complex vibe than most romantic fantasy, ideal for readers who don’t shy away from darkness or emotional intensity. The combination of morally ambiguous characters and romantic tension makes it a standout for fans of darker, grittier love stories!

    Order Alchemised here!

    My Mother, The Mermaid Chaser By Jamie Jo Hoang

    My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser by Jamie Jo Hoang
    Image Source: Penguin Random House

    Another one of our top 2025 books is Jamie Jo Hoang’s coming-of-age novel, My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser! It’s the companion novel to My Father, the Panda Killer, now following the perspectives of the younger brother Paul and his mother Ngọc Lan. This book made us cry our eyes out, addressing the traumatic effects of the Vietnam War while also touching on the bonds between siblings in such a real and raw way. We’d read anything Jamie Jo Hoang writes at this point.

    Order My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser here!

    Fake Skating By Lynn Painter

    Fake Skating by Lynn Painter
    Image Source: Simon & Schuster

    Who doesn’t love a feel-good rom-com? Lynn Painter aced it again in Fake Skating, with hilarious banter and adorable vibes that made us swoon. It’s about two childhood best friends, Dani and Alec, who, after Dani moved away, lost touch. Now Dani is back in town, but the shy and sweet Alec she once knew is nowhere to be seen. He’s now the town’s best hockey player and part of their high school’s popular crowd. When a misunderstanding leads to them having to pretend to be dating, things get complicated. But as they start to get closer again, sparks begin to fly. This is the perfect read for fans of hockey romance and the fake dating trope!

    Order Fake Skating here!

    The Rose Field By Philip Pullman

    The Rose Field by Philip Pullman
    Image Source: Penguin Random House

    Released October 23, The Rose Field wraps up a beloved epic trilogy with sweeping scope, deep mythology, and emotionally resonant character arcs. While romance isn’t the central focus, the relationships and emotional undercurrents throughout the story add real weight and a sense of loss, longing, and hope. For those of you who appreciate mythic world-building, layered storytelling, and emotional poignancy, it’s a powerful, satisfying fantasy.

    Order The Rose Field here!

    Lucky Seed By Justinian Huang

    Top 2025 books: Lucky Seed by Justinian Huang
    Image Source: HarperCollins Publishers

    Our next favorite 2025 book is a fairly recent development, having been published just in November. Justinian Huang’s new novel, Lucky Seed, had our full attention from the first page. If you enjoy reading about messy and dysfunctional families like we do, then you’ll love this book. Lucky Seed follows the wealthy family members of the Sun Clan as they try to produce a male heir and inherit the fortune. It even has a few dark turns and surprise reveals that shook us to our core!

    Order Lucky Seed here!

    What are some of your top 2025 books? Have you been enjoying our end-of-year book content as much as we have? Let us know on Twitter! You can also find us on Facebook and Instagram!

    Need some more book recs? We got them!

    Authors: Julie Dam, Asia Moore, Paige Lobianco, and Caitlyn Tarney

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    Julie Dam

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  • Exclusive Interview: Jamie Jo Hoang On My Mother, The Mermaid Chaser

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    Never have we ever connected to a book as well as we did with My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser by Jamie Jo Hoang! We admit we’ve been hooked on her writing ever since her last book, My Father, the Panda Killer, which released two years ago.

    So for our latest author interview, we had the honor of chatting with Jamie Jo Hoang about her new book, the writing journey, Vietnamese superstitions, and so much more! Dare we say that it’s one of our favorite interviews all year?

    Be sure to check out our in-depth book review of My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser. Until then, let’s get right into our exclusive Jamie Jo Hoang interview! (We kept the number of questions to lucky number eight, of course.)

    Welcome to The Honey POP! We want to start by sharing what an inspiration it is to read books with Vietnamese American representation, of which we can always use more. Do you have any words of wisdom for aspiring AAPI authors or any lessons that have stuck with you thus far?
    Hi, hi! First off, thank you so much for having me. Second, I love this question. I know the goal is to get published (of course it is. I spent more than a decade dreaming of the day I’d find my book on a bookstore shelf), but take stock of this moment, right now where you get to write without judgment or competition. This is where you find your voice and it’s a place you’ll return to when self-doubt or imposter syndrome attack.
    I wrote My Father, The Panda Killer, in this free space, edited it with my peers, my agent and my publishing house editor. Before its release, I was told a well-known Vietnamese author named Minh Lê, yes, the Minh Lê was reading it for a blurb consideration. Panic set in, my hands were shaking – every day I opened emails wondering if I’d be dropped and my book deal pulled. Minh Lê, as it turns out, is the nicest human on earth, and he gave me a wonderful blurb. BUT—and this is key—had it gone the other way, had I not gotten that blurb, I needed to learn to stand tall behind my work. The heart, the voice, the story—it formed long before anyone else read it—it’s mine. And if I don’t believe in it, why should anyone else?
    So yes, celebrate the publication when it comes, but don’t forget this part of the journey—the part where it’s just your ideas and the page. That’s the well you’ll keep drawing from because it’s where your truest voice lives.

    Image Source: Penguin Random House

    My Mother, The Mermaid Chaser

    Congratulations on the release of your new book, My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser! This novel is a companion to My Father, the Panda Killer, which we also absolutely loved. Can you describe your writing/publishing journey with your new book compared to previous ones?
    The writing part hasn’t changed. I still write from a quiet place unhindered by worry of critique. I know what my process is, what works for me, and I trust it. I will say that outwardly, the biggest change is that when people ask me what I do, I now answer, “I’m an author,” with my full voice. Before, I kind of just mumbled it after my name or quickly added my day job out of fear that a drink would be thrown at me and I’d be chased down the street by someone yelling, “fraud, fraud!” Imposter syndrome is real, y’all. LOL.
    The most unbelievable aspect of publishing for me is that my heroes have become my friends. I recall being told at my first major conference that I’d have a signing. My first thought was how cool, then the thought that cut off that microsecond of joy, what if no one comes? When I saw that I would be signing next to a famous author (who claims not to be famous, but she is, I promise you), I nearly peed my pants with joy. If you’re unfamiliar with these dual signing lines, here’s how it works: if you like one author, you come and you get both books. Brilliant! There was no way our line would be empty—phew, relief. But then I had to sit next to said author whose stories opened up my eyes, whose characters I’ve had imaginary conversations with, and pretend like I had not Google-stalked and watched every interview she’d ever done. It’s a rollercoaster of emotions! On the real, though, many authors have been super generous with advice and friendship, it’s healing for someone who is unaccustomed to fitting in.

    In your letter to the reader at the beginning, you mentioned how My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser was inspired by your experience grappling and unpacking your own personal trauma. When did you notice this idea start to take shape? What was the timeline there?
    If my timeline were a picture, it’d look like a Jackson Pollock—chaotic, random, and seemingly unconnected save for the fact that it’s all on one canvas. I have been writing different versions of this story my entire life. I wrote it as part of my college entrance essay, as a screenplay, and as a short story, each a completely different version. The thing about writing Phúc (the father) and Ngọc Lan (the mother) that I had a hard time wrapping my head around was authenticity. I’d done a ton of research, listening to audio through the UCI Archives and watching YouTube interviews, but the truth is, because of the nature of my relationship with my parents, I hadn’t ever had an in-depth conversation with them about what happened. Eventually, instead of fighting what I didn’t know, I leaned into what I did. As you can imagine, dinner after the release of My Father, the Panda Killer was…awkward! My family disowned me, and I haven’t spoken to them since.
    I’m kidding! I’m kidding. Actually, something rather remarkable happened. I asked, in a roundabout way, about what they remembered, and they told me. This is why My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser is a bit closer to my mom’s actual story. And in the process, I discovered something unexpected: despite the difficult light they were sometimes cast in, my parents were grateful that someone was honoring their struggles as boat people.

    Superstitions & Storytelling

    This novel mentions the unlucky number four representing death in Vietnamese culture. What are some other superstitions that you believe in, if any?
    – On Tết (Vietnamese New Year), it’s believed that the aura of the first person who walks through your door sets the tone for the entire year. So, if an angry person walks through first, your house is doomed to conflict all year long. Which is why, every year, I wake up early, exit the back door, circle the house, and re-enter via the front door. If anyone is controlling the aura of my house, it’s going to be me! 😂
    – A staircase in the home should never lead directly to the front door. It means that all your money will flow out. My husband loves this rule—it makes moving so much more fun. 🙃
    – Nothing should obstruct the entrance of your home. It’s like blocking good luck.
    – Whatever happens on Tết sets the pattern for your year. A joyful day means joy all year; a terrible day means sour luck all year. So no matter what, I make sure the day ends on a high note. Champagne helps.

    Paul and Ngọc Lan’s alternating perspectives weave together so well in My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser. How did you balance these two unique voices and time periods while trying to piece together one cohesive story?
    The poetic answer: Writing Paul and Ngọc Lan’s journeys was like guiding two rivers on opposite sides of the country. They moved at varying paces but were always headed toward one another.
    The practical truth: Notecards. I have notecards on a pegboard with different scenes and arrange and rearrange them to connect at specific points in the book.

    Jamie Jo Hoang interview author photo
    Image Source: Jamie Jo Hoang

    What’s Next

    What advice would you give to readers who are also struggling in abusive or manipulative relationships with their parents?
    Healing is an individual practice. I don’t mean that you have to do it alone. I mean that you have to decide, for yourself, what you are willing and unwilling to accept. And then set boundaries. Start with one. For me, I couldn’t control how I was spoken to or what was said about me, to me, but I could choose what I internalized.
    After every corporal punishment I received, my dad would send me to the bathroom to “wash my face.” While there, I would wash myself with affirmations: I am smart. I am kind. I do not deserve this. I did not deserve this. I didn’t always believe myself at the time, but the repetition took root. Those words became the foundation of a place inside me that no one else could reach. Over time, they hardened into armor. And eventually, they transformed into the voice I believed the most.

    We see that you’re celebrating the release of My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser with an event in Houston later this month! Do you plan on visiting other cities? Are there any places still on your bucket list?
    Yes! My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser will launch at Blue Willow Bookshop in Houston, then I’ll be heading to Georgia for the Decatur Book Festival, South Carolina for YALLFEST, and Denver for the National Council of Teachers of English. Houston is my home; I’ve never been to Georgia or South Carolina, so those are bucket list items I’m stoked to get to check off, and Denver is where I was born, so it feels very “full circle!”

    Are you working on any new projects at the moment? If so, what can you tell us about them? If not, what are some of your plans for the rest of 2025?
    Vietnamese Americans are changing how we’re viewed. Our food has been upscaled, our coffee can be found in mainstream markets, our designers are making waves in the fashion industry, and our music is taking center stage at huge venues like SXSW. Vietnamese Americans like me are discovering or rediscovering a pride for our culture, and I’m working on a story that reflects this—one that honors the struggles of our parents while celebrating the creativity, resilience, and joy of a generation that refuses to be invisible.

    I have been writing different versions of this story my entire life. I wrote it as part of my college entrance essay, as a screenplay, and as a short story, each a completely different version.

    Jamie Jo Hoang on My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser

    You can order Jamie Jo Hoang’s My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser here!

    Did you love our exclusive Jamie Jo Hoang interview as much as we did? Let us know your thoughts on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram!

    Need more author interviews? We’ve got plenty!

    Want to hear some of our audiobook recommendations? Here’s the latest!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT JAMIE JO HOANG:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TWITTER | WEBSITE

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    Julie Dam

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