A Best Book of 2023: New York Times Book Review, Publishers Weekly, Book Riot, CrimeReads, and LibbyLife
A LibraryReads Top Ten Pick for July
An Amazon Editors’ Pick for Best Mystery, Thriller & Suspense
A Harlan Coben Recommended Read on “The Today Show”
A CBS New York Club Calvi Late Summer Read
A New York Times Book Review Paperback Row Selection
A NYPL Book of the Day Pick
A Publishers Weekly Pick of the Week
One of The Guardian‘s Thrillers of the Month
One of CrimeReads’ Best 10 Books of July
One of CrimeReads’ Best Psychological Thrillers of July
One of Library Journal’s Best Mystery Books of the Year (So Far)
One of The Millions’ Most Anticipated Books of 2023
One of Book Riot‘s Most Anticipated Books of 2023
A Must-Read Book of Summer in: Town & Country, Parade, Minneapolis Star Tribune, Bookish, New Jersey Monthly, Culturess, Jump Scares
Book Clubs: Strand Bookstore, The Mysterious Bookshop, Aardvark Book Club, Fantastic Strangelings (Nowhere Bookshop), and more
“Watching two diabolical women try to outsmart each other while maintaining their placid facades in the library where they work is only one of the many pleasures of Laura Sims’s deliciously unsettling How Can I Help You.”
—The New York Times Book Review, “Best Thrillers of 2023”
“This cat-and-mouse suspense . . . generates Patricia Highsmith–style psychological fireworks. The narrative’s multiple reveals and shattering climax hit with maximum impact, delivering a deliciously dark monument to extremity that’s among the year’s most exhilarating.”
—Publishers Weekly, “Best Books of 2023”
“How I Can Help You is a gripping and dark psychological thriller about two librarians that takes place in a library. Delicious, right? What more do we book-lovers need to know? I read it one sitting.”
—Harlan Coben, The TODAY Show
“Laura Sims’s unnerving How Can I Help You . . . reads like an homage to Jackson’s work — and, in its portrait of Patricia, to Jackson herself. Sims’s great achievement is to present the two main characters almost as sides of the same coin, colluding in a psychological cat-and-mouse game that only one can win.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Sims plumbs the depths of obsession and madness as she has each woman tell the story in alternating chapters, deftly building the tension until the explosive ending.”
—The Washington Post
“This makes for fine cat-and-mouse (or cat-and-cat?) suspense, but also an unsettling moral tale in which Patricia’s exploitation of her rivetingly grotesque subject — and Laura Sims’s — is called into question.”
—The Sunday Times
“Marvellously intense . . . It is disturbing, compelling — and a lot of fun.”
—The Guardian
“Bringing workplace politics to a fever pitch, How Can I Help You is a delicious mystery begging to be enjoyed beachside. . . . Equal parts cozy mystery and nail-biter, Laura Sims’ latest novel is sure to satisfy just about any thriller craving.”
—Rolling Stone
“A fun and entertaining cat-and-mouse novel . . . about women behaving badly . . . You’ll fly through the pages as Margo and Patricia play mind games, try to outsmart each other, and ultimately both get what’s coming to them.”
—Glamour
“Sims’ audacious story shifts between Margo and Patricia’s points of view in a battle of wits that’s mesmerizing. This exceptional novel is firmly in Highsmith territory and the ending is everything.”
—Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Intense from page one, you’ll root for, abhor, and see yourself in these women as the story makes its way to a disturbing climax. It’s gently creepy.” —Scary Mommy
“A book lover’s dream . . . A taut, high-stakes thriller set in a library . . . that culminates in a shocking climax.”
—Parade
“Without interrupting her plot’s momentum, Sims raises intriguing questions about the wellspring of literary creativity—and even more provocative ones about writerly ethics . . . [For] fans of Shirley Jackson’s eerie fiction . . . How Can I Help You is smartly scary entertainment that will have readers guessing about its outcome until almost the final page . . . Canny and chilling.”
—Shelf Awareness
“I love a good unreliable narrator psychological thriller that explores what it means to be a psychopath/hero/anti-hero. I finished it in a single afternoon because I couldn’t put it down.”
—Jenny Lawson, San Antonio Magazine
“A Highsmithian cat-and-mouse thriller featuring two librarians . . . Sims’s work harkens back to the complex personality studies of mid-century psychological fiction, and pays homage to middle-aged womanhood–serial killers age too, after all.”
—CrimeReads
“Intriguing…[and] leaves you sitting at the edge of your seat.”
—Book Riot’s All the Books!
“A cat-and-mouse between two librarians, told from their alternating perspectives . . . A very fun thriller set at a local library.”
—Town & Country
“An engrossing mystery . . . Sims . . . will keep you guessing in this slow-burn psychological thriller—until the very end.”
—NJ Monthly
“[A] brilliant slice of psychological suspense . . . Sims skillfully alternates between the perspectives of each woman, slowly bringing her simmering plot to a boil, and delivers a stunning climax. Patricia Highsmith fans will savor this unforgettable thriller.”
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
“Librarian Sims (Looker) writes a psychological thriller that stands out in a crowded field . . . Give this unputdownable title to readers who revel in messy and complicated characters.”
—Library Journal, starred review
“A former nurse with a cruel streak and an aspiring novelist check each other out in this eerie thriller set in a library . . . Watching these two women peer at each other as they terrorize the bookshelves is great fun.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“[A] dark, enthralling thriller . . . The characters’ dueling monologues are brilliantly arch and bookish, perfect for the story’s claustrophobic setting. . . . A deliciously dark tale with bright prose, smart dialogue, and a barnburner of an ending. . . . The library will never look quite the same after readers turn the final page.”
—BookBrowse
“A deftly scripted suspense thriller . . . [for] fans of psychological suspense stories that will linger in the mind and memory.”
—Wisconsin Bookwatch
“A compelling take on the complicated relationship between author and muse, as well as the ethics of writing fiction…[and] an absorbing, fast read about the dark sides of care work and public service. If you’ve ever wanted a book that riffs with literary inventiveness on the ‘kill your darlings’ advice often given to authors, then this suspenseful novel with an ending worthy of a horror story is definitely the read for you.”
—Criminal Element
“Chilling . . . Fans of novels with unreliable narrators will want to pick up this thriller as they’ll get two for the price of one. Plus, anyone who has ever worked or spent time in a public library will find much to delight in here.”
—Book Reporter
“An award-winning poet and novelist, Sims also works as a reference librarian, and she adds vivid color to this thriller by detailing the ins and outs of the profession . . . Perfectly blends suspense and satire and will inspire any library patron to look over their shoulder the next time they check out.”
—BookPage
“[A] slow-burn game of cat and mouse . . . The characters are well drawn, and Margo is a particularly enjoyable antihero who brings dark humor to the story . . . Fresh and funny . . . A quick read that is reminiscent of Laura Lippman’s Sunburn and Christine Mangan’s Tangerine.”
—Booklist
“[A] suspenseful novel about obsession.”
—Bookish
“A novel about two librarians caught in a deadly web of intrigue . . . a high-stakes game of cat and mouse.”
—Bustle
“How Can I Help You is an insidiously readable psychological trap set by and for its two unforgettable and unforgiving protagonists. Skillfully constructed and observed, Laura Sims’s novel is a sly meditation on art and identity and the depths we’ll go to protect our constructs. I couldn’t have loved this book more.”
—Paul Tremblay, author of A Head Full of Ghosts and The Cabin at the End of the World
“A dark and spellbinding descent into jolly madness, How Can I Help You is reminiscent of Shirley Jackson at her eerie best. All of Sims’s deliciously wicked powers are on full display in this compulsive and unforgettable novel. A classic.”
—Mona Awad, author of Bunny and All’s Well
“No one writes about obsession like Laura Sims. How Can I Help You is a twisty, disturbing cat-and-mouse game between two women colleagues. I may never look at libraries the same again.”
—Samantha Downing, author of A Twisted Love Story and My Lovely Wife
“Laura Sims’s How Can I Help You takes you inside the seedy underworld of—brace yourself—the small town public library. Turns out, it’s kind of shocking. Turns out, the kindly cardigan-wearing librarians on the other side of the circulation desk have strong feelings about the bad behavior of library patrons—and, even more shocking—are not so well behaved themselves. Sims’s sharp, incisive second novel is an out-and-out page turner.”
—Marcy Dermansky, author of Very Nice and Hurricane Girl
“With transfixing dual female narrators and an artful, innovative structure, How Can I Help You is both a riveting commentary on false pretenses and an utterly beguiling cat and mouse thriller.”
—Kimberly McCreight, New York Times bestselling author of A Good Marriage and Friends Like These
“How Can I Help You is a roller-coaster ride of psychological suspense. The tautly constructed story had me hooked. Margo and Patricia are both hilarious and terrifying. As entertaining as it is, this novel is also a sensitive story about artistic ambition, the need to be seen and heard, and the fragility of relationships formed both inside and outside the workplace. You’ll never look at your colleagues, or your local community librarian, in the same way again.”
—Helen Wan, author of The Partner Track
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