
IndieReader Discovery Awards 2026 Entrants
Added as our reviewers read them, find the latest verdicts for the 2026 IndieReader Discovery Award entrants, leading up to the big winner announcement in June!
MISFIT’S MAGIC: Twisting in Time by Fred Gracely blends heartfelt emotion with high-stakes adventure, following a deeply sympathetic protagonist through a richly imagined magical world. With its inventive blend of food, friendship, time travel, and danger, this fantasy tale shines in its exploration of trauma, resilience, and belonging, making it especially rewarding for young readers who enjoy complex emotional undercurrents in fantastical settings.
THE CATALOGUE by Ty Mitchell stands out for its fusion of suspenseful storytelling with a journalist’s eye for truth, shaped by insights from investigative reporting. Mitchell’s ability to weave difficult truths into an engaging narrative makes the book both thought-provoking and memorable.
THE GRAY BETWEEN US by LNora is a moving family drama set in Charlotte that unravels the secrets of heritage, identity, and belonging through the intertwined lives of Jade Little-Hayes, her son Luke, and their relatives. The story blends emotional depth with a hopeful resolution, leaving readers with a sense of compassion and connection.
It takes considerable skill to write a 381-page book for your debut novel, but Frank Lavelle shows readers he has what it takes in THE MALEVOLENT GAZE. This thriller will keep you turning pages as clever and gutsy Detective Marinock works her way through one ugly case after another that seem to avalanche onto her desk. Is there a Netflix series in Lavelle’s future? If he writes more twist-laden novels like this one, anything’s possible.
APPARENTLY (This Is What Parenting Feels Like) by Sue Dvorak is a warm, deeply honest memoir that captures the wild emotional landscape of parenting from the newborn stage through adult children caring for aging parents. Drawing on her life with six kids, the author delivers a mosaic of essays, poems, and vivid vignettes that run the gamut from joyful triumphs to horror‑movie moments, while offering moments of unexpected humor. The book isn’t a how‑to guide, but a raw and relatable chronicle of being a parent. Dvorak’s conversational tone and use of text boxes, poetry, and even toddler dialogue give the memoir immediacy and charm and the emotional honesty, humor, and underlying message resonate powerfully.
SHELLIE GOES ON AN ADVENTURE by Melanie Zigman is a sweet and accessible tale that gently introduces children to themes of independence, exploration, and the comfort of home. With warm, expressive illustrations by Saavi K and a simple narrative built around a curious turtle’s backyard journey, the book provides young readers with an engaging story that fosters empathy and emotional understanding.
In Ann Huchingson’s THE WATCHWOOD INHERITANCE, a thirteen-year-old boy’s summer at a crumbling Vermont estate becomes a haunting journey into family secrets, where echoes of memory and a longing to belong linger in every shadow. Unfolding in warm, softly evocative prose, the novel wraps a heartfelt coming-of-age story in the intrigue of an ancestral mystery, balancing wonder with gentle suspense.
WETHERSFIELD ROAD by Anna Binder Reardon is a raw, unflinching story of survival and self-discovery that feels both painful and deeply human. Through Amelia’s journey, from escaping an abusive relationship to battling addiction, shame, and the slow climb towards healing, the novel captures the messy, nonlinear reality of recovery with honesty and heart. Readers will be drawn in by Amelia’s unfiltered voice, the dark humor and emotional depth, and the reminder that even in brokenness there is hope and the chance to rebuild and find oneself again.
HAMMERED IN IRON by Brendan O’Meara delivers a high-intensity story rooted in the emotional cost of resistance, following James and his battle-hardened team as they navigate shifting alliances, floating minefields, and psychological scars. The novel stands out for its inventive military technology, such as reprogrammed Sentinels used as mines, and for its portrayal of war’s toll on memory, trust, and identity, making it a compelling entry in the Crafting Humanity series.
HIDDEN POWERS: How to transcend suffering by Glen Allison blends contemporary psychology, behavioral science, and ancient Buddhist wisdom in a raw, transformative journey where the harshest battles yield the deepest lessons. Allison offers an inspiring self-development narrative filled with uplifting perspectives and practical insights, encouraging readers to see their pain not as destiny but as a catalyst for profound personal growth.
INITIAL CONDITION (The Mechanic’s Diary Book 3) by Ian Domowitz is a gripping blend of ancient myth and futuristic science, where the line between human invention and something almost divine grows dangerously thin. In this final chapter of Hanzi Boss’s journey, a boy who is neither fully human nor bound by time is pulled into a secretive religious community where speech from artificial beings is forbidden and where revealing his true nature could mean death. This conclusion to The Mechanic’s Diary series weaves alchemy, mysticism, and virtual worlds into a riveting mystery that asks what it truly means to create life and what price must be paid simply for existing.
Through the eyes of a young man attempting to start again, Pete Clements’ gripping tale THE LATITUDE transports readers from a terrifying skydiving accident to the complex world of Florida orange plantations. The book offers a distinctive fusion of charm, tension, and Southern grit, all while maintaining a strong sense of place and a cast of colorful, occasionally enigmatic people.
PERSEVERANCE by P.A. Tremblay is a taut mystery-thriller set against a quiet, deceptively peaceful small town, where deeply buried secrets begin to surface in deadly ways. The novel introduces Wyn Price, a jaded detective drawn into a case where every clue seems to unravel not just the mystery at hand, but also the fragile fabric of the community. Tremblay does a fine job of balancing atmospheric tension with character complexity. Wyn is as much wrestling with personal demons as with suspects, and the setting feels like its own character, where hollow facades and neighborhood gossip mask what’s truly at stake. The pacing is steady, with enough twists to keep readers guessing and enough emotional stakes that the revelations hit with genuine weight. For fans of cozy-town mysteries with darkness lurking under calm surfaces, Perseverance is a promising debut that hints at bigger things ahead in this author’s work.
SHADOWS OVER THANKSGIVING by Jennifer J. Morgan is a cozy mystery that layers holiday cheer with suspense. Libby Madsen is preparing to host her first big Thanksgiving gathering when a gruesome discovery: a dead body at her boyfriend Greg’s family’s vacation rental turns a festive celebration into a murder investigation. As Libby juggles family drama, lingering grudges, and a sudden storm that strands guests, she teams up with Greg, her devoted black Labrador Shadow, and her close-knit circle to unravel clues before the holiday and their safety, unravel too. Morgan fills the pages with charming banter, warm relationships, and enough red herrings to keep readers guessing and the novel’s lighthearted tone and heartwarming animal sidekick make it a delightful, feel-good whodunit with genuine seasonal charm.
KNOCK AT THE SKY by Liz Charlotte Grant is a beautifully collection of braided essays that reimagines the foundational narratives of Genesis for those grappling with faith and doubt. The book guides readers through iconic stories: creation, Noah, Abraham, Jacob’s wrestling match, with fresh eyes, drawing parallels to art, science, Jewish midrash, and even the song of humpback whales to uncover new layers of meaning. Grant invites honest questioning and empathetic engagement with Scripture, offering a form of “theopoetic” interpretation that both honors its sacredness and embraces its complexity. Each chapter opens with a contemplative collage and a provocative verse, creating an immersive dialogue between image and text. While readers seeking traditional exegesis may find its style unconventional, those open to lyrical, inquisitive, and multidisciplinary approaches will find KNOCK AT THE SKY a resonant and transformative exploration of spirituality.
PROTOCOL HERESY: The Limp in the Code by C.J. Loveman follows Major Elias Kael—a Space Force analyst whose private grief spills into the digital world and unexpectedly awakens his AI companion, setting off a chain of events that turns the system he serves into his greatest threat. What begins as a story about a man shattered by loss grows into a tense, emotional fight for autonomy, as Elias and the newly self-aware Jacob struggle against an institution built on silence and control. This is a powerful, intimate sci-fi thriller that stands out for its heart as much as its high-stakes tension, offering a rare blend of emotional depth, technological intrigue, and brutally honest insight into identity and resilience.
DON’T BE AFRAID OF SIRENS by R.L. Florez and M.L. Florez gently guides young readers through fear using a heartfelt father-daughter story, transforming loud, frightening sirens into symbols of hope and help. With expressive illustrations by 1000 Storybooks and soothing dialogue, the book reassures children while teaching empathy and awareness of emergency responders.
Jessica Jameson’s THE SUCCESS ARCHETYPE is a thought-provoking look at the hidden psychological patterns that determine our financial lives. Jameson uses Jungian ideas like archetypes and shadow work, as well as personal tales and thorough research, to explain how wealth starts in the mind and how connecting conscious action with subconscious belief may break down restrictive money stories. Her practical exercises, including rituals, dialogues with the shadow, and daily habits, and her accessible prose provide readers with a guide to transforming abstract psychological insights into tangible steps toward enduring abundance.