I loved Killers of the Flower Moon - such an intriguing (and distressing) story, and engagingly written.

My ebook loan is about up on The Five, the history book about the five women victims of Jack the Ripper. I haven't finished it and I don't know if I will this time, it's just a bit too dark for me at the moment. But it is well written and intriguing and I'd recommend if it sounds like your kind of thing.

Seconding Dune series!
I keep looking through the online library apps, and not sure what I want. Definitely nothing heavy!
Right now I've started "A Spark of White Fire" which is a sci fi retelling of the Mahabrahata.
Often I gravitate to YA for fiction, because I don't want stories with graphic sex and violence. Plus magic and monsters are always fun!
I'll read cozy cat/dog mysteries too. My favorites are the Midnight Louie series

I've been rereading my way through the Vorkosigan stories by Lois McMaster Bujold. Sci-fi but witty and with much psychological insight. I started in January when I was laid up with influenza. After I'd progressed through all the paper ones I could find in my collection, I downloaded the remaining audio books from the library and am working through them on my commute. They are engaging but not demanding, so appeal to my brain which is somewhat overfried with trying to stay on top of the latest news.
I strongly recommend them to anyone.

I just finished A spanner in the works, which is about a woman who started the first all female garage in Australia, in the 1920s.

Only one library book left after that,and a few other unread ones at home. Making myself read what I have rather than what I feel like is the challenge!

DH has a kindle sub, and while I have been a physical reader til now, that may change.

12 years a slave is a riveting read, can see why it was made into a award winning movie. Also highly recommend The Help if you haven't seen the film and the trilogy 'Darkness, Dawn and Daylight' by Eli Wiesel, the famed Holocaust survivor. Also book versions of Centennial, Rich Man Poor Man, The Immigrants (from the 80's?) all excellent in my biased opinion Anyone a fan of the gangster films of the 30's/40's Cagney by Cagney is top notch. If you're on facebook, please check out the heartfelt and beautifully written posts (rather short story form) on The Pongo Fund that were written by the founder, Larry Chusid. He is an amazingly talented writer and they don't hassle you for $. But keep a tissue box nearby and don't be suprised if you decide to help.

I finished The Poppy War - recommend if you like fantasy and adventure. It's basically a coming-of-age fantasy retelling of Chinese history up through WWII and the beginning of a series. It is pretty visceral/violent with the scenes of battle, though.

Also flew through Midnight Riot, the first in the Rivers of London series. It's a London police mystery but it turns out magic is real. Really well written and engaging.

My place in the queue for the new JD Robb has come up - proof that we're all sitting at home reading more than usual, as when I first added the hold a few weeks ago it estimated I'd be waiting 6 months!

I finished Golden in Death, JD Robb's latest mystery. I felt like it was light on all the aspects that made the series unique - the future setting and all the futuristic aspects. But this is number 50 or something crazy so I guess it makes sense she's running out of ideas. I'm not sure I'll try to keep up with the series anymore.

I've got several titles on my Kindle from the library right now, but I'm not doing well on concentrating on them.

How about y'all; anyone spend their Easter reading?

I like historical mysteries. Right now I am reading “The Murder Stone” by Charles Todd that takes place in an English village in the WWI times.
Religious: “Cloud of the Unknowing “ a contemplative classic and kind of mystic.

Gretchen - I think we have similar tastes in books. I finished the Kingmaker series a few months ago, I've read everything Nalini Singh has written and I'm working my way through Ilona Andrews backlog - just finished the 2nd book in the Kate Daniels series. I recently started the Immortals After Dark series by Kresley Cole and I think it's perfect escapism for my life right now.

Peri - I read the Starless Sea last month. I read 2/3 of it and then had to start over. It made much more sense the 2nd time through. I'm generally fairly blind to symbolism in books and that book is just chock full of symbols.

I've read the Dune series several times and it gets weirder and weirder the more books you read. Now when I reread I usually stop after the first 2.