She can move things with her mind—and that’s the least dangerous part of her job. Snarky, high-octane, and delightfully irreverent, The Girl Who Could Move Sht with Her Mind* hurls a telekinetic fixer into a conspiracy that refuses to sit still.
Have you read this book? Share what you liked (or didn’t), and we’ll use your answers to recommend your next favorite read!
These picks are popular with readers who enjoyed this book. Complete a quick Shelf Talk to get recommendations made just for you! Warning: possible spoilers for The Girl Who Could Move Sh*t with Her Mind below.
If you loved Teagan’s razor-edged wit while juggling black-ops errands and a telekinetic frame-up in Los Angeles, you’ll click with Myfanwy Thomas waking up with no memory and discovering she’s a high-ranking operative in a secret British agency that manages the uncanny. The Rook blends brisk action with dry humor and bureaucratic weirdness, delivering that same breezy, irreverent tone you enjoyed while the hero navigates dangerous missions and impossible powers.
You liked how The Girl Who Could Move Sht with Her Mind* rockets from kitchen brawls to rooftop chases as Teagan races to clear her name. Zero Sum Game hits the same gear: Cas Russell’s near-superhuman math skills turn gunfights and car chases in Los Angeles into jaw-dropping calculations, and the plot barely stops to breathe. It’s kinetic, quippy, and ruthless—perfect if you crave that propulsive, high-adrenaline ride.
If Teagan’s off-the-books team jobs and precision infiltrations were your jam, Foundryside serves up a master-class heist. Thief Sancia Grado steals a device powered by a rules-based magic that rewrites reality, forcing her to assemble a crew for escalating break-ins against ruthless merchant houses. It’s the same caper energy—clever planning, chaotic execution, and improvised escapes—just with a dazzling twist on how power works.
Teagan’s scramble to solve a killing that looks exactly like her own impossible ability mirrors PC Peter Grant’s plunge into his first magical homicide in Rivers of London. You’ll get the same mix of forensics-meets-weirdness, a city that becomes a character, and a case that keeps widening as new occult threads appear—plus a dry, self-aware voice to match the tone you enjoyed.
If the covert program pulling Teagan’s strings and the messy choices around using her telekinesis hooked you, Vicious leans hard into that moral gray. Victor and Eli create their abilities through lethal experiments, then turn their powers on each other—drawing in vulnerable allies and forcing brutal decisions. It’s the same charged question you enjoyed: what lines do you cross when power and survival collide?
Unlock your personalized book recommendations! Just take a quick Shelf Talk for The Girl Who Could Move Sh*t with Her Mind by Jackson Ford. It’s only a few questions and takes less than a minute.