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Author: Molly Maple
FREE
Cozy Culinary Mystery

Charlotte McKay moves to the small town of Sweetwater Falls to care for her elderly aunt, trading city life for something quieter and more manageable. She finds a dead body on her first day. Molly Maple establishes the Cupcake Crimes series with the kind of cheerfully chaotic small-town setup that cozy mystery readers love—a heroine who came for a fresh start and immediately found herself in the middle of a homicide investigation, with local law enforcement treating her as a suspect rather than a neighbor. 🧁

Sweetwater Falls is the sort of town that looks idyllic from the outside and harbors an impressive quantity of dark secrets beneath the charm. Charlotte’s new neighbors are loveable and suspicious in roughly equal measure, and her aunt has the inconvenient habit of disappearing at precisely the moments when danger appears. Maple uses the family dynamic to give Charlotte an anchor amid the chaos—she came here for connection, and she’s finding it, just not in the form she expected. 🔍

The cozy culinary element is woven into the series DNA rather than bolted on—the baking is as much a part of Sweetwater Falls’ identity as the charming main street and the neighbors with secrets. Charlotte’s gradual integration into the community gives the series its emotional through-line, and the mystery plotting keeps things moving with enough genuine tension that the sweetness of the setting never tips into saccharine. For readers who like their small-town mysteries warm, funny, and populated with characters who feel like people rather than types, this is a series opener worth picking up. ☕

Why this charms: A city woman, a cozy small town, a dead body on day one, and an aunt who keeps vanishing—Vanilla Vengeance is a delightful cozy mystery series opener with real wit underneath the warmth.

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Author: Anne Shillolo
FREE
Murder Mystery

Hilary Casgrain left city policing—with all its shootings, corruption, and gang violence—specifically to find something quieter. A small-town posting where drunken tourists and fender benders constitute the serious incidents. A chance to get her life back on track without the weight of urban chaos pressing down on her. A serial killer was not part of the plan. Anne Shillolo establishes the Elk Ridge series with a setup that delivers genuine procedural tension underneath the small-town exterior. 🚔

The complication that makes Hilary’s fresh start immediately complicated is George “Goat” Rundle—her new sergeant, and the man she holds responsible for the worst moment of her professional life. His odd sense of humor grates, his presence is a constant reminder of everything she came here to escape, and yet he is also deadly serious about protecting his team. Shillolo handles the antagonistic-colleagues dynamic with enough character specificity that both Hilary and Goat feel like real people rather than plot positions. 🌲

The serial killer case, known as the Hangman, provides the central dramatic pressure—and the fact that Hilary’s newest officer, Riley Mills, is a dead ringer for the killer’s victims gives the investigation a personal urgency that goes beyond professional responsibility. The small-town-versus-big-city-cop dynamic is handled without condescension in either direction, and Hilary’s internal reckoning with her past runs alongside the external case in ways that give both dimensions genuine weight. ⚖️

Why this grips you: A detective fleeing city trauma, a nemesis as her new sergeant, a serial killer, and a junior officer who looks exactly like the next victim—Murder at Elk Ridge is procedural crime fiction with real stakes.

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Author: Kari Lee Townsend
FREE
Cozy Mystery

Sunshine Meadows is the real deal—a genuine psychic whose visions are accurate, whose readings are uncannily precise, and whose gift occasionally lands her in serious trouble. Leaving New York behind, Sunny settles in the quaint town of Divinity, New York, opens a shop in an ancient Victorian house, and quickly becomes a trusted presence in the community. Then a routine tea-leaf reading for the local librarian reveals something dark, and when the vision comes true, Sunny finds herself on the wrong side of Detective Mitch Stone’s suspicion. Kari Lee Townsend sets the paranormal cozy up with real atmospheric confidence. 🍵

The central tension is elegantly constructed: the same gift that makes Sunny useful makes her look guilty. She predicted the death, which means she either caused it or knew about it in advance—and a hard-nosed detective who doesn’t believe in psychics has only one framework for processing that coincidence. Townsend plays the skeptic-versus-believer dynamic with genuine wit, giving Stone enough intelligence that his skepticism feels reasonable rather than obstructionist. ✨

The Divinity setting—a small town that lives up to its name in ways both charming and slightly uncanny—is rendered with real warmth, and the Victorian shop gives Sunny a physical space with its own character. The cozy mystery genre conventions are all present and deployed with skill, but the paranormal element gives the series a distinctive flavor that distinguishes it from the crowded small-town mystery shelf. Townsend manages the balance between the supernatural and the procedural without letting either undermine the other. 🔍

Why this draws you in: A real psychic, a vision that comes true, a skeptical detective who thinks she’s a suspect, and a town called Divinity that is exactly as interesting as it sounds—Tempest in the Tea Leaves is paranormal cozy mystery at its most entertaining.

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Author: Annabelle McCormack
FREE
Rivals to Lovers Small Town Romance

Samantha Redding left Brandywood, Maryland behind years ago, fleeing gossip, feuds, and memories she had no interest in revisiting. She built a life as a lifestyle photographer, put real distance between herself and the past, and had no intention of returning—until her mother falls ill and a short holiday visit becomes an extended stay. Annabelle McCormack grounds the small-town return romance in genuine necessity rather than contrived coincidence, which gives Sam’s situation immediate emotional credibility. 📷

The Christmas project that demands a new location pulls Sam into contact with Garrett Doyle—her ex-boyfriend’s best friend, a man she has always categorized as a frenemy and nothing more. Why he suddenly seems so irresistible is a question Sam would rather not examine too closely. McCormack builds the rivals-to-lovers dynamic with real specificity: this isn’t a straightforward enemies-to-lovers setup but something more complicated, involving existing loyalties, shared history, and the particular awkwardness of falling for someone who belongs to a chapter of your life you tried to close. 🎄

The snow-covered small-town Christmas atmosphere is rendered with warmth without becoming overwhelming, and the buried secrets that begin surfacing give the romance genuine stakes beyond the romantic tension. Sam’s reckoning with Brandywood—the people she left, the reasons she left them, and what it might mean to stay—gives the novel a character arc that runs alongside the love story and earns the eventual emotional resolution. The Brandywood series establishes a world worth returning to. 💙

Why this draws you in: A reluctant hometown return, her ex’s best friend, a Christmas project, and long-buried secrets threatening everyone she loves—All This Time is small-town rivals-to-lovers romance with genuine emotional depth.

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Author: Amy Knupp
FREE
Contemporary Romance

Cole North has a sky-high IQ and a significant blind spot when it comes to people and relationships—a combination that has led him to a career in construction he genuinely loves and a set of secret feelings for his boss Sierra that he has no idea what to do with. He’s decided that since he could never be right for her personally, he’ll settle for being exactly what she needs professionally. It’s a sustainable arrangement, right up until it isn’t. Amy Knupp builds the slow-burn workplace romance with real character specificity. 🏗️

Sierra Lowell is creative, hardworking, and has navigated the challenges of being a woman in a male-dominated industry with a clear-eyed professionalism that has served her well. The one line she has never crossed is the personal one with Cole—smart, steady, unmistakably attractive Cole—because she understands exactly what adding emotions to the professional equation could cost her. Then a wedding date crisis and a once-in-a-lifetime television opportunity arrive simultaneously, and the carefully maintained professional distance starts to collapse. 💙

The fake date setup is a reliable romance engine, and Knupp runs it with the emotional intelligence the series is built on. The workplace dynamic gives the romance real-world stakes beyond the personal—these aren’t people who can simply feel their feelings without consequences, and that constraint gives the tension genuine weight. The North Brothers series has a devoted readership, and this entry demonstrates why the combination of grounded character work and genuine romantic heat keeps readers coming back. ✨

Why this wins you over: A loner with secret feelings for his boss, a fake date that gets complicated fast, and a workplace romance that has actual consequences—True North is contemporary romance with real emotional payoff.

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Author: Nancy Warren
FREE
Mystery Romance

Peony Bellefleur runs Bewitching Blooms in a picture-perfect Cotswold village, and her flowers have a reputation for making the sick improve and wedding days happier—because she infuses them with actual magic. She’s a witch in a village that looks too perfect to be true, which turns out to be because it is. Nancy Warren, author of the beloved Great Witches Baking Show series, brings the same cozy paranormal sensibility to the Village Flower Shop series with a setting and a protagonist that are immediately appealing. 🌸

Peony’s daily life is already complicated enough: running the shop, managing a mother who is a medium with a habit of conversing with the dead in public at the least convenient moments, and helping her protégée navigate newly discovered powers. Warren gives the supporting cast genuine comic texture—the medium mother in particular is deployed with the kind of affectionate absurdism that distinguishes Warren’s paranormal world-building from the generic. When a suspicious death interrupts the village’s charmed surface, Peony has more than just professional concerns. 🌺

The mystery plotting sits comfortably within the cozy tradition—the Cotswold setting is atmospheric and specific, the cast of suspects is colorful, and the investigation gives Peony a reason to engage with village life in ways that deepen the world beyond a single book. The flower shop framing is used well: the magical properties of Peony’s bouquets give her investigative access that a civilian might not have, and Warren doesn’t waste the conceit. The title’s pun lands with exactly the right light touch. 🔍

Why this blooms: A witch florist in a too-perfect Cotswold village, a medium mother causing scenes, and a murder that needs solving before Peony is the one pushing up daisies—Peony Dreadful is Nancy Warren doing what she does best.

The Coincidence of Coconut Cake

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Author: Amy E. Reichert
Regularly $13.99, Today $1.99
Romantic Comedy

Lou has been pouring everything into Luella’s, her beloved French restaurant in downtown Milwaukee—balancing small business pressures with wedding plans and a demanding fiancé—when she discovers the fiancé in a compromising situation with an intern. On what is already the worst day of her professional life, an anonymous tip sends gruff British food critic Al to review Luella’s, and his devastating write-up threatens to close her doors for good. Amy E. Reichert sets up the enemies-to-lovers rom-com with real comic timing and genuine stakes on both sides. 🍰

The mistaken identity twist is the book’s great pleasure: Lou and Al meet by chance in a pub, neither knowing they’re on opposite sides of a professional disaster, and proceed to fall for each other while exploring Milwaukee’s hidden culinary gems. Reichert builds the chemistry with the warmth of two people who genuinely enjoy each other’s company and the dramatic irony of a reader who knows exactly what’s coming. The Milwaukee food scene is rendered with real specificity and obvious affection throughout. 🏙️

When the truth finally surfaces, Reichert handles the betrayal and its aftermath with more emotional honesty than the genre typically allows—Lou’s hurt is real and the resolution doesn’t come cheaply. The culinary dimension is woven into the story’s DNA rather than used as set dressing: food is how Lou expresses herself and how Lou and Al connect, which means the restaurant stakes are also emotional stakes. The Coincidence of Coconut Cake is a rom-com that earns its happy ending. 💛

Why this delights: A devastated chef, a scathing food critic, a chance meeting where neither knows who the other is, and Milwaukee’s hidden culinary gems binding them together—a rom-com with real flavor.

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Author: Sven Carlsson, Jonas Leijonhufvud
Regularly $17.99, Today $2.99
Company Histories

Steve Jobs tried to stop it. Google and Microsoft made bids to preempt it. The major music labels fought it at every turn. And yet on a summer evening in 2011, the CEO of a Swedish startup celebrated his company’s US launch—and the music industry would never be the same. Sven Carlsson and Jonas Leijonhufvud covered Spotify from its inception as Swedish investigative tech journalists, and their access and reporting depth gives this account an authority that outsider histories rarely achieve. 🎵

The story they tell is genuinely remarkable: Daniel Ek built Spotify during the height of the Apple-Android tech war and the music industry’s crusade against piracy, somehow convincing the hardline executives at Universal, Sony, and Warner to sign with a freemium platform they had every reason to distrust. The negotiation strategies, the near-collapses, the figures who shaped the outcome—Mark Zuckerberg, Sean Parker, Jimmy Iovine, Taylor Swift—are all rendered with the specific detail that hundreds of interviews and previously untapped sources can provide. 📱

The David versus many Goliaths framing is entirely accurate and never feels tired because the specific obstacles Ek faced were genuinely formidable and the solutions genuinely creative. The book has been adapted into a Netflix Original series called The Playlist, which tells you something about the narrative quality of the underlying material. For anyone interested in how the music industry was disrupted, how tech companies navigate entrenched incumbents, or simply how one person can reshape an entire cultural sector, this is essential reading. 🏆

Why this is essential: The definitive inside account of how Spotify beat Apple, Google, and the music labels—by two journalists who were there from the beginning.

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Author: Wilma Mankiller, Michael Wallis
Regularly $19.99, Today $2.99
Biographies of Political Leaders

Wilma Mankiller became the first woman elected Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation in 1985, a position she held until 1995 and used to transform her Nation’s approach to self-governance, community development, and the relationship between Indigenous peoples and the federal government. Her autobiography—written with Michael Wallis—is both a personal memoir and a sweeping account of Cherokee history, told from the inside by someone who lived it and shaped it simultaneously. It is one of the essential American biographies of the twentieth century. 🌿

Mankiller’s life unfolds against the backdrop of the American Indian civil rights movement—her own activism began in the 1960s and 70s before she returned to Oklahoma and entered tribal politics. The book moves through her childhood in rural poverty, the federal relocation program that moved her family to San Francisco, her political awakening, the personal adversities including a near-fatal car accident and kidney disease, and the improbable path to the Cherokee Nation’s highest office. She writes with the directness and spiritual grounding that defined her public voice. 🦅

The updated edition covers her life after stepping down as Chief, including her second kidney transplant and the Medal of Freedom—the nation’s highest civilian honor—awarded by President Clinton in 1998. Mankiller died in 2010, and her legacy has only grown in the years since: she was commemorated on the US quarter in 2022 as part of the American Women Quarters program. This autobiography is the essential primary text for understanding both the woman and the Nation she led. ⭐

Why this endures: One of the great American autobiographies—a woman who led her Nation with vision and courage, in her own words.

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Author: Niall Kirkland, The Good Bite
Regularly $3.99, Today $0.99
Healthy Cooking

Niall Kirkland built The Good Bite on a single mission: bridge the gap between healthy and genuinely delicious, in a way that actually works for real people with real schedules. The High Protein Meal Prep Manual delivers 80 calorie-counted recipes—every single one photographed—designed for meal prep, air fryer, and slow cooker cooking. The range is deliberately ambitious: PB&J Protein French Toast, Sticky Korean Popcorn Chicken, Slow Cooker Sweet Potato Shepherd’s Pie, Hot Honey Halloumi Pittas with Harissa-Lime Mayo. These are not sad desk lunches. 🥗

The meal prep framing is what makes the book practically useful rather than aspirationally useful. Kirkland organizes everything around the reality of filling your fridge once and eating well all week, which addresses the actual obstacle between people and healthy eating—not knowledge or motivation but time and friction. The air fryer and slow cooker chapters in particular are designed for maximum output with minimum active kitchen time. All five daily categories—breakfast, lunch, dinner, desserts, and snacks—are covered. 💪

The nutritional transparency is unusually thorough: full breakdowns for every recipe, guidance on calculating your ideal protein intake, and barcodes that feed directly into food-tracking apps. For anyone using MyFitnessPal, Cronometer, or similar tools, this removes the manual logging friction that derails most meal prep habits. Kirkland’s background as a content creator means he understands what actually motivates people to cook, and the book’s tone reflects that understanding throughout. 🏋️

Why this belongs in your kitchen: Eighty high-protein meal prep recipes that are actually delicious, fully photographed, and designed for real life—The Good Bite’s High Protein Meal Prep Manual earns its place on the practical cookbook shelf.

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Author: Joan Detz
Regularly $17.99, Today $2.99
Communication Skills

Joan Detz has spent decades as a speechwriter and coach, and this guide distills that experience into a practical manual that has sold more than 65,000 copies across two editions—recommended by Forbes and U.S. News & World Report, which suggests it has earned its reputation rather than simply claimed it. The updated and expanded third edition covers the full lifecycle of a speech: researching the topic, assessing the audience, making structural decisions, and then delivering with confidence and authority. 🎤

The practical range is genuinely comprehensive: using imagery, quotations, repetition, and humor; keeping it simple without losing substance; special-occasion speeches with their distinct demands; speaking to international audiences; and the thorny question of visual aids including PowerPoint, which Detz addresses with the healthy skepticism of someone who has watched too many presentations be destroyed by slides. The section on social media and the latest technology keeps the advice current without making the fundamentals feel dated. 📋

What distinguishes this from the crowded public speaking shelf is Detz’s focus on the writing as much as the delivery—the book takes seriously the idea that a speech is a piece of writing with specific requirements, not just a set of talking points to be animated by personality. The anecdotes and examples throughout are drawn from real speechwriting experience rather than hypothetical scenarios, which gives the advice a grounded quality that purely academic treatments of the subject rarely achieve. For anyone who has to make words count in front of an audience, this is the guide worth having. 🏆

Why this is worth your time: A speechwriter and coach’s definitive practical guide—researching, writing, and delivering with authority, from a proven resource with 65,000 copies sold.

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Author: Matt Norman
Regularly $14.98, Today $3.99
Personal Success in Business

Most people in organizations who need to influence others don’t have formal authority over them—they’re subject matter experts, functional leads, project managers, and problem solvers whose effectiveness depends entirely on their ability to bring people along without being able to simply direct them. Matt Norman, presenting the Dale Carnegie framework, opens with the observation that this skill—positive influence without authority—is the professional superpower that most people never learn to develop. 💼

The standard substitute most people reach for is logical argument combined with repeated pressure: build the rational case, make it again, make it louder. Norman is direct about why this doesn’t work—it activates resistance rather than buy-in, and it rarely produces the genuine collaboration and alignment that organizations actually need. The five-step process he offers instead is grounded in psychological research and field-tested through Dale Carnegie’s decades of organizational work, which gives it a practical credibility that pure theory lacks. 📊

The applications are wide: breaking down silos, improving cross-functional collaboration, accelerating decisions, and developing the kind of organizational culture where influence flows in multiple directions rather than only downward through hierarchy. Norman also addresses the individual dimension—people who develop genuine influence without authority tend to experience higher engagement and better sense of professional worth, which makes this as much a career development book as an organizational effectiveness one. 🚀

Why this is worth your attention: A proven Dale Carnegie framework for the skill that determines professional effectiveness more than almost any other—leading and influencing without the authority to command.

… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2