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Author: Stephen Penner
FREE
Legal Thriller

A young man with every advantage in life stands accused of murdering his own grandparents. The media is in a frenzy. The state has deployed their best prosecutor. And the family, despite everything, has hired the best defense attorney in town: Talon Winter. The case itself isn’t the hardest part. The hardest part is that her client is almost certainly guilty. ⚖️

Stephen Penner has built the Talon Winter series around a defense attorney who is brilliant, principled, and deeply uncomfortable with the moral grey zones her profession demands — and Winter’s Duty puts that discomfort front and center. As the trial unfolds, Talon is simultaneously tempted by an opportunity to leave criminal law altogether, forcing her to confront what justice actually means when the system works exactly as designed. 🏛️

This is legal thriller territory that goes well beyond courtroom procedure. Penner is genuinely interested in the ethics of criminal defense — in what it means to fight hard for someone you believe is guilty, and whether doing so makes you complicit or essential. It’s the kind of moral tension that makes for compulsive reading precisely because there’s no clean answer. 📋

What makes this essential: A smart, morally serious legal thriller that asks uncomfortable questions about justice, duty, and the price of being very good at a job that sometimes requires you to win cases you probably shouldn’t. New readers can jump in here, but fans of the series will find this the most emotionally complex entry yet.

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Author: AJ Newman
FREE
Post-Apocalyptic Fiction

By 2038, the signs had been there for years — financial instability, geopolitical tensions, the quiet spread of biological threats. What nobody anticipated was all three hitting at once. Walt was like most Americans: vaguely aware things were bad, trusting that the government would muddle through. He was wrong about that, fatally wrong, and now the country he knew no longer exists. 🇺🇸

AJ Newman’s After America series sits squarely in the prepper fiction tradition — practical, propulsive, and deeply invested in the question of what ordinary people actually do when civilization stops functioning. Walt isn’t a trained survivalist or a former special forces operator. He’s resourceful and stubborn and willing to work, which turns out to matter more than anyone expected. 🔦

As Walt assembles a group of like-minded survivors — people with complementary skills and the shared conviction that giving up isn’t an option — the series establishes the human stakes that make post-apocalyptic fiction worth reading. The action is grounded and believable, and Newman resists the temptation to make survival look easy or heroic. It’s hard, ugly work, and the book doesn’t pretend otherwise. 🌎

Why this grips from page one: A gritty, fast-moving series opener for fans of realistic post-collapse fiction with an everyman protagonist worth rooting for. If you’ve ever wondered what you’d actually do when the safety net disappears entirely, this book will keep you reading well past midnight.

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Author: Tess Thompson
FREE
Clean & Wholesome Romance

At eighteen, Brandi made the most painful decision of her life: she let Trapper Barnes go. He had dreams of playing professional hockey, and she was pregnant with his child — a secret she chose to carry alone rather than derail his future. Then she lost the baby. Grief, silence, and flour became her world, and over the years she built a bakery that became the heart of Emerson Pass, Colorado. 🍰

Trapper comes home a decade later not as a triumphant athlete but as a man whose career has been ended by injury. He dreaded seeing Brandi. What he didn’t expect was falling straight back into love with her — or the persistent feeling that she’s keeping something from him he has a right to know. 🏔️

Tess Thompson is one of the most reliably satisfying writers in the small-town romance genre, and The Sugar Queen showcases everything her longtime readers love: rich Colorado atmosphere, warm community bonds, and emotional stakes that feel genuinely earned rather than manufactured. The dual POV structure gives both Brandi and Trapper full, complex inner lives. 💕

What makes this special: A beautifully constructed second-chance romance built on a secret with real emotional weight. Perfect for readers who want their happily-ever-afters to cost something first — and a wonderful series opener for anyone ready to spend more time in Emerson Pass.

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Author: Chasity Bowlin
FREE
Victorian Historical Romance

Douglas Ashton — known throughout London as “Devil,” Lord Deveril — earned his scandalous reputation honestly. Wild, reckless, and constitutionally incapable of respectable behavior, he was packed off to India by a disgusted father and spent years serving the Crown while his family fell apart at home. He returns to England too late to save his sister from a fortune hunter — but perhaps not too late to save her daughter. 🎩

The problem is finding a governess willing to work in the household of the most notorious lord in England. Any respectable woman who takes the position destroys her own reputation by association. Which means Devil needs someone who has nothing left to lose — or someone brave enough not to care. 🏰

Chasity Bowlin has built the Hellion Club series around the Darrow School, where illegitimate daughters of the nobility are sent to be made employable and kept out of sight. It’s a setting that crackles with social tension — propriety and passion at constant war — and Bowlin deploys it with wit and genuine historical atmosphere. The romance that develops between Devil and his very unconventional governess has the slow-burn chemistry that Victorian historical fans live for. 🌹

Why this irresistible: A scorching Victorian romance with a hero whose reputation is entirely deserved and a heroine who refuses to be intimidated by it. Perfect for fans of Lorraine Heath and Eloisa James — and a series opener that will have you immediately reaching for book two.

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Author: Tess Thompson
FREE
Small Town Romance

After testifying against her own father — a mob boss — nurse Kara Boggs enters witness protection and disappears into a quiet seaside town under a new name. Keeping her head down isn’t just a preference; it’s survival. The last thing she needs is to feel something for the man she’s been hired to care for. 🌊

Brody Mullen should be celebrating a Super Bowl win. Instead he comes home to find his mother injured and the beloved housekeeper who helped raise him gravely ill. He hires a private nurse, expecting competence and professionalism. He doesn’t expect Kara — kind, careful, and completely determined to stay invisible — to make him feel less alone than he has in years. 🏈

Tess Thompson is second to none at this particular flavor of romance — the kind where the stakes are real, the attraction is slow and earned, and the small-town setting feels like a warm embrace rather than a backdrop. Cliffside Bay is the kind of fictional community readers return to series after series, and this opener establishes why. 🏡

What makes this irresistible: A warmhearted romance with genuine suspense woven through it — because Kara’s past isn’t finished with her, and love has a way of making people visible at exactly the wrong moment. Perfect for Tess Thompson fans and a wonderful entry point for new readers.

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Author: Wilkie Collins
Regularly $6.99, Today $1.99
Traditional Detective Mysteries

On a moonlit London road, drawing instructor Walter Hartright encounters a woman dressed entirely in white who emerges from the darkness and begs for his help. She knows Limmeridge House — the very estate where Walter is headed in the morning. Only after he sees her safely into a cab does he learn the chilling truth: she has just escaped from an insane asylum. 🌙

At Limmeridge, Walter falls hopelessly in love with the beautiful Laura Fairlie — only to watch helplessly as she goes through with her engagement to the baronet Sir Percival Gyde. What Walter doesn’t yet know is that Sir Percival has sinister designs on Laura’s inheritance, and his entire plot hinges on her uncanny resemblance to the mysterious woman in white. 🌹

Published in 1859, The Woman in White is widely credited as one of the first sensation novels and a direct ancestor of the modern mystery thriller. Wilkie Collins constructs his narrative through multiple narrators — diaries, letters, testimonies — creating a mosaic of perspectives that keeps the reader perpetually off-balance and pulling the story forward with irresistible momentum. 📜

The novel’s true secret weapon is Marian Halcombe, Laura’s devoted half-sister and one of Victorian fiction’s most memorable heroines. Resourceful, fearless, and bracingly practical, Marian drives the investigation with an energy that feels startlingly modern even today. 🔍

What makes this essential: A foundational masterpiece of suspense fiction that reads with the propulsive energy of a modern thriller. If you’ve never experienced Collins at his best, this is the place to start — and at this price, there’s no reason to wait.

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Author: Philip K. Dick
Regularly $3.99, Today $1.99
Cyberpunk Science Fiction

In a near-future where Mars colonists are conscripted into a dead-end existence under a scorching sun, the drug Can-D offers the only real escape — a shared hallucinogenic experience that translates users into the world of a Barbie-like character called Perky Pat. It’s escapism as religion, addiction as community. Then Palmer Eldritch returns from a decade-long voyage to the Prox system, and everything changes. 🚀

Eldritch brings with him Chew-Z, a new drug that promises something Can-D never could: a direct encounter with God. Or something that claims to be God. The problem is that once you take Chew-Z, you may never be entirely sure what’s real again — including whether the entity wearing Eldritch’s face is human at all. 👁️

Published in 1965, this is Philip K. Dick at his most philosophically audacious. The novel operates on multiple levels simultaneously — as a satirical corporate thriller, a meditation on addiction and free will, and a genuinely unsettling horror story about identity and possession. Dick’s ability to make metaphysical dread feel viscerally immediate has never been sharper. 🌌

The “three stigmata” of the title — artificial eyes, a mechanical arm, and teeth of stainless steel — become one of Dick’s most haunting images, a mark of something inhuman spreading through human consciousness one dose at a time. ☠️

Why this deserves your attention: One of the great mind-bending classics of science fiction, as relevant today as when it was written. Essential reading for fans of dark philosophical sci-fi and anyone who wants to understand where writers like William Gibson and Jeff VanderMeer got their DNA.

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Author: John Durgin
Regularly $4.99, Today $2.49
Horror Fiction

Pembroke, New Hampshire is exactly the kind of small town that takes quiet pride in its traditions. Neighbors know each other. Doors stay unlocked. Life has a comfortable, predictable rhythm. And every year, without fail, a mysterious red envelope arrives in the mail. Every year, someone dies. The town calls it Mail Day. They’ve always called it Mail Day. 📬

John Durgin taps into something deeply unsettling here — the horror of complicity, of a community that has normalized the unthinkable through sheer repetition. Pembroke doesn’t hide its tradition; it simply doesn’t question it. And that collective silence, that willingness to accept death as the price of continuity, is scarier than any monster. 🏘️

The premise echoes Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” in the best possible way — that creeping dread of ritual evil hiding in plain sight, dressed up in the comfortable language of community and custom. Durgin executes it with lean, economical prose that lets the premise do the heavy lifting without over-explaining the horror. 📮

What makes The Envelope particularly effective is the way it implicates the reader. We want to know who gets the envelope this year. We keep turning pages. And by the time we get our answer, we’ve become part of the tradition too. 🩸

Why this grips from page one: A masterfully compact piece of small-town horror built on a premise that burrows under your skin and stays there. Perfect for readers who love folk horror and the particular dread of evil that wears a friendly face.

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Author: Alexandra Barber
Regularly $3.99, Today $1.99
Small Town & Rural Fiction

When Carrie Adams’ life falls apart, she doesn’t plan carefully — she just runs. She ends up on the Isle of Wight, drawn to a cottage called Hideaway House with a thatched roof and a weathered turquoise door that seems, improbably, to be waiting for her. All she wants is quiet. What she gets is something richer and more complicated than she expected. 🌿

The island slowly works its way into her. There’s Rita, warm and apple-cheeked, who feels like home from the first conversation. There’s the Major, prickly and grief-guarded, whose gruffness gradually reveals something gentler underneath. And there’s Guy, the tousle-haired gardener whose quiet presence stirs something in Carrie she wasn’t ready to feel again. 🌸

Alexandra Barber writes the kind of healing fiction that earns its warmth — nothing here feels rushed or unearned. The Isle of Wight setting is rendered with genuine affection, all sea air and village rhythms and the particular stillness of a place that operates outside the frantic pace of modern life. 🏡

Hidden within Hideaway House is an old tea caddy filled with letters and mementos from a family who once lived there, and as Carrie pieces together their story, she begins to understand something about her own. The past-and-present structure is handled with a light, sure touch. 🫖

Why this touches the heart: Gentle, beautifully observed, and quietly moving, The Sanctuary Keepers is the kind of book you finish feeling restored. Perfect for fans of Jojo Moyes and Heidi Swain — and an ideal series opener for readers who want to stay on the island a little longer.

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Author: Bonnie Blaylock
Regularly $4.99, Today $2.49
Friendship Fiction

In the Depression-era Kentucky Appalachians, survival isn’t a metaphor — it’s the daily business of life. Coal mining families scrape by on hardscrabble ingenuity and community bonds, largely cut off from a nation that’s struggling just as hard. Into this world rides Amanda Rye, a young widowed mother who works as a packhorse librarian, carrying books up mountain trails to families who have little else. 📚

Amanda is drawn to the MacInteer family in particular — gentle Rai, her sharp and quick-study daughter Sass, and eldest son Finn, who has a warmth that Amanda can’t quite bring herself to resist. They remind her of her own childhood, and of parents she longs to be reconciled with. The connection grows into something that feels like found family. 🏔️

Bonnie Blaylock writes Appalachian fiction with deep authenticity and genuine love for the region’s people and rhythms. Light to the Hills belongs to a proud tradition of mountain literature — think Barbara Kingsolver’s tenderness for place combined with the narrative drive of a thriller in its final act. 🐴

Because Amanda carries a dangerous secret from her past, and when that secret finds her in the mountains, the lives she’s woven together with the MacInteers are suddenly at risk. What begins as a quiet story of healing and connection becomes something with real stakes and real urgency. 🌄

What makes this special: A richly textured novel about books, belonging, and the courage it takes to trust people with the parts of yourself you’ve kept hidden. Ideal for readers who love historical fiction with emotional depth and a strong sense of place.

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Author: Kia Abdullah
Regularly $3.99, Today $0.99
Domestic Courtroom Thriller

Lily and Safa grew up as best friends. Now their lives have diverged sharply — Lily is the nation’s beloved breakfast TV presenter, all warmth and familiarity, while Safa, once a celebrated journalist, is quietly rebuilding after a very public fall from grace. When rumors surface about suspicious bruises on Lily’s body, Safa reaches out. Lily insists everything is fine. 📺

Then the police are called to Lily’s home in the middle of the night. A body lies at her feet. Lily is calm — unnervingly calm. She pleads not guilty, and then says nothing more. Not to police. Not to her lawyers. Not to Safa. 🚔

Kia Abdullah is one of the sharpest writers working in domestic thriller, and What Happens in the Dark showcases her particular gift for stories where justice, truth, and loyalty are all in direct conflict with each other. The courtroom framework gives the narrative shape and momentum, but it’s the relationship between the two women — its history, its complications, its unspoken damage — that gives the book its real power. ⚖️

Safa’s investigation pulls her into territory she wasn’t prepared for, forcing her to reckon with questions that don’t have clean answers. Was Lily a victim? A perpetrator? Both? Abdullah keeps the reader perpetually uncertain, and the final revelation earns every page that preceded it. 🌑

Why this grips from page one: A taut, morally complex thriller that uses the courtroom as a lens for examining friendship, loyalty, and what we owe the people we love. At under a dollar, this is an extraordinary value for fans of Liane Moriarty and Lisa Jewell.

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