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Author: P. Douglas European
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Crime Mystery

A collective noun for ravens is an unkindness, which tells you something about how this series opener uses its bird imagery, not as gentle nature backdrop but as something with darker implications for the investigation at its center. The Birdwatcher series pairs an unusual protagonist perspective with a crime that requires patience, observation, and the ability to notice what other people overlook. 🐦

The birdwatcher as amateur sleuth brings a distinctive set of skills to an investigation, the habit of sustained quiet attention, comfort with solitude, and an eye trained to spot anomalies in a field of apparent sameness, all of which translate unexpectedly well to piecing together what happened in a crime scene that looks, at first, like it doesn’t have much to say. 🔍

Readers who enjoy crime mysteries with an unusual protagonist hook and a series that takes its central conceit seriously rather than treating it as mere decoration will find this a promising and distinctive series opener.

Why this captivates: it turns a birdwatcher’s habits of patient observation into a genuine investigative advantage, giving the amateur-sleuth formula a fresh and unusually thoughtful angle.

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Author: Lizz Lund
FREE
Cozy Mystery

Mina Kitchen is either the best name ever given to a cozy mystery protagonist or a very deliberate piece of comedic branding, and Lizz Lund leans into the inherent humor of her series from its first pages. Kitchen Addiction opens with a character whose culinary obsession and amateur sleuthing instincts are apparently impossible to separate, which suits the cozy mystery formula exactly as well as it sounds. 🍳

Lund writes with the light, self-aware comic touch that distinguishes the better entries in the genre, giving Mina a voice that’s funny without trying too hard and a mystery that has enough genuine plotting to keep readers engaged between the food descriptions and the small-town character work. The series title’s exclamation point signals a book that doesn’t take itself entirely seriously, which is a feature rather than a bug. ☕

Readers who enjoy cozy mysteries with a strong culinary thread and a protagonist whose personality is as entertaining as the mystery itself will find Mina Kitchen a fun, breezy series to start.

Why this delights: it pairs a genuinely funny protagonist with a cozy mystery formula she barely manages to contain, making the kitchen as central to the story as the crime itself.

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Author: PJ Sharon
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Young Adult Dystopian Fantasy

A waning moon suggests something diminishing, a world losing light or power, and PJ Sharon builds her trilogy opener around exactly that kind of slow depletion, setting her story in a future where the natural world is failing and the communities trying to survive within that failure have developed their own complicated hierarchies and dangers. Lily Carmichael navigates both the environmental collapse and the human systems that have grown up around it. 🌙

Sharon writes young adult dystopian fiction with a strong ecological consciousness, grounding the world’s collapse in recognizable environmental anxiety rather than abstract apocalyptic fantasy. The trilogy structure gives the opener room to establish both the world and Lily’s place in it without rushing toward resolution, letting the stakes accumulate across the series rather than cramming them into a single book. 🌿

Readers who enjoy young adult dystopian fiction with environmental themes and a protagonist whose journey is as much about understanding her world as surviving it will find this a thoughtful, well-built series opener.

Why this compels: it builds a dystopian world from genuinely recognizable ecological anxiety, giving its heroine stakes that feel both epic in scale and deeply personal in their consequences.

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Author: J.A. Konrath, Ann Voss Peterson
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Spy Thriller

The Codename: Chandler series gives Konrath and Ann Voss Peterson a different register than their other collaborations, built around a female spy operating in a world of high-stakes international intrigue where the tradecraft is as important as the action. Six books in, the series has established a confident rhythm, and Naughty keeps the adrenaline running at the level readers have come to expect from this partnership. 🔫

Peterson brings a distinct voice to the Chandler character that distinguishes this series from Konrath’s solo work, and the collaboration produces a spy thriller with both the plot momentum of an action-focused genre entry and real attention to the psychological dimensions of an operative who has been doing this work long enough to accumulate serious personal history. 💥

Readers who enjoy female-led spy thrillers with genuine action sequences and a series heroine whose competence is matched by her complications will find Chandler a reliably entertaining protagonist across the series.

Why this thrills: it delivers the Chandler series’ signature combination of high-octane spy action and a protagonist with enough personal history to make every mission feel like more than just the job.

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Author: S. McPherson
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Fantasy

Ten candidates, one throne, and a trial designed to eliminate all but the worthiest, the competition fantasy premise has proven its staying power across everything from ancient mythology to modern fiction, and S. McPherson builds a world around that framework where the stakes of losing are considerably higher than humiliation. The Trial of Ten promises the kind of mounting tension that comes from watching skilled competitors face challenges designed to break them. ⚔️

McPherson writes with an emphasis on the psychology of competition alongside the fantasy world mechanics, giving the trial’s participants distinct enough motivations and personalities that the eliminations carry genuine weight rather than feeling like abstract plot progression. The throne itself remains a compelling object of desire precisely because the book takes seriously the question of what fitness to rule actually means. 👑

Readers who enjoy fantasy built around high-stakes competitions with real worldbuilding depth and characters worth caring about will find this a propulsive, engaging series opener.

Why this compels: it builds its competition fantasy around the genuinely interesting question of what makes someone fit to rule, giving the trial’s brutal mechanics real political and personal weight.

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Author: J.A. Konrath, Ann Voss Peterson
FREE
Crime Thriller

Val Ryker returns for a fourth outing, and the title’s implication of prolonged surveillance suggests a case built around the specific, creeping dread of being watched without knowing by whom or why. Konrath and Peterson build their Val Ryker series around a protagonist whose toughness has been earned the hard way, and this entry uses the watching premise to put that toughness under a different kind of pressure than a straightforward confrontational threat. 👁️

The series partnership between Konrath and Peterson produces crime thrillers with a particular energy, the procedural instincts of Konrath’s solo work balanced against Peterson’s character-focused storytelling, and the Ryker books benefit from that combination in ways that distinguish them from either author’s work alone. Four books in, the character has accumulated enough history to make the current threat land with more weight than it could in a standalone. 🔪

Readers who enjoy female-led crime thrillers with a hardened, experienced investigator and a surveillance-driven premise will find this a taut, well-constructed series entry.

Why this grips: it uses the particular dread of unseen surveillance to put Val Ryker under pressure that’s psychological as much as physical, playing to both authors’ strengths simultaneously.

Clinton St. Baking Company Cookbook: Breakfast, Brunch & Beyond from New York’s Favorite Neighborhood Restaurant

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Author: Neil Kleinberg, Diana H. Lahman, Michael Harlan Turkell
Regularly $25.99, Today $3.99
Cookbook

Clinton St. Baking Company on Manhattan’s Lower East Side became famous for the kind of breakfast and brunch that people would genuinely line up around the block for, and this cookbook captures the recipes behind that reputation, from the pancakes that made the restaurant a New York institution to the savory dishes that kept regulars coming back every weekend. 🥞

Neil Kleinberg and Diana Lahman built their restaurant around the conviction that breakfast food deserved the same care and quality ingredients as any other meal, and the recipes here reflect that philosophy, treating everything from a simple omelet to a compound butter as something worth getting exactly right. The book goes beyond brunch into broader baking and cooking territory, giving home cooks a range that extends well past the morning meal. ☕

Readers who love brunch, New York food culture, or simply want to understand why some restaurants inspire the kind of devotion that fills sidewalks on Sunday mornings will find this an inspiring, genuinely usable collection.

Why this delivers: it captures the recipes behind one of New York’s most beloved neighborhood restaurants, proving that breakfast done right is worth every minute of the wait.

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Author: Ken McNab
Regularly $19.99, Today $2.99
Music History

The final eighteen months of the Beatles are among the most documented and most debated stretches in rock history, and Ken McNab brings fresh archival research and a measured perspective to a period that has been mythologized, distorted, and relitigated for decades. The book covers the Let It Be sessions, the Abbey Road recording, the business chaos surrounding Apple Corps, and the gradual, painful unraveling of four friendships that had defined a generation. 🎸

McNab writes with the rigor of a serious music historian rather than the agenda of a partisan, resisting the temptation to assign blame neatly or flatten the complexity of what was happening simultaneously across four very different people’s lives. The result is one of the more honest accounts of a breakup that has never stopped being argued about, treating the creative achievement and the personal dissolution as inseparable rather than convenient opposites. 📖

For Beatles fans who want the most accurate picture available of how it actually ended, rather than the version filtered through any one participant’s memoir, McNab is essential reading.

Why this matters: it reconstructs the Beatles’ final chapter with real archival depth and genuine fairness, cutting through fifty years of competing narratives to find something closer to what actually happened.

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Author: Keith Getty, Kristyn Getty
Regularly $12.99, Today $4.99
Christian Living

Keith and Kristyn Getty are among the most influential figures in contemporary Christian hymnody, responsible for modern worship songs sung by millions of congregations worldwide, and this book draws on that deep musical and theological background to make a case for congregational singing as something far more significant than a warm-up to the sermon. The Gettys argue that how a church sings reflects and shapes what it actually believes. 🎵

The book operates on multiple levels simultaneously, as a theological argument for the importance of worship music, a practical guide for families wanting to integrate singing into their household rhythms, and a broader cultural case for recovering a richer, more substantive approach to congregational song. The Gettys write with the authority of practitioners rather than theorists, grounding every argument in real experience. ✝️

Readers interested in worship, church culture, or the role of music in spiritual formation will find the Gettys’ perspective both theologically serious and practically engaged.

Why this resonates: it makes a compelling case that congregational singing is one of the most formative things a church does, backed by two of contemporary Christian music’s most respected voices.

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Author: Eddie Robson
Regularly $17.99, Today $3.99
Science Fiction Mystery

Lydia works as a translator for an alien diplomat in a near-future New York, a job that leaves her physically intoxicated after every session because the alien language does something strange to human neurochemistry. When her employer turns up dead and she’s the prime suspect, she has to investigate a murder while navigating her own compromised mental state, the political implications of an alien diplomat’s death, and a city that isn’t sure what to make of any of it. 🌌

Eddie Robson blends science fiction worldbuilding with genuine mystery plotting in a way that keeps both genres working simultaneously rather than letting one serve merely as decoration for the other. The translation-as-intoxication concept is one of those ideas that opens up the whole premise, providing both a distinctive plot mechanic and a metaphor for the disorientation of working across radical cultural difference. 🔍

Readers who enjoy science fiction with strong mystery bones, or mystery fiction that uses its speculative premise to illuminate something real about communication and misunderstanding, will find this a smart, original read.

Why this intrigues: it wraps a genuinely clever murder mystery inside a science fiction world where language itself is the most dangerous thing in the room.

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Author: Michael Cleverly, Bob Braudis
Regularly $17.99, Today $2.99
Literary Memoir

Most books about Hunter S. Thompson focus on the public legend, the Gonzo journalism, the drugs, the guns, the persona. Michael Cleverly and Bob Braudis knew the actual man who lived at Owl Farm in Woody Creek, Colorado, and this memoir collects the stories that fell outside the mythology, the quieter, stranger, funnier moments that accumulated across decades of genuine friendship with one of American literature’s most exhausting figures. 🦚

Cleverly was a neighbor and friend, Braudis the longtime sheriff of Pitkin County, and their dual perspective gives the book a grounded, affectionate quality that distinguishes it from more reverential tributes. They write about Thompson as someone they actually had to deal with in real life, which produces a portrait that’s more honest about the chaos and more genuinely warm about the man than most accounts manage to be simultaneously. 📖

Readers who love Thompson’s work and want to understand who was behind the legend, or who enjoy memoir that captures a singular American character through the eyes of people who were actually there, will find this a distinctive and entertaining read.

Why this captivates: it bypasses the Gonzo mythology to find the actual person underneath, told by two men who knew Thompson well enough to love him and honest enough to tell it straight.

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Author: Jack Larkin
Regularly $17.99, Today $2.99
American Social History

The fifty years between 1790 and 1840 transformed American daily life more fundamentally than almost any comparable period before the twentieth century, and Jack Larkin traces that transformation through the granular details of how ordinary people actually lived, worked, ate, dressed, traveled, and organized their households rather than through the political and military events that usually dominate the historical record. 🏡

Larkin draws on an extraordinary range of primary sources, diaries, account books, travelers’ accounts, and material culture, to reconstruct the texture of everyday existence during a period when industrialization, urbanization, and expanding commerce were quietly remaking what it meant to be an American. The result reads less like a conventional history and more like a detailed portrait of a world in the middle of becoming something new. 📜

Readers who enjoy social history from the ground up, focused on ordinary people’s lives rather than great events and famous figures, will find this one of the more absorbing accounts of early American domestic history available.

Why this fascinates: it reconstructs the actual texture of everyday American life across fifty transformative years, revealing how profoundly ordinary existence changed before most people had words for what was happening to them.

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