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Author: Molly Black
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Women Sleuths

A body hanging from a bridge in Minnesota. A signature that tells FBI agent Grace Ford this is not a one-time crime but the opening move of a serial killer with an obsession—the Mississippi River as both hunting ground and stage. Molly Black opens the Grace Ford FBI Thriller series with the cultural clash dynamic baked directly into the investigative structure: Grace is a Minnesota field agent paired with an agent from the Louisiana office, two people with different regional rhythms and professional instincts forced to traverse the country together toward a killer who won’t wait for them to find their footing. 🌊

The river itself is the series’ most distinctive atmospheric element—stretching from Minnesota to the Gulf, connecting disparate communities through a shared geography that the killer is using as his organizing logic. Molly Black uses the length and variability of the Mississippi to give the investigation its scope and its specific challenges: a crime that crosses state lines, jurisdictions, cultures, and landscapes requires exactly the kind of multi-agency partnership that generates the productive friction the series runs on. 🔍

Grace Ford is established with the efficiency that series openers need—competent, instinctively sharp, and carrying enough specific professional history that her approach to the case feels character-specific rather than generically female-FBI-agent. The Louisiana partner gives her a counterweight rather than simply a sidekick, and the culture clash dimension gives the procedural investigation its interpersonal texture. Black has built a substantial FBI thriller readership across multiple series, and the Grace Ford series delivers the propulsive pacing and strong investigative focus that audience comes for. ⭐

Why this hooks you: A serial killer using the Mississippi River as his signature, a Minnesota FBI agent paired with a Louisiana counterpart, and a race to stop the next body from turning up—Nearly Mine is FBI thriller with real momentum.

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Author: Noel Hynd
FREE
Political Thrillers

It is 1939. Roosevelt is winding down his second term with isolationist sentiment running high and his popularity at an all-time low. Hitler seizes the moment and dispatches his most dangerous asset: a spy known only as Siegfried, a chameleon who conceals himself behind the mask of middle-class American life—a banker, a linguist, a demolitions expert, a cold-blooded killer capable of changing identities at will and willing to do whatever it takes to remove the president from office at the most critical moment in the century’s history. Noel Hynd’s 1985 espionage thriller operates at the intersection of real historical stakes and genuine thriller momentum. 🕵️

FBI Special Agent Thomas Cochrane has spent years successfully infiltrating German intelligence, which makes him Roosevelt’s handpicked choice for the impossible assignment: find Siegfried before he acts. The adversarial structure is perfectly calibrated—Cochrane is hunting a man who can be anyone, operating with support in the highest levels of the American government, with no clear face and no fixed identity. Hynd builds the cat-and-mouse tension with the specific period atmosphere of pre-war Washington and the specific procedural texture of wartime intelligence work. 🔍

The love affair with British Secret Service operative Laura Worthington gives the novel its personal dimension alongside the geopolitical stakes—two professionals on the same side navigating the particular vulnerability of wartime intimacy, where everyone has secrets and trust is always conditional. Hynd writes the period with genuine historical grounding, and the novel’s stakes—the president’s life, the future of American involvement in the war—give every development its appropriate weight. For fans of vintage espionage fiction with real craft, this is the discovery. ⭐

Why this grips you: 1939, a Nazi assassin targeting FDR hidden inside middle-class America, an FBI agent with one chance to stop him—Flowers from Berlin is vintage espionage thriller at its most accomplished.

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Author: Robyn Peterman
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Humorous Fantasy

She tried to quit smoking. She ended up Undead. Robyn Peterman establishes the Hot Damned series premise in a single sentence, and then spends the rest of the novel extracting every possible comic implication from it. The perks of vampirehood are real—her girls no longer jiggle, her ass is improbably high, and Prada keeps finding its way to her wardrobe. The downsides include an obscenely profane Guardian Angel who looks like Oprah and a Fairy Fighting Coach teaching her to fight like the Terminator, which was not part of her wellness plan. 🧛

The romantic complication is the one the humorous paranormal romance genre delivers best when it’s working: the attraction to a hotter-than-Satan’s-underpants rogue vampire who is both genuinely dangerous and absolutely convinced she belongs to him. The combination of genuine threat and absurd confidence is exactly the energy that Peterman runs on throughout, and the voice—self-aware, perpetually exasperated, incapable of taking the supernatural seriously despite being neck-deep in it—is the series’ great pleasure. The libido-at-vampyric-proportions detail is deployed with the deadpan commitment the premise demands. 😂

The Chosen One complication arrives on top of everything else—apparently she is now responsible for saving an entire race of blood-suckers, which is a lot to process when she’s still figuring out what she can eat. Peterman has built a massive humorous paranormal romance readership across many series, and the Hot Damned books are among her most beloved work—combining genuine wit, genuine heat, and an absolute refusal to be serious about anything that doesn’t require it. For readers who want their vampire romance funny rather than brooding, this is the series. 🌟

Why this delights: She tried to quit smoking and became a vampire instead, now she’s got an Oprah-looking guardian angel, a fighting coach, and a killer rogue who’s decided she’s his—Fashionably Dead is paranormal comedy at its most entertaining.

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Author: Lisa Lang Blakeney
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Interracial Romance

Roman Masterson makes his fortune fixing celebrity problems by any means necessary—a foul-mouthed, bad-tempered playboy who has no interest in babysitting anyone, let alone a gullible girl from the suburbs he’s been sworn to protect. Elizabeth Hill has just been brutally attacked in her apartment and dumped by her ex-boyfriend in the same week, and is now moving in with family she barely knows for safety. She remembers Roman as the moody boy who played a cruel trick on her at six years old. Lisa Lang Blakeney opens the novel with the gap between who they were and who they’ve become as the central dramatic tension. 🔥

The moment Roman spots Elizabeth in a crowded dance floor—before he knows she’s the woman he’s supposed to protect—and decides with complete certainty that she belongs with him is the pivot that gives the novel its particular energy. The discovery that the woman he wants is the one he’s obligated to keep at arm’s length creates a productive double bind: his role as her protector requires exactly the kind of sustained proximity that makes acting on his feelings impossible and wanting them harder to resist. Blakeney handles the complication with real narrative control. 💙

The dark romance dimension is present in Roman’s specific brand of intensity—this is not a conventionally gentle hero, and Blakeney doesn’t soften the edges of his personality to make him more immediately palatable. The complexity and multi-layered quality that Elizabeth gradually discovers beneath the bad-tempered exterior gives the character development its arc. The interracial romance is handled with the specificity and authenticity that distinguishes Blakeney’s work in the space, and the series has built a devoted readership across multiple volumes. 🌹

Why this pulls you in: A bad-tempered fixer who’s supposed to protect her, the cruel boy from her childhood now a complex man, and an attraction that’s strictly off-limits on every level—Masterson is dark interracial romance with genuine heat.

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Author: H. Leighton Dickson
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Fantasy Adventure

Stormfall is a night dragon—born with a coat the color of a starry sky—who is carried off his island home by hurricane winds and dropped into the complicated, sometimes cruel world of men. H. Leighton Dickson makes the radical structural choice of narrating the Dragons of Solunas series as an autobiography written by Stormfall himself, which immediately gives the fantasy a distinctive interior perspective: this is not a story about a dragon seen from the outside but the account of a consciousness navigating an alien world from the inside. 🐉

The journey Stormfall takes through the human world is organized as a series of roles—fisher dragon, farmer, pit-fighting dragon, warrior—each representing a different kind of subordination and a different kind of discovery about what humans are and what they’re capable of. Dickson uses this episodic structure to build a portrait of a world through the eyes of a creature who has no cultural assumptions about it, which gives the fantasy world-building an unusual freshness: we see human society the way a genuinely alien intelligence would. ✨

The war coming to the land of Remus, and the crossroads it presents for Stormfall and the young soul-boy he allows on his back, gives the novel its larger narrative stakes alongside the character journey. How far is Stormfall willing to go in a war that isn’t his? The question is both plot and philosophy, and Dickson doesn’t resolve it cheaply. The autobiography format gives the novel a retrospective quality—we know Stormfall survived to tell the story, which creates its own kind of dramatic irony throughout. The Dragons of Solunas series has a devoted fantasy readership who came for the concept and stayed for the execution. 🌟

Why this enchants: A night dragon carried into the world of men, narrating his own journey through labor and war in a voice unlike any other fantasy hero—Dragon of Ash & Stars is fantasy adventure with a truly distinctive perspective.

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Author: Jean Oram
FREE
Fake Relationship Small Town Romance

Devon Mattson is fake-engaged to the woman who broke his heart a decade ago, and his goal of saving his hometown of Blueberry Springs has become entirely dependent on the two of them playing nicely together. Olivia Carrington has spent ten years regretting how things ended with Devon and working hard to move on, and now he’s back with a lifeline she can’t afford to refuse—for her family’s company and, it turns out, for reasons she’s less comfortable acknowledging. Jean Oram opens the Blueberry Springs series with the second-chance romance given a fake engagement engine that runs on genuine mutual need. 💕

The specific detail that it’s Devon’s heart that was broken—not the usual gender reversal of the second-chance romance—gives the novel its particular emotional texture. He has done the work of getting over her, or believes he has, and the fake engagement forces daily proximity with the evidence that he hasn’t done it as thoroughly as he thought. Oram builds his guardedness with real care, and Olivia’s ten years of private regret means both characters are carrying something rather than only one of them. 🌿

The small town of Blueberry Springs is rendered with the warmth and specificity that the best small-town romance delivers—a community with its own history, its own investment in both the town’s survival and the romantic developments of its members, and the particular social texture of a place where everyone knows everyone. The mutual-need fake engagement gives both characters plausible professional justifications for being in each other’s lives constantly, which Oram uses with real comic timing. The Blueberry Springs series has a large and devoted readership across many volumes. ⭐

Why this charms: A fake engagement with the woman who broke his heart, a decade of mutual regret neither of them has admitted, and a small town that needs them to pull it together—The Surprise Wedding is second-chance fake relationship romance with genuine heart.

The Donovans Books 1-4

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Author: Martha Keyes
Regularly $9.99, Today $4.99
Sweet Regency Romance

Elena MacKinnon has spent seven years training to be a proper English lady—which would be more useful if she were English, rather than a proud Scot who has been suppressing her identity in the service of social acceptability. When Captain Theo Donovan returns from the Navy, he brings back with him the memory of the ardent love letter Elena wrote before his departure, which he ignored entirely. Her twin objectives—making him forget the letter exists and making him regret not responding to it—are in productive tension with each other, and Martha Keyes opens the Donovans collection with a premise that is both classically Regency and distinctly her own. 🌹

The Scots identity Elena has been suppressing is the novel’s great emotional engine—she has spent seven years becoming someone she isn’t in order to be acceptable, and the return of Theo forces a reckoning with whether that transformation has actually worked or has simply built a more elaborate fiction. The tension between the proper English lady she has trained to be and the proud Scot she actually is gives the romance its specific character arc, and Keyes handles the identity question with the warmth and intelligence that her readership has come to depend on. 💙

The collection format—four complete novels in the Donovan series—gives new readers exceptional value and sustained time with a family and a world that Keyes has built with real affection and real historical grounding. Keyes is one of the most consistently praised authors in sweet Regency romance, with a particular gift for heroines who are defined by genuine internal conflict rather than simply external circumstance. The Donovans series is among her most beloved work, and this collection is the ideal way to experience it. ⭐

Why this charms: A proud Scot pretending to be a proper English lady, a Navy captain who still has her embarrassing letter, and seven years of wanting a second chance—four complete Donovan novels in one essential collection.

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Author: Rachael English
Regularly $3.99, Today $0.99
20th Century Historical Fiction

Boston, 1968. Rose Moroney is seventeen, smart, spirited, pregnant, and entirely without options when her ambitious parents make the decision for her—she will be sent to Ireland, their birthplace, to deliver her daughter in a home for unwed mothers and give her up against her will. Rachael English opens the dual timeline with the specific weight of a choice that reverberates across generations: what happens to Rose in that Irish home for unwed mothers will shape not just her life but the life of the daughter she parts with, and the granddaughter who grows up not knowing she has a grandmother. 🌊

Dublin, 2013. Martha Sheeran’s marriage has fallen apart and her husband has moved on with unsettling speed. Under pressure from her teenage daughter, she begins searching for the woman who gave her up for adoption more than forty years before. The search leads into long-buried family secrets, and the old flame who re-enters her life gives the present-day narrative its romantic dimension alongside the identity quest. English handles the dual timeline with the structural care that this kind of multigenerational Irish fiction demands—the past illuminates the present without overwhelming it. 💙

The specific Irish context—the homes for unwed mothers, the church’s role, the particular shame that was attached to illegitimacy in mid-century Ireland—gives the historical strand its authentic weight. Rachael English is one of Ireland’s most beloved popular fiction writers, and *The American Girl* demonstrates her gift for finding the intimate human story inside the larger historical reality. The adoption reunion narrative has real emotional stakes that English earns rather than manipulates. At $0.99 this is one of today’s most significant bargains. ⭐

Why this resonates: Boston 1968, a seventeen-year-old sent to Ireland to give up her daughter, and forty years later the daughter finally searching for answers—The American Girl is Irish multigenerational fiction with genuine emotional depth.

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Author: Donna Jones Alward
Regularly $3.99, Today $0.99
Historical Romance

The Titanic is one of history’s most loaded settings precisely because every reader knows what’s coming—the dramatic irony of six days on an unsinkable ship that will not survive them is built into every scene before it happens. Donna Jones Alward uses that foreknowledge as an emotional pressure rather than a plot twist, giving both of her protagonists the particular urgency of people whose private crises are about to be overtaken by a catastrophe they don’t know is coming. The romance and the history collide rather than simply coexisting. 🚢

Hannah Martin is clinging to the hope that six days of enforced proximity aboard a grand ship will heal the wounds in her marriage to Charles—while concealing a secret that could end everything if it surfaces. Louisa Phillips is escaping her family’s insistence on a passionless marriage at the cost of the relationship that matters most to her. Both women are in transit not just geographically but personally—the ship represents possibility and flight simultaneously. Alward gives each of them enough specific interiority that their stories feel genuinely distinct rather than parallel. 💙

The iceberg changes everything, as it must—and the chaos of that night becomes the crucible in which both women’s choices crystallize. What dreams are worth saving, and at what cost, is the question the novel builds toward, and Alward earns the emotional resolution by making both women’s pre-disaster situations specific enough that the disaster doesn’t simply resolve their problems but forces them to confront which ones actually matter. At $0.99 this is exceptional value for historical fiction with real emotional ambition. 🌊

Why this moves you: Two women on the Titanic with secrets that could change everything, six days to figure out what they’re willing to lose—and then the iceberg—Ship of Dreams is Titanic historical romance with genuine emotional stakes.

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Author: Claire Lynch
Regularly $3.99, Today $1.99
LGBTQ+ Family Life Fiction

1982. Dawn is a young mother still adjusting to married life when Hazel arrives and lights her world like a torch in the dark—the kind of connection that’s impossible to resist and impossible to act on without consequences. She has a daughter. She has responsibilities. She has, in other words, everything that makes the choice both impossible and inevitable. Claire Lynch’s debut novel—which Barbara Kingsolver called “quietly heart-scorching”—opens with the particulars of one woman’s impossible situation rendered with precision and without judgment. 💙

2022. Heron is an older man who has just received news from his doctor that turns everything upside down. His daughter Maggie is the person around whom his entire life has revolved, and telling her about his diagnosis seems impossible—not only because the news is devastating but because it would require him to tell her other things he has been keeping from her for decades. Lynch structures the novel around the secrets that accumulate in families across generations, and the specific cost of what is never said alongside what is. 💔

The novel’s “quietly heart-scorching” quality—Kingsolver’s phrase is exactly right—comes from Lynch’s refusal to sensationalize. The emotions are enormous, the secrets are significant, but the prose renders them with a controlled restraint that makes each revelation land with the accumulated weight of everything that preceded it. This is a novel about a daughter who is the last to know the things that have shaped her life, and the specific tenderness with which Lynch handles that position is what makes the debut so striking. At $1.99 this is exceptional value for literary fiction of real distinction. 🌟

Why this endures: A young wife in 1982 who falls in love when she can’t, a father in 2022 with a diagnosis and forty years of secrets, and a daughter at the center of both—Claire Lynch’s debut is “quietly heart-scorching” for very good reason.

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Author: Victoria Lavine
Regularly $5.99, Today $2.99
Romantic Comedy

Margot Bradley writes beloved romance novels and harbors a dark secret: she doesn’t believe in happy endings. Not for herself, not for her characters, for whom she secretly writes alternate endings featuring divorce papers and the occasional slashed tire. When her Happily Never After document is hacked and released to the public, she is cancelled by her readers and dropped by her publisher in a single news cycle. Victoria Lavine opens *Any Trope but You* with a premise that takes the meta-romance comedy to its logical extreme—and then sends the romance-novelist-who-doesn’t-believe-in-romance to an Alaskan resort to write a murder mystery, where she immediately runs from a moose and lands in a man’s arms. 😂

Dr. Forrest Wakefield left his career as a cancer researcher to manage his family’s resort and care for his ailing father, and his puzzle-loving mind has been slowly freezing in the absence of anything genuinely interesting to solve. Then Margot shows up. Lavine builds the Forrest-Margot dynamic on the specific tension of two people who are each unavailable for different and specific reasons—her checkout date, his inability to risk another loss—rather than generic emotional unavailability. 💙

The murder mystery subplot that Margot is trying to write—while apparently landing in a romance novel instead—gives the comedy its meta-fictional texture without becoming precious about it. Lavine uses the genre-awareness to generate comedy rather than simply to signal sophistication, and the Alaska wilderness setting gives the romance its isolation without resorting to the standard remote cabin formula. The sister Savannah, whose chronic illness motivates Margot’s desperation to keep earning, gives the novel its warm emotional core beneath the comedy. 🌟

Why this delights: A romance novelist cancelled for not believing in her own genre, an Alaskan resort, a moose, and a cancer researcher with a puzzle-loving mind who was not part of her murder mystery plan—Any Trope but You is meta-romance comedy with genuine charm.

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Author: Kyla Stone
Regularly $4.99, Today $2.49
Apocalyptic Survival Thriller

Raven has spent her life at her family’s wildlife refuge in northern Georgia, shoveling manure and hauling feed for bears, wolves, and a tiger while longing for something more interesting. When a mysterious lethal sickness begins spreading across the country and her father contracts it, she goes into town for medicine and discovers that the outside world has already collapsed—no police, no laws, no hospitals. Nobody is coming. Kyla Stone opens the survival thriller with the particular horror of someone who went looking for help and found the absence of it. 🐺

The irony that redeems the situation is that what Raven once resented now offers salvation: the wildlife refuge has food, shelter, electrified fences, and the specific skills her father taught her across a lifetime of caring for dangerous animals. The ordinary competence she built through unglamorous daily labor becomes the survival toolkit that most people in a collapse scenario simply don’t have. Stone builds the post-apocalyptic premise on the foundation of real knowledge rather than generic survival fantasy. 🌲

The dangerous gang that tracks Raven back to the refuge transforms what might be a solo survival story into something with genuine external threat—people who want what she has and have no intention of negotiating. The choice between running and standing her ground is not simply tactical but moral: she has animals in her care who cannot run, and the refuge that was once her prison is now the thing worth protecting. Stone writes survival fiction with the specific detail and genuine character that has earned her a devoted post-apocalyptic readership. 🔥

Why this grips you: A wildlife refuge with bears, wolves, and a tiger as the safest place left in a collapsing world, and a gang that wants it—The Last Sanctuary is apocalyptic survival thriller with a protagonist worth rooting for.

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