Joanna is caught between the community and faith she was raised in and a pull toward a life outside it, forcing her to weigh everything she’s ever known against the person she’s becoming. 🌾
The Spredemanns write Amish fiction with genuine warmth and respect for the culture, avoiding both romanticized fantasy and harsh judgment. Joanna’s internal conflict feels honest rather than melodramatic, and the community details ring true throughout. 🕊️
A gentle, faith-centered read for fans of Amish fiction who want a heroine’s personal struggle handled with sincerity and care. A strong entry point into the wider Amish Girls series. 🌻
Why this comforts: a sincere, faith-driven coming-of-age story that treats its heroine’s struggle between two worlds with real respect.
When trouble hits backstage at a theater production, it falls to Robert Dart to sort out what really happened before the curtain call turns into a cover-up. A whodunit with a spotlight on it. 🎭
Kelley uses the theater world as a clever setting for a classic mystery structure, giving readers a fresh backdrop full of egos, rivalries, and secrets hiding just offstage. Dart makes for a likable amateur investigator, and the pacing keeps the reveal well hidden until the final act. 🔦
A fun series opener for mystery fans who enjoy a theatrical setting and a protagonist worth following into future cases. Light, entertaining, and a little theatrical itself. 🎬
Why this entertains: a theater-world mystery with backstage drama and a likable amateur sleuth worth watching for future cases.
Miami attorney Gail Connor gets pulled into a murder case with ties far too close to her own life, forcing her to untangle a defense while the lines between client and personal stakes blur dangerously. ⚖️
Parker’s Miami setting gives the legal thriller genre a humid, glamorous edge, and Gail Connor is a compelling lead — sharp in the courtroom but increasingly out of her depth as the case gets personal. The pacing balances procedural detail with real emotional tension. 🏛️
A strong series opener for legal thriller fans who want courtroom drama layered with genuine personal risk for the protagonist. A great introduction to a well-regarded series. 🔍
Why this compels: a Miami attorney’s professional and personal stakes collide in this tense, well-crafted legal thriller series opener.
The Ballad of Smallhope and Pennyroyal
Two eccentric elderly sisters run a private detective agency out of their crumbling family estate, taking on cases nobody else wants and solving them with a mix of sharp wit, decades of accumulated cunning, and a total disregard for conventional methods. 🕵️♀️
Taylor, best known for her time-travel Chronicles of St. Mary’s series, brings the same irreverent humor to this new mystery world, but the real joy here is Smallhope and Pennyroyal themselves — two wonderfully odd, fiercely loyal women who’ve clearly been getting each other into trouble for a lifetime. The mystery plot is fun, but the sisters are the whole show. 🏚️
A delightfully quirky mystery for readers who want their detective duos eccentric, their humor dry, and their heroines well past the age everyone else stopped taking them seriously. 🍵
Why this delights: two eccentric, fiercely funny sisters carry this offbeat mystery with more personality than plot twists ever could.
Chizmar blends memoir and fiction in a way that makes this one genuinely hard to shake — a novel framed as true crime, set in his own hometown the summer a serial killer began murdering young women, told in his own voice as if he’d lived through it himself. 🌙
The technique is the hook: fabricated police reports, invented interviews, and a narrator sharing Chizmar’s real name and biography, all blurring the line between what’s real and what’s constructed so effectively that some early readers assumed it actually happened. It’s a genuinely unsettling structural trick that amplifies the dread rather than just describing it. 🖤
A smart, disturbing read for horror and true-crime fans who appreciate craft as much as scares — this one lingers well after the last page. 🕯️
Why this unnerves: a true-crime-style narrative device blurs fact and fiction so convincingly that the dread feels uncomfortably real.
Best known for her viral “power pose” TED Talk, Harvard social psychologist Amy Cuddy expands the idea here into a full framework for showing up as your most confident self in job interviews, difficult conversations, and any high-pressure moment where you’re being evaluated. 💪
Cuddy backs the practical advice with real research on body language, stress hormones, and how small physical shifts can change not just how others perceive you but how you actually feel internally. It’s less about faking confidence and more about accessing the confidence you already have access to. 🧠
A genuinely useful read for anyone facing a big presentation, negotiation, or interview and wanting an evidence-based approach rather than vague motivational advice. Practical and grounded in real science. 🎯
Why this empowers: research-backed techniques for bringing genuine confidence into high-stakes moments, from the psychologist behind the viral power-pose talk.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





