Paul Worthington has just confessed to a murder that—officially—never happened. Magdalene Lynton died forty years ago in what the coroner ruled an accidental drowning, a verdict of death by misadventure. The farming commune she’d lived within splintered apart. Her body was left in a small private cemetery surrounded by acres of fallow ground. And now a man is confessing to killing her. Katherine Hayton opens the Detective Ngaire Blakes series with one of the procedural genre’s most elegantly constructed premises: a confession that doesn’t fit the facts, and original facts that don’t quite fit either. ⚖️
Ngaire Blakes is a Maori detective recovering from a brutal stabbing, fighting for the institutional resources to investigate a cold case that technically wasn’t a homicide. Hayton gives her protagonist real physical and psychological stakes alongside the investigative ones—Ngaire’s recovery is an active factor in how she can work, not background detail. Her partnership with Deb gives the investigation its procedural texture while keeping the focus on Ngaire’s specific way of seeing the case. 🔍
The farming commune backdrop—a closed community that no longer exists, forty years of fading memories and protective silence, a victim whose death everyone had an interest in calling accidental—gives the mystery its specific atmosphere and its moral weight. Hayton peels back the layers of what actually happened to Magdalene with careful pacing, letting the inconsistencies accumulate until the full shape of the crime becomes clear. The mortal danger that emerges as the investigation deepens is earned rather than manufactured. 🌿
Why this compels: A confession to a murder the coroner ruled accidental, facts that don’t match either account, and a Maori detective recovering from a stabbing who won’t let it go—The Three Deaths of Magdalene Lynton is procedural crime fiction at its most elegantly constructed.
Charlie Kingsley—known to fans of the award-winning Secrets of Redemption series as Aunt Charlie—gets her own mysteries in this three-book collection set in 1990s Redemption, Wisconsin. She makes teas, she solves cases, and she does both with the particular dry wit that made her one of the most beloved supporting characters in her parent series. Michele PW (Pariza Wacek) gives Redemption its own distinct atmosphere for Charlie’s standalone adventures, and three complete novels in a single free package makes this an exceptional entry point. ☕
The three mysteries delivered here are each genuinely distinct in their setups. *The Murder Before Christmas* involves a dead husband, a pregnant wife, and a poisoned Christmas gift—cozy mystery at its most seasonally satisfying. *Ice Cold Murder* combines an estranged family, a blizzard, a haunted house, and a murder into what the author accurately describes as the world’s worst family gathering. *Murder Next Door* asks the question that everyone in a small town eventually has to face: can the suspicious house sitter next door actually be a vampire? Right? 🎄
The 1990s setting gives the series a specific temporal texture that distinguishes it from contemporary cozy mysteries—no smartphones, no instant communication, and a small Wisconsin town with its own rhythms and social dynamics that feel period-specific without being precious about it. Michele PW’s plotting is consistently tight and her comedy timing reliable. For readers who have been wanting to meet Aunt Charlie, or who simply want three well-crafted cozy mysteries at zero cost, this collection delivers. 🔍
Why this delights: Three complete 1990s Wisconsin cozy mysteries—a poisoned Christmas gift, the world’s worst blizzard family gathering, and a possibly-vampire neighbor—The Charlie Kingsley Mysteries is cozy comfort reading in bulk.
Cut out of her father’s will and starting over, Meg Bramwell takes her brother’s offer to turn a run-down building into a library—exactly the kind of second-chance project that asks for everything and promises nothing certain in return. The quiet librarian Brian Hooper brings unexpected warmth to the work, and the fast-growing feelings that develop alongside the renovation give the Meg Bramwell Mysteries their romantic dimension from the start. Kristy T Dixon grounds the series opener in the particular satisfaction of building something meaningful. 📚
Then someone starts setting fires. A string of arson attacks sweeps through town and the library becomes a target, which transforms Meg and Brian’s community project into an investigation—and forces them to dig into old records and dangerous secrets that someone is clearly desperate to keep hidden. Dixon handles the shift from small-town romance to genuine suspense with careful pacing, letting the fires escalate rather than arriving at crisis pitch immediately. The arsonist’s motivation, buried in the archives Meg and Brian are working to preserve, gives the mystery its thematic resonance. 🔥
The library setting is used with genuine affection—the building itself, the collection, and the community purpose it serves are all treated as things worth protecting rather than mere backdrop. The romantic relationship between Meg and Brian develops under pressure in ways that feel organic rather than convenient, and the stakes of losing both the library and the nascent relationship to whoever is lighting fires give the thriller its emotional urgency. The Meg Bramwell Mysteries series opens with a premise that earns its heart. 💙
Why this draws you in: A second chance, a library being built from scratch, an arsonist targeting it, and secrets in the old records someone will burn everything to protect—Arson in the Archives is cozy mystery with real warmth and real stakes.
Spirit Horses
Shane Carson is a gifted, nationally recognized horseman living well in the hills of Tennessee when a mysterious mustang appears on his farm. The horse’s distinctive brand identifies her as one of the Spirit Horses—a rare, wild herd that runs free on the Shoshone reservation in Wyoming, watched over for centuries in the tribe’s ancestral valleys, believed to provide a link to the afterlife. Shane doesn’t know how she arrived or why, but he knows she doesn’t belong to him. Alan S. Evans builds the novel around the promise that will define everything that follows. 🐴
When tragedy strikes Shane’s life and nearly breaks his will to live, the single thread holding him to the world is a promise made to his young son: return the mustang to her rightful home. The journey from Tennessee to the Shoshone reservation in Wyoming becomes the novel’s heart—a bittersweet road through landscapes where tradition reigns and ancient beliefs transcend modern logic, where love is alive and hate and greed are always threatening to close in. Evans renders the wide-open expanse of blue sky and open spaces with genuine feeling. 🌄
The threat to the Spirit Horses—greed and intolerance endangering both the herd and the tribe’s legacy—gives the journey its external stakes, while Shane’s own grief and spiritual searching give it its emotional core. The interweaving of a contemporary horseman’s story with Shoshone tradition and belief is handled with respect and specificity rather than romanticization. *Spirit Horses* is the kind of quietly moving novel that earns its emotional resolution through genuine character work. 💙
Why this moves you: A mysterious mustang, a promise to a young son, a journey from Tennessee to Wyoming, and a tribe’s ancient legacy under threat—Spirit Horses is quietly moving family fiction with a big heart.
Clem is the baker behind the Catpurrcino cat café’s cat-themed treats—iced kitten doughnuts, macarons with ears and whiskers, creations that bring genuine delight to the loyal customers who come as much for the cats as for the food. Outside the kitchen, she struggles with anxiety and a sense of not quite belonging. When her boss enters the café in the Whisked Away baking competition, it’s both an opportunity to shine and the kind of exposure that Clem has been carefully avoiding. Rachel Rowlands builds the Cat Café Romance series around a protagonist whose warmth in the kitchen contrasts poignantly with her difficulty in the world beyond it. 🐱
The competition structure is used well—Clem stumbling in the first challenge creates the opening for Lucas, the owner of rival Muddy Paws café, to appear with an encouraging word and a smile rather than exploiting her difficulty. His faithful Golden Retriever Reina provides the appropriate counterpoint to the cat café setting, and the cats-versus-dogs framing gives the baking competition its comic energy while the genuine connection developing between Clem and Lucas provides the romantic heat. Rowlands handles the anxiety representation with care. 🎂
The question of whether the chemistry between competitors can survive a showdown in the final round—and whether Clem’s growing confidence can extend beyond the kitchen—gives the romance its forward momentum. The baking competition format is a reliable genre engine and Rowlands runs it with real warmth, giving both Clem’s internal journey and the external competition equal attention. For readers who want their romance cozy, character-driven, and populated with both cats and a very good dog, this delivers. ☕
Why this charms: A cat café baker with anxiety finding her confidence, a rival who turns out to be an encouragement, and a baking competition where the real prize might be love—Cake Off at the Cat Cafe is romance as warm as fresh pastry.
The premise of *The Backyard Homestead* is both simple and genuinely ambitious: a quarter acre is enough to produce all the food a family needs, year-round. Carleen Madigan’s comprehensive guide makes that ambition practical, covering the full scope of small-scale food production from growing and preserving vegetables and grains through raising animals for meat, eggs, and dairy, and keeping bees for honey. The book has become one of the standard references in the backyard homesteading movement for good reason—it treats the reader as capable of the full project rather than just the easy parts. 🌱
The preservation section is particularly valuable—canning, drying, and pickling instructions that extend the harvest through winter are often the difference between a homestead that produces abundance and one that produces more than it can use. Madigan covers each method with the step-by-step clarity that novices need and the completeness that experienced growers appreciate, making the book useful at multiple stages of the homesteading journey. The practical orientation throughout means the information is immediately applicable. 🥫
The quarter-acre framing is the book’s great gift to anyone who has assumed that food self-sufficiency requires land they don’t have. The specific planning guidance for different property sizes makes the system adaptable, and the broader Backyard Homestead series—covering seasonal planning, building projects, farm animals, and kitchen know-how—means that readers who find this book useful have a full library of complementary resources to grow into. An essential reference for anyone serious about food independence. 🐝
Why this is essential: The comprehensive step-by-step guide to producing all your family’s food on a quarter acre—vegetables, grains, animals, bees, and preservation through winter.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





