London, 1924. The head clerk at Duke and Peabody’s, a Hatton Garden diamond merchant, is found dead beside the open safe. Valuable stones are gone. Inspector Joseph French of Scotland Yard is assigned the case, and what follows is the methodical, relentlessly intelligent investigation that introduced one of Golden Age detective fiction’s most distinctive detectives to the world. French is not a man of theatrical brilliance or dramatic gestures—no Poirot flourishes, no Holmes deductions pulled from thin air. He works with patience, logic, and the dogged persistence that Raymond Chandler praised as the soundest plotting in the genre. 🔍
The evidence is deliberately tangled: alibis that conflict, travel routes that don’t add up, financial trails that refuse to settle. Freeman Wills Crofts—a railway engineer by training with a mind built for timetables and mathematics—constructs a puzzle that rewards careful attention and delivers a satisfying, fair solution. French crosses to the Continent as the investigation expands, tracking deception across borders with the methodical persistence that the New York Times Book Review called “the all-time master of the intricate timetable alibi.” 💙
First published in 1924, this novel was selected by Howard Haycraft for the definitive Haycraft-Queen Library of Detective-Crime-Mystery Fiction, a canon covering two centuries of essential works. S.S. Van Dine called Crofts “without peer for sheer dexterity of plot.” The Times Literary Supplement called him pre-eminent among practitioners of pure detection. For anyone who loves classic British detective fiction, this is essential. ⭐
Why this endures: A murdered diamond merchant, a stolen fortune, and Scotland Yard’s most methodical detective—the 1924 Golden Age masterwork that introduced Inspector French, free.
It’s been three years since Deadbreak—the day the dead rose. Cities are in ruins, supplies are scarce, most meaningful conversations happen with a dog, and Jeremiah Reid has had exactly one goal every single day: make it to the Pacific coast to find his daughter. With his four-legged companion Joe, Jeremiah travels a lawless wasteland of zombie hordes, bandits, occasional cannibals, and—worst of all—people who put anchovies on pizza. Jorge Sanchez opens this Next Generation Indie Books Award winner with the zombie thriller whose distinguishing quality is a wisecracking first-person narrator who refuses to treat the apocalypse with unearned solemnity. 🧟
Told entirely in Jeremiah’s voice, the novel earns its laughs alongside its genuine tension—he spends his days defending the helpless, scavenging for ammunition and trade goods (meds, ammo, and booze are the hot commodities), and narrating it all with the movie-quoting, eye-rolling, deeply human perspective of someone who has given the zombie apocalypse the finger for three straight years and intends to keep going. The emotional stakes—getting back to his daughter—keep the humor from deflating the danger. 🔍
Sanchez received an electrical engineering degree from Cal State Long Beach, and that technical background gives the novel’s apocalypse mechanics a specific authenticity. Indie Reader called it “poignant, gritty, and fun—capturing high-paced thrills and emotional distress while garnishing them with good humor and witty dialogue.” One reviewer described it as “Jack Reacher meets The Walking Dead.” ⭐
Why this hooks you: Three years into the apocalypse, a wisecracking survivor, a loyal dog named Joe, and a cross-country mission to find his daughter—free.
With Earth under the iron fist of a despotic Global Union, a small group of exiles boards a spacecraft headed for Venus and a distant research station. Somewhere else finds them first. A sudden impact sends them hurtling toward a planet that shouldn’t exist—uncharted, unnamed, Earth-like enough at first to breed cautious optimism among the stranded survivors. Then it becomes clear that Terradox’s atmosphere is just the beginning, that Earth’s rules don’t apply here, and that the planet will not give up its secrets without a fight. Craig A. Falconer opens the Terradox Quadrilogy with the sci-fi thriller that became one of indie science fiction’s breakout novels. 🚀
Former space program poster-child Ivy “Holly” Wood—now a fugitive from the regime she once represented—takes responsibility for protecting her civilian passengers with exactly zero preparation for what this world turns out to be. The exploration of Terradox’s landscape reveals wonders and dangers in roughly equal measure, and the mystery of what the planet actually is becomes the central engine of the narrative. Falconer constructs a thriller with the kind of plot twist density that keeps readers awake well past midnight, layered over a solid survival-adventure foundation. 🔍
Falconer is a Scottish bestselling novelist whose earlier book Not Alone was an Audible.com Best of 2016 finalist. Goodreads reviewers call Terradox “not just an exciting sci-fi story, but a masterful thriller that will have you wondering right up until the very end.” The full Terradox Quadrilogy runs to 1,600 pages across four novels. ⭐
Why this captivates: They were heading for Venus—somewhere else found them first—and the mysterious planet they’ve crashed on will not give up its secrets without a fight, free.
School Days
When Manchester Yards donates a new training vessel to the Merchant Officer Academy at Port Newmar, Academy head Alys Giggone knows exactly who she wants for the job: Ishmael Wang and his crew, taking a cohort of cadets into the Deep Dark for a different kind of mission. Not cargo runs, not chases, not survival—but the harder, subtler challenge of figuring out who these cadets actually are, what they need to learn, and who is going to teach them what. Nathan Lowell opens the SC Marva Collins series with the Solar Clipper novel that takes the universe in a direction that surprises even longtime fans. 🚀
Lowell’s Solar Clipper universe has always been about ordinary people doing extraordinary things through competence, decency, and the kind of hard work that compounds quietly over time. School Days turns that lens on education and mentorship—what it means to take responsibility for the formation of the next generation of officers, with all the messiness and unexpected humanity that entails. Once Ishmael and his crew agree, the trouble starts, and the specific trouble here is deeply human rather than galactic. 🔍
Lowell first built his Solar Clipper readership by podcasting his novels, and has maintained one of indie science fiction’s most devoted audiences for over a decade. Reviewers describe his work as “a magic trick—he holds up each part and then somehow it’s more than those parts.” School Days can be read by new readers but rewards those who’ve followed Ishmael from Quarter Share forward with accumulated meaning. ⭐
Why this endures: Ishmael Wang, a new training vessel, a crew of cadets to shape, and the kind of mission that turns out harder than anyone planned—Lowell’s Solar Clipper universe at its most quietly compelling, for $2.49.
Six months ago, she barely escaped the Fae Enclave with her life. Now she’s on the run—human by origin, carrying stolen fae magic she never asked for, hiding from everyone in the supernatural community who would kill her if they knew what she was carrying. Then she thinks she’s found safety: a job with the notorious leader of the Shadow Court, a roof over her head, and enough anonymity to breathe. Then the newly minted king of the shifters walks in. Callum-ro-Deverin is grim, gorgeous, and immediately suspicious. He knows something is different about her. If he discovers the truth about her magic, she’ll be the first name on his hit list. Kenley Davidson opens the Shifter of Sheridan Avenue series with the contemporary fae-and-shifter fantasy romance that piles its complications on fast. ✨
The political machinery of the supernatural world grinds forward regardless: the upcoming Symposium will gather the leaders of all five courts to address the danger posed by the fae queen’s magical experiments. A traitor threatens to disrupt the proceedings. And somehow—impossibly—Callum decides that this human woman with unstable magic is the person he needs to hunt down the threat. No one says no to a dragon. And if he ever learns who and what she truly is, there will be nowhere on earth left to hide. 🔍
Davidson writes contemporary fantasy romance with sharp-witted heroines, complicated supernatural politics, and slow-burn tension that earns its payoff. The Shifter of Sheridan Avenue series has built a devoted following for its blend of urban fantasy world-building and emotionally satisfying romance. ⭐
Why this captivates: A human woman carrying stolen fae magic, a shifter king who suspects everything, a traitor loose in the supernatural courts, and a job that requires her to be the one person she absolutely cannot be—for $2.99.
Ford Dupree has two Grammys, eleven platinum albums, and a tabloid reputation that follows him everywhere. He’s also been proposing to his best friend Peyton Jamerson for years, and she keeps saying no. He finally gets the message. Then Peyton walks back into his life in crisis—custody battle, no house, no job, a judge giving her thirty days to get her life together or lose her son—and drops to one knee herself. The fake marriage that follows was supposed to be transactional, temporary, and emotionally uncomplicated. Susan Henshaw opens the fifth Seddledowne Series novel with the marriage-of-convenience, second-chance country music romance that is exactly as devastating as advertised. 💕
A fake marriage to save her son? Easy. Sleeping in the same bed with a pillow wall between them? Harder. Pretending she’s not the love of his life? Impossible. Henshaw develops both Ford’s long-suffering devotion and Peyton’s genuine reasons for keeping him at arm’s length with the emotional intelligence and hilarious banter that have built her Amazon bestselling career. Ford has been through it—the road, the fame, the addictions, the girl he couldn’t get—and his arc is one of her finest redemption stories yet. 🔍
Henshaw writes from rural Virginia and is an Amazon bestselling author celebrated for the warmth and realism of the Seddledowne community. Reviewers consistently describe her as “immediately hooked”—staying up past bedtime, recommending to everyone. This is a closed-door romance. If you enjoy Virgin River or Sweet Magnolias, the series is for you. ⭐
Why this hooks you: America’s favorite heartthrob, the best friend who kept saying no, a fake marriage she proposed to save her son, and a pillow wall that isn’t going to hold—for $2.99.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





