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Author: Penny Wylder
FREE
Contemporary Romance

She is definitively the good girl of her friend group. Her best friend dares her to let loose on her last free weekend before starting her dream job. She lets loose. The sequence of events that follows—too many vodka tonics, dancing with a stranger, a hotel room, a ring she has no memory of agreeing to—leads to the morning-after realization that she has accidentally married someone she just met. Penny Wylder structures the Vegas marriage premise with the comedic efficiency it requires: get to the ring, get to the regret, and then deliver the information that makes everything immeasurably worse. 💍

The moment she flips off the stranger while threatening a restraining order and then discovers he is her new boss is the joke the novel has been building toward, and Wylder lands it with real timing. The boss-employee dynamic layered onto an accidental marriage creates exactly the kind of situation where every professional instinct and every personal instinct are pulling in opposite directions, which is the engine that contemporary romance comedy runs on when it’s working. 😂

Wylder writes with the breezy confidence of someone who has thought through every comic implication of the premise before committing to it, and the novel delivers on the promise of its setup with consistent energy. The accidental marriage subgenre has a devoted readership for exactly this reason—the starting situation is inherently absurd, the complications are inherently escalating, and the resolution requires both parties to acknowledge something they’ve been pretending isn’t obvious. *Overnight Wife* is a reliable, entertaining entry in that tradition. 🌟

Why this entertains: One dare, one Vegas night, one ring she doesn’t remember saying yes to, and the discovery that the man she just threatened with a restraining order is her new boss—Overnight Wife is accidental marriage comedy with real timing.

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Author: Ted Tayler
FREE
Police Procedural

Daphne Tolliver was murdered in Lowden Woods ten years ago and the case has haunted Wiltshire Police ever since—not because of lack of effort but because of lack of answers. Retired Detective Inspector Gus Freeman is pulled back into service to lead a new Crime Review Team tasked with finding what everyone else missed. Ted Tayler opens the Freeman Files series with the cold case revival setup that the British police procedural tradition does particularly well: experienced detective, suppressed evidence, and the particular urgency of an unsolved murder that has never stopped mattering to the people who worked it. 🔍

The team Gus assembles brings its own complications—most notably DS Alex Hardy, confined to a wheelchair after a devastating crash and determined to prove his analytical capabilities are as valuable as ever. Tayler gives Hardy enough specific professional pride and specific frustration that the disability dimension feels character-specific rather than generically inspirational. The tension between Hardy’s sharp instincts and the institutional tendency to underestimate him gives the series its running subplot alongside the central investigation. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

Gus’s own personal situation—still reeling from the loss of his wife Tess, finding solace in his allotment, beginning to navigate the possibility of new companionship with the same careful instincts he brings to cold cases—gives the series its emotional texture alongside the procedural plotting. Tayler balances the personal and professional dimensions with the practiced control of a writer who has built a substantial British procedural readership. The Freeman Files series has multiple entries and a devoted following, and this opener establishes exactly why the character and the world reward continued investment. ⭐

Why this grips you: A ten-year-old motiveless murder, a retired DI pulled back to find what everyone missed, and a team carrying its own wounds—Fatal Decision is British cold case procedural with real depth.

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Author: Terrance Williamson
FREE
Historical Biographical Fiction

Eleonore Hodys was a real person—a political prisoner detained at Auschwitz who survived the unimaginable and left behind a documented account of her experiences. Terrance Williamson’s biographical fiction takes her story as its foundation and renders it with the specificity that the historical record demands and the human dimension that fiction can provide. The result is a novel that occupies the difficult territory between testimony and narrative, attempting to give voice to a life whose actual record exists but whose inner experience can only be approached through imagination. 🕯️

The survival mechanisms Eleonore finds inside the camp—friendship with another female prisoner, the question of whether to join the resistance movement planning to overthrow their oppressors—give the narrative its human architecture. Williamson focuses on the choices that remain possible even in a context designed to eliminate choice entirely, which is both the most historically honest approach and the most humanizing one. The friendship at the center of Eleonore’s survival gives the story its emotional warmth in circumstances of extreme darkness. 💙

The complication of the Commandant’s unwanted attention—forcing Eleonore to choose between her own comfort and her principles—gives the novel its central moral tension. Williamson handles this dimension with the seriousness it requires, neither sensationalizing the historical reality nor softening it. Holocaust biographical fiction carries an obligation to the real people whose lives it depicts that not all authors meet with equal care; Williamson approaches Eleonore Hodys’s story with evident respect for both the documented history and the human being at its center. This is a sensitive topic and if you are experiencing distress please reach out to a trusted person for support. 📖

Why this matters: The true story of a political prisoner who found survival through friendship and courage in the most harrowing circumstances imaginable—The Mistress of Auschwitz honors a real life with real care.

When It Falls Apart

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Author: Catherine Bybee
Regularly $4.99, Today $2.49
Women’s Romance Fiction

Brooke Turner drops everything to care for her ailing father in San Diego because he’s her dad and he needs her, even though it means unraveling her long-term relationship and crossing the country to a neighborhood where she knows no one. Catherine Bybee grounds the D’Angelos series opener in the specific emotional reality of a woman whose life reorganizes around a parent’s illness—not dramatically or resentfully, but with the quiet, costly determination of someone who knows what the right thing is and does it anyway. 💙

Luca D’Angelo is the oldest child in an Italian-American family, a single father to a young daughter, and thoroughly unhappy when his mother rents the top floor of their house to a beautiful stranger with no ties to the neighborhood. His anger is specific and credible—this is not generalized hostility but the protective suspicion of a man who has organized his family’s world carefully and doesn’t want unknown variables introduced into it. Bybee gives his resistance enough specific texture that its erosion feels earned. 🌊

The San Diego Little Italy setting gives the novel its community identity—the specific neighborhood, the family restaurant, the way the D’Angelo family is embedded in a place rather than simply living in one. As Luca witnesses Brooke’s difficult journey with her father and Brooke sees Luca’s daily effort as a single parent, the developing feelings are grounded in genuine admiration for how the other person is handling genuinely hard circumstances. Bybee is a consistently bestselling romance author, and this series opener demonstrates the warmth and character intelligence that has earned her readership. ⭐

Why this warms you: A woman who dropped everything to care for her father, a single dad suspicious of the beautiful stranger his mother just rented to, and Little Italy San Diego as the place where two people’s lives gradually become one story.

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Author: Sheridan Anne
Regularly $9.99, Today $4.99
Romance Collections

Roman, Levi, and Marcus DeAngelis are the sons of the most notorious mafia boss in the world—men whose names make other men tremble and whose appearance on any horizon means something has gone very wrong for someone. They are not men who ask. They are not men who wait. And they have decided, with the complete certainty of people who have never been told no in any meaningful sense, that she belongs to them. Sheridan Anne opens the Depraved Sinners series with the full force of the dark romance mafia subgenre’s most extreme end. 🖤

The capture premise—stalked through her apartment, led into a trap, taken—is deployed without softening, which is both the series’ defining quality and the thing that makes it strictly for readers who already know and want this specific subgenre. Dark romance has a devoted readership that comes specifically for the morally unchained fantasy, and Anne writes it with the commitment the genre requires: these men are presented as genuinely dangerous, the situation is genuinely without recourse, and the eventual development of something beyond captivity is earned through the specific dynamics of who these characters actually are rather than through plot convenience. 🌑

The complete series package gives that readership the full arc—the initial capture, the developing dynamics, the complications that arrive when power is interrogated rather than simply held—in a single collection at a price that reflects the substantial length. Anne has built a significant dark romance readership across her catalog, and the DeAngelis Brothers series is among her most popular work. For readers who know they enjoy this subgenre and want the complete story, this is the edition to get. 🔥

Why this pulls in its readers: Three mafia heirs who decided she was theirs before she knew they existed—the complete Depraved Sinners series for readers who know exactly what dark romance delivers.

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Author: Christina Lauren
Regularly $5.99, Today $2.99
Romantic Comedy

Fizzy Chen has written bestselling romance novels her entire career, encouraging readers to believe in love with every book she publishes. Then she’s asked to give a commencement address and the realization hits: she has never actually been in love. Lust, absolutely. The real thing? Nothing. Christina Lauren—the bestselling author duo—builds the romantic comedy on one of the genre’s most satisfying premises: the professional optimist who discovers she doesn’t believe her own message. 💛

Connor Prince is a documentary filmmaker whose profit-minded boss has ordered him to produce a reality TV show or lose his job. The chance run-in with an exasperated Fizzy—the queen of romance who has just admitted she’s never experienced what she writes about—offers the perfect solution: film Fizzy actually falling in love on camera. She declines firmly, then negotiates a list of demands, and when he agrees to all of them, production on *The True Love Experiment* begins. Christina Lauren handles the meta-layer with real elegance—a romance novel about a romance novelist being filmed falling in love, written by a romance-writing duo, could be insufferably cute or could be genuinely clever, and it’s the latter. 🎬

Connor’s private question—whether the right match could ever be in the cards for him too—gives the novel its second emotional register beneath the comedy surface, and the development of his feelings for Fizzy runs alongside her on-camera search in ways that the format keeps productively complicated. Christina Lauren is one of contemporary romance’s most consistently beloved author partnerships, and this novel is among their most inventive premises executed with characteristic warmth and wit. 💕

Why this delights: A romance novelist who’s never been in love, a filmmaker who needs to document her falling for someone, and the messy question of whether the person behind the camera might be the actual answer—Christina Lauren at their most charming.

… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3