Gaby has just ended a ten-year relationship and needs to escape—and where better than the Scottish Highlands to lick wounds and recover in peace and quiet? Fate has different ideas. First there’s Jack McAllan, rough and ready and bearing more than a passing resemblance to Gaby’s favorite fictional Scottish hero, except that he’s been singularly unimpressive so far. Who knew a man could be simultaneously that attractive and that rude and taciturn? Emma Baird opens the Highland Books series with the contemporary Scottish romance that earns its specific warmth from the particular appeal of a setting that has never stopped being romantic regardless of what the hero’s personality suggests. 💙
The additional mystery dimension—the previous occupant of Gaby’s rental has left tantalizing clues behind, including a not-so-secret identity and YouTube fame that Gaby finds impossible to resist investigating—gives the novel its specific texture beyond the romance. Baird develops the Highland community with the atmospheric specificity that Scottish romance requires: the landscape, the community rhythms, the specific social world of a place where everyone’s history is known and newcomers are assessed thoroughly before being accepted. 💕
Baird writes contemporary Scottish romance with the combination of genuine Highland atmosphere, a heroine whose specific romantic exhaustion after ten years makes her resistance to Jack both believable and amusing, and the light mystery element that gives the series its distinctive dual appeal. For readers who want their Scottish romance with real setting authenticity and a hero who earns the ending rather than simply being awarded it, this is a series worth starting. ⭐
Why this charms: A messy breakup, a Scottish Highland escape, a rude and taciturn man who looks exactly like her favorite fictional hero, and a mysterious previous tenant whose secrets she can’t stop investigating—Highland Fling opens the series, free.
Phoebe made a promise to her dying mother: take care of her younger sister Grace, no matter what. Even if that means crossing hundreds of miles by wagon train to Oregon. She suspects her uncle—now their guardian—had a hand in their father’s death, and getting Grace away from him is the only priority. The wagon train’s leader, Colton Wallace, realizes immediately that the young boy who showed up with a younger sister is actually a woman—and agrees to take them only on condition that Phoebe maintains her disguise as a man for the duration of the journey. Kay Dawson opens the Oregon Sky series with the Western frontier romance premise stacked with productive complications. 🌾
The disguise structure gives the romance its specific tension: Phoebe and Colton sharing the close quarters and daily dangers of a wagon train crossing while she maintains a pretense they both know is false, and while he tries to reconcile the professional responsibility of keeping the entire company safe with the personal complication of feelings he didn’t plan on. Dawson develops the Oregon Trail world with the historical specificity that frontier romance requires—the physical hardships, the community dynamics, the specific dangers that made the journey genuinely perilous. 💙
Dawson writes Western frontier romance with the combination of historical authenticity and genuine emotional warmth that has built a devoted readership for the Oregon Sky series. The promise to Phoebe’s mother gives the novel its specific moral foundation—everything she risks on the trail is risked in service of that promise—and Colton’s specific competence and reluctant protectiveness give the romance its slow-burn engine. ⭐
Why this hooks you: A deathbed promise, a dangerous uncle, a wagon train to Oregon disguised as a boy, and a trail boss who knows exactly who she is—Phoebe’s Promise is Western frontier romance with real historical stakes, free.
Christmas in Holiday Hills is supposed to be magical, not murderous. Abby Odell is a newly awakened witch and cozy mystery writer still navigating her powers and her first Christmas without her mother when a shocking family-linked double murder shatters the town’s festive calm. With garlands hanging, secrets whispering through the snow, and a distracted but dangerously attractive police chief circling the case, Abby has little choice but to sleuth her way through the chaos. Carolyn Ridder Aspenson opens the Witches of Holiday Hills series with the paranormal Christmas cozy that delivers its seasonal atmosphere with genuine warmth and its mystery with real stakes. ✨
By her side throughout is Cooper, her sarcastic, sharp-eyed Burmese familiar, whose commentary is as helpful as it is unfiltered—which is the specific kind of familiar that distinguishes witchy cozy mystery at its most entertaining. Aspenson develops the Holiday Hills community with the snowy small-town specificity that Christmas cozy requires, and the family connection to the double murder gives Abby’s investigation its personal stakes alongside the professional ones. The grief dimension—first Christmas without her mother, newly discovering powers she never knew she had—gives the novel its emotional depth underneath the holiday atmosphere. 💙
Aspenson is a prolific and beloved cozy mystery author whose Witches of Holiday Hills series has built a devoted following for the combination of witchy paranormal elements, Christmas atmosphere rendered with genuine warmth, and Cooper the familiar whose unfiltered commentary is consistently the series’ most quotable element. ⭐
Why this charms: A newly awakened witch, a double murder at Christmas, a sarcastic Burmese familiar with strong opinions, and a snowy Holiday Hills that isn’t quite as peaceful as it looks—the series opener, free.
Real Artists Don’t Starve
The myth of the starving artist—the idea that commercial success and artistic integrity are incompatible, that real artists wait for inspiration rather than pursue it strategically, that working alone is a virtue and profiting from your work is a sellout—has done more damage to creative people than almost any external obstacle. Jeff Goins opens *Real Artists Don’t Starve* with the specific intention to replace that mythology with timeless strategies for actually thriving as a creative in the modern economy, drawing on the examples of successful artists both historical and contemporary. 🎨
Goins argues that the artistic temperament—far from being a disadvantage—is actually a competitive advantage in the marketplace, and that the creatives who have succeeded across history and into the present are those who understood and embraced that advantage rather than treating commercial engagement as a betrayal of their work. The tension between the inspired life and the practical path to success is the book’s central subject, and Goins navigates it with the balanced intelligence of someone who has thought carefully about both sides. 💙
Goins is a widely read author and creativity expert whose work has reached a large audience of writers, artists, designers, and other creative professionals. *Real Artists Don’t Starve* delivers its argument through inspiring anecdotes of successful creatives alongside the practical framework, making it both motivating and genuinely actionable. For any creative person who has internalized the starving artist mythology and found it limiting their work or their life, this is the book that provides the direct rebuttal. At $2.99 this is excellent value. ⭐
Why this matters: The starving artist myth dismantled with historical evidence and timeless strategies—for every creative who believes commercial success and artistic integrity can’t coexist—Jeff Goins’ essential guide for $2.99.
Ryan Goldberg came to birding unexpectedly—the way many people do, through a single encounter that suddenly made visible a world that had always been there. Enamored with the extraordinary variety of species passing through his hometown of New York City, and with the passionate birders he started meeting, he spent a year reporting on the natural wonders hiding between the skyscrapers. The result is *Bird City*: a richly textured account of urban wildlife that will change how you see the sky above any city you inhabit. More than four hundred different species have been found in New York—more than in Yellowstone National Park. 🐦
The four seasons take Goldberg through all five boroughs, through Central Park and the Brooklyn waterfront and the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, pursuing rare and common species alike and deepening his understanding of how and why birds make their home in this particular environment. The human community he discovers alongside the birds—passionate, idiosyncratic, deeply knowledgeable—gives the book its social texture alongside the natural history. Goldberg writes with the specific enthusiasm of someone who fell hard into an obsession and wants you to fall with him. 🌿
Goldberg writes with the combination of accessible narrative, genuine natural history depth, and New York atmospheric specificity that makes *Bird City* both a compelling urban nature book and a genuine piece of New York writing. For birders who want their hobby placed in its urban ecological context, for New Yorkers who have never noticed what’s flying above them, and for anyone who thinks of nature as something that happens outside cities, this is the book that argues otherwise. At $2.99 this is excellent value. ⭐
Why this inspires: Over four hundred bird species in New York City—more than Yellowstone—and a year spent finding them through all five boroughs by a writer who fell hard into birding and wants to take you with him, for $2.99.
Young Martin Arrowsmith grows up fascinated by medicine—the contents of Gray’s Anatomy, the possibilities of science, the idea of a life devoted to research and discovery. He sets off for medical school full of idealism and eventually finds himself at a prestigious research institute, finally positioned to do the work he always wanted. Then the institute sends him to a plague-ravaged Caribbean island, and he must show what he is truly made of. Sinclair Lewis won the Pulitzer Prize for *Arrowsmith* in 1926—and declined it. The novel remains a perennial favorite of medical students a century later. 📚
What makes *Arrowsmith* endure is not simply its medical subject matter but Lewis’s specific satirical intelligence about the compromises that idealism faces in the real world—the gap between the pure research Martin wants to do and the institutional, social, and professional pressures that accumulate around any ambitious person building a career. The Caribbean plague section gives the novel its dramatic climax and its clearest test of Martin’s character, but the earlier chapters, which trace his path through medical school and into professional life, are Lewis at his most incisive. 🌟
Lewis is one of American literature’s great satirists—the first American to win the Nobel Prize in Literature, in 1930—and *Arrowsmith* demonstrates his specific gift for rendering the social world that surrounds a protagonist with as much intelligence as the protagonist himself. The novel’s questions about scientific integrity, institutional compromise, and the cost of idealism have not dated. At $1.99 this is exceptional value for one of American literature’s essential twentieth-century novels. ⭐
Why this endures: A young doctor’s pursuit of pure scientific research through medical school, prestigious institutions, and a Caribbean plague—Sinclair Lewis’s Pulitzer Prize-winning American classic for $1.99.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





