Bullets rain down on a packed football stadium, killing dozens. The panic stampede that follows kills a thousand more. A police marksman kills the shooter—a mentally unstable Desert Storm veteran found holding a smoking assault rifle. The case is open and shut, the public is outraged, and Congress responds with emergency legislation banning semi-automatic rifles. American gun owners have one week to comply or face mandatory five-year federal sentences. 🔍
The alleged sniper, Jimmy Shifflett, is linked by the FBI to a shadowy Virginia gun club it believes is a right-wing militia terror organization. But the people who knew Shifflett best do not believe he belonged to any militia, and they do not believe he fired those shots. If he was not the shooter, someone went to considerable trouble to make it look like he was—and the emergency legislation that followed happened very fast for a government that normally moves slowly. The question of who actually fired into the stadium, and why, is the engine of the Enemies Trilogy. 💀
Matthew Bracken writes political thriller from a distinctly libertarian and Second Amendment perspective—a novel that takes seriously the possibility that a mass casualty event could be engineered to produce a specific legislative outcome, and follows the investigation of that possibility through a cast of characters who have reasons not to accept the official narrative. First published in 2003, the novel’s central premise about political manipulation of public tragedy has kept it in circulation across two decades of readers who find its questions relevant regardless of their political positions. ⚡
What makes this gripping: Matthew Bracken launches the Enemies Trilogy with a political thriller of genuine suspense—a stadium massacre that produces instant gun legislation, an official story that does not hold up under scrutiny, and the dangerous question of who actually pulled the trigger and why. 🌟
The Death Series opens in the near future with a government-sanctioned cocktail injected into teenagers that triggers something nobody authorized: an Affinity for the Dead, a rare ability that lets its possessor interact with and communicate with deceased individuals. In Death Whispers, Caleb Hart discovers his Affinity after the injections, and immediately understands that the sinister Graysheets—the covert regime bent on control—will want to exploit it. Keeping the ability hidden while surviving high school bullies and protecting his girlfriend Jade is the opening challenge. 🧟
Death Inception pulls back the timeline to reveal the origins of the whole program: Kyle Hart’s groundbreaking genetic mapping work, the covert regime it enables, and Jeffrey Parker’s tragic story as someone with a rare Affinity who becomes a pawn in the larger game of power before Caleb’s story begins. Death Speaks advances the timeline as a serial killer targeting children puts Caleb and his friends in the crosshairs, partnering with police while the Graysheets tighten their institutional grip and threats to Jade’s family escalate the personal stakes. 💀
Tamara Rose Blodgett and Marata Eros build the Death Series on dystopian YA territory that blends government conspiracy, supernatural ability, and coming-of-age pressure into a world where the line between protecting yourself and being used is dangerously thin. The three-book collection gives readers the full opening arc—the origins, the present threat, and the escalating danger—in a single package, with enough world-building and character investment to support the longer series that follows. ⚡
What makes this essential: Tamara Rose Blodgett and Marata Eros deliver the first three Death Series novels in one free collection—government injections that trigger a rare ability to communicate with the dead, a covert regime determined to exploit it, and a teenager trying to protect his girlfriend and his secret from forces that will stop at nothing. 🌟
Lottie Lemon sees dead animals—furry creatures from the other side who have returned to warn her about threats to their former owners. It is a gift that makes her useful in ways she never anticipated and that keeps her life considerably more eventful than a baker-slash-caterer’s life should probably be. When she is hired to provide sweet treats for a party honoring an important judge, she accepts partly for the professional opportunity and partly to get her mind off the revelations about her relationship that have recently upended everything she thought she knew. 🎂
The party goes sideways immediately. She spots the ghost of a girl she was accused of killing last month—which is the kind of omen that, in Lottie’s experience, means something terrible is about to happen regardless of how hard she tries to prevent it. Another murder strikes the community, and Lottie finds herself determined to solve it while simultaneously trying to put her broken heart back together. The cozy mystery format here earns its particular flavor: the dessert buffet, the spectral warning, the amateur investigation, and the personal crisis all running simultaneously. 👻
Addison Moore writes the Murder in the Mix series with the cozy paranormal mystery warmth and comic timing that has made her one of the subgenre’s most reliably enjoyable writers. The seventh installment delivers the established pleasures of Lottie’s world—the baking, the ghostly animal warnings, the community of recurring characters—while giving the personal storyline the kind of development that keeps a long-running series fresh. Lottie’s voice, which never loses its sweetness even when things are going very badly, is the series’ particular charm. 💛
What makes this delightful: Addison Moore delivers the seventh Murder in the Mix mystery with her signature paranormal cozy charm—Lottie Lemon catering a judge’s party, a spectral warning she cannot ignore, another community murder to solve, and a broken heart she is determined to heal one banana cake at a time. 🌟
Black & Decker The Complete Photo Guide to Home Repair
When something breaks in a house, the default response for most homeowners is to call someone—which is expensive, requires scheduling, and creates a dependency that compounds over time. The Black and Decker Complete Photo Guide to Home Repair is built on the premise that most common household problems are fixable by the homeowner who has access to clear instructions and good photography, and it delivers 350 repair projects supported by over 2,000 photos to make that premise practical. 🔧
The coverage spans the full range of household trouble spots: plumbing, wiring, windows and doors, flooring, furnaces, water heaters, wall coverings, and more. Specific projects include repairing water-damaged walls and ceilings, installing entry doors, repairing gutters, staining siding, replacing a water heater, quieting noisy pipes, replacing a toilet, and troubleshooting home wiring. Each project comes with the necessary tools listed and expert tips from people who have done these repairs many times. The compact format and subject-matter organization make it easy to find the relevant section when something has just gone wrong and patience is limited. 🏠
The Black and Decker Complete Photo Guide series has established itself as the gold standard of DIY home reference precisely because the photography standard is high enough to actually show what is happening at each step—not aspirational images but working instructions rendered visually. For homeowners who want to develop genuine repair capability rather than permanent contractor dependency, this is the single reference most likely to make a practical difference across the years of homeownership. 💡
What makes this essential: The Editors of Cool Springs Press deliver 350 home repair projects with over 2,000 photos—plumbing, wiring, flooring, heating, wall repair, and more—in the most comprehensive and practically useful home repair reference available for DIYers of every skill level. 🌟
In an English courtroom, a defendant named Louis Stevenson is sentenced to death for a killing he insists he did not commit. Before they take him away, he rises and delivers a medieval curse on four men: the prosecutor, the judge, the jury foreman, and the actual killer. He names them separately, deliberately, with the specific weight of someone who knows exactly what he is doing and who is present to witness it. A young couple in the gallery believes him, and their conviction only deepens when two more deaths follow in quick succession after the sentencing. 🔍
The second story in this collection, Aunt Helen, operates in a different register—the seemingly civilized residents of an English country house, the secrets about love and marriage and desire concealed behind polished surfaces, and the perfect murder that threatens to expose what has been carefully hidden behind closed doors. Together the two pieces demonstrate the range of Ellis Peters’s skill: the courtroom drama with its medieval curse, and the country house story with its domestic secrets, both executed with the assured plotting and moral intelligence that distinguish her work. 💀
Ellis Peters—best known for the Brother Cadfael medieval mysteries—was one of British crime fiction’s most celebrated practitioners, a writer whose work earned her the Diamond Dagger, the Crime Writers’ Association’s highest honor. The Assize of the Dying showcases her work in the traditional detective mystery format, with the period atmosphere and careful construction that characterize everything she wrote. The medieval curse framing gives the title story its particular distinction—a device that sounds Gothic and functions as rigorous mystery plotting. 📖
What makes this essential: Ellis Peters delivers two classic British mysteries—a courtroom curse that proves prophetic across three deaths, and a country house where the secrets of love and marriage have been too carefully hidden—from the Diamond Dagger-winning author of the Brother Cadfael series. 🌟
The Bill of Rights is ten amendments, and most Americans can name two or three of them with confidence. Constitutional scholar Linda R. Monk’s user’s guide approaches all ten with equal rigor—the remarkable history of each amendment, the Supreme Court’s interpretation across two centuries of cases, and the power of ordinary citizens to enforce rights that the document promises but only people can actually claim. 📖
The book’s organizing principle is people: not legal abstractions but the specific individuals whose cases made the Bill of Rights mean something in practice. Fannie Lou Hamer, the Mississippi sharecropper who became a national civil rights leader. Clarence Earl Gideon, the prisoner whose handwritten Supreme Court petition expanded the right to counsel. Mary Beth Tinker, the thirteen-year-old whose Vietnam War protest established free speech rights for students. Michael Hardwick, who fought for privacy after police entered his bedroom unlawfully. Suzette Kelo, the nurse who opposed her city’s takeover of her neighborhood. Simon Tam, whose decade-long trademark battle for his band ended in a unanimous Supreme Court victory. ⚖️
Monk writes accessible constitutional history with the narrative intelligence to make legal history feel like human story—which it is, in every case that has ever mattered. Judge Learned Hand’s words that frame the book—liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies there, no constitution can save it—animate the entire project: the Bill of Rights is not self-executing but requires citizens who understand it, believe in it, and are willing to act on it. This is the book that makes that understanding accessible to everyone. 💡
What makes this essential: Linda R. Monk delivers an accessible, narrative-driven guide to all ten amendments—amendment by amendment, Supreme Court case by case, brought to life through the ordinary Americans whose battles made constitutional rights mean something in practice rather than just on paper. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





