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Author: J.A. Konrath
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Horror Thriller

A single word title that’s become synonymous with surveillance, voyeurism, and the particular dread of being watched without knowing it. Konrath steps into darker territory with this entry in his Dark Thriller Collective, using the webcam as both a literal plot device and a metaphor for the loss of privacy that makes modern horror feel so immediate and personal. 💻

Konrath’s Dark Thriller Collective operates in a different register than the Jack Daniels series, leaning harder into horror-adjacent territory where the threat is less about procedure and more about pure psychological dread. WEBCAM uses technology’s penetration into private spaces to generate the kind of unsettling premise that lands differently because it feels so plausible in everyday life. 🌑

Readers who enjoy horror thrillers with a contemporary technological edge and a willingness to go to genuinely dark places will find Konrath’s Collective a distinct and unsettling alternative to his procedural work.

Why this unsettles: it turns a piece of everyday technology into a source of genuine dread, mining the modern fear of surveillance for horror that feels uncomfortably close to home.

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Author: Iain Rob Wright
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Horror

Something is spreading through a neighborhood, and Iain Rob Wright is not particularly interested in reassuring readers about what it is or how bad it’s going to get. The Hill series opener delivers the kind of escalating, contained horror that Wright does well, isolating a community and then systematically removing every way out as the threat expands. 🦠

Wright writes British horror with a reputation for genuine brutality and a refusal to let his characters off easy, and The Spread’s title alone signals a story about contamination and contagion that operates on both a literal and social level. The series format gives the premise room to expand well beyond what a standalone could sustain, building dread across installments rather than resolving it cleanly. 🌑

Readers who enjoy relentless, escalating horror with a community under siege and an author who doesn’t flinch from where the premise leads will find Wright a reliable, genuinely frightening read.

Why this terrifies: it takes the specific horror of something spreading beyond anyone’s ability to contain it and builds a series around watching that process unfold in real time.

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Author: J.A. Konrath, Blake Crouch
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Crime Thriller

This ninth Jack Daniels entry is a genuine collaboration rather than just a crossover, pairing Konrath with Blake Crouch and bringing Crouch’s Luther Kite character into direct collision with Daniels’s world. Two authors with distinct voices merging their series creates something genuinely different from either writer’s solo work, and the uncut framing signals this is operating at the more extreme end of both authors’ registers. 🔪

Crouch, who went on to write Dark Matter and Recursion, was already establishing a reputation for high-concept, intensely plotted fiction, and his contribution gives this entry a different energy than Konrath delivers alone. The result is a thriller that plays to both writers’ strengths, Konrath’s procedural momentum and Crouch’s instinct for psychological disorientation working in genuine tandem. ⚡

Readers who enjoy either author’s work, or who want to see what happens when two distinct crime fiction voices genuinely collaborate rather than simply share a page, will find this one of the more interesting entries in either writer’s catalog.

Why this stands out: it’s a genuine two-author collaboration that produces something neither writer would have created alone, merging two distinct series voices into a thriller with real collective energy.

The Surgeon, The Midwife, The Quack: How to Stay Alive in Renaissance England

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Author: Dr. Alanna Skuse
Regularly $3.99, Today $0.99
Medical History

If you got sick in Renaissance England, your options ranged from the marginally helpful to the genuinely dangerous, and Dr. Alanna Skuse walks readers through all of them with the kind of dark humor the subject demands. The Surgeon, the Midwife, the Quack examines the full spectrum of Renaissance medical practice, from licensed professionals operating on the cutting edge of their era’s knowledge to the charlatans peddling cures nobody could verify and a few people probably didn’t survive. 💀

Skuse writes popular history with real scholarly depth behind it, drawing on contemporary sources to reconstruct what patients actually experienced and what practitioners actually believed they were doing, rather than simply cataloging the practices as primitive by modern standards. The period comes alive through specific, vivid detail that makes the distance between then and now feel both enormous and occasionally surprisingly small. 🏥

Readers who enjoy accessible, lively medical or social history with a wry eye for human folly will find this an endlessly entertaining window into a genuinely strange era of medicine.

Why this fascinates: it takes Renaissance medicine seriously enough to explain why people believed it worked, making the era’s dangerous remedies feel less like ignorance and more like a genuinely different relationship with the human body.

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Author: Merlin Tuttle
Regularly $17.99, Today $3.99
Nature & Wildlife

Merlin Tuttle has spent more time with bats than almost anyone alive, and this memoir of a lifetime spent studying, photographing, and advocating for the world’s most unfairly maligned mammals is both a scientific education and a genuine love letter to creatures that most people would rather not think about at all. 🦇

Tuttle is the founder of Bat Conservation International and one of the world’s leading bat photographers, and his combination of field experience and scientific expertise gives this book an authority few nature writers can match. He makes a genuinely compelling case that bats are not only fascinating but ecologically indispensable, their role in controlling insects and pollinating plants far more significant than their creepy reputation suggests. 🌙

Readers who enjoy engaging wildlife memoir with genuine scientific depth, or who are simply open to having their minds changed about an animal they’ve always avoided, will find Tuttle a charming and persuasive guide.

Why this converts: it makes an airtight case that bats deserve far better than their reputation, backed by a lifetime of field research and some of the most extraordinary wildlife photographs you’ll find anywhere.

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Author: Trent Dalton
Regularly $3.99, Today $1.99
Literary Fiction

A seventeen year old girl lives in a rusted van with her mother on the outskirts of Brisbane, nameless and undocumented, invisible to a society that doesn’t know she exists. The only person she confides in is her own reflection, the girl in the mirror she calls Lola, who she believes will one day become something extraordinary. Trent Dalton builds his novel around that fragile, fierce belief in a future that hasn’t arrived yet. 🪞

Dalton writes with the same big-hearted, maximalist energy that made Boy Swallows Universe such a phenomenon in Australia, filling even the grimmest circumstances with genuine warmth and an almost defiant insistence on finding beauty and humor in places that seem to have none left. The Brisbane setting pulses with life in his hands, and the nameless girl at the center carries the novel on pure force of character. 🌟

Readers who loved Boy Swallows Universe or who enjoy literary fiction that swings between heartbreak and joy with fearless confidence will find Dalton one of contemporary fiction’s most alive voices.

Why this shines: it takes a girl living at society’s absolute margins and fills her world with so much life and longing that it becomes impossible not to believe in the future she’s imagining for herself.

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