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Author: Zoe Chant
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Paranormal Werewolves & Shifters Romance

Henry is a hellhound, and being a hellhound means everyone is afraid of you. That’s how it’s supposed to work. What’s not supposed to happen is every animal within a four-mile radius deciding he’s their new best friend—pigeons roosting on his shoulder, the local moose population stampeding toward him for hugs. Zoe Chant builds the Shifters and Sweets series on the premise that the most terrifying supernatural predators are deeply, comically undermined by being inexplicably adorable to the animal kingdom, and she runs that premise with complete deadpan commitment. The result is paranormal romance at its most inventively funny. 🐕

Henry’s solution is to escape to the mountains, where he can presumably intimidate wildlife into maintaining appropriate distances using his hellhound form. His plan requires one last piece of cake first—a reasonable request by any standard—which is how he ends up at the Girdwood Springs Food Festival standing in front of his fated mate. The fated mate trope lands differently when the hero is simultaneously over the moon about finding her and completely unable to figure out how to court anyone while surrounded by animals trying to leap into his arms. Chant uses the comedy to give the romance genuine forward energy. 🎂

Luna, the travel journalist on assignment covering the food festival, arrives with Fillmore—described as the world’s ugliest dog—and an entirely reasonable desire to sample all the amazing local food. The collision of her assignment, her dog, and a man being slowly mobbed by increasingly enthusiastic wildlife is handled with the light comedic touch that Chant’s readership has come to depend on. The Shifters and Sweets series consistently delivers paranormal romance that knows exactly how funny the genre can be when it commits to the bit. ✨

Why this delights: A hellhound whose fearsome reputation is ruined by every animal in town wanting to cuddle him, a fated mate at a food festival, and the world’s ugliest dog along for the ride—Hellhounds and Angel Cakes is paranormal romance with irresistible comic energy.

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Author: Laurie London
FREE
Psychic Romance

In a world where magic comes from enemy territory and psychic gifts are simultaneously coveted and despised, Neyla Trihorn had the perfect life in New Seattle until a deadly accident revealed abilities she didn’t know she had. Now the former fashion designer is the army’s most valuable asset in a war she never chose to be part of. Laurie London opens the Iron Portal series with a world-building conceit that gives both the heroine and the conflict immediate specificity—this isn’t generic fantasy but a fully constructed alternate reality with its own rules about power and survival. ⚔️

Assassin Rickert D’Angelus is operating on vengeance and pure tactical logic when he leads warriors into enemy territory to prevent another portal opening. Finding a beautiful unconscious soldier on a mountain ledge near the portal complicates the mission: she has Protection Magic, which means she can’t be killed, which means the army will simply keep deploying her until the war ends or she breaks. His solution—take her as his prisoner rather than let the army use her again—is the kind of morally ambiguous opening move that psychic romance readers recognize immediately as the beginning of something considerably more complicated than a capture scenario. 🌌

London builds the rules-heavy world with the efficiency that the paranormal romance genre requires—enough structure to make the magic feel real, not so much that it buries the character story. The “and that’s when things get interesting” line at the end of the setup is doing real work: the tension between Rickert’s mission, his prisoner’s abilities, and the inconvenient reality of proximity is exactly the engine that drives this subgenre when the character work holds up. The Iron Portal series has a devoted following. 💫

Why this draws you in: A fashion designer turned army asset with Protection Magic, an assassin who takes her prisoner to keep her safe, and a world where magic comes from the enemy—Dark Assassin is psychic romance with strong world-building bones.

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Author: Glynn James, J. Thorn
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Post-Apocalyptic Science Fiction

The Elk Clan is what remains of humanity in this corner of a ravaged world, and when Jonah inherits leadership from his father under suspicious circumstances, much of the old man’s inner circle immediately questions whether he has what it takes to guide them to their winter shelter at the ruins of Eliz. That skepticism is the first pressure. The hundreds of miles of dangerous highway between where they are and where they need to be is the second. The feral gangs and the dark stranger with his own agenda are the third and fourth. Bestselling authors J. Thorn and Glynn James build the Dustfall series on accumulated adversity. 🌆

The post-apocalyptic fiction genre has a leadership-under-pressure subgenre that Dustfall inhabits with real seriousness—Jonah’s challenge is not just physical survival but the harder work of earning authority he technically possesses but hasn’t yet proven. The inner circle’s doubt follows him, which means every decision he makes is evaluated by people who already suspect he’ll fail. That social pressure layered onto the physical dangers gives the series a dimension that pure action survival fiction often misses. 🔥

Five complete novels in a single free package is an exceptional value for a new reader—it means the world has room to develop across multiple arcs, relationships evolve over sustained time, and the series can deliver the kind of payoff that single volumes can only promise. Thorn and James are both experienced authors with substantial post-apocalyptic readerships, and their collaboration produces the kind of propulsive, character-grounded survival epic that the genre’s devoted fans come back to repeatedly. ⚡

Why this hooks you: A suspicious death, an untested new leader, hundreds of miles of dangerous highway, and five complete novels to follow Jonah’s epic quest—Dustfall is post-apocalyptic survival fiction with real character depth.

Enduring Vietnam

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Author: James Wright
Regularly $17.99, Today $2.99
Vietnam War History

James Wright’s central argument is stated early and pursued with real moral seriousness: the veterans of Vietnam remain largely anonymous, treated as accomplices in a mistake rather than as individuals who served under conditions they didn’t create. *Enduring Vietnam* does not excuse the policy failures that led to the war or the strategic errors that defined its conduct—Wright is clear-eyed about both. What it insists on is that the people who served in it deserve to be seen as more than footnotes to a political disaster. 🎖️

The book begins with the baby boomers growing up in the 1950s—their relationship with patriotism, with military service, with the cultural expectations that shaped their decisions about whether to serve and how. Understanding why young Americans went to Vietnam requires understanding the world that formed them, and Wright traces that formation with the depth of a historian who has spent sustained time with primary sources and oral testimony. The decision to serve, the experience of service, and the complicated return home are all given full treatment. 🌿

The Battle for Hamburger Hill provides the book’s most sustained military narrative—a brutal engagement that encapsulated everything about what the Vietnam experience cost the men who fought it—and Wright’s account draws on substantial interviews with veterans to give it the texture of lived experience rather than strategic summary. The quiet acts of courage that appear throughout the book do exactly what the title promises: they bring the soldiers out of the shadows and give them back their specific humanity. At $2.99 this is one of the essential Vietnam histories available. ⭐

Why this endures: A historian who refuses to let Vietnam veterans remain anonymous—their stories, their war, and the generation that sent them, told with the honesty and respect they deserve.

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Author: Rose George
Regularly $19.99, Today $2.99
Public Health

Disease spread by human waste kills more people worldwide every year than any other single cause of death. Even in America, nearly two million people have no access to an indoor toilet. And yet the subject remains almost entirely unmentionable in polite conversation—we collectively refuse to discuss the thing that affects everyone, every day, and determines more of global health outcomes than almost any other factor. Rose George decided to discuss it anyway, and the result is one of the more important works of public health journalism of the past two decades. 🌍

The scope of George’s reporting is genuinely global. She moves from the underground sewers of Paris, London, and New York—aging infrastructure that she describes as a disaster waiting to happen—to an Indian slum where ten toilets are shared by 60,000 people, to the specific cultural, political, and economic dynamics that determine why some communities have sanitation and others don’t. The disparity is not random and not simply a matter of poverty; it involves policy decisions, cultural taboos, and institutional priorities that George traces with the meticulous attention of a serious investigative reporter. 💧

The *Los Angeles Times* called it “valuable and often entertaining”—the “entertaining” part is real and important, because George writes with the kind of razor-sharp wit that makes deeply uncomfortable material genuinely readable. The mix of levity and gravity prevents the book from becoming a catalogue of horrors while never allowing the reader to look away from what matters. At $2.99 this is one of the better bargains on today’s list: a book that will change how you think about something you’ve been trained not to think about at all. 🔬

Why this matters: The subject we refuse to discuss kills more people annually than any other cause—Rose George breaks the taboo with wit, rigor, and genuine moral urgency.

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Author: Claire Eliza Bartlett
Regularly $11.99, Today $1.99
Young Adult Fiction

Jefferson-Lorne High has the full taxonomy of high school social types—the notorious partier, the head cheerleader, the would-be valedictorian, and now, the dead girl. Senior Emma Baines has been murdered, and the three girls at the top of the suspect list are Claude, Avery, and Gwen: each defined by her public role, each harboring something that role conceals. Claire Eliza Bartlett opens *The Good Girls* with the kind of setup that the YA thriller does best when it commits to the premise—the social architecture of high school as a structure that simultaneously creates and hides the conditions for violence. 🔍

The multiple-suspect structure gives the novel its analytical interest: we follow all three girls, which means we understand their specific vulnerabilities, their specific reasons to be afraid, and their specific versions of what “good girl” means and costs. Bartlett resists the easy move of making one of them obviously guilty while the others are obviously innocent—the long-buried secrets that surface as the investigation deepens complicate each character in ways that feel genuinely earned rather than plotted. 💔

The clock ticking toward another potential victim gives the thriller its urgency, but the emotional weight of the novel lives in its examination of what high school asks girls to perform and suppress. Bartlett writes YA fiction with the seriousness that the best work in the category delivers—this is not a thriller that uses a murder as an excuse to explore social dynamics, it’s a book in which the social dynamics and the murder are genuinely inseparable. The truth lying in plain sight is, as the best such reveals are, both surprising and completely inevitable in retrospect. 🎓

Why this resonates: A murdered senior, three suspects each hiding something real, and a clock ticking toward another victim—The Good Girls is YA thriller that takes high school social dynamics as seriously as the crime.

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