Running the only pet grooming shop in small-town Pecan, Texas comes with its share of muddy paws and shedding season, but nothing quite prepares the shop’s owner for the body that turns up alongside her latest four-legged client. 🐾
M. Alfano opens this series with the warm, low-stakes charm cozy mystery readers expect, pairing a likable amateur sleuth with a cast of small-town regulars and their equally memorable pets. The grooming shop setting gives the series a distinctive hook, letting Alfano weave genuine pet-related humor and detail into the investigation without losing the central mystery’s momentum. 🐕
Alfano writes squarely in the cozy tradition of tight-knit communities and gentle humor, favoring clever plotting and warm character dynamics over graphic violence or shock value. Readers who enjoy their mysteries served with a side of small-town charm and animal companionship will feel right at home here. 🏘️
Why this charms: M. Alfano launches a cozy series pairing a small-town pet groomer with an unexpected murder, blending gentle humor and animal charm into a warm whodunit. 🐶
Being married to the first female president of the United States comes with plenty of complications, but former cop Jim McGill’s decision to keep working as a private investigator from inside the White House complicates things in ways nobody anticipated. 🏛️
Joseph Flynn opens his long-running series by placing an ordinary, hands-on detective directly inside the highest levels of American political power, using McGill’s outsider instincts and refusal to play by Washington’s usual rules to drive both the mystery and the fish-out-of-water comedy. The setup lets Flynn explore genuine political intrigue while keeping the actual case grounded in old-fashioned detective work rather than pure espionage. 🕴️
Flynn writes with a light, propulsive touch that balances political satire with real stakes, and the series has sustained a loyal following across numerous sequels for exactly that combination. Readers who enjoy political fiction with a genuine mystery at its center will find a strong, character-driven starting point here. 🔍
Why this hooks: Joseph Flynn sends a hands-on private investigator to work a case from inside the White House, mixing political intrigue with old-fashioned detective instincts. 🗳️
Born into a bloodline she never asked for and burdened with a destiny she didn’t choose, a young woman discovers that the darkness inside her isn’t something to fear so much as something she’ll have to learn to control. 🌑
Deanna Richmond opens this series around a protagonist whose supernatural inheritance ties her directly to forces far older and more dangerous than she initially understands, blending coming-into-power fantasy tropes with a romance that complicates her sense of who she can trust. Richmond builds tension by keeping the protagonist’s loyalties genuinely uncertain, letting the paranormal mythology and the romantic stakes escalate together rather than treating one as backdrop for the other. 🖤
Richmond writes with an emphasis on atmosphere and slow-building dread, favoring a moody, character-driven approach over fast-paced action. Readers drawn to dark paranormal romance with real mythological weight behind the premise will find plenty to explore here. 🌘
Why this seduces: Deanna Richmond follows a young woman inheriting a dangerous supernatural bloodline, forcing her to reckon with a destiny and a darkness she never chose. 🔥
Flyboys: A True Story of Courage
In 1944, nine American airmen were shot down over a small volcanic island called Chichi Jima during a bombing run against Japanese communications towers. Only one of them survived: a young pilot named George H.W. Bush.
James Bradley, author of Flags of Our Fathers, reconstructs what happened to all nine men, drawing on newly declassified Japanese military records and firsthand accounts to tell a story largely suppressed for decades because of its brutality. The book traces both the individual airmen’s lives before the mission and the fate that met most of them after capture, situating their story within the broader, often overlooked air war against Japan’s home islands.
Bradley’s research draws on extensive interviews with Japanese veterans and previously unreleased documents, giving the account a rare dual perspective on an episode that official histories largely left out of the record. The result is a rigorously documented reckoning with one of the war’s most difficult true stories.
Why this matters: James Bradley uncovers the suppressed fate of eight airmen shot down alongside a young George H.W. Bush, drawing on newly declassified records from both sides of the war.
Returning to her Wyoming hometown was never part of the plan, but a family crisis pulls single mother Maddie Hartford Petrenko back to Star Valley—and straight into the orbit of the local police chief she’d once left behind. 🏔️
RaeAnne Thayne opens her Outlaw Hartes series with the small-town, second-chance romance she’s built a long career on, layering old wounds and unfinished business between two people who never quite got a fair shot the first time around. The Wyoming winter setting gives the story a cozy, snowbound intimacy, while a subplot involving Maddie’s complicated family history adds real stakes beneath the central romance. ❄️
Thayne is a veteran of small-town contemporary romance, known for grounding her love stories in fully realized communities and characters who feel like they existed long before the book opened. Fans of her Haven Point and Hope’s Crossing series will recognize the same warmth and slow-burn emotional payoff here. 🏡
Why this warms: RaeAnne Thayne brings a single mother back to her Wyoming hometown and straight into a second-chance romance with the police chief she once left behind. 💫
Shepherd’s dry, understated voice has made his books unusually accessible entry points into forensic science for general readers, and this volume continues that approach, using real casework to explain how pathologists read the evidence a body leaves behind long after the person is gone.
Why this reveals: Richard Shepherd draws on more than 23,000 autopsies to organize the many ways life ends into seven categories, each explained through real cases from his career.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





