Dorothy L. Sayers introduces mystery writer Harriet Vane in this classic Lord Peter Wimsey novel, putting her on trial for the poisoning murder of her former lover while Wimsey, smitten almost immediately, sets out to prove her innocence even as he falls for the very woman he’s investigating. Strong Poison is widely considered one of the genre’s finest entries. ⚖️
Sayers brings genuine literary craft to the detective novel, elevating the genre with sharp wit, careful plotting, and characters with real interior depth, a far cry from the disposable pulp mysteries often associated with the era. The introduction of Harriet Vane adds a romantic and intellectual sparring partner for Wimsey that would define several subsequent novels in the series. 🔍
Readers who enjoy classic British detective fiction with genuine literary ambition, in the tradition of Agatha Christie but with sharper prose, will find Sayers a rewarding discovery.
Why this endures: it introduces one of detective fiction’s great romantic partnerships within a genuinely well-crafted mystery, still sharp and satisfying nearly a century later.
Hearing from the dead is unsettling enough without it upending your entire sense of who you are, and K.C. Adams builds her series opener around exactly that disruption, sending a protagonist’s quiet small-town life into chaos once she discovers she can hear the call of the recently departed. The Ghost’s Call blends gentle small-town atmosphere with genuine supernatural stakes. 👻
Adams writes within the paranormal women’s fiction space with an emphasis on emotional growth alongside supernatural discovery, treating the protagonist’s new ability as much as a personal reckoning as a plot device. The small-town setting grounds the supernatural elements in something warm and familiar, balancing the eerie premise with genuine heart. 🕯️
Readers who enjoy paranormal women’s fiction with emotional depth and a cozy small-town backdrop will find this series opener thoughtful and engaging.
Why this captivates: it turns a newfound ability to hear the dead into a genuine journey of self-discovery, grounded in small-town warmth rather than pure scares.
The “mostly true” qualifier in the title is doing real work here, signaling a travel memoir that’s as interested in a good story as strict documentary accuracy, and Al Macy leans into that tension across an account of crossing the country by both car and bicycle. Drive, Ride, Repeat promises adventure with a wink built right in. 🚴
Macy writes with a breezy, self-deprecating humor that suits the inherent absurdity of cross-country travel, mixing genuine adventure with comic embellishment in a way that keeps the narrative entertaining without losing its travelogue charm. The dual car-and-bicycle structure gives the journey two distinct rhythms, contrasting the freedom of cycling with the practical necessity of four wheels. 🗺️
Readers who enjoy funny, slightly tall-tale travel memoirs about unconventional cross-country journeys will find Macy’s account an entertaining, easygoing read.
Why this entertains: it mixes genuine cross-country adventure with just enough comic embellishment to keep things consistently fun, two wheels and four working in tandem.
How to Grill: The Complete Illustrated Book of Barbecue Techniques
Steven Raichlen has spent decades as America’s most trusted authority on live-fire cooking, and this volume distills that expertise into the kind of comprehensive, illustrated technique guide that takes grilling from casual backyard habit to genuine skill. It covers everything from basic grilling fundamentals to advanced smoking and barbecue methods. 🔥
Raichlen writes with the clarity of someone who’s tested every technique he describes, and the heavily illustrated format makes even complex methods approachable for home cooks who’ve never moved beyond burgers and hot dogs. The book functions as both a beginner’s foundation and a reference serious grillers will return to for years, covering equipment, fuel types, and regional barbecue traditions alike. 🍖
Readers who want to genuinely improve their grilling, not just repeat the same few recipes every summer, will find this an authoritative, endlessly useful resource.
What makes this essential: it turns backyard grilling into an actual learnable craft, with the illustrated detail to take any home cook from basic burgers to genuine barbecue mastery.
Rosemary Beach has become one of the most beloved settings in new adult romance, and this is where it all began, introducing readers to a tangled web of step-siblings, complicated attraction, and beachside drama that launched an entire sprawling series universe. Abbi Glines opens with the kind of forbidden tension that immediately hooks readers in. 🏖️
Glines writes fast, emotionally charged new adult romance with real staying power, and this series opener shows exactly why Rosemary Beach became such a phenomenon, a setting readers wanted to return to again and again across multiple interconnected series. The step-sibling complication raises the stakes immediately, giving the central romance forbidden energy from its very first pages. 💋
Readers who enjoy emotionally intense new adult romance with forbidden tension and a beachside setting worth revisiting will find this series launch as addictive as ever.
What makes this essential: it’s the book that launched an entire beloved romance universe, still delivering the forbidden tension and beachside escapism that made Rosemary Beach a phenomenon.
Shomari Wills tells the genuinely remarkable stories of six formerly enslaved African Americans who, against odds that seem almost unimaginable today, built personal fortunes in the decades following emancipation, navigating a country actively hostile to Black economic success at every turn. Black Fortunes restores their names to a history that too often forgets them. 💼
Wills, a journalist with family ties to one of the figures profiled, brings genuine narrative skill to stories that read like they should be impossible, tracing how each of these individuals built wealth through real estate, business, and sheer determination in the hostile economic landscape of Reconstruction-era and Gilded Age America. The book treats their achievements with the gravity and detail they deserve. 📈
Readers interested in African American history, entrepreneurship, or stories of resilience against systemic odds will find Wills delivers a genuinely inspiring, well-researched account.
Why this matters: it restores six extraordinary, largely forgotten Black entrepreneurs to history, tracing how they built real wealth in a country actively working against them.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





