Just days before the running of the biggest thoroughbred horse race in the world, an act of bioterrorism kills Kentucky’s lieutenant governor. Former FBI Special Agent Brooke Fairfax receives a video of the murder from her anonymous source—and discovers that domestic terrorists are targeting the governor, who is her late husband’s brother. She heads to Kentucky to stop the threat. The FBI, meanwhile, has zeroed in on one suspect: international mogul Declan O’Roark. And they want Brooke—who has been out of the game since her husband was murdered—to get closer to him. Heather Sunseri opens the In Darkness series with the romantic thriller premise at full tension. 🔍
The specific complication that makes the investigation both dangerous and emotionally complicated: Declan is not what the FBI believes him to be. His motives have nothing to do with murder and everything to do with getting closer to Brooke Fairfax. Sunseri develops the dual investigation structure with real narrative intelligence—the bioterrorism threat that Brooke knows is real, the prime suspect who is pulling her closer for reasons that aren’t criminal, and the growing confusion between the case and her own instincts. 💙
Sunseri writes romantic thriller with the combination of genuine procedural tension, Southern atmospheric setting, and the specific emotional stakes of a protagonist whose personal history with loss gives her every professional decision its additional weight. The Kentucky horse racing world gives the novel its specific and distinctive backdrop. For readers who want their romantic thriller to deliver genuine danger alongside its romantic tension, this is a series worth starting. ⭐
Why this grips you: A bioterrorism attack days before the biggest horse race in the world, a former FBI agent sent to get close to the prime suspect, and a suspect whose interest in her is real but nothing like murder—Exposed in Darkness is romantic thriller at full Kentucky intensity.
Samantha is a mystery-obsessed West Coast transplant who has moved to New Orleans in her thirties, drawn by the music, the food, the history—and the hope of finding her past, having been adopted from Louisiana after being orphaned in a hurricane as a toddler. Her new life starts with genuine promise: a furnished apartment in the Thibodeaux Mansion, friendly neighbors, and the beginning of something like home. Then an anonymous diary, an unusual key, and a distinctive doll appear in her apartment—and when the diary leads her to a dead body, Sammy’s investigation into her new city becomes considerably more personal. Jen Pitts opens the French Quarter Mysteries with the cozy premise that layers New Orleans atmosphere with a protagonist whose search for her own origins runs beneath every investigation. 🔍
The three-book box set gives new readers the full initial arc of Sammy’s French Quarter life—the mysteries of the past and present, the voodoo rituals and haunted hotels and murdered strangers, the community of new friends she’s building in the Big Easy. Pitts develops New Orleans with the genuine affection and atmospheric specificity that the city deserves as a mystery setting—there is no city in America that layers history, mystery, and the supernatural more naturally. 💙
Pitts writes the French Quarter Mysteries with the combination of New Orleans atmosphere, personal mystery dimension, and cozy warmth that has built a devoted following. Sammy’s specific personal stakes—the city she’s investigating is also the city that holds answers about who she is—give the amateur sleuthing its emotional depth beyond the individual investigations. Three complete novels free is excellent value for cozy mystery readers who want their setting to be as distinctive as their protagonist. ⭐
Why this draws you in: A mystery-obsessed New Orleans newcomer searching for her own origins, a mysterious diary leading to a dead body, and three complete French Quarter mysteries—free.
Jake Stone is a former Marine Raider turned CIA operative who was dismissed from the agency after refusing to carry out an order that crossed a line he would not compromise. Now operating in the shadows as part of Nemesis—an off-the-books covert team that officially does not exist—he is pulled back into a hidden war when the institutions underpinning American democracy come under violent attack and the intelligence agencies sworn to protect them run out of options. Robert Rapoza opens the Jake Stone series with the government conspiracy thriller premise built on the specific moral architecture of a man who was fired for having a line he wouldn’t cross. 🔍
What Stone uncovers as he races to prevent the next strike is considerably more dangerous than a foreign enemy: evidence of a conspiracy buried deep inside the system itself, designed to reshape power, control information, and push the country toward a future it may never escape. The total surveillance dimension gives the novel its specific contemporary resonance—a conspiracy whose goal is not traditional geopolitical advantage but the permanent restructuring of how information and power flow. 💙
Rapoza writes the Jake Stone series with the operational specificity and moral complexity that the best conspiracy thrillers require—Stone’s specific history gives him both his tactical capabilities and his ethical framework, and the Nemesis structure gives the series its specific institutional context. For readers who want their government conspiracy thriller to take the democratic stakes seriously alongside the action sequences, this is a series worth starting from the first chapter. ⭐
Why this hooks you: A CIA operative fired for having principles, an off-the-books team that doesn’t officially exist, and a conspiracy buried inside the system itself designed to reshape American democracy permanently—God’s Eye is government conspiracy thriller with real stakes.
Beyond Life and Death
Jet Li became the youngest national martial arts champion in Chinese history at twelve years old. He then became one of the first internationally recognized movie stars from China, redefining martial arts cinema with films including *Once Upon a Time in China*, *Hero*, and *Fearless*. Behind the global fame and physical mastery was a deeper search—for meaning beyond achievement, for something that physical skill and public recognition couldn’t provide. *Beyond Life and Death* distills the insights from that search: ten powerful reflections drawn from his career, his personal life, and thirty years of Tibetan Buddhist practice. 🙏
The near-death encounter in the 2004 tsunami—which arrived at the height of his Hollywood career—proved to be the turning point that accelerated his inward turn. Li walked away from the trajectory his career had been following to deepen his Buddhist practice and dedicate himself to philanthropy, a choice that cost him professionally and gave him everything he was actually looking for. The book is not a conventional memoir but a series of insights offered with the humility of someone who has genuinely lived what he’s describing. 💙
Li writes with the combination of martial artist’s precision and Buddhist practitioner’s openness that gives the book its specific voice—concrete where many spiritual memoirs are abstract, personal where many are generic, and genuinely surprising in the honesty with which he addresses the gap between what he achieved and what it meant. For readers interested in Buddhism, in the specific experience of extraordinary physical mastery applied to spiritual practice, or simply in the authentic account of a life that defied expectation at every turn, this is essential. ⭐
Why this resonates: The youngest martial arts champion in Chinese history, a Hollywood career abandoned at its peak, a tsunami that changed everything, and thirty years of Buddhist practice—Jet Li’s essential new memoir of meaning beyond achievement.
The Golden Age of Hollywood produced some of the most iconic images in the history of human celebrity—and concealed some of the most devastating private realities. *Shattered Hollywood* pulls back the curtain on the moments that changed everything for the people behind those images: the shocking murder of Dominique Dunne, the wartime suffering of Audrey Hepburn, the industry battles of Anna May Wong fighting a system stacked against her, the tensions surrounding Lana Wood, the sudden death of Dorothy Dell, and the controversies linked to Clark Gable. Keli Noury opens the book with the recognition that the spotlight hides more than it reveals. 🎬
The collection covers the full range of what fame in Hollywood’s golden era actually looked like from the inside: the structural racism that limited Anna May Wong’s career despite her talent, the wartime deprivations that shaped Audrey Hepburn’s specific relationship to food and fragility, the industry dynamics that surrounded the Natalie Wood case through her sister Lana’s perspective. Each story is told with the specific detail that separates genuine Hollywood history from gossip. 💙
Noury writes with the combination of research depth and accessible narrative that Hollywood history requires when it’s taking the human cost of the studio system seriously—not simply cataloguing scandal but examining the specific pressures, prejudices, and power structures that produced the tragedies. For readers who want their classic Hollywood with the full picture rather than the carefully managed mythology, *Shattered Hollywood* is an essential corrective. As a new release this delivers immediate value. ⭐
Why this captivates: Dominique Dunne, Audrey Hepburn, Anna May Wong, Clark Gable, and the real stories behind the golden age images—Shattered Hollywood reveals what the spotlight was always hiding.
Sara Hall has been at the top of American distance running for more than two decades—national high school champion, NCAA star at Stanford, the only pro runner to ever win U.S. titles in both the mile and the marathon, holder of the American half marathon record, and the fastest American woman marathoner aged forty or older. She has also battled anxiety, imposter syndrome, injury, and the specific external pressure to quit the sport and devote herself instead to supporting her husband and children. *For the Love of the Grind* is the memoir of how she navigated all of it. 🏃
The unconventional path to motherhood gives the memoir its specific emotional arc alongside the running career—Sara and her husband Olympic marathoner Ryan Hall adopted four daughters from Ethiopia, and the adoption transformed rather than interrupted her athletic life. She ran personal bests year after year after becoming a mother, landing on podiums at the world’s most competitive races while raising four daughters. Hall writes about the specific discovery that choosing love over fear allowed her to take risks she hadn’t previously been able to take, and to let go of results in favor of the pursuit of excellence itself. 💙
Hall writes with the faith-grounded honesty and genuine competitive intelligence that distinguishes sports memoir when it’s working at its most powerful—the running is rendered with the specific technical and physical detail that serious runners come for, and the personal journey is told with the vulnerability that general readers need to care about the athletic stakes. For anyone who has ever doubted themselves in pursuit of something they love, the specific courage of Sara Hall’s career is both moving and genuinely useful. ⭐
Why this inspires: The only runner to win U.S. titles in both the mile and the marathon, a mother who ran faster after adopting four daughters, and the discovery that loving the process more than the result changed everything—Sara Hall’s essential new running memoir.





