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Author: Tonya Kappes
FREE
Cozy Animal Mystery

She came to Celestial Falls specifically to escape magical restrictions. The Marys—Whispering Falls’ mystical council—have their rules, and those rules have made it impossible for someone without spiritual gifts of her own to build the life she wants. Celestial Falls promises something different: fewer rules, fresh start, a Victorian cottage with the perfect space for Heavenly Desserts. She even accepted the fairy god-cat as a condition of departure, which in retrospect was perhaps the first sign that “normal” was not actually on offer. 🧁

Within days of the grand opening, someone is murdered at the bakery and the cookie crumbs—metaphorically and possibly literally—point directly at her. The wizard who followed her from Whispering Falls (there’s always a wizard) is now her most immediate resource for investigation, which is not exactly the fresh start she had in mind. Casper, the charismatic billionaire mage and creator of the online game Wizards and Fae, is also involved, and the entire situation has become considerably more complicated than opening a pastry shop in a low-magic town was supposed to be. 🔍

Tonya Kappes builds the Southern Magical Bakery series with the particular warmth and momentum that has made her one of cozy mystery’s most reliable voices—a heroine whose competence in the kitchen is matched by her accidental aptitude for investigation, a supporting cast that includes a fairy god-cat with opinions, and a magical community setting that rewards readers who are in it for the long haul. ☕

What makes this delightful: Tonya Kappes launches the Southern Magical Bakery series with a paranormal cozy of irresistible charm—a bakery grand opening crashed by a murder, a fairy god-cat, a reluctant wizard, and a heroine who just wanted to make scones in peace. 🌟

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Author: Ted Tayler
FREE
Terrorism Thrillers

Olympus is an organization that operates in the space where official justice cannot or will not reach—a **vigilante infrastructure** built for the kind of problems that formal institutions are too constrained to solve. Books four through six of Ted Tayler’s Phoenix Series collect three complete installments of this world, each one escalating the threats facing the Olympus Project and deepening the moral complexity of what it means to operate outside the law in the service of something that looks, at least from the inside, like justice. ⚔️

In the fourth book, Olympus finds itself in direct conflict with a vicious criminal network led by the notorious Dimitar Marinov—a confrontation that forces the organization to operate at its limits. The fifth installment moves the action inside Larcombe Manor, where a web of treachery within Olympus itself forces the Phoenix to navigate betrayal from unexpected directions. The sixth book brings a new and particularly sinister threat: a rogue surgeon, a predatory drug network, and an enigmatic puppeteer orchestrating a criminal empire from the shadows—all while Olympus is still rebuilding from an internal coup attempt. 🌑

Ted Tayler writes vigilante justice thriller with the political edge and moral ambiguity that distinguishes the best entries in the genre from straightforward action fiction. The line between Olympus and its enemies is never entirely clear, which is precisely what makes the series worth reading across three volumes. 🎯

What makes this essential: Ted Tayler delivers three complete Phoenix Series thrillers in one free collection—vigilante justice, terrorist networks, internal betrayal, and a shadow organization that keeps finding new ways to be tested by the darkness it was built to fight. 🌟

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Author: Caethes Faron
FREE
Romantasy

She had her life together. Great parents, great friends, a scholarship to her dream school—and then her adoptive parents’ plane went down and everything that had been stable stopped being stable all at once. She has been escaping into an online game called Wizards and Fae, fighting fantastical creatures in a world that is safely fictional. Then a panther shifter named Alex shows up at her door, and the world of the game turns out to be considerably less fictional than advertised. 🌟

Alex brings news: her birth mother was a mage, and she has been murdered, and the killer is now looking for her daughter. He is also determined to get her safely to mages who can help—specifically to Casper, the charismatic billionaire who created Wizards and Fae, who turns out to have known and worked with her mother. Alex is wary of Casper. He does not fully trust the charismatic billionaire mage, which is the kind of wariness that suggests he has good reasons for it. And yet he will not leave her there alone. 🔮

Caethes Faron builds the Elustria Chronicles on the collision between an ordinary life and a magical inheritance that was never explained—the discovery that the online game was a map to something real, that the mother she never knew was important, and that the skills required to survive in this world are not the ones she came in with. The romantasy elements develop with the slow-burn patience that the best entries in the genre use to earn their payoffs. 💛

What makes this captivating: Caethes Faron launches The Elustria Chronicles with a romantasy of genuine warmth and momentum—a grieving young woman, a panther shifter who won’t leave her side, a charismatic mage with secrets, and a magical world hiding inside a video game she thought was just an escape. 🌟

Dopamine Kids

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Author: Michaeleen Doucleff
NEW RELEASE
Children’s Studies

The popular understanding of dopamine is wrong in ways that matter. It is not the molecule of happiness, and it does not deliver pleasure—it delivers motivation and craving, which is a different thing entirely. Understanding the distinction turns out to be essential for anyone trying to figure out why children (and adults) keep reaching for screens and ultraprocessed foods even when doing so makes them feel worse, not better. 🧠

Michaeleen Doucleff—NPR science journalist and author of the acclaimed parenting book Hunt, Gather, Parent—decided to address her family’s screen and food dependencies and found that the media narrative around dopamine was contradicted by study after study. The neuroscience has actually moved significantly beyond the “dopamine hit” framework that dominates popular discourse, and the implications for families are practical and actionable rather than merely theoretical. Her Path of Least Regret framework merges the new neuroscience with strategies developed through her own family’s experience and her research into parenting practices across cultures. 📱

The central reframe is genuinely useful: instead of treating devices and ultraprocessed foods as problems to be restricted through willpower, the book teaches families to restructure the dopamine dynamics themselves—shifting from reactive management to proactive control, from devices controlling the family to the family controlling the devices. The result is a parenting book grounded in actual neuroscience rather than the popularized version that has been circulating for a decade. 💡

What makes this essential: Michaeleen Doucleff delivers a parenting book built on what neuroscience actually shows about dopamine—a science-based framework for helping families reclaim control from screens and ultraprocessed foods without the willpower model that never worked anyway. 🌟

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Author: Heather Anderson
NEW RELEASE
Hiking & Camping Excursion Guides

Between 2003 and 2017, Heather Anderson hiked more than 20,000 miles—twice completing each of America’s three longest trails and setting speed records along the way. Records can be broken, which meant she needed to accomplish something that couldn’t be reduced to a number: becoming the first woman to complete a Calendar Year Triple Crown, thru-hiking the Appalachian Trail, the Pacific Crest Trail, and the Continental Divide Trail all within a single calendar year. Nearly 8,000 miles of backcountry in twelve months. 🏔️

The logistics alone are staggering—three trails, multiple climate systems, a year’s worth of resupply and gear and weather and physical recovery compressed into the tightest possible window. But Farther is not primarily a logistics book. It is a memoir about what eight months of feral solitude and continuous physical hardship does to a person’s relationship with grief, identity, and the question of what keeps you moving when the only honest answer is that you don’t know. Anderson examines these themes with the clarity and vulnerability that distinguishes the best outdoor memoirs from simple adventure narratives. 🌄

The personal upheaval running parallel to the physical challenge—emotional turbulence in her relationships, the particular grief that motion both delays and processes—gives the journey its human stakes. Walking forward as a way of finding your way back to yourself is the book’s central proposition, and Anderson earns it across every mile. 💛

What makes this inspiring: Heather Anderson chronicles the first woman’s Calendar Year Triple Crown attempt with the grit, vulnerability, and hard-won clarity of a writer who understands that nearly 8,000 miles of trail is also nearly 8,000 miles of interior landscape. 🌟

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Author: Parul Somani
NEW RELEASE
Vocational Guidance

The fear of making the wrong choice is one of the most reliable sources of paralysis available to human beings. Career changes, health decisions, relationship transitions, shifting priorities—the decisions that matter most rarely arrive with clear answers, and the uncertainty that surrounds them can make inaction feel safer than choosing badly. Parul Somani’s book proposes a reframe: regret is not a backward-looking burden but a forward-looking compass, and learning to use it as a navigational tool changes the relationship with uncertainty entirely. 🧭

The Path of Least Regret framework emerged from Somani’s own experience navigating serious hardship, her work coaching high-achieving professionals through defining transitions, and research drawing on psychology and neuroscience. It is designed to be both conceptual and practical—a process that transforms the question “what if I’m wrong?” from a source of paralysis into a source of clarity. The framework is repeatable, meaning it applies across the different kinds of difficult decisions that accumulate across a life rather than being calibrated for a single type of challenge. 💡

The tools the book provides address the specific mechanisms that make decision-making hard: perfectionism, overthinking, the difficulty of identifying what you actually value versus what you think you’re supposed to value, and the challenge of trusting your own judgment in conditions where the outcome is genuinely uncertain. Relatable stories, reflective prompts, and actionable strategies work together to make the framework accessible rather than theoretical. 🌿

What makes this essential: Parul Somani delivers a decision-making framework built on a genuinely useful reframe—regret as compass rather than punishment—with the practical tools and psychological grounding that make it applicable to the real decisions that actually keep people up at night. 🌟