DS Charlie Rees arrives at his new posting with a clear agenda: build a reputation as a serious, professional detective, leave behind whatever complications defined his last position, and prove that he belongs at this level. It is a reasonable plan. It begins coming apart almost immediately, because the fresh start he was counting on turns out to have its own entirely new set of problems. 🔍
Two students go missing from the local university. It is exactly the kind of case that could make Charlie’s name if he solves it—high profile, high stakes, with enough public visibility to establish him as the detective he is trying to become. The university, however, is less interested in Charlie’s career trajectory than in its own reputation, and is not especially eager to acknowledge that two of its students have disappeared at all. Institutional resistance is an obstacle he did not budget for. 🎓
His personal life, meanwhile, is in a state that could generously be described as a disaster and less generously described in several other ways that would all be accurate. Managing the professional complications while the personal ones keep intruding requires a level of compartmentalization that Charlie is finding increasingly difficult to maintain—particularly when the case starts pulling in directions he didn’t see coming. The fresh start is rapidly becoming a hot mess, and the students are still missing. 💙
What makes this fresh: Ripley Hayes launches the DS Charlie Rees series with an LGBTQ+ mystery that combines a propulsive missing persons investigation with a richly drawn detective whose personal and professional lives create friction in all the right ways—sharp, warm, and genuinely hard to put down. 🌟
The virus came, and it did what viruses do when given enough time and no meaningful resistance—it spread everywhere. The dead don’t stay dead. They return as savage predators with one biological imperative: infect whatever living human beings remain. Most of the world has already fallen. The UK and Ireland held on longer than anywhere else, maintaining a self-imposed quarantine that kept the worst of it outside the borders. Then the infrastructure supporting that quarantine collapses, and the last line becomes no line at all. 🧟
Mike Fletcher and his sister Emma live in Leeds, which means they are now living in a city whose streets are overrun. Staying is not an option. Their younger siblings are with them, which means the calculus of survival is not just personal—every decision Mike makes has consequences for people he cannot afford to lose. The destination is their last remaining relative, somewhere in the far north-west of Scotland. Between Leeds and the Scottish Highlands lies the entire width of a country that has been consumed. 🏴
The journey is what the book is, and it is relentless—every mile contested, every safe-seeming place potentially not, every decision made under the pressure of immediate threat with incomplete information and no margin for significant error. Artinian writes with the momentum of someone who understands that in survival fiction, the road itself is the story. 🚗
What makes this propulsive: Christopher Artinian launches the Rise of the RAMs series with a post-apocalyptic zombie thriller of exceptional pace and genuine emotional weight—a family fighting to stay together across an Britain that no longer exists in any recognizable form, with stakes that feel real on every page. 🏆
DI Max Thatcher and his partner DS Isaac Mills are sent to the Yorkshire countryside to investigate a body found in the aftermath of a local bonfire. The victim is a real estate buyer who had been circling the village with development plans that the locals viewed with varying degrees of hostility—which is to say, the list of people who wanted this particular man dead is long, local, and entirely willing to talk about it. 🌾
The investigation quickly establishes that the dead man’s professional career was not without controversy well beyond this village. A journalist who had been tracking him and his business dealings turns up, and her research suggests a pattern of behavior that left aggrieved parties scattered across a much wider geography than a single Yorkshire community. Between the disgruntled locals and the larger professional history, Thatcher has suspects in abundance and evidence in short supply. 🔍
The challenge is not finding people who might have done it—it is finding the one who actually did, before the story gets buried alongside the motive. Yorkshire keeps its own counsel, and a village that disapproved of the victim collectively is not necessarily eager to single out one of its own. Thatcher has to read the landscape, the silence, and the things people say by not saying them. 🏡
What makes this atmospheric: Oliver Davies launches the DCI Thatcher Yorkshire Crimes series with a crime novel that uses its landscape as more than backdrop—the Yorkshire countryside is a genuine presence, the village politics are sharply observed, and the procedural investigation builds with satisfying patience toward a resolution that earns its reveal. 🌟
This Story Might Save Your Life
Benny Abbott and Joy Moore have built something genuinely rare: a podcast that millions of people love, built around survival stories told with warmth, humor, and the particular gallows wit of people who have stared at something terrible and decided to laugh about it afterward. Their chemistry is real, their friendship is the engine of everything, and their production empire—carefully managed by Joy’s husband Xander—has turned their genuine connection into a lucrative and beloved institution. 🎙️
Then Benny arrives one morning to record and finds shattered glass, an empty house, and no sign of either Joy or Xander. They are simply gone—and the circumstances of their disappearance don’t add up to anything innocent. The one clue is an incomplete, previously unseen first draft of Joy’s memoir, which raises questions about her life that Benny had never thought to ask before. He starts reading it. What he finds inside begins to reframe everything. 😨
The police zero in on Benny as their prime suspect almost immediately, which means he has to find Joy and Xander while simultaneously proving he didn’t do something he didn’t do. The investigation pulls him into a version of his best friend’s life that he thought he knew completely and turns out to have been only partially visible. The survival story that defined their whole podcast may have had more to it than Joy ever let on. 🔍
What makes this gripping: Tiffany Crum constructs a suspense novel of exceptional originality—a podcast world that feels vivid and real, a friendship at the center of a mystery, and a protagonist trying to solve a disappearance while being hunted himself. A tense, propulsive, and genuinely surprising new release. 🏆
Her life was normal. Genuinely, unremarkably normal—classes, homework, the comforting predictability of a college routine built around math she loved and solitude she had learned to prefer. She was not interesting to anyone, which was fine. It was actually the point. Then a stalker decided otherwise, and the predictability she relied on became the very thing that made her easy to track. 😰
Spencer had a job: keep a pack of hockey players safe. That was the assignment, clearly defined, with clear parameters. Making a nearly antisocial math student his secret priority was not in the job description. But he noticed her—noticed the shadow following her that she hadn’t seen yet—and once Spencer notices something that wrong, he is constitutionally incapable of looking away. When he and his pack mates Bear and Chase can no longer operate quietly in the background, they pull her into their protection openly. 🏒
She did not ask for three overprotective alphas rearranging their lives around her safety, and she is not particularly grateful in the ways they might have expected. She has math to finish, a degree to pursue, and a strawberry-shaped pillow she is very attached to, and being an omega does not mean any of those things become less important. Spencer’s grumpy certainty that he knows what is best for her is a hill she is prepared to die on. 💜
What makes this fun: Melissa Huxley launches the Keep Her Safe series with a why-choose omegaverse romance packed with overprotective heroes, a fiercely independent heroine who refuses to be managed, genuine humor, and a slow-build dynamic between all four leads that earns every moment of the heat it generates. 🌟
Leonard Summers is not his real name, which is the first thing worth knowing about him. A former high-ranking Russian intelligence officer, he defected to the United States after providing critical information about Russian operatives embedded in American government—a service that earned him and his family a year in a CIA facility near Washington and, eventually, a carefully arranged new life in a Minneapolis suburb chosen because it bears a passing resemblance to the Moscow dacha he left behind. 🇺🇸
Lucas Davenport and fellow marshal Shelly White are there to receive the Summers family at their new location. The handoff is supposed to be routine. No one from the Witness Protection Program has ever been attacked during a transfer—it is one of the program’s foundational claims. What nobody in the WPP knows is that a Russian hit team has been tracking this particular family with a patience and precision that suggests they are not going to let the record stand. 🎯
When shots are fired and the mission fractures, Lucas is left with an urgent question and very little time to answer it: where is the leak? Someone with access to the transfer route, the timing, and the destination fed that information to people who want Leonard Summers dead. Finding that person before the hit team finds its target again is the only thing standing between the Summers family and a very final resolution to their situation. ⚡
What makes this essential: John Sandford delivers the 36th Prey novel with all the propulsive momentum and sharp intelligence that made the series legendary—cold war shadows, a mole hunt with genuine stakes, and Lucas Davenport doing what he does best under conditions designed to make success look impossible. 🏆





