Ex-homicide detective Frank Langer is a broken man. A mental breakdown pulled him from the squad he was once hand-picked to lead, and since then he’s been filling his days with drinking and chain-smoking and his nights with screaming awake from nightmares. He is not the obvious choice for uncovering a deadly conspiracy—but he’s the one who stumbles across it. What begins as a seemingly routine observation spirals into an investigation involving kidnappings, corruption, and a plot so bizarre and far-reaching that even his ally Rebecca begins to question his sanity. Jay Allan Storey opens with the thriller-sci-fi hybrid that earns its specific charge from the gap between what Frank knows is real and what anyone else will believe. 🔍
The Hitchcockian plot structure—one ordinary, damaged man accidentally pulling a thread that unravels something monstrous—gives the novel its forward momentum. Storey develops Frank with the genuine complexity of a character who must fight through his own psychological damage to function in an investigation that requires everything he has left. When he finally unravels the truth, it is more bizarre and deadly than he imagined—and telling Rebecca puts her life in danger. The sci-fi layer arrives where the thriller least expects it. 💙
Storey is a musician and international traveler who has passed through Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, and the Swat valley in Pakistan—experiences that give his fiction its edge-of-believability quality. Reviewers call The Arx “Hitchcockian—part noir mystery, part sci-fi, part social commentary” and praise the rapid-fire pacing that makes it genuinely impossible to put down. ⭐
Why this hooks you: A broken ex-detective, a conspiracy no one will believe, and a truth more dangerous than anything he imagined—Jay Allan Storey’s genre-crossing thriller, free.
They called Daisy broken. Dangerous. At thirteen she was sent to a clinic—her stepfather and mother’s solution to a problem they couldn’t manage. Ten years later she’s out, navigating a university where her welcome committee is Shade, her maliciously charming stepbrother, his frat-boy circle, and their designated purpose of destroying her and sending her back. Daisy is neurodivergent, freshly out of the clinic, and about to discover that she is considerably harder to break than any of them anticipated. Kyra Alessy opens the Den of Deception series with the dark reverse harem romance that doesn’t tiptoe into its darkness—it commits to it fully, wearing zero apologies. 🖤
From Shade’s perspective, the mission is simple: she’s a liability, a weakness, a temptation none of them expected. Her genius rivals theirs. Her darkness is a song they recognize. And the girl they were sent to destroy is rapidly becoming the obsession none of them can escape. Alessy develops both Daisy’s interiority and the psychological complexity of her antagonists with the care that distinguishes the Den of Deception series within the dark romance space—this is enemies-to-lovers with genuine stakes, forced proximity with real menace, and psychological manipulation as both weapon and revelation. 🔍
Alessy is a British-American author living outside London who writes all her stories as enemies-to-lovers why-choose romance where the road to the happily-ever-after is genuinely difficult but worth the journey. She was diagnosed autistic at 36, and neurodivergent FMC representation runs through her work. None of her stories use AI. The Den of Deception series runs to five books. ⭐
Why this captivates: A neurodivergent young woman who survived a clinic, a stepbrother with orders to destroy her, and three men who were sent to break her becoming obsessed instead—free.
One hot Sunday morning in the sleepy New Hampshire town of Masterson, adults start dying. A vaccine-linked virus sweeps through the adult population with no warning and no recovery—within days, over seventy percent are dead, leaving the city in chaos and its children and teenagers suddenly, terrifyingly alone. Thirteen-year-old Milo Winters must team up with his teenage neighbor Becca to protect their younger siblings while the government scrambles for control. But the collapse of society doesn’t just leave children without parents—it removes every restraint from the dangerous and the predatory. Jon Colt opens his debut dystopian thriller with a premise that is as simple as it is devastating. 🔦
Three storylines converge with increasing urgency. Milo and Becca are protecting their siblings and tracking down the one family member who might help—the person Milo’s mother told him to stay away from at all costs. Becca has a stalker—a troubled young man named Rex who sees the collapse of order as his opportunity. And Denzel, a city cadet sent to police Masterson, arrives carrying his own unfinished business: his mother was murdered by a hate group when he was a child, and evidence of that group is surfacing in this small town. As these stories collide, the stakes only escalate. 🔍
Multi-million-selling author RR Haywood called it “compelling and highly original—I was hooked from the start.” Readers consistently describe it as giving Stephen King vibes, with short punchy chapters and pacing that refuses to slow down. Colt is an Edinburgh-based novelist who draws inspiration from King, James Herbert, and Dan Brown. This is book one of a trilogy and the story continues in the following volumes. ⭐
Why this grips you: Adults dying, children left alone, a predator moving through the chaos, and a teenage boy searching for the one person his mother told him to avoid—Jon Colt’s debut dystopian thriller, free.
Mr. Emotionally Unstable
Someone is breaking into her house and cleaning her kitchen. At first she thinks she’s losing her mind—then she decides it’s actually kind of nice, right up until the death threats start. As a mature woman in her thirties running a café in Seattle, our heroine’s stalker-slash-housekeeper is the closest thing to a relationship she’s had in years. She has her café, her neurotic overweight border collie, her entire family who just showed up unannounced to move in, and the shadowy figure peering through her window. She does not need a man. Except she might need to find her newly single sister one, so the houseguests will finally leave. Alina Jacobs opens the third Seattle Svenssons book with the romantic comedy that delivers chaos at full volume from page one. 😂
The complication arrives in the form of Fitzgerald Svensson—billionaire, annoyingly handsome, the man she’d already sworn off after he served her eviction papers with insults disguised as flirting. He keeps showing up at her sister’s dates. He was supposed to be interested in her sister. And yet he keeps looking at her. The mystery stalker, the family invasion, the sister scheme, and the growing problem of Fitzgerald Svensson converge with the specific gleeful energy that has made Jacobs one of romantic comedy’s most commercially successful voices. 💕
Jacobs writes snarly heroes with hearts of gold and kick-ass heroines with zero tolerance for man-children, and her Seattle Svenssons series has built a massive devoted following for exactly this combination—laugh-out-loud chaos, genuine heart, and the guaranteed happily-ever-after her readers come for. Each book in the series stands alone. ⭐
Why this hooks you: A mystery stalker who does her laundry, a family who moved in uninvited, and a billionaire who was supposed to be interested in her sister—Alina Jacobs’s romantic comedy chaos, for $1.99.
Dolly Brick is a hardworking single mother who returns to the fictional seaside town of Whitfield, Rhode Island, for the summer to help save her family’s house. She is self-sufficient, capable, and not particularly looking for anything beyond getting the job done. Then she comes across Stewart Whitfield—annoyingly handsome heir to the town’s founding family—with a flat tire and at the humiliating wrong end of a very public breakup. It’s in Dolly’s nature to help. Stewart’s proposed arrangement turns out to be more than either of them bargained for. Annabel Monaghan opens her new novel with the same warmth and wit that made Same Time Next Summer and Nora Goes Off Script beloved summer staples. 💕
As public dinners and high-society benefits give way to sunset boat rides and quiet moments by the shore, the fake-dating arrangement shifts into something genuine—and Dolly, who has only ever relied on herself, faces the harder question of whether she can actually let someone in. Monaghan develops the Rhode Island summer world with the sensory specificity and affectionate social observation that give her books their particular atmosphere. Town & Country noted that she “frames the story around independence, vulnerability, and the uneasy shift from self-sufficiency to partnership.” 🔍
Good Morning America selected Dolly All the Time as its June 2026 Book Club pick. The book has been praised by Catherine Newman as “like a spicy margarita—sweet and a little salty, tart and hot,” and Publishers Weekly called it “a heartening summer romance.” Monaghan’s work has been translated into more than twenty languages. As a brand-new release from one of the genre’s most beloved voices, this is an immediate recommendation. ⭐
Why this charms: A hardworking single mother, a humiliated heir, a Rhode Island summer, and a fake-dating arrangement that becomes entirely real—the GMA June 2026 Book Club pick from Annabel Monaghan.
No one can change the past, but the Midnight Train can take you there. Wilbur Budd is eighty-one years old, wealthy, and alone in a vast Bedfordshire house when the train arrives. He boards it into a guided journey back through his own life—stopping not at alternate possibilities, as in The Midnight Library, but at the actual moments he chose, the decisions he made, and the people he let go. His best days were with Maggie, the love of his life, on their honeymoon in Venice. Before he gave it all away. The Midnight Train asks a quieter, harder question than its predecessor: what if you could only watch the life you already had? Matt Haig returns to the Midnight World with the novel that has been among the most anticipated releases of 2026. ✨
His guide is Mrs Agnes Bagdale—the once-owner of the Sheffield bookshop he loved as a child, strict, funny, and fond of the phrase “Old Bean”—who accompanies Wilbur backward through the moments that made him and the moments he came to regret. Where Nora Seed in The Midnight Library flicked through infinite alternatives, Wilbur must sit with his one actual life: the post-war poverty and ambition that forged a driven man who forgot what mattered most, and the love he sacrificed to build the wealth that now surrounds him alone. Nora herself makes a cameo near the end in a lovely touch for readers who know the first book. 🔍
The Daily Mail called it “already one of the year’s most sought-after books—as much an adventure as an exploration of the things that are most important in life.” One reviewer declared it achieves “modern classic status.” Haig is the #1 New York Times bestselling author whose work has been published in fifty territories worldwide. As a brand-new release from one of literary fiction’s most beloved voices, this is an immediate essential. ⭐
Why this moves you: A dying man boards a magical train back through his own life to the love he gave away—Matt Haig’s long-awaited return to the world of The Midnight Library.





