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Author: John Ellsworth
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Legal Thriller

A judge’s wife is dead, and the public wants blood. It is the kind of case that ends defense attorneys’ careers—headline-grabbing, emotionally charged, the sort where the verdict has already been reached by everyone who matters before the trial begins. Michael Gresham takes it anyway, because he does not have much left to lose and because when he smells a rat in a story this tidy, the injustice of it is not something he can walk past. ⚖️

Gresham is the kind of defense attorney that the legal thriller genre requires at its most effective: a brilliant legal mind unconstrained by the usual calculations of reputation and career survival, which makes him exactly the adversary that those who abuse their power are least equipped to handle. His willingness to challenge the justice establishment from a position of relative personal freedom—the freedom of a man with nothing to protect—gives the Michael Gresham series its particular dynamic and its moral energy. 🔍

John Ellsworth writes the Michael Gresham series with the courtroom procedural authenticity and character depth that has made him one of legal thriller’s most consistently readable authors, with a devoted readership built across a long-running series. The Lawyer launches the series with the case and the character that will sustain it—establishing Gresham’s voice, his methods, and the specific kind of injustice that activates the best of what he has to offer. For readers who want legal thriller with genuine moral stakes rather than procedural puzzle-solving, the Gresham series delivers. ⚡

What makes this gripping: John Ellsworth launches the Michael Gresham series with a legal thriller of genuine moral stakes—a defense attorney with nothing left to lose, a headline case that smells wrong, and the specific danger that comes from a brilliant legal mind deciding the justice establishment needs to be worried. 🌟

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Author: Jamie Millen
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Psychological Thrillers

Everybody loves Claire’s little sister Tina. Only Claire sees what is hiding behind the angelic face. When Tina is brutally murdered on her fourteenth birthday—the day Claire failed to walk her home from school—Claire never forgives herself. Neither does their mother. The guilt becomes the architecture around which the next twelve years of her life are built. 💔

Claire becomes a police detective. When more girls turn up dead in Newburgh in exactly the same pattern as Tina’s murder, she becomes convinced that her sister’s killer has been active all along—and that the FBI forensic profiler brought in to assist the case, along with Special Agent Robert Cline (Claire’s old flame), are not seeing what she is seeing. When the investigation turns and Claire becomes the lead suspect herself, the system that was supposed to help her find justice has become the thing standing in its way. 🔍

Jamie Millen constructs the Claire Wolfe series on a psychological foundation that distinguishes it from standard detective procedurals—a protagonist whose entire professional life is organized around a childhood trauma she has never processed, working a case that is forcing her to confront it, in a situation where her own judgment and her own freedom are simultaneously at stake. The inability to trust anyone—not even herself—is the specific psychological thriller element that gives the series its sustained tension. The first installment establishes Claire with the moral complexity and raw urgency that the best series openers require. 💀

What makes this gripping: Jamie Millen launches the Claire Wolfe series with a psychological thriller of devastating emotional depth—a detective haunted by her sister’s unsolved murder who becomes the lead suspect in a copycat investigation, unable to trust anyone including herself, breaking every rule to save the next girl. 🌟

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Author: Robert M. Kerns
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Science Fiction Adventure

Cole’s plan is simple and achievable: spend thirteen years piloting freighters on the criminal fringes of society, accumulate enough money, buy a planet, and disappear. He has spent thirteen years executing this plan with the discipline of a man who wants nothing more than to be left alone. Then life happens. A castaway is ejected from a ship, Cole chooses to save the person, and before he has fully processed what he has done, he has accidentally acquired a crew. 🚀

The crew is the complication. Cole spent thirteen years specifically avoiding the kinds of entanglements that come with people depending on you—and now people depend on him. The question the novel builds toward is the one that space opera has always used to define its reluctant heroes: protect the people who have become yours, or slip away quietly in the night the way the plan always required. The fact that the plan was perfectly good before Srexx and the others arrived does not make the choice any easier. 💛

Robert M. Kerns writes the Cole and Srexx series with the found-family space opera dynamics and character warmth that have made it a favorite in the independent science fiction market—a protagonist whose self-imposed isolation is understandable enough to generate genuine sympathy, and a crew whose specific qualities make their claim on him feel earned rather than convenient. The series has built its readership on the strength of the character relationships rather than spectacle alone, and the first installment establishes both the world and the central dynamic with the momentum that sustains long series commitments. ⚡

What makes this essential: Robert M. Kerns launches the Cole and Srexx series with a space opera of genuine heart—a man who spent thirteen years building toward solitude, one rescued castaway who derailed the whole plan, and the question of whether found family is worth giving up the disappearing act he has been working toward. 🌟

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Author: Lindsay Buroker
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Epic Fantasy

Kaylina Korbian is a commoner visiting the kingdom capital, which means her duties are clear: bow to aristocrats, avoid trouble, and address the haughty royal rangers with appropriate deference. She irks the arrogant Vlerion of Havartaft at their first meeting and gets arrested. The visit has gone badly in the specific, immediate way that Lindsay Buroker’s protagonists manage to generate disaster at maximum inconvenient speed. 🏰

The city is dealing with political strife and assassinations that Kaylina had no awareness of, and the rangers are operating at a level of tension that makes her accidental provocation considerably more consequential than it would otherwise be. Forced to work with Vlerion to clear her name, Kaylina unearths a dark secret about him that will either bind them together or get her killed—and the specific nature of that secret gives the fantasy romance its particular stakes, because it is not the kind of secret that neutral parties get to walk away from unchanged. 💛

Lindsay Buroker—the author of the Fallen Empire series and dozens of other beloved fantasy and science fiction novels—writes with the character warmth and propulsive pacing that has made her one of independent publishing’s most successful authors. Shadows of Winter combines the epic fantasy world-building she does with such assurance with a central relationship built on the specific enemies-to-partners dynamic that her readership particularly enjoys: two people who have good reasons not to trust each other, discovering that they need each other anyway. ⚡

What makes this captivating: Lindsay Buroker delivers an epic fantasy romance of genuine momentum—a commoner who irks the wrong royal ranger at exactly the wrong time, a forced partnership to clear her name, and a dark secret about him that binds them together in ways neither of them planned. 🌟

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Author: Leena Clover
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Cozy Murder Mystery

Jenny King is forty-four, recently abandoned by her cheating husband, and trying to build something new in the small seaside town of Pelican Cove. The Boardwalk Cafe is working—locals are lining up for her cakes and muffins, and for the first time in a while, things feel like they might be heading somewhere good. Then her aunt, a local artist, is accused of killing a stranger, and Jenny sets aside the apron for a sleuthing cap. 🔍

Nobody in Pelican Cove knows who the dead stranger is or what he was doing there, which gives the mystery its particular cozy structure: an outsider death in a close-knit community where everyone has history with everyone but nobody has history with the victim. Jenny battles the cranky local sheriff and navigates the quirky cast of characters that small coastal towns reliably generate, aided by new friends who are still becoming her people. The combination of fresh-start personal stakes and genuine detective work gives the Pelican Cove series its emotional foundation alongside its mystery plots. 💛

Leena Clover writes the Pelican Cove series with the warmth and seaside atmosphere that has made it one of cozy mystery’s most popular long-running series—a protagonist whose personal journey of rebuilding after betrayal runs alongside the investigation work, giving readers something to root for beyond the case resolution. Jenny’s baking and her cafe provide the culinary cozy texture, the community provides the comic and dramatic supporting cast, and the cranky sheriff provides the institutional friction that keeps the amateur sleuthing interesting. 🌊

What makes this charming: Leena Clover launches the Pelican Cove series with a seaside cozy mystery of genuine warmth—a woman rebuilding after divorce through baking and a small-town cafe, whose aunt’s murder accusation sends her chasing the truth about a dead stranger nobody in town recognizes. 🌟

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Author: Stephen Penner
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Legal Thriller

David Brunelle, homicide prosecutor, is handling what looks like an open-and-shut domestic violence murder case when the defense attorney accuses the lead cop of misconduct. Suddenly the confession and the murder weapon are in danger of being suppressed, and a case that was airtight is gasping for air. This is the professional crisis. The personal one arrives simultaneously. ⚖️

A man Brunelle convicted of murder decades ago has finished his sentence and walked out of prison. When the jury found him guilty, he made a specific promise: he would kill Brunelle when he got out. It is now clear he intends to keep it. Brunelle must prosecute a case that is coming apart at the seams, prevent a convicted killer from executing a years-in-the-making plan to execute him, and do both simultaneously with the focus and precision that each demands independently. The dual-threat structure gives the thirteenth David Brunelle installment its particular high-stakes energy. 💀

Stephen Penner writes the David Brunelle Legal Thriller series with the Seattle courtroom procedural specificity and character continuity that has sustained a long-running franchise. The thirteenth installment rewards readers who have followed Brunelle across the series while delivering a complete legal thriller that works as a standalone—the case mechanics, the personal threat, and Brunelle’s working method are all established with enough context for new readers while the series’ accumulated character depth enriches it for those who have been there from the beginning. ⚡

What makes this gripping: Stephen Penner delivers the thirteenth David Brunelle thriller with dual-threat momentum—an airtight domestic violence case that is suddenly falling apart due to police misconduct allegations, and a man just released from prison who swore to kill Brunelle when he got out and is making good on the promise. 🌟

Talking to Strangers

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Author: Malcolm Gladwell
Regularly $12.99, Today $1.99
Psychology

Malcolm Gladwell’s central argument in Talking to Strangers is simple and genuinely troubling: something is profoundly wrong with the tools and strategies human beings use to make sense of people they do not know. The book is built on cases that demonstrate the failure—how Fidel Castro fooled the CIA for a generation, why Neville Chamberlain believed he could trust Adolf Hitler, what the Bernie Madoff deceptions reveal about the limits of face-to-face assessment, why the trial of Amanda Knox went the way it did. 💡

The pattern Gladwell identifies across these cases is counterintuitive: we are systematically worse at reading strangers than we believe we are, and the confidence we feel in our judgments correlates poorly with their accuracy. The mechanisms he explores—default to truth, transparency, coupling—are drawn from psychology and behavioral science but rendered with the accessible narrative prose that has made Gladwell one of the most widely read nonfiction writers in the world. The cases he uses are not academic examples but stories pulled from current events, including the death of Sandra Bland and the Jerry Sandusky scandal at Penn State. 📖

Talking to Strangers functions both as intellectual adventure and as practical warning—an argument that the consequences of misreading strangers are not merely personal but systemic, shaping everything from criminal justice to campus safety to international diplomacy. Gladwell does not offer an easy fix, because there is not one; the book is most useful as a recalibration of how confident readers should feel about their capacity to read people they do not know. 🌟

What makes this essential: Malcolm Gladwell delivers a classically Gladwellian examination of how we misread strangers—from Hitler and Castro to Madoff and Amanda Knox—and why the tools we use to make sense of people we don’t know are systematically failing us in ways that have profound consequences. 🌟

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Author: Jodi Picoult
Regularly $2.99, Today $1.99
Contemporary Women’s Fiction

Fourteen-year-old Trixie Stone is in love for the first time, a straight-A student, pretty and popular, the light of her comic book artist father Daniel’s life. Then a single act of violence shatters her innocence, and the seemingly mild-mannered Daniel’s convictions are put to their ultimate test—because the protective instinct of a father and the rule of law do not always point in the same direction. 💔

The violence against Trixie is only the beginning of what The Tenth Circle uncovers. Daniel has a past that his family does not know—a shockingly tumultuous history he has kept hidden, which the crisis now forces to light. Trixie believed in her father as a hero. What she begins to learn about him in the aftermath of her own trauma complicates that belief in ways that the novel handles with the moral complexity Jodi Picoult brings to all her most challenging work. The quest for revenge and the question of its price run alongside the question of who Daniel actually is. 💛

Picoult—one of the most widely read novelists in contemporary women’s fiction, with multiple New York Times bestsellers and a devoted international readership—writes The Tenth Circle with the structural inventiveness that distinguishes her best work: the story is partially told through graphic novel illustrations by Mark Mateo, making the book itself a formal embodiment of Daniel’s identity as a comic book artist. The Dante’s Inferno frame gives the novel its title and its thematic architecture, as Daniel ventures to hell and back in the specific way that fathers do when their daughters are hurt. 📖

What makes this essential: Jodi Picoult delivers a novel of devastating family drama—a father’s hidden past surfacing after his daughter is violated, a quest for revenge that tests everything he claimed to be, and a structural innovation that uses graphic novel panels to tell a story about a man who draws them. 🌟

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Author: Scott Blade
Regularly $5.99, Today $2.99
Espionage Thrillers

A mistaken arrest drops Jack Widow into the Miami criminal system—not a situation he planned for, and not one that resolves cleanly. Then comes a mysterious phone call from the U.S. Secret Service, pulling him directly to Washington D.C. to face a covert emergency: someone has kidnapped the Secret Service Director’s daughter. The demands are specific and impossible. Tell no one. Assassinate the President. 🔍

The clock is already ticking. Widow must save an innocent girl and simultaneously prevent a plot to kill the Commander-in-Chief, operating alone and unsupported in a situation where both foreign and domestic enemies are closing in. The impossibility of the assignment—the gap between what is being demanded and what any reasonable operation would attempt—is exactly the environment in which Widow operates most effectively. He is not a reasonable operator in a reasonable situation. He is the call you make when reasonable has run out. ⚡

Scott Blade writes the Jack Widow series with the stripped-down thriller pacing and lone-operator premise that has built it into one of the most popular independent action thriller series in the market—a protagonist who carries no luggage, holds no position, and has no institutional support, which makes him simultaneously the most vulnerable and the most dangerous person in any given situation. Foreign and Domestic puts Widow in the highest-stakes scenario the genre offers: the President’s life and an innocent child’s, with enemies on both sides, and no backup. 💀

What makes this propulsive: Scott Blade delivers a Jack Widow thriller of maximum stakes—a mistaken arrest, a Secret Service emergency, a kidnapped director’s daughter, and the impossible demand to assassinate the President, with foreign and domestic enemies closing in and no one Widow can call for help. 🌟

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Author: Jess Kidd
Regularly $5.99, Today $2.99
Amateur Sleuth Mysteries

1954. When Nora Breen’s former novice Frieda stops writing, Nora—haunted by a line in Frieda’s last letter—asks to be released from her religious vows and travels to Gulls Nest, a charming hotel in Gore-on-Sea in Kent. The seaside town presents itself as a place of fresh air and relaxed constraints, perfect for a new start. Nora hides her identity among the hotel’s guests and begins quietly prying into their lives, looking for Frieda. 🔍

Every one of them is concealing something. The guests at Gulls Nest are a collection of secrets housed in a charming building by the sea, and when a series of bizarre murders begins rattling the occupants, the question shifts from what people are hiding to whether a dark past can ever really be left behind. Nora’s own past—the religious life she has just walked away from, the novice she came to find, the identity she is concealing—is as much under investigation as anyone else’s, which gives the novel its particular moral texture. 💀

Jess Kidd—the author of Himself and The Hoarder, whose literary ghost stories have won significant critical acclaim—brings her distinctive atmospheric writing and character richness to the 1950s British seaside mystery with the result that Nora Breen Investigates occupies unusual territory: an amateur sleuth novel with genuine literary ambition, a period mystery that uses its setting with the specificity of a writer who understands how place shapes what people are capable of concealing and revealing. 💛

What makes this captivating: Jess Kidd delivers a 1954 British seaside mystery of genuine literary distinction—a former nun hiding her identity at a Kent hotel searching for her missing novice, a cast of guests each concealing something, and a series of bizarre murders that makes everyone’s dark past suddenly relevant. 🌟

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Author: Jodi Burnett
Regularly $5.99, Today $2.99
Terrorism Thrillers

When intelligence reveals a potential terror plot at Denver International Airport, US Deputy Marshal Caitlyn Reed teams up with her FBI-agent brother Logan on a critical mission. Their K9 partners—Renegade and Gunner—are operational alongside them as they join a high-profile task force assembled to assess and neutralize the threat. The arrival of a controversial political figure at the airport only raises the stakes further, transforming an already urgent situation into something that requires both speed and precision. 🐕

The race against time structure gives Detonate its thriller momentum, while the sibling partnership between Caitlyn and Logan gives it its personal dimension—two people who know each other’s instincts and trust each other’s judgment operating in a high-stakes environment where that trust is an operational advantage. The K9 partnerships add another layer: Renegade and Gunner are not props but active operational partners whose specific capabilities shape what the team can do. 💀

Jodi Burnett writes the Tin Star K9 Series with the law enforcement authenticity and K9 partnership warmth that distinguishes the best entries in the police K9 thriller genre—the technical details of bomb detection and counter-terror operations rendered with enough procedural accuracy to feel genuine, and the human and canine relationships that give the team its character. Detonate launches the series with the urgency and character establishment that the opening of a long-running series requires. ⚡

What makes this gripping: Jodi Burnett launches the Tin Star K9 Series with a terrorism thriller of relentless momentum—a Deputy Marshal and her FBI brother racing to stop a plot at Denver International Airport, their K9 partners Renegade and Gunner operational at their sides, with a controversial political figure raising the stakes by the minute. 🌟

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Author: Dustin Stevens
Regularly $4.99, Today $2.49
Serial Killer Thrillers

Le Fontainebleau opened in downtown Columbus to little fanfare—a lifetime passion project of a French immigrant, simple peasant dishes in a modest setting, clean cooking that developed an avid following and earned its place as one of the city’s must-eat locations. At just after noon on a dreary spring Wednesday, a hooded gunman walks in, raises the weapon hidden under his jacket, and opens fire. Seventeen shots. Four victims. 🔍

Columbus Police Detective Reed Mattox and his K9 partner Billie are both home in bed after a graveyard shift when the news hits the airwaves—barely a year into their partnership, pulled immediately into the highest-profile shooting the city has seen. The restaurant setting, the specificity of the target, and the seventeen shots give the investigation its opening questions: why this place, why this day, and what does the title—The Influencer—mean in a crime that begins at a beloved neighborhood restaurant? 💀

Dustin Stevens writes the Reed and Billie series with the Columbus setting and K9 partnership dynamics that have built it a substantial readership across multiple installments. The detective-and-dog partnership is handled with the operational specificity and genuine warmth that distinguishes the best entries in the genre—Billie is not a mascot but a working partner whose capabilities shape the investigation. The restaurant backdrop, and the community that gathered around it, give The Influencer its emotional stakes alongside the procedural momentum. ⚡

What makes this gripping: Dustin Stevens delivers a Reed and Billie thriller of genuine procedural momentum—a beloved Columbus restaurant, seventeen shots fired into a lunch crowd, four dead, and a detective-K9 team pulled from their graveyard shift recovery to investigate a mass shooting with no obvious motive. 🌟

… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2