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Former FBI agent Jason Maxfield is seven years into a ten-year sentence and has just had his hopes for early release crushed by the parole board. He resigns himself to serving the time. Then armed men storm the prison transport bus. His old adversary is leading them. The adversary threatens Jason’s ex-wife, knocks him unconscious, and leaves a key within reach when Jason comes to—along with a message about a daughter whose name Jason does not even know being at risk. 💀
The choice is simple on its face: return to prison, or use the key. Jason takes the key. He is now a fugitive racing to reach his ex-wife and daughter before his adversary can get to them first—with no badge, no backup, no legal standing, and every law enforcement agency in the country eventually looking for the escaped federal prisoner. The Jason Maxfield Thrillers series launches with the specific momentum that the wrongly imprisoned former agent premise generates when the threat is immediate and the protagonist has everything to prove. ⚡
Dan Decker writes with the political thriller pacing and FBI procedural authenticity that give the series its grounding—Jason’s federal law enforcement background giving him specific skills that matter in his desperate situation, and the adversary who engineered his imprisonment giving the thriller its sustained personal stakes beyond the immediate rescue mission. 💛
What makes this gripping: Dan Decker launches the Jason Maxfield Thrillers with a political suspense of pure propulsive momentum—a former FBI agent whose parole is denied, a prison transport stormed by armed men, a key left within reach, and a daughter he has never met whose life depends on whether he uses it. 🌟
Maggie McJasper is starting over in a little California beach town — bead shop, a nice circle of friends, a handsome movie star who keeps flirting with her. Life would be genuinely pretty great if she could just stop stumbling over dead bodies. The Maggie and Jasper Capers series launches with a corpse in the swimming pool and a movie star in her kitchen, which is not the typical Monday morning even by California standards. 🐾
Barbara Cool Lee describes the series’ appeal precisely in her own pitch: dogs, crafts, quirky friends, a slow-building romance between grown-ups who genuinely like each other, and a twisty mystery with red herrings in abundance. No swearing, no love scenes, no gruesome violence to keep anyone up at night. The clean cozy format done with the warmth and specific character detail that distinguishes the genre’s best entries from its generic ones — the beach town setting, the bead shop, the flirtatious movie star all giving the world its particular texture. 💛
Lee writes with the California coastal cozy atmosphere and found-community warmth that have built the Maggie and Jasper series a devoted readership. The movie star element gives the series its glamorous edge without abandoning the cozy format’s fundamental commitment to community and character over sensation. The dog gives it its heart — as it always does. 😄
What makes this irresistible: Barbara Cool Lee launches the Maggie and Jasper Capers with a California beach town cozy of pure charm — a fresh-start bead shop owner who keeps finding dead bodies, a handsome movie star who keeps flirting, and a twisty mystery with red herrings galore and absolutely nothing to keep you up at night. 🌟
The Ultimate Seven Sisters Collection gathers the complete Southern Gothic saga set in Mobile, Alabama — a series that launched thousands of fans into the haunted history of an antebellum mansion pulsing with secrets, sorrow, and restless spirits. Historian and dreamwalker Carrie Jo Stuart is drawn into Seven Sisters, where time folds, nightmares bleed into memory, and the truth that the past has been concealing demands to be found. 👻
The Southern Gothic setting gives the series its particular atmospheric density — Mobile’s actual history, the crumbling elegance of a plantation mansion, and the specific weight of Southern secrets that stretch back generations all contributing to a world where the supernatural feels like a natural extension of the human capacity for concealment and consequence. Carrie Jo’s dreamwalking ability gives the investigation its unusual mechanism and its particular horror: she does not just research the past, she inhabits it. 💔
M.L. Bullock writes with the Southern Gothic atmosphere and haunted house suspense that have built the Seven Sisters series one of independent paranormal fiction’s most devoted followings — the Mobile setting rendered with genuine regional specificity, and Carrie Jo’s dreamwalker gifts given enough internal consistency to feel like a coherent supernatural system rather than an authorial convenience. The complete collection format delivers the full saga in a single package, which is the ideal way to experience a series built on accumulated revelation. 💛
What makes this captivating: M.L. Bullock delivers the complete Seven Sisters Southern Gothic saga — a historian and dreamwalker drawn into a haunted Mobile antebellum mansion where time folds, restless spirits whisper, and the secrets of generations refuse to stay buried. 🌟
Courtney Cain’s life has just come apart at two seams simultaneously: she lost her job at a prestigious ad agency, and the person who let her go was her own fiancé. Ready for a genuine change, she spots an opening at the Curly Bay Pet Hotel and Rescue and takes it — the kind of fresh start that a new town and animals in need of care seems to promise. Then a prize-winning Pomeranian disappears on her very first day on the job. 🐾
The finger points immediately at Courtney, which is the specific cozy mystery setup that the format delivers most satisfyingly when the amateur sleuth has a personal stake that goes beyond civic curiosity — she has to solve this or her fresh start becomes her next disaster. The Curly Bay Animal Rescue series builds its world on the pet hotel and rescue setting, which gives every case its animal-centered warmth and its particular community of characters. 🔍
Donna Doyle writes with the cozy animal mystery warmth and fresh-start protagonist energy that have made the Curly Bay series a beloved entry in the genre — Courtney’s dual personal crisis giving the series opener its emotional grounding, and the pet rescue setting giving it its community of four-legged supporting characters. The missing show dog premise gives the first mystery its specific competitive-world milieu alongside the cozy small-town atmosphere. 💛
What makes this charming: Donna Doyle launches the Curly Bay Animal Rescue series with a cozy animal mystery of genuine warmth — a woman whose fiancé cost her both her job and her future who takes a fresh start at a pet hotel, only to have a prize-winning Pomeranian vanish on day one with everyone looking at her. 🌟
She has been holding the world on her shoulders for as long as she can remember — a sick mother, a draining bank account, an unclear future with no obvious path forward. Her entire life has been built around survival rather than living. Then four mysterious men show up: the leader, the suit, the tech guru, and the quiet enigma. Their intentions are unknown. What she knows is that she is bound to them now if she wants any escape from the situation she has been slowly drowning in. 💛
The Iris Boys series builds its reverse harem contemporary romance premise on the survival dynamic that the format delivers most powerfully when it has genuine stakes beneath the attraction — a woman who is not choosing four men out of abundance but reaching toward them out of exhaustion, and discovering in that reaching something she did not expect to find. The four distinct personalities give the series its ensemble richness, and her wariness about getting burned gives it its central tension. 🔥
Lucy Smoke writes the Iris Boys series with the contemporary reverse harem intensity and morally complex character work that have built her a significant readership in the subgenre — each of the four men rendered with enough specificity to generate his own dynamic with the protagonist, and her survival instinct given enough authenticity to make her choices feel driven by genuine desperation rather than manufactured circumstance. ⚡
What makes this compelling: Lucy Smoke launches the Iris Boys series with a contemporary reverse harem romance of genuine emotional stakes — a woman who has carried everything alone for too long, four mysterious men whose intentions she cannot read, and the desperate calculation that the only escape from the gutter runs through trusting them. 🌟
At fourteen, she watched a woman she called mom die — and knew it was her fault. She has been running ever since, pursued by something she cannot identify, unable to stop moving or more people will die. The human authorities are useless. The supernatural cops are worse. Her only remaining option is the Iron Incubi MC — the biggest, baddest, most human-hating supernatural organization she knows of — and she is desperate enough to make a deal even if it costs everything she has left. 💀
The complication is that she is autistic, and the Iron Incubi have her effectively prisoner in their mansion in the middle of nowhere. She can mask her ASD for short periods in normal social situations, but being locked up indefinitely with five incubi who hate humans and have no patience for her particular kind of neurodivergence is not a short-period situation. The Desire Aforethought series builds its monster romance on the specific premise of an autistic protagonist whose neurodivergence is rendered as a genuine feature of her character rather than a detail to be overcome. 💛
Kyra Alessy writes with the paranormal monster romance heat and neurodivergent protagonist authenticity that distinguish the Desire Aforethought series within the genre — the autistic heroine given an interior voice that reflects her actual experience, and the incubi given enough individual personality to generate distinct dynamics. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: Kyra Alessy launches the Desire Aforethought series with a monster romance of genuine originality — an autistic woman who has been hunted for twenty years making a desperate deal with five human-hating incubi, then being kept prisoner in their mansion where masking her neurodivergence 24/7 is simply not an option. 🌟
The Lost Girl of Seahaven (Temple River)
Angie Fairlie returns to her coastal hometown after a devastating divorce wanting nothing more than a fresh start. While clearing out her beloved grandmother’s home, she finds a mysterious box containing an anonymously written novel and newspaper clippings about a child who vanished from a family picnic in 1952. The handwritten book — titled The Loneliest Girl by the Sea — may hold clues to what happened to the little girl who disappeared decades ago. 🔍
As Angie digs deeper, the investigation forces her to confront not just the tragedy of the missing child but the pain in her own past — the two stories more connected than she initially understands. With the help of her enigmatic neighbor Jack, a man carrying his own scars, she begins unraveling a shocking secret that spans generations and threatens to change what remains of her family before it is finished. The Temple River series builds its historical mystery on the dual-timeline structure that literary mystery rewards when both timelines are given equal weight and consequence. 💔
Phillipa Nefri Clark writes with the Australian coastal setting warmth and women’s fiction emotional intelligence that distinguish the Temple River series — Angie’s divorce recovery and the 1952 disappearance running on parallel tracks that converge with the specificity that the best literary mystery delivers. 💛
What makes this captivating: Phillipa Nefri Clark delivers a coastal historical mystery of genuine emotional depth — a woman recovering from divorce who finds a mysterious box in her grandmother’s home containing a novel and clippings about a child who vanished in 1952, and discovers that unraveling the old tragedy means confronting her own. 🌟
A young woman takes a job as a tour guide on the Kentucky bourbon distillery trail with a mission that has nothing to do with the whiskey: she is searching for her biological father. What she finds along the trail turns out to be considerably more than she bargained for — the Bourbon Girl series is described as a romantic mystery, which means the search for her father runs alongside both investigation and unexpected connection. 🥃
Stephanie Bond — the bestselling author of the Body Movers series and dozens of beloved romantic mysteries — writes Bourbon Girl as a serialized six-part story, with each installment advancing the search, the mystery, and the romance simultaneously. The Kentucky bourbon trail setting gives the series its specific atmospheric identity — the distilleries, the rolling bluegrass landscape, the specific culture of one of America’s most storied regional industries — and the biological father search gives it its deeply personal stakes beneath the romantic mystery surface. 💛
Bond is one of the most reliable names in the romantic mystery category, having spent decades building a readership on exactly the combination the genre promises — enough mystery to sustain genuine investigative tension, enough romance to give the personal stakes their emotional resonance. The serialized format rewards readers who follow the full six-part arc, and the first installment at the current price is the most accessible possible entry point. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: Stephanie Bond launches the Bourbon Girl romantic mystery series with a Kentucky whiskey trail road trip built on a search for a biological father — a woman guide, a trail of distilleries, discoveries along the way that go well beyond what she was looking for, and five more installments waiting. 🌟
Along California’s 1,200-mile coastline, the overheated Pacific Ocean is rising and pressing in, threatening both wildlife and the maritime communities where 27 million people live. Los Angeles Times coastal reporter Rosanna Xia — a Pulitzer Prize finalist — investigates the impacts of engineered landscapes, development market pressures, and the ecological activism and political battles that have shaped the contemporary coastline and that will determine what California’s shores look like in the decades ahead. 🌊
From Imperial Beach to San Francisco and beyond, Xia weaves together the voices of Indigenous leaders, community activists, small-town mayors, urban engineers, and environmental scientists to chronicle the challenges and urgency of building a climate-wise coastal future. The book takes readers to specific places along the coast to show how the decisions being made right now — about seawalls, managed retreats, development permits, and public access — will determine whether California heads toward natural disaster or toward an equitable refashioning of how coastlines are stewarded. 🌍
Xia writes with the graceful reportage and environmental justice perspective that have established California Against the Sea as one of the most important climate books about a specific American landscape — asking not just what is happening to the coastline but who gets to decide what to do about it, and whose communities bear the greatest cost of getting it wrong. ⚡
What makes this essential: Pulitzer Prize finalist Rosanna Xia delivers the definitive account of California’s vanishing coastline — what the rising Pacific is doing to 1,200 miles of shore, whose communities are most at risk, and whether the decisions being made today will lead toward disaster or toward something better. 🌟
When Titan pilot David Snyder loses his squad, he takes the helm and finishes the mission alone — trained, focused, and lethal in the way the Coalition most needs its soldiers to be. Now he commands a new squad: a sharp-tongued ace with a chip on his shoulder, a by-the-book commodore’s daughter, and a rookie straight out of the academy with something to prove. Three people with three very different reasons to challenge his authority and three very different skill sets that he needs working together. 🚀
David is not here just to survive. He is here to win — which means keeping his squad alive, outmaneuvering alien war machines on the battlefield, and managing the heat that develops between him and the women under his command off it. Titan Maidens builds its military science fiction on the mech combat foundation of the Titan pilot premise alongside the romance dynamics that the squad structure generates when the stakes are high enough and the characters are compelling enough to make both feel consequential. ⚡
Dan Raxor and Oliver Voss write with the military sci-fi action pacing and squad ensemble character dynamics that give the series its forward momentum — the Titan mech combat giving the battle sequences their kinetic scale, and the squad’s internal friction giving the novel its human texture alongside the alien war machines. 💛
What makes this gripping: Dan Raxor and Oliver Voss deliver a military science fiction of pure battlefield momentum — a Titan mech pilot who lost his first squad taking command of three very different soldiers, facing alien war machines on the battlefield and something considerably more complicated off it. 🌟
A mysterious flu is sweeping the world. Reports of unexplained violent behavior are multiplying on the airwaves. Then a massive solar flare delivers the final blow to an infrastructure already ravaged by chaos, pushing the world into lawlessness. Jack Emily is a regular guy thrown into a world of violence, sickness, and hippies — which the title acknowledges with the specific self-awareness that distinguishes zombie fiction that knows exactly what it is doing from zombie fiction that does not. 💀
In a world where tough guys rule and the rules themselves have collapsed, Jack’s job is simple: protect his family and friends with years of preparation, a bit of dumb luck, and the general resourcefulness of an ordinary man who was paying attention before everyone else started paying attention. The Not Another Zombie Book title signals the novel’s comic self-awareness about the genre it occupies — the preppers, the weirdos, the improvised solutions, and the specific flavor of American apocalypse fiction that takes its protagonist’s ordinariness as seriously as his survival. 😄
D.B. Randelia writes with the men’s adventure fiction momentum and wry apocalyptic humor that give the novel its particular voice — the solar flare and flu combination giving the collapse its specific mechanism, and Jack’s preparation-meets-dumb-luck approach giving the survival its entertaining unpredictability. 💛
What makes this essential: D.B. Randelia delivers a zombie apocalypse adventure that earns its self-aware title — a regular guy whose years of preparation and a fair amount of dumb luck may be all that stands between his family and a world of violence, sickness, chaos, and an unsettling number of hippies. 🌟
Professional security contractor and former Navy SEAL Eric Branson has been fighting ongoing insurgencies in Europe when he learns his own country has fallen into the same chaos — terror attacks, riots, and insurrection turning American cities and towns into war zones. Before he can make his way back home to Florida, a catastrophic hurricane delivers the final blow to an infrastructure already ravaged by violence, cutting survivors off from each other and from any organized response. 💀
Eric begins his most dangerous mission yet: searching for the family he left behind. He did not come back to America to fight another war — but he is prepared for anything he encounters as he moves quietly into south Florida through the death and destruction of the aftermath. The Feral Nation series builds its post-apocalyptic military thriller on the specific combination that Scott B. Williams handles most effectively: SEAL operational skills deployed in a collapsed domestic environment, where the enemy is not a foreign army but the breakdown of everything that made civilian life possible. ⚡
Williams writes with the survival thriller authenticity and military fiction technical grounding that have made the Feral Nation series one of the most respected entries in the post-apocalyptic military genre — Eric’s professional background giving the infiltration its specific tactical texture, and the family search giving it its irreducible personal stakes. 💛
What makes this essential: Scott B. Williams launches the Feral Nation series with a post-apocalyptic military thriller of genuine operational momentum — a former Navy SEAL who comes home from fighting insurgencies in Europe to find America fallen into the same chaos, a hurricane finishing what the violence started, and a family somewhere in south Florida that he intends to find. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











