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Ainsley McGregor poured everything she had into opening Bless Your Art, Sweet River’s newest artisan market—and it’s finally starting to work. Then her Great Dane, George Clooney, discovers a body during a wine tasting, and suddenly the whole fragile dream is under threat. Her best friend lands in the crosshairs as prime suspect, and her brother the sheriff is making it crystal clear that Ainsley should stay out of it. She will absolutely not stay out of it. 🍷
As gossip ferments beneath the town’s charming surface, Ainsley starts pulling threads—old grudges, buried lies, and motives that hit uncomfortably close to home. Candace Havens builds a cozy mystery with genuine tension here, the kind where the killer isn’t panicking about being caught. They’re worried about Ainsley specifically. That shift in stakes—from whodunit to who’s-coming-for-her—gives the story a propulsive edge that keeps pages turning. 🐕
George Clooney the Great Dane is an immediate scene-stealer, and the dynamic between Ainsley and her sheriff brother gives the book a warm, bickering family energy that anchors all the chaos. The artisan market setting is fresh and specific—wine tastings, local vendors, small-town charm done right without tipping into saccharine. Havens clearly knows this world and loves it. 🛍️
Irresistible small-town mystery with a feisty heroine, a killer premise, and a Great Dane who deserves top billing—A Case for the Winemaker is the perfect series starter for cozy mystery fans. FREE today on Amazon.
The Howard family has never had it easy, but the three siblings carrying on the witch legacy are dealing with a particularly loaded hand. Eldest sister Charlie was bitten by a werewolf, which makes romance with humans a complicated and dangerous proposition. Middle sibling Michael wants out of magic entirely—a life without spells, full stop. And youngest Melinda can barely leave the house without a panic attack, which makes her secret crush on the centuries-old vampire who lives with them especially inconvenient. 🧙♀️
Into this already chaotic household comes a murder investigation connecting a dead tourist to a beloved deceased family member—meaning the Howard witches are suddenly on the hook to prove their innocence, or possibly their guilt. Rae Daigle Humphrey juggles the found-family warmth of the sibling dynamic with genuine paranormal stakes, and the result is a series opener that feels both cozy and genuinely unpredictable. The café gossip and strong coffee are essential fuel throughout. ☕
What makes Charmed Witches work is that each sibling gets a distinct arc rather than just serving as background color. Charlie’s werewolf situation, Michael’s crisis of identity, and Melinda’s will-they-won’t-they with the live-in vampire William all feel like real stories worth following. The supernatural mission to clear the family name gives the book a satisfying plot spine while leaving plenty of room for character development. 🌙
Captivating paranormal romance with three witches, a vampire housemate, and a murder to solve—Charmed Witches is a warm and wickedly fun series starter. FREE today on Amazon.
A trip to a small Alaskan town to handle her great aunt’s estate was supposed to be quick and uncomplicated—sell the inherited lodge, head home. But Sunset Ridge has other plans, and so does Ford Harris, the ruggedly capable caretaker who comes with the property. He’s been off the market since losing his wife four years ago, his protective little sister has made that abundantly clear, and none of this is stopping the feelings from developing anyway. 🦌
Jacqueline Winters draws on a decade of actually living in Alaska to give Moose Be Love a sense of place that most small-town romances can only approximate. Sunset Ridge feels lived-in and specific—quirky locals, genuine wilderness atmosphere, and yes, a town moose who plays an active role in the plot. The romance between the heroine and Ford builds slowly and convincingly, rooted in shared meals, impromptu town tours, and one very memorable shirtless moment. ❄️
The push-pull here works because both characters have real reasons to hold back. She’s supposed to be leaving. He swore off love. The lodge sale looms over everything like a ticking clock, giving the sweet romance genuine stakes without manufacturing drama. Winters keeps the tone warm and fun throughout, never letting the tension tip into angst. 🏔️
Heartwarming Alaskan romance with a swoony caretaker, a town full of charm, and a moose who steals every scene he’s in—Moose Be Love is a pure delight from start to finish. FREE today on Amazon.
Addie James’s life fell apart in the most efficient way possible—cheating fiancé and job loss arriving nearly simultaneously. Her escape plan: retreat to her Aunt Kate’s tea and apothecary shop in the peaceful mountain town of Stargaze, breathe, and figure out what’s next. But when she arrives, her aunt is nowhere to be found. Then one night, Kate’s lifeless body appears in the locked shop—and then vanishes. That’s when things get genuinely strange. 🍵
Thora Bluestone builds the mystery carefully here, layering small-town atmosphere with a magical underpinning that Addie herself can’t quite accept. She’s a biotech scientist—logical, evidence-based, deeply skeptical of anything that can’t be measured. The central tension isn’t just whodunit but whether Addie can reconcile her rational worldview with the hidden magical talents she’s starting to discover in herself. The mind-reading dog is an inspired touch. 🐾
The Stargaze setting does a lot of work—it’s the kind of cozy mountain town that feels like a genuine refuge, full of charm and secrets in equal measure. The tea shop itself is practically a character, and the apothecary angle gives the magic a grounded, herbal quality that suits Addie’s scientific sensibility. The mystery of what actually happened to Aunt Kate—who may not be entirely dead after all—keeps the tension alive throughout. ✨
Enchanting paranormal cozy with a skeptical scientist heroine, a magical tea shop, and a mystery that refuses to stay solved—The Tea Shop Witch is a thoroughly delightful series opener. FREE today on Amazon.
The rules were simple: medicate the vicious cat, use coasters, and under no circumstances engage with her sister’s notoriously grumpy boss. She has never been good at rules. One opportunity to tell off Mr. Strickland for running her sister ragged, and she takes it without hesitation—landing like a missile and leaving him visibly shaken. The problem is, she ends up shaken too. 💼
Olivia T. Turner leans hard into the opposites-attract tension here, and it works. He’s structure and control; she’s chaos with good intentions. He’s twenty years older, technically off-limits, and dressed in suits that should not be as appealing as they are. The push-pull between them has real energy—two people who genuinely get under each other’s skin in ways neither expected. The age gap and power dynamic are front and center rather than glossed over, which gives the romance more weight than the average forbidden-attraction setup. 🔥
The cat-sitting premise is a clever container for the story—it puts the heroine in the sister’s luxurious NYC condo and keeps her in proximity to Strickland in a way that feels organic rather than contrived. The banter crackles, the attraction builds with genuine heat, and Turner gives both characters enough interiority that the eventual collision feels earned rather than inevitable from page one. 🐱
Gripping alpha male romance with sparking banter, a suit-wearing dragon of a hero, and a heroine who absolutely refuses to be intimidated—Strictly Yours is a compulsively readable forbidden romance. FREE today on Amazon.
Three hundred years of peace across the Five Realms is ending, and the signs are there for those willing to hear them. The world of Song of Echoes is built around a concept called the Song—a cosmic weave containing all that has ever existed—and dark new voices are rising within it. R.E. Palmer uses this elegant framework to launch an epic fantasy with genuine sweep and ambition, told through two protagonists whose paths are slowly converging toward something enormous. 🎶
Elodi never wanted to rule, but her father’s death drops the weight of leadership onto her at exactly the wrong moment—her authority questioned, her people fractured, and a resurgent threat already pressing at her gates. Toryn, meanwhile, is a farmhand running from a bloodline legacy that could get him killed, until a hidden power begins forcing his hand. Palmer gives both characters real interiority and avoids the trap of making either one a simple hero-on-a-quest. ⚔️
The world-building here is layered and confident without drowning the narrative in exposition. The Song as a metaphysical device gives the magic system emotional resonance—it’s not just power, it’s meaning—and the sense that something ancient is waking up beneath the surface of events gives the story an escalating dread that pulls the reader forward. The greatest threat, as always, turns out to be the people who refuse to see what’s happening. 🌑
Compelling epic fantasy with a richly imagined world, two deeply drawn protagonists, and a darkness gathering at the edges of everything—Song of Echoes is a superb series opener. FREE today on Amazon.
The Book of Disquiet: The Complete Edition
Fernando Pessoa is one of the twentieth century’s great literary mysteries—a Portuguese modernist who invented dozens of fully realized fictional authors, each with their own style and biography, and wrote prolifically under all of them. The Book of Disquiet is his strangest and most personal work, written mostly under the semi-heteronym Bernardo Soares, an assistant bookkeeper in Lisbon whose inner life turns out to be one of the richest in all of literature. Pessoa worked on it his entire adult life and never published it; it appeared forty-seven years after his death. 📚
The book resists easy description. It’s part diary, part prose poem, part philosophical meditation—a collection of fragments, aphorisms, and observations that circle endlessly around questions of identity, longing, solitude, and the strange texture of everyday existence. Soares watches the world from his window and from the inside of his own skull, and what he sees is by turns melancholy, luminous, and devastating. There is nothing quite like it in any literature. ✍️
This complete edition, translated by Margaret Jull Costa and presented chronologically for the first time in English, is the definitive way to encounter the work. Costa is among the finest translators working from Portuguese, and her version captures the hypnotic rhythm of Pessoa’s prose without flattening its strangeness. Reading it straight through or in fragments, it rewards every approach. 🌧️
Essential literary fiction—one of the twentieth century’s great unclassifiable masterpieces, now in a complete and definitive English edition. The Book of Disquiet is $2.99 today on Amazon.
The Akashic Noir series launched in 2004 with Brooklyn Noir and grew into one of the most acclaimed ongoing anthology projects in American crime fiction—over sixty volumes and counting, each rooted in a specific city or region. USA Noir gathers the best of the US-based volumes into a single essential collection, drawing from across the country to assemble a portrait of American darkness that is as geographically diverse as it is relentlessly good. 🗺️
The contributor list reads like a murderers’ row of crime fiction: Dennis Lehane, Don Winslow, Michael Connelly, George Pelecanos, Laura Lippman, Lee Child, Joyce Carol Oates, Jeffery Deaver, Lawrence Block, Megan Abbott, Pete Hamill—and that’s barely half the roster. The range is extraordinary, spanning Memphis, Chicago, Detroit, New York, and points between, with each story rooted in the specific geography and sociology of its setting. This is crime fiction that knows its zip codes. 🔫
What makes Akashic anthologies work is the insistence on place as character. These aren’t generic crime stories reassigned to different cities—they could only happen where they happen, and the cumulative effect of reading story after story with that level of locational specificity is a kind of fractured American atlas, written in shadows. Booklist gave it a starred review and called it a must-have anthology. That’s about right. 🌆
Gripping crime anthology featuring the best American noir writers of the last two decades, all at the top of their game—USA Noir is an indispensable collection. $2.99 today on Amazon.
Over three years, journalist Thomas Laird sat down with the Dalai Lama for more than sixty hours of candid, wide-ranging conversation—covering not just Tibetan history but reincarnation, Buddhism, science, and the nature of consciousness itself. The result is a monumental work that spans thousands of years of civilization, myth, and spirituality, told from the inside by the one living person who carries it all as both custodian and embodiment. 🏔️
The history itself is extraordinary: the origins of Buddhism and the era of Great Tibetan Emperors whose reach extended from southwestern China to northern India; the institution of the Dalai Lama and the great yogis and meditation masters who shaped it; Tibet’s complex entanglements with the Mongols, the Manchu overlords, and the Golden Age of the Great Fifth Dalai Lama. Laird guides the reader through millennia of material without losing the thread, and the Dalai Lama’s personal voice gives even the distant past an immediacy that academic history rarely achieves. 🙏
The book’s final sections, covering the Dalai Lama’s personal meetings with Mao and the harrowing flight into exile in 1959, carry particular weight. These are not just historical events but lived memories—and hearing them recounted directly, in conversation, gives them an intimacy and gravity that no third-party account could replicate. Laird’s access was extraordinary, and he uses it with both discipline and warmth. ☸️
Unforgettable narrative history—intimate, sweeping, and told in part by the man at its center—The Story of Tibet is a rare and remarkable book. $2.99 today on Amazon.
She only applied for the internship on a dare. Now she’s packing for the North Pole, working for the Royal Water Fae she’s been quietly in love with since the Academy, and trying very hard to be professional about it. Then she arrives and discovers that Kalt has not gotten fat from Winter Fae sweets—he is, if anything, more devastatingly attractive than she remembered. And he brought friends. ❄️
Those friends are Lark, a royal elf, and Norden, a selkie, and both of them seem to believe she’s their mate. Kalt disagrees, strenuously. The romantic chaos this creates is the joyful engine at the heart of Winter Fae Queen, and Lexi C. Foss and J.R. Thorn keep it spinning with real comedic skill. The heroine is caught between three supernaturally attractive men with competing agendas, a water magic ability that has gone completely haywire, and the ongoing demands of an actual internship. 🧝
The North Pole setting is genuinely inventive—Santa’s workshop as a supernatural workplace, ice tinsel shooting from fingertips during a professional meeting, snowball fights triggered by accidental magic. The world-building is playful and specific, and the reverse harem setup is handled with more character development than the genre typically delivers. Each of the three love interests feels distinct, and the heroine’s relationship with each develops differently. 🌨️
Irresistible paranormal romance with a wildly charming premise, three competing suitors, and magic so out of control it’s practically a fourth character—Winter Fae Queen is a pure delight. $2.99 today on Amazon.
When everything falls apart, she runs to the only family she has left—and ends up jobless, broke, and sharing a roof with five bikers in a small Texas town. It’s not where she saw herself landing, but she’s determined to rebuild rather than collapse. What she didn’t factor into the recovery plan was Dylan: six foot five, former Navy SEAL, her brother’s best friend, and technically his boss. Off-limits in approximately every direction. 🏍️
Neve Onoros builds the forbidden romance tension efficiently—the setup is classic but executed with enough specific detail to feel fresh. The biker club world gives the story a lived-in texture that distinguishes it from standard small-town romance, and the camaraderie between the club members creates a genuine found-family atmosphere around the central relationship. Dylan’s background as a SEAL gives him a particular kind of quiet competence that works well against her scrappy determination to stand on her own. 🤠
The complication of the past catching up to her gives Dylan: Haven MCC genuine stakes beyond the romantic tension. When trouble arrives from her previous life, the question isn’t just whether she and Dylan will get together—it’s whether she’ll survive long enough to find out. The club’s response to that threat says everything about what Haven MCC actually stands for, and Onoros earns the emotional payoff. 🔥
Compelling small-town biker romance with a forbidden attraction, a heroine rebuilding from scratch, and a protector who takes the job very seriously—Dylan: Haven MCC delivers on every count. $1.99 today on Amazon.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2










