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It’s 1937, and the world is holding its breath. In a windswept Dingle fishing village, eighteen-year-old Grace Fitzgerald dreams of a bigger life. Across the Atlantic in Savannah, Georgia, Richard Lewis is suffocating under the weight of a banking dynasty he never asked for. When their worlds collide through a twist of fate, what emerges is a connection neither of them has any framework for understanding. 🍀
Jean Grainger is one of the most beloved writers of Irish historical fiction working today, and Lilac Ink showcases everything her readers love — atmospheric settings rendered with genuine affection, characters with real inner lives, and a story that moves between the rugged Irish coastline and the genteel streets of Georgia with equal confidence. ☘️
The backdrop of impending global conflict gives the romance an urgency that lifts it beyond period escapism — these two people are finding each other just as the world is about to make everything harder. Family expectations, social norms, and their own conflicting desires all press in from every direction. 🌊
What makes this special: A fiery Irish dreamer and a stifled American heir discover an inexplicable bond across the Atlantic on the eve of World War II — Jean Grainger at her warmest and most atmospheric, spanning the Irish coast and the American South in a story about connection that defies every obstacle in its path.
Lord Peter Wimsey — aristocratic, brilliant, and quietly irresistible — encounters a woman accused of poisoning her lover. The accused is Harriet Vane, a writer of mystery novels who insists she is innocent. Wimsey believes her. The jury does not. He has one month before the retrial to prove she didn’t do it. 🔍
Dorothy L. Sayers introduced Harriet Vane in this 1930 novel, and the decision transformed the Wimsey series entirely. Harriet is Sayers’ most fully realized creation — independent, sharp, and deeply resistant to being saved by a man she barely knows, however charming he might be. The dynamic between them is unlike anything else in Golden Age detective fiction. 🎩
The mystery itself is ingeniously constructed, but what makes Strong Poison essential reading is the relationship at its center — one of the great slow burns in all of crime fiction, beginning here and unfolding across several more novels. If you haven’t read Sayers, this is the place to start. 📖
Why this grips from page one: Lord Peter Wimsey falls for a woman convicted of murder and sets out to prove her innocence before the clock runs out — the novel that introduced Harriet Vane and launched one of crime fiction’s greatest partnerships. Dorothy Sayers at her most irresistible, free.
The Earl of Kelmarsh made a catastrophic error involving a misunderstanding of gargantuan proportions, and Miss Sophie Beckford — his almost betrothed — has responded by fleeing to Ireland for a year, returning to London stronger, better dressed, armed with her Irish cousin, and absolutely determined never to speak to him again. The earl is desperate. 🎭
Emily Windsor writes Regency romance with real wit and a gift for comic plotting — the earl’s campaign to recapture Sophie’s heart, conducted with dubious assistance from a roguish marquess, a strait-laced duke, a poet, and a famous actor, takes him from Almack’s to Drury Lane taverns to secret seductions in Vauxhall Gardens. Propriety, as the book cheerfully announces, be damned. 🌹
Sophie is exactly the kind of Regency heroine worth rooting for — she’s not waiting around to be won back, and the earl has to work very hard indeed for every inch of ground he gains. Windsor keeps the energy high and the banter sharp throughout. 💫
What makes this irresistible: A desperate earl enlists a rogue’s handbook and a colorful cast of accomplices to win back the woman he wronged — Regency romance with sparkling wit, a heroine who makes him earn every moment, and a pursuit that spans the best and worst of London society. Perfect series opener.
Renee Esterhaus is on the run for a robbery she didn’t commit, stranded in East Texas with a dead car and a bounty hunter closing in. In a moment of pure desperation she makes an offer to the first man she sees — a night she won’t forget in exchange for a ride out of town. The man turns out to be a cop on vacation with a very low tolerance for charming criminals. 😂
Jane Graves has a gift for romantic comedy with genuine stakes, and the setup here delivers both. John DeMarco hauls Renee toward justice, starts to believe she might actually be innocent, and finds himself in the increasingly complicated position of working with her to clear her name while dodging his entire all-cop family and a very angry bounty hunter. 🚔
The banter crackles, the supporting cast is reliably entertaining, and the romance develops with the kind of warm inevitability that makes this genre so satisfying when it’s done well. Strong series launch with a hero worth spending more time with. 💛
Why I’m including this: A woman wrongly accused of robbery makes a desperate deal with the one man she absolutely shouldn’t — a vacationing cop who might just believe her. Funny, fast-moving romantic suspense with a heroine who talks her way into trouble and a hero who can’t quite bring himself to mind.
A generation ago, a starship was lost in space. The original crew fought on as long as they could, then aged and died. Their children — born in the void, raised among the stars, dreaming of a homeworld they’ve never seen — are the ones who have to finish what their parents started. Against the vicious alien Malibor. Against everything. 🚀
Craig Martelle is one of the most prolific and dependable names in military science fiction, and Starship Lost gives him a premise with real emotional resonance. Captain Jaq Hunter and Commander Crip Castle carry both the weight of their parents’ legacy and the hunger of people who have spent their entire lives being told what they’re fighting for without ever having touched it. ⭐
The combination of generational saga and military action gives the book more depth than the average space combat thriller, and Martelle delivers the kinetic plotting his readers expect alongside characters whose stakes feel genuinely personal. 💥
What makes this special: The children of a lost starship crew must fight to reclaim the homeworld they’ve only ever heard about — military sci-fi with a generational emotional core, relentless action, and two commanders carrying the hopes of everyone who came before them. Craig Martelle doing what he does best.
Archie was born in the shadow of a famous father, carrying a name that opens doors and a birth that closes others. Returning from exile to a Scotland ripped apart by conflict, he has everything to prove and the specific disadvantage of everyone already having an opinion about him. ⚔️
J. R. Tomlin writes Scottish historical fiction with the kind of gritty authenticity that puts you squarely in the mud and blood of medieval conflict. The coming-of-age arc here — Archie learning the ways of war under his mentor’s tutelage, forging bonds of loyalty, confronting his own doubts — is grounded in real history and rendered with genuine dramatic force. 🏴
For readers who love Bernard Cornwell’s brand of historically immersive battlefield fiction, this hits the same notes with a distinctly Scottish voice. The question at the heart of the book — can a man rise above the circumstances of his birth to become who he was meant to be — is as compelling now as it was in the fourteenth century. 🗡️
What makes this a must-read: A son of war returns from exile to prove himself worthy of his father’s legendary name in a Scotland torn by conflict — gritty, immersive Scottish historical fiction with a hero whose obstacles are as much internal as they are on the battlefield. Strong series opener, free.
Glasgow’s West End is already one of the most atmospheric corners of Scotland — bookshops, cafés, cobbled lanes, the kind of place that feels like it’s holding onto secrets. Steven P. Aitchison uses it brilliantly as the setting for a story about seven women who have built their ordinary lives there, completely unaware that they’re the descendants of an ancient witch sisterhood. 🔮
When sceptical bookseller Isla Macrae discovers an old grimoire and a trail of cryptic messages left by her late grandmother, everything changes. One by one, the seven women find each other — and begin to awaken powers that have been dormant for generations. What follows is part mystery, part magical adventure, and part ensemble romance as each woman navigates love and self-discovery alongside a growing danger threatening the city itself. 🌿
Aitchison writes with genuine warmth and a clear love for his Glasgow setting, and the ensemble structure — seven witches, seven stories — gives the series real scope. This first book establishes the world and the sisterhood with the kind of care that makes you want to stay in it for the long haul. ✨
What makes this special: Seven ordinary Glasgow women discover they’re the heirs to an ancient witch coven — paranormal romance with a richly atmospheric Scottish setting, a compelling ensemble cast, and a magical mystery that deepens with every chapter. Perfect series launch for readers who love their romance with a generous dash of the supernatural.
If you’ve ever listened to a Dylan track and wondered exactly how it came together — who played what, where it was recorded, what he was reaching for — this is the book that answers every question you didn’t know you had. Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon go song by song through more than 500 tracks across nearly six decades of one of the most extraordinary careers in the history of popular music. 🎸
Organized chronologically by album, the book covers Dylan’s recording process with forensic detail — the origins of melodies and lyrics, the instruments used, the musicians and producers who shaped each session. A lot of it will be new even to people who think they know the catalog inside out. The creative process of a Nobel Prize winner, laid bare track by track. 🎵
At under three dollars this is frankly absurd value for a reference work of this depth and scope. Whether you’re a lifelong devotee or someone who’s just starting to fall down the Dylan rabbit hole, this belongs on your shelf. 📖
Why this deserves your attention: The most comprehensive song-by-song account of Bob Dylan’s entire recorded career ever published — over 500 tracks, decades of sessions, and countless stories even dedicated fans won’t know. An exceptional reference work at an exceptional price.
Most histories of Reconstruction focus on the politicians and generals — the people whose names ended up in textbooks. Kidada E. Williams turns the lens entirely the other way, centering the daily lived experience of formerly enslaved people trying to build new lives after 1865 while being subjected to relentless white supremacist violence. The result is history that feels immediate and devastating in equal measure. 📜
Drawing on overlooked sources and bold new readings of the historical archive, Williams reconstructs nighttime raids and Ku Klux Klan attacks with a specificity — sometimes minute-by-minute — that makes this unlike any Reconstruction history you’ve read before. She also brings cutting-edge trauma scholarship to bear on how the effects of that violence echoed across generations. 🕯️
This is essential, uncomfortable, important reading — the kind of history that permanently expands your understanding of what this period actually meant for the people who lived through it. ⭐
Why this grips from page one: A groundbreaking account of Reconstruction told through the eyes of Black families living under the terror of white supremacist violence — meticulous, empathetic, and essential. Kidada E. Williams has written one of the most important American history books of recent years.
Steve Martin is one of those rare talents who is genuinely funny on the page in a completely different way than he is on screen — precise, deadpan, and operating at a level of comic intelligence that rewards rereading. This collection pulls together the best of his written work, with a new introduction and some previously unpublished pieces thrown in for good measure. 😄
The range here is impressive — from the neurotic Daniel Pecan Cambridge to the bittersweet Shopgirl to his long-running New Yorker “Shouts & Murmurs” pieces, Martin moves between registers with the ease of someone who has been doing this for fifty years and never stopped getting better at it. 📝
For new readers it’s the perfect introduction. For longtime fans it’s essential. Either way, it’s Steve Martin at his most purely himself — which is to say, funnier than almost anyone else working in any medium. 🌟
What makes this irresistible: The best of Steve Martin’s written work collected in one place — fiction, humor essays, New Yorker pieces, and never-before-published material, showcasing one of comedy’s great minds doing what he does best on the page. A genuine treat at any price.
Jess Mount opens her Facebook and finds something that shouldn’t be possible — her timeline has jumped forward eighteen months, and it’s filled with tributes from grieving friends and family. She is, apparently, dead. The posts describe an accident. One post from her best friend hints at something darker — that her death wasn’t an accident at all. 😰
Linda Green builds her premise with genuine ingenuity, and the central dilemma is one of the more genuinely affecting twists on the time-leap thriller: among the future posts, Jess discovers photos of a baby boy she hasn’t yet conceived. A son she’s already fallen in love with. If she changes the future to save her own life, he may never exist. 💔
Green handles the emotional weight of that impossible choice with real skill, keeping the thriller mechanics and the human stakes in perfect balance throughout. This is the kind of book that’s very hard to put down once the premise locks in. ⏳
What makes this irresistible: A woman discovers her own Facebook obituary eighteen months in the future — and a photo of the baby son she hasn’t conceived yet. To save her life she may have to sacrifice his. A brilliantly constructed thriller with emotional stakes that hit harder than expected, at a price that’s hard to argue with.
DI Nathaniel Caslin is not doing well. His career is in freefall, he’s working the minimum, and he’s medicating himself through the days with substances and through the nights with alcohol. When he’s assigned to investigate the death of an ex-serviceman in police custody, it seems like exactly the kind of case a man in his state might sleepwalk through. It isn’t. 🌧️
J. M. Dalgliesh sets his Dark Yorkshire series in the kind of landscape that feels complicit in its crimes — bleak moors, bitter winters, a family home that gives up its secrets reluctantly and gruesomely. The disappearance of a young family that nobody noticed, a murder scene of horrific brutality, and a cast of characters where nobody is quite who they claim to be. 🔍
The question running underneath everything — will this case break Caslin or redeem him — gives the book genuine emotional stakes beyond the mystery plotting. Strong series launch with a protagonist worth following into the dark. 🏴
Why this grips from page one: A burnt-out Yorkshire detective investigating a death in custody uncovers a vanished family, a brutal murder on the moors, and secrets that nobody wanted found. Atmospheric British crime fiction with a flawed hero worth investing in and a landscape that feels like a character in its own right.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











