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It’s 1988 and Crowford School has been abandoned for years, scheduled for demolition — but eleven-year-old Bradley Firth and his two best friends want one last look inside before it’s gone. The legend is irresistible: a ghostly woman haunting the halls, crying out for justice decades after her death. For Bradley, this isn’t idle curiosity. With his mother gravely ill, he needs to believe that the dead aren’t truly lost. 👻
Amy Cross builds the Ghosts of Crowford series on the specific texture of British village horror — the small town with the long memory, the crime that gets buried rather than solved, the local legend that turns out to be considerably more than legend. The abandoned school setting is used with maximum atmospheric efficiency: crumbling classrooms, shadows in corridors, the particular dread of a place that was once full of children and is now full of something else entirely. 🏚️
The mystery at the center — who really killed Eve Marsh, and why has the town spent fifty years not talking about it — gives the horror its emotional foundation. Bradley’s personal grief runs underneath the supernatural investigation, giving Cross the emotional register that separates her best work from standard ghost fiction: the haunting is real, but so is the child’s need to find something on the other side of loss. 🕯️
What makes this essential: A beautifully atmospheric British horror novel about three kids who sneak into an abandoned school to investigate a fifty-year-old murder — and discover that some ghosts aren’t ready to let the living leave without answers. Free today — perfect for fans of M.R. James and Susan Hill who want their horror rooted in English village secrets, their child protagonists genuinely at risk, and their mysteries wrapped in genuine dread.
Telryn “Trip” Yert has spent his whole life hiding. Magic is forbidden in Iskandia — punishable by death, as he learned firsthand watching his mother executed for witchcraft when he was a boy. So he buried whatever lurks inside him and built a different life: army officer, loyal soldier, dedicated servant of the king. The plan was working fine until the dragons came back. 🐉
Lindsay Buroker builds the Heritage of Power series on the epic fantasy framework with a protagonist whose reluctance is earned rather than performed — Trip isn’t being modest when he says he wants nothing to do with his power. He watched what that power cost his mother, and the price tag hasn’t changed. The returning dragons force the issue in the specific way that good fantasy uses external threat: not as an excuse for a hero to become powerful, but as a situation that makes the choice between safety and purpose impossible to keep deferring. ⚔️
The world-building is efficient and specific, delivered through action rather than exposition, and Buroker gives Trip a clear goal — become a soldier as respected as the legendary General Zirkander — that the fantasy plot systematically complicates. The tension between what Trip wants to be and what his heritage is making him is the series’ engine, and it runs cleanly from the first chapter. 🌑
Why this grips from page one: A propulsive epic fantasy about a soldier born with forbidden magical power who spent his life hiding it — until dragons returned to the world and hiding became the one thing he can no longer afford. Free today — perfect for fans of Brandon Sanderson and Brent Weeks who want their epic fantasy character-driven, their magic systems with genuine personal cost, and their reluctant heroes tested from every direction.
It’s 1928, the age of women’s rights is dawning, and Eliza Montagu has done exactly what her aristocratic family hoped she wouldn’t — turned her back on Thistlewood Manor, moved to London, and built herself an artist’s life. Then a family crisis arrives that she can’t ignore, dragging her back to rural England, her father’s expectations, and the Lord they’ve decided she should marry. She arrives with every intention of leaving as soon as possible. Then someone turns up dead. 🌿
Fiona Grace builds the Eliza Montagu series on the historical cozy mystery’s most satisfying dynamic: a heroine too independent for the world she was born into, trapped by circumstance in exactly the place she escaped, and forced to use the very qualities that make her unsuitable for polite society — sharp observation, refusal to defer, willingness to ask uncomfortable questions — to solve a murder that the household would rather pretend didn’t happen. 🔎
The 1920s English countryside setting gives the series its atmosphere and its stakes — a dead body at a family reunion in this world carries the specific weight of scandal, inheritance, and social ruin alongside the obvious criminal matter. Eliza’s freedom depends on clearing the air before suspicion settles permanently on her, which gives the investigation its personal urgency and the romance subplot its natural complications. 🫖
What makes this delightful: A charming 1920s historical cozy about a free-spirited aristocratic artist dragged home to Thistlewood Manor — where a dead body threatens to destroy both the family reunion and her hard-won independence. Free today — perfect for fans of Rhys Bowen and Jessica Ellicott who want their historical mysteries atmospheric, their heroines ahead of their time, and their English country houses reliably full of secrets.
The League has moved on a golden planet deep inside Republican territory and galactic war has broken out. AIs are strategizing across vast distances, teleporting star fleets and space-based weapons into position across an interstellar conflict neither side expected to survive this long. The Republic, outgunned and running short on ships, does what desperate governments have always done: it turns to privateers. 🚀
Jaxon Reed builds the Pirates of the Milky Way series on the space opera tradition that runs from classic pulp adventure through the modern military sci-fi renaissance — fast-moving, populated with vivid characters, built around the freewheeling energy of a crew that operates in the space between law and outright criminality. Captain Christopher Raleigh and the crew of the Ultima Mule are law-skirting professionals from the planet of Lute, and the Republic’s offer of enormous bounties is exactly the kind of opportunity they were built for. 🌌
The ten-book box set delivers the full arc of the series in a single free download — ten complete novels’ worth of interstellar combat, crew dynamics, AI strategy, and the specific pleasure of watching brilliant misfits outmaneuver a war machine that underestimated them. Reed writes action-forward science fiction with the pacing of someone who respects the reader’s time and the genre’s best traditions. ⭐
Why this captivates from page one: Ten complete science fiction adventure novels in one free box set, following Captain Raleigh and his crew of brilliant misfits as they teach the League a lesson — and collect every bounty they can along the way. Free today — perfect for fans of John Scalzi and Nathan Lowell who want their space opera fast, their crews genuinely entertaining, and their interstellar conflicts fought with equal parts firepower and ingenuity.
The wife of the American ambassador has been murdered and her body posed in a Singapore hotel room in a grotesque display. The FBI says terrorism. The whispers on the street say serial killer — someone targeting prominent American women across Asia, and not finished yet. Singapore’s Inspector Samuel Tay gets the case because he’s the best they have, and because the alternative is an international embarrassment neither side can afford. 🌏
Jake Needham builds the Inspector Tay series on the international crime thriller’s most satisfying tension: the local detective with jurisdiction and competence, surrounded by foreign agencies with agendas and authority but apparently very little interest in actually solving anything. The Americans want Tay out. His own bosses are nervous. Tay is unmoved — it’s a Singapore murder, finding killers in Singapore is what he does, and nothing about the FBI’s behavior suggests they’re interested in the truth. 🔍
The Singapore setting gives the series its distinctive atmosphere — a small, efficient, intensely particular city-state navigating the pressure of a high-profile case with international dimensions — and Needham renders it with the specific authority of someone who has spent real time there. Tay himself is dry, observant, and completely indifferent to the diplomatic sensitivities that everyone else is performing around him. 🌃
What makes this essential: A sharp, atmospheric international crime thriller about a Singapore detective who refuses to cede a murder investigation to the Americans — and begins to suspect they have very good reasons for wanting him gone. Free today — perfect for fans of John le Carré and James Church who want their crime fiction internationally grounded, their detectives stubbornly principled, and their settings rendered with genuine authority.
Tucker Simon has decided he’s done with love. After a tragedy he doesn’t talk about, it simply isn’t available to him anymore — and his family needs to accept that. He has accepted it. Then a family wedding forces him into a Florida weekend with Abby Mathews, who has been safely filed under “friend” because she deserves far more than what he can give, and the careful distance he has maintained starts to feel considerably less manageable. 💙
Juliana Stone builds the Family Simon series on the contemporary romance’s most emotionally effective foundation: a hero whose barriers are genuine rather than performative, and a heroine who understands exactly what she is to him and has decided to want more anyway. The friend-to-lovers dynamic works here because Stone takes both positions seriously — Tucker’s reasons for holding back are real, and Abby’s choice to push past them is a decision rather than an accident. 🌴
The Florida weekend setting does exactly what the romance genre uses vacation settings for — enforced proximity, removed from ordinary defenses, with enough warmth and looseness to make the emotional walls harder to maintain. Stone writes the slow thaw with patience and warmth, letting the attraction build through small moments rather than rushing to the inevitable. ☀️
Why this resonates from page one: A warm, emotionally satisfying contemporary romance about a man who decided love was finished with him — and the woman who has been waiting, not so patiently, for him to realize he was wrong. Free today — perfect for fans of Kristen Proby and Melody Anne who want their romance emotionally layered, their heroes genuinely wounded, and their happily-ever-afters properly earned.
Ring of Fire Hawaii
The Pacific Rim is waking up. After the catastrophic fury of Mount St. Helens and the devastating eruption of Mount Fuji, Dr. Duke Mercer and the CVO team are regrouping — and redeploying. Their new mandate: monitor the most volatile volcanic systems along the Ring of Fire, from the mysterious Axial Seamount to the towering giants off Indonesia. The science is urgent. The threat is global. And someone in a position to know is actively hiding the truth. 🌋
Bobby Akart builds his Ring of Fire series on the technothriller’s most effective combination — rigorous geological detail and genuine human stakes. Duke Mercer is not an action hero improvising under fire; he is a scientist watching data that no one wants to believe, in a world where the distance between a monitoring alert and a civilization-level catastrophe is measured in hours. The Hawaiian setting gives this installment a specific, gorgeous backdrop for something that intends to destroy it. 🌊
The cover-up element — the knowledge being suppressed, the institutional forces resisting what the science is saying — gives the thriller its political edge and its urgency. Akart understands that the scariest disaster fiction is not about the eruption itself but about the window before it, when someone with authority could have acted and chose not to. Duke’s race against that window drives the novel’s pace with the relentless momentum the series has built. 🔥
What makes this essential: A propulsive geological technothriller following Dr. Duke Mercer and the CVO team as they race to monitor a reawakening Ring of Fire — against a cover-up that is buying time for a catastrophe the world isn’t ready for. On sale today for $2.99 — perfect for fans of James Rollins and Steve Alten who want their disaster fiction scientifically grounded, their conspiracies plausible, and their countdowns genuinely terrifying.
In Kravan, children born to those with powers are taken at birth and raised in the Tower — a prison-like structure where no one is permitted to touch, where intimacy is forbidden, and where every resident waits for their nineteenth birthday to learn whether their powers make them safe enough to release or dangerous enough to disappear. Shara has spent her entire life longing for Placement. When it finally comes, in the household of a Noble family, it feels like the beginning of everything. It isn’t that simple. ✨
K.A. Riley builds Thrall on a fantasy premise that uses its world’s rules to generate genuine emotional stakes — the prohibition on touch isn’t decorative world-building but the central source of tension, giving every interaction between Shara and the handsome fellow Tethered who shares the house’s wing a charged significance that the genre’s standard romantic dynamics don’t quite replicate. The mysteries surrounding her Proprietor deepen gradually, rewarding patience. 🏰
The structure of the Tethered system — release or disappearance, with no transparency about what disappearance actually means — gives the romance its political undertow. Shara’s longing for freedom and connection is personal, but it exists inside a social order that has made both structurally impossible, and Riley keeps that pressure present throughout rather than letting the fantasy world recede into backdrop. 🌑
Why this captivates from page one: A beautifully constructed romantic fantasy about a young woman raised in a power-controlled prison society who receives her Placement in a Noble household — and begins unraveling secrets about her world, her Proprietor, and the compelling fellow Tethered she isn’t supposed to want. On sale today for $2.49 — perfect for fans of Jennifer L. Armentrout and Elise Kova who want their fantasy romance atmospheric, their forbidden dynamics genuinely charged, and their world-building built to matter.
Cath is thirty-four, quietly settled into a life of unassuming routine in Buffalo, and not entirely sure how she feels about her mostly absent mother’s death. Going through her mother’s things, she finds something unexpected: tickets to a murder week in England’s Peak District, where an entire village has staged a fake mystery to attract tourists. Baffled, intrigued, and unable to explain why, Cath goes. 🎭
Karen Dukess builds Welcome to Murder Week around the kind of unlikely ensemble that literary mystery does at its most enjoyable — Cath’s cottage-mates are Wyatt, forty, who works unhappily in his husband’s birding shop, and Amity, fifty, a divorced romance writer stuck on her current novel. Three people at different crossroads, thrown together to solve a fake crime, discovering that the week’s real revelations have nothing to do with the staged mystery and everything to do with themselves. 🌿
The Peak District setting is rendered with the atmospheric specificity that English village fiction does best, and the artisanal gin maker who catches Cath’s attention adds a warm romantic thread without pulling focus from the central emotional engine: what the mother she barely knew was doing with these tickets, and what the answer says about both of them. Dukess handles the grief subplot with the restraint that makes it land. 🫖
What makes this irresistible: A warm, witty mystery about a woman who follows her late mother’s unexplained tickets to a staged murder week in England’s Peak District — and finds herself solving something considerably more personal than a fake crime. On sale today for $1.99 — perfect for fans of Richard Osman and Alexander McCall Smith who want their mysteries charming, their ensembles genuinely delightful, and their English settings thoroughly atmospheric.
She wakes on the shore of a remote lake in the middle of the night, freezing and disoriented, with no memory of who she is or how she got there. The lights of a nearby house offer the only option. The handsome stranger who answers the door — who says his name is Gregg — takes her in. The winter storm cuts off everything else. And almost immediately, something feels wrong. 🌊
A.M. Strong and Sonya Sargent build Gravewater Lake on the psychological thriller’s most claustrophobic setup — an amnesiac protagonist, an isolated location, a single potential ally who may be the actual threat, and a house that seems to have sounds and presences it shouldn’t. The unreliable-narrator dynamic here is built into the premise rather than applied as a twist: when the protagonist can’t remember her own past, the reader has no stable ground to stand on, which is exactly where the authors want everyone. 🏚️
The dual uncertainty — is Gregg hiding something, or is she losing her mind — is sustained with enough credibility on both sides that neither answer feels telegraphed. The memory recovery structure gives the thriller its pacing engine, with each recollection raising the stakes rather than settling them, and the revelation of what she’s been hiding from herself lands with the weight that good psychological suspense earns rather than manufactures. 🌑
Why this grips from page one: A taut, claustrophobic psychological thriller about a woman who wakes with no memory on the shore of a remote lake — trapped by a winter storm with a stranger whose secrets may be as dangerous as her own. On sale today for $2.49 — perfect for fans of Lisa Gardner and Chevy Stevens who want their psychological suspense isolated, their amnesia premises genuinely disorienting, and their reveals worth the wait.
Jen Gibbs has just landed the position she’s spent her career working toward — a senior editor role at Vida House Publishing in New York — when a manuscript surfaces from the old slush pile and lands on her desk. It has no cover letter, no author name, and no explanation for why it was sitting there. It also has her completely hooked: the story of Sarra, a mixed-race Melungeon girl navigating dangerous men in turn-of-the-century Appalachia, written with an authenticity that raises more questions than it answers. 📚
Lisa Wingate builds The Story Keeper on the dual-narrative structure that literary fiction uses most effectively when both threads are genuinely compelling on their own terms — Jen’s contemporary investigation into the manuscript’s unknown origins and Sarra’s historical story in the Blue Ridge Mountains both carry full emotional weight. The mystery of who wrote this and why deepens the further Jen follows the trail. 🏔️
The complication is personal: the trail leads back to Appalachia, the place Jen left behind and has no intention of revisiting. Wingate handles the tension between professional ambition and unresolved history with the emotional intelligence that her fiction consistently delivers — the blockbuster manuscript is the engine, but the cost of finding its source is the real story. 🌿
What makes this captivating: A beautifully layered dual-narrative novel about a New York editor who follows a mysterious manuscript’s origins back to the Appalachian mountains she left behind — and into the extraordinary true story of the woman who wrote it. On sale today for $1.99 — perfect for fans of Kristy Cambron and Patti Callahan Henry who want their Christian historical fiction emotionally rich, their dual timelines deeply connected, and their mountain settings rendered with genuine love.
Ryke Meadows knows he’s not easy to be around. Billion-dollar inheritance, track-star credentials, alpha-male energy — he’s aware of how he comes across, and he doesn’t lose sleep over it. What he wants is straightforward: free climb three of Yosemite’s toughest mountains without drama. Then Daisy Calloway calls from Paris at the worst possible moment, and the plan that didn’t include anyone else gets significantly more complicated. 🧗
Krista and Becca Ritchie write the Addicted series with a psychological depth that separates it from standard new adult romance — Daisy at eighteen has finally escaped her overbearing mother and the scrutiny that came with her modeling career, and Paris was supposed to be freedom. What she finds instead is the uglier reality beneath the industry’s surface, and when everything spirals, Ryke is the person she calls. He keeps her secrets. He tries to keep up. 💫
The tension between them is built on genuine understanding rather than simple attraction — Ryke sees the hurt beneath every impulsive decision Daisy makes, the “live as if you’ll die today” philosophy that is less a motto than a warning sign. The protective dynamic never tips into controlling because Ritchie and Ritchie are careful about the distinction, which is what makes the emotional payoff feel earned rather than convenient. 🌸
Why this resonates from page one: A compulsively readable contemporary romance about a fiercely independent young woman discovering who she is after a lifetime of being managed — and the alpha-male climber who is the only person keeping pace with her. On sale today for $2.99 — perfect for fans of Colleen Hoover and Anna Todd who want their new adult romance emotionally layered, their heroines genuinely complex, and their slow burns built on something real.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











