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When out-of-work graphic designer Verity Long accidentally traps a ghost on her property, she acquires more than a supernatural sidekick—she gains the ability to see spirits. The ability leads to an offer she cannot refuse from the town’s bad boy, Ellis Wydell, who also happens to be the brother of her ex and the last man she should ever partner with. He has a stunning historic property in Sugarland, Tennessee haunted by some of the town’s finest former citizens, and some of them are growing restless and destructive. 👻
Verity is hired to put an end to the disturbances—but the mysterious estate turns out to hold considerably more than floating specters, secret passageways, and hidden rooms. There is a modern-day mystery built on a decades-old murder, and Verity is not above questioning the living or the dead to get to the bottom of it. The question is whether she can discover the truth before the killer finds her. 🔍
Angie Fox writes the Southern Ghost Hunter Mysteries with the Tennessee small-town atmosphere and paranormal cozy mystery warmth that has made the series one of the most beloved long-running franchises in the genre—Verity’s voice is funny and sharp, Ellis is exactly the kind of complicated love interest that earns his slow-burn status, and the ghost sidekick dynamic gives the investigation mechanics their particular flavor. The series has built its following across many books precisely because the world and characters are rendered with enough specificity to make every return to Sugarland feel like going home. 💛
What makes this irresistible: Angie Fox launches the Southern Ghost Hunter Mysteries with a paranormal cozy of pure Tennessee charm—a graphic designer who accidentally acquires the ability to see ghosts, a haunted historic estate with a decades-old murder at its heart, and the brother of her ex who is the last man she should be working with. 🌟
Layton Morris and his brother Mike grew up without running water, electricity, or parents—learning to survive and depend only on each other in the specific way that difficult childhoods forge unbreakable bonds. When a tragic accident takes Mike, and the only other person Layton ever let into his heart walks away, he pours everything into the ranch he and his brother dreamed of building. He makes a vow: no more love, no more heartache. The ranch is enough. 💔
Whitley Reynolds grew up in a privileged New York home—landed the star football player in high school, followed him to the city, built the life she imagined. The two protagonists are starting from opposite ends of every spectrum, which is exactly the kind of distance that contemporary romance uses to greatest effect when the characters have enough internal damage to make the closing of that distance feel genuinely difficult and genuinely earned. 💛
Kelly Elliott writes the kind of contemporary romance that built her into one of the genre’s most widely read authors—emotionally grounded, character-driven, with heroes whose damage is rendered with enough specificity to make their eventual opening feel real rather than convenient. Broken delivers the foundational appeal of the Kelly Elliott voice: two people who have excellent reasons to stay closed, circumstances that keep putting them in each other’s path, and the slow accumulation of genuine connection that overrides the vows they made to protect themselves. The ranch setting grounds the story in the specific texture of Western contemporary romance that distinguishes Elliott’s work. ⚡
What makes this unforgettable: Kelly Elliott delivers a contemporary ranch romance of genuine emotional depth—a man who survived a brutal childhood and lost everyone he loved, a woman from a privileged world whose own life has cracked apart, and two broken people discovering that the walls they built were not as permanent as they believed. 🌟
Thirty years ago, Harry Winslow’s wife and children died in a house fire while he was overseas on a government mission. Or so he was told. Someone has now left him an envelope containing photographs of his wife and children taken years after they were supposed to be dead—and Harry, freshly retired from his career as a government agent, turns to PI Sam Prichard and his wife Indie to find out the truth. 🔍
What Sam and Indie uncover is extraordinary: an old friend staged the deaths of Harry’s family, then convinced his wife that Harry was the one who had died and that the KGB was coming for them. She fled the country and built a new life under a false identity, believing her husband was gone. Harry and his wife are eventually reunited—and then his old friend is murdered, and Harry is the only viable suspect. The mystery that opened as a search for the living dead becomes a murder investigation with the man it vindicated now at the center of a new accusation. 💀
David Archer writes the Sam and Indie series with the hard-boiled momentum and family warmth that have made the long-running franchise one of the most popular in independent mystery publishing—Sam’s investigative instincts, Indie’s technical skills, and the cases that keep escalating beyond their original scope give the series its sustained appeal. Aces and Eights launches the world with a premise whose emotional scale—a man discovering his dead family was alive for thirty years—is matched by its narrative complexity. ⚡
What makes this gripping: David Archer launches the Sam and Indie series with a hard-boiled mystery of extraordinary emotional scope—a retired government agent who discovers his family faked their deaths thirty years ago, a reunion that should have ended the story, and a murder that makes him the only suspect. 🌟
April moves into Hummingbird House with a bruised heart, a distinct lack of furniture, and a need for peace and quiet to heal. The tenants of Hummingbird House have other ideas. The mysterious landlord Dai intrigues her from the start, and she spends the summer getting to know the other occupants—Paul, a solitary ex-chef, and Betty, an elderly woman who lives in the basement flat—as she slowly smartens up her home and makes peace with her recent past. 💛
Hummingbird House holds secrets, and the relationships between its tenants are not as straightforward as they appear. One eventful night, April learns shocking truths that reframe everything she thought she understood about the people she has come to know. The novel’s central revelation—that victims and villains can look exactly the same—is the kind of moral complexity that women’s fiction handles most effectively when it has spent enough time building the community that makes the revelation land with its full weight. 🔍
Jane Harvey writes the Hummingbird House series with the character warmth and slow-building community atmosphere that distinguishes the best contemporary women’s fiction—the building itself as a character, its occupants as a found family in formation, and the specific healing that comes from being somewhere new enough that the old grief cannot follow as easily as it does in familiar places. The series rewards readers who follow it across multiple books, and this first installment establishes the world with the gentleness and the hidden depth that makes the eventual revelations feel genuinely earned. ⚡
What makes this captivating: Jane Harvey launches the Hummingbird House series with a contemporary women’s fiction of quiet power—a woman seeking peace in a new home who discovers her neighbors are not what they seem, her mysterious landlord is more than he appears, and the truth about Hummingbird House arrives in one eventful night that changes everything. 🌟
When bestselling author Samantha Roberts receives an urgent message from her estranged sisters, she is drawn back to the Cloudberry Inn—a place full of unresolved family secrets and painful memories she has been keeping at arm’s length for years. Despite the years of silence, she holds onto hope that she can uncover the reasons behind their falling out and find a way back to the family she lost. 💛
Cloudberry Inn offers more than the chance for family reconciliation. Samantha meets Garrett Mason—ruggedly charming, genuinely kind, the kind of man who could have walked straight out of one of her own novels. As they grow closer, she finds herself caught between her developing feelings for Garrett and the complicated web of family secrets that threatens everything. The choice between mending her family ties and pursuing the romance she has spent years writing about but never found is the central tension the Cloudberry Inn series builds from with the unhurried pace that later-in-life romance rewards. 🌲
Karice Bolton writes the Cloudberry Inn series with the Pacific Northwest setting warmth and family reconciliation depth that distinguishes it within the later-in-life romance space—a heroine whose professional life involves writing the kind of love stories she has not been able to have, and a setting that gives both the family drama and the romance their atmospheric grounding. The inn itself, with its history and secrets, functions as a character rather than simply a backdrop, giving the series its particular cozy texture. ⚡
What makes this heartwarming: Karice Bolton launches the Cloudberry Inn series with a later-in-life romance of genuine warmth—a bestselling romance author drawn back to a place of family secrets, a man who seems to have stepped out of one of her own novels, and the choice between healing her family and opening her heart. 🌟
Private investigator Melody Clue prefers a simple life in her small town—but her PI cases keep drawing her into police investigations, where she reliably ends up being the one who actually solves things for the local detectives. From chasing down bad guys to helping clients through their darkest hours, it is all in a day’s work for Melody Clue. Thirty novels’ worth of days’ work, delivered in a single free collection. 🔍
The Melody Clue series has built its readership on the specific cozy mystery pleasures that a long-running PI protagonist generates: a consistent voice and investigative style across many cases, a small-town community that deepens with each installment, and the particular dynamic of an amateur who is reliably better at the job than the professionals while maintaining the cozy warmth that distinguishes the genre from harder-edged procedural fiction. Thirty books in a single package is an exceptional entry point for readers new to the series and a complete collection for those who have been following Melody across individual installments. 💛
Meredith Potts writes the cozy mystery with the small-town setting and character consistency that sustains long-running series readership—Melody’s preference for simplicity coexisting with her inability to stay out of complicated situations is the central comic tension that thirty books have apparently not exhausted. The mega box set format delivers the full Melody Clue experience at the most generous possible price point. 😄
What makes this essential: Meredith Potts delivers all thirty Melody Clue cozy mysteries in one free collection—a small-town PI who prefers a simple life but keeps ending up solving the cases the local detectives cannot crack, across thirty novels of small-town mystery and genuine charm. 🌟
Gallant Lady: A Biography of the USS Archerfish
The USS Archerfish looked like any other Balao-class submarine built in the 1940s. What distinguished her was her record: she survived fierce combat, fires, and earthquake, and holds a uniquely heroic place in military history—the submarine that sank the largest ship ever destroyed by a sub, the Japanese aircraft carrier Shinano, on November 29, 1944. The Archerfish also played a critical role in the Cold War, crisscrossing the oceans for six years to foil Soviet naval intelligence before her eventual decommissioning. 🎖️
Ken Henry, who served aboard the Archerfish, presents the full biography of the vessel from her assembly in New England and dedication at the hand of Eleanor Roosevelt through her World War II service and Cold War operations. The story is told partly in the officers’ and sailors’ own words—the men who sent a Japanese carrier to the ocean floor, steered their ship into exotic ports, and welcomed everyone from Japanese war veterans to royalty to Playboy bunnies aboard with equal hospitality. The human dimension of the submarine’s history is as compelling as its tactical record. 🌊
Don Keith—the author of multiple acclaimed naval history books—co-writes with the insider authority that Henry’s service provides, giving the biography both the historical research depth and the lived texture that naval history delivers at its most authentic. At the current price, Gallant Lady is an exceptional value for military history readers and submarine enthusiasts. 📖
What makes this essential: Ken Henry and Don Keith deliver the full biography of the USS Archerfish—the submarine that sank the largest ship ever destroyed by a sub, told by a man who served aboard her, in the voices of the officers and sailors who made that history. 🌟
It is 1937, and fear and suspicion are stalking the Continent. A million have died in Stalin’s Great Purge. The Nazi terror grips Germany. British intelligence is still attempting to work out who the enemy actually is—and already losing the intelligence war before it has properly begun. British spymasters know there is a Soviet agent in their ranks, codenamed Agent Archie, and they are desperately searching for him. What they do not know is that Archie is not the only traitor. 🕵️
Into this atmosphere of pre-war paranoia arrives Charles Cooper—a young British writer travelling Europe to research his novel, whose life is about to change forever. The Double Agent series launches here, in the specific pre-war moment when Europe was still capable of collective self-deception about what was coming, and British intelligence was populated with people who had chosen their loyalties based on ideological convictions that the coming war would test to destruction. 💀
Alex Gerlis writes pre-war and wartime spy fiction with the historical authenticity and period atmosphere that distinguishes the best entries in the genre—1937 Europe rendered with enough specificity to feel genuinely inhabited, the tradecraft and counter-intelligence mechanics handled with procedural accuracy, and the moral complexity of a world where multiple sides were engaged in mass betrayal simultaneously. The series has earned strong comparison to the classic British spy fiction tradition. ⚡
What makes this gripping: Alex Gerlis launches the Double Agent series with a 1937 pre-war spy thriller of genuine period atmosphere—British intelligence hunting a known Soviet mole who is not the only traitor, and a young writer whose European research trip is about to change his life forever. 🌟
Lainie Eaves has no idea she is descended from shifters—her grandparents made certain of that when she was born human, ensuring she would never learn the truth about her family. Now that they are gone, she is returning to Hideaway Cove to deal with their crumbling old estate and discover everything that was kept hidden from her. The small coastal town with a magical secret is about to stop keeping it. 💛
Griffin shifter Harrison Galway has always known Hideaway Cove as the only safe haven he has ever had—a place where he can live without hiding what he is. When Lainie arrives in town, he knows immediately that she is his fated mate. The complication is that where Harrison sees a sanctuary, Lainie sees only the place that rejected her. Her family kept her out of this world her entire life, and the wounds from that exclusion are real. Healing her relationship to Hideaway Cove is the prerequisite for anything else—including him. ⚡
Zoe Chant writes the Hideaway Cove series with the fated mates shifter romance warmth and small coastal town world-building that have made her one of the most prolific and beloved authors in the subgenre. The griffin shifter is a less common choice than wolf or bear, giving the series its distinctive element, and the returning-to-discover-your-heritage premise gives Lainie’s story the dual mystery of her own nature and her family’s secrets alongside the central romance. 🌊
What makes this irresistible: Zoe Chant launches the Hideaway Cove series with a shifter romance of genuine warmth—a woman who discovers she is descended from a family of shifters, a griffin who knows immediately she is his fated mate, and the specific challenge of healing her relationship to the place that kept her out her entire life. 🌟
Olivia Brooks is the national anthem singer for the Milwaukee Steel Riders hockey team—talented, stuck in a relationship that makes her feel like background music in her own life, and craving something more. Abandoned at a bar one night by her neglectful boyfriend, she shares an unforgettable moment with a striking stranger she is convinced she will never see again. 💛
Hayes Larson is the newest star center for the Steel Riders, fresh from a painful breakup and doubting he will ever find real love again—until the moment he locks eyes with Olivia and feels a connection he cannot ignore. Three weeks later, worlds collide at the home opener: Olivia steps onto the ice to sing the anthem and her heart stops when she recognizes the stranger staring back at her from the lineup. The stadium meet-cute delayed reveal is one of sports romance’s most satisfying structural pleasures, and Ellie K. Drake executes it with the timing the premise demands. 🏒
Drake writes the Milwaukee Steel Riders series with the hockey romance warmth and slow-burn connection that has made the sports romance subgenre one of contemporary romance’s most reliably popular categories. The national anthem singer and star player setup gives the series its particular dynamic—two people orbiting the same team with no reason to have met before the bar encounter, discovering that the universe had arranged the introduction long before either of them realized it. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: Ellie K. Drake launches the Milwaukee Steel Riders series with a hockey romance of pure romantic momentum—the national anthem singer who meets a stranger at a bar, the star center who cannot stop thinking about her, and the home opener three weeks later when she steps to the microphone and recognizes him on the ice. 🌟
Pregnant and scared, Laura Metcalf has finally escaped the ex-boyfriend who spent years making her life miserable—who abused her and made her feel small. A new fear of an unknown future drives her to do whatever she must for her unborn child. When she lands work at Cade Sulley’s construction company, she arrives with more trouble than he anticipated and a forbidden attraction he cannot resist—she is his best friend’s little sister, which puts her immediately in the category of off-limits. 💔
The trouble multiplies when his office is ransacked and Laura is attacked. Cade vows to keep her safe while pouring his energy into a construction project that captures Laura’s heart: a women’s shelter that gives her new purpose alongside the protection she desperately needs. When the attacks turn deadly, Laura must learn to trust the one man who has always been there for her—or lose her life to a threat that has followed her from her old life into her new one. 💛
Danielle M. Haas writes the Safe Haven Women’s Shelter series with the action-adventure romance momentum and emotional depth that makes the protective hero format compelling when it is grounded in genuine stakes—Laura’s danger is real, her need for both safety and autonomy is rendered with care, and Cade’s protective instinct is balanced against her need to rebuild on her own terms. The women’s shelter project gives the series its thematic heart alongside the central romance. ⚡
What makes this compelling: Danielle M. Haas launches the Safe Haven Women’s Shelter series with an action romance of genuine emotional stakes—a pregnant woman who escaped an abusive relationship, a construction boss who is his best friend’s little sister’s reluctant protector, and attacks that turn deadly before she can fully trust anyone again. 🌟
Lily Reed is numb with grief after her husband’s death in the line of duty—surrounded by the emotional reminders of their shared world, struggling daily against the weight of a life built for two that is now lived for one. When she inherits a quiet beachside cottage property, she moves there to try to piece things together one wave at a time. The physical work of one renovation project after another gives her hands something to do while her heart figures out the harder work. 💔
The cottage’s neighbors surprise her. Easy friendships form in the way that grief sometimes allows when the familiar social geography has been stripped away—including a friendship with a hearing-impaired man, and an agreement to help train his service puppy. The puppy is the specific kind of healing catalyst that friendship fiction and beach cottage novels understand intuitively: something that needs her, that responds to her presence without the weight of her history, that pulls her gently forward into the next day. 💛
Tammy L. Grace writes the Glass Beach Cottage series with the beachside friendship fiction warmth and grief-recovery emotional intelligence that has made her one of the genre’s most trusted authors. The coastal setting functions as both backdrop and active element—the rhythm of waves, the light, the physical distance from everything that reminds Lily of what she lost—and the community she finds there gives the series its ensemble richness across subsequent books. 🌊
What makes this heartwarming: Tammy L. Grace launches the Glass Beach Cottage series with a beachside friendship fiction of gentle, profound warmth—a grieving widow who inherits a cottage, pours herself into renovation work, makes unexpected connections with her neighbors, and discovers that a service puppy might be the thing that starts her heart healing again. 🌟
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