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Author: Tracy Whitwell
FREE
Amateur Sleuth Mysteries

Tanz is a wine-loving, straight-talking former TV actress from Gateshead whose career has shrivelled like an antique walnut—her words, and they’re perfect. She’s still grieving for her friend Frank, dead three years now, and she needs a job in London to fund her cocktail habit. She ends up working in a new age shop, which is where the voices in her head start making a lot more sense. Not madness, it turns out—she’s from a long line of psychic mediums and has just been hearing from the dead without realizing it. Tracy Whitwell establishes Tanz as one of the more genuinely distinctive protagonists in the paranormal mystery space. 🍷

The voice is everything here. Tanz is funny, self-deprecating, and completely unimpressed by her own supernatural abilities—she’s not delighted to discover she’s a medium, she’s alarmed, and her confrontation with her little mam about the family secret has exactly the comedic energy of someone who needed this particular revelation like a hole in the head. Whitwell writes Northern English wit with real ear, and the comic timing never undercuts the genuine emotional underpinning of a woman still actively grieving. 👻

The darkness that arrives alongside the exciting new psychic career gives the novel its mystery backbone—murder isn’t far away, and Tanz’s abilities position her to investigate in ways that no conventional sleuth could. The combination of sharp comedy, genuine grief, and paranormal mystery is handled with enough tonal control that none of the three elements undermines the others. This is the kind of series opener that generates immediate loyalty from its readers. 🔍

Why this wins you over: A shrunken acting career, an accidental psychic gift, a family secret, and a voice so sharp it could cut glass—The Accidental Medium is paranormal mystery with genuine comic soul.

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Author: Irina Shapiro
FREE
Time Travel Romance

Neve Ashley is a location scout returning to work after a personal tragedy when she visits Everly Manor—a Tudor mansion with vivid tapestries, intricate carvings, and a local legend about Lord Hugo Everly, who vanished without trace over three hundred years ago. The legend becomes considerably more personal when she finds a mysterious passageway in the ancient church crypt, pushes open a heavy wooden door, and steps into 1685 directly in front of Hugo’s galloping horse. Irina Shapiro opens the Wonderland series with the kind of time travel setup that rewards the reader’s patience with its historical specificity. ⏳

Hugo’s initial response to finding an inexplicable woman in his path is to seize her as a spy, which is both the reasonable 1685 response and an immediate complication for Neve’s only goal: get back to the passage and get home. Separated from her only means of return, she has to navigate a world she doesn’t understand while managing a man who doesn’t trust her. Shapiro builds the tension between Neve’s urgent practical need and the slower development of genuine connection with real craft. 🏰

The English countryside setting in the reign of James II—a period of genuine political danger and religious conflict—gives the romance historical stakes beyond the personal. Hugo’s entanglement in a plot against the king is not background color but an active threat that forces Neve into choices with real consequences, including a desperate decision to save his life that may cost her everything. The slow erosion of mistrust into something else is handled with the patience the time travel romance genre requires. 🌹

Why this transports you: A Tudor mansion, a hidden passageway, 1685, and a suspicious lord who slowly becomes someone worth staying for—The Passage is time travel romance with genuine historical atmosphere.

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Author: Elizabeth Pantley
FREE
Cozy Animal Mystery

When Hayden was a child, her cat disappeared into a mirror. Adults said the cat ran away. Hayden knew the truth because the mirror had nearly pulled her in too, and she saw a glimpse of another world before she managed to pull back. Twenty years later, she discovers she was right all along when she steps through a magic portal and lands in Destiny Falls—an enchanted realm where her mysterious family lives, a family she never knew existed. Elizabeth Pantley builds the Destiny Falls Mystery & Magic series around a premise that rewards the patient setup of that childhood memory. ✨

The reunion with her unknown family is complicated almost immediately by the danger that brought Hayden through the mirror in the first place and that now threatens everyone she’s just discovered. The enchanted world of Destiny Falls is rendered with the warm, cozy atmosphere that Pantley brought to the Magical Book Club series—magical wonders rendered as genuinely inviting rather than overwhelming, with enough mystery to keep the plot moving. 🌀

The talking cat sidekick is, of course, the original cat from childhood—now with a voice and strong opinions about everything—and Pantley deploys the reunion with exactly the right emotional weight given the twenty-year setup. The cat’s personality is sassy without being tiresome, and the dynamic between Hayden and her newly recovered companion gives the adventure its warm emotional center. For readers who loved the Magical Book Club series, this is a natural next step into Pantley’s inventive paranormal cozy world. 🐱

Why this enchants: A mirror that swallowed a cat, a portal twenty years later, a secret family, and a talking cat with a lot to say—Falling into Magic is cozy paranormal adventure with genuine charm.

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Author: Harper Wylde, Quinn Arthurs
FREE
Werewolves & Shifters Romance

She always knew she was different. She thought hiding it was enough. She’s about to discover that her secret is the key to surviving in a world she didn’t know existed. Turning eighteen brings college acceptance and the promise of escape from a painful past—and then deposits her directly into a world of shifters, supernatural politics, friendships that require entirely new rules, and five men who each represent something she didn’t know she was looking for. Harper Wylde and Quinn Arthurs launch the Phoenix Rising series with the kinetic energy of a portal-into-supernatural-world story that knows exactly what its readers want. 🔥

The reverse harem setup—Hiro, Killian, Theo, Damien, and Ryder—gives each relationship a distinct flavor rather than presenting the five as an interchangeable group. The authors develop the individual connections with enough specificity that each man represents a genuinely different kind of bond, which is what separates reverse harem that works from reverse harem that doesn’t. The supernatural world-building establishes its rules with efficient pacing so the reader understands the stakes without being front-loaded with exposition. 🐺

The protagonist’s internal journey—becoming the woman she’s always wanted to be, despite a past that has consistently undermined that effort—gives the series its emotional spine alongside the romantic and supernatural elements. The nightmares from her past and the uncertain shape of her future create a genuine tension that the romance develops against rather than displacing. The Phoenix Rising series has a devoted following, and this first volume earns that devotion by delivering on every level it promises. ✨

Why this pulls you in: A hidden secret that becomes the key to survival, a world of shifters she never knew existed, and five men who each offer something different—Born of Embers is reverse harem paranormal romance with real momentum.

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Author: Leena Clover
FREE
Cozy Murder Mystery

Jenny King did not want to be a bridesmaid at this particular wedding. Recently divorced and not exactly in a celebratory mood, she shows up to a posh country club event and watches a dead body fall from the sky and land directly on the wedding cake. The famous groom is immediately under suspicion. Jenny, who has shown a talent for this kind of thing, starts asking questions. Leena Clover runs the Pelican Cove series with the warm small-town atmosphere and gentle humor that the cozy mystery genre does best. 🎂

The celebrity world setting gives this installment of the series a slightly different social texture—the lies and deceit Jenny uncovers operate in an environment where popularity and fame are the only currencies that matter, and almost everyone at the wedding has a reason to want someone dead. Clover populates the suspect pool with colorful characters whose motives are specific and whose stories are genuinely entertaining to untangle. The investigation gives Jenny legitimate access to a world she’d normally never enter. 🔍

The Pelican Cove backdrop—the town is a finalist in the Prettiest Town in America contest, which is the kind of local pride detail that makes a small-town cozy feel genuine—gives the story its warm home base while the celebrity wedding setting provides the drama. Jenny’s ongoing process of settling into her new life and getting friendly with the locals provides the series’ emotional through-line, and Clover handles the balance between investigation and community warmth with practiced ease. 🌊

Why this charms: A reluctant bridesmaid, a corpse on the wedding cake, a famous groom under suspicion, and a small town that’s genuinely the prettiest around—Cupcakes and Celebrities is cozy mystery comfort reading.

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Author: Traci Andrighetti
FREE
Private Investigator Comedy Mystery

Franki Amato was a perfectly good cop in Austin until an embarrassing 911 call provided the motivation she needed to take a very different job at her best friend’s PI agency in New Orleans. She arrives expecting something more manageable than her previous career. Her first case involves a boutique manager strangled with a cheap yellow scarf, and her primary suspect is her own client. Welcome to the Big Easy. Traci Andrighetti launches the Franki Amato series with the particular comedic energy of someone who writes funny mysteries because she genuinely finds people funny. 🎷

The New Orleans setting is used with real local specificity—the city’s culture, atmosphere, and particular social dynamics give the mystery its flavor, and Andrighetti clearly knows the city rather than using it as generic Southern backdrop. Mardi Gras approaching as the case deepens gives the investigation a pressure-cooker quality, and the voodoo priestess whose odd ramblings may hold the key to everything is exactly the kind of detail that distinguishes New Orleans mysteries from mysteries set anywhere else. 🌙

The romantic subplot is complicated in the best possible way by Franki’s meddlesome Sicilian nonna, who has very firm opinions about who Franki should be dating and no intention of keeping those opinions to herself. The tension between Franki’s professional instincts, her romantic hopes, and her grandmother’s interference gives the series its warm comedy backbone. Andrighetti has built a large and devoted readership across many Franki Amato books, and this first volume establishes exactly why the character is worth following. 😂

Why this entertains: A cop-turned-PI, a New Orleans murder, a meddling Sicilian grandmother, and a voodoo priestess with cryptic advice—Limoncello Yellow is private investigator comedy mystery at its most fun.

The Arly Hanks Mysteries Volume One

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Author: Joan Hess
Regularly $25.99, Today $3.99
Traditional Detective Mysteries

Arly Hanks took the job as police chief of Maggody, Arkansas after her marriage and career both fell apart, reasoning that a village this size wouldn’t demand much of her. She reasoned wrong. Joan Hess, an Agatha Award winner, built the Arly Hanks series into one of the most beloved cozy mystery franchises in American crime fiction, and this volume collects the first three novels for new readers at an exceptional price. The Ozark setting is rendered with the affectionate specificity of someone who genuinely loves the material. 🏔️

In *Malice in Maggody*, an escaped convict, a missing EPA agent, and a corpse with an arrow in its neck at a seedy motel establish the series’ tone immediately—absurd situations, sharp comedy, and genuine mystery plotting. *Mischief in Maggody* brings a doom-obsessed psychic and a handsome guidance counselor to town just as a moonshiner and a prostitute turn up dead in a booby-trapped cannabis field, which is the kind of sentence that only works in the hands of a writer who knows exactly what she’s doing. 😂

*Much Ado in Maggody* rounds out the collection with a bank president’s sexist playboy son, a burned-down bank, and a murder that Arly has to solve quickly before the town’s tensions combust. Arly’s long-suffering relationship with her half-witted deputy Paulie and the full cast of Maggody’s eccentric residents gives the series its ongoing warm comic energy. Three complete novels, one beloved series, one exceptional price. ⭐

Why this is essential cozy reading: Three complete Ozark mysteries from an Agatha Award winner—sharp comedy, genuine plotting, and one of American cozy fiction’s most beloved heroines.

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Author: Marcelo Hernandez Castillo
Regularly $25.99, Today $3.99
Hispanic & Latin Biographies

When Marcelo Hernandez Castillo was five years old, crossing the border between Mexico and the United States with his family, he experienced temporary stress-induced blindness. He regained his sight. He then learned immediately that survival in his new country required a different kind of invisibility—a threshold of unseen-ness that he would have to inhabit with extraordinary care for the rest of his childhood. Before he became one of the most celebrated poets of his generation, he was a boy perfecting his English so that he would never seem extraordinary. 🌿

*Children of the Land* is the memoir of that childhood and its aftermath—the grinding, daily vigilance of being undocumented in America, the specific sorrows of watching draconian policies tear his family apart, and the long effort to build a future in a country that officially denied his existence while he lived inside it. Castillo writes with the precision and emotional intelligence of a poet, which means the memoir’s plainest sentences carry weight that most prose writers couldn’t achieve with much more elaborate means. 📖

The book is an act of witness as much as memoir—Castillo’s title insists on the humanity and belonging of people whose legal status denies both, and the epigraph he returns to throughout (“You were not a ghost even though an entire country was scared of you”) is both a rebuke and an affirmation. For readers who want to understand the undocumented experience from the inside rather than the policy level, this is one of the essential accounts—specific, unforgettable, and written by someone who survived it to become extraordinary anyway. 🌱

Why this endures: A prize-winning poet’s memoir of growing up undocumented in America—precise, devastating, and written with the kind of honesty that only poetry can teach.

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Author: Philip Caputo
Regularly $17.99, Today $2.99
Adventurer & Explorer Biographies

Philip Caputo is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and the author of *A Rumor of War*, and when he noticed that schoolchildren in a remote Alaskan Inupiat community pledged allegiance to the same flag as Cuban immigrant children in Key West six thousand miles away, he couldn’t let the question go: how does this country, populated by every race on earth, remain united? In 2011, he and his wife loaded their truck and a classic trailer with two English setters and drove 16,000 miles from the nation’s southernmost point to the northernmost road-accessible point, asking that question along the way. 🗺️

The people Caputo meets across that distance are the book’s great treasure—a West Virginia couple saving souls, a Native American shaman and taco entrepreneur, and dozens of others whose specific lives resist easy categorization. Caputo resists the temptation to resolve his central question with a tidy answer; he lets the people he meets supply the texture and complexity that the question actually demands. The writing has the authority of someone who has spent fifty years listening to Americans talk about their own lives. 🚐

The road trip format allows the book to move from the Gulf Coast through the heartland to the far north with the natural rhythm of genuine travel, and Caputo’s observations about how different regions understand themselves and each other give the narrative both documentary value and personal warmth. This is the kind of American road trip book that holds up precisely because the author is genuinely curious rather than confirming a thesis. The two English setters make every stop better. 🐕

Why this matters: A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, 16,000 miles, and the question of what actually holds America together—The Longest Road is American nonfiction at its most generous and most honest.

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Author: Dorothy Garlock
Regularly $8.99, Today $1.99
Historical Romance

Nona Conrad has made it through by the hardest—managing grief after her parents’ sudden death, fighting an untrustworthy half-brother for her rightful inheritance, and raising her high-spirited younger sister through all of it. When she takes work managing a fishing camp deep in the Arkansas woods, she’s hoping for stability and a chance to breathe. What she finds instead is Simon Wright, the camp’s new owner, who is persistently drawn to her in ways she can’t quite figure out—ally or charmer with his own agenda. Dorothy Garlock was a master of the American historical romance, and this novel demonstrates why. 🌲

Garlock gives Nona the kind of self-reliant competence that distinguishes her heroines—this is a woman who has been managing genuinely hard circumstances without help and has developed real toughness as a result. Simon’s attraction to that toughness feels earned rather than generic, and the slow process of Nona deciding whether to trust him gives the romance its emotional engine. The Arkansas wilderness setting is rendered with the specific regional atmosphere that Garlock brought to all her work. 🐟

The danger that arrives from someone driven by greed—wanting to know what Nona knows and willing to do anything to find out—gives the romance genuine suspense alongside the personal stakes. Garlock integrates the threat into the love story rather than treating them as parallel tracks, which keeps both elements active throughout. The fishing camp setting and the specific texture of the Arkansas woods give *On Tall Pine Lake* a strong sense of place that anchors the emotional story. 💙

Why this endures: A self-reliant woman, a new owner she can’t quite trust, and danger closing in from someone who wants what she knows—Dorothy Garlock at her atmospheric, emotionally satisfying best.

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Author: Francis Ray
Regularly $17.99, Today $2.99
African American Romance

Francis Ray was one of the defining voices in African American romance fiction, and *Somebody’s Knocking at My Door* showcases her gift for weaving multiple women’s stories into a single emotionally resonant narrative set in New Orleans. Three women, three very different situations, all playing out against the backdrop of a city that has its own claim on the story. Ray gives each protagonist enough space to breathe as a fully realized character rather than a subplot. 🌙

Kristen Wakefield is the privileged daughter trying to prove herself in the Big Easy and reckoning with a man from her past—Rafe Crawford—who is carrying his own demons. Angelique Fleming has fought for everything she has in a world dominated by men, and her work at a local strip club to expose the community’s hypocrisies is about to teach her things she didn’t expect about life and forgiveness. Claudette Thibodeaux Laurent has shocked polite society by marrying a much younger man and is beginning to wonder whether her happiness is worth what she’s starting to suspect about his motivations. 💔

Ray handles the three storylines with the control of a writer who has thought carefully about how they inform each other—the questions each woman is asking about love, trust, and self-knowledge echo across the narratives without becoming thematically heavy-handed. New Orleans as a setting is rendered with genuine feeling: its old money, its social hierarchies, its particular capacity for both glamour and shadow. For readers who love multi-strand women’s fiction with emotional depth, this is Francis Ray doing what she did best. 🌹

Why this resonates: Three women in New Orleans, three different questions about love and trust, and one of African American romance fiction’s most beloved voices at full power.

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Author: David Hajdu
Regularly $17.99, Today $2.99
Biographies of Jazz Musicians

Billy Strayhorn wrote “Take the ‘A’ Train” and dozens of other jazz standards that have outlasted almost everything from his era. He spent thirty years as Duke Ellington’s ace songwriter and arranger, the creative partnership at the heart of the Ellington Orchestra’s greatest work. And for most of those thirty years, Ellington received the credit for Strayhorn’s contributions—a complex arrangement that the small, shy composer navigated with what David Hajdu describes as singular style and grace. *Lush Life* is the corrective biography this extraordinary figure deserved. 🎵

Hajdu’s account covers Strayhorn’s entire arc: his Pittsburgh childhood, his journey to New York, the initial meeting with Ellington that would define his professional life, and the Harlem and Paris scenes in which he and his fellow musicians created some of the most gorgeous American music of the twentieth century. The biography is as much a portrait of a cultural world as it is of an individual—the jazz life of the mid-century, rendered with the warmth and specificity of genuine immersion. 🎹

Strayhorn was one of the few openly gay musicians in an era when that required genuine courage, and Hajdu handles this dimension of his life with the seriousness and sensitivity it deserves—neither sensationalizing nor minimizing. The tragedy of his death from cancer at fifty-one, brought on partly by alcohol, is rendered without melodrama but with full emotional weight. USA Today called this biography “definitive,” and the decades since publication have only confirmed that judgment. 🏆

Why this endures: The definitive biography of one of jazz’s greatest composers—the man behind “Take the ‘A’ Train” who spent three decades letting someone else take the bow.

… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2