As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
Maggie Killian had it all—multiplatinum album, Grammy, country number one. Then came the cocaine and heroin and fifteen years of rebuilding. Now she runs an antique shop in Texas and tries not to think about Hank Sibley. She fails at that last part, which is how she ends up driving a vintage magenta pickup to Wyoming to surprise him—and finding him with someone else. 🎸
When her truck is sabotaged and a young cowboy she spent one night with turns up bludgeoned in a hotel parking lot, the Buffalo PD makes Maggie their prime suspect. Then her most prized possession is stolen—a championship belt buckle she’s carried for fifteen years—and inconvenience turns into something much darker. 🔍
Then someone shoots Hank in the mountains. And Maggie, who was supposed to be long gone by now, finds herself riding a pregnant draft horse across open range, breaking into a shack full of obsessive memorabilia, and shooting a stalker with a bow and arrow in the middle of a forest fire on the Bighorn Mountains. 🏔️
What makes this essential: Hutchins lives on the face of those mountains and it shows—the Wyoming landscape is as vivid and dangerous as the mystery itself, and Maggie is one of the most original amateur sleuths in the genre. 🌟
Five-year-old Mason is missing, likely taken by his own father. Old cowboy-turned-fixer Tuper is hired to find him—but when the father turns up dead and the boy is still nowhere to be found, a simple missing persons case becomes something far more sinister. 🤠
The search unfolds against a brutal Montana blizzard, with Tuper pursuing leads on foot while his hacker partner Lana works the digital angles. As Tuper fights to stay alive in the bitter cold, Lana uncovers someone working very hard to keep certain secrets buried—especially the truth about Mason’s real identity. 🌨️
What makes this essential: A tight, propulsive mystery with an unlikely duo at its center—the weathered cowboy and the tech-savvy hacker make a pairing that feels genuinely fresh, and the Montana setting gives the urgency real teeth. ⭐
Billionaire Trevor Merriam did not want to be dispatched to a sleepy Irish village to close a land deal for the family business. He especially didn’t want to meet the owner of that land—Becca O’Neill, who loathes him on sight and refuses to serve him the award-winning scones her bed and breakfast is famous for. 🍀
Things get worse. Becca has an ornery cat, a mischievous Irish setter, and a lovesick alpaca that delights in chasing Trevor around the property. Then his matchmaking aunt and uncle show up from Dare Valley, determined to get him hitched. The deal is complicated enough without all of that. 😂
But somewhere between the scone embargo and the alpaca ambushes, Trevor starts wondering whether Becca’s indignation might be covering something warmer—and whether the deal he really came to close is the one he hadn’t planned on. 💚
What makes this essential: Charming, funny, and set against an irresistible Irish village backdrop—Miles delivers enemies-to-lovers rom-com with genuine wit and a hero whose dignity takes a beating in the best possible way. 🌟
Hayley is on the run from a stalker who won’t stop—and she’s been careful enough to stay hidden. Until she saves the life of the local alpha wolf shifter and blows her cover completely. Now Cooper has decided she’s his mate, and he’s not inclined to take no for an answer. 🐺
What follows is a crash course in a world Hayley never knew existed—wolf packs, shifter politics, fated mates, and an alpha who is simultaneously the most protective and most possessive man she has ever encountered. She saved his life. He intends to spend the rest of his protecting hers. 🔥
What makes this essential: Fast-paced paranormal romance with a heroine who earns her place in the story from page one—Hayley’s resourcefulness makes the fated-mates dynamic feel earned rather than imposed, and the Grey Ridge pack world leaves you wanting more. ⭐
An enforcer wanted dead for crimes she didn’t commit. An assassin wanted dead for crimes he absolutely did. Under normal circumstances they’d be enemies—but they need the same thing: exoneration. And the only man who can grant it is the emperor, who a nefarious underground organization is actively trying to kill. ⚔️
Winning their freedom means battling powerful wizards, outmaneuvering master schemers, surviving bloodthirsty monsters, and somehow doing all of it while dodging friendly fire from both sides of the law. Three full novels of this, all in one collection. 🗡️
What makes this essential: Buroker built a devoted following with this series for good reason—sharp plotting, a genuinely funny odd-couple dynamic, and a fantasy world with real texture. Three books for free is an extraordinary entry point. 🌟
Hannah Stolzfus has built a life that looks perfect from the outside—loving husband, beautiful home, a tight-knit Amish community. The one thing missing is a child. But when tragedy strikes, the secrets she’s been carrying for years begin to surface, threatening everything she’s spent her life protecting. 🌾
Guilt, betrayal, and condemnation crowd in from every direction as Hannah tries to keep moving forward. The question isn’t just whether her marriage can survive—it’s whether she and her husband Christian can find their way back to each other and to their faith. 🙏
What makes this essential: Spredemann writes Amish fiction with genuine emotional depth—this isn’t gentle comfort reading but a real reckoning with shame, forgiveness, and what it takes to rebuild a life after a secret comes undone. ⭐
A Girl Returned
At thirteen, she is handed back—returned without explanation to a birth family she has never met, torn from the only home she has ever known. No warning. No reason. Just a new life she didn’t ask for. 💔
Donatella Di Pietrantonio’s A Girl Returned is a spare, devastating Italian novel about identity and belonging—what it means to lose a family and slowly, painfully, begin to build another. The unnamed narrator’s disorientation is rendered with extraordinary precision. 🌿
The relationship with her new siblings—particularly the fiercely alive Adriana—is where the book finds its unexpected warmth. Out of chaos and conflict, something like connection begins to form, fragile and hard-won. 🫂
A Strega Prize winner and international bestseller, translated with luminous clarity—essential reading for fans of Elena Ferrante and quiet literary fiction that hits harder than anything louder. 📖
What makes this essential: A girl given away and given back—a stunning Italian novel about identity, family, and the slow work of belonging somewhere new. 🌟
Rebecca was thirteen when she watched her father kill her mother at Seaview Cottage. She has never spoken of it since. Decades later, her daughter Jessie vanishes with a gravely ill newborn—and the past Rebecca buried is the only place left to look. 🏚️
Emily Gunnis’ The Missing Daughter is a propulsive dual-timeline thriller that weaves present-day desperation with buried family history, each revelation tightening the knot of secrets that Seaview Cottage has kept for years. 🌊
Gunnis is masterful at building dread through domestic detail—the silences between a mother and her daughters, the things a family chooses never to name. When the past finally speaks, it changes everything. 🔍
Gripping from the first page, with a twist that genuinely earns the label—perfect for fans of Kate Morton and Liane Moriarty. Under a dollar today. 📚
What makes this essential: A mother’s silence, a daughter’s disappearance, and a family secret locked inside a seaside cottage for decades. 🗝️
She wanted a little excitement. What she got was a deeply unfortunate situation involving a chair, her stepbrother, and his two best friends—none of whom she expected to find quite so irresistible once the masks came on. 😳
Jaye Pratt’s Hold Your Breath is a spicy, fast-paced novella in the Masked Men series—a why-choose romance that leans into anonymity, chemistry, and the chaos of feelings that arrive uninvited and refuse to leave. 🔥
The Easter holiday setting gives it an intimate, closed-world energy, and Pratt keeps the emotional stakes real beneath the heat—this isn’t just about attraction, it’s about a woman finally letting her walls down and deciding she’s brave enough for what’s waiting on the other side. 💥
A quick, entertaining read for fans of reverse harem romance who want their novellas with genuine heart alongside the steam. 😈
What makes this essential: A mistaken identity, three masked strangers, and a woman who finally decides to stop playing it safe. 🖤
Candice was supposed to be on a romantic road trip with her secret boyfriend. Instead she’s stuck in a cramped VW Beetle with Danny—the new guy, full of opinions, relentlessly enthusiastic, and absolutely not the plan. 🚗
Portia MacIntosh’s Drive Me Crazy is a fizzy British rom-com built on the best forced proximity setup—two people, one tiny car, nowhere to hide, and a journey that keeps getting more chaotic and more unexpectedly wonderful. 🗺️
Danny is the kind of romantic lead who talks too much and means every word—annoying until he isn’t, which happens faster than Candice would like to admit. MacIntosh has a real gift for comic timing and the slow reveal of why two people fit together better than they should. 😄
Light, funny, and genuinely charming—perfect escapist reading at under a dollar today. 💛
What makes this essential: A wrong-guy road trip that turns into exactly the right one—British rom-com at its most fun. ❤️
A young woman named Mary bears an uncanny resemblance to Annabel Winslow, missing heiress to the beautiful Whitescar estate. The family has a plan. Mary has reservations. Someone else has a secret—and wanted Annabel to stay missing. 🌿
Mary Stewart’s The Ivy Tree is a classic of romantic suspense—atmospheric, intelligent, and built on an impersonation plot that keeps tightening long after you think you’ve figured it out. Stewart writes Northumberland country with the kind of sensory richness that makes you feel the cold. 🏡
The deception at the center is handled with real craft—the tension between what Mary knows, what she’s told, and what the house itself seems to be hiding gives the novel a slow-burn dread that the romance only amplifies. 🔥
A gem from one of the twentieth century’s finest writers in the genre—under a dollar today for readers who haven’t yet discovered her. 📖
What makes this essential: A dangerous impersonation, a brooding estate, and a missing woman someone very badly wanted to stay gone. 🗝️
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Richard Rhodes doesn’t answer the question of how to write so much as he sits down beside you and helps you ask it honestly—starting with the fears most writers are too embarrassed to admit out loud. ✍️
How to Write is part craft guide, part memoir, part permission slip—Rhodes weaves practical wisdom with personal reflection in prose that models everything it teaches. The questions he addresses are the real ones: *How do I dare? Where do I begin? What do I do with the story that fills and breaks my heart?* 📝
This isn’t a mechanical writing manual. It’s a meditation on creative courage from someone who has written across an extraordinary range of subjects—from the atomic bomb to farm life—and understands that the hardest part of writing is rarely the writing itself. 💡
Essential for any writer at any stage—honest, warm, and quietly galvanizing. Under three dollars today. 📚
What makes this essential: A Pulitzer winner’s honest, personal guide to finding the courage to write—and then actually doing it. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











