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The Brannon family has been mysterious since before anyone in town can remember—descended from the founders, reclusive, and rumored to be carrying generations of dark history inside the walls of their abandoned mansion. When Claire, the eldest daughter and a driven lawyer, is found dead from an apparent suicide, her free-spirited sister Kenzi comes home determined to find the truth. Stacy Claflin launches the Brannon House series with a gothic family mystery that builds its atmosphere from the ground up. 🏚️
Kenzi’s relationship with Claire was fraught—their history together is unresolved, which makes the grief complicated and the investigation personal in ways that go beyond sisterly loyalty. She arrives to find herself suddenly responsible for Claire’s brooding teenage daughter Ember, who is already convinced that the family’s abandoned mansion is hiding sinister secrets. The strange occurrences that follow give the thriller its gothic texture, raising the question of whether they’re looking for a killer, something else entirely, or both. 🔍
Detective Graham Felton provides the investigative partnership and the romantic tension that gives the series its forward momentum, and Claflin uses the family history—a disturbing legacy of violence that Kenzi and Ember slowly unravel together—as the engine that drives both the mystery and the character development. The layered structure, with family secrets feeding into the present-day investigation, gives the Brannon House series genuine depth rather than simply stacking gothic atmosphere on top of a murder plot. The first volume establishes a world worth returning to. 💀
Why this grips you: A reclusive founding family, a suspicious suicide, a brooding teenager who knows the mansion is hiding something, and a history of violence that won’t stay buried—The Perfect Death is gothic psychological thriller with real momentum.
Claire Barnes’s husband Greg goes on a business trip and doesn’t come back. The police are looking, but Claire can’t simply wait—so she starts looking too, with her best friend Drew helping her search. What she finds isn’t reassuring. Every clue reveals a version of Greg she didn’t know existed, and the man she thought she married becomes less recognizable with each discovery. Kate Moretti builds the domestic suspense thriller around one of the genre’s most potent premises: the person you trust most is the person you understand least. 💔
Moretti handles the dual emotional tracks with real skill. Claire is simultaneously investigating a disappearance and grieving a marriage—or rather, grieving her understanding of a marriage, which turns out to have been built on incomplete information. The growing feelings for Drew, who has been present and steady throughout the crisis, develop naturally from the situation rather than feeling imposed on it. Moretti is careful not to let the romance undercut the psychological weight of what Claire is working through. 🔍
The unresolved ending—the truth behind Greg’s disappearance may never be fully revealed—is a deliberate choice that will frustrate readers who want clean answers and satisfy readers who understand that real life rarely provides them. Moretti is interested in what Claire does with uncertainty, how she raises her children and builds a life when the foundation of her marriage has been called into question without being fully explained. The book handles that ambiguity with the maturity of a writer who trusts her readers. ❓
Why this draws you in: A husband who vanishes, a best friend who helps search, and a marriage that looked solid until the investigation started—Thought I Knew You is domestic suspense with genuine emotional intelligence.
Elinor Chalamet is witty, clever, and using her mediumship skills for the most personal possible purpose: hunting for her father’s killer. When a body in the canal brings her to the morgue, she’s happy to help—until Tristan Fontaine, the Duke de Archambeau, takes over the case and places her under house arrest. Byrd Nash establishes the Madame Chalamet Ghost Mysteries in the gaslamp fantasy setting of Alenbonné, a coastal city of picturesque canal promenades where the ghosts, as the premise promises, never sleep. 👻
The dynamic between Elinor and the duke is the novel’s great pleasure—she’s under house arrest but has absolutely no intention of stopping her investigation, and putting him in his place is, as she freely acknowledges, a potentially enjoyable part of the case. Nash gives the paranormal romance its tension through genuine ideological conflict: the duke operates through institutional authority, Elinor operates through abilities he can neither control nor fully understand, and neither is willing to defer to the other. The possessions and poltergeists add genuine supernatural stakes to the power struggle. 🕯️
The gaslamp setting—that specific Victorian-adjacent atmosphere of gas-lit streets, formal society, and lurking supernatural reality—is rendered with enough specific detail that Alenbonné feels like a real place with its own logic and history. Nash uses the canal city geography to give the mystery its physical texture, and the world-building extends to the rules of mediumship in ways that make Elinor’s abilities feel like a genuine skill rather than an unlimited plot convenience. ✨
Why this enchants: A medium hunting her father’s killer, a duke who puts her under house arrest, possessions and poltergeists, and a canal city where ghosts are always just a breath away—Ghost Talker is gaslamp mystery with irresistible energy.
She sold a vintage typewriter and got an anonymous pen pal, best friend, and secret crush out of the deal. They have two rules—no photos, no real names—and over the years the typewritten notes have evolved into daily texts while the rules, and the distance, have stayed the same. He calls her Typewriter Girl. She calls him Remington. She’s a bookshop barista and a wannabe novelist who can’t finish a book. He’s Hollywood’s biggest celebrity hiding behind anonymity to protect the women he cares about from tabloid targeting. Sarah Deeham launches the Falling for Famous series with a premise that understands why anonymity creates intimacy. 📝
The dual perspective gives both sides of the correspondence equal weight—his secrecy isn’t simply evasion but a genuine attempt to protect someone he cares about, and hers isn’t simply passivity but the accumulated inertia of a life that has felt stuck for years. When a letter from her late grandmother encourages a summer of risks, and Typewriter Girl ghosts Remington without warning, his determination to find her—stepping out from behind the screen and leading a double life—sets the plot in motion. 🌟
Deeham handles the celebrity anonymity conceit with enough internal logic that it holds together, and the romance between two people who know each other’s inner lives before they know each other’s faces gives the story a genuine emotional foundation that distinguishes it from standard enemies-to-lovers or mistaken identity setups. The Falling for Famous series opener delivers the warmth and wit the romantic comedy reader comes looking for. 💌
Why this charms: A vintage typewriter, two rules, years of anonymous letters, and a celebrity willing to blow his cover to find the one woman who matters—Star-Crossed Letters is romantic comedy with a genuinely sweet premise.
Liora Day is half-human, half-Damaclan—and the Damaclan half comes with a warning: mess with her and you’ll die. Thrown onto a rough path at an early age, she’s been in a cage when Devren, the young captain of the SS Kratos, breaks her out. His crew is on a mission to rescue fallen surveyors from a faction called the Revolutionaries, and Liora is offered a choice: follow her Damaclan instincts, or trust the dark eyes and captivating smile of a man promising an adventure unlike anything she’s experienced. Cheree Alsop opens the Girl from the Stars series with kinetic energy and a protagonist who is immediately compelling. 🚀
The tension between Liora’s nature and her choice is the novel’s central engine—the Damaclan side of her biology has kept her alive in conditions that would have killed anyone else, but it also pulls against the kind of trust that Devren and his crew represent. Alsop doesn’t resolve that tension cheaply, letting it drive both the action and the slow development of the relationship between Liora and Devren without forcing either into a comfortable resolution before the story earns it. 🌌
The universe Alsop builds has the scope of space opera with the intimacy of a smaller ensemble story—the Kratos and its crew give the adventure a home base with genuine warmth, which makes the external danger feel more threatening by contrast. Liora’s journey from captivity to something approaching belonging, without losing the fierce independence that defines her, gives the series its emotional through-line across what became an extensive franchise. This first volume delivers on its considerable promise. ⭐
Why this launches you: A half-human warrior freed from a cage, a captain with a dangerous mission, and a choice between instinct and trust in a universe of chaos—Girl from the Stars: Daybreak is sci-fi adventure with real heart.
Detective Lacey James in Sweet Home, Oregon, has enough going on with her marriage without a robbery call turning into something much worse. The fleeing suspect’s getaway car contains rope, gloves, zip ties, and a gun—the kit of someone planning something terrible. When she hunts him down, he grabs a firearm and kills a fellow officer before himself, leaving Lacey’s only lead dead on a slab. Then she discovers a woman connected to the case is missing. Chris Patchell opens the Lacey James series with the ruthless forward momentum of a thriller that doesn’t allow the reader to get comfortable. 🚔
The structure is expertly constructed—the robbery that opens the novel is resolved in a way that creates a larger problem rather than a solution, and each subsequent discovery tightens the pressure rather than releasing it. The missing woman and the dwindling time before the worst outcome becomes irreversible give the investigation its urgency, and Lacey’s personal complications—the marriage problems running alongside the case—give the character depth without slowing the plot down. Patchell handles the dual pressure with practiced efficiency. 🔍
The Oregon setting is used with specific regional texture rather than generic Pacific Northwest backdrop, and Lacey herself is drawn with enough specificity to distinguish her from the crowded field of female detective protagonists. The killer’s methodology—the items in the getaway car suggesting premeditation of a specific and terrible kind—gives the thriller its particular dread from early in the narrative. The Lacey James series has built a devoted following, and this first volume demonstrates exactly why. ⏱️
Why this grips you: A robbery call, a getaway car full of horrors, a dead suspect, and a missing woman with time running out—Find Her is psychological crime thriller that never lets you breathe.
The Good, the Bad, and the Furry
The Bear is a cat who carries the weight of the world on his furry shoulders. His wise, owl-like eyes ask the kind of existential questions—Can you tell me why I am a cat please?—that suggest he would prefer a life of quiet intellectual solitude rather than the one he has, which involves being surrounded by felines of significantly lower IQ. Tom Cox has built one of the most beloved cat memoir franchises in British publishing around The Bear and his companions, and this installment demonstrates exactly why. 🐱
The supporting cast is impeccably rendered. Janet is a large man cat who accidentally sets fire to his tail by walking too close to lighted candles, which is the kind of detail that could only be true. Ralph is a preening tabby who enjoys meowing his own name at 5am with what one imagines is genuine artistic satisfaction. Shipley, Ralph’s brother, steals soup but is generally relaxed once you pick him up and turn him upside down—a personality description that raises questions Cox wisely leaves unanswered. 😂
What makes the Tom Cox cat books genuinely good rather than merely charming is the writing itself—he brings the same wit and literary intelligence to his cats that he brings to his landscape writing and music journalism, and the result is pet memoir that reads as genuine literature rather than an extended Instagram caption. The Bear’s melancholy is treated with the affectionate seriousness it deserves, and Cox’s own life—the unexpected adventures that come from being at the beck and call of four cats—is observed with equal honesty. ⭐
Why this charms: A philosophically burdened cat, a tail-igniting companion, a soup thief who relaxes upside down, and Tom Cox writing about all of it with genuine literary wit—The Good, the Bad, and the Furry is cat memoir of the highest order.
Two years after his fiancée Laurel was murdered, Joe Trumbull is finally going on a blind date. He’s not looking for love—just testing whether a normal life is still possible. The first awkward minutes pass. He starts to think this wasn’t such a bad idea. And then the evening sets in motion a nightmare that will take everything he has to survive. Steve Hamilton is a two-time Edgar Award winner, and *Night Work* demonstrates exactly the kind of craft that earns that recognition—a thriller that begins in profound human vulnerability and escalates from there. 🌙
Hamilton understands that the most effective thrillers are rooted in emotional reality before they become plot machines. Joe’s grief, his tentative return to the world, and the specific courage it takes to go on a first date when someone you loved was violently taken—all of this is established with enough specificity that when the nightmare begins, the reader is fully invested in protecting someone who has already suffered enough. The past-is-never-past theme runs through the novel with the inevitability of a well-laid trap. 🔍
The connection between the blind date and Laurel’s murder—the way this one evening reveals that the worst is not behind Joe but still ahead of him—is constructed with the patient plotting that distinguishes Hamilton’s best work. He takes the premise seriously, which means the thriller mechanics serve the emotional story rather than displacing it. Hamilton has built a distinguished career in crime fiction across multiple series, and *Night Work* showcases his standalone work at full strength. ⚠️
Why this grips you: A grieving man’s first blind date two years after his fiancée’s murder, and one evening that reveals the past is not finished with him yet—Night Work is crime thriller craft from a two-time Edgar Award winner.
Jonah Berger’s follow-up to the bestselling *Contagious* examines the social forces that shape our choices without our awareness—and does so with the counterintuitive finding that those forces don’t always push us toward conformity. Sometimes we imitate people around us; sometimes we deliberately avoid their choices. We stop listening to a band when they go mainstream. We skip buying the minivan because of what it signals. We shift our opinion of a policy based entirely on which party we’re told supports it, even when the policy itself is unchanged. Berger maps this terrain with rigorous research and accessible clarity. 🧠
The core insight—that we think we’re making individual choices based on personal taste while actually navigating a complex web of social reference points—is developed across multiple domains: consumer behavior, career choices, political attitudes, and personal relationships. Berger is careful to distinguish between the different mechanisms at work: imitation and differentiation operate by different psychological rules and in different social contexts, and understanding which one is active in any given moment is the practical gift the book delivers. 📊
Berger writes with the accessible wit that made *Contagious* a crossover success—the research is rigorous but the presentation is always aimed at understanding rather than academic credentialing. For anyone in marketing, psychology, organizational behavior, or simply anyone who wants to understand why they make the choices they make, *Invisible Influence* offers a genuinely useful framework. The examples are specific enough to be memorable and broad enough to apply well beyond their original contexts. 💡
Why this is worth your time: A rigorous, accessible examination of the hidden social forces shaping every choice you make—Jonah Berger at his most illuminating on the gap between what we think drives us and what actually does.
Liz Curtis Higgs is one of Christian publishing’s most beloved voices, with millions of books sold and a particular gift for making ancient Scripture feel immediately relevant to contemporary women’s lives. *The Girl’s Still Got It* takes on the book of Ruth—one of the Bible’s most beloved narratives—through a novel approach: walking through it verse by verse, tarrying in every corner and considering every word, while leaping between the ancient world and the present in ways that make the timeless truths feel personally addressed. 🌾
The three central figures—Ruth, whose faithfulness and courage have made her one of Scripture’s most beloved women; Naomi, whose broken life is put back together by love in the most unexpected way; and Boaz, the kinsman-redeemer who honors both women and God—are rendered with the warmth of someone who has spent serious time in their company. Higgs writes with the sense of genuine affection for these people that distinguishes the best devotional writing from mere commentary. 💛
The format—described as time travel without gimmicks or a DeLorean—is a novel approach to Bible study that leaps from past to present in ways that illuminate both. Higgs makes Ruth’s journey from Moab to Bethlehem feel like a walk the reader takes alongside her, and the insights that emerge from that close attention are the kind that apply directly and practically to the questions contemporary women bring to their faith lives. For readers in the women’s Christian living space, this is Liz Curtis Higgs at her most accessible and most affecting. ✨
Why this endures: One of Christian publishing’s most beloved voices on the book of Ruth—verse by verse, past to present, and genuinely moving throughout.
Tom Douglas is one of Seattle’s most celebrated chefs—an Iron Chef winner and multiple James Beard Award recipient whose Dahlia Bakery has become a genuine institution in the Pacific Northwest. *The Dahlia Bakery Cookbook* brings the bakery’s most beloved recipes into home kitchens, covering the full range from breakfast through cookies, cakes, soups, and jams in a collection of 125 recipes that reflects the bakery’s reputation as a destination for serious food lovers and casual visitors alike. 🍰
The range is genuine rather than aspirational—this isn’t a collection of technically demanding showpieces but a practical document of what makes the Dahlia Bakery worth the line. The Seattle English muffin sandwich with cured wild salmon, the toasted hazelnut whole wheat scones with maple glaze, the carrot cupcakes with brown butter cream cheese frosting, the tangy lemon meringue tart—these are recipes that emerged from the demands of a working bakery that has been earning its reputation for decades. Douglas and Shelley Lance give each recipe enough context to understand what makes it worth making. 🏆
The James Beard Award association signals the level of craft involved, and the endorsements from Giada De Laurentiis and Serious Eats founder Ed Levine suggest the book has been vetted by people with genuinely high standards. For Pacific Northwest food enthusiasts, this is a piece of regional culinary history. For bakers anywhere who want to learn from one of America’s best, it’s a practical and inspiring reference. The Dahlia Bakery Cookbook earns its reputation. 🌲
Why this belongs in your kitchen: 125 recipes from Seattle’s most beloved bakery—an Iron Chef winner and James Beard Award recipient sharing the real Dahlia Bakery at an exceptional price.
Tarot cards are full of symbols—the cat with the Queen of Wands, the moon with the High Priestess, the number X on the Wheel of Fortune—and those symbols are the actual language the cards speak. Most beginners learn the cards’ meanings as a list to memorize; what Liz Dean’s approach offers instead is something more useful: the ability to read the symbols directly, so that each card’s meaning can be derived rather than retrieved from memory. Bestselling author Dean has built her reputation on making tarot genuinely accessible without oversimplifying it. 🔮
The scope here is comprehensive—over 200 symbols covered across all 78 cards in both the Major and Minor Arcana, with each symbol explained in terms of its intuitive significance and its specific application within the card where it appears. The beginner-friendly framing means the book meets readers where they are rather than assuming prior knowledge, but the depth of coverage gives experienced readers meaningful new layers of interpretation to work with. Dean structures the material as a practical reference rather than a cover-to-cover read. 🌙
The “operating system” metaphor Dean uses—understanding symbols as the underlying logic that makes tarot readings work rather than as decorative details—is both pedagogically effective and accurate. Once you understand why a symbol means what it means, you can derive rather than memorize, which transforms the learning curve entirely. For anyone who has felt frustrated by tarot’s apparent complexity or who wants to deepen an existing practice, this is a genuinely useful guide from one of the field’s most trusted voices. ✨
Why this illuminates: Over 200 tarot symbols explained across all 78 cards—Liz Dean on the actual language of tarot, making readings more intuitive and more meaningful.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











