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Author: Tanya Anne Crosby
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Scottish Historical Romance

Laird Iain MacKinnon has a simple objective: his young son has been taken by the English, and he is going to get him back by any means available. The means available include taking the daughter of his enemy as hostage—a calculated act of Highland retribution that he executes without particular moral complication. What he has not calculated is Page FitzSimon. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

Page is not meek. She is proud, clever, and possessed of a tongue sharp enough to meet Iain’s fury without flinching—which is the last quality a man who has taken a captive wants to discover in his captive. She has been raised to fear Highlanders. She has also been cast aside by her own father’s cruelty, which means she has arrived in Iain’s world with nothing to lose and no particular motivation to make his life easier. Every exchange between them generates more heat than either of them is comfortable acknowledging. 🔥

What begins as a battle of wills conducted entirely at close quarters—because a hostage and her captor do not have the luxury of distance—becomes something neither of them has a name for and both of them are actively refusing to examine. Tanya Anne Crosby writes Highland romance with genuine wit and historical texture, and the specific dynamic between Page and Iain—two people too proud to admit they’ve met their match—generates the kind of chemistry that builds across an entire novel before it pays off in ways that earn every page of the slow burn. 💛

What makes this irresistible: Tanya Anne Crosby launches The Highland Brides with a Scottish historical romance of exceptional warmth and wit—a fierce heroine who refuses to be managed, a laird who didn’t account for her, and a captivity romance that earns its heat through genuine clash and genuine connection. 🌟

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Author: Agatha Christie
FREE
Traditional Detective Mysteries

Roger Ackroyd is found murdered in his study in the English village of King’s Abbott, and the investigation that follows is one of the most consequential in the history of detective fiction—not because of who committed the crime, but because of how Agatha Christie chose to reveal it. Published in 1926, The Murder of Roger Ackroyd is the novel that made Christie’s reputation permanent and sparked a controversy in the mystery world that has never entirely subsided. 🔍

The village of King’s Abbott is the kind of place where secrets travel fast and alibis are tested against decades of accumulated local knowledge. Every resident becomes a suspect as Hercule Poirot—recently retired to the neighborhood to grow vegetable marrows, as reluctant to leave the detective work alone as ever—applies his celebrated little grey cells to a case that keeps refusing to resolve into the obvious shape. The deceptions multiply. The motives proliferate. The truth hides in plain sight. 🏡

What makes this novel a landmark rather than merely an excellent example of the form is its narrative structure—a choice Christie made that caused genuine uproar among critics and fellow mystery writers when the book appeared, and that remains one of the most debated decisions in genre fiction. Whether it constitutes brilliant innovation or a violation of the mystery genre’s unspoken contract with the reader is a question that a hundred years of argument have not fully settled. The best way to have the argument is to read the book first. 🌟

What makes this essential: One of the most important detective novels ever written—The Murder of Roger Ackroyd is Agatha Christie at her most audacious, a masterwork of misdirection that changed what mystery fiction was allowed to do and has never been out of print since. 🏆

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Author: Amy Boyles
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Cozy Mystery

Clementine Cooke runs a house renovation business in Peachwood, Alabama, with her best friend, and things are going well—thriving, even, by the standards of a small Southern town. Then she arrives at a job site and finds her business partner dead, encased in poured concrete. The renovation business has taken a turn that the usual contractor insurance does not cover. 😱

The investigation that follows reveals that Clementine knew considerably less about her best friend than she believed. Years of lies surface with the investigation. The list of people who wanted her partner dead turns out to be startlingly long—and includes both a unionized wizard mafia and the old lady quilting club, which is the kind of suspect range that requires Clementine to expand her investigative framework considerably. She is also under suspicion herself, being a stranger to the local police chief’s preferred theory of the case, and the clock is running on how long she can investigate before she finds herself in a jail cell. 🔍

Her unlikely ally is a wizard suffering from amnesia—a man who cannot remember who he is but who Clementine recognizes, and whose identity she is keeping to herself for reasons she is not yet ready to explain. Together they navigate a magical small-town mystery that Amy Boyles constructs with the light, warm comic touch that makes the Magical Renovation Mysteries series such a satisfying read—funny without losing its plot, charming without losing its stakes. 🌟

What makes this delightful: Amy Boyles launches the Magical Renovation Mysteries with Southern charm, paranormal imagination, and genuine comic timing—a heroine in over her head, a mystery with the most eclectic suspect list in cozy fiction, and a wizard sidekick whose amnesia is considerably more complicated than it appears. 🏆

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Author: Beth Dolgner
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Supernatural Thrillers

At forty-two, Olivia Kendrick is starting over in the least expected location: Nightmare, Arizona, a tucked-away old mining town that runs on tourism, offbeat residents, and a year-round haunted house called Nightmare Sanctuary. Divorced, broke, and broken down when her car gives out in town, she takes the job she can get. Her first day as a haunted house employee begins with a real body at the front entrance—a local man, very much dead, very much not part of the scheduled entertainment. 👻

As a stranger in town, Olivia is immediately the obvious suspect in the eyes of local law enforcement. She has no history here, no alibi, and no particular reason to be trusted by a community that is considerably stranger than it first appeared. The investigation she conducts to clear her name keeps turning up things she wasn’t expecting—primarily that her co-workers at Nightmare Sanctuary are not entirely what they seem, and that the “dog” running around the property has fangs considerably longer than any dog she has previously encountered. 🌙

Into this already complicated situation arrives Damien Shackleford—handsome, arrogant, the son of the haunted house’s missing owner, and the kind of person whose presence makes every room slightly more difficult to manage. Olivia must simultaneously solve a murder, forge a life in a town she landed in accidentally, and determine which of the threats around her is the most immediate: the killer, the actual monsters she works with, or Damien. Beth Dolgner builds the Nightmare, Arizona world with genuine wit and supernatural imagination. 🔍

What makes this fun: Beth Dolgner launches the Nightmare, Arizona series with a midlife-crisis paranormal mystery that delivers genuine laughs, genuine scares, and a heroine whose fresh start involves considerably more monsters than she budgeted for. 🌟

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Author: Maisy Marple
FREE
Books, Bookstores & Libraries Mystery

Six complete cozy mysteries, all set in the world that cozy mystery readers love most: bookshops, libraries, and the literary communities that form around them—where the people who love stories most turn out to have the most interesting secrets. Maisy Marple has built a collection that delivers six different heroines, six different settings, and six fully resolved mysteries, all united by the premise that books provide both the motive for murder and the most reliable path to solving it. 📚

The settings range from coastal hideaways to mountain retreats, and each amateur sleuth brings her own particular combination of literary knowledge and investigative instinct to a community where small-town secrets run deep and everyone has something worth concealing. Literary rivalries turn deadly. Hidden treasures surface in vintage books. Uncannily perceptive pets prove their value as investigative partners. The genre pleasures are consistent across all six—warm community, clever plotting, and the specific satisfaction of a bibliophile heroine who understands that the clues are always in the text, metaphorically and sometimes literally. 🔍

For readers who are already fans of bookshop mysteries, this collection offers six complete stories at a single price point that makes the value essentially impossible to argue with. For readers discovering the subgenre, it offers six different entry points—six chances to find the setting and sleuth that feels most like home. The author’s pen name is a knowing nod to the genre’s most beloved practitioner, and the sensibility throughout delivers on that promise with warmth, wit, and genuine plotting. 🏡

What makes this essential: Maisy Marple delivers six complete bookshop and library cozy mysteries in one bundle—witty, warmhearted, and cleverly plotted, with amateur sleuths whose love of books is matched only by their talent for finding killers hiding among the stacks. 🌟

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Author: Deany Ray
FREE
Amateur Sleuth Mysteries

Charlie Cooper is twenty-nine years old and working as a precinct secretary at the Boston Police Department—answering phones, scheduling appointments, writing up crime reports, and operating at roughly infinite remove from her actual professional ambitions. Her apartment is the size of a very small walk-in closet. Her career trajectory is not what she envisioned. The universe has not been particularly accommodating on either front. 😄

Then her boss sends her undercover. The assignment requires her to return to her hometown and move back in with her family—a cover that tests her limits in ways the actual investigation does not—while pursuing clues in a major drug case that the department has not been able to crack through conventional means. Charlie approaches this opportunity the way she approaches everything: by deciding that she is going to prove she is considerably more than a fast typist, and then proceeding as if the evidence will eventually catch up with her confidence. 🔍

What was supposed to be harmless snooping escalates with the particular speed that harmless snooping always does when it turns out to be anything but harmless. Dead bodies accumulate. Tires are slashed. Threatening notes appear. The killer has noticed that someone is getting closer than the investigation was supposed to get, and Charlie’s determination to solve the case is now in direct competition with the killer’s determination to ensure she doesn’t. The wacky family she is living with as cover is, at this point, the least of her problems. 💀

What makes this a blast: Deany Ray launches the Charlie Cooper Mystery series with energy, humor, and a heroine whose gap between ambition and current circumstances is both deeply relatable and endlessly funny—an undercover investigation that escalates far beyond anyone’s expectations, including Charlie’s. 🌟

Typhoon

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Author: Charles Cumming
Regularly $23.99, Today $3.99
International Mystery & Crime

In 1997, with the British handover of Hong Kong to China just months away, Joe Lennox is a brilliant young MI6 operative on what should be a career-defining assignment. Instead, two things disappear simultaneously: his girlfriend Isabella, who leaves him for a hard-bitten CIA agent named Miles Coolidge, and his first major asset—a prominent defector who vanishes from a safe house in circumstances that suggest collusion between Lennox’s own superiors and the Americans. It is the kind of double betrayal that a certain type of man never fully absorbs. 🕵️

A decade later, Lennox is back in China. The CIA is running a covert operation to use an Islamic militant group to destabilize Beijing. MI6 wants to stop them. The defector who disappeared in 1997 is the key to everything—and Isabella, the woman both Lennox and Coolidge once loved, is caught in the middle of it again. The personal and the operational are hopelessly tangled in ways that make clear thinking nearly impossible and trust entirely out of the question. 🌏

Charles Cumming writes British intelligence fiction with the moral ambiguity and psychological texture that places him squarely in the tradition of le Carré—the tradecraft is convincing, the geopolitics are genuinely complex, and the emotional damage that intelligence work inflicts on the people who do it is never softened into something more palatable than it actually is. Typhoon uses the specific, charged atmosphere of post-handover China with rare authority. 🔍

What makes this essential: Charles Cumming is one of the finest spy novelists working today, and Typhoon delivers everything the genre promises at its best—geopolitical stakes, impossible loyalties, a love triangle with real consequences, and a protagonist navigating a world where betrayal is the only reliable constant. 🏆

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Author: Susan Howatch
Regularly $19.99, Today $1.99
Historical Literary Fiction

Paul Van Zale is the undisputed king of Wall Street during the Roaring Twenties—a man of staggering wealth, insatiable appetites, and the particular arrogance that comes from having never encountered anything he couldn’t acquire. Dinah Slade, a vibrant young Englishwoman with an endangered ancestral estate and an ambition that matches Van Zale’s own, understands exactly what kind of man she is dealing with. She also understands precisely how to use that knowledge. 💰

One look at Dinah is enough to drive all other considerations from Van Zale’s mind—wife, mistresses, and professional judgment included. Their ensuing affair reshapes the architecture of his Wall Street firm, particularly when his dynamic right-hand man also falls completely under her spell. What begins as calculated seduction on Dinah’s part becomes something considerably more complicated as the ambitions and desires of multiple powerful people intersect in ways none of them fully anticipated. 🌹

Susan Howatch builds her saga across the full arc of the era—from the gilded excess of the twenties boom to the devastating collapse of the Depression, when every brittle social structure that the decade had constructed comes apart simultaneously. The Van Zale family’s internal dynamics—driven by greed, rage, jealousy, and the particular violence of inherited wealth—provide the human engine for a story that operates on both the intimate scale of personal betrayal and the sweeping scale of historical catastrophe. Treachery and murder are the natural conclusions of appetites this size in a world this fragile. 🏛️

What makes this sweeping: Susan Howatch’s Titans trilogy opener is grand-scale historical literary fiction in the tradition of the great American saga—enormous in ambition, ruthless in its portraiture of power and desire, and utterly absorbing from the Roaring Twenties to the moment everything falls. 🌟

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Author: Larry A. Winters
Regularly $4.99, Today $2.49
Police Procedurals

Hal and Kristina Nolan have built something exceptional in Philadelphia’s legal world—a firm with a record of seemingly impossible courtroom victories, constructed on the complementary tension between Hal’s charismatic, unorthodox approach and Kristina’s razor-sharp intellect and unwavering ethical compass. He bends the rules. She knows them by heart. Together they have won cases that nobody else could touch. The partnership works because neither of them could do what the other does. ⚖️

Now the partnership itself is under threat. The firm is facing devastating blows from multiple directions simultaneously, and before Hal and Kristina can stabilize the business, they are pulled into a high-profile murder case that carries its own complications—ghosts from the past, enemies hiding in plain sight, and pressure that blurs the already-complicated line between their professional obligations and their personal history together. The skills that make them formidable in a courtroom are exactly the skills the situation demands. Whether those skills are enough is a different question. 🔍

Larry A. Winters builds the Nolan series on a partnership dynamic that generates natural tension without tipping into formula—the ethical gap between Hal and Kristina is not a simple good-cop-bad-cop construct but a genuine difference in how two intelligent, principled people understand what the law is for. The Philadelphia setting has texture, and the moral questions the case raises have no clean answers. 🏛️

What makes this compelling: Larry A. Winters launches the Hal and Kristina Nolan series with a legal thriller that earns its courtroom drama through genuine moral complexity—two lawyers who are each other’s greatest asset and most significant complication, working a case that tests everything they’ve built. 🌟

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Author: Simon Tolkien
Regularly $3.99, Today $1.99
Friendship Fiction

London, 1910. Adam Raine’s life has been defined by misfortune from the beginning—and his mother’s death sends him north to Scarsdale, a Yorkshire coal-mining town where his father has found work as a union organizer. The town is beautiful and suffocating in roughly equal measure, operating under the rigid class structures of Edwardian England with all the violence those structures generate when they’re pushed hard enough. Adam arrives at exactly the moment the pushing is about to produce consequences. ⛏️

When the tensions between the miners and Sir John Scarsdale explode into something irreversible, Adam finds himself taken into the Scarsdale family home—an ascent that places him in direct rivalry with Sir John’s son Brice for everything that matters: status, the future, and the love of the parson’s daughter. Brice has the advantages of birth and position. Adam has something harder to define and more difficult to extinguish. As Brice plots his rival’s downfall, Europe is sliding toward a war that will obliterate the world both young men are fighting over. ⚔️

Simon Tolkien traces Adam’s journey from the workhouses of London through the Yorkshire mines and the privilege of an Edwardian estate to the trenches of the Western Front—a passage through every layer of a society violently entering the modern world. The war that arrives is not just a backdrop but a reckoning, stripping away everything that the class system had built and revealing what survives underneath. 🌿

What makes this gripping: Simon Tolkien writes historical fiction with genuine sweep and moral intelligence—No Man’s Land is an epic coming-of-age story set against the full catastrophe of Edwardian England’s collision with the twentieth century, intimate in its characterization and enormous in its ambition. 🏆

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Author: Cam Torrens
Regularly $4.99, Today $2.49
Kidnapping Crime Fiction

A 911 call sends Search and Rescue into the Collegiate Peaks looking for a missing girl. They find a child—but not the one they were looking for. The case has been hiding in plain sight in a rural Colorado town full of suspects and the particular difficulty of a community where everyone knows everyone and the surface of ordinary life is very hard to read accurately. Based on an actual missing person case, Cam Torrens builds the investigation from the ground up with the authority of someone who understands both the terrain and the human cost. 🏔️

Tyler Zahn is an Air Force pilot whose life disintegrated eight years ago when he lost his son. He discarded his family, his career, and his dignity in the wreckage, finding what passed for stability in apathy and beer. He has rebuilt something since—new confidence, a Rocky Mountain home, a place on the Search and Rescue team—and invited his estranged daughter Daria to visit in an attempt to begin repairing what broke between them. He is trying too hard. The tension between them is real, and forgiveness is not arriving on his preferred schedule. 💔

Then his Search and Rescue work pulls him away at exactly the wrong moment, Daria finds romance at the church camp next door, and a kidnapper operating in the community makes every other complication suddenly secondary. The investigation and the damaged father-daughter relationship run on parallel tracks that converge in ways neither Zahn nor the reader sees coming until the moment of impact. 🔍

What makes this gut-wrenching: Cam Torrens combines a ripped-from-headlines missing child investigation with a deeply affecting portrait of a father trying to earn back what he threw away—Stable is mystery-suspense fiction with genuine emotional stakes and a Rocky Mountain setting that feels lived-in and real. 🌟

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Author: Sherwood Anderson
Regularly $6.99, Today $1.99
Classic Literary Fiction

Sherwood Anderson’s 1919 story cycle is one of the foundational texts of American literature—a book that changed not just how the Midwest was depicted in fiction but how short fiction itself worked. Twenty-two linked tales set in a small Ohio town, connected by place and by the recurring presence of George Willard, a young man coming of age who serves as both witness and participant in the lives of people whose inner worlds are far more turbulent than the quiet surface of Winesburg suggests. 📖

The characters Anderson draws are defined by what they cannot say and cannot release—Kate Swift, the schoolteacher whose beauty inspires feelings she cannot navigate; Wing Biddlebaum, the recluse whose restless hands carry a terrible secret that drove him to abandon his name and his past; Doctor Reefy, who processes his suffering by writing it on scraps of paper that he then rolls into balls and throws away. These are people trapped by the gap between their inner lives and the language available to them, in a town that provides no vocabulary for what they actually feel. 🌾

The influence of Winesburg, Ohio on American literature is direct and traceable. William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway, and F. Scott Fitzgerald all absorbed its lessons about what prose could do and what small-town America actually contained beneath its respectable exterior. The book’s uncompromising realism and its structural innovation—the linked story cycle as a novel form—remain as fresh and as useful to writers today as they were when Anderson published them. 🌟

What makes this essential: One of the genuinely indispensable works of American literature, available here at a price that makes it impossible to justify not reading it—Winesburg, Ohio is the book that taught a generation of writers how to see the people around them clearly. 🏆

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