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A senior Justice Department official calls Washington investigative reporter Beck Rikki with a tip that could upend a presidential election. A powerful U.S. senator is on the verge of winning the White House—and someone inside the government believes he’s corrupt. It’s the kind of lead that careers are built on. It’s also the kind of lead that gets people killed. 🏛️
Beck follows the money—offshore accounts, suspicious deaths, shadowy corporate ties running from Canada to the Caribbean and back into the heart of Washington power. The conspiracy is bigger and uglier than the initial tip suggested, and every layer he peels back reveals something worse underneath: financial fraud, political bribery, blackmail, and murder. The deeper he digs, the more people with very serious resources start paying attention to what he’s doing. 💰
Then there’s the woman. A mysterious insider who seems to know more than she’s saying, who draws Beck in with a pull he can’t entirely rationalize, and who forces him to ask the question that every reporter in Washington eventually has to face: is he driving the story, or is the story driving him? In a city built entirely on deception, the most dangerous thing Beck possesses is the truth—and the most dangerous question is whether he can trust anyone long enough to use it. 🔍
What makes this gripping: Rick Pullen writes Washington conspiracy fiction with the insider authority of someone who has spent a career in political journalism—Naked Ambition is a propulsive, twisty series opener with a hero who is smart enough to find the story and human enough to get tangled in it anyway. 🏆
The sirens are already wailing when Detective Lena Gamble arrives at Club 3 AM, a Hollywood hotspot where the rich and famous go to be seen—and where two people have just been murdered in very public, very gruesome fashion. The first victim is Johnny Bosco, the influential club owner. The second victim is the one that sets the whole city on fire. 🎬
Jacob Gant, twenty-five years old, was acquitted just weeks earlier of murdering his teenage neighbor Lily Hight in what the media had christened L.A.’s latest trial of the century. The verdict left half the city furious and the other half unconvinced. Now Gant is dead, and everyone who followed the case has an opinion about whether justice was served or whether someone decided to serve it themselves. Lena has to investigate regardless of what anyone thinks about the outcome. 🔍
The deeper she digs, the more the case resists simple explanations. Every clue she uncovers opens onto something more complicated—a labyrinth of deceit and vengeance where nothing about the original trial was as clean as the verdict suggested, and where the corruption runs through layers of Hollywood power that have their own reasons to keep secrets buried. Each new murder she unearths pulls her further from anything she could have predicted at the outset. 🌆
What makes this compelling: Robert Ellis sets his Lena Gamble series against a Hollywood backdrop that glitters and rots in equal measure—Murder Season is a tightly plotted, atmospheric crime novel with a detective whose relentless pursuit of truth keeps colliding with a city that prefers its justice managed rather than delivered. 🏆
Howard Parker wants to be Secretary of Homeland Security, and he is not the kind of man who lets inconvenient people stand between him and what he wants. A group of Marines who were in the wrong place at the wrong time years ago could complicate his confirmation—so they need to stop being a problem. What are the odds that one of them is now a cop reporter in Seattle, Parker’s own home city? Apparently quite good. 🗞️
Former Marine Mac Davis likes his current life just fine. Regular paycheck, nobody shooting at him, crime beat in a city he knows well. He’d rather be covering sports, but he took the job and it suits him. Then someone tries to kill him. Roughs up his aunt. Kidnaps an old buddy from his Marine days. And Mac is constitutionally incapable of leaving that alone—he is going to find out why, and then he is going to put a stop to it. 💪
He starts with the tools of a reporter: sources, records, questions that make people uncomfortable. But Mac Davis is also a former Marine, and when journalism stops being sufficient, he has other tools available and no particular hesitation about using them. Whatever Howard Parker thought he was cleaning up, he has made a serious miscalculation about who he is dealing with. 🎯
What makes this a blast: L.J. Breedlove launches the Mac Davis series with a hero who is equal parts tenacious journalist and formidable Marine—a fast, entertaining political thriller with genuine stakes, a villain worth despising, and a protagonist whose particular combination of skills makes him exactly the wrong person to target. 🏆
Josie Matthews buys a Victorian mansion with a notorious past fully expecting the usual headaches of renovation—structural surprises, contractor delays, historic preservation complications. What she is not expecting is to be transported back in time to 1929, directly into the middle of a double murder that was never solved and that made the mansion infamous in the first place. The alleged killer: Wall Street financier David Remington, forever known to history as the Tycoon Murderer. 🏛️
It’s the height of the Roaring Twenties, and Remington has assembled a house party of considerable variety: a Chicago bootlegger and his moll, a Broadway playwright and his closest friend, a corrupt U.S. Senator and his wife, a handsome silent screen star, and a disgruntled federal agent who has his own reasons for being there. It is the kind of guest list that practically writes its own body count. Then a mysterious woman arrives uninvited, and people start dying one by one. 🥂
Josie finds herself in the impossible position of witnessing a historical crime from the inside—knowing how the story ends in her own time but not knowing who actually wrote that ending, or why the real killer was never identified. The mansion’s walls hold secrets that history recorded incorrectly, and Josie may be the only person in either century who has a chance of uncovering the truth. 🔍
What makes this inventive: Maureen Driscoll combines time travel and classic golden age mystery with genuine flair—a 1920s house party setting that crackles with period atmosphere, a puzzle that rewards careful reading, and a heroine navigating history from the inside with everything to lose. 🌟
It’s the late 1950s in a small industrial town in the North of England, and a young man has decided he is going to make something of himself. He has ambition, he has persistence, and he has the lads from his yard—which is arguably the most important ingredient of the three, and also the most unpredictable. The times are hard, opportunities are thin, and bad luck has a way of arriving precisely when it is least welcome. None of this is going to stop him from trying. ⚙️
The journey is less a smooth upward trajectory than a series of determined stumbles—setbacks absorbed, schemes that almost worked, moments of inexperience that would be mortifying if they weren’t so entirely understandable given the circumstances. The lads in his yard are part support crew and part chaos factor, their loyalty genuine and their judgment occasionally questionable. Together they represent a portrait of working-class life that is both entirely specific to its time and place and completely universal in its humanity. 🏭
Allan Finlay writes with the warmth and affection of someone who knows this world from the inside—the rhythms of it, the humor that was as necessary as food, the way community forms around shared hardship and shared absurdity in roughly equal measure. This is a feel-good story in the best sense: not saccharine, but genuinely earned in its optimism about what persistence and camaraderie can accomplish even when everything else is stacked against you. 😄
What makes this a delight: Raggy Arsed Lads is a warm, funny, deeply human comic drama that captures Northern English working-class life with love and sharp-eyed humor—the kind of book that makes you smile throughout and feel unexpectedly moved by the end. 🌟
Caitlyn grew up American, with a family she loved and a life that made sense. Then she learns she was found as an abandoned baby—and the search for answers leads her to a tiny English village that seems, at first glance, to be charmingly ordinary. It is not charmingly ordinary. It contains a mysterious shop selling enchanted chocolates, a woman the locals call the village witch, and a recent death in a nearby stone circle that nobody seems adequately concerned about. 🍫
The village is also home to a toothless old vampire who requires managing, an adorable kitten who requires rescuing, and a man who is either a modern-day Mr. Darcy or a very convincing impression of one. Caitlyn is dealing with all of this while simultaneously processing the revelation that the magical blood in her veins may not be entirely metaphorical. She can feel something stirring that she has never felt before, and it is becoming increasingly difficult to attribute to jet lag. 🌿
When her search for her origins uncovers secrets the village has been sitting on for years—and when she begins to suspect that the death in the stone circle involved considerably more than natural causes—Caitlyn finds herself at the center of something that demands she choose: keep her distance from a world she barely understands, or step into it fully and figure out what she can do before whoever caused that death decides to cause another. 🔮
What makes this enchanting: H.Y. Hanna launches the Bewitched by Chocolate series with a cozy fantasy mystery of irresistible warmth—an English village full of secrets, a heroine discovering her magical heritage one chaotic scene at a time, and enough chocolate to make the whole adventure feel like a treat. 🌟
The Country Cooking of France
Anne Willan has spent decades studying, teaching, and writing about French food from inside France itself—her cooking school in Burgundy trained generations of chefs and home cooks who came from around the world to learn the real thing. This landmark cookbook is the distillation of all of it: more than 250 recipes drawn from every corner of the country, from the mountainous regions of the Auvergne to the sun-drenched markets of Provence and the butter-rich kitchens of Normandy. 🇫🇷
The recipes range from deeply traditional to quietly revelatory. La Truffade delivers crispy potatoes and melted cheese with the rustic simplicity that defines the best regional cooking. Cassoulet de Toulouse—that magnificent Languedoc bean casserole of duck confit, sausage, and lamb—is presented in a version that rewards the time it demands. And the desserts are, as promised, magnifique: crêpes with a luscious salted caramel filling, a rustic Landaise apple tart, and much more. 🧅
What lifts this book beyond a recipe collection is its deep pleasure in context. More than 270 photographs of village markets, harbor towns, fields, and country kitchens give the food its proper landscape. Historical tidbits are woven throughout—not as footnotes but as genuine illuminations of why French regional cooking is the way it is and why it matters. Every chapter is both instruction and invitation. 📸
What makes this essential: Anne Willan brings authority, affection, and decades of firsthand expertise to a definitive celebration of French culinary culture—a cookbook that belongs in the permanent collection of anyone who loves French food, cooks it regularly, or simply wants to understand where it all comes from. 🏆
Twelve years is a long time to build a life around someone—long enough that when it falls apart, you don’t just lose a marriage. You lose the entire future you had mapped out in your head. She’s divorced now, starting over in a new town with a new job as an elementary teacher, trying to reassemble something worth living in from the pieces of what she thought her life would look like. It’s slow, unglamorous work, and she was just beginning to make real progress. 💔
Then she notices her new neighbor. Lieutenant Colonel Fletcher Miller—strict, stone-faced, and the last person she expected to encounter in a quiet residential street far from everything that used to define her life. He was her ex-husband’s commanding officer. His presence across the street is a daily, unavoidable reminder of everything she lost, everything she survived, and everything she is still trying to put behind her. 🪖
Then his young son turns up in her classroom, and the professional distance she was counting on evaporates entirely. A single father. A woman rebuilding from the wreckage of a marriage. A history that connects them both to a grief neither of them has fully named. Neither of them was looking for this—and neither of them can quite manage to walk away from it either. 🏡
What makes this resonate: B. Celeste writes second-chance romance with emotional precision and genuine depth—Make You Miss Me is a slow-burn story of two people carrying real wounds who find each other in the exact circumstances least designed for love, and fall anyway. Tender, honest, and deeply satisfying. ❤️
Ezra Carmichael has built his life on precision and purpose. Oxford-educated, licensed as a therapist, rooted in deep faith, he is preparing to step into leadership of the largest Pentecostal church in New York—a role that carries enormous expectation and demands an equally composed personal life. Everything about Ezra is considered, calibrated, and pointed in a single clear direction. 🙏
Lex Grier’s life runs on a completely different kind of discipline—the kind that comes from holding everything together when there is never quite enough of anything. Three jobs, a demanding school schedule, and the weight of responsibility for people who depend on her. She is sharp, resourceful, and entirely unimpressed by pedigree. Ezra’s world and hers exist in different orbits, and under ordinary circumstances they would never intersect at all. 🌆
But circumstances are not ordinary. A covenant forms between them—an agreement that creates a space where both their worlds can exist simultaneously, each one making room for the other in ways that neither fully anticipated. What starts as an arrangement built on practicality and mutual need begins to reveal something deeper and considerably harder to categorize as the pages turn. 💛
What makes this compelling: Love Belvin writes contemporary romance with cultural specificity, emotional intelligence, and a genuine investment in characters whose differences run deeper than surface attraction—In Covenant with Ezra is a beautifully crafted series opener about two people from entirely different worlds finding that the covenant they made is becoming the truest thing in either of their lives. ❤️
Brody McCrae cannot get Freedom Mercier out of his head, and he has tried. He is a Scottish billionaire with no shortage of options and a very clear sense of what a sensible man does when fate keeps throwing obstacles between him and the woman he wants. He knows what the sensible answer is. He keeps not doing it. Keeping his mind off her is damn near impossible, and the question of how this could ever actually work refuses to stay quiet. 🏴
Freedom learned early that her heart was not something to be trusted carelessly. She developed a rule—never date the same person more than once—that has served her well precisely because she has not broken it. Brody McCrae is a compelling argument for breaking it. She cannot get him out of her head or her bed, and the rule that was supposed to protect her is starting to feel less like wisdom and more like stubbornness in an expensive coat. 💙
Life has a habit of driving wedges between people who are trying to figure out if they belong together. Events conspire. Timing fails. The question of whether fate is trying to tell them something keeps surfacing, and neither of them has a satisfying answer. Eventually they will have to make a choice: fight for what keeps pulling them back to each other, or accept that some things that feel inevitable are actually impossible. 💔
What makes this engaging: M.S. Parker delivers a Scottish billionaire romance with genuine emotional stakes on both sides—two people with real reasons to hesitate, real chemistry that won’t behave, and a will-they-won’t-they tension that keeps the pages turning right up to the moment the choice finally gets made. 🌟
The city has secrets that the ordinary world never gets to see—and keeping those secrets safe requires a very particular kind of firefighter. Welsh dragon shifter Dai Drake is part of Alpha Fire Team, an elite unit of mythic shapeshifters working in the shadows to protect a supernatural community hidden within the city. Rogue dragons, dangerous magical incidents, creatures behaving badly—just another shift for Dai. He has handled every kind of heat there is. Until Virginia. 🔥
Curvy archaeologist Virginia made the find of a lifetime and stumbled directly into a world she had no idea existed. An evil dragon comes after her gold, and she is rescued by a mysterious, intense firefighter with burning green eyes that do something to her she is completely unprepared for. Dai is clearly hiding things. She is clearly not safe. And the connection between them is immediate, overwhelming, and deeply inconvenient given the circumstances. 🐉
One touch, and Dai’s legendary control goes up in smoke entirely. Virginia is his true mate—he knows it with the certainty that only a dragon shifter can feel—and every protective instinct he has roars to life at once. He will do anything to keep her safe from the evil dragon still hunting her treasure. The problem with fighting fire with fire, as any dragon knows, is that someone is very likely to get burned. 💚
What makes this a blast: Chant and Kestrel launch the Fire & Rescue Shifters series with all the heat and humor the premise promises—a dragon hero who is formidably capable at everything except resisting his mate, a heroine who holds her own beautifully, and action that crackles alongside the romance from the first page to the last. 🌟
After a bitter divorce, criminal solicitor Laila moves to Violet Lane—a picture-perfect street that feels like exactly the fresh start she needs. The neighbors are charming. The atmosphere is peaceful. And Max, the piano-playing man next door, is the kind of person who makes a person believe that everything might actually be fine from here on out. Their affair is passionate and fast and feels, for the first time in a long while, like something real. 🌷
Then Jackie, a young mother across the street, goes missing. Her husband becomes the chief suspect almost immediately, and he turns to Laila to act as his lawyer. It seems like a professional matter, separate from her personal life—but as Laila investigates Jackie’s disappearance, Violet Lane begins to reveal the things it has been hiding beneath its quiet, well-kept surface. The neighbors are not quite who they seemed. Someone is watching Laila closely. Anonymous threats start arriving. 😰
And the deeper she digs, the more her relationship with Max begins to feel like something else entirely—something with an undertow she didn’t notice when the current was pulling her in a direction she wanted to go. He is charming and attentive and possibly hiding a darkness that she, as a criminal solicitor, should have recognized much sooner. The street that looked like safety is turning out to be anything but. 🌑
What makes this addictive: Miranda Rijks constructs a psychological thriller of building dread and expert misdirection—a heroine whose professional instincts keep running headlong into her personal blind spots, a neighborhood full of people with reasons to lie, and a final revelation that lands with genuine impact. 🔍
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











