Lady Caroline Ashworth has spent years managing her family’s affairs while her heart remained locked away after a painful betrayal. When a mysterious letter arrives addressed to her deceased father—a letter bearing the seal of the Duke of Wyndham—she begins to unravel a secret that connects their families in ways she never imagined. The Duke, Alexander Hartley, is a man of considerable power and guarded pain, known throughout the ton for his formidable reserve. Finding himself drawn into the secrets hidden in the letter, he discovers that the woman across from him may be the one person in London who sees him clearly. Bridget Barton opens the Noble Gentlemen of the Ton series with the Regency romance built on the slow burn of two wounded people discovering each other through the mystery of a hidden correspondence. 💕
As Caroline and Alexander work together to unravel what the letter contains and who else may know about it, the proximity of the investigation tests every wall both of them have carefully maintained. The social stakes of Regency London—the gossip, the expectations, the rigid requirements of propriety—frame a love story where the greatest obstacle isn’t external disapproval but the fear of being known. Barton develops the period detail with the warm, readable style her devoted readership comes for. 🔍
Barton is a clean Regency historical romance author whose Noble Gentlemen of the Ton series has built a large and loyal following. Her books consistently deliver the emotional satisfaction of slow-burn, trust-based romance within meticulously realized Regency settings. ⭐
Why this charms: A mysterious letter bearing a Duke’s seal, two people with carefully guarded hearts, and a secret that forces them to trust each other—free.
Ruby had barely started kindergarten when the world collapsed, but she’s over it by now—really over it. To celebrate their upcoming graduation, the teenagers of Port Gibson are gathering for a forbidden game from Before: spin the bottle. Pretty much every girl in town likes the same two guys. Ruby wants to finally kiss her longtime crush Wesley, the charismatic mayor’s son being groomed to follow in his father’s footsteps. Sam Roth, the ripped and terrifying second-in-command to the Security Chief, is the last person she wants to deal with. Then an innocent game goes sideways and endangers Wesley’s life, and the only person Ruby can turn to—no matter how scary and enigmatic he is—is Samuel Roth. Bridget E. Baker opens the Sins of Our Ancestors series with the YA dystopian romance that Kirkus Reviews praised as “a promising debut.” 🔍
When things go catastrophically wrong, Ruby discovers secrets about her dead parents that send her racing to find a cure for the virus killing Port Gibson’s marked population—before the clock runs out. The triangle between Ruby, Wesley, and Sam is complicated by genuine character complexity, and the dystopian world-building has the specific sci-fi grounding that gives the stakes their weight. Baker’s prose is sharp and vivid, the pacing relentless, and the ending arrives on a cliffhanger that makes the next book immediately necessary. 💙
Baker is a bestselling YA author whose Sins of Our Ancestors series runs five books. Kirkus Reviews praised the novel’s “combination of sci-fi, mystery, and teen romance” and called it “a compelling adventure.” ⭐
Why this grips you: A forbidden game, a virus killing her town, secrets about her parents, and the scariest boy in Port Gibson who might be the only one who can help her—free.
He has no name. No past. Only a number. When Agent 917 wakes in a seedy motel, his memory is gone—as designed. A dime-sized implant pulses under his skull. An encrypted phone buzzes with mission orders. The rules are simple: kill the target, go back to sleep. The organization that built him programmed 917 to eliminate evil at its source—a sadistic surgeon, a cult hiding in the heart of New York City, a pyromaniac hell-bent on burning the world down. He hunts them methodically, a ghost in the system, with no past to complicate his purpose. Then the cracks begin. Andy Holmes opens the Agent 917 thriller with the Jason Bourne-meets-Orphan X premise that delivers on both its psychological complexity and its pulse-pounding action. 🔍
With every mission, something leaks through the artificial amnesia wall. A daughter. A betrayal. A choice. As his past bleeds into his present, 917 must confront the question that the people who built him never wanted him to ask: Is he a hero serving a righteous cause, or is he being manipulated by the very organization claiming to fight evil? The thriller operates simultaneously as propulsive action and psychological unraveling, with the moral complexity that distinguishes it from straightforward operative fiction. 💙
Holmes is a San Francisco-based thriller author who specializes in crime, thrillers, and the supernatural. The Agent 917 series runs three books to its conclusion. Reviewers describe it as “an awesome series—packed, gripping, with mouth-dropping reveals.” ⭐
Why this grips you: A government assassin with an implanted memory wipe, missions that keep cracking the wall, and a past that may change everything he believes about what he’s doing—free.
The Resentment Trap
Resentment in a relationship has a specific quality: it builds quietly, fueled by accumulated disappointments and unmet needs, until the gap between partners feels permanent. You communicate, adjust, try harder—and the pattern doesn’t change. Joy Harrington—a relationship coach with over 345,000 Instagram followers and a signature course that has helped thousands of women—has written the book-length version of her most essential work. The Resentment Trap exposes how resentment forms at the root level, why it keeps growing despite attempts to address it, and how to interrupt the cycle without blowing up your life or losing yourself in the process. 💙
The framework Harrington teaches is built on three interlocking practices: emotional awareness, clear boundaries, and radical honesty. She shows readers how to change the dynamic in a relationship without begging for effort, silencing their own needs, or waiting indefinitely for a partner to change. The book is aimed at women who have been overgiving, over-adjusting, and over-communicating without seeing results—and who need a different approach that starts with themselves rather than their partners. 🔍
Harrington is a relationship coach known for her direct, no-fluff approach to healing resentment in marriage and long-term partnerships. Her social media platform reaches millions monthly and her course has over 1,800 enrolled students. As a new release from one of the most trusted voices in the relationship coaching space, this is an immediate recommendation. ⭐
Why this helps: The relationship book that starts where the problem actually starts—not with your partner’s behavior, but with the pattern you’re both stuck in—new release.
Zayd Ayers Dohrn was born underground. His mother, Bernardine Dohrn, co-founded the Weather Underground and replaced Angela Davis on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted list. His father, Bill Ayers, was her partner in radical resistance and in parenthood. All his life, Dohrn was told that his birth marked a clean break from violent revolutionary struggle. In this explosive memoir, he discovers that wasn’t entirely true. Drawing on exclusive interviews, declassified FBI files, and long-hidden letters, photos, and diaries, Dohrn tells the story of his childhood on the run and the half-century of revolutionary struggle in America that it intersects—including revelations about the Weathermen’s bombing campaign, their secret alliance with the Black Liberation Army, and the dramatic prison break of Assata Shakur. 📚
This is simultaneously a deeply personal memoir about growing up as the child of fugitives—packing milk crates in the middle of the night, ditching cars and apartments, carrying his prized possessions in a backpack because nothing was ever guaranteed to stay—and a meticulously researched work of American political history. Dohrn, a playwright and screenwriter who teaches at Northwestern University, brings both a journalist’s precision and a son’s complicated love to a story that implicates his parents in real harm while refusing to simplify them. 🔍
The New York Times Book Review named it an Editors’ Choice. Dana Spiotta called it “a searing memoir and meticulously researched history.” Booklist gave it a starred review. Literary Hub included it in their top nonfiction titles of May 2026. As a new release, this is an immediate recommendation for anyone serious about American radical history. ⭐
Why this matters: The son of the FBI’s most wanted woman tells the story of a childhood on the run—and the revolutionary history his parents made—new release, a New York Times Editors’ Choice.
Marcus Aurelius knew it. Buddha knew it. So did Nietzsche, Rumi, and Einstein. They lived thousands of years apart, on different continents, speaking different languages—and they kept arriving at the same conclusions about how to live. When the greatest minds in history independently reach the same truths across millennia, you’re not looking at opinion. You’re looking at wisdom that has survived the test of time. The Art of Intentional Living distills that cross-cultural consensus into 101 lessons across eight chapters: waking up, knowing yourself, being present, accepting reality, choosing your values, acting with purpose, building deep relationships, and facing death without regret. 📚
Each lesson is short enough to read in minutes—the book is explicitly designed for dipping in rather than reading cover-to-cover, though the cumulative effect of the 101 lessons builds into a coherent philosophy of life. The framing throughout is direct: this is not a self-help book in the conventional sense, but a curated conversation with the wisest humans who ever lived, aimed at the only question that will actually matter at the end: did you spend your time on what was worth it? 🔍
GROWTH™ is one of the world’s most-followed personal development platforms, with millions of followers and consistently reaching over 100 million views per month on YouTube, built on the mission of studying what history’s greatest minds actually said about how to live and extracting the patterns. As a new release, this is an immediate recommendation for readers who take philosophy and personal development seriously. ⭐
Why this matters: 101 lessons from history’s greatest minds—Marcus Aurelius to Einstein—on the only question that matters at the end: did you live on purpose?—new release.





