Simon King works in one of the country’s worst correctional facilities, and Prison Days is what he found when he got there: an uncensored record of life inside maximum security, written as true diary entries from the nightmare world beyond the razor wire. Horrific assaults, murders, prison gangs, and the day-to-day chaos that makes the corrections officer role one of the most dangerous and psychologically demanding jobs in existence—all rendered with the raw authenticity of someone who is living it rather than reconstructing it from the outside. 🔒
The diary entry format gives the book its particular power—each entry is a discrete account of what happened that day, which means the accumulation is the point. The chaos is not dramatic or exceptional; it is the baseline. The worst offenders imaginable are not case studies but daily colleagues in the specific, awful sense that a corrections officer shares physical space with them every shift. King’s writing does not sensationalize the environment because it does not need to—the environment sensationalizes itself, and his job is simply to document it accurately. 💀
Prison memoirs written by corrections staff rather than inmates occupy a specific and underrepresented niche in the true crime space, and King’s account fills it with the kind of detail that purely journalistic accounts of prison conditions cannot provide. The first installment of the Prison Days series establishes the world and the voice with enough specificity to make it genuinely difficult to look away, and enough humanity in King’s perspective to prevent it from becoming purely voyeuristic. 📖
What makes this essential: Simon King delivers a true crime prison memoir of raw, uncensored authenticity—diary entries from inside one of the country’s worst maximum-security facilities, written by the corrections officer living it, documenting the assaults, murders, gang violence, and daily chaos that make this one of the most brutal jobs on earth. 🌟
Sloan Jordan has spent twenty-seven years keeping a secret: with nothing more than a glance at a photograph, she can judge the living from the dead and the good souls from the evil ones. The ability that could make her invaluable to law enforcement is the same ability she has kept carefully hidden—until eleven young women are dead and she is the only hope of stopping their killer. When she agrees to help Detective Nathan McNamara, she steps out of the life she has constructed around concealment and into something considerably more dangerous. 🔍
The stranger who shows up at her door complicates matters in ways the murder investigation alone could not. He is alluring and terrifying in equal measure, and the specific detail that makes him terrifying is this: he has no soul at all. For someone whose entire ability is built around reading the quality of human souls, encountering a person who has none is not just unsettling—it is an existential challenge to everything she understands about her own gift. The three-book collection opens the Soul Summoner world with both the serial killer investigation and this darker, stranger thread running simultaneously. 💀
Elicia Hyder writes the Soul Summoner series with the psychic thriller and paranormal romance combination that has built it a devoted following—Sloan’s ability is specific and consistent enough to function as genuine world-building rather than vague supernatural atmosphere, and the characters around her are developed with enough depth to sustain the series across many installments. The three-book collection gives readers the full opening arc at no cost. 💛
What makes this essential: Elicia Hyder delivers the first three Soul Summoner novels in one free collection—a woman who can read souls from photographs forced into a serial killer investigation, and a man with no soul at all who shows up at her door and changes everything she thought she understood about her gift. 🌟
The oldest and most experienced Pickle brother owns the family deli that is somehow the only one failing. He hightails it to Austin to investigate, only to find a sassy spitfire named Nova Strong running the place like she owns it—funny, capable, and completely unaware that the new employee she is talking to is actually her boss who came specifically to evaluate whether she is the problem. She is, objectively, amazing. This is a picklish problem. 😄
Despite the way they nearly melt the permafrost in the industrial freezer, the whole undercover boss situation requires him to maintain the fiction that he is just another employee while Nova runs the deli with the confidence and competence of someone who has never considered the possibility that the rug might be pulled out from under her. JJ Knight writes the deception with the comic timing that makes the eventual revelation feel both inevitable and perfectly timed—the lie that was supposed to be professional creates exactly the personal complications that professional distance was supposed to prevent. 💛
The Pickle Family series has built its readership on the specific combination of food-world setting, family ensemble dynamics, and romantic comedy heat that Knight delivers consistently across the franchise. Big Pickle launches it with the premise that does double duty as a pun and a genuine story engine—a family business under stress, a manager who is better at the job than the person who came to fire her, and an attraction that neither party has any business acting on. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: JJ Knight launches the Pickle Family series with a romantic comedy of pure comic delight—the oldest Pickle brother going undercover to investigate his failing Austin deli, discovering it is run brilliantly by a woman who has no idea he is her boss, and an attraction that makes the whole situation considerably more complicated than advertised. 🌟
Kept by the Pack (North Coast Omegaverse)
She came back to Driftwood Cove for a new start with no complications—and walked into Bar 2.0 where she met Knox, six-foot-something of broody ex-big-city Alpha with eyes like he has seen too much and a voice that settles low in her stomach. He is, he says, the new sheriff. He does not say he is about to wreck her peace. One game of pool becomes one kiss, and the kiss sends her Omega spiraling straight toward heat. 🌊
Just when she thinks she might be able to handle one dominant, protective Alpha, there is Liam—the cinnamon-scented barista who used to knot her in the backseat of his car and still looks at her like unfinished business. And then there is Maddox. The North Coast Omegaverse launches here with the specific reverse harem Omegaverse dynamic that the subgenre delivers at its most unapologetic—an Omega returning to her hometown and finding that the uncomplicated fresh start she planned has become considerably more complicated in exactly the direction the genre promises. 🔥
Nora Quinn writes with the heat and Omegaverse world-building that the subgenre requires—a small coastal town setting that gives the community its warmth and the pack dynamics their particular pressure, and an Omega protagonist whose return home puts her directly in the path of men who all have prior claims or new ones. The New Release status means this is a fresh entry into one of the genre’s most actively developing subforms. ⚡
What makes this compelling: Nora Quinn launches the North Coast Omegaverse with a new steamy reverse harem romance—a woman who came back to Driftwood Cove for peace, a broody new Alpha sheriff who immediately dismantles it, a barista with unfinished business, and a third Alpha waiting just offscreen. 🌟
Gracie learned early that love never comes easy—and then Braxton stumbled into her life and began carefully dismantling the walls she had built around her heart. She let him, convinced he was worth the risk. He knew at first glance that she was his—the person who would become his everything—and they began building a life together on the foundation of trust, loyalty, and love. It was working. 💛
Then the past reared its head, and Braxton made a choice that threw everything into turmoil. Gracie watched it happen and walked away. Now Braxton faces the decision that the Sterling Protectors series builds its emotional stakes around: fight for the woman he still loves, or let his past win. The firefighter romance genre handles the fight-or-surrender question with particular effectiveness when the hero’s reluctance to fully commit has its roots in something real rather than manufactured, and Mackenzie Madden treats Braxton’s choice with the seriousness it deserves. 🌅
Madden launches the Sterling Protectors series with the emotional foundation that a long-running romance series requires—characters whose damage is rendered with enough specificity to make their journey feel earned, a central relationship that is genuinely worth fighting for, and a betrayal that feels consequential enough to make the second chance meaningful. The firefighter world gives the series its professional backdrop and its particular brand of protective hero. ⚡
What makes this compelling: Mackenzie Madden launches the Sterling Protectors series with a firefighter romance of genuine emotional depth—walls carefully dismantled, a life built together on trust, a choice that shattered it, and the only question that matters: will Braxton fight for the woman he loves or let his past be the thing that finally wins? 🌟
Killian’s entire hitman operation is thrown into chaos when a quirky, innocent heiress with a head full of rainbows and unicorns hops into his car, mistakes him for her driver, and proceeds to be absolutely delightful about it. He was sent to find her. She fell directly into his lap wielding a lightsaber and wearing a crown of real jewels. New mission: keep the sunshine girl alive and eliminate anyone who tries to dim it. She is, after all, his Zolotse. 😄
Teddy believes she has remarkable luck—and by her accounting, she is correct. When her plans start crumbling and her flight gets cancelled, a sexy Russian tattooed driver three times her size appears to save the day. He may look intimidating, but he is the sweetest man she has ever met. She has no idea he is a hitman, that he was sent specifically to find her, or that the people trying to dampen her sunshine are considerably more dangerous than cancelled flights and failed sneaky adventures. Her new mission: have the adventure of a lifetime with the most handsome man she has ever met. 💛
Lucy Darling writes Meet Cute the Hitman with the specific comic energy that the innocent-heroine-plus-dangerous-hero premise generates when both characters are rendered with genuine warmth—Teddy’s sunshine is not naivety played for laughs but a genuine worldview that transforms everyone around her, and Killian’s competence and protectiveness are the serious underpinning of what is consistently, delightfully funny. 🌟
What makes this irresistible: Lucy Darling delivers a new romantic comedy of pure charm and chaos—a quirky heiress who mistakes a hitman for her driver, a Russian assassin whose entire professional life is disrupted by one girl with a lightsaber and a crown of real jewels, and glitter, tiaras, and bullets in equal measure. 🌟





