BookSumo Press has built a large readership for their focused, practical cookbook collections, and *Easy Dinner Recipes* delivers exactly what the title promises: a complete set of simple weeknight dinner recipes designed to be approachable without being predictable. The range spans cuisines and techniques—broccoli steak stir fry, teriyaki pasta, spaghetti Bolognese, corn chowder, Bavarian egg noodle and apple dinner, curry soup, pilaf—with the consistent emphasis on recipes that work in a real kitchen for a real weeknight. 🍽️
The specific combination of international influences and classic comfort food formats gives the collection its variety. Peshawar Pilaf sits alongside Johnson Family Cornbread; Canadian-inspired curry alongside 20-minute Bavarian noodles. The willingness to draw from multiple culinary traditions while keeping preparation accessible is the BookSumo Press approach—these are not simplified versions of restaurant dishes but genuinely home-cooking-scaled recipes designed to produce satisfying results without requiring specialist ingredients or extended technique. 🌍
BookSumo Press has produced hundreds of cookbook collections across cuisines and categories, with a readership that comes specifically for the combination of breadth, accessibility, and reliability. The free price point makes this an excellent addition to any digital cookbook collection—the cost of trying a new dinner recipe book is exactly zero, and the range of recipes is sufficient to produce weeks of genuinely varied weeknight meals. For home cooks looking to expand their weeknight dinner rotation without investing in a specialized cookbook, this is exactly the kind of practical collection the format does best. ⭐
Why this belongs in your kitchen: Weeknight dinners from broccoli stir fry to Peshawar pilaf to 20-minute Bavarian noodles—a practical, varied collection of simple dinner recipes from BookSumo Press, free.
Diane Moody opens *Confessions of a Prayer Slacker* with a premise that most believers will recognize instantly: the merry-go-round of prayerlessness, the vague guilt about it, and the consistent failure to do anything about either. Rather than approaching the subject with the solemn weight that most prayer books deploy, Moody traces her own personal prayer journey with transparency and a touch of humor—which turns out to be the combination that actually makes the subject accessible rather than another addition to the unread devotional shelf. 🙏
The book’s central argument is direct: without a genuine prayer life, the warm one-on-one relationship that God desires to have with each person remains theoretical rather than real. Moody doesn’t soften this or dress it in comfortable language—she calls her readership to stop acting like spiritual babies and get serious about prayer, which is the kind of directness that Christian living books occasionally attempt and rarely sustain without tipping into condemnation. The humor is the mechanism that keeps the directness from becoming discouraging. 💙
Moody is a prolific Christian fiction and nonfiction author with a large devoted readership, and *Confessions of a Prayer Slacker* has been one of her most enduring nonfiction titles for exactly the quality that distinguishes it: it meets readers where they actually are rather than where they think they should be, and offers the personal journey as the invitation rather than the instruction. For Christian readers who have been meaning to address their prayer life for longer than they’d like to admit, this is the book that takes the subject seriously without making starting feel impossible. ⭐
Why this resonates: A personal prayer journey told with humor and transparency—for every believer who knows they should pray more and hasn’t done anything about it—Diane Moody’s beloved Christian living classic, free.
Mitch and Karl are both gay, both middle-aged, both single, and both constitutionally incapable of getting out of the house—Mitch with his non-existent social life, Karl working from home with no particular impetus to leave it. The probability of them meeting under normal circumstances is close to zero. Then Karl’s greyhound takes a shine to Mitch at the neighborhood dog park, and Karl—recognizing an opportunity—hires Mitch to do some landscaping work as a pretext for spending more time together. Alexander Elliott opens *Green’s Thumb* with the later-in-life gay romance premise that earns its warmth from the specific comedy of two people who are genuinely their own obstacles. 💙
The gardening setting gives the romance its specific slow-bloom metaphor—something special growing alongside the flowers—and Elliott develops the mutual recognition with the patient warmth that later-in-life romance requires. These are not people who have been waiting dramatically for love; they are people who have been quietly not having it, for the specific reasons of middle age and habit and the specific inertia of lives that are comfortable if not quite complete. 💕
Elliott writes gay romance with the warmth and gentle humor that has built his readership, and *Green’s Thumb* delivers the combination of character specificity and low-key charm that distinguishes later-in-life romance at its most satisfying. The novel doesn’t manufacture dramatic obstacles—the obstacles are Mitch and Karl themselves, two men who needed a greyhound’s social instincts to get them in the same space long enough for the obvious to become apparent. For readers who want their romance warm, gently funny, and free of manufactured crisis, this is exactly that. ⭐
Why this warms you: Two middle-aged gay men who never leave the house, a greyhound who takes matters into his own paws, and a landscaping job that was really just an excuse to keep showing up—Green’s Thumb is later-in-life romance with real quiet charm.
The Mediator
Max Ringo was once a courtroom star—until a car accident left her addicted to painkillers and her career dissolved. Now fresh out of rehab and making a comeback as a mediator, she takes on a high-stakes divorce between two notorious power players. It looks like a professional second chance. Then the husband kidnaps her teenage son Nathan and delivers an ultimatum: settle the case on his terms, or the boy dies. Robert Bailey opens the Max Ringo series with the legal thriller premise that takes the professional and the personal and makes them catastrophically simultaneous. ⚖️
What follows is three relentless days during which Max must resolve a brutal legal battle while running a covert parallel mission to rescue Nathan—without anyone in the negotiation room realizing that her son’s life is the actual stake she’s playing for. Bailey develops the dual-pressure structure with the timing precision that the premise requires: every concession Max makes at the table has a cost she can’t disclose, and every move she makes for Nathan risks the case she cannot afford to lose. 🔍
Bailey is the author of the Tom McMurtrie and Rick Drake legal thriller series, with a substantial devoted readership that has followed his work for the combination of courtroom authenticity and genuine thriller momentum. *The Mediator* launches Max Ringo as a protagonist whose specific history—the addiction, the recovery, the comeback—gives her the particular resilience that the situation demands: a woman who has already survived the worst thing that happened to her, now being asked to survive something worse. As a new release this delivers at full strength. ⭐
Why this grips you: A recovering addict making her comeback as a mediator, her son kidnapped on the first day of a high-stakes divorce case, and three days to resolve the legal battle while secretly trying to get him back—The Mediator is legal thriller at full relentless pace.
In the Civilized World, everyone is rich—but money doesn’t buy safety, only a gold coffin. Real currency is the right allies. Low-citizens survive by entering high-citizens’ exclusive inner circles, trading loyalty for protection from laws that punish violations of speech, dress, and posture with public beheading. Loredana Waldsten is a low-citizen who was once a rising fencing prodigy—until she killed a high-citizen in a brutal locker-room attack and the courts erased his death to protect his family’s honor, leaving her unarmed and legally defenseless. Edith Birde opens the Nine Gentlemen series with the dystopian premise built on the most specific of social nightmares. 🗡️
Enrolled at the elite Grandmaster University—where champagne spills into the gutters and reputations are built on death duels—Loredana becomes a target when her father publicly challenges the high-citizens. Some classmates demand her execution. Others hunt her for sport. By law, she cannot fight back. Her only option is Edmund Prew, a charming and ruthless high-citizen student whose family has been feuding with hers for years and who wants nothing to do with her until a lost bet forces him to offer protection. Birde develops the coerced alliance with real romantic and political intelligence. 💙
The dystopian world-building is the novel’s specific achievement—a stratified society whose rules are absurd in exactly the way that real social hierarchies are absurd when described from the outside, made genuinely menacing by the specific consequences Birde renders in detail. The forbidden romance that develops within the scandalous alliance gives the novel its romantic dimension without softening the world’s violence. As a new release this is a distinctive debut. ⭐
Why this captivates: A low-citizen fencing prodigy who killed a high-citizen, now unarmed and hunted at an elite university where she can’t legally defend herself—and the enemy’s son whose lost bet forces him to protect her—Because I Killed Him is dystopian fiction with real social menace.
She’s a rejected Omega on the run with her niece Cora, moving from town to town and trusting no one—especially not Alphas. When her car breaks down in Silver Falls, she’s stranded and expecting nothing from the locals. What she gets is three of them: Everett, Cash, and Lincoln, the most powerful Alpha pack in Silver Falls. After what her old pack did to her, her guard goes up immediately. These men turn out to be nothing like what she’s used to. Sadie Moss opens the Knot Her Pack series with the omegaverse reverse harem romance premise built on the specific emotional weight of a woman whose experience has given her very good reasons to be wrong about these particular men. 💙
The practical help arrives first—a mechanic for the car, a job at the bar they own, an offer to move out of the shadiest motel in town and into their house. All of it is framed as being for Cora, which is the only framing that could work: she would do anything for her niece, and she knows it, and they seem to understand it intuitively. Moss develops the gradual erosion of her defenses with the specific warmth and patience that the omegaverse romance requires when it’s working at its best. 💕
Moss is one of the most widely read omegaverse romance authors, with a massive devoted readership that follows the Knot Her Pack series for the combination of Silver Falls small-town warmth, genuine character development for all three Alphas, and the specific emotional journey of a rejected Omega discovering that the category she built her walls against isn’t monolithic. As a new release this delivers all of those series qualities with a fresh start premise that new readers can enter without prior context. ⭐
Why this warms you: A rejected Omega on the run with her niece, a broken-down car in Silver Falls, and three Alphas who are nothing like what hurt her before—Protecting Their Omega is omegaverse reverse harem romance built on earned trust.





