Buy Now
Author: Gillian Larkin
FREE
Women Sleuths

Maggie Kelburn lives on a quiet street where nothing unremarkable happens—until a neighbor is murdered. She doesn’t know she captured the murder on video until a surveillance expert named Sam Ward shows her the footage. Together they take the recording to the police, and then the recording device is stolen from the police station. Shortly after, Maggie’s home is invaded and a message is left for her: *I know what you saw.* Gillian Larkin opens the Maggie Kelburn Mystery series with the women’s sleuth premise that earns its tension from the specific horror of an ordinary woman who did the right thing and is now being hunted for it. 😰

The cross-country flight that follows—Sam convincing Maggie to seek safety in another town while the killer tracks her progress—gives the novel its road thriller dimension alongside the mystery. The question of whether Maggie can trust Sam, who appeared in her life at exactly the right moment to know she had footage, gives the thriller its specific paranoid texture: the person helping her may or may not be the person she needs to be afraid of. Larkin builds the tension with real structural intelligence. 🔍

The opening detail—hedgehogs, then murder—tells you everything you need to know about the tone: Larkin writes women’s sleuth fiction with the warmth and dark comedy that distinguishes British crime fiction at its most appealing, while taking the actual threat Maggie faces with genuine seriousness. The Maggie Kelburn series has developed a devoted readership that returns for the combination of ordinary protagonist, specific community texture, and the particular British sensibility that finds even a killer pursuit slightly absurd. ⭐

Why this chills you: An ordinary woman, a neighbor murdered, footage she didn’t know she had, and a message left in her home: *I know what you saw*—I Know What You Saw is British women’s suspense with real threat beneath the warmth.

Buy Now
Author: Sally Vixen
FREE
Historical Regency Romance

Duke Edwin has a reputation for cruelty that has placed him at the exact margins of acceptable society—and to salvage what remains, he must do the one thing he never planned: reenter the ton and claim a bride. Joanna would do anything to help her sister, including marry the Cruel Duke in her sister’s place. Sally Vixen opens the Brides of Convenience series with the Regency romance premise that delivers its specific pleasure from the gap between the reputation and the reality—a duke the world calls a monster, and the woman who agrees to marry him for entirely selfless reasons and discovers something else entirely. 🌹

The marriage of convenience structure is one of the Regency romance genre’s most reliable engines because it creates legitimate proximity without legitimate emotional access—two people sharing a life who have not agreed to share feelings, which means every moment of genuine connection must be navigated against the backdrop of an arrangement designed to preclude it. Vixen deploys the structure with the warmth and period atmosphere that the subgenre’s readership comes for. 💙

The frozen heart that comes to life with Joanna’s first kiss is the novel’s governing metaphor and its specific romantic promise: a man whose cruelty has been his armor and a woman whose selflessness brought her into the one situation where that armor cannot hold indefinitely. Vixen writes Regency romance with the emotional directness and heat that has built her a devoted readership for the Brides of Convenience series. For readers who want their dark duke redeemed with genuine warmth rather than simply declared reformed, this is a series worth starting. ⭐

Why this charms: A duke everyone calls a monster, a woman who married him to protect her sister, and the first kiss that changes everything—The Cruel Duke is Regency romance built on the most reliable of promises: the frozen heart that thaws.

Buy Now
Author: Elizabeth Meyette
FREE
Ghost Suspense

Jesse Graham inherits a deserted haunted house in the Finger Lakes and, with it, a decades-old mystery that a small town has been hiding for years. The ghost isn’t the threat—it’s the guide, leading Jesse toward the truth about her aunt’s death and toward a web of deceit that reaches far beyond the events of twenty-eight years ago. Elizabeth Meyette opens the Finger Lakes Mysteries with the ghost suspense premise that uses its supernatural element purposefully rather than decoratively: the haunting is an investigation, and Jesse is the woman the ghost has been waiting for to finally follow the trail. 👻

The small-town secrecy that has surrounded the Cavanaugh House gives the investigation its specific social pressure—someone in this community has been protecting these secrets for nearly three decades, and as the house reveals what it knows, Jesse’s life becomes the next thing at risk. Meyette develops the Finger Lakes community with the warmth and specificity that the paranormal suspense genre requires when it wants its threats to feel genuinely embedded in a real world rather than simply atmospherically dark. 🔍

Meyette writes ghost suspense with the specific combination of gutsy heroine, light romance, and genuine mystery construction that she describes as the series’ promise—and *The Cavanaugh House* delivers all three. The Finger Lakes setting is rendered with the affection of someone who knows it well, giving the supernatural elements their specific New York landscape rather than a generic haunted-house backdrop. The series has a devoted following that comes back for the combination of genuine atmospheric dread and genuine warmth. ⭐

Why this draws you in: An inherited haunted house, a ghost that leads rather than frightens, a town-wide secret buried for twenty-eight years, and someone who will kill to keep it—The Cavanaugh House is Finger Lakes ghost suspense with real atmospheric pull.

You Can Tell Me

Buy Now
Author: Melinda Leigh
NEW RELEASE
Romantic Suspense

On the three-year anniversary of true crime writer Olivia Cruz’s own horrific kidnapping, she’s walking her podcaster friend Zoe through the crime scene when Zoe fails to appear. Olivia knows Zoe would never stand her up—not today. Zoe’s husband says she never came home the night before. The police suspect a marital dispute and aren’t looking. Olivia starts looking herself, retracing her friend’s last steps, and finds Zoe’s phone with a text containing one word: *Run.* Melinda Leigh opens the Olivia Cruz series with the romantic suspense premise that puts a survivor back in the exact circumstances she survived. 😰

The specific timing—the anniversary of Olivia’s kidnapping, the crime scene she’s revisiting—gives the novel its layered psychological tension. Whatever Zoe uncovered with her true crime podcast, it has put her in danger from someone who now knows Olivia is investigating, which means Olivia may be walking into a trap built around exactly her specific history. Leigh develops the investigation with the propulsive efficiency that has made her one of the romantic suspense genre’s most commercially successful authors. 🔍

Leigh is a New York Times bestselling author with a massive readership that has followed her across many series for the combination of genuine thriller momentum, romantic threads that develop under pressure rather than beside it, and protagonists whose specific histories give every case its personal stakes. *You Can Tell Me* launches Olivia Cruz with the specific combination of survivor’s knowledge and survivor’s vulnerability that makes the series premise genuinely distinctive. As a new release this is an immediate essential for her readership. ⭐

Why this grips you: A true crime writer on the anniversary of her own kidnapping, her friend missing with a one-word text—*Run*—and the question of whether investigating will lead her into the same trap—Melinda Leigh’s new release at full suspense intensity.

Buy Now
Author: Melanie Harlow
NEW RELEASE
Contemporary Romance

Ten years ago, Mila Ferguson left Hart’s Landing behind—a devastating fire, a stolen kiss, and a shattered circle of friends she hasn’t fully recovered. She’s back now because a crisis requires it, with the specific intention of getting in, handling the situation, and getting out before her mother’s criticism or Everett McKean’s presence can do additional damage. Everett is the town’s beloved mayor, has never stopped wondering about Mila, and is not planning to waste the second chance of her return. Melanie Harlow opens *Hart’s Landing* with the contemporary romance premise built on the most emotionally loaded variety of homecoming. 💙

The questions that the novel holds in sustained tension—what really happened the night of the fire, who is actually responsible, and whether knowing the truth will free Mila or burn down the future she’s starting to imagine—give the romance its thriller dimension alongside the emotional one. Harlow develops the mystery of the past with real structural control, parceling out the revelations at exactly the pace the romantic development requires. 🔍

Harlow is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author whose contemporary romance work has built one of the genre’s most devoted readerships. *Hart’s Landing* demonstrates the qualities that earned that loyalty: small-town atmosphere rendered with genuine community warmth, a second-chance romance with specific shared history rather than generic past entanglement, and the kind of emotional honesty about what returning home actually costs that distinguishes contemporary romance that takes its characters seriously. As a new release this delivers at full strength. ⭐

Why this draws you in: A devastating fire ten years ago, a stolen kiss, a mayor who never stopped wondering, and the question of what really happened the night she left—Melanie Harlow’s new release second-chance romance with real emotional depth.

Buy Now
Author: Douglas Stuart
NEW RELEASE
LGBTQ+ Family Life Fiction

John-Calum Macleod takes the ferry home to the Isle of Harris in the Outer Hebrides with his art school degree, no money, and no clear sense of what comes next. The croft he returns to holds his father John—sheep farmer, tweed weaver, lay Presbyterian preacher—and his grandmother Ella, a profanity-loving Glaswegian whose warmth helped Cal survive his mother’s departure. Douglas Stuart—the Booker Prize-winning author of *Shuggie Bain*—opens *John of John* with the specific texture of a homecoming that reveals as much about the person returning as it does about the place. 🌿

Cal privately wonders if any lonely men might be found on the barren Hebridean hillsides while his father watches his long hair, strange clothes, and spiritual disinterest with dismay. Stuart develops the father-son tension with the specific care that the conflict deserves: John’s disappointment in Cal is real, Cal’s love for his father is real, and neither cancels the other. The revelation that Cal is not the only one keeping secrets in the croft house gives the novel its structural turn. 💙

Stuart is one of contemporary British literary fiction’s most acclaimed voices—*Shuggie Bain* won the Booker Prize in 2020 and has been read and loved by millions—and *John of John* demonstrates the same qualities that made that debut extraordinary: precise attention to the specific texture of working-class Scottish life, the specific weight of love between people who don’t know how to express it, and the kind of prose that makes the bleakness of the Hebridean landscape feel simultaneously desolate and beautiful. As a new release this is an immediate essential. ⭐

Why this endures: A young Hebridean man home from art school with nothing to show, a Presbyterian father whose faith runs directly against his son’s secrets, and a croft full of things nobody is saying—Douglas Stuart’s new novel from the Booker Prize-winning author of *Shuggie Bain*.