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Author: Maggie Dallen
FREE
Romantic Comedy

The valedictorian loses a bet at an end-of-summer party and has to kiss the cocky quarterback — her enemy since kindergarten, the last person she would have chosen, and apparently the only person anyone at school wants to talk about now that September has arrived. Her crush notices. He might even be jealous. And the quarterback’s proposal — that they use the rumor to their mutual advantage — starts to sound less insane than it did initially. 😏

Maggie Dallen writes YA romantic comedy with the genre’s essential pleasures cleanly executed — the enemies-to-something-more dynamic, the fake-relationship premise with genuine emotional stakes, and the slow revelation that the person you’ve been dismissing for years has been paying considerably more attention than you realized. The high school social architecture is rendered with enough specificity to feel real rather than generic. 💋

The moment at the bonfire — when a threatening situation resolves itself not through the expected rescue but through the quarterback stepping in with a possessiveness that surprises everyone, including him — is the pivot point that Dallen sets up with satisfying patience. The line between performed relationship and actual feeling starts to blur in exactly the ways the genre promises and this series opener delivers. 🔥

Why this charms from page one: A funny, swoony YA romantic comedy about a valedictorian, a quarterback, one ill-advised party kiss, and a fake-relationship scheme that begins to feel considerably less fake as the school year progresses. Free today — perfect for fans of Jenny Han and Kasie West who want their teen romance sharply written, their banter genuinely funny, and their enemies-to-lovers slow burn worth every page of the setup.

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Author: Melanie Cellier
FREE
Fairy Tales & Folklore Adaptations

Rosalie’s family has already lost everything once, and she is not going to let it happen again. When newcomers start wandering into the enchanted rose garden that she has been carefully protecting, she steps in — direct, fierce, and completely uninterested in being charmed by anyone. Especially not by Dimitri, the captivating royal who doesn’t yet understand that in the kingdom of Glandore, being a young man of royal blood living alone in a castle is a genuinely dangerous thing to be. 🌹

Melanie Cellier builds her Kingdoms of Legacy series on fairy tale retelling done with genuine structural intelligence — the Beauty and the Beast framework is recognizable but not predictable, and the enchantment logic is built into the kingdom’s rules rather than applied as decoration. The Legacy of the title is the story the kingdom keeps trying to force its inhabitants into: the enchanted prince, the merchant’s daughter, the arc that both Rosalie and Dimitri are actively resisting. 🏰

The dynamic between them works because Cellier gives both characters genuine agency and genuine reasons to distrust the situation — Rosalie is horrified by Dimitri’s presence not because of anything personal but because she understands exactly what his presence in that castle means, and she has watched that story destroy people before. Her protectiveness is wisdom, not obstruction, which makes her a more compelling heroine than the genre’s default reluctant romantic lead. ✨

What makes this enchanting: A beautifully constructed Beauty and the Beast retelling in which both the merchant’s daughter and the royal are fully aware of the story being written around them — and equally determined not to let it end the usual way. Free today — perfect for fans of Robin McKinley and Gail Carson Levine who want their fairy tale retellings character-driven, their magic systems thoughtfully built, and their heroines genuinely formidable.

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Author: Katherine Cowley
FREE
Historical Mysteries

In Jane Austen’s *Pride and Prejudice*, Mary Bennet is the middle sister — bookish, overlooked, perpetually passed over in favor of the more dramatic Bennets on either side of her. Katherine Cowley has decided that this is an oversight worth correcting. After Mr. Bennet’s death leaves Mary without fortune or marriage prospects, an unexpected invitation arrives from a mysterious Lady Trafford of Castle Durrington — and Mary, curious as always, accepts. 📚

Cowley builds her Mary Bennet series on the pleasures that Austen-adjacent historical mystery does at its best — a protagonist whose intellectual gifts were always present but whose story was never told, dropped into a setting that gives those gifts something genuinely dangerous to work on. Castle Durrington comes with questions attached from the moment Mary arrives: who Lady Trafford actually is, what she is hiding, and what her secrets might mean for the seaside community quietly worried about Napoleon Bonaparte. 🔎

When Mary discovers a dead body — someone she herself had exposed as a would-be thief before her father’s funeral — the investigation puts everything she’s been given at risk: her position at the castle, her family’s reputation, and the education she had no other way of obtaining. For a character defined by her love of reading and her desire to be taken seriously, the stakes are exactly right. 🕯️

Why this captivates from page one: A clever, atmospheric historical mystery giving Pride and Prejudice’s most underrated Bennet sister her own story — complete with a mysterious benefactress, a Napoleonic-era conspiracy, and a dead body that Mary is uniquely positioned to investigate. Free today — perfect for fans of Deanna Raybourn and Laurie R. King who want their Regency-era mysteries literary, their heroines intellectually formidable, and their Jane Austen connections genuinely earned.

Lost: Amelia Earhart’s Three Mysterious Deaths and One Extraordinary Life

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Author: Rachel Hartigan
NEW RELEASE
Adventurer & Explorer Biographies

When Amelia Earhart’s plane vanished over the Pacific in July 1937, it generated one of the most durable unsolved mysteries in American history — and one of the most dedicated communities of obsessives ever assembled around a single question. Former National Geographic reporter Rachel Hartigan spent years inside that community, following three competing theories: capture by Japanese soldiers near the Marshall Islands, survival and death on the remote Nikumaroro atoll, or a straightforward crash into the ocean after running out of fuel. ✈️

What distinguishes Hartigan’s approach from the crowded field of Earhart speculation is the equal attention she gives to the searchers themselves — the eccentric, tenacious, often brilliant investigators whose careers and in some cases entire identities have become organized around finding what happened. The result reads less like a cold case review than a portrait of obsession, in the tradition of narrative nonfiction that uses an unsolved mystery to illuminate something larger about human nature. 🌊

The biography woven through the search narrative is equally compelling: Earhart’s unstable childhood, her unconventional marriage to publisher George Putnam, the way a PR-savvy media apparatus transformed a genuinely skilled aviator into a cultural icon, and what it cost her to maintain that image. Hartigan travels from Earhart’s Kansas birthplace to a remote Pacific expedition where forensic dogs search for DNA evidence — and the tantalizing new evidence she encounters along the way suggests the mystery may be closer to resolution than anyone expected. 🗺️

What makes this essential: A brilliantly reported new biography and mystery investigation following Amelia Earhart’s extraordinary life and the three competing theories about how it ended — told through the obsessive searchers still hunting for answers nearly ninety years later. A new release from a former National Geographic journalist — essential reading for anyone who has ever wondered what actually happened in 1937.

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Author: Sue Aikens
NEW RELEASE
Traveler & Explorer Biographies

Sue Aikens runs a remote outpost 200 miles north of the Arctic Circle, where the nearest neighbor is hours away, the winters are brutal enough to kill the unprepared, and the bears are not theoretical. She is the breakout star of National Geographic’s long-running series *Life Below Zero*, and she has been surviving impossible circumstances since long before the cameras arrived — because she was left to fend for herself as a child, and the wilderness was where she learned that she could. 🐻

North of Ordinary is the memoir that *Life Below Zero* viewers have been waiting for: the full story behind the woman the show introduced, told in her own voice with the trademark directness and dark humor that made her the series’ most compelling figure. The Alaskan material — deadly storms, a horrific bear attack, the physical and psychological demands of true isolation — is rendered with the specificity of someone who has actually lived it rather than dramatized it. 🌌

The childhood chapters give the Alaska story its emotional foundation. Sue’s abandonment and early survival — navigating a world that offered her very little — is the backstory that explains why the Arctic doesn’t frighten her the way it frightens everyone else. She learned to read dangerous environments before she learned to read maps. The memoir brings both threads together with the honesty of someone who has stopped performing toughness because she no longer needs to. ❄️

Why this moves and inspires: A raw, unforgettable memoir from the star of *Life Below Zero* — covering abandonment, survival, a bear attack, and the extraordinary life built 200 miles north of the Arctic Circle by a woman who learned to be unbreakable long before Alaska gave her the chance to prove it. A new release and essential reading for fans of the show and anyone who has ever wondered what genuine resilience actually looks like.

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Author: Ella Quittner
NEW RELEASE
Culinary Arts & Techniques

Ella Quittner cannot make a recipe without first running every possible version of it. Roast chicken? She needs to know whether spatchcocking beats trussing, whether dry-brining beats wet, whether the oven temperature that everyone uses is actually optimal or just conventional. The obsession that made her Food52’s “Absolute Best Tests” column a cult favorite is now a cookbook: 24 head-to-head methodology tests, more than 100 resulting recipes, and a research process that took her to Tokyo for tsukune technique and into Alabama kitchens for biscuit intelligence. 🍗

The cookbook as genre has two failure modes — the recipe collection that assumes you already know why you’re doing what you’re doing, and the technique manual so rigorous it forgets that people actually want to eat. Quittner avoids both by making the testing process itself the entertainment. The comparison results are reported with the same specificity as the recipes, which means readers understand not just what to do but why this version beat the alternatives — and what they’d be trading away if they chose differently. 🍳

The range is genuinely ambitious: roast chicken, pasta, biscuits, meatballs, and considerably more, each approached with the same methodical intensity regardless of whether the dish is weeknight practical or weekend project. The minimalist techniques that Quittner develops from her testing are designed to maximize flavor without maximizing complexity — the goal is always the best result for the actual effort involved, not the most impressive process. 📖

What makes this essential: A brilliantly obsessive new cookbook from the creator of Food52’s “Absolute Best Tests” — covering 24 head-to-head methodology battles, 100+ perfected recipes, and enough testing rigor to permanently change how you think about roast chicken, pasta, and biscuits. A new release and essential addition to the shelf of any cook who has ever wondered whether they’re actually doing it the best possible way.