The monsters are real. They have always been real. For centuries, the stories passed down through generations were not folklore—they were field reports, preserved in the only format that wouldn’t get anyone committed. The civilian population has been kept safe through a combination of genuine operational effectiveness and very aggressive evidence management. The people responsible for both functions are the Monster Squad: elite military rapid response teams whose existence is officially impossible and operationally essential. 🌑
When a routine mission goes catastrophically wrong, the Squad is forced to rebuild from the ashes of what it was—which would be challenge enough on its own. The complication is that the rebuilding happens while a new threat is building on the horizon: not just the creatures they were formed to contain, but their own government, which has decided that a covert paramilitary organization operating outside conventional oversight is a liability rather than an asset. The Squad now faces monsters and bureaucratic hostility simultaneously, which requires a different kind of operational flexibility than their training covered. ⚔️
Heath Stallcup writes military urban fantasy with the action pacing and unit-dynamics texture that readers of military fiction recognize and the supernatural escalation that gives the series its particular energy. The threat that builds across the novel is explicitly existential—not just for the Squad but for every human on earth—which gives the stakes a scale that the genre’s best entries consistently deliver on. 🔥
What makes this propulsive: Heath Stallcup launches Monster Squad with a military urban fantasy that earns its premise—elite operators who hunt the things that go bump in the night, now rebuilding under impossible pressure while something considerably worse than a routine monster is gathering on the horizon. 🌟
Lilith Picardie has spent her life being reminded of her illegitimacy. Being the natural daughter of an English lord is the defining fact of her social existence—a stain that Regency society treats as both permanent and deserved. When her half-sister begs her to take her place to escape an unwanted marriage with the disfigured Duke of Blackmore, Lilith agrees. She expects to endure the arrangement. She does not expect to find, behind the Duke’s cold exterior and the disfigurement that makes polite society look away, someone genuinely worth knowing. 💙
Alexander Spencer has lived an isolated life since his carriage accident—not simply because of the physical changes but because of what the accident revealed about the people around him, whose reactions made it easier to keep the world at a distance than to keep subjecting himself to it. When Lilith arrives, his first response is coldness. Her response is warmth, and patience, and a complete absence of the recoil he has been expecting. The connection that develops between them catches him entirely off guard. 🌹
The deception at the center of the story carries the stakes that identity-swap Regency romances require—when the secret is revealed, it does not simply cause embarrassment but threatens to destroy something genuinely valuable that neither character anticipated building. Alice Kirks constructs the Noble Hearts and Hidden Desires series on the premise that the people society dismisses—the illegitimate daughter, the disfigured duke—are precisely the ones capable of the deepest connection. 💛
What makes this touching: Alice Kirks delivers a Regency romance of genuine warmth—an identity swap that becomes a love story neither character planned for, two people defined by their social rejection finding in each other the recognition they’ve been denied everywhere else. 🌟
Nikki Knight returns to her childhood home of Frog Hollow, Georgia, and discovers that her late grandmother’s bed and breakfast is haunted—specifically by her grandmother, who is still roaming the halls of the Moonlight Mansion in a thoroughly opinionated afterlife. The haunting is, relatively speaking, the most manageable part of Nikki’s current situation. Not ten steps into town, she acquires a furry new companion: an abandoned royal dachshund with a suspicious past and a name—Prince Dasher Dangerdog Bean—that suggests his previous life was considerably more dramatic than his current one. 🐕
The dog, it turns out, may carry the secret to his previous owner’s untimely death. Nikki begins investigating with the particular instinct of someone who cannot walk past a mystery without poking at it—which leads to her being spotted snooping around at one too many crime scenes by the local officer, who begins appearing at inconvenient moments with an escalating number of questions. The situation requires resolution before the wrong conclusion is reached and Prince Dasher Dangerdog Bean ends up in considerably more dangerous hands than Nikki’s. 🔍
Emmie Lyn builds the Accidental Ghost Detective series on the particular pleasures of Southern Gothic cozy mystery—a small town with layers, a haunted property with personality, an animal companion with apparent investigative instincts, and a heroine who did not plan to become a detective but has discovered she is surprisingly good at it. The grandmother ghost adds a dimension that gives the series genuine warmth beyond the mystery mechanics. 🌿
What makes this charming: Emmie Lyn launches The Accidental Ghost Detective with a Southern cozy mystery of irresistible charm—a haunted Georgia B&B, a grandmother ghost with opinions, a royal dachshund named Prince Dasher Dangerdog Bean, and a reluctant amateur sleuth who keeps stumbling into exactly the right place at exactly the wrong time. 🌟
Everything You Want Is on the Other Side of Hard
Ken Rideout grew up in Somerville, Massachusetts, in a household persistently scarred by drugs and crime. At eighteen years old, he was working as a corrections officer in the same prison where his stepfather had been incarcerated—a detail that captures the particular compressed tragedy of a certain kind of American upbringing, where the institutions designed to address dysfunction become as familiar as the dysfunction itself. His brother would later serve time in the same facility. The expectations set by his environment pointed in one direction. Ken went in another. 💪
The path he found led from the streets of Somerville to Wall Street—to a career with firms including Cantor Fitzgerald and Crédit Agricole, to the kind of professional success that looks from the outside like a complete escape from the starting point. Underneath, the battle was ongoing. A decade-long addiction to opioids ran parallel to the career success, consuming the money he earned and the version of himself he was trying to build. The turning point arrived in the form of the adoption of a daughter from overseas—a child who needed a father capable of showing up, which required him to become that person first. 🌅
Rideout went on to become the fastest marathoner in the world over fifty—a physical accomplishment that embodies the memoir’s central argument about what becomes possible on the other side of the hardest work. The title is not a motivational slogan. It is a description of a life that proved the proposition true under conditions that would have stopped most people entirely. 🏃
What makes this inspiring: Ken Rideout’s memoir is an extraordinary American story—from Somerville to Wall Street, through addiction and recovery, to world-class athletic achievement—told with the directness of a man who has stopped pretending any part of it was easy. 🌟
Nora Blackwell has built the life she wanted in Millbrook, a charming New England town: a carefully curated vintage shop called Second Acts, filled with objects that carry stories from their previous lives. When the historic Ashford estate opens for liquidation, it is exactly the kind of opportunity that makes Nora’s work feel like something more than commerce—the chance to bring beautiful old things back into the world where they can be appreciated again. What she finds at the Ashford estate, buried in the lining of a navy-blue coat, is considerably more than a beautiful old thing. 🧥
The coat belonged to Catherine Ashford, who died young in the 1940s. The hidden pocket inside it contains a diary that has been concealed for over eighty years—a diary that Catherine’s sister could never let go of, that she apparently chose to bury rather than destroy, and that has been waiting inside the coat through every decade since. Nora’s black Labrador Gatsby fixates on the garment with unusual intensity that his owner has learned to trust as investigative instinct, and the investigation that follows pulls Nora into a decades-old mystery that someone went to considerable lengths to ensure would never surface. 🔍
Dianne Harman builds the Nora Blackwell series on the premise that vintage objects carry the weight of the lives that touched them—that a coat is never just a coat, and that the person willing to listen to what objects are trying to say will find stories that history forgot to record. The New England setting is rendered with warmth and specificity, and Nora’s combination of collector’s instinct and investigative determination makes her a natural cozy mystery heroine. 🏡
What makes this delightful: Dianne Harman launches the Nora Blackwell series with a vintage mystery of genuine charm—an eighty-year-old secret sewn into a coat lining, a black Labrador with uncanny instincts, and a New England shop owner who understands that the past never really stays hidden. 🌟
In the most dangerous and forgotten corners of the world, there exists a brotherhood of operators who have no names in any official record, no faces in any database, no existence in any organizational chart. They are called Ghosts—a word that is both description and designation. They move through darkness that most people will never encounter and protect freedoms that most people will never know were at risk. The premise of Encrypted Patriot is that American liberty is not self-sustaining; it is maintained, at continuous cost, by people who cannot acknowledge what they do. 🇺🇸
Dennis Currie immerses readers in the operational world of these covert protectors with the intensity of a writer who wants the reader to understand not just what these people do but what it costs them to do it—the psychological weight of operating in complete anonymity, of knowing that the history they are protecting will never record their names. The Ghosts operate in a realm where the stakes are existential and the recognition is zero, and the book is as much about what that demands of human beings as it is about the missions themselves. 🌑
The framing question Currie poses at the opening—what if everything you believe about American freedom is a lie, maintained by invisible warriors dying in places nobody knows exist—is designed to destabilize comfortable assumptions about safety and sovereignty. Whether the reader finds that question provocative or unsettling, the world the book describes is one that rewards engagement: a shadow infrastructure of dedicated operators whose existence is simultaneously essential and officially impossible. 🎯
What makes this gripping: Dennis Currie delivers a new covert operations thriller built around the most anonymous warriors in America’s defense apparatus—Encrypted Patriot is an immersive, high-stakes portrait of the people who protect freedoms they can never publicly claim credit for defending. 🌟





