Everyone thinks she is crazy. A vampire killed her father, and she is going to prove it—which requires lying to her best friend, stealing classified information, and infiltrating the Vampire Council. These are the opening moves, not the endgame. The endgame involves offering herself up as a snack to one of the monsters, which is the part where her plan and any reasonable risk assessment part ways. 🧛
What she finds when she gets inside the Vampire Council is not a uniformly hostile environment. One of them looks like a potential ally—which is exactly the kind of opportunity that requires throwing caution to the wind, because needing something from a vampire is not a situation that accommodates caution. Her past is catching up to her in dark alleys. A fugitive witch has attached herself to the cause. A family secret is waiting at the bottom of the investigation that will change the shape of everything she thought she understood about her father’s death and her own history. 💀
Ella Stone builds the Dark Creatures Saga on the vampire thriller premise with the investigative momentum of a mystery and the world-building ambition of an ongoing fantasy series. The protagonist’s driving motivation—proving what killed her father—gives the novel its personal stakes beneath the supernatural action, and the Vampire Council setting gives the series its political texture. The quest for justice becoming a race for survival is the structural shift that moves the opening book from setup into momentum. ⚡
What makes this gripping: Ella Stone launches the Dark Creatures Saga with a vampire fantasy thriller of genuine momentum—a woman who knows a vampire killed her father infiltrating the Vampire Council to prove it, with a fugitive witch alongside her and a family secret waiting at the bottom of everything. 🌟
They want Venir the Darkslayer dead. He will not cooperate. He is too angry, too cursed, and by most accounts too good at killing to go quietly into the exile the corrupt Royals of Bish have arranged for him. They cast him out of their festering cities and into the Outlands, where the Underlings wait—patient, hungry, and endless. The Royals intend this as a death sentence. Venir intends to prove them wrong. ⚔️
While the Royals drown in decadence, Venir sees the truth that nobody else is willing to look at: an ancient menace is rising from below, ready to swarm the surface and wipe humanity from the map. He is not alone in this—beside him stand a rogue named Melegal and a collection of killers, outcasts, and warriors whose primary qualification is that they hate the world enough to fight it. They will carve through monsters, mercenaries, and magic across a sixteen-book series that Wrath of the Royals launches with the momentum of a writer who knows exactly what kind of story he is telling. 🌑
Craig Halloran writes sword and sorcery adventure with the propulsive pacing and morally uncomplicated hero that the genre rewards when it commits fully to its own pleasures—Venir is not a nuanced figure wrestling with ethical complexity, he is a man of savage competence doing what needs to be done in a world that no one else has the stomach for. The sixteen-book scope gives the series room to build on itself across an extended arc, and Wrath of the Royals establishes the world, the stakes, and the protagonist with the efficiency of a first installment that knows its readership. 🌟
What makes this propulsive: Craig Halloran launches the sixteen-book Darkslayer saga with a sword and sorcery adventure of relentless momentum—an exiled warrior who refuses to die, an ancient evil rising from below, and the only man savage enough to face what the corrupt Royals of Bish cannot bring themselves to acknowledge. 🌟
What separates Green Berets from other military personnel is not raw physical capability—it is the combination of clear goal-setting, systematic obstacle management, and the psychological framework for operating effectively under conditions that would paralyze most people. Bob Mayer spent decades in Special Forces developing and applying these frameworks, and The Green Beret Guide for Success translates them directly into civilian life. 💪
The Circle of Success framework at the center of the book addresses the five components of any goal achievement: What, Why, Where, Who, and How. The One-Sentence Goal Statement tool provides the focus mechanism that keeps daily tasks connected to larger objectives without requiring constant recalibration. The Character Assessment section addresses what the book treats as one of the most underexamined obstacles to success: the blind spots and hidden fears that people carry into every endeavor without recognizing their influence. The Sustained Change Methodology bridges the gap between deciding to change and actually changing, which is where most self-improvement frameworks fail. 💡
Bob Mayer is a West Point graduate, former Green Beret, and prolific author whose work spans fiction and nonfiction—the combination of operational Special Forces experience and professional writing gives the book both the authority of lived practice and the accessibility of someone who knows how to communicate complex ideas clearly. The historical examples that accompany each tool are drawn from actual Special Operations experience, which grounds the frameworks in something more durable than motivational theory. For readers who want practical systems over inspirational sentiment, this is the category of self-help that delivers. 🎯
What makes this essential: Bob Mayer delivers battle-tested Green Beret success frameworks adapted for civilian life—goal-setting, obstacle management, character assessment, and courage under pressure, drawn from decades of Special Forces experience and organized as practical tools rather than motivational theory. 🌟
How to Disagree Better
The average person would rather go to the dentist than spend twenty minutes talking to someone they strongly disagree with. Julia Minson has spent decades studying why this is and what can be done about it—not through techniques that suppress disagreement, but through a skill that the best mediators and negotiators share and that almost nobody else consciously develops: displaying genuine receptiveness to opposing views. 💡
The research finding at the center of the book is counterintuitive enough to be worth dwelling on. Receptive individuals—people who demonstrably engage with the other side’s perspective rather than simply waiting to rebut it—do not just fight less. They are better decision-makers, more effective peacemakers, and more persuasive than their non-receptive counterparts. The traditional persuasion strategies that most people rely on—arguing harder, marshaling more evidence, winning on points—are significantly less effective than the data suggests people believe them to be. Showing genuine interest in an opposing view turns out to be more influential than overwhelming it. 🤝
Minson draws on original research and case studies to make the receptiveness framework practical rather than merely aspirational—this is not a book about the virtues of open-mindedness but about the specific behaviors and communication patterns that signal receptiveness in ways that other people can actually detect and respond to. The applications span home, workplace, and civic life, which reflects both the ubiquity of disagreement and the scale of the problem that better disagreement skills would address. In an era widely described as a disagreement crisis, this is a book that addresses the actual mechanism of the problem. 🌟
What makes this essential: Julia Minson delivers decades of research on the psychology of disagreement into one practical new guide—the hidden skill that the best negotiators share, why traditional persuasion strategies underperform, and how receptiveness to opposing views makes people better decision-makers, peacemakers, and influencers. 🌟
Big Lou Junod dominated every room he entered. He worshipped his own bronzed body, Frank Sinatra, beautiful women, and the sun. A successful traveling handbag salesman who carried himself like a celebrity, he returned from road trips with stories of nightclubs where Ava Gardner and Liz Taylor couldn’t keep their eyes off him. He had countless affairs and made little effort to conceal them. He could be cruel to his wife of fifty-nine years and lavish on his youngest son. 💔
Tom Junod was that youngest son—a skin-and-bones, nervous boy devoted to his mother, who became the object of his father’s most concentrated effort at transformation. Lou wanted to make Tom a version of himself, and he pursued the project with the specific thoroughness of a man who had strong opinions about turtlenecks, alpha male behavior, and the romantic advantages of dating Jewish girls. His parting speech when Tom left for college was, in its way, a complete worldview: specific, confident, and entirely Lou. The memoir traces what Tom did with what Lou gave him, and what it cost both of them. 📖
Tom Junod is one of American journalism’s most acclaimed magazine writers—a multiple National Magazine Award winner best known for “The Falling Man” and his long relationship with Mister Rogers, which became the basis for A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood. This memoir brings the same quality of attention he has applied to other people’s lives to the most complicated relationship of his own: a father who was impossible and irreplaceable, and the question of what a man does with the version of manhood he was handed. 🌅
What makes this essential: Tom Junod delivers a new memoir of striking emotional honesty—the legendary journalist reckoning with his father Big Lou, a larger-than-life traveling salesman who loved Frank Sinatra, had countless affairs, and spent decades trying to make his youngest son into a version of himself. 🌟
Planet Money is the NPR podcast that has spent more than a decade making economics not just accessible but genuinely entertaining—the show that explains why a raisin cartel in California can exist, what pro sports’ seemingly dumbest contract reveals about building wealth, and how a smartphone factory in Patagonia illuminates global supply chains. The first book from the Planet Money team brings that same quality of storytelling to economics that affects readers’ actual lives. 💡
Longtime contributor Alex Mayyasi and the Planet Money hosts present new stories and insights across the full range of economic forces that shape daily decisions—how AI might help or replace workers, the hidden dynamics of dating markets, the Indigenous reserve in Canada that may have found a solution to the housing crisis. The book treats economics not as a technical discipline for specialists but as a lens that makes the world more legible: once you understand why certain things cost what they cost, why certain markets work the way they do, why certain policies produce outcomes opposite to their stated intentions, the world stops being mysterious and starts making a different kind of sense. 🌍
The Planet Money approach—expert research delivered through delightful storytelling rather than academic apparatus—has built one of the most loyal and large audiences in podcast history precisely because it respects listeners’ intelligence without requiring prior economics training. The book delivers that same combination in a format that allows the stories to develop at greater length and depth than the podcast format allows. For anyone who has ever listened to Planet Money and wanted more, this is the more. 📖
What makes this essential: Alex Mayyasi and the NPR Planet Money team deliver their first-ever book—new stories from more than a decade of economic reporting, covering AI, dating markets, raisin cartels, the world’s strangest sports contract, and the hidden forces shaping nearly every decision you make. 🌟





