The Sa’Nerra were close to defeat. Then they deployed their neural weapon and everything changed. Armed with the ability to turn Fleet crew against their own ships, the merciless alien warriors transformed entire warships into rogue threats, sending suspicion and fear through every level of human command. Surrender began to look rational. Captain Lucas Sterling knows better. For Sterling, there is only victory or death. As an Omega Captain—a rank earned through a grueling and monstrous trial that most candidates don’t survive—Sterling commands the Fleet Marauder Invictus with a mandate to fight without emotion, without boundaries, and without mercy. G.J. Ogden opens the Omega Taskforce series with the military sci-fi that fans compare to Battlestar Galactica crossed with Star Trek’s Section 31. 🚀
The Omega Taskforce operates where the rules of war don’t apply, which means Sterling can do what conventional Fleet commanders cannot: execute crew members who have been turned by the Sa’Nerra’s neural weapon rather than risk further betrayal. When the alien enemy finally sends an emissary after fifty years of total silence, Sterling discovers that the message is not peace—it is a declaration of something far worse. 🔍
Ogden is a Kindle Storyteller Award winner and Amazon #1 bestselling author. The Omega Taskforce series runs 12 books. Reviewers call it “explosive, action-filled military sci-fi space opera” and report being unable to stop reading. ⭐
Why this captivates: A black-ops captain who fights without mercy, a neural weapon that turns allies into enemies, and an alien emissary whose message is not what anyone hoped.
Kiki Lowenstein is the mother of an active toddler and the wife of a husband who is frequently absent—which means she already has both hands completely full when the Lowensteins move into their new house on the same day the construction crew walks out. She’s determined to be a good neighbor. That plan runs into immediate trouble when she manages to anger Sven and his wife, the couple next door. Then Sven turns up dead under suspicious circumstances, and Kiki—with no training, no particular qualifications, and a great deal of maternal instinct to protect her family—finds herself an amateur sleuth whether she intended to be or not. Joanna Campbell Slan opens her beloved Kiki Lowenstein series with the prequel that stands completely alone. 🐱
The mystery involves the neighbor’s escape-artist black cat Bart, who has a tendency to streak out of any open garage door at exactly the wrong moment and who turns out to be more useful to the investigation than anyone anticipated. Slan writes cozy mysteries that blend genuine humor with real social awareness, and Kiki is the kind of protagonist—imperfect, funny, fiercely protective—who readers consistently describe as feeling like their actual best friend. 🔍
Slan is a New York Times, USA Today, and Amazon bestselling author of over 30 books, and her first novel was shortlisted for the Agatha Award. The Kiki Lowenstein Scrap-n-Craft Mysteries series runs 20+ books. ⭐
Why this charms: A new house, a difficult neighbor, a suspicious death, a cat with a gift for escaping at critical moments, and Kiki Lowenstein’s first courageous encounter with crime.
A week after her car accident, Heather still can’t remember a single thing about her life. No name, no history, no explanation for why she was traveling without identification alongside a recently released ex-convict who didn’t survive the crash. A new friend has arranged for her to live and work at a Cape Cod inn while she recovers and waits to see if her memory returns. When she arrives at the Sand Dune Inn for the first time, she’s greeted by police tape and a murder scene. That doesn’t stop Heather. She immediately sets out to catch the killer—putting brand-new sleuthing skills she didn’t know she had to the test. Angela K. Ryan opens the Cape Cod Cozy Mysteries with the amnesia mystery that delivers exactly what the genre promises. 🔍
Heather’s investigation into the murder runs parallel to her deeper mystery: figuring out who she is and why she was traveling with a criminal before the accident. The quaint seaside setting gives the series its warm, distinctive atmosphere, while Heather’s specific situation—a sleuth who has to learn about herself through what she instinctively does and knows—creates a compelling hook that sets this apart from standard cozy fare. 💙
Ryan is the author of three cozy mystery series including the Sapphire Beach Cozy Mysteries and the Seaside Ice Cream Shop Mysteries. The Cape Cod series is a spinoff from the latter. Each book can be read independently. ⭐
Why this charms: A woman with no memory, a new job at a Cape Cod inn, and a murder scene waiting for her on her very first day—with questions about her own past haunting every step.
The Wilder Way
Seven years ago, Eva zu Beck was a well-paid corporate executive in London—designer clothes, successful fiancé, the picture-perfect life that looked exactly right from the outside. On her wedding day, the tears she shed weren’t tears of joy. Nearly a year later, she quit, left the marriage, and bought a one-way ticket to Nepal. What followed was a seven-year journey that took her from Everest Base Camp to a solo horse ride across Mongolia to a remote island off Yemen where she was stranded at the start of COVID-19—and eventually to the life of a YouTube adventurer and National Geographic TV host with millions of followers around the world. Eva zu Beck now tells that story in full. 🌍
The memoir is notably honest about what the journey did and didn’t deliver. Zu Beck admits she “failed to find herself” in the conventional sense that such stories promise—but learned to live with uncertainty and keep reaching toward new horizons, which turns out to be a more useful and more honest conclusion. She traces her restlessness back to a childhood where she never felt seen or at home, giving the adventure narrative a genuine emotional foundation. 🔍
Zu Beck is Polish-British, Oxford-educated, and currently lives nomadically. Publishers Weekly called this “a stirring testament to forging one’s own path—a joy.” Booklist compared it to Cheryl Strayed’s Wild for readers who love powerful travel memoirs. ⭐
Why this inspires: A corporate executive who walked away from the perfect life, seven years of solo expeditions across the world’s most remote places, and the honest memoir of what she found and didn’t find—new release.
Hayden Panettiere made her acting debut before her first birthday. By the time she was twelve, she was a working actress navigating a Hollywood career while everyone around her tried to define who she was before she had the chance to figure it out herself. In This Is Me: A Reckoning, she finally tells the story on her own terms—an irreverent, intimate, and unflinching account that begins with the pressure and exploitation of child stardom and follows her through the full arc of what came after: postpartum depression after the birth of her daughter Kaya, addiction to alcohol and opioids, the loss of her younger brother Jansen in 2023, and the slow, ongoing work of becoming a version of herself she actually recognizes. 📚
Panettiere is known to most readers as Claire Bennet from Heroes, Juliette Barnes from Nashville, or the Scream franchise—characters who survive extraordinary circumstances through stubbornness and resourcefulness. The memoir suggests those were not entirely performances. She writes with the directness of someone who has spent years watching other people tell her story incorrectly and has finally decided enough is enough. 🔍
The memoir was released May 2025. Panettiere told People she hopes readers will “laugh a little, cry a little, but most importantly finish it feeling inspired.” As a new release from one of Hollywood’s most candid voices about the real costs of child stardom, this is a timely and necessary book. ⭐
Why this matters: The actress best known as the cheerleader who saves the world tells the story of saving herself—a candid, irreverent memoir about child stardom, addiction, and what comes after—new release.
Ever heard of a steak so good it ended a battle? According to Colonel Beauregard Cracker himself, his chicken-fried steak prompted 200 of General Sherman’s Union soldiers to surrender just for a taste of his home cooking—which is the kind of claim only a man of Beauregard’s particular character could make with a straight face. Daniel Golio’s Colonel Beauregard Cracker’s Southern Recipes of 1865 follows this legendary fictional Colonel as he navigates the chaotic transition from the Civil War to Reconstruction, transforming his family estate at Magnolia Grove into a restaurant and spinning audacious tall tales along the way. The Confederacy, he maintains, lost not because of military strategy but because they ran out of sugar for the pecan pie. 😂
Beneath the comedy lies a genuinely substantive cookbook: over 40 authentic 19th-century “receipts” including Pan-Fried Buttermilk Squirrel, Rabbit Hash, Shrimp and Sausage Gumbo, and every essential of the Southern table. Golio also provides vital historical context about the African American culinary traditions—deep-fat frying, slow-stewing, pot liquor—that form the actual foundation of Southern cuisine, honoring the enslaved cooks whose innovations shaped the entire tradition. 🔍
Golio is an author, culinary educator, and former Director of Food and Beverage for several major New York hotels, bringing professional authority to a project executed with irreverent humor. New release for readers who want their culinary history served with a side of tall tales. ⭐
Why this charms: Forty authentic Civil War-era Southern recipes wrapped in the outrageously embellished memoirs of a fictional Confederate colonel—history, humor, and home cooking—new release.





