Super sleuth Lee Alvarez has seen some things in her time, but finding a tuxedoed dead man in her friend’s bathtub during a VIP soiree is a new one. The friend in question is an internationally acclaimed actress who recently relocated to San Francisco—specifically to one of Alamo Square’s famous Painted Ladies, which is a spectacular house to have a murder in. The circumstances are already complicated before the police even arrive. 🎭
The police’s theory is straightforward: it’s her house, it’s her tub, and there was another suspicious death connected to her recently—both romantic encounters, as it happens. The case against the actress looks airtight. Heather Haven has been writing the Alvarez Family series with sharp comedic energy and genuine mystery plotting, and book seven demonstrates why the series has built such a loyal readership—Lee is funny, resourceful, and completely unwilling to accept a convenient conclusion. 🔍
The San Francisco setting is used with real specificity—the Painted Ladies of Alamo Square are practically a character in themselves, and the city’s particular social geography gives the VIP soiree setting a texture that generic mystery backdrops rarely achieve. The Alvarez family dynamic provides warm comic relief around the investigation, and Lee’s instinct that the actress is being framed gives the mystery its moral engine. Haven balances the humor and the suspense with a practiced hand. 🌉
Why this series keeps delivering: A sharp-witted San Francisco sleuth, a glamorous murder setting, and a mystery that refuses the easy answer—Casting Call for a Corpse is the Alvarez Family series at its entertaining best. FREE today on Amazon.
Avery Barks volunteers as a search and rescue dog trainer, so when she’s asked to help search for a missing person, she’s in familiar territory. What she’s not prepared for is the victim’s spectacularly dysfunctional family, who manage to actively complicate the search efforts in ways that put lives at risk. Then Avery finds a body on the road, and the connection between the deceased and her ex-boyfriend Travis becomes uncomfortably direct. 🐕
Travis is quickly identified as the prime suspect, which puts Avery in the classic cozy mystery position of being personally invested in an investigation she has no official standing to conduct. Mary Hiker handles the ex-boyfriend dynamic with enough specificity that Avery’s conviction of his innocence feels like genuine knowledge rather than wishful thinking—she knows Travis, and the evidence doesn’t match the man she knows. Convincing everyone else is the harder problem. 🔍
Enter Chevy, Avery’s golden retriever, who turns out to be an unexpectedly effective investigative asset—the local residents’ love for the dog opens doors that would otherwise stay firmly shut. It’s a clever and charming device, and Hiker leans into it without letting it tip into absurdity. The third book in the Avery Barks series, Play Fetch works well as a standalone while rewarding readers who’ve followed the series from the start with the accumulated warmth of the ongoing character relationships. 🎾
Why this charms: A search and rescue trainer, an ex-boyfriend in trouble, and a golden retriever who is far more useful than he looks—Play Fetch is a cozy animal mystery that delivers on every count. FREE today on Amazon.
Earth’s first colonization mission was supposed to represent humanity’s hopeful reach toward the stars. It does not go according to plan. When the mission takes a deadly turn, the Marine Expeditionary Force finds itself fighting for survival on alien worlds of ice and sand, against creatures that were nowhere in the mission briefing. Justin Sloan establishes the stakes quickly and then keeps escalating them—this is military sci-fi that moves. 🚀
The secrets emerging from the chaos are the most interesting element of the setup: something ancient and deadly has been waiting out here, and the threat isn’t just local. Back on Earth, a genetically engineered danger is rising that connects to the interstellar conflict in ways that gradually become clear across the narrative. Sloan manages the dual-front storytelling with enough clarity that the connections feel revelatory rather than confusing when they land. ⭐
The Marine unit dynamics give the action sequences a human texture that pure space opera often sacrifices for spectacle. Sloan has published extensively in the military sci-fi and space fantasy space, and the craft shows—the pacing is confident, the world-building is introduced efficiently rather than front-loaded, and the sense that humanity’s survival genuinely hangs in the balance is established and maintained throughout. The Ascension Gate series has a large and devoted readership, and this first volume explains why. ⚔️
Why this launches a series worth following: Relentless military sci-fi with ancient enemies, genetic threats, and Marines fighting on the wrong side of the galaxy—Star Forged is a propulsive series opener. FREE today on Amazon.
Ghosts of Sicily
It’s 1942, German U-boats are sinking ships within sight of the New York coastline, and the Office of Naval Intelligence is convinced that waterfront spies are feeding targeting information to the enemy. Their solution is audacious: form an alliance with the most powerful criminal organization operating on the Brooklyn and Manhattan docks—Lucky Luciano’s mob. The result was one of the most successful and controversial operations in the history of what we now know as NCIS. 🚢
Mark Harmon and Leon Carroll reconstruct this extraordinary partnership through the experiences of Tony Marsloe and his fellow ONI officers, who found themselves holding secret meetings with legendary criminals, hunting clandestine spy rings on US soil, and conducting undercover missions behind the bloody front lines of the invasion of Italy. The cast of historical figures who drift through these operations reads like a dream—Meyer Lansky, General George Patton, and a kaleidoscope of agents and gangsters whose decisions shaped both the war and the future of organized crime. 🕵️
The moral complexity of the Navy-mob alliance gives the story a dimension that straight military history rarely achieves. These are not comfortable partnerships or clean victories—they’re expedient arrangements made under extreme pressure by people who understood that winning required compromises that would look very different in peacetime. Harmon and Carroll document the operation with the rigor of serious historians while keeping the narrative moving with the momentum of a thriller. 🇺🇸
Why this fascinates: The true story of the Navy’s alliance with Lucky Luciano—espionage, organized crime, and the invasion of Italy told with rare access and propulsive narrative force. A new release that reads like the best kind of stranger-than-fiction history.
Bob Dylan initially dismissed the Beatles as music for teenyboppers. Then he actually listened, and concluded they were pointing the direction where music had to go. The Beatles, meanwhile, were spinning early Dylan records obsessively, and during the 1969 Get Back sessions—the ones that became the Let It Be documentary—spontaneously ran through fifteen Dylan songs in the studio. Jim Windolf’s dual biography tracks a creative relationship that has never been examined with this level of depth and detail. 🎸
The mutual influence is the book’s subject, but the specific mechanisms are what make it fascinating. Dylan’s decision to go electric at Newport in 1965—one of the most controversial moments in folk music history—is traced in part to what he heard the Beatles doing. The Beatles’ lyrical evolution from “I Want to Hold Your Hand” to “Tomorrow Never Knows” in the space of two years reflects a direct engagement with what Dylan was demonstrating was possible in popular song. Windolf captures both trajectories with the authority of someone who has done the research and the instincts of a gifted narrative journalist. 🎵
The backstage anecdotes are terrific throughout—the first meeting between Dylan and the Beatles in their New York hotel room in 1964, the introduction of marijuana to the Fab Four that allegedly followed, the subsequent creative explosions on both sides that can be traced at least partly to that encounter. Windolf is careful to distinguish between the documented and the apocryphal, which makes the confirmed details land with greater force. For Beatles Rewind readers, this is essential. 📖
Why this is essential reading: The creative relationship that changed popular music forever, finally examined in the depth it deserves—Where the Music Had to Go is a new release that belongs on every serious music fan’s shelf.
French baking has an intimidation problem. The words “haute pâtisserie” alone are enough to send most home bakers straight back to their box mixes, conjuring images of impossibly precise laminated doughs and pastry school techniques that require years of practice. Alexander Gran’s premise is that this intimidation is largely unearned—that the heart of French home baking is actually about simplicity, pleasure, and sharing, and that the techniques are far more accessible than the reputation suggests. 🥐
The 99 recipes are organized across six chapters covering rustic countryside cakes, decadent chocolate bakes, family favorites, and elegant celebration cakes—a range that covers everything from a simple weekend gateau to something worthy of a dinner party centerpiece. Gran has adapted the classics specifically for American kitchens, which means the ingredients are available at Walmart, Target, or Kroger rather than requiring a specialty import shop, and every recipe includes both standard US cup measurements and metric grams. The dual measurement system alone removes one of the most common friction points in baking from European cookbooks. 🧁
The conversational instructions and embedded chef’s tips give the book a teaching quality that distinguishes it from cookbooks that simply list steps without explaining the reasoning behind them. Gran appears to understand that the gap between a recipe that works and a baker who understands why it works is where actual confidence gets built. For home bakers who have always wanted to attempt French baking but been put off by the mystique, this is a well-designed entry point. 🫐
Why this belongs in your kitchen: 99 authentic French cake recipes adapted for American bakers, with dual measurements and zero intimidation—The Effortless French Baker makes the good stuff genuinely accessible. A new release worth adding to your shelf.





