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Author: Joy Ellis, Helen H. Durrant, Gretta Mulrooney, Bill Kitson, David Hodges
FREE
Police Procedurals

Five bestselling crime authors. Five short stories. Five complete mysteries in a single collection from Joffe Books—a publisher that has built one of the most reliable rosters in British crime fiction. The authors represented here have collectively sold over five million books, and each story gives readers a self-contained introduction to the specific voice and world that has made each writer’s longer series so popular. 🔍

The range across the five stories covers the genre’s breadth. Gretta Mulrooney’s *The Worm Turns* follows investigator Tyrone Swift into a cold case involving a woman who died alone in a tunnel beneath her house. Helen H. Durrant’s *The Carrion Crow* finds Detective Tom Calladine unable to take a holiday without a murder investigation materializing around him. David Hodges sends Detective Kate Hamblin after a twisted serial killer in *Creeper on the Levels*. Bill Kitson’s *Time to Kill* sets a stage for murder with the economy of a writer who knows exactly how much setup a short story requires. Joy Ellis closes the collection with *Forgive Me*—a man found dead with a note reading “Please forgive me,” and everything that follows from those three words. 💀

Short story collections from established crime series authors serve a specific and valuable function: they let new readers sample the voice and world before committing to a full-length novel, and they give existing fans a new encounter with characters they already love. The Joffe Books collection delivers both. Each story stands completely on its own while pointing toward the larger fictional worlds each author has built. 📚

What makes this essential: Five of British crime fiction’s most popular authors deliver five complete short mysteries in one free collection—tunnels, holiday murders, serial killers, staged deaths, and a note that reads “Please forgive me,” all in the time it takes to read a long lunch. 🌟

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Author: Dale Mann, Willow Walsh
FREE
Reference

The 2020 pandemic made a useful demonstration available to anyone paying attention: the people who were least disrupted by extended lockdowns and supply shortages were the ones who had prepared in advance. Preppers—a community that has been dismissed as paranoid for decades—turned out to have been correct about the basic proposition that self-sufficiency is worth investing in before the crisis arrives rather than during it. The question for everyone else became how to build that kind of resilience without spending years developing it from scratch. 🏕️

The Prepper’s Survival Bible addresses that question comprehensively. The coverage spans long-term food storage and stockpiling, off-grid living, canning and preservation, home defense, self-sufficiency systems, and emergency preparedness for a wide range of scenarios—from natural disasters to infrastructure failures to the kind of prolonged societal disruption that the pandemic demonstrated was more possible than most people had assumed. The approach is practical rather than ideological: this is not a manifesto about collapse but a reference for people who want to be able to take care of their families regardless of what happens. 🔦

Dale Mann and Willow Walsh organize the material accessibly enough for readers with no prior preparedness knowledge while covering enough ground to be genuinely useful to people who are further along in building their systems. The first book in the Survival Series establishes the foundation—the mindset, the core skills, the essential stockpiles—that the rest of the series builds on. 🌿

What makes this essential: Dale Mann and Willow Walsh deliver a comprehensive preparedness reference covering everything from food storage and canning to home defense and off-grid living—the complete foundation for anyone who wants to be ready for whatever comes next, starting from zero or from experience. 🌟

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Author: Scott Moon, Craig Martelle
FREE
Space Opera Science Fiction

Darklanding is the wild west of known space—a frontier world built around a spaceport and the mining operations that feed it, governed by the kind of loose institutional authority that attracts exactly the people who prefer to operate outside tighter oversight. Sheriff Thaddeus Fry arrives from the battlefields of Centauri Prime carrying the specific damage of a man who has seen too much combat—his assignment as Darklanding’s sheriff was supposed to be a step down, a quieter posting, possibly the kind of job that lets a soldier decompress. It is not that job. 🚀

The three-book omnibus collects the opening arc of the Darklanding series: a mine collapse that puts Fry immediately into the kind of action that demonstrates he is not the do-nothing sheriff anyone expected; unrest among the miners, a desperate Company executive making bad decisions, and strangers in town whose allegiances are unclear; and an attack on the mono-rail that moves unrefined ore from the mines to the spaceport—an operation that has never failed before and is now revealing that someone is willing to interfere with SagCon’s investments in ways that will not end quietly. 💥

Scott Moon and Craig Martelle—both prolific figures in the science fiction action space—build the Darklanding universe on the specific appeal of the western-in-space subgenre: the frontier setting, the lone lawman, the corporate interests versus the working people, and the particular satisfaction of watching a competent professional navigate a situation that keeps escalating. Three complete novels in one free collection is a substantial introduction to a world worth spending time in. ⚡

What makes this essential: Scott Moon and Craig Martelle deliver three complete Darklanding space opera novels in one free omnibus—a frontier spaceport, a battle-scarred sheriff who was supposed to have a quiet posting, and a wild west of known space that has absolutely no intention of staying quiet. 🌟

A Far-flung Life

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Author: M.L. Stedman
NEW RELEASE
Family Saga Fiction

Remote Western Australia, 1958. The MacBrides have worked Meredith Downs—a million-acre sheep station, an ocean of arid land—for generations. On an ordinary day, on a lonely road under the unending blue sky, patriarch Phil MacBride swerves to avoid a kangaroo. In seconds, the lives of the entire MacBride family are shattered. The accident sets in motion a chain of consequences that will claim another life, force one sibling to surrender everything for the sake of an innocent child, and send the youngest MacBride, Matt, onto a moral and emotional journey for which there is no map. 🌾

M.L. Stedman—whose debut novel The Light Between Oceans became an international bestseller and a major film—returns with a novel that asks the question at the center of her first book in a new and equally devastating form: when we do something that cannot be undone or mended, how do we go on living? The Western Australian landscape provides the same kind of moral backdrop that the lighthouse island did in The Light Between Oceans—vast, indifferent, beautiful, offering no easy absolution. 🌅

The family saga structure allows the consequences of the accident to reverberate across decades, with each generation carrying forward the weight of what the previous one chose or failed to choose. Stedman writes with the prose precision and emotional intelligence that made The Light Between Oceans such a profound reading experience—a novelist who understands that the most important moral questions are the ones that have no right answer, and that living with that uncertainty is the real work of a human life. 💛

What makes this essential: M.L. Stedman returns with a sweeping family saga set in the Australian outback—one accident, one impossible choice, and decades of consequences that illuminate the question at the heart of all her work: when something can’t be mended, how do we find the courage to go on? 🌟

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Author: C. Monet
NEW RELEASE
African American Romance

Colecion Outlaw built her business from nothing and her independence from harder material still. She keeps her circle small, stopped expecting people to stay a long time ago, and has made her peace with all of it—she is not against love, she just knows better than to build anything on a foundation that can walk out. What she wants, if she is being honest, is to be genuinely chosen. Deliberately. Not as a convenience or a placeholder. She has simply never met anyone who made her believe they meant it. 💛

One night in a basement changes that calculation. Lesley Grimson takes over his family’s empire on the same night he sees Colecion across a crowded dining room—smells her—and the night goes sideways before either of them has time to process what that means. She ends up somewhere she should not be, witnessing something she cannot unsee. For most people this would be a problem. For Lesley, it is an opportunity. 🌑

His solution is marriage. Practical, clean, airtight: she gets protection, he gets her silence. That is the official version, the one he tells everyone including himself. What the narrative makes clear from the beginning is that Lesley Grimson had already made up his mind about Colecion Outlaw before any of the practical justifications were needed—the arrangement is real but it is not the whole truth. C. Monet builds the novel on the specific pleasures of the forced-proximity marriage-of-convenience setup in dark romance: two people whose circumstances require them to be together discovering that the circumstances are not, in fact, why they are staying. ❤️

What makes this compelling: C. Monet delivers a dark romance with genuine emotional depth—a woman who has stopped expecting to be chosen, a man who made up his mind before the ink was dry, and a marriage of convenience that was never really just convenient. 🌟

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Author: Corinne Sullivan
NEW RELEASE
Domestic Thrillers

Talia Danvers is an engineer for a high-end dating app—a professional irony she is presumably accustomed to—who reconnects with Townsend Fuller, the one who got away. More precisely, the one who left her for Amanda Reade, the woman who broke them up. Townsend swears he is a changed man. Talia wants to believe him. The complicating factor is that Townsend is also the prime suspect in Amanda Reade’s disappearance. 😰

The architecture of the thriller is neatly constructed: Amanda’s sister Kaitlyn is convinced Townsend is guilty—in cases like these, it is always the boyfriend—and Talia’s colleague Meera is willing to risk everything to convince Talia that she is making a potentially fatal mistake. Talia is caught between her desire to believe in the man she loved and the mounting evidence that she should not. Then she begins receiving menacing texts from Amanda’s number. Someone is alive, or someone wants her to think so, and she cannot tell the difference. 💀

Corinne Sullivan builds the domestic thriller around the specific horror of not knowing—not knowing whether the person you have let back in is dangerous, not knowing whether the warning you are receiving is genuine or manipulation, not knowing whether the texts are from a woman who survived or a killer who is playing games. The dating app backdrop adds a layer of contemporary resonance: a woman who helps people find love algorithmically, unable to determine whether the love she has found herself is real or manufactured. 🌑

What makes this terrifying: Corinne Sullivan delivers a new domestic thriller with precisely calibrated suspense—the ex who left, the missing woman he’s suspected of killing, the texts arriving from her phone, and a protagonist who cannot tell whether she is being protected or hunted. 🌟