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Author: Jacqueline Hayley
FREE
Post-Apocalyptic Romance

A deadly virus has ravaged Chicago and Mackenzie Lyons’ carefully built life is gone. Her escape route out of the devastation runs through her best friend’s little brother, Jake Brent — who has loved her quietly for longer than she knows, and who is taking every opportunity the apocalypse offers to make sure she survives long enough to figure that out. The childhood hometown of Sanford was supposed to be safety. It has its own problems. 🌿

Jacqueline Hayley builds the After Series on the post-apocalyptic romance’s most effective tension: survival stakes high enough to be genuinely dangerous, a community that turns out to be as threatening as the outbreak in different ways, and a romance that develops under pressure without losing the emotional grounding that makes the reader care whether these specific two people make it. The misogynistic council and the motorcycle gang give the plot its external conflict while Jake and Mac’s dynamic gives it its heart. 💔

The “surviving humanity after” framing is the novel’s sharpest insight — the virus is the inciting event but not the real threat, and Hayley is interested in what people become when the structures holding them accountable collapse. That darker register keeps the romance from feeling lightweight even as the emotional warmth between Jake and Mac provides genuine counterbalance. 🔥

Why this grips from page one: A propulsive post-apocalyptic romance about a woman who escapes a devastated Chicago with the boy who has always loved her — only to find that the small town they flee to has dangers of its own, and that surviving the virus was the easy part. Free today — perfect for fans of Susan Ee and Kristine Kathryn Rusch who want their apocalyptic romance genuinely tense, their communities realistically complicated, and their love stories hard-won.

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Author: Petie McCarty
FREE
Small Town Romance

Rhett Buchanan is a billionaire developer, jaded about women for the thoroughly reasonable reason that most of the ones he meets are interested in his money rather than him. He arrives at Jupiter Island, Florida to inspect a shipment of priceless trees and meets a woman who looks like a socialite, acts like a socialite, and turns out to be the gardener. He falls head over heels before he figures that part out. She falls for him before she figures out who he is. The misunderstanding, as misunderstandings go, is unusually symmetrical. 🌺

Petie McCarty builds the Cinderella Romances series on the identity-swap premise that romantic comedy deploys most effectively when both characters are equally deceived — neither of them is performing, which means neither of them has to maintain a lie, and the revelation lands as comedy rather than betrayal. The Jupiter Island setting delivers Florida sunshine, lush landscaping, and the specific social texture of a place where old money and new money navigate each other carefully. 🌴

The Cinderella inversion — it’s the wealthy man who falls for someone he believes is above his social reach, rather than the other way around — gives the premise its fresh angle and its warmth. McCarty writes the comedy of errors with a light touch, letting the romance develop in the genuine space between two people who like each other before they know who each other is. ☀️

What makes this charming: A sunny, witty Florida romance about a billionaire developer who falls for the Jupiter Island socialite of his dreams — who is actually the gardener, and equally confused about who he is. Free today — perfect for fans of Rachel Gibson and Susan Elizabeth Phillips who want their romantic comedy breezy, their identity mix-ups genuinely funny, and their Florida settings warm enough to read on a cold day.

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Author: Brooke L. French
FREE
Medical Thrillers

Inexplicable human rabies cases are appearing in Chattanooga, Tennessee — and the victims aren’t random. Disease ecologist Letty Duquesne jumps at the chance to trace the virus back to its source, partly because this is the work she was built for, and partly because the spillover of zoonotic diseases to the human population is a problem she has personal reasons to take seriously. A violent animal attack killed her sister. Something in nature has gone very wrong, and Letty intends to find out what. 🔬

Brooke L. French builds the Letty Duquesne series on the medical thriller’s most effective structure — the scientific investigation that keeps producing answers that raise worse questions, the protagonist whose professional expertise is precisely what makes her dangerous to whoever is behind the outbreak, and the escalating sense that the closer she gets to the source, the further someone is willing to go to stop her. 🦠

The personal stakes give the thriller its emotional grounding — this isn’t abstract public health work for Letty but a direct confrontation with the kind of event that already destroyed her family once. The unwanted promotion threatening to pull her into administration adds a ticking clock that runs parallel to the outbreak’s own urgency: this may be her last chance to do the fieldwork that matters, and someone is actively trying to end the investigation. 😰

Why this grips from page one: A taut, scientifically grounded medical thriller about a disease ecologist racing to trace a mysterious rabies outbreak in Tennessee — while someone with dangerous reasons to hide the truth works just as hard to stop her. Free today — perfect for fans of Robin Cook and Tess Gerritsen who want their medical thrillers procedurally rigorous, their scientists under genuine threat, and their outbreaks rooted in real ecological anxiety.

Law Maker

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Author: Susie Tate
NEW RELEASE
Workplace Romance

Clara has been invisible by design since childhood — thick glasses, heavy fringe, a teaching assistant role at Molton Prep that keeps her safely away from the posh parents and their expectations. Her one indulgence is watching Lord Rafe Sterling sweep in to collect his son: older, aristocratic, wildly intimidating, tipped to become one of the UK’s youngest judges. The crush is ridiculous and she knows it. Then she tells his son his brain works differently, and Lord Sterling demands a meeting. 👓

Susie Tate builds Law Maker on the workplace romance dynamic that works most effectively when the power imbalance is real and both characters know it — Rafe is accustomed to having doors open immediately, and Clara is accustomed to being overlooked. The collision between those two modes produces the novel’s best scenes: Rafe bulldozing past her defenses and finding someone considerably fiercer than the mousy exterior suggested, Clara defending a child’s needs with a directness she reserves for nothing else. ⚖️

The tutoring arrangement that follows — Rafe convincing Clara to work privately with his son — gives the romance its slow-burn engine, the gradual process of Clara stopping flinching in his presence and Rafe’s obsession deepening in proportion. Tate handles the class and background tensions with enough honesty to give the eventual connection genuine weight rather than convenient resolution. 🏛️

Why this captivates from page one: A warm, slow-burn workplace romance about a self-effacing teaching assistant and the terrifying aristocratic lord who discovers — when she fiercely defends his son — that quiet people are sometimes the most surprising. A new release — perfect for fans of Penny Reid and Talia Hibbert who want their romance deeply character-driven, their heroines underestimated in useful ways, and their heroes genuinely humbled by the experience.

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Author: Martin Shaw
NEW RELEASE
Folklore & Mythology Studies

An old Irish belief holds that without a cloak of story, you will be unprepared for what the world hurls at you — and that you will remain adolescent at precisely the moment a culture worth its salt needs you to become fully human. Martin Shaw, mythographer, storyteller, and Christian thinker, begins Liturgies of the Wild from that premise: we live in a myth-impoverished age, and the poverty has left us vulnerable to stories that do not wish us well. 🌿

Shaw draws on what he calls the ancient technologies of myth and initiatory rite to map a path toward wholeness, maturity, and genuine connection. The book teaches readers to encounter myth the way it wants to be encountered — not as allegory to decode but as living thing to be changed by — and offers vivid retellings of tales powerful enough to carry a person through the kind of difficulty that cannot be solved by practical means alone. 🔥

The most unexpected element is autobiographical: Shaw traces how thirty years of living inside these ancient stories led him — by way of a 101-night vigil in a Dartmoor forest — to Christ, whom he calls the True Myth. It is not a conversion narrative in any conventional sense but a record of what happens when someone follows the mythic logic all the way to its source, wherever that turns out to be. 🏔️

What makes this essential: A profound new work from acclaimed mythographer Martin Shaw — arguing that myth is not decoration but necessity, and that learning to inhabit ancient stories is one of the few remaining paths to genuine adulthood in a culture that has largely forgotten how. A new release that will permanently change how you read a story, and how a story reads you.

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Author: Robert Wachter
NEW RELEASE
Artificial Intelligence & Semantics

Healthcare is buckling — bureaucratic overload, soaring costs, clinician burnout at historic levels — and AI doesn’t need to be perfect to help. It only needs to be better. That is the argument Robert Wachter makes in A Giant Leap, navigating between uncritical hype and reflexive skepticism to make a sober, evidence-based case for what artificial intelligence is already doing in hospitals and clinics — and what it could do next. 🏥

Wachter draws on more than 100 interviews with pioneers across medicine, technology, policy, and business to document AI’s current presence in clinical settings: drafting notes, fielding patient questions, recommending treatments, interpreting images, guiding surgeries. He does not minimize the risks — hallucinations, embedded biases, misinformation at scale — but he situates them inside a realistic assessment of what the alternative looks like when the status quo is already producing preventable harm. 🤖

The most striking claims are the empirical ones: that AI can now match, and in some areas surpass, physicians in diagnosis, and that the technology is demonstrating capacities for empathy in patient interaction that were not anticipated. Wachter examines what these findings mean for the doctor-patient relationship, for medical training, and for a healthcare system that has been slow to adopt technological change even when the evidence is clear. 💊

Why this matters: A rigorous, balanced new assessment of AI’s actual and potential role in transforming medicine — written by a leading physician and thought leader who spent years interviewing the people building this future, and refuses to tell us it will be either painless or catastrophic. A new release that belongs on the shelf of anyone who will ever be a patient, which is to say everyone.