Scarlett has poured everything into keeping the family café alive — long hours, hard work, and a stubbornness that small-town Cozy Hollow has come to recognize as a defining character trait. The café is already fragile. The rumors starting to circulate through town could be enough to finish it off. And then someone turns up dead, and the café is right in the middle of the story everyone is telling about it. ☕
C.A. Phipps writes small-town cozy mystery with the genre’s essential pleasures intact — a community rendered with enough specific detail to feel genuinely inhabited, a protagonist whose personal stakes in the investigation go beyond civic duty, and a mystery with enough suspects and secrets to sustain genuine suspense through the resolution. The café setting gives the culinary cozy its natural backdrop, and Phipps uses the kitchen and the gossip network with equal skill. 🍰
Scarlett’s voice is the series’ real asset — practical, a little weary, and possessed of the particular stubborn loyalty to family and place that small-town cozy heroines need to feel real rather than generic. The threat to the café gives the murder investigation immediate personal stakes, which is exactly the structural move that distinguishes compelling cozy mystery from its more procedural cousins. 🌸
Why this delights from page one: A warm, charming cozy culinary mystery set in small-town Cozy Hollow, featuring a café owner fighting to keep her family’s dream alive against deadly gossip, a suspicious death, and a community with more secrets than it’s letting on. Free today and a perfect series opener for fans of Joanne Fluke and Diane Mott Davidson who want their mysteries cozy, their food descriptions mouthwatering, and their small towns worth visiting.
Three people. Each carrying a secret. Each running an agenda. All three lying about something significant. One committed a terrible crime. One is on the run. More than one has killed. What connects them — what none of them fully understands yet — is Lori. And what happened to her is the revelation that Konrath has structured the entire novel to deliver. 🕵️
J.A. Konrath is one of thriller fiction’s most technically sophisticated architects of surprise, and What Happened to Lori is the series entry that most directly foregrounds his structural obsessions — the unreliable narrator taken to its logical extreme, three separate deceptions converging on a single truth that recontextualizes everything that preceded it. The promise in the title is the promise of the book: you will not see it coming. 🌑
The multi-perspective format, which Konrath uses to layer misdirection across three separate storylines, rewards the kind of active reading that conspiracy thrillers demand at their best — each character is a puzzle, and the reader’s job is to figure out which pieces of each account are lies before the reveal does it for them. Most readers won’t succeed. That’s the point. 🔀
What makes this essential: A brilliantly constructed conspiracy thriller built around three liars, one terrible crime, and a twist so well-engineered that even readers who pride themselves on seeing endings coming tend to miss this one. Free today — perfect for fans of Gillian Flynn and S.J. Watson who want their psychological thrillers ruthlessly plotted, their narrators genuinely untrustworthy, and their final reveals genuinely shocking.
The apocalypse arrived without drama — no bombs, no EMP pulse, no grid collapse. Just governmental incompetence compounding financial fraud until the whole structure failed, slowly and then all at once. Jeff Mann is 58 years old, an avid reader of post-apocalyptic fiction, and uniquely positioned to recognize that all those novels got it wrong. What followed the collapse wasn’t a dramatic catastrophe but something slower and crueler: riots, then starvation, then the billionaires retreating to their compounds while everyone else fought to survive. ☢️
AJ Newman writes post-apocalyptic fiction with the grounded, unglamorous realism that the best entries in the genre share — the collapse in Old Man’s War is political and financial rather than spectacular, which makes it considerably more unsettling than the scenarios involving mushroom clouds. Jeff’s age is a deliberate narrative choice that separates the series from the young-protagonist survival fiction that dominates the genre, giving the story a different emotional register and a different set of practical concerns. 🌍
The human trafficking thread — which begins when Jeff saves two women from slavers and grows into a crusade — gives the survival narrative a moral center that pure resource-acquisition stories often lack. One man, two women, and a world that has decided most people are expendable: the stakes are personal before they’re heroic, which is exactly where post-apocalyptic fiction is most interesting. 🔥
Why this grips from page one: A grounded, unnervingly plausible post-apocalyptic thriller about a collapse driven by governmental failure rather than spectacle — and one 58-year-old man’s one-person crusade against human trafficking in a world that’s stopped caring. Free today — perfect for fans of James Wesley Rawles and William Forstchen who want their apocalypse fiction realistic, their protagonists unconventional, and their moral stakes genuinely high.
Second Acts Vintage (Nora Blackwell)
Nora Blackwell runs Second Acts Vintage in the charming New England town of Millbrook — a carefully curated shop where old clothes carry old stories. When the historic Ashford estate opens for liquidation, Nora finds more than exquisite 1940s pieces: her black Labrador Gatsby fixates on a navy-blue coat with unusual intensity, and inside its hidden pocket is a diary that’s been sealed for over eighty years. The coat belonged to Catherine Ashford, who died young. Her sister never let go. 🧥
Dianne Harman builds her Nora Blackwell series on a premise that cozy mystery handles with particular charm when it commits fully — the object-with-a-history as the mystery’s entry point, the amateur investigator whose specific professional expertise makes her uniquely equipped to follow the trail. A vintage shop owner who understands the emotional weight clothing carries is exactly the right person to find a hidden diary and feel obligated to act on what it contains. 🔍
The 1940s cold-case structure gives the novel a dual-timeline quality without requiring Harman to split the narrative — the past arrives through the diary, filtered through Nora’s reading and investigation, which keeps the pacing tight while delivering the period atmosphere that historical cozy readers love. Gatsby’s role as an instinctive detector of the coat’s significance is a nice touch that the genre’s animal-companion tradition will appreciate. 🐾
Why this enchants from page one: A warm, atmospheric new cozy mystery about a New England vintage shop owner whose black Lab leads her to a hidden diary — and an eighty-year-old family secret sewn into the lining of a navy coat. A new release from a cozy mystery author with a devoted readership, perfect for fans of Laura Childs and Monica Ferris who want their mysteries object-centered, their settings charming, and their protagonists genuinely passionate about what they do.
Liza Minnelli decided at sixteen that sympathy was her mother’s business. She would give people joy. What that vow cost her — and what it protected her from — is the subject of a memoir that arrives with the authority of someone who has survived things that would have finished most people: Judy Garland for a mother, Vincente Minnelli for a father, a lifelong battle with substance use disorder, broken marriages, miscarriages, financial ruin, and the particular burden of being an EGOT icon who is rarely discussed without reference to her parents. 🎭
Liza has described this memoir as the story she has never told before, which is a claim celebrity autobiography makes more often than it delivers. The evidence here suggests she means it — the access to her own diaries throughout her life gives the narrative a specificity that ghostwritten celebrity autobiography typically lacks, and the willingness to sit with the self-doubt and the body image struggles alongside the cabaret triumphs marks this as something rawer than the polished performance her audiences have always received. ⭐
The EGOT framing — Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, Tony — gives the biography a structural spine through which Minnelli traces not just the awards but the specific artistic contexts that produced them: the Bob Fosse collaborations, the Kander and Ebb years, the Liza with a Z concert film, and the long road back from physical collapse and addiction. For fans of Minnelli and of Broadway and Hollywood history, this is essential primary source material. 🎬
Why this moves and inspires: A raw, long-awaited memoir from one of entertainment’s most extraordinary figures — covering Judy Garland’s daughter, Vincente Minnelli’s daughter, and finally, bracingly, Liza Minnelli herself. A new release from a genuine legend, finally telling her own story in her own words.
Jim Agnew has written and produced multiple feature films alongside directors Dario Argento and John Carpenter and actors including Nicolas Cage, Adrien Brody, and Jean-Claude Van Damme. His guide to surviving Hollywood as a screenwriter is not a film school curriculum or a success story. It’s an insider confessional about deals that collapsed, egos that dominated, near-disasters that became the defining experiences of a career, and what it actually costs to keep making films in a business designed to chew through the people who love it most. 🎬
The distinction Agnew draws — between understanding the craft of screenwriting and understanding the business of Hollywood — is the book’s central argument, and it’s one that film school graduates consistently discover too late. The business infrastructure: how decisions get made, who actually has power, why projects die in development, what survival requires beyond talent — is the knowledge that only comes from having lived it, and Agnew has lived enough of it to fill a genuinely useful book. 📝
The name-dropping is contextual rather than decorative — Argento and Carpenter and Cage appear not as celebrity accessories but as case studies in the specific dynamics of working with directors and stars who operate at the intersection of art and commerce. For aspiring screenwriters, this is the book that tells them what’s actually waiting on the other side of the sale. 🌟
What makes this essential: A frank, street-level insider guide to Hollywood screenwriting from a career writer-producer who worked with Carpenter, Argento, and Cage — covering what film school teaches, what it misses, and what survival in the industry actually requires. A new release and indispensable reading for anyone serious about a screenwriting career who wants honest intelligence over inspirational mythology.





