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Author: Kimberly Thomas
Women’s Fiction
FREE

Clara Hayes returns to Martha’s Vineyard to escape a scandal that upended her career, only to find herself face-to-face with the grief she’s spent two years avoiding. Once a brilliant cardiothoracic surgeon, Clara’s world falls apart when a malpractice case forces her into an unwanted sabbatical. 🌊

Seeking solitude, she retreats to the weathered beach house she and her late husband, Jack, once dreamed of restoring together. But the island refuses to stay quiet, whispering instead of unfinished love, old family wounds, and truths Clara has spent years trying not to look at. 🏡

Reconnecting with her estranged sister Evie, and with Jack’s former best friend Daniel, who is carrying secrets of his own, Clara is forced to choose between clinging to the woman she used to be and discovering who she might still become. Set against the salt-swept charm of the Vineyard, this is a story about starting over and the healing that only home can bring. 💛

Why this moves you: a widowed surgeon returns home to face the grief she’s been outrunning, and finds an unexpected chance to begin again.

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Author: Johnny Moscato
Science Fiction
FREE

It’s 2022, and Marty Harperbaron is just out walking his dog when a silent, floating, metallic blob starts following him home. Nothing he does can shake it off, and when he seeks help at the police station, authorities assume it’s some kind of foreign spy device. 👽

They’re wrong. When attacked, the blob emits a flash of light that instantly melts the attacker’s face off, and it isn’t long before more blobs appear worldwide, each one silently attaching itself to a different human host. Left alone, they seem peaceful, even protective, but scientists soon discover something stranger still. 🧪

The blobs appear to be altering their hosts’ brain chemistry, deepening feelings of love and attachment toward them. As governments panic and some conclude that killing the original hosts might end the invasion, Marty finds himself in mounting danger, and left wondering whether the blobs came to destroy humanity, or to save it from itself. 🌍

Why this surprises: an ordinary dog walk brings home an alien that might be the best or worst thing to ever happen to humanity.

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Author: Jaclyn Hardy
Contemporary Romance
FREE

The old mansion down the road from Rachel’s family ranch has always been her quiet escape, empty for years and the object of a dream she’s never told anyone about: owning it herself one day. So when she finds a handsome stranger from the city walking through it, claiming ownership, her whole world tilts. 🏡

Patrick had no idea the mansion was even his until he found the deed among his late father’s papers, and he’s traveled from Los Angeles to Idaho just to decide what to do with it. Meeting Rachel there changes his plans in ways he never saw coming. 🤠

As sparks fly between them, Patrick has to weigh the business and life he built in the city against the pull of a woman, and a home, he’s only just discovered. Roping His Heart kicks off the heartwarming Cottonwood Ranch series with a sweet, clean romance readers say they finished in a single sitting. 💕

Why this warms: a city guy’s inherited mansion becomes the last place he expects to find home, and the woman who already loves it.

The Civil War: A Visual History

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Author: DK
NEW RELEASE
History Reference

From the first shots at Fort Sumter to Lee’s surrender at Appomattox, DK’s latest visual history lays out the full arc of the Civil War through maps, battlefield photography, uniform diagrams, and period artifacts arranged for browsing as much as reading. 🗺️

The publisher’s signature visual-reference format turns dense military and political history into something genuinely navigable—troop movement maps sit alongside portraits of key generals and politicians, timelines track the war’s shifting momentum year by year, and sidebars break out the technological changes in weaponry and transport that reshaped how the war was fought. It’s built as much for dipping into a single battle or figure as for reading cover to cover. 📸

DK’s reference books have built their reputation on exactly this kind of accessibility, and this volume is no exception, balancing rigorous historical detail with a design that never feels like a textbook. It works equally well as a browsing coffee-table volume or a genuine research reference for students and history enthusiasts alike. 📚

Why this illuminates: DK maps the entire Civil War through battlefield photography, troop movement maps, and artifact-driven detail, built for browsing a single battle or reading the whole sweeping arc. ⭐

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Author: Prevention
NEW RELEASE
Health & Wellness Periodical

The July 2026 issue of Prevention brings its usual mix of practical, research-backed health guidance—nutrition advice, low-impact fitness routines, and features on healthy aging—wrapped in the accessible, everyday-reader-friendly tone the magazine has built its following on. 🌿

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Author: Craig Beck
NEW RELEASE
True Crime

Between 1972 and 1978, John Wayne Gacy murdered at least thirty-three young men and boys, burying most of them beneath his own suburban Chicago home while maintaining a public reputation as a respected local businessman and volunteer children’s entertainer.

Craig Beck moves past the familiar sensationalized retellings to examine the psychological architecture that allowed Gacy to sustain two entirely separate lives for years without detection, drawing on trial records, police files, and prior investigative accounts to trace the pattern of manipulation, denial, and compartmentalization that defined his crimes. The book pays close attention to the systemic failures that allowed warning signs to go unheeded for so long, including missed opportunities by law enforcement and a community that saw only the image Gacy carefully constructed.

Beck’s approach prioritizes the victims and the investigative failures surrounding the case over shock value, situating Gacy’s crimes within the broader history of serial murder investigation in the 1970s, a period before criminal profiling and interagency cooperation had matured into the tools investigators rely on today.

Why this matters: Craig Beck examines the psychological patterns and systemic failures that allowed John Wayne Gacy to conceal one of the twentieth century’s most devastating serial murder cases for years.