Andy Foster never expected lightning to strike when she met Giovanni Carnevale, the enigmatic frontman of an up-and-coming rock band—but she was thunderstruck. Her freelance writing career provides the perfect excuse to follow the flirtation from city to city, professional cover for something that feels anything but professional. As she gets closer to making her fantasies a reality, she finds herself entangled in the fake and sometimes dangerous world of celebrity where nothing is as it seems, including the celebrities themselves. 🎸
Over a tumultuous three-year courtship, it becomes clear that Andy and Vanni are bound together by something neither can fight—something that also draws the ire of another fan determined to claim him as exclusively hers. The three of them are unknowingly racing toward a dramatic moment of truth that will leave two people injured and one dead, with a twist that the novel earns across its full three years of accumulated tension. 💀
Ginger Voight writes Groupie with the rock world contemporary romance authenticity and unflinching look at celebrity’s darker dimensions that distinguish the novel from the genre’s more romanticized entries. The three-year timeline gives the central relationship its genuine depth—this is not a quick attraction resolved in a single crisis but a sustained, complicated bond that develops in the specific environment of touring musicians and the world that forms around them. The thriller element that arrives in the novel’s final act is genuinely earned by everything that precedes it. 💛
What makes this compelling: Ginger Voight delivers a rock world contemporary romance with genuine bite—a freelance writer thunderstruck by a rising band’s frontman, a three-year courtship that pulls her into the fake and dangerous world of celebrity, and a rival fan whose obsession drives all three of them toward a twist ending that leaves nothing unchanged. 🌟
Tech-savvy Elna is determined to bring her family’s island vineyard into the twenty-first century—hoping her resourcefulness will finally earn her father’s respect and keep visitors coming to their idyllic retreat. Then a catastrophic EMP attack descends on North America with only a brief warning before the missile strikes, and Elna and her father find themselves marooned on their private island with a group of unusual guests, no power, no electronics, and no way to reach the mainland. 💀
Paradise sours quickly. Food and water are growing scarce. Medical supplies are inaccessible. Nobody knows what is happening in the outside world. The group must unify fast—but an unexpected assailant threatens their lives, Elna’s father goes missing, and another guest is gravely injured before they have managed anything like cohesion. A journey to the mainland might be the only option, except that reaching it is not easy and what waits on the other side of the water is entirely unknown. Staying on the island is becoming less viable every day. ⚡
Grace Hamilton—the prolific author of the Broken World EMP series and multiple post-apocalyptic sagas—writes the Island Refuge EMP series with the isolated-community survival dynamics and vineyard island setting that give it its distinctive identity within her catalog. The island premise strips away the usual EMP survival landscape of highways and urban collapse and replaces it with the specific pressure of a small group with no escape route and no way to summon help. 💛
What makes this essential: Grace Hamilton launches the Island Refuge EMP series with a post-apocalyptic survival thriller of claustrophobic tension—a tech-savvy woman stranded on her family’s private island vineyard with strangers after an EMP attack, no power, dwindling supplies, an unknown assailant, and a mainland that may offer salvation or something far worse. 🌟
Once a dominant All-Pro baseball pitcher, Abraham Jenkins is drifting through life with nothing but a beer truck and a broken heart after a devastating family loss—until a rip in time and space catapults him into Titanuus, a brutal war-torn kingdom where he is immediately mistaken for Ruger Slade, a legendary warrior armed with a cursed blade called Black Bane. He has swung a bat. He has never swung a sword. This is going to be a problem. 🗡️
Thrust into a blood-soaked role he never asked for, Abraham is ordered to lead the King’s Henchmen—a branded band of assassins, outlaws, and killers marked for death if they fail their missions. To find his way home, he must fight dragons, survive assassination attempts, face god-like beings, and unlock the forbidden power of the Crown of Stones, a relic that may be his only ticket back. In Titanuus, mercy is weakness, and every legend starts with blood. The Henchmen Chronicles builds its portal fantasy on the specific comic tragedy of the completely wrong person being given the completely wrong role. 😄
Craig Halloran—one of independent fantasy’s most prolific bestselling authors—writes the Henchmen Chronicles with the fish-out-of-water portal fantasy energy and epic world-building scope that have built his readership across multiple series. Abraham’s baseball background gives him his particular outsider perspective, and Titanuus gives the series its brutal, magic-saturated backdrop. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: Craig Halloran launches the Henchmen Chronicles with a portal fantasy of genuine comic epic scale—a broken-hearted baseball pitcher transported to a war-torn kingdom and mistaken for a legendary warrior, given command of assassins and outlaws, and forced to earn his way home through dragons, politics, and a cursed blade he barely knows how to hold. 🌟
The Lost Diamond
India, 1947. Celia Fforbes-Whyte’s most vivid memory of her beloved mother is the Chamakta Sitara—the family’s prized diamond—glistening at her throat. The diamond has been part of the family for as long as she can remember, but growing voices are beginning to ask whether it should ever have belonged to them at all. With danger closing in on the eve of Indian independence, Celia’s father makes a drastic choice: to protect his family, the diamond must disappear without a trace. The question is whether hiding it will create a curse that outlasts the crisis it was meant to survive. 💔
London, 2024. Heartbroken and desperate for escape, Lisa Statton retreats to the Alps—and stumbles across a sparkling gem and an unopened letter embedded in a glacier, thrust into a mystery more devastating than anything she expected to find. The dual-timeline structure connects 1947’s colonial reckoning and 2024’s discovery with the precision that the best historical mystery fiction rewards when both timelines are given equal weight and genuine consequence. 🌊
Kathleen McGurl—the prolific author of multiple beloved dual-timeline historical novels—writes The Lost Diamond with the colonial India setting specificity and glacier mystery atmosphere that give it its distinctive identity. The question of whether the Chamakta Sitara should ever have belonged to the family it has been hidden by gives the novel its moral depth alongside its mystery plot. 💛
What makes this captivating: Kathleen McGurl delivers a dual-timeline historical mystery of genuine emotional power—a family diamond hidden at Indian independence in 1947 to protect against growing questions of ownership, and a heartbroken woman in 2024 who finds it embedded in an Alpine glacier alongside an unopened letter that changes everything. 🌟
Ha-Joon Chang—one of the world’s most respected economists, described as a voice of sanity and wit in the tradition of John Kenneth Galbraith and Joseph Stiglitz—sets out to question the assumptions behind the dogma that neoliberal economists have been selling since the Age of Reagan. The central question the book poses is the one that nobody was asking before the 2008 financial collapse: what did they not tell us about capitalism? The answer, it turns out, is quite a lot. 💡
The twenty-three things are each a myth or assumption about free-market capitalism that mainstream economic theory presents as obvious fact but that does not survive scrutiny when examined honestly—from the claim that the free market is the most efficient way to organize an economy to the idea that making rich people richer benefits everyone. Chang dismantles each with accessible prose, real-world evidence, and the wry clarity of someone who has spent a career watching economic orthodoxy collide with actual outcomes. 📖
The book is lighthearted in register but serious in purpose—ending with a final chapter titled “How to Rebuild the World” that offers a genuine vision of how capitalism can be shaped to humane ends rather than the other way around. Chang’s Bad Samaritans reached an international audience, and 23 Things builds on that readership with a more direct and accessible critique. At the current price this is exceptional value for one of the most important economics books of the past two decades. 💛
What makes this essential: Ha-Joon Chang delivers one of the most important economics books of the past two decades—twenty-three things the free-market orthodoxy never told you about capitalism, from one of the world’s most respected economists, written with the clarity and wit to make the critique genuinely accessible to anyone who wonders how the financial collapse happened. 🌟
In the wake of her husband’s death, Barbara’s eighteen-year-old daughter Emily has developed a severe drug addiction—and Barbara is afraid her son Logan is heading the same direction. In desperation, she enrolls Emily in a rehab program with an intervention agent scheduled to escort her safely to the facility. Then the interventionist is murdered in the parking garage of the Atlanta airport, Emily disappears, and the daughter Barbara was trying to save becomes the prime suspect in a murder case. 💀
Barbara races to Atlanta with her son, convinced beyond any doubt that Emily is innocent—even as Detective Kent Harlan follows the evidence toward what looks like a straightforward case of an addict killing for drugs. As he gets to know Barbara, he begins to hope his read on the situation is wrong. The Intervention Series launches here with the specific Christian suspense tension that Terri Blackstock handles most powerfully: a family in genuine crisis, an impossible situation, and the question of whether faith and a mother’s conviction can hold against overwhelming circumstantial evidence. 💛
Blackstock—the bestselling author of dozens of beloved Christian suspense novels—writes with the family crisis authenticity and investigative thriller momentum that have made the Intervention Series one of her most praised works. The addiction backstory gives the novel its emotional weight before the murder arrives, and Detective Harlan’s developing relationship with Barbara gives it its romantic thread. ⚡
What makes this gripping: Terri Blackstock launches the Intervention Series with a Christian suspense thriller of genuine emotional power—a grieving mother whose addicted daughter disappears after the intervention agent is murdered, a detective convinced the evidence points one way, and a mother who knows her daughter and refuses to stop fighting. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





