Historian Carrie Jo Jardine takes a restoration job at the abandoned Seven Sisters mansion expecting peeling wallpaper and salvageable hardwood. What she gets instead is ghostly footsteps, mysterious whispers, and vivid dreams that pull her bodily into the past — into the lives of the plantation’s former occupants, a grieving mother and a daughter who vanished, a family torn apart by secrets buried deeper than the magnolias. 🌸
M.L. Bullock builds the Seven Sisters series on the Southern Gothic paranormal romance tradition — the haunted plantation, the dreamwalker protagonist, the past that refuses to stay past. What distinguishes this series opener is the specificity of the haunting: Seven Sisters doesn’t merely feel old and sad, it feels like a place that remembers, that is actively trying to communicate something through Carrie Jo’s sleeping mind, and that the communication is becoming more urgent. 👻
The dreamwalking mechanic is handled with enough consistency to function as genuine plot structure rather than atmospheric decoration — each night Carrie Jo slips deeper, each vision raises new questions, and the danger that surfaces as the dreams intensify gives the romance its stakes. Something in the house wants what happened there to happen again, and the question of whether Carrie Jo can understand the past in time to stop the present drives the series forward from the first chapter. 🌙
What makes this captivating: A richly atmospheric Southern Gothic paranormal romance about a historian whose restoration job at a haunted Alabama plantation draws her into the lost world of its former occupants — night by night, dream by dream, until the past becomes impossible to escape. Free today — perfect for fans of Karen White and Jude Deveraux who want their paranormal romance lush, their Southern settings genuinely haunted, and their mysteries rooted in family secrets that refused to stay buried.
Newly divorced, armed with strong coffee and a Pinterest board full of impossible renovation dreams, she has arrived in Saltford Bay for a fresh start. The crumbling seaside lodge was supposed to be the beginning of something new. The town’s grumpiest, greenest contractor — Gerralt Banesman, large, broody, and apparently allergic to conversation — was not part of the plan. Their first meeting ended in spilled wood stain and mutual offense. It did not improve from there. 💚
Mary Auclair builds the Monsters of Saltford Bay series on the monster romance subgenre’s most enduring appeal — the sunshine/grump pairing with the additional wrinkle that one half of it is an orc who communicates primarily in scowls and has no apparent interest in changing. The cozy seaside setting softens the fantasy elements into something warm and domestic rather than dark, which is exactly the register this subgenre is currently doing best. 🌊
The dynamic between her relentless optimism and his determined pessimism generates the romantic tension, but Auclair gives the plot genuine stakes by introducing a shady rival threatening her renovation project — which is what forces Gerralt from grudging professional into something considerably more personally invested, and gives the romance its emotional turning point. The suspicion that there’s a heart of gold under the gruff exterior is confirmed slowly enough to be satisfying. 🏖️
Why this delights from page one: A warm, witty cozy monster romance about a freshly divorced woman renovating a seaside lodge in a town populated by monsters — including the infuriatingly grumpy orc contractor who might be hiding something worth finding. Free today — perfect for fans of Ruby Dixon and T.L. Smith who want their monster romance cozy rather than dark, their grumpy heroes worth the effort, and their seaside settings irresistibly charming.
She was given to him to start a war. He was too eager to accept. A ruthless man with a beautiful woman at his mercy — the arrangement was supposed to be transactional, political, a move in a game considerably larger than either of them. He knew the rules. He had built his entire life around the rules. Then she looked at him the way no one else ever had, and the rules stopped holding. 🌑
Willow Winters builds the dark romance formula with the specific intensity that her readers come for — the dangerous man whose power is absolute and whose composure is, it turns out, considerably more fragile than advertised. The premise is confrontational by design: a ruthless man who doesn’t let anyone close, a woman whose innocence and vulnerability he finds infuriating precisely because of what they make him feel. The tension between his code and his feelings is the engine. 🔥
Winters writes this territory with the direct, unflinching voice that dark romance requires — no softening of the power dynamics, no pretending the situation is something other than what it is, but genuine emotional development underneath the dangerous surface. The transformation from cold calculation to something he can’t control or name is rendered with enough specificity to feel earned rather than convenient. 💀
What makes this irresistible: A dark, intense romantic suspense about a powerful man who receives a woman as a political pawn — and discovers too late that the rules he built his ruthless life around offer no protection against actually falling for her. Free today — perfect for fans of Penelope Douglas and Rina Kent who want their dark romance genuinely tense, their dangerous heroes genuinely transformed, and their emotional payoffs built on something real.
The Last Wife
Waitress Olivia meets charming, wealthy Lachlan Gibson and the life he offers looks like everything she never dared to want — a fairytale wedding, a magnificent house in the beautiful town of Rosford, the freedom to paint. She takes it. Almost immediately, something feels off: strange rules, unsettling accidents that don’t seem random, and disquieting whispers about what happened to Lachlan’s previous wife. The one who died. 🥀
Matt McGregor builds The Last Wife on the domestic suspense framework that the genre executes most effectively when it commits fully to the escalation — the cage that reveals itself gradually, the protagonist whose growing awareness is outpaced by her deepening entrapment. Olivia’s attempts to investigate Lachlan’s past are rendered with enough procedural specificity to feel real, and the secret she eventually uncovers is proportionate to the dread the novel has been building. 🌑
The Rosford setting gives the thriller its particular atmosphere — the beautiful town, the magnificent house, the surface of a life that looks enviable from the outside and functions as a trap from within. McGregor understands that the most effective domestic suspense makes the reader complicit in the protagonist’s optimism before dismantling it, which is exactly what the early chapters accomplish. 😰
What makes this essential: A propulsive psychological thriller about a woman who marries into a perfect life in a beautiful town — and gradually realizes that her dream husband’s dark secret may cost her everything, including her life. On sale today for $1.49 — perfect for fans of B.A. Paris and Harriet Tyce who want their domestic suspense claustrophobic, their reveals genuinely shocking, and their perfect-life premises thoroughly dismantled.
Gerold Frank originally met with Judy Garland to collaborate on her autobiography. He finished the project alone — after her fatal overdose in 1969. What he completed draws on more than two hundred interviews and full access to her personal records and photographs, with the cooperation of her family, her doctors, and her circle in Hollywood. The result is one of the most comprehensive portraits ever assembled of one of American entertainment’s most extraordinary and most damaged figures. 🎬
The Judy Garland who emerges from Frank’s research is a woman whose talent was genuinely incomparable and whose life was shaped by forces that talent alone couldn’t survive — a studio system that medicated her as a child, a series of marriages that offered stability and delivered turbulence, and a public love that demanded everything she had in return for the validation she couldn’t find elsewhere. Frank renders all of it with the access and the restraint that authorized biography at its best requires. 🌟
The films remain vivid: The Wizard of Oz, Meet Me in St. Louis, A Star Is Born. They are the public record of what she could do. This book is the private record of what it cost. Frank’s New York Times bestselling biography was a landmark account when first published and remains the definitive source on a life that was simultaneously a legend and a tragedy — and never quite one without the other. 🎭
Why this captivates from page one: The definitive biography of Judy Garland — drawn from 200+ interviews and her private papers, completed by her authorized biographer after her death in 1969 — tracing the full arc of an incomparable talent and an American tragedy. On sale today for $1.99 — essential reading for anyone who has ever wondered what really happened behind the rainbow.
Karen Whitlaw is still processing her mother’s death when a package arrives from her estranged father — a man she has barely known since his return from Vietnam — containing a mysterious notebook she can’t explain. Then the phone call comes: her father has been murdered on the streets of New Orleans. The notebook is suddenly very important to people who are willing to make sure Karen doesn’t figure out why. 🎺
Linda Howard builds Kill and Tell on the romantic suspense formula she executes better than almost anyone — the investigation that starts with a personal loss, the protective male lead who is himself genuinely interesting, and the chemistry that develops under pressure rather than in spite of it. New Orleans homicide detective Marc Chastain expected a cold grieving daughter. Karen is warm and passionate and walking into danger she doesn’t fully understand, which changes the shape of his interest considerably. 🌃
The conspiracy that the notebook unlocks — politics, power, and a killer with reach extending well beyond New Orleans — gives the thriller its escalating stakes while the romance gives it its emotional center. Howard’s instinct for pacing means both threads tighten simultaneously rather than trading off, which is what separates genuine romantic suspense from a thriller with a love interest stapled to the side. 🔍
What makes this essential: A taut, compulsively readable romantic suspense novel about a woman who inherits her murdered father’s dangerous secrets — and the New Orleans detective who becomes both her protector and her greatest complication. On sale today for $1.99 — perfect for fans of Nora Roberts and Iris Johansen who want their romantic suspense fast-paced, their conspiracies reaching all the way to the top, and their chemistry undeniable.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





