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Author: Nancy Skopin
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Private Investigator Mysteries

Nikki Hunter is a thirty-five-year-old private investigator living aboard a sailboat in the San Francisco Bay Area, the only child of a Cossack and a former nun, and thoroughly bored by the bar and restaurant surveys that pay her bills. When the brutal murder of socialite-slash-stripper Laura Howard lands on her desk, Nikki finally has a case worthy of her talent. Nancy Skopin establishes her protagonist with the confident specificity of a writer who knows exactly who she’s writing about. 🔍

The Howard murder goes cold with official investigators, which is when the victim’s mother arrives at Nikki’s marina office. The preliminary investigation quickly reveals that Laura was about to inherit several million dollars—which opens a suspect list that keeps expanding the deeper Nikki digs. Her friendship with Homicide Detective Bill Anderson gives her access she wouldn’t otherwise have, and his confidence that three recent murders share peculiar similarities transforms what looked like a single case into something considerably larger. ⛵

When the interviewees start turning up dead, the investigation shifts from professional to personal in the worst possible way. Skopin handles the escalation with real craft—the pacing accelerates naturally rather than through manufactured incident, and Nikki’s transition from investigator to target feels earned rather than contrived. The San Francisco Bay setting is used with genuine local texture, and Nikki’s best friend and fellow boat-dweller Elizabeth Gaultier adds warmth and a practical second set of eyes to the investigation. 🌉

Why this hooks you: A sharp PI on a sailboat, a dead socialite with secrets, and an investigation that turns her into the next target—Murder on the Menu is a private eye mystery with a genuinely distinctive heroine.

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Author: Ruby Vincent
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Polyamory Romance

Her parents skipped town with millions of dollars of the town’s money and left her behind to face the consequences. Nobody believes she doesn’t know where they are. Nobody will accept that she can’t get the money back. Every student at Raven River Academy is determined to extract payment from her in humiliation and pain—and nobody, the entire school agrees, will be more effective at this than the Angels. 🖤

Ruby Vincent builds the dark academy setup with the propulsive momentum that makes this subgenre so compulsively readable. The Angels turn out to be hot, mischievous, pickpocketing triplets—plus a rule-crushing model in a school uniform and a former one-night-stand with blisteringly inconvenient chemistry. Vincent leans into the chaos with full commitment, and the result is the kind of story that earns its reader’s surrender on the first chapter rather than the third. The enemies dynamic has genuine electricity. 😈

The dark romance territory here is firmly in the “morally complicated, intentionally so” category—Vincent is writing for readers who want high tension, intense attraction, and a heroine being pushed to her absolute limits before anything else. The gang dynamic gives the Angels a collective menace that the individual characters then complicate as the story develops. The first book in the Raven River Academy series establishes the world and the power dynamics with the confidence of a writer who knows exactly what her audience is looking for. 🌑

Why this pulls you under: A girl left holding her parents’ debts, a school full of enemies, and five impossibly dangerous boys who have claimed her—The Angels is dark academy romance at full throttle.

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Author: Ruby Vincent
FREE
Polyamory Romance

She was in the wrong place at the wrong time and witnessed four gods of beauty and brutality commit murder. They found her. They claimed her. They pulled her out of her safe, ordinary world and into something she had no framework for understanding. Ruby Vincent opens the Saint and Sinners series with the dark romance genre’s most reliable engine—the dangerous men who decide the heroine belongs to them—and runs it with the confident momentum of a writer who knows this world inside out. 🖤

What distinguishes Vincent’s approach is the heroine’s voice: self-aware, wry, and fully conscious of how the story she’s in is supposed to go. The meta-awareness doesn’t undercut the darkness—it sharpens it, giving the reader permission to surrender to the fantasy while acknowledging its contours. The four men are rendered with enough individual distinction that the collective claiming feels like four separate relationships rather than one undifferentiated force. 😈

The world of Cinco City that Vincent builds around the Saint and Sinners gang has genuine texture—specific enough to feel like a real criminal ecosystem, atmospheric enough to serve the genre’s heightened emotional register. The corruption arc, in which the heroine is drawn deeper into a world of death and destruction until she becomes something she didn’t know she could be, is handled with the escalating intensity the readership comes for. The series has built a substantial following for good reason. 🌑

Why this captivates: Four dangerous men, a woman who saw too much, and a dark world that pulls her in until she’s theirs in every way—Saint is dark gang romance that delivers exactly what it promises.

While England Slept

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Author: Winston S. Churchill
Regularly $14.98, Today $2.99
20th Century History of the UK

Between 1932 and 1938, Winston Churchill stood almost alone in Parliament warning that Britain was sleepwalking toward catastrophe. Nazi Germany was rearming. The appeasement policies of Neville Chamberlain were offering false comfort. The British public, still reeling from the First World War, desperately wanted to believe that peace could be preserved through diplomacy and goodwill. Churchill knew better, and he said so—repeatedly, specifically, and with mounting urgency—in the speeches collected here. 🇬🇧

Published in Britain as Arms and the Covenant and in the US as While England Slept, this collection is a remarkable historical document: a sustained argument made in real time by a man who turned out to be right about everything. Churchill’s warnings about German rearmament, about the failure of the League of Nations, about the strategic consequences of the Anschluss, about the Munich Agreement—all of it reads now with the weight of prophecy, though at the time it was simply careful observation that most people preferred not to hear. 📜

The book is presented here in its original classic form with the preface and notes by Randolph S. Churchill, which adds valuable context to the speeches’ reception and impact. Churchill’s argument that While England Slept helped turn public opinion against Chamberlain’s dovish policies and toward military preparedness is borne out by the historical record. As a window into one of history’s most consequential political failures—and the voice that tried to prevent it—this collection is indispensable. ⚔️

Why this matters: Churchill’s real-time warnings about Nazi Germany, collected as he gave them—a primary historical document and a masterclass in what it looks like to be right when everyone else is wrong.

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Author: Justin Lee
Regularly $3.99, Today $1.99
Political Philosophy

America is more polarized than at any point in recent memory, and the polarization is self-reinforcing: social media makes it easy to fill your feed with voices that agree with you, which means that when you actually encounter someone who doesn’t, you’ve lost the ability to understand why. Justin Lee’s premise is that this isn’t inevitable—that the walls can be broken down, that minds can be changed, and that the skills for doing it can be learned. 🗣️

Lee identifies five key barriers that make people resist differing opinions and provides concrete strategies for addressing each one. The approach is grounded in genuine psychological research rather than wishful thinking about civil discourse, and Lee draws on years of experience mediating contentious conversations—including some of the most charged debates in American public life—to illustrate what actually works in practice versus what sounds good in theory. The pop-culture references keep the framework accessible without undermining its rigor. 🤝

What distinguishes Talking Across the Divide from the broader genre of “let’s all get along” books is Lee’s specificity about the mechanics of resistance. He doesn’t pretend that people change their minds easily or often—he’s realistic about how hard the process is while making a compelling case that it’s both possible and worth attempting. The toolkit he provides is practical enough to use in real conversations, which is rarer than it sounds in books of this type. 📖

Why this is worth your time: Concrete, psychologically grounded strategies for actually communicating with people who disagree with you—Talking Across the Divide is one of the more genuinely useful books in a genre full of good intentions and thin advice.

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Author: Eric Dezenhall
Regularly $3.99, Today $1.99
Biographies of Political Leaders

The relationship between organized crime and American presidential power has always been acknowledged as a colorful historical footnote. Eric Dezenhall argues it’s been considerably more than that—that in some instances, one couldn’t have functioned without the other, and that the favors traded between gangsters and presidents form a continuous thread through American political history from FDR to Biden. Wiseguys and the White House is the thorough account that thread has always deserved. 🇺🇸

The specific cases Dezenhall documents are remarkable in their range and specificity: the wartime alliance with Lucky Luciano to protect the New York waterfront—which connects directly to the Navy-mob collaboration that appeared in the Ghosts of Sicily review—the Chicago Outfit’s role in electing JFK alongside Frank Sinatra, LBJ and the FBI using a mob hitman to pursue civil rights killers in Mississippi, Reagan’s complicated relationship with Lew Wasserman, and Biden’s documented early links to Frank Sheeran, the labor union enforcer immortalized in The Irishman. 🕵️

Dezenhall is not a conspiracy theorist—he’s a crisis communications professional with genuine expertise in how power actually operates, and the book is scrupulously sourced. The double-crosses are as well documented as the favors, which gives the account a credibility that pure exposé rarely achieves. For readers who think they know American political history, this is a book full of documented revelations that reframe the familiar story. 🏛️

Why this fascinates: From FDR to Biden, the documented history of how American presidents and organized crime have traded favors, betrayed each other, and shaped the country together—Wiseguys and the White House is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand power in America.

… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3