Emmeline Pankhurst became a suffragette at fourteen. By the time the fight was won, she had been arrested more times than most activists experience in a lifetime, survived hunger strikes, built and led the most confrontational women’s rights movement Britain had ever seen, and watched a cause she gave everything to finally, irreversibly succeed. My Own Story is her account of all of it — told in her own voice, with the directness of someone who never had much patience for the polite version. ✊
Born in Manchester in 1858, Pankhurst developed a philosophy of militant direct action at a time when suffragettes were expected to petition quietly and wait. She didn’t. The Women’s Social and Political Union under her leadership broke windows, chained themselves to railings, went on hunger strike in prison, and forced a movement that had been politely ignored for decades onto the front pages and into the political conversation. By 1927 she would stand for parliament herself. 📜
The memoir is both a historical document and a genuinely compelling piece of political writing — the arguments Pankhurst makes for why peaceful protest had failed and more confrontational tactics were morally necessary remain as sharp as when she made them. The book served as the basis for the award-winning film Suffragette, with Meryl Streep in the role of Pankhurst, but the source material is considerably richer than any adaptation. 🕊️
What makes this essential: The autobiography of Emmeline Pankhurst — the most influential leader of the British suffragette movement — covering organization, outrage, hunger strikes, and the dogged campaign that ultimately won women the right to vote, told entirely in her own unflinching words. Free today and genuinely essential reading for anyone interested in political history, activism, or what it actually takes to change the world.
Marie Fortune is thirty-nine, a successful Boston dog groomer who has had her fill of wealthy clients and their pampered animals, and ready for something entirely different. A coastal Maine town where she spent fond childhood summers sounds like exactly the right change — until her great-aunt’s inheritance turns out to be a dilapidated historic house on a hill overlooking the harbor, and the locals unanimously advise her to walk away. Marie feels a connection she can’t explain. She decides to renovate. 🐾
Sophie Love builds the Canine Casper series on the cozy mystery formula with two additions that distinguish it from the standard setup: the house is haunted, and the dog the great-aunt also left behind is not a typical dog. Both facts become relevant in short order when an unexpected death occurs and the investigation that follows turns out to be considerably more than idle curiosity — Marie’s entire future at the B&B she is betting everything on may depend on solving it. 🏚️
The Maine coastal setting does exactly what cozy mystery settings are supposed to do — small community, scenic harbor, an ensemble of locals with strong opinions about the newcomer and her renovation project — and Love populates it with enough specific characters to make the place feel inhabited rather than atmospheric backdrop. The haunted house and mysterious dog give the series its supernatural edge without tipping into horror. 🌊
Why this delights from page one: A charming cozy animal mystery about a Boston dog groomer who inherits a haunted Maine harbor house and a very unusual dog — and finds herself solving a murder before she can finish the renovation. Free today — perfect for fans of Donna Andrews and Rita Mae Brown who want their cozy mysteries atmospheric, their animal companions genuinely peculiar, and their amateur sleuths with real stakes in the outcome.
Eleri Eames thought her FBI career ended when her last case got her committed for psychiatric evaluation. When she’s offered a second chance with the secret NightShade division, she takes it without asking too many questions — which turns out to be appropriate, because NightShade doesn’t answer many questions. Her new partner is hiding something significant. So is the division itself. And their first case involves a charismatic cult leader and a high-profile kidnapping that nothing in Eleri’s standard training prepared her for. 🔦
A.J. Scudiere builds the NightShade Forensic FBI Files on the premise that the Bureau’s most unusual cases require agents with unusual abilities — and that the line between hunter and hunted gets complicated when the hunters are supernatural themselves. Donovan Heath left a career as a sought-after medical examiner because his uncanny abilities were attracting attention he couldn’t afford. NightShade offered a solution. Whether it actually is one depends on whether Eleri figures out what he is before he decides whether to trust her. 🐺
The dual-POV structure — alternating between Eleri’s perspective and Donovan’s — gives the novel its central tension, building two characters who are each concealing something the other needs to know, thrown together on a case that requires them to function as a unit before they’ve resolved whether they can trust each other. Scudiere sustains the paranormal mystery atmosphere without sacrificing the procedural credibility. 🌑
What makes this essential: A smart, atmospheric paranormal FBI thriller about two agents with secrets — one barely holding onto her career, one hiding what he is from everyone — thrown together in a secret division where the supernatural isn’t an anomaly but a job requirement. Free today — perfect for fans of Patricia Briggs and Kelley Armstrong who want their paranormal fiction procedurally grounded, their partnerships built on genuine tension, and their FBI divisions genuinely strange.
Role Play (Off the Books Book 1)
An indie romance author who has published more books than she can count and still hasn’t broken through decides to invest in a marketing guru who promises to fix everything. The frantic search for “book boyfriend material” ends at a bar, where she accidentally spends her entire budget on an escort named Forrest — a charming single dad by day, considerably more complicated by night. Before she can demand a refund, he points out what she’s actually missing: inspiration. 📚
Kay Cove writes romantic comedy with the meta-awareness that the genre handles most entertainingly when the protagonist is herself a romance author — the tropes Forrest proposes acting out (brooding billionaires, masked men, small-town cowboys, all of it) are both the research and the joke, and Cove deploys them with the knowing affection of someone who loves the genre she’s gently ribbing. The three-month arrangement gives the novel its structure and its slow-burn engine. 💋
The complications arrive on schedule: the red flags that are hard to ignore, the single dad situation that makes everything more complicated, and the increasingly blurred line between performance and something neither of them planned for. Cove handles the shift from comedy to genuine feeling with enough lightness to preserve the fun and enough honesty to make the eventual emotional payoff land. 😂
What makes this irresistible: A wickedly funny romantic comedy about a struggling romance author who accidentally hires an escort as her muse — and spends three months acting out every genre trope with a man who is either the worst idea she’s ever had or the best. On sale today for $2.99 — perfect for fans of Helen Hoang and Talia Hibbert who want their romantic comedy self-aware, their banter sharp, and their slow burns worth every chapter of the setup.
Betrayal, in Myf’s experience, doesn’t sting — it is something considerably worse than that, something that goes all the way down. She has found someone to blame for hers, focused all her pain on a single target, and is now very deliberately making that target’s existence difficult. The target in question — the narrator, and very much on the receiving end of Myf’s fury — did not want to hurt her. Whether that matters is the question the novel keeps circling. 🐺
Lauretta Hignett builds the Hidden City Supernatural Sleuth series on the paranormal romance and urban fantasy combination that the shifter thriller genre does most effectively when it commits to character — the supernatural elements are the framework, but the emotional engine is the specific, personal damage that Myf and her reluctant adversary are carrying into every encounter. The “she wants to destroy me and I can’t entirely blame her” dynamic is a strong foundation for a series, and Hignett executes it with wit and genuine feeling. 🔥
The Hidden City setting gives the series its world-building backbone — a supernatural community operating beneath or alongside the ordinary one, with its own politics, its own rules, and its own particular complications for two people who are on opposite sides of a wound that hasn’t healed. The sleuth element adds investigative structure to what might otherwise be pure paranormal romance, giving readers both the emotional pull and the plot engine. 🌆
Why this captivates from page one: A sharp, emotionally charged paranormal thriller about a werewolf investigator on the receiving end of a dragon’s very focused, very personal vendetta — and the complicated history that explains why she’s not entirely wrong. On sale today for $2.49 — perfect for fans of Ilona Andrews and Patricia Briggs who want their shifter fiction funny, their supernatural world-building inventive, and their enemies-to-lovers tension genuinely electric.
Mark Hawkins is found dead in a seedy motel — an apparent overdose, case closed. Billionaire computer genius Avery Turner is not satisfied with that verdict. Hawkins was her old friend, and he was on the trail of the legendary General’s Gold when he died. Avery is going to find what he was looking for. She enlists Carter Mosley, a deep-sea shipwreck diver turned social media sensation with an adrenaline problem and exactly the skills the search requires. 🏆
LynDee Walker and Bruce Robert Coffin build the Turner and Mosley Files on the action-adventure treasure hunt format that fiction handles most entertainingly when the protagonists are genuinely mismatched and the obstacles are genuinely dangerous. The route from Florida to Maine to the mountains of Virginia to the depths of the Atlantic Ocean generates enough geographic variety to keep the momentum high, and the adversaries — treacherous gangs, man-eating sharks, a world of double-crosses — match the ambition of the treasure itself. 🦈
The partnership dynamic between Avery and Carter is the series’ real engine — the billionaire with resources and determination paired with the diver with skills and instincts, each one essential to what the other can’t do alone. Walker and Coffin, both established thriller writers in their own right, bring complementary strengths to the collaboration, and the result has the pacing of a novel written by two people who know exactly how to keep pages turning. 🗺️
What makes this essential: A high-octane treasure hunt thriller following a billionaire tech genius and an adrenaline-junkie deep-sea diver from Florida to the Atlantic — hunting legendary gold, dodging deadly adversaries, and untangling a conspiracy that begins with one suspicious death. On sale today for $2.49 — perfect for fans of Clive Cussler and Steve Berry who want their adventure fiction fast, their locations varied, and their treasure worth every risk taken to find it.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





