After years of trauma and a childhood no one should have to survive, Ivy Stanton has built a life around control — control over her emotions, her relationships, and how close she lets anyone get. Then a chance encounter cracks that carefully guarded shell, and she’s forced to face the past she’s spent years running from. 🕊️
Brown writes inspirational fiction with real emotional weight, pairing Ivy’s healing journey with a faith-centered thread that never feels heavy-handed. The supporting cast — a patient love interest, a found community, a mentor who’s seen her own share of hardship — gives Ivy the space to rebuild trust in people again, slowly and believably. 🌿
It’s a moving, hopeful read for fans of Christian fiction and redemption stories, tackling difficult themes with compassion rather than melodrama. A strong opener for a series built on resilience and grace. 🌅
Why this uplifts: a faith-driven redemption story, a heroine learning to trust again, and a hopeful tone that never shies away from real struggle.
Dave Mowry spent decades living with bipolar disorder before he understood what was actually happening to him. This memoir traces that long, difficult path to diagnosis, tracking the mood swings, the misread symptoms, and the years of confusion that came before he finally had a name for what he was experiencing.
Written in plain, direct language rather than clinical jargon, the book covers depression, anxiety, and panic attacks alongside bipolar disorder, giving readers a firsthand account of what these conditions actually feel like from the inside. Mowry doesn’t romanticize the struggle or offer easy answers; he simply describes his experience honestly, which is exactly what makes it valuable.
For readers navigating a mental health diagnosis themselves, or trying to understand a loved one who is, this book offers recognition and perspective rather than pity. It’s a candid, unpolished account that many readers describe as the first thing that made them feel understood.
Why this resonates: an honest, firsthand account of living with bipolar disorder that offers real recognition to readers navigating similar struggles.
An EMP strike knocks out the power grid across the country, and in a matter of hours, modern life simply stops working. No electricity, no vehicles, no communication — just a nation of people suddenly thrown back to basics, with no idea how long the darkness will last. ⚡
Newman builds his post-apocalyptic world around a resourceful family determined to survive the collapse, and the story moves fast through the practical realities of the crisis: dwindling supplies, dangerous strangers, and the hard choices that come with protecting the people you love when the rules of society have vanished overnight. 🔦
It’s a gripping, fast-paced read for fans of EMP and survivalist fiction, heavy on tension and short on filler. Readers who enjoy prepper-thriller series with real stakes and believable characters will want to keep going straight into book two. 🛠️
Why this grips: a tense EMP-collapse premise, a resourceful family fighting to survive, and a fast pace that doesn’t let up.
All the Lonely People
Mike Gayle’s novel takes its title from the Beatles song and builds from that same well of feeling, a story about urban loneliness and the unexpected connections that can form when people stop moving fast enough to notice each other. Hubert Bird is eighty-four years old, a Jamaican-born Briton living alone in Birmingham, and his story is about what happens when someone finally asks him how he is and actually waits for the answer. 🎵
Gayle writes with genuine warmth and an understanding of how loneliness actually operates in modern urban life, not as dramatic isolation but as the accumulated weight of days that pass without meaningful contact. The intergenerational friendship at the novel’s center gives the story both its emotional engine and its implicit argument about what community requires. 💛
Readers who enjoy British literary fiction about ordinary lives and the unexpected connections that change them will find Gayle’s novel a moving, quietly important read about the epidemic hiding in plain sight on every street.
Why this moves: it tells the story of a lonely eighty-four-year-old and the friendship that changes everything with the warmth and honesty that loneliness deserves, making the Beatles song it borrows its title from feel newly necessary.
A crash course in romance implies learning something essential in a compressed, intense period, and Alyssa Wilde builds her novel around exactly that kind of accelerated emotional education, a situation that forces two people together in circumstances where the usual slow getting-to-know-you timeline is unavailable and the connection has to be built fast or not at all. 💕
Wilde writes contemporary romance with the breezy momentum that works well for a premise built around speed and compressed intimacy, giving her protagonists enough genuine chemistry that the fast timeline feels earned rather than convenient. The crash course framing allows for a romance that’s both intense and efficient, delivering its emotional beats without the slow burn that longer formats require. ⚡
Readers who enjoy contemporary romance with a fun premise, genuine central chemistry, and a pace that keeps the story moving without sacrificing emotional payoff will find Wilde’s novel a satisfying, quick read.
Why this entertains: it compresses a romance into the kind of intense, accelerated timeline that forces characters to be honest faster than they’d like, finding in that urgency a story that’s both fun and genuinely felt.
A numbered room is the kind of title that signals containment, a story that happens within four walls and uses that limitation to generate the claustrophobic pressure that psychological thrillers need. Jessica Huntley builds Room 21 around exactly that kind of confined, intensely pressured space, where the room itself becomes as much a character as the people inside it. 🚪
Huntley writes psychological suspense with the interior, close-focus style that the contained-setting thriller demands, keeping the psychological temperature high through revelation rather than action, the slow unwinding of what the room contains and what it means. The numbered designation, anonymous and institutional, signals a place with a history that predates its current occupant. 🌑
Readers who enjoy psychological thrillers built around contained settings and the specific dread of a space that seems to have its own agenda will find Huntley’s approach taut and effectively unsettling.
Why this grips: it turns a numbered room into the entire world of its thriller, using containment and claustrophobic focus to build the kind of psychological pressure that makes the space itself feel threatening long before the full picture becomes clear.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





