Seattle homicide DA David Brunelle has spent his entire career putting criminals behind bars—until his girlfriend, medical examiner Kat Anderson, asks him to fly to California and defend her ex-husband on a murder charge. He cannot say no to her. What follows is the legal thriller’s most structurally interesting premise: a prosecutor who must fight not only a smooth-talking DA and an unhelpful detective, but his own deeply ingrained prosecutorial instincts at every turn. ⚖️
The client is not making things easier by refusing to give Brunelle straight answers, which is exactly the kind of behavior that reads very differently from the defense table than it did from the prosecution side. As the evidence accumulates and the case develops, Brunelle waits for the other shoe to drop—but this time the shoe is on the other foot. The fourth David Brunelle novel delivers the legal thriller at its most conceptually playful, inverting the entire premise of the series while keeping everything that makes Brunelle an engaging protagonist fully intact. 💛
Stephen Penner writes the David Brunelle series with the Seattle legal world authenticity and procedural intelligence that have sustained the series across its long run. The prosecutor-turned-defense-attorney premise gives this installment its distinctive hook within the series, and Brunelle’s relationship with Kat gives the professional reversal its personal motivation—he is doing this for her, which makes every compromising moment cost him something real. ⚡
What makes this gripping: Stephen Penner delivers the fourth David Brunelle legal thriller with its most ingenious premise—Seattle’s best homicide prosecutor forced to defend a murder suspect for love, fighting a smooth-talking DA, an unhelpful detective, an evasive client, and every instinct his career built into him. 🌟
Emelin lives in a quiet human village and knows better than to use forbidden magic—until one mistake lands her in the hands of the legendary fae assassin known as the Silent Death. He is beautiful. Brutal. Voiceless. And instead of killing her, he makes her an offer: come to the Crimson Court, the glittering heart of fae power and cruelty, and play the part of his lover in a realm where humans are nothing but prey. Survival through deception in a court that would destroy her if it knew the truth. 🌑
But Creon is not the monster she anticipated. He is worse—he seems to know what she is thinking before she does, he shields her as if by instinct, and when his burning gaze lingers on her lips she forgets which side she is supposed to be on. The fae fantasy romance premise here operates at the intersection of genuine danger and genuine feeling, which is where the spicy fae genre delivers most powerfully—when the threat is real enough that the attraction feels like betrayal of good sense rather than simply dramatic tension. 🔥
Lisette Marshall writes with the Crimson Court world-building depth and forbidden bond intensity that have made the series a standout in the crowded fae romance space—the Silent Death mythology giving Creon his particular dangerous mystique, and Emelin’s forbidden magic giving her the specific vulnerability and specific power that make her more than a passive figure in someone else’s dangerous game. ⚡
What makes this captivating: Lisette Marshall delivers a spicy fae fantasy romance of genuine dark atmosphere—a woman whose forbidden magic mistake lands her in the hands of the most feared fae assassin alive, playing his lover at the Crimson Court, and discovering that the monster she expected is somehow far more dangerous than that. 🌟
She was never supposed to walk into his club. He was never supposed to look twice at her. Men in his world cannot afford weakness, so he tells Katerina to leave—and she does, but not before she sees something she should not have seen. When she goes into hiding, it becomes his job to hunt her down. She needs to disappear for good. That was the plan. 💀
Four years later, Kat is not alone anymore. And the little boy standing beside her looks exactly like him. The Ties That Bind series launches here with the dark romantic suspense premise that A. Zavarelli and Natasha Knight handle with their characteristic psychological intensity—a criminal underworld figure who ordered a woman’s disappearance now confronting the specific moral and emotional reckoning that a child changes everything about. The four-year gap between the initial encounter and the discovery gives the story its particular weight. 💛
Zavarelli and Knight are both established names in dark romance, and their collaboration gives Mine the dual-author depth that comes from two writers who have each built reputations for taking dark premises seriously rather than softening them. The criminal underworld setting gives the danger its specific texture, and the child revelation gives the story its irreducible human stakes that no amount of criminal logic can override. 🔥
What makes this gripping: A. Zavarelli and Natasha Knight launch the Ties That Bind series with a dark romantic suspense of genuine intensity—a man who ordered a woman’s disappearance hunting her down four years later, only to find that the little boy beside her looks exactly like him. 🌟
Baby Doll
She has been held captive in one room. She has been mentally and physically abused every single day since she was sixteen years old. Then one night she realizes her captor has left the door unlocked. For the first time in eight years, she is free. Baby Doll begins at the moment most kidnapping thrillers would end—with the escape—and asks what happens next. 💔
The escape was just the beginning. Hollie Overton builds the novel on the specific and underexplored territory that follows survival: the world that continued without her, the people who grieved and moved on and now must recalibrate, the captor who is still out there, and the internal landscape of a woman who spent her formative years in captivity trying to rebuild a self in conditions of sudden freedom. The premise flips the kidnapping thriller’s conventional structure into something that requires a fundamentally different kind of suspense. 💀
Overton writes with the psychological acuity and character-first thriller craft that have made Baby Doll one of the most discussed books in the kidnapping thriller category—praised by critics and readers alike for refusing the easy catharsis of escape in favor of the much harder, much more honest story of what comes after. The dual perspective structure gives the novel its full scope. ⚡
What makes this essential: Hollie Overton delivers a kidnapping thriller that begins where most end—with the escape—following a woman held captive since sixteen who walks out a finally-unlocked door after eight years and must navigate the far harder challenge of what freedom actually means. 🌟
Actress Delilah Day has just landed the role of a lifetime playing a legendary tennis champion—and she has never picked up a racket in her life. With six weeks until filming begins, she needs intensive help fast. Enter Cassie Thorne: once destined for greatness, her tennis career ended too soon, and now she coaches wealthy amateurs while nursing the bitterness of what might have been. Blunt, disciplined, perpetually cranky, and with absolutely zero patience for beginners. 😄
Delilah may be her worst student yet. Their on-court battles generate a dynamic that starts as pure friction and develops into something considerably more complicated—both women fighting their attraction alongside their ambitions, both aware that the stakes extend well beyond a six-week coaching arrangement. When attraction collides with the specific vulnerability that ambition creates, both Delilah and Cassie must face the toughest match of their lives: keep playing it safe, or risk everything on each other. 💛
Natasha West writes with the sports romance warmth and F/F romantic comedy timing that give Courting Trouble its particular appeal—the actress-learning-tennis premise generating its comedy from genuine incompetence rather than manufactured pratfalls, and Cassie’s buried disappointment giving the coaching relationship its emotional depth beyond the attraction. The six-week deadline gives the romance its natural pressure without requiring an artificial crisis. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: Natasha West delivers an F/F sports romance of pure sparkling energy—an actress who needs to convincingly play a tennis champion in six weeks, a former pro who coaches amateurs and resents every minute of it, and on-court battles that turn into something neither of them was playing for. 🌟
Cath is a Simon Snow fan—but where the whole world is a Simon Snow fan, for Cath it is her actual life. She and her twin sister Wren grew up in the fandom together: reading, rereading, writing fan fiction, dressing up for every movie premiere. It got them through their mother leaving. Now they are going to college, Wren has decided she does not want to be roommates, and Cath is entirely on her own for the first time in her life—completely outside her comfort zone, without the person who has always been her anchor. 💛
She has a surly roommate with a charming always-around boyfriend. A fiction-writing professor who considers fan fiction the end of civilized literature. A handsome classmate who only wants to talk about words. A father who is loving and fragile and has never been properly alone. And she cannot stop writing Simon Snow fan fiction, which is simultaneously the thing keeping her functioning and the thing her professor has declared worthless. The central question Fangirl poses is whether Cath can do this—can she make it without Wren, does she want to move on if it means leaving Simon Snow behind, and is she ready to start living her own story? 📖
Rainbow Rowell writes with the coming-of-age emotional precision and fandom cultural intelligence that have made Fangirl one of the most beloved YA contemporary novels of its generation—Cath’s fan fiction identity rendered with genuine respect rather than as something to be outgrown. ⚡
What makes this unforgettable: Rainbow Rowell delivers a coming-of-age novel of genuine emotional power—a fangirl whose twin sister abandoned their shared identity at the college door, left alone with a surly roommate, an anti-fan-fiction professor, and the question of whether she can build a real life without letting go of the fictional one that saved her. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





