Buy Now
Author: Letty Frame
FREE
Polyamory Romance

She lost her fiancé to a drunk driver. Then her newborn daughter shifted into a wolf pup. Then four identical werewolf brothers showed up claiming she’s their fated mate — while her dead fiancé’s ghost is apparently not done with her either. Letty Frame piles complication on top of complication with the confident energy of a writer who knows exactly how much chaos her readers can handle, and the answer is: quite a lot. 🐺

The premise is emotionally ambitious in ways the paranormal romance genre doesn’t always attempt — grief, deception, new motherhood, and supernatural revelation all hitting simultaneously gives the heroine genuine reasons to resist the fated-mate pull beyond genre convention. The Wolfe brothers are possessive and intense in the expected ways, but the ghost of Ryan adds a layer of emotional complexity that most shifter romance bypasses entirely. 🌙

Frame writes the attraction between her heroine and the brothers with real heat while keeping the emotional stakes grounded in something more than instinct. The polyamory framework is handled with care rather than convenience, and the baby-werewolf element gives the story a warmth that balances the darker threads running through it. 💫

What makes this irresistible: A paranormal polyamory romance about a grieving widow whose world gets considerably more complicated when four werewolf brothers arrive, her daughter shifts for the first time, and her late fiancé’s ghost refuses to exit gracefully. Free today — perfect for fans of Eva Chase and Jaymin Eve who want their shifter romance emotionally layered, supernaturally chaotic, and impossible to stop reading.

Buy Now
Author: Rune Hunt
FREE
Dark Fantasy Romance

In the kingdom of Angevin, power belongs to humans and everyone else wears chains — literally, in our heroine’s case. She’s a mystic who has spent years imprisoned by a human king whose fear of supernatural beings has curdled into something much darker. When his campaign to eliminate all mystics finally pushes her to run, she makes it exactly as far as an orc clan that mistakes her for a murderer. Out of the frying pan, directly into the fire. 🗡️

Rune Hunt builds her dark fantasy romance on a foundation of genuine political stakes — this isn’t a world where the conflict between humans and supernaturals is decorative backdrop, it’s the engine of everything that happens to the characters. The mistaken-identity premise gives the romance an unusual shape: she needs to prove she’s not what they think she is, while simultaneously needing what only they can provide. Trust built under those conditions hits differently. 🌑

The orc clan dynamic is rendered with care — these are characters with their own code and their own wounds, not simply obstacles or prizes — and the slow movement from captivity toward something that begins to resemble belonging is where the novel earns its emotional payload. The reverse harem elements are woven into the world-building rather than dropped in from outside it. ⚔️

Why this grips from page one: A dark, immersive fantasy romance about a fugitive mystic, a case of mistaken identity with an orc clan, and a world where power corrupts absolutely and trust is the most dangerous thing anyone can offer. Free today — perfect for fans of K.F. Breene and Eva Chase who want their dark fantasy romance morally complex, politically charged, and built on the kind of slow-burn tension that makes every page feel essential.

Buy Now
Author: Chris Bennett
FREE
War & Military Action Fiction

Captain Nathaniel Chambers has survived west Texas, the violence of the frontier, and everything the Army could throw at him. What he hasn’t survived yet is coming home. The tense years before the Civil War are not a peaceful time to return east, and what should be refuge turns out to be old rivalries, dangerous politics, and a country fracturing along every fault line at once. Chambers lives by a soldier’s code — loyalty earned, friendship honored, silence is surrender — and that code is about to be tested in ways combat never prepared him for. ⚔️

Chris Bennett writes Civil War-era fiction with a character-first sensibility that sets the Road to the Breaking series apart from action-heavy military historical fiction. The brotherhood forged on the frontier carries into civilian life with all its complications intact, and the domestic front — the women holding things together, the political maneuvering, the personal costs of a man who refuses to keep his head down — gets as much attention as the looming conflict. 🎖️

Three complete novels in one box set means this is an extraordinary value even at full price, and free today makes it essentially unreasonable not to grab. The romance between Chambers and Evelyn is given room to develop properly across the series arc, built on mutual respect and tested by everything the era can throw at two people trying to build something in the shadow of a war nobody can stop. 🌅

What makes this essential: Three full novels of Civil War-era military fiction featuring a war-hardened officer, an unbreakable brotherhood, and a love story forged under the pressure of a nation coming apart. Free today — perfect for fans of Jeff Shaara and Bernard Cornwell who want their historical military fiction emotionally rich, character-driven, and built on the kind of moral clarity that makes impossible choices feel genuinely weighty.

Marrying the Captain

Buy Now
Author: Carla Kelly
Regularly $8.99, Today $1.99
Regency Romance

Eleanor “Nana” Massie learned independence the hard way — when her father tried to auction her off as a mistress, she took herself out of the equation entirely and built a life running a struggling Plymouth inn on her own terms. She’s not interested in being anyone’s anything. Then Captain Oliver Worthy arrives, sent by Lord Ratliffe with purposes he’s not immediately disclosing, and Nana finds herself intrigued despite every instinct telling her to keep her distance. 🌊

Carla Kelly is one of the most respected and distinctive voices in Regency romance — her work is consistently praised for its emotional intelligence, its historical specificity, and its heroines who feel like actual people rather than genre constructions. Nana is a Kelly heroine in the best sense: independent by necessity rather than whim, wary for excellent reasons, and capable of genuine feeling once someone earns it. 💙

Oliver Worthy is equally well drawn — a naval officer with a conscience who arrives on one mission and quietly transfers his loyalties to another. The growing awareness that Lord Ratliffe’s intentions toward Nana are darker than advertised gives the romance a genuine thriller undercurrent, and Kelly handles the shift from courtship to protection with the kind of earned emotional momentum that separates great Regency romance from competent Regency romance. ⚓

Why this delights from page one: A beautifully crafted Regency romance featuring a fiercely independent heroine who built her freedom the hard way and a naval captain who arrives as a threat and stays as a protector. Perfect for fans of Georgette Heyer and Mary Balogh who want their historical romance emotionally intelligent, historically grounded, and built on the kind of genuine character respect that makes the happily-ever-after feel truly earned.

Buy Now
Author: Richard Wagamese
Regularly $17.99, Today $2.99
Literary Fiction

Franklin Starlight’s father Eldon is dying — destroyed by decades of drinking, a body that has finally run out of ways to survive its own punishment. Franklin has never been close to this man who was barely present and never explained himself. But Eldon has one request: a journey into the mountainous backcountry on horseback, to find a place to die in the warrior way. And as they ride, Eldon begins to talk — about a childhood in poverty, about the Korean War, about what combat does to a person, and about the moments of love and happiness that got buried under everything else. 🌲

Richard Wagamese was one of the most important Indigenous Canadian writers of his generation, and Medicine Walk is widely regarded as his masterwork — a spare, luminous novel about fathers and sons, about the stories we withhold and the damage that withholding does, and about the land as witness to human experience. The prose has the quality of the wilderness it moves through: clear, unhurried, and carrying more weight than its surface suggests. 🏔️

The novel operates on multiple levels simultaneously — as a road narrative, as a meditation on Indigenous experience and trauma, and as a deeply intimate account of a reconciliation that arrives almost too late. Wagamese earned comparisons to Cormac McCarthy without ever sounding like him, which is the highest compliment the comparison can offer. 🌿

What makes this unforgettable: A spare, luminous literary masterpiece about a young man who rides into the wilderness with the father he never knew — and the story of a life, told in the shadow of death, that changes everything. Perfect for readers of Cormac McCarthy and Thomas King who want their literary fiction elemental, emotionally devastating, and written with the kind of precise beauty that stays with you for years.

Buy Now
Author: Andrea Levy
Regularly $19.99, Today $2.99
Historical Literary Fiction

London, 1948. Hortense Joseph arrives from Jamaica with her life in a suitcase and her resolve intact, expecting the mother country to be what she was promised. Gilbert Joseph returns from the war expecting to be received as a hero, and finds that his service counts for nothing against the color of his skin. Their white landlady Queenie navigates her own complicated loyalties, until the return of her husband Bernard — damaged by combat in ways he can’t articulate — forces a reckoning that none of them can avoid. 🌍

Andrea Levy’s Whitbread Prize-winning novel tells its story through four alternating voices, and the technical achievement is as impressive as the emotional one — each narrator has a distinct register, a distinct set of blind spots, and a distinct relationship to the truth they’re all circling. The result is a novel that feels genuinely polyphonic rather than merely multi-perspectival. Levy understood that the Windrush generation’s experience could only be fully rendered by showing it from every angle simultaneously. ✈️

The wit and warmth that characterize the novel are its most surprising qualities — this is a story about racism, displacement, and the gap between colonial promise and metropolitan reality, but Levy refuses to let the weight of her subject extinguish the comedy and tenderness in her characters’ lives. The combination is devastating in the best possible way. 🏡

Why this endures as a modern classic: A magnificent, multi-voiced historical novel about four people whose lives intersect in postwar London — told with the wit, compassion, and moral intelligence that made Andrea Levy one of the essential British novelists of her generation. Perfect for readers of Zadie Smith and Bernardine Evaristo who want their historical fiction humane, formally inventive, and built on the kind of character richness that makes every page feel essential.

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