Keith Calder is a gunsmith and shooting instructor with no fixed address, a girl in every town, and a healthy disrespect for authority. 🎯 He’s attending a shoot in the Scottish borders when one of the other attendees slips away from the group. Keith doesn’t think much of it—he’s focused on his own profitable agenda.
Then the man’s body turns up between two blazing gorse bushes, flesh still burning. 🔥 What looks like a heart attack during a smoke turns out, on closer inspection, to be a murder. The police find a bullet in the corpse, and suddenly Keith’s expertise—and his inconvenient presence at the scene—makes him very interesting to the investigation.
Gerald Hammond built the Keith Calder series over decades, and Dead Game introduces the character with the kind of confident, unhurried voice that comes from a writer who knows exactly who his protagonist is. 📚 Keith isn’t a detective and has no interest in becoming one—but when his girlfriend’s brother is arrested for the murder, he’s pulled in from both sides: by loyalty and by the police, who need his knowledge of ballistics to build their case.
The Scottish borders setting is beautifully rendered, the shooting world given authentic texture, and the mystery constructed with old-fashioned craft. 🏴 For readers who miss the era of genuinely witty British crime fiction—think Dick Francis with guns instead of horses—this is a wonderful discovery.
What makes this essential: A witty, atmospheric Scottish noir introducing one of crime fiction’s most entertaining reluctant investigators—a gunsmith with no fixed address and no patience for the law. 🔫
Daffodil Caron grew up running through the halls of Perrigwynn Palace, childhood playmate to royal princes—until the day she stumbled on a secret that changed everything. 👑 Eighteen years later, she’s built a sweet, thoroughly non-royal life as an art curator, and the last person on her mind is Gus, the prince she once called her best mate.
Prince Augustus, meanwhile, has had a rough few years. 😅 Jilted at the altar. Dumped by his second fiancée. Skewered by the press for years as “Prince Pudgy.” He’s retreated to a Florida beach, grown a beard, and is seriously considering a career pouring pints at a tiki bar rather than serving his country. Then a wild Frisbee toss brings Daffy back into his orbit.
Rachel Hauck writes royal romance with genuine warmth and a faith-friendly sensibility that never feels preachy. 📖 The North Sea kingdom of Lauchtenland is charming without being cloying, and the central relationship earns its slow rebuild through real conversation and shared history rather than manufactured conflict. The childhood friendship backstory gives the romance an emotional depth that straightforward royal-meets-commoner stories often lack.
Gus’s year as a regular person grounds him in a way that makes his eventual return to duty feel genuinely meaningful. ❤️ And Daffy’s quiet insistence that he remember who he is—not who the press made him—is exactly the kind of love story worth rooting for.
What makes this essential: A charming, warmhearted royal romance about a prince who lost his way and the childhood friend who reminds him why it matters to find it again. 🌊
Elaine Brogan grew up in the worst part of Pittsburgh with one goal: get out, get even, and become the Secret Service agent who takes down the man who framed her father. 💪 She makes it. Then she gets posted to what looks like a career dead-end in Great Falls, Montana—until a dangerous new mission pulls her into a world of wealth, deception, and international crime that makes Pittsburgh look like a warm-up.
Mike Wells constructs his heroine with the kind of specific backstory that makes thriller protagonists feel earned rather than assembled. 🔍 Elaine’s motivation isn’t generic justice—it’s personal, specific, and simmering, which gives every scene an emotional undercurrent that pure plot-driven thrillers often lack.
The series spans Sofia, Moscow, and Milan, moving through the elite criminal networks that operate above and between national borders with the assurance of someone who has clearly done the research. 🌍 The conspiracy grows in scope across all three volumes in ways that feel organic rather than inflated, and Elaine’s moral position—the deeper she goes, the more she risks becoming what she hunts—gives the series its real tension.
Getting three complete novels at no cost makes this one of the better free deals going for fans of international conspiracy thrillers. ⭐ For readers who loved the early Jack Reacher or Stieg Larsson’s Lisbeth Salander, Elaine Brogan is a heroine worth the time investment.
What makes this essential: Three complete conspiracy thrillers following a Secret Service agent on a globe-spanning mission—driven by personal vendetta, tested by moral compromise, and impossible to stop reading. 🕵️
The Millionaires
Charlie and Oliver Caruso work at Greene and Greene, a private bank so exclusive it requires a $2 million minimum just to walk through the door. 💼 They are not millionaires. When a door slams in their faces and an abandoned account with $3 million sitting in it presents itself, the temptation is simply too great. It’s a victimless crime. Nobody will ever know.
Nobody ever thinks it through that far, do they? 😬 A friend turns up dead. The Secret Service materializes from nowhere. A female private investigator starts asking uncomfortable questions. And the brothers discover that whoever owned that money is exactly the kind of person who doesn’t let go of it quietly.
Brad Meltzer writes financial thrillers with the instincts of a storyteller who understands that money is never really the point—what drives these stories is the gap between who people think they are and what they discover they’re capable of when the stakes get high enough. 🔫 The brothers’ dynamic gives the novel real emotional texture beneath the plot mechanics, and the escalation is handled with the controlled pacing that distinguishes Meltzer from his peers.
The Secret Service angle opens up the conspiracy in unexpected directions, and the question of whose money they actually took keeps the tension alive long after the initial theft. 💀 Fast, propulsive, and loaded with the kind of twists that reward readers who pay attention.
What makes this essential: A slick, propulsive financial thriller about two brothers who steal from the wrong account—and spend the rest of the novel desperately trying to survive the consequences. 💰
Three men. Three women. Three relationships that collapsed because of pride, blindness, or a catastrophic failure of trust—and three second chances that may arrive too late. 💔 Maya Alden’s omnibus collects three complete contemporary romances, each built around a different flavor of regret and the hard work of earning back what was lost.
Ansel let his brilliant, devoted assistant walk away rather than admit what she meant to him—and spent exactly long enough realizing his mistake to make winning her back a genuine challenge. 💼 Basil had everything he wanted and failed to notice his girlfriend enduring years of disrespect from the people closest to him, until she finally stopped enduring it. And Cain falsely accused the woman working in his restaurant of theft and had her arrested—a mistake whose consequences ripple long after the truth surfaces. 🍽️
What unites the three stories is Alden’s insistence that the men here do actual work to deserve redemption. 🙏 These aren’t miscommunication romances where one conversation fixes everything—the damage is real in each case, and the path back is appropriately difficult.
Getting three complete novels for this price makes the collection exceptional value, and the variety of setups—workplace romance, social circle dynamics, wrongful accusation—keeps the reading experience fresh across all three. ❤️ For readers who love their second-chance romances with genuine accountability baked in.
What makes this essential: Three complete second-chance romances about men who let the right woman go—and the hard, honest work of proving they deserve another chance. 💌
Jayne Scott and Rebecca Worden became best friends in high school despite having nothing obvious in common—studious Jayne and wild-child Rebecca, jewelry heiress and family runaway. 💎 The friendship endured even after Rebecca fled overseas, and even through the decade Jayne spent as something between unpaid assistant and surrogate daughter to the Worden family.
Now Rebecca is coming home to Los Angeles, and she’s coming with an agenda. 🌆 Her return stirs up everything the family has spent years keeping below the surface—and it brings back her brother David, the man Jayne has always wanted and always known she couldn’t have. Except David doesn’t seem to agree with that assessment.
Susan Mallery is one of the most reliably satisfying writers in contemporary women’s fiction, and The Best of Friends showcases her gift for building complicated family dynamics that feel genuinely lived-in rather than constructed for plot purposes. 📖 The Worden family’s wealth and dysfunction give the romance a texture that goes well beyond the central attraction.
The central question—where does loyalty end and love begin?—is one Mallery takes seriously rather than resolving cheaply. 💛 Jayne’s position inside the family is precarious in ways that make her reluctance feel entirely reasonable, and the resolution earns its emotional payoff through genuine character work rather than convenience.
What makes this essential: A warm, emotionally layered contemporary romance about loyalty, family secrets, and the man who was always off-limits—until he decided he wasn’t. ❤️
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





