She was born a Nexus shifter, which means she spent her entire life being defined by what that is—her parents despised Nexus shifters, everyone around her was taught to fear them, and she has always understood the fear to be justified. She is bonded to five souls she rejected at the mating ceremony five years ago, before vanishing with her parents to put as much distance as possible between herself and the life that was supposed to be hers. Distance, it turns out, was temporary. 🌑
They found her. She is back, and this time there is no escape. The five men whose bond she rejected are now her captors—enforcing their rules with unrelenting dominance, keeping her under constant watch, operating in the specific register of reverse harem dark fantasy where captivity and desire exist in deliberate and sustained tension. The five years of absence have not diminished the pull between them. If anything, the distance and the betrayal have concentrated it into something more volatile. 🔥
G. Bailey is one of the most prolific and widely read authors in the reverse harem paranormal romance space, with a readership built on series that deliver the genre’s core pleasures—multiple love interests, supernatural world-building, dark emotional stakes—with the pacing and character work that keeps readers committed across long series arcs. The Nexus Series launches here with a heroine whose self-knowledge and circumstances are in direct conflict: a woman who knows what she is, what she did, and what the consequences are, returned to face all of it at once. 💛
What makes this compelling: G. Bailey launches the Nexus Series with a dark reverse harem paranormal romance—a Nexus shifter who ran from her five bonded mates five years ago, brought back as a captive, and facing a tension that five years of distance made considerably more dangerous rather than less. 🌟
Alaska is already a place where the ground shifts without warning—where earthquakes are a routine fact of life for the people and military units stationed there. For the 4th Brigade Combat Team Airborne, a routine night operation becomes something else entirely when a freak earthquake rips open the earth and sends them into darkness. When they crawl out of the fissure, the landscape is wrong. The sky is wrong. The air is wrong. They are 23,000 years in the past, in the middle of the Ice Age. ❄️
The tactical situation is unlike anything their training prepared them for. Prehistoric predators. No extraction. No communication with any command structure that exists yet. A world that does not recognize them and has no obligation to accommodate their survival. What these elite soldiers do have is each other, the training that made them effective in the modern world, and the adaptability that distinguishes genuinely capable military units from ones that only function when conditions are familiar. The question the novel builds toward is whether those assets are enough to survive a world that operated by completely different rules. 🦣
S.A. Ison builds the premise on the specific pleasures of military science fiction crossed with prehistoric adventure—the Ice Age setting gives the time travel scenario genuine stakes, since there is no infrastructure to exploit and no civilization to navigate, only terrain and predators and each other. The Alaska framing grounds the opening in a real and vividly rendered landscape before the displacement makes everything unfamiliar. 🏔️
What makes this propulsive: S.A. Ison delivers a military time travel thriller with a genuinely original premise—elite Airborne soldiers dropped 23,000 years into the Alaskan Ice Age by a freak earthquake, facing prehistoric predators with modern training and no way home. 🌟
The one-night stand who turns out to be the new sheriff in town would be awkward enough on its own. The fact that he arrives to arrest her makes the situation considerably more complicated. She is the resident party girl, a reformed bad girl with a consistent preference for tattooed bad boys on motorcycles rather than clean-cut single dads in squad cars—which is precisely what Conrad Meyer is, in addition to being a know-it-all, grumpy, and possessed of a distractingly attractive body that she would prefer to find easier to ignore. 😂
The situation then gets worse in the specific way that small-town romantic comedy situations always manage to get worse: Conrad is not only the new sheriff. He is also her new landlord. She has every intention of keeping her distance. The architecture of the setup makes this intention functionally impossible—a landlord who is also the law enforcement presence in a small town is not someone who disappears from your daily life simply because you have decided to avoid him. 💛
Katana Collins writes romantic comedy with the wit and character specificity that makes the Beefcakes series a reliable source of the genre’s particular pleasures—heroes who are genuinely appealing rather than just described as such, heroines with enough personality to generate actual comedy, and small-town settings that function as communities rather than backdrops. The one-night-stand-turned-landlord-turned-arresting-officer situation is the kind of premise that the genre exists to deliver on, and Collins handles it with the timing it deserves. 🏡
What makes this delightful: Katana Collins delivers a Beefcakes romantic comedy of genuine comic momentum—a reformed party girl, a one-night stand who turns up as the new sheriff and her new landlord, and every intention of keeping her distance that the plot immediately makes impossible. 🌟
The Mother’s Day Murder
Gina Spann was thirty-one years old when she met seventeen-year-old Larry Kelley at the Taco Bell in Augusta, Georgia where they both worked. Their friendship developed quickly into something more—Gina invited Larry to move into the home she shared with her husband Kevin and their teenage son, where she and Larry openly shared the master bedroom while Kevin slept in a back room. What was already a remarkable domestic arrangement was about to become something far more sinister. 😰
Gina wanted Kevin dead. More precisely, she wanted the $300,000 life insurance policy. She enlisted Larry and three of his teenage friends to carry out the murder. On Mother’s Day 1997, two teenagers knocked on the Spanns’ front door. When Kevin opened it, they shot him point-blank. His assassins walked away casually, as if they had simply made a delivery. The case that followed raised questions that true crime readers still find compelling: how does a woman in her thirties recruit teenagers to commit murder? What does it take to cross that line? 💀
Wensley Clarkson—one of Britain’s most prolific true crime writers—reconstructs the case with the narrative momentum that distinguishes the best entries in the genre from simple crime reporting. The psychological portrait of Gina Spann is the book’s central project: a woman whose manipulation of the young men around her was methodical and complete, who understood exactly what she was doing and calculated that the teenage pawns she was using were both expendable and controllable. The full story of how the conspiracy was uncovered and prosecuted provides the structural resolution the case demands. 🔍
What makes this essential: Wensley Clarkson delivers a compelling true crime account of a Mother’s Day murder—a seductive wife, three teenage pawns, a $300,000 insurance policy, and a case that raises disturbing questions about manipulation, complicity, and the specific vulnerabilities of young men. 🌟
The Lord of the Rings sold modestly for nearly two decades after publication. Then the American Ballantine editions arrived, a generation of readers encountered it in college, and the shape of fantasy fiction changed permanently. The writers who came of age in the following decades were not merely influenced by Tolkien—many of them were formed by him, their imaginations shaped by Middle-earth before they had fully developed as writers themselves. 📚
This anthology collects essays from the writers who know this best: the generation that Tolkien made possible. Ursula K. Le Guin on what Middle-earth meant for Earthsea. George R. R. Martin on what it meant for Westeros. Terry Pratchett on what it meant for Discworld. Orson Scott Card on the Legends of Alvin Maker. Each essay is a personal account of a specific creative debt—not criticism in the academic sense but something more intimate: writers explaining how another writer’s work got into them and changed what they were capable of imagining. 🌿
The anthology is both a document of Tolkien’s influence and a record of fantasy literature’s formative decades—the period when the genre was discovering what it could do, with Middle-earth as the shared reference point that everyone was either building on or pushing against. For readers who love Tolkien, it is an opportunity to see his work through the eyes of the writers he inspired. For readers who love any of the contributors, it is an illuminating window into how the creative mind metabolizes influences across a career. 🏔️
What makes this essential: Meditations on Middle-Earth collects personal essays from the fantasy writers Tolkien made possible—Le Guin, Martin, Pratchett, Card, and others—each accounting for the specific debt they owe to Middle-earth and the ways it shaped everything they went on to write. 🌟
The standard narrative of Hollywood’s studio era positions the moguls and producers as obstacles to artistic expression—businesspeople who constrained the directors and writers trying to make genuine art. Thomas Schatz’s landmark film history argues the opposite: that the studio system was not despite its industrial structure but because of it that it produced so many enduring classics, and that the producers who ran it deserve far more credit than the auteur theory has ever been willing to give them. 🎬
Drawing from industry documents including studio memos, production files, and correspondence, Schatz traces the development of each major studio’s distinctive house style, the rise and fall of careers both in front of and behind the camera, and the specific circumstances that produced specific films. Frankenstein. Spellbound. Grand Hotel. The classical Hollywood film was not the product of individual genius working against the system—it was the product of a system that channeled individual talent into collaborative structures that amplified rather than suppressed it. 🎞️
The argument has been influential and controversial in equal measure, and the richly illustrated narrative that supports it remains one of the most readable works of film history ever written. Schatz brings the same commitment to primary sources and institutional analysis that distinguishes serious history from fan appreciation, while never losing sight of the fact that the films being discussed were made to be watched and loved. For students of film history, working filmmakers, and anyone curious about how the movies they love were actually made, this is indispensable. 🏆
What makes this essential: Thomas Schatz delivers the definitive history of Hollywood’s studio era—a landmark reappraisal that challenges the auteur myth and reveals the genius of a collaborative industrial system that produced some of the greatest films ever made. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





