Eight thousand miles from Boston, a badly decomposed body has been found floating in Philippine waters. The victim is an American tourist. Nobody knows who he is, who killed him, or why. Lucy is on vacation in Thailand when she befriends Dale Porter, a fellow American living in the Philippines — and when Dale is arrested for the murder on his return to Manila, she does the only logical thing: she calls in private investigator Mark Kane and gets herself deputized as his temporary assistant. 🌏
John Hemmings writes PI mystery with a globe-trotting sensibility that separates the Kane series from the domestic detective fiction that dominates the genre. The Southeast Asian settings are rendered with the kind of specific detail that only comes from genuine familiarity — Thailand and the Philippines are characters in their own right here, not just exotic backdrop — and the dual investigation structure, following both the murder case and Lucy’s amateur involvement, gives the plot two tracks that converge with satisfying timing. 🔍
The Kane-Lucy dynamic is the series’ secret weapon: she’s not a damsel and he’s not a lone wolf, and the temporary partnership that develops over the course of the investigation has the kind of easy, sparring warmth that keeps readers coming back to a series long after the mystery is solved. 🌴
What makes this essential: A smartly plotted international PI mystery that takes its investigation from Thailand to the Philippines, following a decomposed body, a wrongly accused friend, and a temporary assistant who turns out to be considerably more useful than advertised. Free today — perfect for fans of Michael Connelly and John Sandford who want their detective fiction globe-spanning, character-driven, and impossible to put down.
Colin McCool is the last druid master, and he’s done being everyone else’s errand boy. Gods, tricksters, fae — they’ve all had their turn pulling his strings, and he’s finished. His plan: return to the alternate timeline where the undead overran the world, rebuild the druid order, and work through a very long list of vampires who need killing. He’s bringing a werewolf alpha and a cranky necromancer. The Vampyri Nations are not going to enjoy this. ⚔️
M.D. Massey has built one of urban fantasy’s most expansive mythologies across the Druidverse series, and Deadlands Druid represents the saga at full stride — a protagonist with real history and genuine grievances, a world-building investment that rewards long-term readers while remaining accessible to newcomers, and action sequences that deliver the genre’s essential pleasures without sacrificing the character work that makes them matter. 🌑
The alternate timeline setting gives the novel an unusual shape for urban fantasy — this isn’t a hidden magical world beneath the real one, it’s a world where the magical catastrophe already happened and the survivors are dealing with the aftermath. Massey uses the post-apocalyptic framework to give the druid-rebuilding storyline genuine stakes that feel earned rather than manufactured. 🐺
Why this grips from page one: A propulsive, mythology-rich urban fantasy about the last druid master returning to a vampire-overrun alternate world with a werewolf, a necromancer, and a mandate to start dropping bodies. Free today — perfect for fans of Kevin Hearne and Jim Butcher who want their urban fantasy action-forward, world-building deep, and built on the kind of hard-won protagonist agency that makes every fight feel like it matters.
Scotland, 1820. Jane Stuart has lost everything — her betrothed, her ancestral castle, her orchard — and found herself exiled to the cold fog of Glasgow with nothing but grief and a determination to survive it. Percy Sommerbell is a musician and free spirit who has spent his life enjoying the fortune his father’s mills generate, without looking too carefully at how they generate it. When family duty forces him to Scotland, he can no longer avoid the truth: the money that funds his comfortable life is built on child labor. 🌿
Louise Mayberry sets her Scottish Regency romance against a backdrop of genuine historical conflict — the Industrial Revolution’s human cost, the tension between the old Scottish landed order and the rising industrial class — and uses it to give both protagonists moral weight that purely domestic romance often lacks. Jane and Percy arrive at their connection from opposite directions: she has lost everything material, he is losing his comfortable illusions. 🏔️
The Highland and Glasgow settings are rendered with atmospheric care, and Mayberry handles the class politics of the era with enough specificity to feel researched rather than decorative. The romance that develops between an exiled noblewoman and a man reckoning with his family’s sins is given the space it needs to feel genuinely transformative. 🌹
What makes this captivating: A richly atmospheric Scottish Regency romance set against the smoke and beauty of 1820s Scotland — featuring a dispossessed noblewoman, a musician forced to confront his family’s dark fortune, and a love story built on shared moral reckoning. Free today — perfect for fans of Anna Campbell and Mary Balogh who want their historical romance emotionally layered, beautifully set, and built on more than mere attraction.
Monkey: Folk Novel of China
Written in sixteenth-century China and widely considered the most popular book in the history of the Far East, Monkey is a picaresque folk epic that defies easy categorization — part adventure story, part satirical allegory, part spiritual journey, and entirely its own thing. The roguish, irrepressible Monkey makes his way through a world populated by gods, demons, ogres, monsters, fairies, and every variety of supernatural being the Chinese imagination could conjure, and somehow manages to be entertaining, subversive, and philosophically interesting simultaneously. 🐒
Arthur Waley’s translation — the first accurate English version — is what made this novel accessible to Western readers, and it remains the definitive text: faithful to the spirit and meaning of the original while reading with the energy and momentum of a story that was always meant to be irresistible. Waley understood that the novel’s greatness lies not in its allegory but in its protagonist, who is too vivid and too funny to be reduced to symbol. 🌏
For readers who know the novel only through its various adaptations — and there have been many, in every medium — the original is a genuine revelation: richer, funnier, and stranger than any version that came after it. For readers coming to it fresh, it’s one of those rare discoveries that immediately earns a permanent place on the shelf. 🌟
What makes this timeless: A riotous, centuries-old adventure epic about the irrepressible Monkey navigating a world of gods and demons — one of the great works of world literature, finally accessible in Arthur Waley’s celebrated English translation. At $2.99, it’s an extraordinary bargain for a book that has been delighting readers across cultures for five hundred years.
He was her brother’s best friend — which meant off-limits by every unwritten rule she knew. She loved him anyway, convinced he was worth the risk. He wasn’t. When her feelings became impossible to ignore and she needed him most, he wasn’t there. So she left, rebuilt herself, and spent four years becoming someone who no longer needed catching. Then he walked back into her life: same crooked smile, same tattoos, same unavailability. Same everything. 💔
Holly Renee writes contemporary romance with a sharp emotional edge that separates the Good Girls series from softer entries in the genre — the hurt here is real, the betrayal specific, and the heroine’s journey from heartbroken girl to woman who no longer needs anyone’s approval is given the space it deserves before the romance is allowed to reassert itself. The brother’s-best-friend trope is one of romance’s most reliable frameworks, and Renee uses it with real skill. 🖤
The tattoo-and-bad-boy aesthetic is deployed without apology — Parker James is exactly the kind of hero the cover promises — but Renee earns the eventual softening by making both characters accountable for what went wrong the first time. The heroine who returns is genuinely different from the one who left, and that difference matters to how the second-chance story unfolds. 🔥
Why this hooks from page one: A steamy, emotionally charged second-chance romance about a woman who loved her brother’s best friend, got her heart broken, rebuilt herself entirely, and came home to find him exactly as irresistible and exactly as complicated as before. Perfect for fans of Penelope Douglas and Katy Evans who want their contemporary romance emotionally raw, deliciously tense, and impossible to put down.
Hollywood, 1935. Twenty-one-year-old Loretta Young meets thirty-four-year-old Clark Gable on the set of The Call of the Wild. He’s already married. He falls for her instantly anyway. What follows is one of old Hollywood’s most complicated love stories, set against a backdrop of studio power, artistic ambition, and the particular moral negotiations that the golden age of cinema demanded of everyone who wanted to survive it. 🎬
Adriana Trigiani is a New York Times bestselling author known for sweeping, warmly romantic historical fiction, and All the Stars in the Heavens is her most ambitious canvas — a novel that captures the glamour and brutality of the studio system simultaneously, told through the lives of characters who were creating something genuinely new and paying real costs to do it. The 1930s Los Angeles setting is rendered with the kind of meticulous period detail that makes historical fiction feel inhabited rather than costumed. ⭐
The novel operates on multiple levels — as a Hollywood love story, as a portrait of an era, and as a meditation on the price women paid for ambition in a system designed to commodify them. Trigiani handles the religious dimensions of Loretta Young’s story with respect and without sentimentality, which is a harder balance to strike than it sounds. 🌹
What makes this unforgettable: A lush, meticulously researched historical novel about Loretta Young, Clark Gable, and the glittering, complicated world of 1930s Hollywood — told with the warmth, drama, and romantic sweep that made Adriana Trigiani one of the genre’s most beloved voices. At $1.99, it’s an extraordinary value for a novel this richly imagined.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





