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Author: Gerard Harrison
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Horror Suspense

Sarah Caysum leaves her four-year-old daughter Casey in a car on a Phoenix afternoon when temperatures are forecast to reach 125 degrees. She has Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy—a condition in which caregivers fabricate or induce illness in those in their care to draw attention and sympathy to themselves—and possibly something darker and less clinically definable underneath that. Gerard Harrison opens Burn, Baby, Burn with a premise of unflinching horror rooted not in the supernatural but in the particular terror of a child left helpless by the one person who was supposed to protect her. 🔥

This is horror that earns its darkness through psychological specificity rather than genre mechanics. Munchausen by Proxy—now clinically termed Factitious Disorder Imposed on Another—is one of the more disturbing documented forms of child abuse precisely because it operates under the cover of apparent caregiving. Harrison uses Sarah’s condition as an entry point into a portrait of a mind that has constructed an entire reality around its own need, and the implications for Casey are genuinely difficult to read. 😰

The Phoenix heat functions as both literal threat and atmospheric pressure throughout—the city’s extreme summer temperatures are not background color but an active participant in what happens to Casey, and Harrison uses the sensory reality of 125-degree heat with deliberate, uncomfortable precision. This is not comfortable fiction. It is the kind of horror that stays with you because it is grounded in something real and documented and far too common. Readers who want psychological depth over jump scares will find exactly what they’re looking for. 🌡️

Why this unsettles deeply: Horror rooted in the documented psychology of a caregiver who harms the child she’s supposed to protect—Burn, Baby, Burn is genuinely disturbing fiction for readers who want their darkness earned.

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Author: Anne R. Tan
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Cozy Mystery

Raina Sun is a graduate student with an outstanding loan to collect from her college advisor. It should be a simple, if awkward, errand. Instead she finds his dead body, immediately becomes the prime suspect, and—to round out an already terrible day—discovers that the lead detective assigned to the case is the one man she ever truly loved. Anne R. Tan opens the Raina Sun series with a setup that hits every cozy mystery pleasure point while adding a romantic complication that gives the investigation an extra layer of personal stakes. 🔍

The graduate school setting is a fresh choice for the genre—the academic world’s specific hierarchies, politics, and grudges give the mystery a distinct social texture. Raina’s position as both primary suspect and reluctant investigator puts her in a satisfying double bind: she needs to clear her name while the detective investigating her keeps sending what she can only interpret as emotional smoke signals. Tan juggles the tonal balance between comedy and genuine peril with a confident hand. 📚

The box set format makes this an ideal series entry point—multiple volumes in a single free package, which means readers can invest in Raina’s world without worrying about being stranded after a single book. Tan brings a distinctive voice to the cozy mystery space, and Raina’s Chinese American background and family dynamics give the series a cultural specificity that distinguishes it from the genre’s frequently homogeneous landscape. The supporting cast—including a family that has very firm opinions about what Raina should be doing with her life—is consistently entertaining. 💕

Why this charms: A grad student, a dead advisor, a rekindled almost-romance with the investigating detective, and multiple books in a single free package—the Raina Sun series is a cozy mystery treat.

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Author: E.J. Lawson
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Contemporary Romance

She has been managing just fine on her own as an unclaimed Omega—until one small mistake has her perfuming enough to draw enforcement officers from ten blocks away. The only available escape is accepting a claim from a blazing hot Alpha who didn’t exactly run this past his pack first. Now she’s installed in a mansion with four unbonded Alphas who smell like heaven, waiting for them to find another pack to take her, and trying very hard to remember why she was in hiding in the first place. E.J. Lawson builds the Omegaverse setup with real tension and warmth. 🐺

The pack dynamic is handled with enough individual characterization that Fox, Miles, Levi, and Thane feel genuinely distinct rather than interchangeable. Thane in particular—the one calling the shots, the most resistant to an Omega in the house—gives the story its central friction, and Lawson develops his opposition with enough specificity that his eventual shift feels earned rather than mechanical. The reverse harem format works because each relationship develops differently rather than in parallel. 💕

The reason she was in hiding is the novel’s structural secret, and Lawson parcels it out with good pacing—enough is revealed early to establish stakes, with the full picture held back to give the story momentum toward the end. The Omegaverse worldbuilding is established efficiently without drowning the character dynamics in lore. Captivate has built a substantial readership in the contemporary Omegaverse space, and this first Knot Their Omega installment delivers the genre’s signature combination of safety, heat, and the particular fantasy of being genuinely wanted. 🌙

Why this captivates: An Omega in hiding, a pack that doesn’t want her, and four Alphas who smell like everything she’s been avoiding—Captivate is Omegaverse romance that earns its devoted readership.

Lost Japan

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Author: Alex Kerr
Regularly $3.99, Today $0.99
Travel Writing

Alex Kerr first came to Japan as a child in 1964 and has spent much of his adult life there—studying the language, collecting antiques, living in a traditional farmhouse in a hidden Tokushima valley, building a deep immersion in the culture that most Western writers about Japan never achieve. Lost Japan was originally written in Japanese and won the Shincho Gakugei Literary Prize—which is to say, it was recognized by Japanese readers and critics as a genuine contribution to the literature about their own culture. That provenance matters. 🏯

The book moves through Kerr’s decades of Japanese experience with an essayist’s freedom—kabuki theater, the Tokyo boardroom culture of the Bubble Years, the hidden valley that became his home, the traditional arts that shaped his aesthetic sensibility. The love letter dimension is real and specific and earned through genuine expertise. But what makes Lost Japan essential rather than merely charming is the grief running alongside the love: Kerr watched Japan’s postwar economic growth systematically destroy much of what he had come to revere, through environmental degradation, cultural homogenization, and an architectural indifference to anything that predated the concrete era. 🌸

The elegiac quality is not nostalgia for a Japan Kerr romanticizes from outside—it’s the specific grief of someone who loved particular things that were specifically destroyed. The distinction matters enormously, and it’s what separates this from the many Western books that use Japan as an occasion for self-reflection. Kerr is writing about Japan, not about himself discovering Japan, and the difference gives the book a quality that holds up across multiple readings. 🎋

Why this endures: A Western scholar who earned Japanese recognition writing about Japan’s lost beauty—Lost Japan is one of the most honest and deeply felt accounts of a culture in the process of disappearing.

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Author: Nicole Maggi
Regularly $3.99, Today $0.99
Travel & Vacation Fiction

Special Agent Emmeline Helliwell has had a rough stretch—her most recent case went badly, and she’s come home to Utah to grieve her mother and figure out what’s next. The plan is to hand in her badge and take over the bakery. A quieter life. Then a childhood friend turns up dead in the Narrows of Zion National Park, and the case is too personal for Emme to walk away from. Nicole Maggi uses the National Park setting with the dual-purpose skill that distinguishes the best regional mysteries. 🏜️

Zion National Park’s Narrows—the slot canyon where the Virgin River runs between walls of Navajo sandstone hundreds of feet high—is one of the most dramatic hiking destinations in the American Southwest, and Maggi earns its use as a murder location by rendering it with specific, atmospheric detail. The park itself becomes an active element of the investigation rather than a picturesque backdrop, as Emme ventures deeper into the canyon system tracking a killer who has chosen the terrain deliberately. 🌄

The complication that elevates the mystery above a straightforward regional procedural is the connection Emme begins uncovering between this case and the previous one that derailed her career. The personal stakes compound rapidly: a childhood friend, her mother’s recent death, and a killer whose patterns suggest a threat considerably larger than a single murder in a national park. Maggi balances the investigation and the grief with real skill, and the Utah setting—both the park and Emme’s hometown—gives the series a specific geographic identity worth returning to. 🌵

Why this draws you in: A grieving agent, a murdered childhood friend in one of America’s most stunning parks, and a trail of clues connecting to a case she thought was behind her—A Murder in Zion is regional mystery with real depth.

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Author: Joe R. Lansdale
Regularly $3.99, Today $1.99
Historical Mysteries

Jack Parker has already absorbed more than his share of loss by the time the novel begins—grandmother dead in a farm accident, both parents taken by smallpox, traveling with his grandfather and sister toward their uncle’s farm when a band of bank-robbing bandits murders the old man and kidnaps Lula. Jack is on his own in early twentieth-century East Texas, his only goal to get his sister back. What he’s got to work with is limited. Joe R. Lansdale sets the adventure in motion with the velocity of the best tall-tale tradition. 🤠

The rescue party Jack assembles is the book’s great pleasure: Shorty, a charismatic bounty-hunting dwarf; Eustace, a grave-digging son of a formerly enslaved man; and Jimmie Sue, a woman-for-hire who has come into some intimate knowledge about the bandits and, as it turns out, some members of Jack’s extended family. Lansdale gives all three genuine dignity and specific voices—this is not a parade of colorful sidekicks but a genuine ensemble of people with their own histories and stakes. 🌾

The New York Times comparison to the Brothers Grimm crossed with Mark Twain is apt—The Thicket has the darkness and the moral complexity of genuine folklore alongside the vernacular wit and forward momentum of the best American frontier fiction. The East Texas oil boom setting gives the violence a specific historical context rather than generic Western atmosphere. Now a Tubi original film starring Peter Dinklage and Juliette Lewis, which suggests the material translates as well visually as it reads on the page. ⭐

Why this is a Lansdale essential: A boy, a kidnapped sister, a bounty-hunting dwarf, and an East Texas landscape that refuses to be romantic about anything—The Thicket is American frontier fiction at its most gloriously alive.

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