Framed for treason, hunted by assassins, and facing execution at the hands of a merciless high elf king—Rie’s day is going about as badly as a day can go. ⚔️ The Last Descendant launches with the kind of propulsive opening that grabs readers by the collar and refuses to let go.
To survive, Rie must abandon her oaths and flee into the one place she was never supposed to go: the enemy Shadow Realm. 🌑 Her only companions are a band of fierce carnivorous pixies—a detail that manages to be both unsettling and oddly endearing in equal measure.
Megan Haskell has built a genuinely complex nine-realm faerie world here, layered with political intrigue, ancient grudges, and the kind of mythology that rewards attentive readers. 🧝 The truth Rie uncovers about her own heritage doesn’t just threaten her personally—it has the power to reshape the entire power structure of the faerie courts.
This is sword-and-sorcery fantasy with real emotional stakes and a heroine who earns every hard-won step of her journey. 🗡️ The world-building is rich without becoming overwhelming, and the carnivorous pixie sidekicks are genuinely one of the more memorable fantasy companions in recent indie publishing.
What makes this essential: A fast-paced, inventive fantasy debut with a compelling mystery at its heart, a richly imagined multi-realm world, and a heroine whose survival instincts are matched only by her determination to uncover the truth. ✨
A brilliant FBI agent. A psychiatric clinic in the middle of nowhere. And a death that everyone but him is willing to call a suicide. 🧠 Keep Still opens in an unusual setting for a thriller—and uses that setting to devastating effect.
Sage West is recovering from PTSD after a traumatic case when a fellow patient and friend turns up dead. 😟 Local authorities dismiss it as suicide, but Sage’s trained instincts tell him something far darker is at work—a sinister plot targeting the very vulnerability that landed him in this clinic in the first place.
Molly Black makes a bold structural choice here, placing her compromised hero in a situation where his greatest asset—his mind—is also his most fragile liability. 🔒 The result is a thriller with a psychological edge that goes well beyond the typical FBI procedural, forcing readers to constantly ask how much they trust what Sage perceives.
The Midwest farmland setting—vast, flat, and relentlessly quiet—creates an atmospheric dread that perfectly mirrors Sage’s internal landscape. 🌾 There’s nowhere to run, nowhere to hide, and help feels impossibly far away.
What makes this essential: A psychologically sophisticated thriller that turns the damaged-detective trope inside out—Sage West is a hero whose greatest strength and greatest weakness are exactly the same thing. 🕵️
A billion-dollar corporation. A crime of the century in the making. And two journalists who stumble onto it at exactly the wrong moment. 📰 Burying the Truth is a propulsive crime thriller built on the classic template of ordinary people suddenly targeted by very dangerous forces.
Investigative reporter Nathan Hughes and his ex-girlfriend Jenny Mars start hearing whispers—fraud, payoffs, secret societies—through a frightened whistleblower whose fear turns out to be entirely justified. 😨 Before long, a ruthless assassin is on their trail, and the stakes have escalated from front-page story to survival situation.
J. Stark keeps the conspiracy machinery running smoothly, with a calculating CEO villain whose cool menace makes every encounter feel genuinely threatening. 🏢 The FBI’s involvement raises the stakes further, adding institutional weight to a story that might otherwise feel like a standard corporate thriller.
The missing persons thread is particularly effective—as people connected to the case start disappearing, the sense that no one is truly safe becomes increasingly difficult to shake. 💀 This is the kind of thriller that reads best in long sessions, when the mounting dread can build without interruption.
What makes this essential: A taut, fast-moving conspiracy thriller with a villain worth fearing, journalists worth rooting for, and a secret society at its core that keeps the mystery alive until the final pages. 🗂️
Mad About You
Harriet Hatley photographs weddings for a living and believes in romance approximately as much as she believes in chocolate fountains — which is not at all. So when her long-time partner proposes, she panics, ends the relationship, and finds herself single and living down the hall from her ex in a situation that is, by any measure, untenable. She needs a new flat. What she gets instead is Cal Clarke. 💍
Mhairi McFarlane built her reputation on exactly this kind of British romantic comedy — sharp, warm, emotionally honest, populated with characters whose flaws are specific rather than decorative. Cal is a hopeless romantic who just survived his own wedding disaster, which makes him and Harriet the least likely flatmates imaginable and, inevitably, the most necessary. The chalk-and-cheese dynamic generates the wit; the genuine friendship underneath it generates the feeling. ☕
McFarlane is particularly good at the secret — the thing the protagonist is hiding that isn’t just backstory but active present weight. When Harriet’s most guarded secret surfaces and her world implodes simultaneously with her career and reputation, Cal’s presence shifts from comic counterpoint to something considerably more important. The British romcom register gives McFarlane permission to be funny right up until she isn’t. 🌧️
What makes this delightful: A warm, witty British romantic comedy about a wedding photographer who hates weddings, a flatmate who believes in everything she doesn’t, and the secret that threatens to take down everything she’s built before she figures out what she actually wants. On sale today — perfect for fans of Sophie Kinsella and Beth O’Leary who want their romcoms genuinely funny, their heroines properly complicated, and their emotional payoffs arrived at honestly. 🌟
Special Agent Emma Last’s Violent Crimes Unit is finally catching its breath after two members came out of the hospital and a third is still recovering. Emma is not catching her breath. Her disturbing dreams of the Other are intensifying, and now a desperate fortune teller from a past case is at her door: her estranged husband took their ten-year-old camping five days ago. No word since. 🌲
Mary Stone builds the Emma Last series on the psychic suspense subgenre’s most effective structure — an investigator whose abilities give her access to information she can’t explain and can’t ignore, pitted against cases where the official evidence and the psychic evidence point in directions that don’t initially match. The missing child case opens cleanly enough, then the discovery of a severed foot in the wilderness reframes everything. 🦶
The series’ ongoing arc — Emma’s escalating connection to the Other — gives the procedural investigation its personal undertow. Each case costs her something, and Stone is careful to make that cost feel real rather than decorative. The wilderness setting for this entry adds physical isolation to the psychological pressure, and the question of whether the father is a threat or a victim drives the investigation’s central tension. 🌑
Why this grips from page one: A taut psychic suspense thriller about an FBI agent whose unsettling gift leads her into a wilderness disappearance that turns out to conceal something far darker than a custody dispute. On sale today — perfect for fans of Lisa Gardner and Karin Slaughter who want their crime fiction procedurally grounded, their investigators psychically burdened, and their wilderness settings used to maximum atmospheric effect. 🔦
Lord Ashford is rich, handsome, titled, and the most sought-after bachelor in England. Miss Lydia Hanworth is the one woman in the country who doesn’t want him — which is, of course, exactly why he wants her. Pressured into accepting his proposal against her will, Lydia has ten days before the engagement goes public to engineer her own jilting without destroying her reputation in the process. This is going to require considerable ingenuity. 💍
Sophie Irwin, the Sunday Times bestselling author of A Lady’s Guide to Fortune-Hunting, builds How to Lose a Lord in Ten Days on the Regency comedy of manners’ most delicious inversion: the heroine actively trying to escape the match every other woman in the novel would kill for, and the hero who finds her resistance not off-putting but irresistible. The ten-day countdown gives the premise its comic structure and its romantic engine simultaneously. 🎩
Irwin writes with the sharp wit and period-specific social awareness that made her debut such a pleasure — the comedy is grounded in how much actually depends on reputation in this world, which means Lydia’s scheme has genuine stakes underneath the farce. Every move she makes to lose Ashford has to be subtle enough not to ruin her, which is a considerably more difficult brief than it initially appears. 🌹
What makes this irresistible: A sparkling Regency romantic comedy about a woman determined to get herself jilted by England’s most eligible lord — and the increasingly inconvenient fact that the more she tries to drive him away, the more interested he becomes. On sale today at a steep discount — perfect for fans of Julia Quinn and Evie Dunmore who want their historical romance witty, their heroines resourceful, and their countdowns to disaster genuinely delightful. 😂
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





