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Author: Kaylee Ryan
FREE
Contemporary Romance

Knox Beckett is Corie’s brother’s best friend, which puts him firmly in the category of untouchable regardless of how she feels about him. He’s also a professional football player for the Nashville Rampage, which adds another layer of impracticality to the equation. A few stolen glances become a welcome home that blindsides them both, the rules get quietly set aside, and suddenly they’re running a trick play—sneaking around behind closed doors and pretending this isn’t the kind of situation that has the power to blow everything up. Kaylee Ryan opens the Nashville Rampage series with the best friend’s sister setup deployed with real romantic heat. 🏈

Knox’s perspective gives the novel its second dimension: she’s the last woman he’s supposed to want, and the moment Corie crashes into him in a barely-there bikini, he understands with complete clarity that he’s in serious trouble. His response to that trouble—helping her land a job working for the team—is the kind of decision that solves the immediate awkwardness by creating a much larger structural problem, and Ryan uses the resulting forced proximity with the timing that sports romance readers come for. 💕

Ryan is one of contemporary romance’s most prolific and reliably satisfying authors, with a readership that has followed her across multiple series, and the Nashville Rampage opener demonstrates the qualities that have built that loyalty: dialogue with genuine snap, romantic tension that builds with real patience, and protagonists whose specific lives give the love story stakes beyond the personal. The sports romance framework gives the series its world and its community, and Ryan uses both with the ease of an author who has thought carefully about how setting creates character. 🌟

Why this pulls you in: His best friend’s sister, a welcome home that crosses every line, sneaking around behind closed doors, and a situation that’s going to detonate—Make the Play is sports romance with real heat and genuine charm.

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Author: Larry A. Winters
FREE
Legal Thrillers

Jessie Black’s successful prosecution of a serial murderer put her on the fast track at the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office. The opposing public defender’s spectacular public breakdown after the trial—which landed Jack Ackerman in a mental institution—gave convicted killer Frank Ramsey an opening: a claim of ineffective counsel and a petition for a new trial. Now Jessie must defend her own conviction by proving Ackerman’s sanity, a task considerably complicated by her genuine uncertainty about whether he was, in fact, functioning adequately at the time. Larry A. Winters opens the Jessie Black series with a legal premise that is genuinely clever. ⚖️

The procedural trap is elegantly constructed: Jessie won the case, but the manner of her opponent’s breakdown has given the worst possible person a legitimate legal argument. She now has to work backward through her own prosecution to demonstrate that the man arguing against her was competent, while Ramsey’s new legal team works to demonstrate the opposite. Winters handles the legal mechanics with enough specificity that the courtroom tension feels real rather than procedurally approximate. 🔍

The powerful forces conspiring to put Ramsey back on the streets give the thriller its external danger alongside the courtroom drama—this isn’t a purely procedural story but one in which the legal battle has genuine stakes beyond the professional. Jessie’s character is established with the efficiency that series openers need: competent, driven, ethically serious, and now facing the kind of case where those qualities will be tested in ways a straightforward prosecution never demanded. The Jessie Black series has built a devoted legal thriller readership across multiple volumes. 🏛️

Why this grips you: She won the case—now she has to prove her opponent was sane enough to lose it fairly, or the killer walks free—Burnout is legal thriller with a genuinely ingenious premise.

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Author: Oliver Davies
FREE
Scottish Crime Thriller

DI Dominic Sutherland finally gets a break on a case that has been consuming his team for months. A harrowing interrogation yields a lead, the team sets up a surveillance operation, and then one of his colleagues is shot. Oliver Davies establishes the stakes early and sharply—police shootings in Scotland are not American TV show territory, they are genuine ruptures in the fabric of how Sutherland understands his work, and the personal dimension of a colleague’s injury transforms what was already an urgent case into something considerably more driven by emotion. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

The bullet that connects the shooting to the larger investigation is a distinctive detail that gives the forensic thread real interest: hand-made, crafted from silver, and impossible to trace through conventional channels. The specificity suggests villains with unusual resources and unusual methods, which lifts the thriller above the standard criminal organization setup. Davies uses the unusual ammunition as a consistent reminder that Sutherland is dealing with people willing to operate entirely outside normal parameters—including harming police officers. 🔍

The Scottish setting is rendered with genuine atmospheric specificity rather than serving as mere backdrop—the landscape, the institutional culture of Scottish policing, and the particular dynamics of Sutherland’s team give the series its distinctive texture. Davies has built a readership in British crime fiction that responds to exactly this combination: grounded procedural work, specific sense of place, and protagonists whose personal investment in the case creates genuine stakes. The DI Sutherland series delivers consistent quality across its volumes, and this entry is a strong representative of the series at work. ⭐

Why this grips you: A break in a months-long case, a surveillance operation that goes wrong, a colleague shot, and a silver bullet that can’t be traced—One Shot is Scottish crime fiction with real procedural tension.

Vegetarian Indian Instant Pot Cookbook

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Author: Pavani Nandula
Regularly $17.99, Today $2.99
Indian Cooking

Indian vegetarian cooking is one of the world’s great culinary traditions—a centuries-old practice of creating extraordinarily flavorful, nutritionally complete meals without meat, drawing on techniques and spice combinations that most Western kitchens have only begun to explore. Pavani Nandula’s Instant Pot cookbook is specifically designed to make that tradition accessible to home cooks who want the results without the hours of traditional preparation that some of the most complex dishes require. The pressure cooker’s ability to dramatically reduce cooking time for dal, rice dishes, and curries makes it an exceptionally good fit for this cuisine. 🍛

The cookbook covers the full range—restaurant favorites alongside regional home-cooking classics—and includes an Indian cooking primer that addresses the practical knowledge gap many Western cooks face: how to stock a kitchen with the essential Indian ingredients, how techniques like tadka (tempering) and bhunao (sautéing) translate to the Instant Pot, and how to build the layered flavor profiles that make Indian food so distinctive. Every recipe includes realistic time estimates that account for pressure-build and release time, which prevents the frustration of recipes that claim 20 minutes but don’t count the 15 minutes of pressurization. 🌶️

The sample menus—for everyday lunches and dinners, dinner parties, holiday celebrations, vegan meals, and more—give the book practical utility beyond the individual recipes, allowing cooks to think about Indian vegetarian food as a complete meal-planning system rather than a collection of isolated dishes. Nandula writes with the clarity of someone who has taught this cuisine to beginners, and the book rewards both first-time Indian cookers and experienced practitioners. 🌿

Why this belongs in your kitchen: The full range of Indian vegetarian cooking made genuinely accessible through the Instant Pot—dal, curries, rice dishes, and more, from restaurant favorites to regional home-cooking classics.

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Author: J.M. Adams
Regularly $3.99, Today $0.99
Political Thrillers & Suspense

In September 2012, DIA operative Cora Walker learns of a terrorist plot in Benghazi and rushes to a secret installation to stop it. When her superiors ignore her warnings, she mounts an unsanctioned operation and her team barely repels a large force determined to kill Americans. Sixteen years later, Cora is the press secretary for the Speaker of the House—a single mother balancing a demanding political job with a complicated personal life—when the lame duck president suspends habeas corpus and begins arresting members of Congress to retain power. J.M. Adams builds the political thriller around a protagonist whose biography earns her credibility. 🏛️

The jump from covert operative to political communications to constitutional crisis gives the novel an unusually wide canvas, and Adams connects the three phases of Cora’s life with enough character continuity that the different settings feel inhabited by the same person rather than assembled for plot convenience. The Benghazi prologue establishes that Cora acts on principle regardless of institutional sanction—a trait that served her then and becomes essential again when the Speaker needs someone willing to operate outside conventional channels. 🔍

The political extremism scenario—a president using emergency powers to arrest political opponents and suspend constitutional protections—is handled as a genuine thriller premise rather than a political polemic, and Adams keeps the focus on Cora’s practical problem-solving rather than ideological commentary. The alliances that turn sour and the failing trust in colleagues give the thriller its interpersonal tension alongside the constitutional stakes. At $0.99 this is an exceptional value for a political thriller with a protagonist worth following. ⭐

Why this grips you: A former covert operative turned press secretary when a lame duck president starts arresting Congress—Cora Walker’s principles have always gotten her into trouble, and this time the stakes are the Constitution itself.

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Author: Martin Middlebrook
Regularly $9.99, Today $1.99
Military Naval History

Winston Churchill wrote that the only thing that genuinely frightened him during the entire war was the U-boat peril. Martin Middlebrook—author of *The First Day on the Somme*, one of the defining works of WWI military history—brings the same ground-level narrative approach to the most critical convoy battle of the Battle of the Atlantic. In the first twenty days of March 1943, German U-boats sank ninety-seven Allied merchant ships at twice the rate they could be replaced. Had that pace continued, the North Atlantic lifeline between America and Britain would have broken—and with it, the entire Allied war effort in Europe. ⚓

The specific engagement Middlebrook reconstructs—Convoys SC122 and HX229 sailing from New York harbor, with Admiral Dönitz deploying forty-two U-boats to intercept them—is what the Germans themselves called “the greatest convoy battle of all time.” Twenty-one merchant ships were sunk. The scale of the catastrophe, and the near-miss for Allied strategic survival, gives the book its dramatic weight even for readers who know the war’s ultimate outcome. Middlebrook builds the narrative with the same meticulous detail and human-level focus that made his Somme book essential. 🌊

The author’s gift is for making strategic history feel personal—the merchant sailors and naval escort crews whose specific experiences he traces give the larger numbers their human meaning. Understanding why March 1943 was the potential hinge of the entire war, and what it actually felt like to be on those ships, are things this book delivers simultaneously and without sacrificing either dimension to the other. At $1.99 this is one of the outstanding military history bargains on today’s list. 🏆

Why this endures: The battle Churchill said frightened him most, reconstructed by the author of *The First Day on the Somme*—forty-two U-boats, two convoys, and the moment the Atlantic war almost broke the wrong way.

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