Two hours after her fiancé proposes, she catches him in a deeply compromising situation with someone named Tiffany Slater—and he has the audacity to suggest it’s her fault. His reasoning: she’s frigid. Tara Crescent sets up the premise with cheerful bluntness, and the heroine’s response is equally direct: she’s going to find her missing O, and she’s going to do it with professional help. Enter therapists Benjamin Long and Landon West. 🔥
The two therapists are, inconveniently, the most attractive men she’s ever encountered. The setup is a why-choose romance with a comedic foundation—Crescent writes with sharp, irreverent wit that keeps the explicit content anchored in genuine humor rather than letting it tip into pure fantasy. The heroine’s voice is consistently funny, self-aware, and completely unimpressed with her own terrible decision-making, which makes her immediately likable. 💋
As a standalone with a happily-ever-after ending and no cliffhangers, Dirty Therapy delivers exactly what it promises without asking readers to commit to an open-ended series. The emotional arc underneath the comedy is real—a woman reclaiming her confidence and desire after a relationship that systematically undermined both—and Crescent gives it enough weight to make the resolution feel earned rather than merely titillating. This is comfort reading for adults with a very good sense of humor. 😈
Why this works: Genuinely funny, genuinely steamy, and grounded in a heroine whose confidence arc is as satisfying as the romance itself—Dirty Therapy is a standalone that delivers on every promise. FREE today on Amazon.
Trevor has spent his entire life convinced he’s a fraud—a shifter who doesn’t measure up to the prophecy that surrounds him, waiting for a real fight against the demon he’s supposedly destined to defeat. The One True Mate mythology haunts him: do destined mates actually exist, or is it just a story the pack tells itself? He’s drawn to a female who doesn’t seem to fit the prophecy at all—until she leads him straight into the demon’s lair. 🐺
Lisa Ladew builds the One True Mate universe with the kind of mythology-heavy world-building that paranormal romance readers love—shifter politics, ancient prophecies, demonic threats, and the particular intensity of a fated mate bond that neither party fully understands yet. Trevor’s self-doubt gives him an interiority that distinguishes him from the alpha-male-as-force-of-nature template, and the female lead’s unexpected role in the prophecy adds a satisfying twist to the setup. 🌙
This bundle collects the first four books in the series, which is an exceptional entry point—four complete installments to establish whether this is a world worth living in for the long haul. Ladew has built a substantial readership in the shifter romance space, and the bundle format means new readers can commit to the mythology without worrying about being left on a cliffhanger after a single volume. The overarching demon storyline develops across all four books with satisfying momentum. ⚔️
Why this bundle is worth grabbing: Four complete paranormal romance novels, a richly built shifter world, and a reluctant hero whose destiny turns out to be more complicated than anyone told him. FREE today on Amazon.
It starts with a secret compartment in a new Corvette—and whatever Doug finds inside it is going to change everything. Luisa Marietta Gold opens the Osprey Cove series with a mystery object and a collision of worlds: Doug grew up poor, carrying the particular ambition that comes from watching others have what you don’t; Catherine is a VP at a prominent New York City marketing firm, the product of privilege and wealth. When Catherine hires Doug, the class divide between them is as obvious as it is electric. 🚗
The romance develops against a backdrop that ranges from the Rideau Lakes of Canada to the shores of the Caribbean, giving the story a sense of geographic sweep that most contemporary romances don’t attempt. Gold uses the settings purposefully rather than decoratively—each location carries its own atmosphere and advances the plot in specific ways. The mystery element threaded through the narrative gives the love story an additional layer of tension that keeps the pages turning beyond the romantic arc alone. 🌊
The class dynamic between Doug and Catherine is handled with more nuance than the standard billionaire romance formula typically allows—his envy and ambition are acknowledged rather than glossed over, and Catherine’s privilege is a real factor in their dynamic rather than simply backdrop. The series is written as a continuous narrative, so this first book is the start of an ongoing story rather than a standalone, which means the investment pays dividends across multiple volumes. 💼
Why this hooks you in: A mystery object, two worlds colliding, and a romance that unfolds across some of the most beautiful landscapes in North America—Escape to Osprey Cove is an engaging series opener. FREE today on Amazon.
The House of Dreams
In 1940, a beautiful villa just outside Marseilles became one of the most extraordinary places in the world. American journalist Varian Fry and his remarkable team used the House of Dreams as a base of operations for one of the most audacious rescue missions of World War II—smuggling Europe’s greatest artists and intellectuals out of occupied France before the Nazis could reach them. Among those they saved: Marc Chagall, Hannah Arendt, and Max Ernst. Kate Lord Brown brings this almost unbelievable true story to life through the frame of a present-day journalist’s investigation. 🎨
In 2000, Sophie Cass is convinced that a celebrated painter in the Hamptons is hiding something significant about his past. Her research pulls her back to the House of Dreams and the wartime love affair that changed the course of his life. Brown moves between timelines with confidence, using the contrast between the dangerous, electric atmosphere of the villa and the careful distance of Sophie’s contemporary investigation to build genuine narrative tension. The House of Dreams itself—a place of remarkable creative camaraderie surrounded by mortal danger—is rendered with vivid specificity. 🌿
The real Varian Fry is one of history’s most underrecognized heroes, and Brown honors the historical record while giving it the emotional texture of fiction. The love story at the novel’s center is handled with restraint and genuine feeling, and Sophie’s growing uncertainty about whether some secrets should remain buried gives the contemporary timeline its own moral weight. This is the kind of historical fiction that sends you straight to Wikipedia afterward to confirm how much of it is true. 🕯️
Why this moves and inspires: A wartime rescue mission, a decades-old love affair, and a journalist who may be in over her head—The House of Dreams is historical fiction at its most lyrical and humane. $1.99 today on Amazon.
Between the 1880s and the 1920s, two million Jewish immigrants made the journey from Warsaw, the Russian shtetls, and the towns of Eastern Europe through Ellis Island and into the teeming tenements of Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Irving Howe’s monumental account of that migration and its aftermath is one of the great works of American social history—a book that captures not just the external facts of the immigrant experience but the interior life of an entire community in transformation. 🗽
Howe traces the full arc: the desperate circumstances that drove the emigration, the shock of arrival in a new world, the struggle to hold onto Yiddish language and culture while simultaneously reaching for American opportunity. The sweatshops, the settlement houses, the labor movement, the Yiddish theater, the pushcart markets, the gradual and sometimes painful process of assimilation—all of it is rendered with the depth of a scholar and the warmth of someone writing about his own people’s story. 📚
The New York Times called it “brilliant,” and the decades since publication have only confirmed its status as a definitive text. Howe wrote World of Our Fathers as an act of cultural preservation as much as historical scholarship—a recognition that the world it described was vanishing and needed to be captured before the last living witnesses were gone. The result is a book that reads as personally as a memoir while carrying the authority of exhaustive research. For anyone with roots in that migration, or simply curious about one of the most consequential chapters in American immigration history, this is essential. 🕎
Why this endures: One of the great works of American social history—sweeping, intimate, and essential for understanding the Jewish immigrant experience that helped shape modern New York. $1.99 today on Amazon.
The New Yorker receives around 500 cartoon submissions every week and rejects the vast majority. Most rejections are for the obvious reason: not funny enough. These 293 cartoons were rejected for an entirely different reason—they were too dark, too dumb, too naughty, or too outrageous for even the magazine’s notoriously catholic sense of humor. Which means, of course, that they are a treasure. 😂
The contributor list is the New Yorker’s actual roster of talent: Roz Chast, Gahan Wilson, Sam Gross, Jack Zeigler, David Sipress, and more. These are the cartoonists whose work appears regularly in the magazine’s pages—this is simply the other side of their output, the stuff that Eustace Tilley looked at and sniffed. The gap between the polished wit of their published work and the cheerful depravity on display here is genuinely revelatory and consistently hilarious. 🖊️
The categories are a delight in themselves: ventriloquist dummy cartoons, operating room cartoons, bring-your-daughter-to-work-day cartoons featuring a stripper and a prison guard on death row, couples in bed, coffins, wise-cracking animals. Matthew Diffee has curated with the instincts of someone who understands that the rejected work often tells you more about a cartoonist’s sensibility than the approved stuff. This is a book for anyone who has ever suspected that the funniest joke in the room was the one that didn’t make the cut. 🗑️
Why this belongs on every humor shelf: 293 cartoons too wrong for the New Yorker, from the cartoonists who draw for the New Yorker—this is the good stuff that got away. $1.99 today on Amazon.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





