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Author: A.E. Rayne
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Epic Fantasy Adventure

Jael Furyck is a battle-hardened warrior, daughter of a king, trained to kill since she was ten years old, and completely uninterested in marriage. When her father dies and her loathsome uncle seizes the throne, he solves the problem of his dangerous niece by marrying her off to the son of Brekka’s arch-enemy. Eadmund Skalleson had a wife, loved her, lost her, and has been drinking ever since—an embarrassment to his father, the King of the Slave Islands, who has run out of patience. Two people who want nothing to do with each other, bound by political necessity. A.E. Rayne opens the Furyck Saga with the epic fantasy marriage-of-convenience setup at its most productively volatile. ⚔️

The rival kings scheming on either side give the political marriage its specific stakes, and the ancient darkness crawling out of the shadows—an echo of the past seeking to destroy them all—gives the series its epic threat alongside the interpersonal conflict. Rayne develops both the political and supernatural dimensions with real structural control, and the world she builds around Jael and Eadmund has the specific Norse-inflected atmosphere that gives the Furyck Saga its distinctive identity within the epic fantasy genre. 🌑

Rayne has built a substantial devoted readership for the Furyck Saga, praised specifically for the combination of fierce female protagonist, genuinely complex political world-building, and the kind of slow-burn relationship development that only epic fantasy’s extended canvas can accommodate. The series has a passionate following that has followed Jael and Eadmund across many volumes, and this opener delivers everything that following was built on. ⭐

Why this captivates: A warrior who doesn’t want a husband, a broken man who doesn’t want a wife, a forced political marriage, and an ancient darkness that doesn’t care about either of their preferences—Winter’s Fury is epic fantasy at its most compelling.

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Author: Ava Hunter
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Second Chance Amnesia Romance

Nine months after country superstar Luke Kincaid lost his wife in a plane crash, he is close to giving up everything—the music, his band, his life. Then he learns she is alive. He rushes to bring her home and finds her: breathing, physically recovered, and with no memory of him or the life they built together. Ava Hunter opens the Nashville Star series with the second-chance amnesia romance premise that takes the “starting over” metaphor literally—Luke must rebuild the relationship from the beginning with a woman who is his wife in every legal sense and a stranger in every experiential one. 💙

The dual pressure of helping Sal recover her memories while simultaneously trying to rebuild his failing music career gives Luke’s situation its specific layered urgency—neither dimension can wait for the other, and both are necessary for anything like the life he had before to be possible. Hunter develops the amnesia dynamic with genuine emotional intelligence: Sal’s experience of a man who clearly loves her with an intensity she cannot yet feel the basis for gives the romance its specific poignant texture. 🎵

The danger dimension—the madman responsible for Sal’s disappearance who has found her again—gives the novel its thriller urgency alongside the romance and the memory recovery. Hunter writes the Nashville Star series with the warm country music atmosphere and the specific emotional complexity of second-chance romance that doesn’t take the second chance for granted. The series has a devoted readership that comes for the combination of country music world, genuine romantic stakes, and the specific tension of a love story that has to be built twice. ⭐

Why this moves you: A country star who thought he buried his wife, her return with no memory of him, and the madman who took her the first time now looking for her again—Sing You Home is second-chance amnesia romance with real Nashville heart.

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Author: Sam Baron, John Ash
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Small Town Mystery Thriller

Twenty-three children vanish from a school bus in Caldwell, Texas, and the case becomes personal for Texas Ranger Ruth Baker before it even begins: her daughter Ava should have been on that bus. Partnered with fellow Ranger Aaron Tate, Ruth uncovers a connection to the infamous Red Barn Killings from twenty years ago—a case that Caldwell’s most powerful figures may have spent two decades actively protecting. Sam Baron and John Ash open the Ruth Baker series with the small-town mystery thriller at its most immediately high-stakes: twenty-three missing children and a mother who cannot separate the professional from the personal. 🔍

The double pressure—the active missing children investigation and the buried twenty-year-old case beginning to surface—gives the thriller its specific structural complexity. As Ruth digs deeper, revelations about her late husband’s death emerge alongside the conspiracy, which means the personal stakes keep widening rather than narrowing as the investigation progresses. Baron and Ash build the Caldwell power structure with the specific small-town opacity that gives the mystery its sustained tension: the people who know what happened have had twenty years to perfect their silence. 💙

The FBI closing in as Ruth works the case gives the procedural its jurisdictional dimension and its additional pressure—she is operating against multiple forms of institutional resistance simultaneously. Ruth Baker is established as the kind of protagonist that carries a series: specific professional identity, specific personal stakes, and the specific moral determination that makes her simultaneously effective and vulnerable. The Ruth Baker series has launched with real momentum. ⭐

Why this grips you: Twenty-three children missing, her daughter should have been on that bus, and the investigation pointing toward a twenty-year-old massacre that Caldwell’s powerful have been protecting ever since—Red Barn is Texas crime fiction with real urgency.

The Cultural Revolution: A People’s History

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Author: Frank Dikötter
Regularly $16.00, Today $2.99
Communism & Socialism

After the catastrophic Great Leap Forward claimed tens of millions of lives, Mao Zedong launched the Cultural Revolution—ostensibly to purge bourgeois and capitalist elements, actually to eliminate political rivals and shore up his personal legacy. Young students became Red Guards, vowing to defend the Chairman to the death, until rival factions began fighting each other in the streets with semiautomatic weapons in the name of revolutionary purity. The military eventually turned China into a garrison state. Frank Dikötter opens *The Cultural Revolution: A People’s History* with access that previous accounts never had. 🔍

Dikötter drew on hundreds of previously classified party documents—secret police reports, unexpurgated leadership speeches, local records that the official historical narrative was built to suppress—and what he found undermines the picture of complete conformity that has characterized standard accounts of the period. His central and counterintuitive finding: ordinary people used the political chaos to resurrect market activity and hollow out party ideology from the inside, effectively burying Maoism through the very disorder Mao created. 💙

This is the third volume of Dikötter’s People’s Trilogy, following *Mao’s Great Famine* and *The Tragedy of Liberation*, and it completes one of modern historiography’s most significant reassessments of the Mao era—built on primary sources that were unavailable to previous scholars and reaching conclusions that reframe how the era ended and what followed it. For anyone interested in Chinese history, twentieth-century political history, or the mechanics of how authoritarian states collapse from within, this is essential reading. At $2.99, marked down from $16, it is exceptional value. ⭐

Why this is essential: Hundreds of classified party documents, the Cultural Revolution seen from the inside, and the counterintuitive discovery that ordinary people buried Maoism through the chaos it created—Frank Dikötter’s landmark history for $2.99.

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Author: Nicole Johnsey Burke
Regularly $30.00, Today $4.99
Gardening & Horticulture Techniques

Nicole Johnsey Burke founded Rooted Garden, one of the leading culinary landscape companies in the United States, and Gardenary, an online kitchen gardening education platform—and *Kitchen Garden Revival* is the book form of her argument that growing your own food doesn’t have to look like a utilitarian row of cabbages in a dirt patch. The kitchen garden she advocates is something considerably more intentional: raised planting beds in organized geometric patterns, designed for both ornamental interest and genuine food production across all four seasons. 🌿

The premise is both practical and aesthetic—kitchen gardens are attractive, highly tailored, and designed to suit a life rather than demand it conform to a garden’s needs. Burke walks through every aspect of the process: design, bed construction, soil, planting, seasonal succession, and harvesting, with the specific focus on making the system maintainable for people who are not professional gardeners. The emphasis on fresh homegrown fruits, vegetables, and herbs as a real daily reality rather than a weekend project gives the book its practical ambition. 🍃

Burke writes with the practical authority of someone who has installed and maintained these gardens for clients across many climate zones and many skill levels, and the book reflects that experience: the guidance is specific rather than aspirational, the troubleshooting is built in rather than treated as exceptional, and the visual presentation—the kitchen garden as a beautiful element of outdoor living rather than a purely utilitarian endeavor—gives the approach its appeal to readers who want their home to look as good as it eats. At $4.99, marked down from $30, this is outstanding value for a genuinely beautiful and practical gardening guide. ⭐

Why this inspires: The kitchen garden as a beautiful, organized, four-season food garden—not rows of dirt but raised beds in geometric patterns—Nicole Burke’s definitive guide to growing your own food with style, marked down from $30 to $4.99.

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Author: Robin Lane Fox
Regularly $3.99, Today $0.99
Ancient Rome Biographies

When Alexander the Great died in 323 BC at thirty-two, his empire covered more than two million square miles, stretching from Greece to India—an achievement assembled through thirteen years of continuous military campaigning that remains without parallel in the ancient world. He founded eighteen cities, stamped Greek culture across the ancient East, and created a legend that has been debated, reimagined, and contested for more than two thousand years. Robin Lane Fox’s biography, originally published in 1973 and still considered among the finest ever written, approaches Alexander as a man of his own time rather than a mythological figure. ⚔️

Lane Fox is a classical historian at Oxford whose decades of scholarship in ancient sources—Greek, Persian, and otherwise—give the biography its specific authority. He works through the mass of conflicting evidence and legend with acute critical judgment, combining historical scholarship with the psychological insight that distinguishes biography from chronicle. The result is an Alexander who is genuinely human in his ambitions, his passions, his relationships, and his contradictions—a far more interesting figure than either the romantic hero or the ruthless conqueror that simpler accounts tend to produce. 🌟

Lane Fox subsequently rode with cavalry on location during the filming of Oliver Stone’s *Alexander* to advise on military authenticity—a detail that captures his specific commitment to understanding the subject from the inside rather than purely from the archive. The book has remained in print continuously because it has never been superseded: subsequent scholarship has refined details, but the biography’s essential achievement—making Alexander vivid and comprehensible and human—remains unmatched. At $0.99 this is one of the outstanding historical biography bargains available anywhere. ⭐

Why this endures: Alexander the Great seen as a man of his own time—the warrior, the leader, the legend—Robin Lane Fox’s definitive biography still unsurpassed after fifty years, for $0.99.

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