Sofie’s father killed himself and she has never fully accepted the official explanation. When a journalist approaches her with evidence that he may have been an unwitting participant in a secret pharmaceutical drug trial—one that drove its subjects to self-destructive behavior—she jumps at the chance to find out the truth. It leads her onto a Thames party boat where she expects to make contact with two whistleblowing scientists. Instead, she witnesses their murders, barely escapes with her life, and becomes the only surviving witness to killings that no one in authority wants to acknowledge happened. On the run and with powerful people working to silence her, she crosses paths with Cal Harrison—a divorced ex-army surveillance specialist who was hired to provide security for the very people who died, and who now knows he has been completely played. Together, they uncover a political conspiracy stretching from London to Africa. JD Wood opens the Cal Harrison series with the British conspiracy thriller fans are comparing to Harlan Coben and Robert Harris. 🔍
Wood—a former film industry professional, e-commerce entrepreneur, and travel writer who co-founded the online travel guide The Hotel Guru—brings a journalist’s eye for detail and an insider’s instinct for institutional corruption to the plot. The dual Sofie/Cal perspective keeps both narrative threads compelling, and the twists arrive with genuine force. 💙
Wood is a British author. The Cal Harrison series runs two completed books. ⭐
Why this grips you: She went on a boat to find out who killed her father—and became the only witness to two more murders that the most powerful people in London desperately need to disappear.
Chuck has trained his whole life for this. He is Engine 17’s newest recruit as of this morning and he is ready. He has been on the clock for exactly two hours when the crisis arrives. It is not a five-alarm blaze. It is not a thirty-car pileup. It is a silver maple tree, a black-and-white cat with very yellow eyes, and Alli O’Malley—a platinum blonde with more curves than a rolled-up firehose and an angel face that absolutely does not tell you the whole story. Don’t let it fool you. He ends up with a black eye, a concussion, and four stitches in his forehead. She ends up thinking he’s the most annoyingly persistent man she has ever met. He ends up thinking she’s the most infuriating woman who has ever set his soul on fire. This is technically a bad start. Ash Keller opens the Men of Engine 17 series with the short, sweet, and genuinely funny firefighter romcom that readers describe as exactly the kind of joy they needed. 💕
Keller writes with the light comic touch and clean warmth that distinguishes her brand—the banter between Chuck and Alli is sharp without being cruel, the swoony hero moments land, and the novella delivers a complete satisfying arc in a single sitting. Clean romance; no explicit content. HEA guaranteed. 🔍
Keller is a Kentucky-based author of clean contemporary romance and romantic comedy. The Men of Engine 17 series runs five standalone novellas. ⭐
Why this charms: Engine 17’s newest recruit was on the job for two hours before a cat rescue left him with a concussion, four stitches, and the most interesting woman he has ever met.
Constance and Sophia Baines are the daughters of a draper in the Five Towns of the English Midlands—a world of provincial commerce, chapel respectability, and quiet social ambition. When the novel opens they are young women with their futures still entirely open. By the time it closes, they are old women who have lived through the transformation of an entire century. Constance stays: marries sensibly, keeps the shop, roots herself deeply in the community, witnesses the slow death of the old provincial world she has always known. Sophia runs: falls for a romantic adventure that takes her to Paris during the Franco-Prussian War and the Commune, builds herself a successful businesswoman’s life in France, and returns to the Five Towns in old age to find a world she barely recognizes. Arnold Bennett delivers the 1908 novel that the critic Frank Swinnerton called the best English novel of the 20th century. 📚
Bennett wrote about the Five Towns with the same documentary precision and affection that Balzac brought to Paris—the novel’s scope across a full human lifetime, and its quiet insistence on taking the lives of ordinary women seriously, gives it a moral weight that has kept it in print for over a century. Somerset Maugham placed it in his list of the ten greatest novels ever written in English. 🔍
Bennett was an English novelist, journalist, and critic who lived from 1867 to 1931. The Old Wives’ Tale is a standalone in the public domain. ⭐
Why this matters: Two sisters in Victorian England—one who stayed, one who fled—and a whole century of ordinary life rendered with the care it always deserved.
The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership
If you want to lead, there are rules. Not guidelines, not suggestions, not preferences—laws. Inviolable principles that determine whether people choose to follow you or simply tolerate your title. John C. Maxwell spent decades studying what separates leaders who build genuine followership from those who rely on positional authority alone, and The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership is the distillation of that study: twenty-one principles arranged in order of importance, each one illustrated with stories from history, business, sports, and Maxwell’s own leadership experience. From the Law of the Lid—which holds that your leadership ability is the ceiling on your effectiveness—to the Law of the Legacy, which asks what you’ll leave behind when you’re gone, each chapter strips a core truth about influence and authority down to something you can actually apply in the next twenty-four hours. 📚
First published in 1998 and updated in 2007 to reflect lessons from the intervening decade, the book has sold over three million copies, appeared on the New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller lists, and is routinely cited by executives, pastors, coaches, and military officers as the single most useful leadership book they have read. The principles hold because they are descriptive rather than prescriptive—this is how leadership actually works, not how we wish it would. 🔍
Maxwell is a #1 New York Times bestselling author, leadership speaker, and coach who has sold over 34 million books worldwide. The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership is a standalone classic. ⭐
Why this matters: Three million copies sold because these twenty-one laws describe how leadership actually works—not how anyone wished it did—for $3.99.
Andrew McCarthy grew up in New Jersey, left for Manhattan to study acting at NYU, and became a movie star before he could graduate. By his mid-twenties he had appeared in Pretty in Pink, St. Elmo’s Fire, Less Than Zero, and Weekend at Bernie’s, and been labeled a charter member of the Hollywood Brat Pack alongside Rob Lowe, Molly Ringwald, Emilio Estevez, and Demi Moore. Brat: An ’80s Story is not the full autobiography—it doesn’t try to be. It is a precise, sharp-eyed reckoning with that singular moment: the late seventies and eighties in New York City, from scoring loose joints in Washington Square Park to skipping school for dark revival houses in the Village, to the heady, disorienting experience of suddenly becoming famous while still essentially being a boy. McCarthy writes with the honesty of someone who has spent a long time processing what he describes as “taking the blossom of my youth and blowing it to smithereens.” 📚
The book is the inspiration for a Hulu documentary of the same name. Demi Moore called it “the truth of an unknowable scared boy shining light on the complex pieces that make up the wise man.” Publishers Weekly described it as “a riveting portrait of the artist as a young man.” Stephen Fry called it “piercingly, ruefully, and hilariously wise.” Forbes praised its “surprisingly, and refreshingly, honest” candor. 🔍
McCarthy is also a travel writer and director who has built an entire second career. Brat: An ’80s Story is a standalone memoir. ⭐
Why this captivates: The quiet one in the Brat Pack finally writes his version—and it turns out he’s a genuinely gifted memoirist who spent decades figuring out what it cost him—for $2.99.
Second-grade teacher Dade Saracina has had more than enough military life. He grew up moving around the world with an ambitious general for a father, and everything he wants now is simple: put down roots, stay in one place, be something other than the general’s son. The absolute last thing he is looking for is a handsome, kind, attention-commanding Army Major to come crashing into his carefully ordered life. Major Clifton Rogers has been curious about his quiet neighbor for a while. When he sees trouble, he steps in—and nearly sinks into Dade’s eyes when they finally meet his. The attraction seems undeniable, but Dade keeps him at arm’s length, and once Cliff meets Dade’s father, he understands exactly why. The general has definite ideas about what his son should be doing, the career he should be pursuing, and the life he should be living—and he is not the kind of man who accepts no for an answer. Andrew Grey delivers the MM military romance that reviewers are calling warm, genuine, and impossible not to root for. 💕
Grey writes with the character-first approach and genuine emotional warmth that has built his reputation as one of the most prolific and beloved MM romance authors working—the specific tension between Dade’s determination to escape his father’s shadow and Cliff’s patient, protective devotion gives the novel its heart. Clean with moderate heat; sweet rather than explicit. 🔍
Grey is an RWA Centennial Award recipient and the author of over 100 works of contemporary MM romance. Major Advancement is a standalone published December 2025. ⭐
Why this hooks you: He spent his whole life fleeing his military father’s ambitions—and the most attractive man he’s ever met turns out to be an Army Major who also knows his dad—for $1.49.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





