On a quiet evening, virtually everything that burns fuel ignites simultaneously—cars, planes, fuel lines, cities—killing billions in the first twenty-four hours. Mike Kraus opens the End of All Things series with the post-apocalyptic survival premise that establishes its catastrophe with brutal efficiency and then immediately splits its narrative across two simultaneous survival stories: a mother and her children on a South Florida beach where their vacation just became a fight to stay alive, and a father trapped at Denver International Airport as planes erupt in flame around him. ☢️
The dual structure gives the novel its specific emotional urgency—James Burton in Denver and Alice Burton in Florida are separated by the width of a continent, both trying to survive long enough to find their way back to each other. Kraus develops both storylines with the propulsive efficiency that distinguishes post-apocalyptic survival fiction at its best: the practical problems of immediate survival in a world without fuel or functional infrastructure, the specific dangers of other people who are also desperate, and the specific geography of each location giving the survival challenges their distinct texture. 🔍
Kraus is one of post-apocalyptic fiction’s most prolific and commercially successful authors, with a massive readership that has followed his work across many series. The End of All Things delivers the combination of large-scale catastrophe and intimate family stakes that has built that readership, with a scenario—fueled civilization collapsing in a single night—that is both immediate in its impact and genuinely terrifying in its scope. ⭐
Why this hooks you: Everything that uses fuel goes up in flames simultaneously, a mother and children stranded on a Florida beach, a father trapped in Denver—and a continent between them—The Collapse is post-apocalyptic survival fiction that opens at full scale.
Claire Vogel is a recently divorced mother of four daughters, a successful counselor, and a resident of the kind of planned prestigious community where everyone knows their neighbors and everything appears respectable. She has a secret—a pattern of risky, reckless behavior she uses to manage hidden, deep-rooted pain. When the mysterious Steel Nolan moves in next door and their flirtation develops into genuine attraction, everything shifts. Then the sleepwalking starts. Then the shadow men. Then the disembodied voices. London Clarke opens the Neighborhood Nightmares series with the horror suspense premise that runs its supernatural threat directly through the personal one. 👻
The specific dynamic—a woman with her own hidden history beginning to recover childhood memories as she learns more about her new neighbor—gives the novel its psychological depth alongside its supernatural dread. Clarke develops the question of whether Steel is the source of the darkness or its target with real atmospheric intelligence, and the four daughters’ safety becoming increasingly central as the sleepwalking and visions escalate gives the horror its specific maternal urgency. 😰
Clarke writes horror suspense with the Gothic atmosphere and psychological complexity that distinguishes the Neighborhood Nightmares series within the domestic horror space. The planned community setting—the surface respectability, the close proximity, the social knowledge that everyone has about everyone else—gives the supernatural intrusions their specific menace: these are things happening in the most ordinary possible context. The question the novel holds in sustained tension—dream or nightmare?—is answered with the genuine ambiguity that the best horror sustains longest. ⭐
Why this unsettles: A divorced mother, a mysterious new neighbor, a flirtation that becomes something more—and then the sleepwalking, the shadow men, and the disembodied voices that follow—The Neighbor is domestic horror suspense with real psychological depth.
Captain Mitch Lansing is a by-the-book cop with a haunted past who has been assigned to work in a high school classroom to improve relationships between at-risk youth and the police—exactly the last thing he wants to do. Cassie Smith is an unorthodox teacher who was herself an at-risk student, fought her way through a dysfunctional family and college on her own terms, and has built a life she’s genuinely happy with—until Mitch crashes into it. Kathryn Shay opens the Bayview Heights series with the later-in-life romance premise built on two people whose professional identities are each other’s worst nightmare. 💙
The at-risk students who are the reason Mitch and Cassie have been thrown together become the unexpected engine of healing for both of them—the kids’ specific needs forcing two cautious, damaged adults into a collaboration that neither of them anticipated needing. Shay handles the shift from professional friction to romantic feeling with the emotional intelligence that comes from writing characters whose specific histories make them genuinely reluctant rather than conventionally obstructed. 💕
Shay is a veteran romance author whose Bayview Heights series has developed a devoted readership for the combination of emotional depth, mature protagonists with real damage, and the specific warmth of romance that takes its characters’ full lives seriously rather than simply pairing them off. When a gang targets Mitch and Cassie realizes what that means to her, the novel reaches the specific emotional intensity that Shay’s readership returns for. Several highly emotional scenes and the students themselves give this romance its heart. ⭐
Why this moves you: A haunted by-the-book cop, a teacher whose worst nightmare is cops, at-risk kids who begin the healing process for both of them—Cop of the Year is later-in-life romance with real emotional depth.
Sally’s Candy Addiction
Sally McKenney created Sally’s Baking Addiction into one of the internet’s most trusted baking resources, and *Sally’s Candy Addiction* brings the same approach—clear technique, reliable recipes, beautiful photography—to the specific pleasures and challenges of homemade candy. The 75 recipes span the full candy-making range: taffy, truffles, fudge, marshmallows, caramels, toffees, brittles, chocolate-covered treats, candied nuts, candy apples, and popcorn balls, with the kind of recipe specificity that makes even unfamiliar techniques feel achievable. 🍬
McKenney begins with the foundational knowledge that candy making requires and baking doesn’t always: temperature stages, tools, ingredient behavior, and the specific points at which candy can go wrong and how to prevent them. This groundwork is what separates a candy cookbook that works from one that produces frustrating failures—candy is more technically demanding than most baking, and McKenney’s strength as a teacher is her ability to demystify that technical dimension without either oversimplifying or overwhelming. 🍫
The specific recipe highlights demonstrate the range: Nutella and Lemon Cream Pie truffles, Fluffernutter Swirl and Cranberry Pistachio fudge, Peanut Butter Buckeyes, Strawberry Buttercreams—not the standard selections but genuinely inventive variations on candy classics that give the cookbook its personality. The fully illustrated step-by-step format ensures that the visual check points are as clear as the written instructions. At $3.99, marked down from $25.99, this is an outstanding value for a candy cookbook built on genuine expertise. ⭐
Why this belongs in your kitchen: 75 candy recipes from taffy to truffles to Fluffernutter Swirl fudge, with the foundational technique that makes candy making actually work—Sally McKenney’s beloved candy cookbook, marked down from $26 to $3.99.
Three men knew Elvis Presley from his teens to his final days: Billy Smith, his first cousin and the person Elvis reportedly loved most after his own mother; Marty Lacker, best man at the wedding and foreman of the Memphis Mafia, the King’s handpicked group of confidants and gatekeepers; and Lamar Fike, the touring crew member who accompanied Elvis into the Army. Alanna Nash sat with all three of them and assembled the first oral biography of Elvis built from genuine insider testimony—the first book to map Elvis’s psyche rather than simply narrate his career. 🎸
What Nash achieves is something that most Elvis biographies have not managed: the man rather than the myth, seen from the inside. The revelations range from the childhood seeds of his drug dependency to his terror about his mother’s health, from his plan to change his identity to behaviors that his public image carefully concealed. Three proud, ribald, sad, and ultimately wistful voices—each with a slightly different vantage on the same life—produce a picture of Elvis that is simultaneously more human and more complicated than the legend. 🌟
Nash is one of music biography’s most acclaimed practitioners, and *Elvis and the Memphis Mafia* is considered among the essential Elvis texts for exactly the quality of access it achieved. The oral biography format gives the testimony its specific authority: these are men speaking about someone they loved and protected and watched destroyed, and the complexity of that emotional position runs through every page. At $1.29 this is an exceptional value for one of rock biography’s most significant books. ⭐
Why this endures: Three men who were with Elvis from his teens to his death, speaking with the authority of people who loved him and watched him—the oral biography that finally mapped the King’s inner life, for $1.29.
Nadiya Hussain won *The Great British Bake Off* in 2015 and has since built one of Britain’s most beloved food platforms—television series, cookbooks, and a specific culinary voice that combines her Bangladeshi heritage with the full breadth of her British cooking life. *Nadiya’s Quick Comforts* is her comfort food collection: more than 80 recipes designed to cheer from the inside out, all quick enough for busy home cooks who want the comfort without the commitment of a long cooking project. 🍜
The recipe range covers the specific territory that comfort food inhabits when it’s working at its best—caramelized onion pasta, honey chicken udon noodles, halloumi bake, butter bean salmon, croissant berry pudding, chocolate mousse—dishes that are indulgent without being elaborate, hearty without being heavy, and built on the combination of flavor and ease that Hussain’s cooking consistently delivers. The quick preparation runs throughout: these are meals and treats for the evenings when you need the food to be good and need it to happen soon. 🌟
Hussain writes cookbooks with the warmth and specific personality that have made her such a trusted presence in British food culture—the recipes feel like they come from a person rather than a brand, and the creativity that runs through her ingredient combinations gives even familiar comfort food formats their own character. *Nadiya’s Quick Comforts* has received excellent reviews from her devoted cookbook readership for exactly this quality: genuinely comforting, genuinely quick, genuinely Nadiya. At $0.99, marked down from $3.99, this is exceptional value. ⭐
Why this belongs in your kitchen: Over 80 quick, genuinely comforting recipes from the Great British Bake Off winner—from caramelized onion pasta to croissant berry pudding—Nadiya Hussain’s warm and creative comfort food collection for $0.99.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





