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Set in Hugh Howey’s Wool universe, Silo 49 has never had it easy—and things have just gotten considerably worse. Graham, the head of IT, has spent his career doing the unsavory things that keeping a silo functional requires. Every person has a line they will not cross. Graham has just found his. What he is being asked to do is something he cannot do, and the realization arrives at the worst possible moment. 🔍
With only his best friend Wallis and a dying electrician named Grace to stand with him, Graham faces the choice that the Silo universe keeps returning to: do what is right, or do what the rules say. Silo One—the impersonal, distant authority that controls all silos—is not a force that tolerates deviation, and the trio racing against it have limited time, limited resources, and a solution that is as drastic as the situation demands: Going Dark. 💀
Ann Christy writes within the Wool universe with the understanding of its emotional and philosophical stakes that distinguishes the best fan fiction from simple imitation—the silo setting is not just a backdrop but the active moral environment in which her characters have to make impossible choices. The question of institutional compliance versus individual conscience is the engine of the entire Wool universe, and Silo 49 engages it directly, with three ordinary people who have found their limits and are willing to act on them against a system built to prevent exactly that. The novella format delivers the tension cleanly and without padding. ⚡
What makes this essential: Ann Christy delivers a gripping Wool universe novella—a head of IT who has found the one thing he will not do, a dying electrician with nothing to lose, a best friend with everything at stake, and a race against Silo One that can only end one way. 🌟
Emily Main had the life that looked like everything: a high-powered career with a leading technology company, a handsome fiancé on the corporate rise, an island wedding, a honeymoon. Then a tragic accident causes her retinas to detach. The treatments fail. She slips into blindness, and the well-ordered life she constructed comes apart in ways that no amount of professional competence or personal determination can prevent. 💔
The novel follows two parallel stories. Emily’s is the human one—the struggle to understand what her life looks like now, how the people around her will cope, and whether she can rebuild something in a new normal she never chose and does not want. The second is the story of a black lab puppy named Garth, moving through the long and demanding process of guide dog training, fulfilling what the novel treats with genuine tenderness as his destiny: to become that most esteemed of creatures, the dog who gives someone their world back. 🐾
Barbara Hinske writes with the warmth and emotional intelligence that has made the Guiding Emily series a beloved presence in the literary fiction space that bridges the gap between accessible storytelling and genuine feeling. The dual narrative is handled with care—Garth’s story is not comic relief or sentimentality but a parallel journey of preparation that gives the novel its structural hope: someone is getting ready to meet Emily, even while Emily does not yet know that help is coming. The series has generated a devoted readership across multiple books, and this first installment earns that loyalty with its honesty about loss and its refusal to sentimentalize what blindness actually costs. 🌅
What makes this essential: Barbara Hinske delivers a novel of genuine emotional power—a woman whose perfect life is shattered by sudden blindness, and a black lab puppy training to become her guide, two stories moving toward each other with the quiet inevitability of something that was always supposed to happen. 🌟
Ben Stiger is the son of an infamous imperial general—a name that opens no doors and closes many. A born soldier and nobleman who refuses to crumble under the weight of his family’s disgrace, he has been reassigned from his crack company to the struggling southern army, which is the kind of posting that gets handed to officers nobody wants to promote and nobody wants to fire. He intends to turn it around. The men he inherits are resentful and mediocre, and they are going to have to become something else very quickly. ⚔️
The mission waiting for them is desperate: a forced march through hostile territory to reach an outpost cut off by an escalating rebellion. Stiger’s support consists of his faithful lieutenant Eli, one of the last remaining elven rangers, and a holy Paladin on a quest for the High Father—an unlikely combination of companions for a military campaign that keeps revealing itself as something larger than it first appeared. Rebels, bandits, a magical relic from an ancient age, and an evil that has freshly risen with the potential to destroy the empire he serves—none of this was in the original mission briefing. 🌑
Marc Alan Edelheit writes military fantasy with the Roman legion operational detail and epic scope that has made the Stiger Chronicles one of self-published fantasy’s most successful long-running series. The tarnished-legacy protagonist who must earn respect through demonstrated competence rather than inherited authority is a premise the genre rewards when the competence is shown rather than asserted, and Edelheit delivers it—the army Stiger inherits, and what he makes of it, is the novel’s core pleasure. 🏰
What makes this essential: Marc Alan Edelheit launches the Stiger Chronicles with a military epic fantasy of genuine scope—a disgraced nobleman commanding resentful soldiers, a desperate march through hostile territory, an elven ranger and a holy Paladin at his side, and an ancient evil that nobody told him was on the route. 🌟
A nuclear submarine aborts its mission under mysterious circumstances deep in the Caribbean Sea, and naval investigator John Clay is sent to find out why. The trail leads him to a small group of marine biologists who are quietly on the verge of making history: with the help of a powerful computer system, Alison Shaw and her team are preparing to complete the first genuine two-way conversation with dolphins—the planet’s second most intelligent species. 🐬
The dolphins, it turns out, have information that nobody expected. A secret object on the ocean floor—one that was never supposed to be found—surfaces through the translation work, and suddenly the science project becomes something considerably more dangerous. An unknown group takes immediate and aggressive interest in Alison’s research. She has reasons not to trust the military, but John Clay is beginning to look like the only person she can. Together they start assembling a puzzle whose most alarming piece is whatever is causing the trembling in Antarctica. ⚡
Michael C. Grumley writes action thriller with the scientific premise and global-stakes escalation that makes the Breakthrough series one of self-published thriller fiction’s most beloved ongoing sagas. The dolphin translation concept is handled with enough scientific plausibility to function as genuine techno-thriller material rather than fantasy, and the pacing moves efficiently between the marine biology work, the naval investigation, and the larger threat that both are converging on. The series has generated a devoted international readership precisely because Grumley trusts the premise to carry the weight of real thriller stakes. 🌊
What makes this essential: Michael C. Grumley launches the Breakthrough series with an action thriller of genuine originality—a naval investigator, a marine biologist translating dolphin speech, a secret object on the ocean floor, and a trembling in Antarctica that connects all of it into something nobody is ready for. 🌟
England, 1742. Beth Cunningham loves her quiet rural life and has managed, since her father’s death, to maintain it on a diminishing foundation—a dowry held in trust, enough for now, not enough for indefinitely. The threat she has been quietly managing becomes immediate when her ruthless brother returns from war with plans to use her inheritance for his own advancement. The mechanism is marriage: he intends to sell her off to whoever best serves his ambitions. Beth defies him as long as she can. When he turns violent, defiance becomes harder to sustain. 💔
The Jacobite Chronicles launch into the specific historical moment when Catholic heritage in Britain had stopped being merely a social liability and had become actively dangerous—with rebellion brewing across the country, Beth’s faith puts her at the intersection of her brother’s schemes and forces considerably larger and more lethal than his ambition. The political turmoil of 1742 Scotland and England is not background texture but active threat, and the novel works it into the personal story with the confidence of a writer who knows her period. 🏴
Julia Brannan writes the Jacobite Chronicles with the historical authenticity and romantic tension that has made the series a consistent bestseller in historical Scottish fiction—a heroine whose intelligence and determination operate within real historical constraints, a world that is genuinely dangerous rather than decoratively picturesque, and a story that uses the Jacobite rising as both political backdrop and personal crucible. The series has generated a devoted following across many books, and this first installment establishes both the world and the character with the assurance that sustains a long series. 🌿
What makes this captivating: Julia Brannan launches the Jacobite Chronicles with a gripping historical novel—a woman fighting her brother’s violent schemes in 1742 England, a Catholic heritage that becomes deadly as rebellion spreads, and a coming storm that will test everything she thought she knew about survival and loyalty. 🌟
First published in 1936, How to Win Friends and Influence People has sold over thirty million copies worldwide and remains one of the best-selling books in history—a self-help classic that has outlasted virtually every trend in the genre it helped define. Time Magazine ranked it among the hundred most influential books of all time in 2011. The longevity is not accidental: Carnegie’s principles are grounded in observations about human nature that have not changed across ninety years of social transformation. 📖
Carnegie had been running business education courses in New York since 1912, refining the material through thousands of interactions with real people in real professional situations. The book that emerged from those courses covers the fundamental mechanics of human connection—how to make people feel genuinely valued, how to handle disagreement without generating resentment, how to lead and persuade without triggering defensiveness. The principles are simple enough to state in a sentence and require a lifetime to execute consistently, which is why the book remains useful to readers who have owned it for decades. 💡
This edition is the original 1936 version that Carnegie published himself—including the two sections on effective business letter writing and improving marital satisfaction that were removed from the 1981 revised edition. While some of the specific examples reflect their era, the underlying principles in these sections are as timeless as the rest of the book, and readers interested in Carnegie’s complete original vision will find both sections valuable in ways the revised edition cannot provide. 🌅
What makes this essential: Dale Carnegie’s original 1936 masterwork—thirty million copies sold, ninety years of proven relevance, and the complete unabridged text including the two sections cut from later editions—remains the most practically useful book ever written about the art of human connection. 🌟
Hollywood Hit Men (Cassidy Clarke Book 1)
Cassidy Clarke joins the LAPD with no intention of following in her father’s footsteps—veteran detective Bill Clarke has a reputation that fills the room before he enters it, and Cassidy has her own path to forge through a department with a complicated history. She is just finding her footing when a string of murders begins: young women strangled in their homes across Los Angeles, the media generating the kind of frenzy that makes clear investigations more difficult, and the Hollywood Hit Men no closer to being identified despite the coverage. 🔍
While Cassidy works the active case on the streets, Bill is retired and doing something that unsettles him in different ways: he is knee-deep in cold cases and in conversation with a convicted killer named Tyler Derby—a man Bill is certain committed more murders than they ever pinned on him. Derby, for his part, has a theory about Bill: that without his badge, the retired detective is not as different from a killer as he would like to believe. The conversation is unsettling in ways that are hard to dismiss. 💀
Michele Domínguez Greene sets the Cassidy Clarke series in Los Angeles with the gritty procedural texture that the city’s particular combination of glamour and darkness generates at its best—two investigations running simultaneously, father and daughter each pulling on threads that are beginning to connect in dangerous ways. The dual structure gives the novel both the active thriller momentum of the serial killer case and the slower, more psychological unease of the cold case conversations. ⚡
What makes this gripping: Michele Domínguez Greene launches the Cassidy Clarke series with a dual-investigation LAPD thriller—a new detective hunting an active serial strangler, a retired father in unsettling conversations with a killer who sees through his badge, and a game that neither of them has a playbook for. 🌟
Fourteen of crime fiction’s most decorated writers go behind the lace curtains and PTA smiles to explore what the domestic life actually contains—and what it occasionally drives women to do. The roster is extraordinary: Nevada Barr, Barbara Collins, Carole Nelson Douglas, Eileen Dreyer, Vicki Hendricks, Suzann Ledbetter, Elisabeth Massie, Christine Matthews, Denise Mina, Marcia Muller, Sara Paretsky, Nancy Pickard, S.J. Rozan, and Julie Smith—New York Times bestsellers and winners of Agatha, Anthony, Dagger, Macavity, Shamus, and Edgar Awards among them. 🔍
What these writers bring to the housewife premise is the same forensic intelligence they apply to their crime novels—the understanding that the suburban domestic setting is not a safe backdrop but an environment with its own specific pressures, resentments, and breaking points. Meddling mothers-in-law, cheating husbands, creepy neighbors, fickle female friends, careers left behind, out-of-control children, steamy sex, and much more: all the material of domestic life, rendered by writers who know exactly where the darkness lives and how to get there efficiently. 💀
The anthology format gives the collection its particular pleasure—each story is complete in its own right, with the narrative compression that short fiction demands, and the variety across fourteen writers means the tonal range runs from darkly comic to genuinely chilling. Victims bite the dust. Domestic divas get their hands dirty. The reader laughs, gasps, and nods in recognition, which is the specific cocktail that makes the best crime fiction feel simultaneously like entertainment and revelation. The collection has lost none of its bite. 😄
What makes this essential: Fourteen of crime fiction’s most award-laden writers—Paretsky, Barr, Mina, Muller, and ten more—go behind the domestic facade to deliver stories of meddling mothers-in-law, cheating husbands, and housewives who have finally had enough, in a collection that is as hilarious as it is dark. 🌟
Three actresses are famous for playing the same 1930s fictional detective—Dahlia Lively, the creation of beloved mystery author Lettice Davenport. Rosalind King played her in the original films and is a national treasure. Caro Hooper inhabited the role for thirteen seasons of television. Posy Starling, ex-child star and fresh out of rehab, is taking on the mantle for the new movie adaptation. None of them particularly like each other. All of them have strong opinions about how Dahlia should be played. 🔍
When VIP fans, the film crew, the Davenport family, and all three Dahlias converge on Aldermere—the stately home where Lettice Davenport wrote her books—for a convention weekend, the English summer gathering is supposed to be a celebration of the fictional detective’s legacy. Then the fictional deaths in Davenport’s stories stop being fictional, and real bodies start appearing on the grounds. The three rival actresses find themselves in the position their character occupies in every book: the smartest people in the room, the ones who need to solve the murder before anyone else. 💀
Katy Watson writes the Three Dahlias series with the Golden Age atmosphere and contemporary wit that makes the best modern cozy mystery feel like a love letter to Agatha Christie rather than a pale imitation. The meta-fictional layer—three interpreters of a fictional detective solving a real crime—gives the series its particular charm, and the question of whether the solution lies in Lettice Davenport’s own stories adds exactly the kind of puzzle-within-a-puzzle that Christie’s most devoted readers will find irresistible. 🌹
What makes this delightful: Katy Watson delivers a Golden Age-flavored mystery of genuine wit—three rival actresses who each played the same fictional 1930s detective, a stately home convention gone deadly, and real murders that can only be solved by women who have spent their careers thinking like Dahlia Lively. 🌟
Navajo culinary tradition carries thousands of years of history—techniques, ingredients, and flavor profiles that reflect both the deep roots of Diné culture and the resilience of a people who have adapted their food across centuries of change. Alana Yazzie brings that tradition into the modern kitchen with sixty recipes that blend authentically traditional Navajo cooking with global influences and contemporary techniques, creating a cookbook that honors heritage without treating it as a museum exhibit. 🌽
The range is genuinely broad: Navajo Boba Milk Tea, Fry Bread, Navajo Burgers, Sumac and Strawberry Greek Yogurt Ice Pops, and much more across drinks, breads, breakfasts, soups, mains, sides, and desserts. The inclusion of global recipes with a Navajo spin gives the collection its particular freshness—a cuisine in conversation with the wider food world rather than sealed off from it. Technical instructions for making juniper ash, roasted cornmeal, and roasted chiles give readers the foundational skills that distinguish Navajo cooking from adjacent traditions. 🌿
The cultural context woven through the book—a short history of Navajo culinary traditions, explanations of the significance of specific ingredients and techniques—makes The Modern Navajo Kitchen a genuinely educational as well as practical cooking companion. Sample meal plans help readers integrate the recipes into regular cooking rotations rather than treating them as occasional special-occasion dishes. The beautiful photography gives each recipe its visual context. For anyone who wants to explore Native American cooking with the depth and specificity that the tradition deserves, this is an essential starting point. 🌅
What makes this essential: Alana Yazzie delivers sixty recipes celebrating Navajo culinary tradition—traditional dishes alongside global recipes with a Diné spin, technical instructions for authentic ingredients, cultural history throughout, and the warmth of a cookbook that treats its heritage as a living, evolving practice. 🌟
When Paula Wolfert’s The Cooking of Southwest France was first published in 1983, it became an instant classic—the book that introduced American cooks to cassoulet and confit with the authority of a writer who had spent years in Gascony, the Périgord, Bordeaux, and the Basque country learning from the people who had been cooking this way for generations. It changed the American culinary scene, and it did so by insisting that the rustic, fat-rich, deeply flavored cooking of southwest France was not a curiosity but one of the great regional cuisines of the world. 🍷
This fully revised edition adds sixty recipes to the original—thirty entirely new and thirty updated from Wolfert’s other books—while revising the original recipes to account for current tastes and newly available ingredients. The classical canon is preserved in full: cassoulet, sauce périgueux, salmon rillettes, beef daube. New and revised recipes cover ragouts, soups, desserts, and the most exemplary of all southwest French ingredients—duck—including the traditional duck confit method plus two new, easier variations. Desserts include Batter Cake with Fresh Pears from the Corrèze and Prune and Armagnac Ice Cream. 🦆
What distinguishes Wolfert’s writing from mere recipe collection is the evocative prose that brings the region alive—sharply etched scenes peopled by canny peasant women and world-famous master chefs, capturing the living traditions and passion for good food that define Gascony and its neighbors. The revised edition adds sixteen pages of full-color food photography. This is one of the essential American food books of the twentieth century, and the revision makes it as relevant as it ever was. 🌿
What makes this essential: Paula Wolfert delivers the fully revised edition of her classic—the book that changed how Americans cook French food, now expanded with sixty new recipes, updated classics, duck confit in three versions, and the evocative regional writing that made the original a landmark. 🌟
Chief Justice Earl Warren said it plainly: some things involving security might not be released in the lifetime of the public then living. Almost sixty years after Dallas, most Americans still believe they have not been told the full truth about John F. Kennedy’s assassination—and the documentary record continues to support their suspicion. Millions of pages of assassination records have been released since the late 1990s, yet as of 2022, more than thirteen thousand declassified documents still contain redactions, most of them from CIA records. 🔍
Anthony Summers—a Pulitzer Prize finalist whose journalistic investigations have shaped public understanding of the Kennedy assassination for decades—has updated this account to incorporate the latest available evidence. The title comes directly from Warren’s statement, and the book takes that phrase seriously: it is an investigation written in full awareness that the official story has always been incomplete, and that the incompleteness is not accidental. Summers follows the evidence where it leads, examining the Warren Commission’s findings, the House Select Committee on Assassinations, and the subsequent decades of document releases with the precision that the subject demands. 💀
The book is widely considered one of the finest works on the assassination—not a conspiracy theory compendium but a rigorous journalistic account that takes seriously both what is known and what remains deliberately obscured. The 2022 context—President Biden’s order regarding continued document secrecy—gives the updated edition its particular currency. For anyone who wants to understand what is actually known, what remains hidden, and why the case continues to haunt American political consciousness, this is the essential starting point. 📖
What makes this essential: Anthony Summers delivers the updated definitive account of the Kennedy assassination—Pulitzer Prize finalist journalism incorporating the latest declassified evidence, the ongoing document redactions, and the clear-eyed assessment of what we know, what we don’t, and why the answer may still not come in our lifetime. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











