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Author: Kelsie Rae
FREE
Contemporary Romance

He wants a girl he can’t have. She’s his tutor. She’s his best friend’s girlfriend. She also looks very good in his T-shirt, which is a detail he is finding impossible to stop noticing. The situation is complicated enough on its face—and it gets considerably more complicated the longer he’s around her, because the smile she gave him the first time changed something he hasn’t been able to change back. 💙

The problem is layered. She wants the golden boy—the good guy, the clean option, the one with the right reputation. He’s more the villain type. Or he was, until recently. The other problem is that the good guy she’s with is not behaving like a good guy, and our narrator—who is supposed to be the morally compromised one in this scenario—is the only one who knows it. The righteous path is less clear than the labels everyone has assigned would suggest. 🔥

Kelsie Rae writes college romance with the emotional precision that makes the forbidden-attraction setup feel like something more than formula—the tension between what the characters want and what they’re allowed to want is the engine of everything, and it runs hot throughout. The best friend’s girlfriend premise works here because the characters are drawn with enough specificity that their individual choices carry genuine weight rather than just narrative convenience. 💛

What makes this compelling: Kelsie Rae constructs a forbidden romance with real moral texture—a hero who isn’t as bad as his reputation and a situation that isn’t as clear as it looks, with chemistry that refuses to behave itself no matter how many good reasons there are for it to do so. 🌟

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Author: Trevor Douglas
FREE
Crime Thrillers

Detective Bridgette Cash is new to the force—new enough that her first murder case is also her first real test of whether the instincts she was trained to trust are actually reliable. A young woman’s body is found in the forest, and Bridgette’s read of the evidence points in one direction: this is not a one-time crime, and whoever committed it has done this before. Her superiors have a different read, or at least a different preference for how the investigation proceeds. 🔍

Navigating skeptical superiors while working from scant evidence with a clock running is not the ideal set of conditions for a rookie detective’s first homicide. It is, however, exactly the kind of pressure that reveals what a person is actually made of—and Bridgette is not the type to accept an easy resolution when the evidence is pointing somewhere more complicated. The gap between what she believes and what she can prove is the operational space the entire investigation lives in. 💀

Trevor Douglas builds the Bridgette Cash series on a detective who earns her credibility through persistence rather than authority—she doesn’t have the rank to override institutional resistance, so she has to be right, and she has to prove it, and she has to do both before the perpetrator strikes again. The first-case structure gives the series opener genuine stakes while establishing Bridgette as the kind of protagonist worth following across multiple books. 🌑

What makes this gripping: Trevor Douglas launches the Bridgette Cash Mystery Thriller series with a taut procedural debut—a rookie detective, a skeptical department, a serial killer operating in plain sight, and a race against time that establishes a compelling series heroine from the very first page. 🏆

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Author: Kate Anslinger
FREE
Kidnapping Crime Fiction

Grace McKenna is not a typical police officer. When she locks eyes with a criminal, her vision floods with images—fragments of crimes, clues she cannot explain, details that have no business being in her head. The gift is not comfortable to carry. It is also not something she can switch off or ignore, which means that cases have a way of becoming personal whether she intends them to or not. 👁️

On a missing persons case in a small Massachusetts town, Grace finds herself face to face with an unlikely suspect—armed with only a handful of clues and the images that arrived unbidden when she made eye contact: a sullen boy, a tormented woman, a breathless man, a thousand pieces of shattered green glass. The fragments point somewhere the official investigation is not pointing, and Grace begins working the case on her own terms, off the books, which is the only way her particular kind of evidence can be used. 🔍

Sharing streets with someone only she knows to be a killer is its own particular kind of tension. The off-books investigation generates more questions than answers. The list of people she can trust contracts with every new discovery. The race to solve the mystery before the trail goes cold is running in parallel with the race to do so before someone realizes how close she’s getting. Kate Anslinger builds the McKenna Mystery Series on a premise that is both genuinely original and structurally sound—a gift that is also a burden, in the hands of a protagonist who cannot look away. 💙

What makes this distinctive: Kate Anslinger launches the McKenna Mystery Series with a procedural that earns its paranormal premise—Grace’s gift is woven into the investigation rather than layered on top of it, producing a detective story with genuine suspense and a protagonist unlike anyone else in the genre. 🌟

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Author: Tegan Maher
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Paranormal Fantasy

Destiny Maganti is a water witch who works at a tiki bar on the Enchanted Coast—a beach getaway designed specifically for paranormals, where she delivers drinks to mermaids, serves rare steaks to werewolves, and is generally in her element both professionally and literally. The job has one significant downside: her boss is a disgraced angel who has decided that his ancestry entitles him to make everyone around him miserable. He is, to put it plainly, insufferable. 🌊

An hour after he publicly humiliates Destiny, he ends up dead. The timing is terrible in a very specific way: all the evidence points directly at her, and the fact that she had very publicly wished him dead approximately sixty minutes before his demise does not help her case. Her friends know she’s innocent. The evidence does not know she’s innocent. Working out the actual killer’s identity before the situation resolves itself in the wrong direction becomes urgent on multiple levels. 🔍

Tegan Maher constructs the Enchanted Coast world with the relaxed, imaginative charm that makes paranormal cozy mysteries so consistently appealing—a setting where the supernatural is simply the community’s normal, a heroine whose magic is both her defining characteristic and her current liability, and a mystery that moves with the breezy momentum of the best beach reads. The paranormal cast of suspects generates the kind of creative investigative possibilities that purely human mysteries can’t match. 🍹

What makes this delightful: Tegan Maher launches the Enchanted Coast Magical Mystery series with a sun-soaked paranormal cozy that delivers everything the genre promises—a witch bartender, a dead disgraced angel, an improbable suspect list, and a seaside setting where the supernatural is entirely unremarkable. 🌟

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Author: L. R. Braden
FREE
Urban Fantasy

Alex Blackwood hates magic. This is not an abstract position—magic took her father in the Faerie Wars, nearly tore the world apart, and left behind a generation of people with very concrete reasons to distrust anything associated with the fae. Alex has spent her adult life building a life that is emphatically not magical. Then her best friend is murdered, and his final cryptic message pulls her directly into the shadowy underworld she has been carefully avoiding. 🌑

The underworld she finds is organized around dangerous magical artifacts, operated by criminals who understand what those artifacts are worth, and complicated by a relentless faerie knight pursuing an agenda she cannot yet read. Someone is also working toward something larger—a conspiracy aimed at reigniting the war between humans and the fae that already cost Alex everything she cared about most. And then she discovers the truth about herself: she is not fully human. She is an unregistered fae halfer with a rare magical talent—one that could tip the balance between war and peace in either direction. 🔮

The choice the novel builds toward—embrace the magic she grew up hating, or protect the life she built on avoiding it—is not a theoretical dilemma. It is immediate, costly, and not reversible. L. R. Braden constructs the urban fantasy premise with the structural intelligence that makes the best genre fiction feel inevitable: every element introduced early pays off, and the stakes are never abstract. 🌿

What makes this compelling: L. R. Braden launches The Magicsmith with an urban fantasy of genuine emotional depth—a heroine defined by what she lost to magic, a world where the war is not over, and an identity revelation that forces everything she built on avoidance to come apart at exactly the worst moment. 🏆

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Author: Erin Johnson
FREE
Paranormal Fantasy

Minnie Wells works at a vampire-owned magical tea room in Bath and was recently divorced, which means she is getting back out there—cautiously, optimistically, one evening at a time. A play at the gorgeous Theatre Royal with a handsome detective sounds like a promising start. The evening becomes considerably less promising when she finds the lead actress dead in her dressing room before the curtain call. 🎭

The murder investigation would be enough to manage on its own. It is not on its own. Minnie also suspects that her detective date’s mysterious companion is the rumored vampire hunter, which creates a separate and urgent problem: her best friend is a vampire, and her boss is a vampire she may have developed a significant crush on, and the presence of a vampire hunter in Bath is a threat that cannot wait while she solves an unrelated homicide. The two situations are now competing for her attention simultaneously. 🧛

Erin Johnson builds the Magical Tea Room Mysteries with the layered, warm chaos that makes this particular brand of paranormal cozy mystery so appealing—Bath as a setting brings Georgian architecture and the specific atmosphere of a city that has always had secrets, and the tea room at the center of the series gives every book a grounding in the pleasures of good company and good scones even when everything around it is falling apart. Another body appears backstage. The Spring Solstice is approaching. Her dastardly ex is causing trouble. Minnie handles all of it. ☕

What makes this a treat: Erin Johnson brews a paranormal cozy mystery of exceptional warmth and comic momentum—Bath, vampires, a tea room steeped in magic, and a heroine juggling a murder, a vampire hunter, and an ill-timed crush with equal parts competence and chaos. 🌟

Margaret Truman Thrillers: Murder in the Supreme Court, Murder on Embassy Row, Murder at the FBI

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Author: Margaret Truman
Regularly $24.99, Today $3.99
Political Thrillers & Suspense

Margaret Truman—daughter of the 33rd President—wrote Washington thrillers with the authority of someone who had actually lived inside the machinery she was describing. Three of her best are collected here, each one set in a different iconic institution of American power and each one treating that institution not as a backdrop but as a living, complicated organism with its own secrets and its own capacity for violence. 🏛️

In Murder in the Supreme Court, Chief Clerk Clarence Sutherland is found dead inside the Court itself—the institution that is supposed to represent the highest standard of American justice now harboring a killer. Lieutenant Martin Teller and Justice Department investigator Susanna Pincher are drawn together by the case and by the particular difficulty of investigating an institution that prefers to manage its own problems internally. In Murder on Embassy Row, a British Ambassador drops dead at his own gala, the obvious suspect has vanished, and Washington Metro’s Captain Sal Morizio starts pulling on threads involving womanizing and shady financial arrangements that the diplomatic community would very much prefer to keep quiet. 🔍

Murder at the FBI takes the formula to its most claustrophobic extreme: FBI Agents Ross Lizenby and Christine Saksis investigating a colleague’s murder inside the J. Edgar Hoover Building itself, with their own superiors desperate to close the case before the trail leads somewhere uncomfortable. The higher-ups want it resolved quietly. The trail leads somewhere that definitively cannot be resolved quietly. 💀

What makes this essential: Three Washington thrillers from a writer with genuine insider knowledge of how power operates in America’s capital—Margaret Truman’s Capital Crimes series remains one of the most authoritative and entertaining political mystery series ever written, and this collection delivers three of its finest installments at an outstanding price. 🏆

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Author: Lawrence Durrell
Regularly $59.99, Today $4.99
Classic Literary Fiction

Lawrence Durrell’s Alexandria Quartet is one of the most ambitious formal experiments in twentieth-century English-language fiction—four novels that tell the same story from four different perspectives, set in Alexandria, Egypt, in the years before, during, and after World War II. The project is not just about telling a story from multiple angles; it is about the nature of reality itself, about how completely the same events can be transformed by the consciousness through which they are perceived. 🌅

The city of Alexandria is as central to the quartet as any of its human characters—sensuous, dusty, layered with civilizations, humming with intrigue and eroticism and the particular melancholy of a place that has been many things and knows it. Through Darley, Justine, Balthazar, Clea, and the larger circle of friends and lovers that surrounds them, Durrell explores what he called the “space-time continuum” of the novel—using the first three books to approach the same events from different spatial perspectives and the fourth to move forward in time. 🏛️

Durrell’s prose is one of the glories of the quartet—dense, sensuous, and musical in ways that make demands on the reader and reward them completely. The New York Times called it “one of the most important works of our time” at publication, and the intervening decades have done nothing to diminish that assessment. This is a book—four books—that changes how readers think about perspective, truth, and the impossibility of ever fully knowing another person. 📖

What makes this extraordinary: Four complete novels for under five dollars—The Alexandria Quartet is a landmark of world literature, a formally daring masterwork of love and perception set against one of history’s most evocative cities, available here at a price that makes it impossible to justify not reading it. 🌟

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Author: Stephanie Rose
Regularly $24.99, Today $3.99
Organic & Sustainable Gardening & Horticulture

The central argument of permaculture—that a garden can be designed to sustain itself rather than constantly demanding intervention—sounds like an abstract principle until someone shows you the eighty practical projects that make it real. Stephanie Rose of the popular Garden Therapy website has spent years translating permaculture concepts from theory into accessible DIY practice, and this book is the distillation of that work: a guide that meets gardeners wherever they are and moves them toward something more resilient and self-sustaining. 🌱

The book is organized around six living elements of the garden—soil, water, plants, climate, ethics, and community—each one capable of playing a role in the garden’s constant regeneration. The projects range from foundational (building better soil structure, capturing and directing water intelligently) to creative (growing perennial foods in unexpected ways, creating wildlife habitat within the garden’s existing footprint). Whatever the size of the space—a tiny patio container garden or a substantial backyard—the principles scale, and the projects are sequenced to build on each other logically. 🌿

The practical payoff is significant: reduced long-term workload, conserved water and other resources, a yard that supports wildlife rather than excluding it, and the particular satisfaction of a garden that increasingly takes care of itself as its ecosystem matures. Rose writes with the warmth and accessibility that has built Garden Therapy into one of the most trusted voices in sustainable gardening, making concepts that could feel intimidating feel genuinely achievable. 🌸

What makes this essential: Stephanie Rose delivers permaculture for everyone—80 practical, clearly explained projects that transform any garden into a more beautiful, more productive, and more self-sustaining ecosystem, from a writer who has been teaching these principles accessibly for years. 🏆

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Author: John Brunner
Regularly $9.99, Today $1.99
Cyberpunk Science Fiction

John Brunner published The Shockwave Rider in 1975, and it remains one of the most eerily prescient novels in the history of science fiction. Written before personal computers were common, before the internet existed as a public phenomenon, before anyone had coined the word “hacker,” Brunner imagined a society drowning in information overload, corporate power unchecked by meaningful regulation, and personal identity rendered fluid and unstable by the demands of an increasingly networked world. He also invented the concept of the computer worm as a plot device—decades before the term entered technical vocabulary. 💻

Nickie Haflinger lives in this society as an outlaw of a particular kind: he shifts identities constantly through a population that has surrendered its autonomy to computers and bureaucrats, existing in the gaps of a surveillance apparatus that is theoretically total. He doesn’t appear to exist. He is, in the language of the novel, a shockwave rider—someone moving faster than the system can track. When he is finally caught and faces reprogramming, his escape attempt becomes something larger: a confrontation with the entire structure of a civilization that has optimized itself into brittleness. 🔍

Brunner wrote the novel as a conscious companion to Alvin Toffler’s Future Shock, taking Toffler’s sociological arguments about information overload and acceleration and dramatizing them as near-future fiction. Fifty years later, the book reads less like speculation than like observation. The concerns it raises about corporate power, surveillance, identity, and the human cost of information saturation have not dated. They have intensified. 🌐

What makes this essential: One of science fiction’s great prophetic novels, available for under two dollars—The Shockwave Rider invented the concept of the computer worm, anticipated the internet age by decades, and remains as urgently relevant as anything published this year. 🏆

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Author: Rachel Grant
Regularly $7.99, Today $3.99
Political Thrillers & Suspense

Alexandra Vargas has not spoken to JT Talon in seven years—not since she ended their engagement one week before the wedding, in the remote mountain cabin that has been the site of the most significant and most painful moment of both their lives. She has moved on. She has the baby and the life she planned for herself without him. The past is the past. Then a cold December traffic stop goes catastrophically wrong, and Alexandra finds herself on the run with her child, with only one possible place to hide. 😰

JT’s cabin. The same place. Eleven years of history compressed into a single desperate night, with the woman who broke his heart now a fugitive needing his protection and a child in his care who represents everything he had decided he never wanted. The situation forces both of them to operate entirely outside the scripts they have written for the last seven years—scripts that were supposed to keep them safely apart and emotionally managed. Those scripts dissolve within hours of her arrival. 💔

Rachel Grant constructs the novel around the double timeline—the present danger and the past wound—with the precision of a writer who understands that the most effective thrillers don’t just generate external stakes but internal ones. The question of whether Alexandra and JT can find their way back to each other is as urgent as the question of who is hunting them, and the two questions are not separable. Every deception has a source. Every lie has a consequence. And no one is safe until the truth behind all of it is fully exposed. 🌨️

What makes this gripping: Rachel Grant delivers a second-chance romantic thriller of genuine momentum—a fugitive heroine, a cabin hideout, seven years of unresolved history, and a conspiracy that won’t stay buried no matter how many people would prefer it to. 🌟

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Author: Olivia Hawker
Regularly $4.99, Today $2.49
Sisters Fiction

Rexburg, Idaho, 1975. Aran Rigby is an aspiring artist living in a household organized around his father’s need for control. Gad Rigby is the kind of man who soothes the failures of his own life by managing the lives of everyone around him—his children locked in orbit around his moods, his expectations, and the particular cruelty of a man who understands exactly which pressure points will keep people from leaving. Aran and his younger sister Tamsin are united against him, quietly, in the way that siblings in damaged families develop shared languages of survival. 🌅

Into this carefully balanced household arrives Linda Duff, an outsider from Seattle seeking new roots and drawn immediately to Aran—to his talent, to what she recognizes in him. Their falling in love is genuine and pulls Linda into a family considerably more damaged than the one she escaped. It also makes her privy to a secret that Aran and Tamsin share—something that has been holding the household’s precarious equilibrium in place and that Linda’s presence as an outsider begins to destabilize simply by existing. 💛

Olivia Hawker writes literary historical fiction with the atmospheric specificity that made The Stars and Their Light such a compelling read, and The Rise of Light brings the same qualities to a different era and a different kind of American community. The Idaho setting is rendered with precision—the particular texture of a small town in the mid-1970s, the weight of religious and familial expectation, the difficult work of breaking free from systems designed to hold people in place. 🌾

What makes this resonant: Olivia Hawker delivers literary fiction of genuine emotional depth—The Rise of Light is a story about artistic dreams, family damage, the bonds between siblings, and what it actually costs to break free from the past that formed you. 🌟

… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2