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It’s springtime on Dewberry Farm, and homesteader Lucy Resnick has her hands full preparing herb starts and Easter Market wares. Then a tornado rips through the property—destroying crops, scattering livestock, and tearing up the barn—and Lucy’s spring goes from busy to catastrophic in a matter of minutes. While searching the wreckage for two kids lost in the storm, she makes a grisly discovery: her neighbor’s home health aide, Eva, strangled with a hand-knitted scarf. 🌪️
The investigation that follows pulls Lucy into some uncomfortable corners of small-town life in Buttercup. Eva was young, seemingly harmless, and working with one of the town’s most vulnerable residents. Yet someone wanted her dead badly enough to do the deed in the middle of a tornado—which either speaks to extraordinary convenience or extraordinary planning. Lucy starts wondering whether someone in town has been taking advantage of the elderly and infirm in ways that go well beyond bad manners. 🧶
Then a second body surfaces—drowned in a vat of dye—and the whole town realizes this isn’t a one-off crime of passion. Someone is working a pattern, and Lucy is the only one paying close enough attention to see it. With the Easter Market looming and her farm still in pieces, she’s running out of time on multiple fronts simultaneously. 🥚
What makes this delightful: Karen MacInerney crafts a cozy mystery with genuine seasonal atmosphere, a heroine whose homesteading life gives the series real texture and charm, and a puzzle that rewards careful reading—perfect for fans of farm-fresh whodunits with warmth, wit, and a body count that keeps climbing at exactly the wrong time of year. 🌸
Poppy Peters is having a midlife crisis, and she has decided to handle it in the most specific possible way: by enrolling in a pastry school in the heart of southern Georgia to follow in her grandmother’s footsteps. She sets aside her fear of carbs, her fear of soggy pastry bottoms, and her general fear of being the oldest person in the room, and she shows up ready to learn. What she wasn’t ready for is quite literally everything else that happens next. 🍑
The school’s charming exterior hides a competitive, complicated interior. Her classmates range from warm to actively hostile. Her instructors are unimpressed after her first very public attempt at the school’s famous peach pie—an attempt that will not be discussed further. And somewhere among the flour-dusted chaos of the kitchen, there is a thief operating quietly and a murderer operating less quietly. Poppy is abruptly a suspect in both situations. 🥧
To clear her name and salvage what remains of her culinary dignity, Poppy has to do two things simultaneously: prove her innocence and actually get good enough at baking to compete in the school’s dessert competition for a coveted overseas internship. One of these problems involves sleuthing. The other involves practicing peach pie until she gets it right. Both are harder than expected. 🔍
What makes this a treat: A. Gardner launches the Poppy Peters Mysteries with a heroine whose midlife pivot is equal parts brave and chaotic, a southern Georgia setting that drips with charm and atmosphere, and a mystery that keeps the pages turning between baking disasters—funny, warm, and impossible to put down before the final twist. 🌟
It’s the 1920s, and Anty Boisjoly—gadabout, wit, and man-about-town of the highest order—has never particularly wanted to be a detective. Then his Oxford chum finds himself facing the gallows, accused of murdering a wealthy uncle, and Boisjoly discovers that loyalty occasionally requires one to do inconvenient things. Taking on his first case seems like the least he can do. The case, in return, does considerably more than the least it could do to him. 🎩
What presents itself as a single locked-room murder promptly becomes two locked-room murders, which is the sort of development that would rattle most amateur investigators. Boisjoly meets it with characteristic composure and an arsenal of witticisms that the Sussex countryside does not entirely know how to respond to. His adversaries include a subversive butler with unclear loyalties, a senile footman with unclear recollections, a single-minded detective-inspector with a clear preference for the obvious suspect, and an errant goat whose role in proceedings remains ambiguous throughout. 🔍
Underneath the farce lies a genuinely intricate puzzle—secret bequests, ancient writs, love triangles of surprising complexity, a motive involving revenge that goes back considerably further than anyone initially admits, and a final twist that earns its place completely. Boisjoly unravels it all with the casual brilliance of a man who finds the whole affair mildly amusing while simultaneously being the only person in the room who has actually understood what happened. 🏡
What makes this a gem: PJ Fitzsimmons channels the golden age of British detective fiction through a hero of irrepressible wit and unexpected depth—The Case of the Canterfell Codicil is a locked-room mystery of real ingenuity wrapped in some of the funniest prose the genre has produced in years. 🌟
Somewhere in the Alaskan wilderness, a lone rider races across the last American frontier under the midnight sun, carrying the weight of a promise made decades ago in a war the world would rather forget. He has many names. The world knows only one: the Demon. He is skilled, methodical, and entirely accustomed to completing what he starts. 🌄
In Washington D.C., Army sniper Claire Ferreti is being drawn toward a black-ops mission she doesn’t yet know exists. Her lover is a young, ambitious General whose classified geosecurity work has recently attracted some very dangerous attention. When a boy stumbles across a small machine in the wilderness, the threads connecting Claire, the Demon, and a web of Washington secrets begin pulling tight—and the two warriors are set on a collision course neither of them fully understands yet. 🎯
What follows is a relentless, globe-spanning confrontation between two people who are equally skilled at violence and equally skilled at deception, and who have spent their careers winning. Claire ends up unconscious in a typhoon-ravaged jungle, transformed from hunter to hunted in a single unguarded moment. The Demon has a use for her now. The General is in pursuit. And behind everything lies a labyrinth of cyber-secrets where political necessity and financial reality have been colliding for years with lethal results. 💥
What makes this explosive: Joe Klingler’s acclaimed debut thriller moves with relentless momentum—a decades-old mission, a modern-day shadow war, and two elite operatives on a collision course that tears through the Alaskan wilderness and the corridors of Washington power with equal ferocity. One of the most propulsive thrillers in recent memory. 🏆
Green Beret sniper Horace Chase is perched on a frozen Wyoming mountainside with a mission that should be straightforward: intercept two cop-killers before they disappear into militia territory. The targets are armed, dangerous, and moving directly into his kill zone. Backup is hours away. Chase has handled worse. Then everything goes sideways in ways that even his extensive Special Operations career did not prepare him for. 🏔️
Someone else is hunting in these mountains. Something is watching from the shadows, closer than any thermal signature suggested, operating with a patience and precision that Chase recognizes immediately as professional. He’s spent his career in the world’s deadliest hotspots—defined by precision, discipline, and the iron certainty that the mission gets completed regardless of cost. None of that is quite sufficient for what the Medicine Bow Mountains have in store for him. 🎯
What starts as a routine interdiction in brutally cold terrain becomes a cat-and-mouse game that pushes Chase against the limits of every skill he’s accumulated across a lifetime of classified operations. The cold is a factor. The terrain is a factor. The unknown variable watching from the dark is the factor that changes everything—and Chase has to figure out what it is before it figures out where he is. ❄️
What makes this gripping: Bob Mayer writes military thrillers with the authority of someone who has lived this world—Chasing the Ghost introduces Horace Chase as a compelling new hero: technically brilliant, psychologically complex, and dropped immediately into one of the most unforgiving landscapes and situations the series has yet produced. Essential reading for fans of elite operator fiction. 🏆
Cat Cafe Magical Mystery Series
Amber Eldritch had a plan: make it big as a journalist in London, leave her small hometown of Windsor firmly in the rearview mirror, and never look back. The plan did not survive contact with reality. Her dream job curdled into a nightmare, and now she’s back home, baking cakes and helping out at her aunt’s cozy cat café, hoping for a quiet life and getting the exact opposite. 🐱
Murder has a way of finding Amber whether she looks for it or not, and Windsor turns out to be considerably less peaceful than she remembered. Fortunately—or perhaps unfortunately—she has help. Her talking ginger cat brings feline intuition and a great deal of unsolicited commentary to every investigation. The ghost of her grandmother contributes wisdom, occasional warnings, and a complete inability to stay out of Amber’s business. And the handsome vampire policeman who broke her heart years ago keeps showing up in an official capacity, which is either convenient or deeply inconvenient depending on the moment. 🔮
The mysteries pile up faster than Amber can solve them, and the supernatural complications make every case more unpredictable than the last. Between running a café, managing a talking cat, navigating a ghost with opinions, and trying not to notice how good the vampire looks in uniform, she has very little time to wonder what her life in London was ever actually for. 🍰
What makes this delightful: Rosie Reed’s Cat Café Magical Mystery series blends paranormal cozy mystery with genuine wit, a charming ensemble cast, and a slow-burn romance that gives readers plenty to sink their teeth into—perfect for fans of magical small-town mysteries with humor, heart, and a talking cat who steals every scene. 🌟
Literature professor Selwyn Aldridge has spent six years caring for her ailing parents, watching the world outside her childhood home continue without her. Now both parents are gone, and Selwyn is alone in the weathered Victorian house where she grew up—surrounded by grief, by rooms full of memories, and by her mother’s once-glorious garden, now buried entirely under weeds. The weight of it all presses down without mercy. 🌿
When a bottle of morphine disappears during a moment of dark despair, Selwyn begins to question her own grip on reality. Then a radiant stranger named Blossom appears—arriving with uncanny timing and an instinct for exactly what Selwyn needs before she knows she needs it. With Blossom’s quiet, unhurried guidance, Selwyn begins the slow work of restoring her mother’s garden and, alongside it, some fragile version of her own sense of purpose. 🌸
But the world refuses to stay quiet. An old flame resurfaces from a part of Selwyn’s life she thought she had closed. A pregnant student turns up in need of more help than she can ask for. And strange disturbances begin echoing from the garage apartment in ways that suggest Selwyn’s story—and Blossom’s—is considerably more complicated than either of them has let on. Sometimes the quietest miracles grow in the darkest seasons, and sometimes the strangers who find us know exactly why they came. 💫
What makes this moving: Ashley Farley writes with warmth, gentleness, and deep emotional intelligence about grief, healing, and the unexpected forms that grace can take—a beautifully crafted novel about a woman finding her way back to herself, one small act of restoration at a time. 🌷
Portland’s North Precinct draws two kinds of officers: those assigned there as punishment, and those who choose it because they want to keep fighting. Officer Hanson is the second kind—a Vietnam veteran who survived the war and then deliberately walked toward more of it, trading one battleground for another. He doesn’t fight for the law exactly. He fights for his own code, which is a different thing entirely and considerably more dangerous. 🌃
The streets of Portland’s North Precinct give Hanson what he needs: action, purpose, and enough chaos to keep the memories of Southeast Asia from filling every quiet moment. But the past has a way of following men like Hanson regardless of how fast they move. Someone is prying into his war record—pulling back the shields that protect the darkest moments of that fevered time, surfacing things Hanson buried with good reason and fully intended to keep buried. 🔫
As the investigation into his past closes in, Hanson finds himself fighting on two fronts simultaneously—the present-tense battle of the streets and the older, more personal war that never really ended. What he’s willing to risk to protect his secrets—his career, his sanity, his life—says everything about who he became in Vietnam and everything about who he’s been trying to be ever since. 🌑
What makes this unforgettable: Kent Anderson writes with the hard-won authority of someone who knows exactly what he’s describing—Night Dogs is a raw, atmospheric, morally complex portrait of a man caught between two wars, praised by critics as one of the finest crime novels ever written about the cost of violence on the human soul. 🏆
The Change came, as everyone always suspected it would—and when it did, it changed everything. An island nation ravaged by rising seas and the slow collapse of the world its people once knew has built its response in concrete: an enormous wall running the entire length of its coastline, manned around the clock by Defenders whose one task is to keep the Others out. The Others are the people trapped outside, caught in the rising waters, desperate in ways the people inside the Wall prefer not to think about too closely. 🌊
Joseph Kavanagh is a new Defender, assigned to his section of the Wall with the cold understanding of what failure means. If the Others get through on your watch, you become one of them—cast out to face the seas and whatever lies beyond. The Wall demands total vigilance and offers nothing in return except the continuation of a life that feels increasingly difficult to call living. Every shift is cold, exhausting, and morally complicated in ways the training never quite prepared him for. 🧱
What Lanchester builds within this stark framework is a story about fear, division, love, and survival—about what people become when they are asked to hold a line against other human beings whose only crime is needing what lies on the other side. The allegory is pointed and the story is gripping, and the two work together rather than against each other. 💔
What makes this essential: John Lanchester has written a taut, morally urgent dystopian novel that uses the language of climate fiction to ask questions about borders, belonging, and culpability that feel more relevant with every passing year—suspenseful, humane, and impossible to dismiss. 🌍
For more than three decades, Zig Ziglar traveled the world with a message that was simple on the surface and genuinely transformative in practice: you can get everything you want in life if you help enough other people get what they want. It sounds almost too straightforward to be the foundation of a self-help classic. It turns out to be exactly that—and this 25th anniversary edition of his landmark book proves the premise has lost none of its power. 🌟
At its core, See You at the Top is a book about identity. Ziglar’s argument is that before goals, before strategy, before any external achievement, a person needs to build a healthy self-image—because how you see yourself determines every decision you make and every relationship you form. The book works through that premise methodically and practically, with warmth and without condescension, offering tools rather than platitudes. 💪
This revised and updated edition reinforces the values Ziglar believed were non-negotiable for lasting success: honesty, integrity, loyalty, faith, and strong personal character. It covers goal-setting in concrete, actionable terms—how to identify what you actually want, how to build the plan to reach it, and how to change the internal narrative that quietly sabotages so many people before they even begin. The advice has been tested across generations of readers and keeps working. 🎯
What makes this a classic: Zig Ziglar earned his legendary status the hard way—by being right about the things that matter most. This anniversary edition is the definitive version of a book that has genuinely changed lives, updated for a new generation while keeping every word of wisdom that made the original indispensable. 🏆
When an American businessman plummets from a Tokyo train platform, Detective Hiroshi Shimizu is pulled from his desk and thrust into the city’s glittering, unforgiving darkness. The only lead is a grainy flash of a woman on a security feed—too calm, too deliberate, too close to the dead man to be coincidence. She was there. Then she was gone. 🚆
Hiroshi’s investigation pulls him through every layer of the city—from gleaming corporate towers and velvet-curtained hostess clubs to the empty, echoing platforms of midnight trains where Tokyo’s loneliest transactions take place. Partnered with ex-sumo wrestler Sakaguchi and his grizzled mentor Takamatsu, Hiroshi navigates a world where billions in land deals change hands in quiet rooms, and where the people who know too much have a habit of ending up on the wrong side of a platform edge. 🌃
Every lead drags him deeper into a maze of corporate greed, real estate corruption, and quiet desperation—a Tokyo that the tourist brochures leave out entirely. The elusive woman on the security feed is somewhere in that maze, plotting her escape while Hiroshi closes in with dwindling time and a growing sense that the city itself is working against him. In the world’s most expensive city, inside information is currency. Hiroshi is running low on both. 🔍
What makes this atmospheric: Michael Pronko brings Tokyo alive in all its nocturnal complexity—The Last Train is a hard-boiled mystery that uses the city as more than a backdrop, delivering a detective debut as rich in mood and cultural detail as it is in propulsive, elegantly plotted suspense. 🏙️
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2










