Spotlight: Side Hustle by Wendy Gee

Charleston’s top investigative TV reporter, Sydney Quinn, lives to expose the city’s darkest secrets. So when a former firefighter takes two paramedics hostage, she talks her way inside, offering to gather intel in exchange for a story that could boost her career.

But when Sydney finds the body of her friend, a local insurance executive, at the scene, the scoop of a lifetime turns personal. The hostage-taker swears he’s been framed, pulling Sydney into a web of cybercrime, stolen identities, and corporate corruption that stretches far beyond Charleston’s polished waterfront.

As she chases the truth through encrypted files and backroom deceptions, Sydney uncovers ties to a shadow network of hackers. Busting them should be routine…except she’s unraveling faster than her investigation. Haunted by the ambush she survived while embedded with the Marines in Iraq, she’s been outrunning her ghosts with fast cars and faster pitches at the batting cage. But when the cybercriminals turn their sights on her, Sydney must face her worst memories—and choose who to trust—before her name ends up on the next body tag.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Bookshop.org

About the Author

After a successful career in the U.S. Navy, Wendy Gee now channels her boundless energy into community volunteering, leaving no stone unturned—or unpainted—at the Charleston Fire Department, Friends of the Lewes Public Library Board of Directors, and Sussex County Habitat for Humanity. A proud graduate of the University of Michigan, University of Arizona, Naval War College, and Old Dominion University, Wendy combines her academic prowess and life experiences into her writing.

Residing in Lewes, DE, she is an avid golfer, a diehard Detroit Tigers and Lions fan (even when they’re not winning, but so excited when they are), and a pickleball enthusiast who’s always ready to serve up some fun. Her work has been shortlisted with Killer Nashville and the Writer’s League of Texas. And as a lifetime member of Sisters in Crime, Wendy’s passion for the mystery genre is no secret—though she might leave a few clues lying around just for fun. Learn more at: www.wendygeeauthor.com

Spotlight: Red Star Rebels by Amie Kaufman

It’s 2067, and the Graves family has transformed Mars from a lifeless rock into a chaotic patch of settlements. You can buy a one-way ticket to a new life--if you're rich.

Enter Hunter Graves, the handsome, ambitious grandson of the man who settled Mars. With spectacularly bad timing, Hunter arrives at the United Nations base just as an emergency evacuation sends everyone scurrying for safety. Except he’s left behind. Uh-oh.  

Also stranded: Cleo, a sharp-tonged stowaway with no intention of dying today, and even less patience for overconfident trust fund boys. But the enemy of your enemy might just help you survive, so here we are.

It turns out the evacuation is just a cover for the mercenaries who come next, and the plan to blow up the base--and every trace of their crime--in eight hours.

Now, Hunter and Cleo have one shot to stop the explosion, escape alive, and deal with the inconvenient fact that they're falling for each other.

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About the Author

Amie Kaufman is the New York Times bestselling co-author of the Illuminae Files and the Aurora Cycle, with Jay Kristoff, and the Starbound, Unearthed, and Other Side of the Sky series with Meagan Spooner. Raised in Australia and occasionally Ireland, Amie has degrees in history, literature, law, and conflict resolution, and is currently undertaking a PhD in Creative Writing. She lives in Melbourne with her husband, daughter and rescue dog, and an extremely large personal library. You can learn more about Amie at her website, on social, or via her podcast. 

Spotlight: Tiny Little Earthquakes by Hays Blinckmann

Elliot Hase is a sharp, observant nine-year-old girl growing up on a horse farm in 1980s North Carolina, where the adults are far less stable than the barn animals. Her mother, a charismatic alcoholic with a flair for drama and denial, careens through life in a haze of wine and self-pity. Her father, a distant doctor with a new family and a wife who rewrites history, offers more guilt than guidance. Caught between the two is Poppy—Elliot’s older sister, partner-in-crime, and cautionary tale—whose battles with addiction and self-destruction echo through Elliot’s own attempts to break the cycle.

As Elliot navigates funerals, failed interventions, AA and Al Anon meetings, and an elite boarding school that teaches more about co-dependency than calculus, she slowly begins to question not just the people raising her, but the identity she’s been forced to adopt to survive them. Her coming-of-age is shaped by secrets she didn’t ask for, betrayals she doesn’t deserve, and moments of brutal clarity that land like aftershocks.

The central conflict is Elliot’s internal struggle to define herself apart from the chaos of her family—trying to reconcile loyalty to her mother and sister with self-preservation, and survival with healing. Through humor, heartbreak, and sheer stubbornness, she learns that resilience isn't about being unbreakable—it's about breaking and rebuilding, again and again.

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About the Author

Hays Blinckmann is a writer, journalist, teacher, and recovering painter. She holds a Bachelor of Arts from Tufts University and a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. She lives in Key West, Florida, with her husband and two sons. Her other novels include In the Salt, Where I Can Breathe, Here, Kitty, and the young adult novel Yell Out Loud. They are available on Amazon and at bookstores throughout Key West.  If you enjoyed this book, please consider leaving a review on Amazon.com. As this is a published novel, your reviews and recommendations on social media help Tiny Little Earthquakes reach a wider audience. Thank you for spreading the word—places, people. Places! For more about Hays, visit: www.authorhaysblinckmann.com and follow her on IG @authorhaysblinckmann.

Spotlight: Breaking the Barnyard Barrier by Linda Rhodes

In the late 1970s the golden valley between Utah’s Wasatch Mountains was home to some of the best dairies in the country. That was also where Linda Rhodes, a newly minted large animal veterinarian, had to prove that a woman could do what the Mormon dairymen were sure was a man’s job. She was often scared that they were right. Throughout her experience, she tackled a menagerie of challenging medical and surgical cases that forced her to be fearless. Every bovine life she saved helped her confidence grow, but each failure left her feeling defeated—as did the mounting tensions between pursuing a demanding career and saving a crumbling marriage.

In Breaking the Barnyard Barrier, Linda Rhodes tells the story of how a woman, through grit and tears, made her way in a man’s world and blazed a path that prevailed against career stereotypes.

Excerpt

I emerged from the cramped car, stretched my arms over my head, and took a deep breath. The sweet scent of lilacs was a wonderful change from the stench of West Philadelphia. My sister, Anne, carried her daughter, Satya, seven years old, fast asleep, into the house. Vincent pulled boxes out of the car and piled them on the driveway. The chickens ran to greet us, cackling, looking for their dinner of corn. The setting sun cast a warm light on the meadow, and the peepers sang down by the pond. Vincent put his arm around me. We stood, silent, and gazed at the rolling green hills east of the house. I leaned my head on his shoulder.

Vincent sighed.

“What?” I asked.

“Long day,” he said.

After my Philadelphia life was packed up and the rental cleaned so I could get my deposit back, we left Philly around three in the afternoon, arriving in Freeville, New York, a few miles outside of Ithaca, after four hours on the road. Anne, Satya, and Vincent came to Philadelphia to celebrate my graduation from Penn Veterinary School in late May 1978. I had just turned twenty-nine, and after four years of living apart from him, I was ready to start my life with Vincent—and, hopefully, a job as a large animal veterinarian in the rolling hills and meadows around Ithaca, New York.

_____________________________________

Anne, Vincent, and a group of musicians and friends lived communally in an old Victorian house in Freeville while I was studying in Philadelphia. Now I was happily done with living in a city and the rigors of veterinary school. We had planned to settle into a life—Vincent playing music with his brothers, me working as a large animal vet in the local dairy farms. It would be so good if we could finally be together after four years of Vincent in Freeville and me living in the gritty world of West Philadelphia, but in spite of months of trying, I hadn’t found a job. We both knew that meant our dream was in jeopardy, but we avoided talking about what might come next.

For now, it was enough to breathe the scent of lilacs and lean on each other. The screen door banged. Anne threw some cracked corn out the back door for the chickens, already busy pecking. I plopped down on the porch steps.

“Seems weird not to have a schedule,” I said. My life had been defined for the last four years by a hectic rush of classes, labs, and clinics.

Vincent smiled. “Maybe you can take a few weeks to slow down,” he said.

My back against the porch railing, I stretched my legs out. Th peepers down by the pond were getting louder, fireflies flashed in the grass, the last of the light slanted across the meadow.

“I guess I could try that,” I said, and we both laughed.

“It’s getting dark,” Vincent said. “I’ll get your stuff and put it in the cabin.”

The Freeville house functioned as a commune, with most of the original founders who had moved into the house in 1974, when I moved to Philly, still there. During the four years I toiled away at vet school, the vegetable garden had grown large and weedy, a few more cats had turned up, and the attic and basement filled with the boxes and miscellaneous detritus of various musicians who came and went.

The cabin, a tiny one-room shed behind the house, would be fine for now, but I hoped in a few weeks I would find a job with a salary so that Vincent and I could move someplace to avoid the chaos of the commune. I wanted to celebrate finally being Dr. Rhodes, but instead I worried. Starting in early spring of 1978, long before graduation, I searched for a job in large animal practice, but it had gradually become clear that finding a job taking care of cows near Freeville was going to be much harder than I had expected. Degree in hand, no job, student loan payments due in a couple of months, I had a bank account so close to zero that the bank might close it out.

The countryside around Freeville was filled with dairy farms. New York State was the third largest producer of milk, after Wisconsin and California. Prosperous dairy farms dotted the landscape. Since the beginning of vet school, my plan had been to return to Freeville. I’d spent the spring of my senior year interviewing for all the jobs listed in the area. No one would hire me.

The pink sunset clouds darkened to gray. Anne was in the kitchen singing along with the radio. She chopped zucchini and onions into the oil-coated wok, making stir-fry for dinner. The light was on in Vincent’s little cabin. I rolled my shoulders, stretched to reach my toes, and yawned. My exhaustion from the last four years settled over me like a heavy blanket. There was still a long way to go until

I was a practicing veterinarian.

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About the Author

Linda Rhodes began her career as a dairy cow veterinarian after she graduated from the University of Pennsylvania summa cum laude in 1978. After several years in dairy practice, she was granted a fellowship at Cornell University, where she obtained her PhD in 1988. The rest of her career was spent in the pharmaceutical industry, helping to develop medicines for many species of animals. She retired in 2016 and has subsequently served on several corporate and start-up boards in the animal health industry. She has received the Iron Paw Award for her lifetime achievements. Breaking the Barnyard Barrier is her first book.

Spotlight: First Date by Gemma Amor

Naive and particular, Amandine has lived in isolation since losing her parents in a tragic crash. Now a neurodiverse woman adrift in rural Norfolk, she struggles with solitude and fragile mental health. Desperate for connection, she turns to online dating–only to face heartbreak time and again.

Then she meets Connor: wounded, lonely and codependent. When he invites her to dinner, Amandine dares to believe this first date might be different.

It is–but not in the way she imagines.

Watching from the shadows is the Lone Diner, a predator who hunts happy couples–determined to make their joy his next course!

What begins as a promising first date, quickly descends into terror. Stranded in the remote Norfolk Wetlands during the worst winter in modern memory, Amandine and Connor accept a lift from the wrong man and are plunged into a nightmare of violence and captivity.

Bound, bleeding, and running out of time, Amandine and Connor must trust each other to escape. But even if they survive the Lone Diner, will their trauma bond prove just as fatal as the man who held them captive? 

Excerpt

NO SUCH THING AS NORMAL 

Amandine knew there was no such thing as “normal”, not really, but she was beginning to suspect there was something profoundly wrong with her. Some cognitive issue that was rapidly getting worse. Memory loss was only a small part of it. Life in her thirties had become a great deal more difficult than it ought to be, to the point where her days had deteriorated into a chaotic sequence of disorganised events, half-finished tasks, missed opportunities, clumsy accidents, easily avoided misunderstandings and constant distractions. She didn’t seem to be able to complete any single task in one go, interpersonal relationships and friendships had become nigh-on impossible to maintain, and she found herself moving around her house as if wading through fog, day in, day out. She would often wander from one room to another and forget what her purpose for doing so was. She also caught herself zoning out with alarming frequency, especially in pressurised situations or occasions when she was due somewhere. 

As if her body was willing, but her brain was not. 

Like now, for example. 

Instead of getting ready for her date, she was still furiously daydreaming, staring into space, grinding her celery like a cow chewing the cud, crunch-crunch-crunch. Her terrible memory was busy trying to sort through the terabytes of received internet wisdom offered by the hundreds, if not thousands, of listicles and articles and thirty-second videos she’d scanned in preparation for this date. She was aware that deep diving to the extent that she did was a very real demonstration of not being able to see the woods for the trees, but she couldn’t seem to help herself. The content she craved offered something she didn’t otherwise have access to: immediacy, and the illusion of support. If her brain had an itch, she could scratch it, right away, by simply unlocking her phone screen. 

This was important to Amandine, a woman who spent vast quantities of time alone. Through circumstance at first, later through choice. 

Advice was hard to come by, especially when both your parents were dead. She examined her index finger, used as a crude pen to write the Miracle Word on her body. Crimson-tipped now, the nail ridged with her own blood-ink. 

Well, that won’t do, she thought. Can’t shake hands like this. 

She stood up to go to her ensuite bathroom, intent on cleaning her finger, and promptly got lost in another thought-loop. 

Periods. 

People either wanted to talk about them in detail, or not at all. 

This dichotomy fascinated her. 

There was a wealth of misinformation online about a woman’s bleeding, most of it masquerading as advice. Amandine had read and seen all sorts of wild and wonderful things: bleeding was the sign of the devil; bleeding was only supposed to happen twice a year, not once a month; bleeding was supposed to be an egg-cup of fluid a day, no more, no less; inserting a tampon inside yourself was tantamount to having sex and taking your own virginity; sanitary products were behind global warming; you couldn’t get pregnant during your period; bleeding should last exactly seven days every month without fail; period pain was a myth; cramps were “tricks of the mind”; you shouldn’t bathe during your time of the month; you couldn’t go camping in the woods because bears would smell your blood from miles away and come looking; you shouldn’t touch flowers while bleeding because they would wither and die; washing your face in your first menstrual blood would give you a good complexion… 

She’d also read that menstruation was a “gift” linked to the lunar cycle, that her body had formed a sacrosanct bodily pact with the moon that enriched her life with special meaning, significance and a unique energy, and that she had a pre-ordained path to walk, if she chose, a bloody path towards a “ferocious type of feminine power”. 

She’d laughed at that phrase, what was so fucking special and ferocious about bleeds so heavy she could barely walk, cramps so severe she spent days of her life bent in half, mood swings so violent she could barely function, ruined underwear, stained jeans and bedding… 

She didn’t believe in menstruation as a gift, or in ancient lunar cycles, nor did she subscribe to the idea that her natural bodily functions were shameful, in any way. Inconvenient, sure. Messy and painful, definitely. But never shameful. 

But she did believe in the power of words, which is why she daubed herself. It felt, now she’d done it, like making a pact with some higher power, a strange contract of sorts. Amandine found that after the Miracle Word was written, her nerves subsided, a little. 

An alarm sounded on her phone, wrenching her out of herself. One of many she had to set throughout the day, for this precise reason. 

She cancelled the alarm with an untainted thumb and finally went to wash her hands.

Then, she sat naked at her vanity table, patting eyeshadow onto her lids with a soft brush as she waited for the sticky word to dry on her belly. 

I wonder what he is like, she thought, working powder into the creases of her lids. I wonder if he will like me. 

She glanced at her wrist. 

If Celery will like me. 

She giggled. 

It didn’t much matter if he liked her, not really. 

What mattered was whether she liked him

Amandine had cautiously low expectations. Sure, they’d been texting back and forth for a while, but that was no way to assess a person’s true nature. She considered texts low value exchanges, didn’t place much importance on them. It was the easiest thing in the world to shoot someone a message. In the moments between his texts, she hardly thought about Connor at all. It was hard to get excited about a little round speech bubble. She preferred to keep her energy for real-life interactions, because they demanded so much more from her. Meeting new people was hard, and faintly traumatic every time she did it. She tended to judge books firmly by their cover and preface, always had. Face value was important to her. 

The problem with this approach was that other people were often not as they first presented themselves. 

Especially when it came to sex, dating and love. 

But the internet validated her. She could find dozens of first-hand accounts from other women just like her with a few swipes of her thumb. It seemed to have all the rulebooks governing “normal” people’s conduct, motivations and behaviour. She’d done a lot of reading in the wake of her string of failed dating attempts and learned a lot of lessons. 

As a result, Connor, although he didn’t know it, was going to have to work much harder to get her approval than he might have if they had met several years earlier. Vet this one thoroughly, she told herself. Protect your peace. 

That was what the girls on TikTok said, at any rate. 

Red flags, they called it in the various relationship-advice communities she subscribed to. Buzzwords that generated endless social wisdom she could scroll through when bored, depressed, lonely or overstimulated. Ten Red Flags You Shouldn’t Ignore. She never liked the expression, it implied red flags to a bull, like it was animalistic of her to react to shitty behaviour with anger, coldness or firm boundaries, even when provoked. A depressing concept, flags.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Audible | Paperback | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Gemma Amor is a Bram Stoker and British Fantasy Award- nominated author, illustrator and voice actor. Her happy place is horror, speculative and dark fiction, or anything that blurs the boundaries of genre with a focus on human stories. Many of her works have been adapted into audio dramas by the popular NoSleep Podcast. She is also the co-creator, writer and voice actor for horror-comedy podcast Calling Darkness. In addition to her writing, Gemma is an audio book narrator and painter. She lives and works in Bristol.

Cover Reveal: Ares by Sybil Bartel

(Paragon Operations, #4)

Publication date: September 17th 2026

Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance, Suspense

Mercenary.

Dominant.

Sine Pari.

The first rule of Delta Force was don’t talk about Delta Force.
The second rule I wasn’t at liberty to discuss.

Serving with the 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment–Delta was an honor. CAG was my home, and I protected my brothers…. Until I didn’t.

Staring at the terrorist through my scope, I had her in my sights.
Black hair, hazel eyes, bruises all over her face.
I knew what I had to do.

But I didn’t do it.

I broke the second rule.

ARES is the third standalone book in the heart-pounding Paragon Operations Series by USA Today bestselling author, Sybil Bartel! If you’re ready to step into a whole new world of romantic suspense, come meet Ares and the darkly dominant Tier One Operators at Paragon Operations who will make your e-reader combust!

Buy on Amazon | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Sybil Bartel is a USA Today Bestselling author of unapologetic alpha heroes. Whether you're reading her deliciously dominant alpha bodyguards, her page-turning romantic suspense, or her heart-stopping military romance, all of her books have sexy-as-sin alpha heroes!

Sybil lives in South Florida and she is forever Oliver’s mom. 

Connect:

http://sybilbartel.com/

https://www.facebook.com/sybilbartelauthor

https://sybilbartel.us12.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=182d8d166e12a179a7c4d19a1&id=2ac9328bee

https://www.bookbub.com/authors/sybil-bartel

https://amzn.to/4aag5gX

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https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7893521.Sybil_Bartel